Archive for the 'State/Local Government' Category

Alaska first state to hit $4 a gallon gasoline: AAA

LOS ANGELES (Reuters) - Alaska hit a milestone on Wednesday that could be a sign of things to come around the United States this summer — it became the first state where the average price for regular gasoline reached $4 per gallon.

 

“It wasn’t totally unexpected,” said Geoff Sundstrom, spokesman for the travel and auto group AAA which issues a daily gasoline price report.

“Oil prices recently brushed against $127 per barrel so certainly, $4 gasoline could be in the cards for other states as well this summer,” said Sundstrom.

At $4 per gallon, filling up a 15-gallon tank will cost $60.

Alaskans using self-service regular gasoline paid $4.006 per gallon, said the AAA Wednesday report.The U.S. average for regular gasoline hit a record $3.758 per gallon, the same report showed.

A year ago, the U.S. average price was $3.3354 a gallon and in Alaska, the average price was $2.946 a gallon.

Gasoline price analysts will have a better handle on how many states are likely to reach $4 a gallon this summer once the Memorial Day weekend passes, said Sundstrom. That holiday weekend is May 23-26.

“Memorial Day weekend is a little to the gasoline industry what Christmas is to retailers,” said Sundstrom. “It’s one of the highest demand weekends for fuel and is a barometer for what can be expected in summer driving season demand.”

 

 

The AAA will issue its summer travel forecast on Thursday. 

 

Article Continue @ Sourced  Site.

Kill Old People Cheap Act of 2008

Nursing Homes, along with their politically active PAAC’s have funneled huge sums of money to Tennessee legislators in an effort to support nursing home supported legislation which would placestrict limits and hurdles on those who would sue nursing homes as a result of the negligence and abuse of their elderly patients.

It is hard to imagine how legislators voted into office by the general public would even consider supporting legislation which would take away longstanding rights to victims of nursing home negligence and abuse to make a claim in court to remedy these wrongs.

The only beneficiaries of this legislation are the large corporations which own nursing homes throughout Tennessee. Those that will be hurt by this legislation are residents of nursing homes who will have limited abilities to fight abuse and neglect in nursing homes if this draconian legislation is passed.

The lackeys controlled by nursing homes in Tennessee who have introduced this legislation have the gall to name this proposed legislation: “The Nursing Home Patient Protection Act of 2008”. With this ridiculous nomenclature, these nursing home lackeys hope to obscure the fact that the bill is anything but a patient protection act. On the contrary, it removes from nursing home residents the little protection they have under the law as it is now.

Cook County, Tennessee Representative Henry Fincher who heads a key subcommittee in the Tennessee legislature has correctly labeled this bill the “Kill Old People Cheap Act of 2008”.

Senate sponsor of the bill, Jim Tracey, a Republican, lamely argues that: “If we can cut the cost of insurance down for nursing homes, they can have more nurses, better patient care.” If he really believes this ridiculous statement, it shows what a simpleton Senator Tracey really is. Does it not occur to him that the way nursing homes can avoid lawsuits is simply to give good patient care. Who could argue against a nursing home giving good patient care? More

If this passes, you can bet you’ll see this type of legislation coming to your state as well. -Sue

State Programs Add Safety Net for the Poorest

By RACHEL L. SWARNS, The New York Times

LITTLE ROCK, Ark. — For years, state welfare offices like the one alongside Interstate 30 have drawn the unemployed. But these days, the red-brick building here is also attracting poor, working parents with an unexpected offer: $204 a month in cash.

Shelly Thomas, a stockroom clerk and single mother, is using her windfall from the State of Arkansas to tune up the old Chevrolet she drives to work. Talia Greenwood, a day care worker with four children, spends the money on gas, diapers and baby formula.

The women are pioneers in an emerging social experiment as states across the country try to go beyond simply moving people off welfare. Over the last two years, officials in Arkansas and at least a dozen other states have announced plans to extend the safety net — through monthly cash payments — to thousands of low-income workers struggling to gain a foothold in the work world.

Most states focus on people who have left welfare for low-wage jobs. Officials believe that the programs, which typically combine several months of cash assistance with career counseling, health insurance and subsidized child care, will help low-wage workers weather family illnesses and cash shortages and deter them from cycling back onto the welfare rolls.

Arkansas provides poor working parents with $204 a month, plus bonuses for staying employed, for up to two years. Oregon offers $150 a month for up to a year. Virginia gives $50 a month for up to a year. And the California Legislature is considering a plan, proposed by Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger, to provide $40 a month to 41,000 working families that receive food stamps.

