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Monthly Archives: November 2009

If Luetkemeyer is the best they can do …

18 Wednesday Nov 2009

Posted by Michael Bersin in Uncategorized

≈ Leave a comment

An ABC/Washington Post poll from early October found that only 1 out every 20 Americans identifies with the Republican Party. It strikes me that one of the reasons for this Republican malaise may be the lame talent pool available to the GOP. For instnace, the word is that Eric Cantor, GOP House Whip, considers Blaine Luetkemeyer an up-and-comer in the party. Yet, at a fundraiser in Clayton for Luetkemeyer yesterday, the best he could come up with was:

Blaine Luetkemeyer has really hit the ground running,” Cantor said.

As an example, he continued, “Blaine has been a part of the crafting of the Republican alternative on the health-care front.

Wow! Luetkemeyer helped with the Republican health care alternative?  After he hit the ground, he surely didn’t have to run too hard to manage that feat. I’d call this damming with faint praise except I think that Cantor was actually trying to talk the guy up.

FDL Action Health Care Update: Tuesday (11/17/09)

18 Wednesday Nov 2009

Posted by Michael Bersin in Uncategorized

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( – promoted by Clark)

Here are the FDL Action health care reform highlights for Tuesday, November 17.

1. Jon Walker reports that a new ABC/Washington Post poll indicates the country “nearly divided” on the overall health care reform effort, but “very high popular support [for] the public option and the employer mandate.” Isn’t it interesting how the most progressive parts are the most popular? Hmmmm.

2. Jane Hamsher comments on an email from Sen. Dick Durbin (D-IL) that says, “The question is no longer if we will have some sort of public option in the final health care reform bill, but instead what form it will take.”  To put it mildly, Hamsher is suspicious of what this means. asking if Durbin’s and Reid’s “online people really think they can burn the entire online left community by manipulating them so shamelessly on something that is this important to them, and that nobody will remember?”

3. I’ve got a roundup from the state blogs, including Calitics, Loaded Orygun, Blogging for Michigan, Blue Virginia, Minnesota Progressive Project, and West Virginia Blue. Keep up the great work, everyone!

4. Jon Walker analyzes the options for passing health care reform in the U.S. Senate without having 60 votes, and asks, “how many thousands of lives and billions of dollars are they willing to throw away to maintain some of their terrible, anti-democratic, anti-constitutional, special Senate privileges?” The answer to that question, of course, should be “none.”

5. Jon Walker writes that we need to address health care costs, and that it’s no “great mystery” how to do so: “There are plenty of thoroughly tested, completely proven cost control mechanisms we can directly borrow from other nations.” One thing’s for sure, though, Walker concludes, “we need to take off the ‘free market economagic’ blinders” and “start by adopting solutions proven to work elsewhere.”

6. Jon Walker is concerned that the Stupak Amendment “could radically reduce the availability of abortion coverage in this country,” and that “its reach could be far beyond the exchange.” Which is why it’s such a bad idea and should be removed from health care reform legislation, ASAP!

Denny Hoskins (r) in the 121st District: "You must have been misinformed."

18 Wednesday Nov 2009

Posted by Michael Bersin in Uncategorized

≈ 1 Comment

Tags

121st Legislative District, Denny Hoskins, General Assembly, Johnson County, missouri, property taxes

We were curious about the reported statements about a “tax payment installation plan” and a “balloon payment” in regard to Representative Denny Hoskin’s (r – noun, verb, CPA) recent property tax issue. So, we asked office holders in Johnson County if there were any programs, agreements or documentation of such in their records:

November 13, 2009

Janet Jones

Johnson County Recorder

Johnson County Courthouse

Warrensburg, Missouri 64093

Dear Ms. Jones,

I am requesting the following information under RSMo 610:

1) Any document(s) showing verbal or written agreement between Denny Hoskins / Brian Hoskins / any representative of HOS Properties LLC and the Johnson County Recorder pertaining to a “balloon payment” or “tax payment installation plan” concerning the remittance of past due property taxes in Johnson County for any properties owned by the aforementioned entities.

