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Monthly Archives: March 2014

Chesterfield Resident Concerned and Disappointed with Monarch Board’s Budget Excesses and Cronyism

26 Wednesday Mar 2014

Posted by Michael Bersin in Uncategorized

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As a Chesterfield resident for 27 years served by the tax-payer supported Monarch Fire Protection District in St. Louis County, I am very concerned by what I observe to be questionable management and political cronyism by the Monarch Board of Directors.

On Thursday, March 13, citizens learned that the Monarch Fire Protection District exceeded its 2013 budget by $725,000 that includes more than $400,000 for legal fees and board member indemnification insurance, a type of insurance no other fire district board in greater St. Louis has felt the need to acquire.

This overage amount includes about $230,000 in fees paid to two attorneys who contributed cash to the Board election campaigns of Monarch Board President Robin Harris and Board Secretary Jane Cunningham.

This political cronyism is one reason why the Monarch District is woefully over budget and many Chesterfield citizens are outraged.

It is important to note that all Monarch Fire Protection District budget items in 2013 managed by Monarch fire chief officers — not by the Board — were under budget, including for building maintenance, overtime and firefighter/paramedic salaries.

In announcing on March 19 that she will not run for the post of St. Louis County Executive, Ms. Cunningham said the District has “made major strides in cleaning up a fire district badly in need of it” since she was elected to the board last year. Ms. Cunningham is taking credit for improvements and cost efficiency that Monarch Firefighters/Paramedics initiated before she was elected to the board, including for worker’s compensation claims.

In truth, worker’s compensation claims in the Monarch Fire Protection District have significantly decreased since 2010 — from 49 total claims in 2010 to 43 total claims in 2012 – with comparative reductions in related total costs totaling $730,338 – a cost reduction of more than 63 percent.

Moreover, as of May 15, 2013, Monarch’s total worker’s compensation premium costs declined by more than 15 percent compared to those in 2012 while, at many other fire protection districts in greater St. Louis, premium costs skyrocketed. In another local fire protection district, for example, total worker’s compensation premium costs increased by more than 67 percent in the comparable period for 2012 and May 2013. (Source: MoFAD data for 2012-2013). These and other improvements occurred after the April 2011 Monarch board election, when Steve Swyers was elected to the board and he began to introduce new policies and programs.

As a St. Louis County citizen who relies on emergency services bravely provided by District firefighters and paramedics, who respond to more than 6,500 emergency calls per year, I am concerned and disappointed with the Board’s current budget excesses and cronyism politics.  

When I learned that the Monarch board exceeded its 2013 budget by $725,000 including money to pay for the services of lawyers who donated to both Cunningham’s and Harris’ election campaigns, I began to wonder how these elected officials — who claim to serve to our citizens with integrity — can validate the need for expenditures including for obvious “political payback.”  

In response to the District’s $725,000 budget overage, Ms. Cunningham used Twitter to simply announce “Tax revenues down in county. Monarch leaders committed to calling on staff to join us in finding savings to live within our means.”

That is a paltry explanation. Perhaps Ms. Cunningham is too busy to respond to voters who elected her to the Monarch Fire Protection District Board. After all, she admits she is now seriously considering running for the state Senate in Missouri’s 26th District.

Before running for another political office, Ms. Cunningham should address the political cronyism and budget excesses that voters will remember as her legacy at the Monarch Fire Protection District.

Russell Lake                                                                                                                                                                                Chesterfield, Missouri

Campaign Finance: paying for all those HRCC robocalls

26 Wednesday Mar 2014

Posted by Michael Bersin in Uncategorized

≈ 1 Comment

Tags

campaign finance, HRCC, missouri, Missouri Ethics Commission

Evidently it’s time to ante up.

Today, at the Missouri Ethics Commission:

C091068 03/26/2014 HOUSE REPUBLICAN CAMPAIGN COMMITTEE, INC Citizens For Morris PO Box 992 Ozark MO 65721 3/25/2014 $5,000.10

C091068 03/26/2014 HOUSE REPUBLICAN CAMPAIGN COMMITTEE, INC Friends To Elect Bill Lant 845 Elk River Rd Pineville MO 64856 3/25/2014 $5,000.01

C091068 03/26/2014 HOUSE REPUBLICAN CAMPAIGN COMMITTEE, INC Friends Of Jay Barnes 219 E Dunklin St Suite A Jefferson City MO 65101 3/25/2014 $5,001.00

C091068 03/26/2014 HOUSE REPUBLICAN CAMPAIGN COMMITTEE, INC Citizens To Elect Susan Allen 702 Willow Spring Hill Ct Chesterfield MO 63017 3/25/2014 $5,000.01

C091068 03/26/2014 HOUSE REPUBLICAN CAMPAIGN COMMITTEE, INC Citizens For Hinson PO Box 67 St Clair MO 63077 3/25/2014 $5,000.01