The programs differ considerably. While Utah offers $474 a month for two months and $237 for a third month for a family of three, Michigan provides $10 a month for six months. Massachusetts gives $7 a month to more than 13,000 food stamp recipients.

The new strategy reflects, in part, a growing concern about the challenges facing the poor nearly 12 years after Congress overhauled welfare laws. While states have drastically reduced their welfare caseloads, research suggests that they have been far less successful in helping people find and keep jobs that lift families out of poverty. More

Gas Prices Send Surge of Riders to Mass Transit

From The New York Times:

 

DENVER — With the price of gas approaching $4 a gallon, more commuters are abandoning their cars and taking the train or bus instead.

 

Mass transit systems around the country are seeing standing-room-only crowds on bus lines where seats were once easy to come by. Parking lots at many bus and light rail stations are suddenly overflowing, with commuters in some towns risking a ticket or tow by parking on nearby grassy areas and in vacant lots.

 

“In almost every transit system I talk to, we’re seeing very high rates of growth the last few months,” said William W. Millar, president of the American Public Transportation Association.

 

“It’s very clear that a significant portion of the increase in transit use is directly caused by people who are looking for alternatives to paying $3.50 a gallon for gas.”

 

Some cities with long-established public transit systems, like New York and Boston, have seen increases in ridership of 5 percent or more so far this year. But the biggest surges — of 10 to 15 percent or more over last year — are occurring in many metropolitan areas in the South and West where the driving culture is strongest and bus and rail lines are more limited.

 

Here in Denver, for example, ridership was up 8 percent in the first three months of the year compared with last year, despite a fare increase in January and a slowing economy, which usually means fewer commuters. Several routes on the system have reached capacity, particularly at rush hour, for the first time.

 

“We are at a tipping point,” said Clarence W. Marsella, chief executive of the Denver Regional Transportation District, referring to gasoline prices. 

 

 

 Article Continues @ Sourced Site

Soveriegnty advocates say they’re legitimate government of island

From AP News Via MSNBC:

 HONOLULU - A Native Hawaiian group that advocates sovereignty locked the gates of a historic palace in downtown Honolulu on Wednesday, saying it would carry out the business of what it considers the legitimate government of the islands.

 

State deputy sheriffs weren’t allowing anyone else to enter Iolani Palace grounds as unarmed security guards from the Hawaiian Kingdom Government group blocked all gates to the palace, which is adjacent to the state Capitol.

 

The group said it learned from Honolulu Police Chief Boisse Correa that arrest warrants were being prepared for the 60 or so protesters and would probably be served later in the day. Police have not confirmed that to The Associated Press.

 

Protest leaders said they were prepared to be arrested and would go peacefully.

 

Don’t recognize Hawaii as state

 

Protest leader Mahealani Kahau said the group doesn’t recognize Hawaii as a U.S. state. Supporters planned to keep the protest peaceful and if evicted would return later, she said.

 

The group is one of several Hawaiian sovereignty organizations in the islands, which became the 50th U.S. state in 1959.

The ornate Iolani Palace is operated as a museum. Hawaiian King Kalakaua built it in 1882, and it also served as the residence for his sister and successor, Queen Liliuokalani, the islands’ last ruling monarch. 

 

Article Continues @ Sourced Site.  

How low will lake levels go?

Courtesy MLive

 West Michigan residents concerned about sinking Great Lakes water levels will get a chance to share their views this week when U.S. and Canadian officials studying the issue visit Muskegon.

 

The International Joint Commission, a U.S.-Canadian panel that advises the two nations on Great Lakes issues, is studying water levels in lakes Michigan, Huron, Superior and Erie. A committee working on the IJC’s International Upper Great Lakes Study will host a public hearing on lake levels Sunday, from 10 a.m. to noon, at Grand Valley State University’s Annis Water Resources Institute, 740 W. Shoreline.

 

“We want to hear lots of people come out and squawk at this public meeting,” said John Nevin, an IJC spokesman. “We want to hear what this issue means to people when the water is really high or really low.”

 

IJC officials might get an earful.

 

Lake Michigan’s water level has dropped nearly four feet since 1997, according to federal data. The low lake level has widened beaches but created safety hazards for recreational boaters and caused freighters to run aground in Muskegon, Grand Haven and other ports around the lake.