2) Any document(s) showing a verbal or written agreement between Denny Hoskins / Brian Hoskins / any representative of HOS Properties LLC and Johnson County pertaining to a “balloon payment” or “tax payment installation plan” concerning the remittance of past due property. taxes in Johnson County for any properties owned by the aforementioned entities.

Please provide an estimate of the cost of the charges for providing this information under RSMo 610.026.

Please notify me either by phone or the e-mail address below when I can come by your office to pick up the document(s).

[….]

We sent similar requests to Ruthane Small, Johnson County Collector and Mark Reynolds, Johnson County Assessor. Mark Reynolds called me on Monday morning and stated that his office did not have any kind of documents as we described in our request, adding, “You must have been misinformed.”

Jan Jones and Ruthane Small provided written responses:


[….]

November 17, 2009

[….]

After a thorough review of the records in the Johnson County Missouri Recorder’s office, I am unable to find any records pertaining to your request.

Please let me know if you need any further information.

Sincerely,

s/

Jan Jones

Recorder of Deeds

From Ruthane Small, Johnson County Collector on November 17, 2009:


[….]

In response to your request dated November 13, 2009, Johnson County does not have a payment plan or installment plan to pay taxes. Please refer to the attached copy of RSMo 139.052 stating that “The governing body of any county may by ordinance or order provide for the payment of all or any part of current and delinquent real property taxes, in such installments and on such terms as the governing body deems appropriate.” I have served as Johnson County Collector since January 26, 1993 and no order ordinance or order has been written since that date.

To be very clear, “Partial payment or pro-ration of tax is not accepted by law.” is preprinted on all Johnson County Tax Statements.

Another Missouri Statute, RSMo 139.050, discusses partial payment of taxes and it applies to constitutional charter cities which have a population of 750,000 or more. This, again, does not apply to any city within Johnson County.

I know of three counties in Missouri that accepts partial payment. Jackson County allows senior citizens age 62 and over to pre-pay quarterly payments of tax. I believe St. Louis County also has a similar program as well as Boone County. All of these programs are to help the taxpayer pre¬pare for future tax, not payment plans for delinquent taxes. Information obtain from the internet is attached for Jackson County and Boone County.

Due to the reasons outlined above, I have no written or verbal agreement with Denny Hoskins, Brian Hoskins, or any representative of HOS Properties LLC regarding a payment plan of any type regarding real estate (property) taxes. I am not that the term “balloon payment” would apply to taxes at all. Balloon payment is usually associated with a repayment of loan, not taxes.

If you need further information on the subject, please let me know.

Sincerely,

s/

Ruthane Small

Johnson County Collector

We must have been misinformed.

Jeff Smith sentenced

17 Tuesday Nov 2009

Posted by Michael Bersin in Uncategorized

≈ 2 Comments

Tags

Jeff Smith sentenced, missouri

As the legislative session ground to its end last spring, Jeff Smith threatened to filibuster the entire budget in the State Senate if Republicans insisted on cutting funds for tax credits for the rehabbing of historic buildings. He prevailed in protecting the program, particularly the smaller projects that make up the bulk of the program. Historic tax credits have helped revitalize downtown St. Louis and have driven $4 billion in  rehabbing over the last decade. Keeping most of the program intact was one of several accomplishments Smith could take pride in.

But today, he was sentenced to a year in prison. Rep. Steve Brown, who wore a wire to help get the evidence to convict Smith of lying to the FBI, was given two years probation and a fine. And Nick Adams, who worked on Smith’s campaign against Russ Carnahan in 2004 and later as Brown’s campaign manager, was given two years probation and a $5,000 fine.

Anyway, Jeff Smith is gone from the Senate. His replacement, Joe Keaveny, doesn’t hold any particular promise for fighting for his district. That is sad. On the historic tax credit issue alone, Smith will be missed:

The tax credits have other backers in Jefferson City, and a strong lobby of developers and urban leaders who support them. But it’s unclear who will take the reins in the Legislature if there’s a move again next year to cut them further.

Jeff Smith would have accomplished more if he had stayed, if he hadn’t blown it. He had a passion about working for good causes. His statement after the sentencing implies that he believes he will put that energy to use again: “‘This has been a difficult chapter in my life. It will not be the last and it will … not be the defining one.'”