On the flip side, record-high lake levels in 1986 caused severe beach erosion that sent several Grand Haven cottages tumbling into the lake. 

 

The IJC study is focused on two issues: Whether dredging in the St. Clair River over the past century has caused excessive lowering of water levels in lakes Michigan and Huron; and if the volume of water flowing out of Lake Superior daily through control structures in the St. Marys River should be adjusted to account for below-average precipitation and global warming, which some studies suggest could lower lake levels by several feet over the next century.

 

The study could prompt changes, such as the construction of a water control structure in the St. Clair River, that would affect water levels in lakes Michigan and Huron, said Gene Stakhiv, co-chair of the International Upper Lakes Study Board.

 

“There are a whole range of changes in the regulation of flow and physical structures in the (Great Lakes) system that could help us control water levels,” Stakhiv said. “But we don’t know yet if there is a need for that.”

 

A growing chorus of critics — from scientists and shoreline property owners in Lake Huron’s Georgian Bay, to marina owners and shipping interests — want the U.S. and Canadian governments to plug what amounts to an unnaturally large drain hole in the St. Clair River. 

 

Article Continues @ Sourced Site

Report: Bush SCHIP Rule Illegal

From The Washington Independent:                By MIKE LILLIS 04/22/2008

The Bush administration has no plans to rescind controversial guidelines restricting enrollment in a popular children’s health-care program, despite a recent legal finding that they were administered illegally. The administration’s position could leave the issue to the courts, where several states have already sued the White House over their right to expand coverage under the State Children’s Health Insurance Program, or SCHIP.

It could also lead to a showdown with Congress, though legislative efforts to expand SCHIP were twice vetoed by President George W. Bush last year. Perhaps with that in mind, congressional critics of the enrollment guidelines are clinging to the unlikely hope that the new legal opinion will inspire the administration to scrap the rules voluntarily.

 

 

The long-running debate over SCHIP highlights the sharp differences between the White House and a Democratic Congress over Washington’s role in providing health care. With medical costs skyrocketing and employers dropping more and more coverage benefits, many lawmakers are pushing to expand that role into higher income brackets. The Bush administration has fought that push, claiming such expansions nibble away at private insurance markets.

 

In limbo are tens-of-thousands of kids whose health coverage hinges on their eligibility for the state-federal program.

 

At issue are controversial eligibility guidelines — issued directly to state health officials in an Aug. 17 letter — that prohibit states from using federal SCHIP funds to cover children in families earning more than 250 percent of the federal poverty level, or $53,000 for a family of four, until they have covered 95 percent of kids living under 200 percent of poverty, or $42,400. Supporters in and outside of the White House say the rules ensure that SCHIP dollars go to the lowest income kids.

 

But on Thursday, the Government Accountability Office challenged the guidelines, charging that the administration broke the law when it bypassed Congress in issuing them. Under a 12-year-old law, the GAO says, the changes have to be reviewed by both Congress and the GAO before they could take effect.

 

The legal opinion is being cheered by children’s health-care advocates and state health officials. But they might not want to hold their breath waiting for change: The GAO opinion has no teeth, and the Bush administration has already issued a statement saying it will ignore it. 

 

“GAO’s opinion does not change the department’s conclusion that the 8/17 letter is still in effect,” Jeff Nelligan, spokesman for the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services, said in an Apr. 18 statement.

 

The issue boils down to a difference in legal interpretations. The Bush administration claims the Aug. 17 letter is just a non-binding statement of general policy — a clarification of existing law. The GAO, on the other hand, argues that the letter constitutes a policy change significant enough to require congressional and GAO perusal under the Congressional Review Act.

 

“The August 17 letter from CMS to state health officials is a statement of general applicability and future effect designed to implement, interpret or prescribe law or policy with regard to [SCHIP],” GAO writes. “Accordingly, it is a rule under the Congressional Review Act. Therefore, before it can take effect, it must be submitted to Congress and the Comptroller General.”

 

The Congressional Research Service, another nonpartisan investigative research body, reached a similar conclusion in a January report.   

 

Article Continues @ Sourced Site

Republican State Senator Fails 3 Sobriety Tests, Claims DUI Arrest ‘Political’ - Videos

By Yvonne Wenger, The Post and Courier

State Sen. Randy Scott “berated” Dorchester County deputies after failing three field sobriety tests, according to a Sheriff’s Office report released Monday.

The five-page incident report outlines Scott’s arrest this weekend on a driving under the influence charge. The senator allegedly threatened the arresting sergeant and the county magistrate with their jobs.

The arrest, made late Saturday in Summerville, comes just weeks before a primary election that pits Dorchester County political interests against one another.

Scott, a Summerville Republican finishing his first term in the Senate, is arguing that the arrest is politically motivated. He is running against former state Sen. Mike Rose, a Republican, in June.

According to the report, Scott repeatedly argued that politics were at play while deputies conducted field sobriety tests. At the jail, he “berated and at sometimes appeared to be intimidating deputies,” it said.

Sheriff Ray Nash said the deputies who arrested Scott went by the book.

A deputy spotted Scott’s vehicle driving erratically and called his supervisor when he saw it was the senator’s license plate, Nash said. The arrest wasn’t made until another officer with a video camera arrived, he said.

“You can see on the video that the car is weaving around,” Nash said.

The deputy gave Scott the standard tests to see if there was a good reason to bring him into the station for a Datamaster test, which determines blood-alcohol content with breath, Nash said. Once there, the machine was not able to get a reading because Scott was uncooperative and didn’t blow hard enough to get a reading within the allotted two minutes, Nash said. More

Here are some bits in the videos that I found VERY interesting! -Sue

On the video of his arrest out on the road, notice all of the exaggerated “limping” he does. The audio is pretty bad on this one, but I seriously doubt that having an artificial leg would prevent him from reciting the alphabet, or counting backwards correctly. To see this video, click here.

The second video is that of Mr. Scott back at the station, and the attempt to get a breath analysis. You can see Scott fiddle farting around, trying to buy time by demanding a lawyer be present, in an attempt to have the reading come out lower. Then, during the test, he refuses to blow hard enough to have a reading register. Then, he begins threatening the officers with their jobs, and pacing around the room, absent the pronounced “limp” that he had when he was arrested. And finally, when he is informed he’s being taken to a jail cell, because the officers aren’t going to waste anymore time trying to get him to blow hard enough for a reading, he walks back over to the machine, OFFERS to take the test again, and does NOT insist on having a lawyer present, which was his whole basis for refusing to take the test in the first place! Geez! You can see that video here.

Measure backs ‘American values’ in state schools

From The East Valley Tribune (Phoenix, AZ)    HOWARD FISCHER, CAPITOL MEDIA SERVICES 

Arizona schools whose courses “denigrate American values and the teachings of Western civilization” could lose state funding under the terms of legislation approved Wednesday by a House panel.  

SB1108 also would bar teaching practices that “overtly encourage dissent” from those values, including democracy, capitalism, pluralism and religious tolerance. Schools would have to surrender teaching materials to the state superintendent of public instruction, who could withhold state aid from districts that broke the law.

Another section of the bill would bar public schools, community colleges and universities from allowing organizations to operate on campus if it is “based in whole or in part on race-based criteria,” a provision Rep. Russell Pearce, R-Mesa, said is aimed at MEChA, the Moviemiento Estudiantil Chicano de Aztlan, a student group.

The 9-6 vote by the Appropriations Committee sends the measure to the full House.The legislation appears aimed largely at the Tucson Unified School District, whose “Raza Studies” program has annoyed some people. Tucson resident Laura Leighton read lawmakers sections of some books used in classrooms which she said promote hatred. If the proposal becomes law, however, it would have a statewide reach. And that concerned even some lawmakers who voted for it, saying the language of what would and would not be prohibited is “vague.”

 

Article Continues @ Sourced Site

Siegelman on 60 Minutes: Karl Rove has Succeeded in Ruining Political Career

Via Rawstory:

 ”Politics for me…in terms of electoral politics–is over,” says former Alabama governor Don Siegelman, once considered the most successful Democrat in his state, to CBS’ 60 Minutes. “I think that’s what Karl Rove wanted; he has accomplished his goal.”

 

“Frankly,” he continues, “I’m about busted financially. I’ve spent my life savings…I’ve spent a lot of money on trying to muster my defense.”

 

Governor Siegelman, as RAW STORY has extensively reported in thePermanent Republican Majority series, was prosecuted and imprisoned with the help of US Attorneys, federal prosecutors and judges said to have been hand-picked operatives under the watch of former Bush advisor Karl Rove.

 

Siegelman has been released on appeal.

 

Nick Langewis and David Edwards

Published: Sunday April 6, 2008

Article including Video Continues @ Sourced Site




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