I hope so.

Single Payer strategy meeting 2009 held in St. Louis

17 Tuesday Nov 2009

Posted by Michael Bersin in Uncategorized

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Tags

Health Care Now, national strategy meeting, Single payer health care

Ricklm and I had the rare good experience of attending the 2009 National Strategy Conference of the Health Care Now Coalition that was held at the Sheraton in Westport this past weekend.  

Present and presenting were such notables as Dr Quentin Young and Dr Margaret Flowers from the PNHP, Donna Smith and Michael Lighty of the California Nurses Assn and the NNOC, Terry O’Neill president of NOW, Russell Mokhiber of Single Payer Action and Tim Carpenter, Executive Director of Progressive Dems of America.

Local notables included Jerry Tucker from Labor for Single Payer and Mimi Signor RN of the Missourians for Single Payer (MOSP).

It was the diligent campaigning by the MOSP that encouraged the Health Care Now Coalition to select St. Louis as the site for this important meeting.  There were approximately 200 other participants representing almost every state in the Union.

By unanimous vote, HB 3962 was rejected for many reasons, one of which was the atrocious Stupak/Pitt amendment which will effectively overturn Roe v Wade for millions of women. Another was that The Great Pelosi Hullabaloo over the reining in of insurance ability to gender rate premiums will be offset by allowing insurance to continue and augment the ability to age rate premiums with individuals in mid life paying up to 50% more than younger participants.

The CNA reply to the question of why there was so much cheerleading by so many progressives and liberal legislators, columnists and activists was  as follows:

1.Passage of the bill was a clear defeat for the Republican opposition and those on the right who have so mischaracterized what boils down to modest reform that looks more like a”robust” version of the Medicare Prescription drug benefit or the State Children’s Health Initiative.

2.Proponents of the bill, starting in the White House and running through the Democratic leadership in Congress, with the assistance and support of many in labor and liberal and progressive constituency groups, have so lowered expectations on health care reform that with eyes wide shut they can call this a sweeping victory.

The many providers present at this meeting testified to the fact that clinical judgment will be increasingly sacrificed to insurance profits with providers being forced to change the way they practice to ensure savings.  Thus their opposition to 3962 will include a solution that goes beyond profits for corporations and instead goes to the heart of every provider’s duty to their patient.

Terry O’Neill admitted that NOW had been caught off guard by the inclusion of Stupak/Pitt into 3962, but is now in the process of rolling out a full campaign to support HR 676.  

It was a full weekend of heavy-duty analysis of the issue with numerous strategy sessions that included all participants.  The most often heard words were “going forward”. The conference ended with  unanimous agreement that true health care reform should be considered the 21st century human and civil rights issue.  

Would you forget if somebody gave you a million?

17 Tuesday Nov 2009

Posted by Michael Bersin in Uncategorized

≈ 2 Comments

Tags

Big Oil contributions, LCV, League of Conservation Voters, missouri, Roy Blunt

Roy Blunt is annoyed with the League of Conservation Voters. How dare they air that “stain” TV ad telling the truth about the million Big Oil bucks he’s accepted. He called it sneaky tactics:

The money you can spend on ads like this are unlimited, so it’s an interesting way to kind of get around the campaign finance law…

It’s a way to violate – it’s a way to get around the campaign finance laws.

What, like he wouldn’t stoop to doing that? Only the first chance he gets.

Here’s hoping LCV’s response in a radio ad raised his blood pressure–and educated some Missourians about the way he votes for Big Oil subsidies and against tax credits for wind and solar:

Listen.

Go ahead, Roy, tell us again about how much you love wind and solar power. Maybe it’ll prompt another LCV ad on that topic.

UPDATE: How much do you want to bet Roy Blunt mentions ACORN in his response to this ad? -Clark

shkuntala

17 Tuesday Nov 2009

Posted by Michael Bersin in Uncategorized

≈ Leave a comment

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mrinmai

17 Tuesday Nov 2009

Posted by Michael Bersin in Uncategorized

≈ Leave a comment

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FDL Action Health Care Update: Monday (11/16/09)

17 Tuesday Nov 2009

Posted by Michael Bersin in Uncategorized

≈ Leave a comment

( – promoted by Clark)

Here are the FDL Action health care reform highlights for Monday, November 16.

1. Jon Walker reports that “HR 3962’s Massive Expansion Of Coverage Would Result In Very Small Increase In Health Care Spending.” Walker adds, “Despite the Republican talking point, it is not some liberal overreach-this reform bill is extremely modest reform that leaves statue quo mostly unchanged.”

2. Jane Hamsher requests that we “[a]sk Sherrod Brown to save us from PhRMA and the Eshoo/Hagan/ lobbyist-written biologics legislation HERE.”

3. I blog about a story on My Left Nutmeg, which has a rabbi telling Joe Lieberman with regard to health care reform and the public option, “Do not stand idly by the blood of your neighbors.” The rabbi also asks Senator Lieberman, “what is it that you stand for?” That’s an easy one: Joe Lieberman stands for Joe Lieberman, not for the people of Connecticut, on this crucial issue.

4. Jon Walker blogs about a report in the New York Times that “the drug companies have dramatically jacked up the prices of their medications this year to lock in profits before reform starts.” Wonderful, huh? As Walker puts it, “there goes your magic savings from the PhRMA deal.” Ugh.

5. Michael Whitney reports that “Rep. Sheila Jackson Lee (TX-18) will oppose a final health care bill that has triggers or that allows states to opt out of the public option – with an asterisk.” The “asterisk” is that she would “allow states to opt-out only if they did provided ‘a more progressive option’ offered at the state level.” Sounds reasonable to me.

6. Jane Hamsher asks “What do you do when you’re busted spamming the Congressional Record?” Easy: “Raise Drug Prices!” As Hamsher notes, that takes “some serious stones”.

7. I report on the teabaggers in Virginia backing off their plans to burn Nancy Pelosi and Tom Perriello in effigy for supporting health care reform. It turns out, they were scared off by bloggers like Blue Virginia and Firedoglake. Are we “liberal bloggers” really that scary to big, bad tea partiers?  Apparently so!

8. Jon Walker writes that the Senate health care debate is expected to start on November 30, which obviously “does not leave the Senate a lot of time to finish up amending the bill before Christmas.” Are we going to miss another deadline on getting a health care reform bill to President Obama’s desk for signature? It’s starting to look that way, unfortunately.

9. Jon Walker says that Sen. Tom Carper of Delaware “thinks Democrats should embrace Snowe’s worthless trigger,” and predicts that “Senate Democrats are going to rue that day if they sellout the over 80% of their base that supports a public option in order to win the support of one single Republican.” And that’s not even counting Joe Lieberman! Heh.

Hunger in America: A shocking and disturbing statistic

17 Tuesday Nov 2009

Posted by Michael Bersin in Uncategorized

≈ 1 Comment

Tags

Food Security, hunger, poverty, Somerset Maugham, USDA

One of the books that shaped my outlook and the person I eventually became was Of Human Bondage by W. Somerset Maugnam. A lot of people list that book as one of those that shaped them, but I have yet to meet a person who was affected by it in the same way I was, and by the same minor character. Indeed, many people don’t even remember the character Fanny Price. But she is the character I remember best…

Then one morning when he was going out, the concierge called out to him that there was a letter. Nobody wrote to him but his Aunt Louisa and sometimes Hayward, and this was a handwriting he did not know. The letter was as follows:

Please come at once when you get this. I couldn’t put up with it any more. Please come yourself. I can’t bear the thought that anyone else should touch me. I want you to have everything.

F. Price

I have not had anything to eat for three days.

Philip felt on a sudden sick with fear. He hurried to the house in which she lived. He was astonished that she was in Paris at all. He had not seen her for months and imagined she had long since returned to England. When he arrived he asked the concierge whether she was in.

“Yes, I’ve not seen her go out for two days.”

Philip ran upstairs and knocked at the door. There was no reply. He called her name. The door was locked, and on bending down he found the key was in the lock…

“Oh, my God, I hope she hasn’t done something awful,” he cried aloud.

He ran down and told the porter that she was certainly in the room. He had had a letter from her and feared a terrible accident. He suggested breaking open the door. The porter, who had been sullen and disinclined to listen, became alarmed; he could not take the responsibility of breaking into the room; they must go for the commissaire de police. They walked together to the bureau, and then they fetched a locksmith. Philip found that Miss Price had not paid the last quarter’s rent: on New Year’s Day she had not given the concierge the present which old-established custom led him to regard as a right. The four of them went upstairs, and they knocked again at the door. There was no reply. The locksmith set to work, and at last they entered the room. Philip gave a cry and instinctively covered his eyes with his hands. The wretched woman was hanging with a rope round her neck, which she had tied to a hook in the ceiling fixed by some previous tenant to hold up the curtains of the bed. She had moved her own little bed out of the way and had stood on a chair, which had been kicked away. it was lying on its side on the floor. They cut her down. The body was quite cold…

…The story which Philip made out in one way and another was terrible. One of the grievances of the women-students was that Fanny Price would never share their gay meals in restaurants, and the reason was obvious: she had been oppressed by dire poverty. He remembered the luncheon they had eaten together when first he came to Paris and the ghoulish appetite which had disgusted him: he realised now that she ate in that manner because she was ravenous. The concierge told him what her food had consisted of. A bottle of milk was left for her every day and she brought in her own loaf of bread; she ate half the loaf and drank half the milk at mid-day when she came back from the school, and consumed the rest in the evening. It was the same day after day. Philip thought with anguish of what she must have endured. She had never given anyone to understand that she was poorer than the rest, but it was clear that her money had been coming to an end, and at last she could not afford to come any more to the studio. The little room was almost bare of furniture, and there were no other clothes than the shabby brown dress she had always worn. Philip searched among her things for the address of some friend with whom he could communicate. He found a piece of paper on which his own name was written a score of times. It gave him a peculiar shock. He supposed it was true that she had loved him; he thought of the emaciated body, in the brown dress, hanging from the nail in the ceiling; and he shuddered. But if she had cared for him why did she not let him help her? He would so gladly have done all he could. He felt remorseful because he had refused to see that she looked upon him with any particular feeling, and now these words in her letter were infinitely pathetic: I can’t bear the thought that anyone else should touch me. She had died of starvation.

That scene from that book haunted me when I read it the first time at about 13 or 14, and it never stopped haunting me. Because Somerset Maugham painted that image in my young mind all those years ago, I have never stopped living by the dictum “feed the hungry.” So far as I am concerned, that is a commandment that must not be broken.

Hunger is not a motivator. Hunger is a scourge. A scourge for which there is no excuse in this country. When I read in today’s New York Times, while reaching for a second Biscotti, that hunger in the United States is at the highest point it has been since the Department of Agriculture started indexing the food security of Americans in 1995, according to a report released today.

The number of Americans who lacked reliable access to sufficient food shot up last year to its highest point since the government began surveying in 1995, the Agriculture Department reported on Monday.

In its annual report on hunger, the department said that 17 million American households, or 14.6 percent of the total, “had difficulty putting enough food on the table at times during the year.” That was an increase from 13 million households, or 11.1 percent, the previous year.

The results provided a more human sense of the costs of a recession that has officially ended but continues to take a daily toll on households; it describes the plight not of a faceless General Motors or A.I.G. but of families with too little food on their children’s plates.

Indeed, while children are usually shielded from the worst effects of deprivation, many more were affected last year than the year before. The number of households in which both adults and children experienced “very low food security” rose by more than half, to 506,000 in 2008 from 323,000 in 2007, according to the report.

Overall, one-third of all the families that are affected by hunger, or 6.7 million households, were classified as having very low food security, meaning that members of the household had too little to eat or saw their eating habits disrupted during 2008. That was 2 million households more than in 2007.

Unconscionable.

There is something deeply, fundamentally wrong when so many people in this, the richest nation in the world, have so little security in the knowledge of where their next meal is coming from.

Crossposted from They Gave Us a Republic  

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