C091068 03/26/2014 HOUSE REPUBLICAN CAMPAIGN COMMITTEE, INC Citizens For Rocky Miller PO Box 393 Osage Beach MO 65065 3/25/2014 $5,001.00

C091068 03/26/2014 HOUSE REPUBLICAN CAMPAIGN COMMITTEE, INC Committee To Elect Tom Flanigan PO Box 1034 Carthage MO 64836 3/25/2014 $5,001.00

C091068 03/26/2014 HOUSE REPUBLICAN CAMPAIGN COMMITTEE, INC Missouri For Charlie Davis 1624 Lakeview Drive Webb City MO 64870 3/25/2014 $7,500.00

C091068 03/26/2014 HOUSE REPUBLICAN CAMPAIGN COMMITTEE, INC Friends Of Donna Lichtenegger PO Box 406 Jackson MO 63755 3/25/2014 $8,000.00

C091068 03/26/2014 HOUSE REPUBLICAN CAMPAIGN COMMITTEE, INC People For Solon 2402 Stonecreek Ct Blue Springs MO 64015 3/25/2014 $10,000.00

C091068 03/26/2014 HOUSE REPUBLICAN CAMPAIGN COMMITTEE, INC Missourians For Mike Cierpiot 214 Landings Circle Lees Summit MO 64064 3/25/2014 $10,000.00

C091068 03/26/2014 HOUSE REPUBLICAN CAMPAIGN COMMITTEE, INC Friends Of Todd Richardson PO Box 310 Poplar Bluff MO 63902 3/25/2014 $10,000.00

C091068 03/26/2014 HOUSE REPUBLICAN CAMPAIGN COMMITTEE, INC Friends Of Diehl 2404 White Stable Road Town Country MO 63131 3/25/2014 $100,000.00

[emphasis added]

The funny part will be when they all say, “HRCC? What HRCC? I’ve never heard of such a thing…”

Plus ça change, plus c’est la même chose. You can bet $100,000.00 on it.

Rep. Vicky Hartzler (r): maybe we should all find a different hobby

26 Wednesday Mar 2014

Posted by Michael Bersin in Uncategorized

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Tags

4th Congressional District, ACA, corporate personhood, missouri, Obamacare, religious exception, right wingnuts, Supreme Court, Vicky Hartzler

Today, via Twitter, Representative Vicky Hartzler (r) weighed in on corporations holding religious beliefs:

Rep. Vicky Hartzler ‏@RepHartzler

At #SCOTUS to stand w/ the Green family to run their businesses w/o government forcing them to violate their faith.[….]8:33 AM – 25 Mar 2014

Uh, if a corporation doesn’t believe in blood transfusions does that mean they can’t be covered by their employees’ health insurance policy? If a corporation is pacifist and it doesn’t want to pay for a war does it have to pay taxes? Just asking.

Interesting. Representative Hartzler (r) isn’t too busy to hang out at the Supreme Court, but was maybe too busy to hold open town halls in the district during the last legislative break?

Someone else noticed:

curtis whitworth ‏@curtiswhitworth

@RepHartzler nothing like a photo op to play to your religious base. I can’t wait to vote you out. 8:37 AM – 25 Mar 2014

That was within four minutes.

And, within five minutes:

Cody Welton ‏@acoupstick

@RepHartzler CORPORATIONS ARE NOT PEOPLE!!!! Stop undermining the rights of actual, real people. #howmucharetheypayingyou 8:38 AM – 25 Mar 2014

Oh, by the way:

Cody Welton ‏@acoupstick

@RepHartzler by the way, abortifacients are not actually a medically or scientifically recognized thing. Please feel free to join reality. 8:43 AM – 25 Mar 2014

“You keep using that word. I do not think it means what you think it means”:  

Huk ‏@hukolac

@RepHartzler As the Princess Bride would say: http://bit.ly/1h6vcXn 12:08 PM – 25 Mar 2014

 

2014 Candidates for Congress – March 25, 2014

26 Wednesday Mar 2014

Posted by Michael Bersin in Uncategorized

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Tags

2014, candidates, Congress, missouri

Previously:

2014 Candidates for Congress – March 19, 2014 (March 19, 2014)

2014 Candidates for Congress – March 21, 2014 (March 22, 2014)

The candidate filing deadline was 5:00 p.m. today.

The filed candidates (in italics), for now:

U.S. Representative – District 1

Democratic

Lacy Clay

Republican

Martin D. Baker

Daniel J. Elder

David Koehr

Libertarian

Robb E Cunningham

U.S. Representative – District 2

Democratic

Arthur Lieber

Republican

Ann Wagner

Libertarian

Bill Slantz

U.S. Representative – District 3

Democratic

Velma Steinman

Courtney Denton

Republican

Leonard Steinman

Blaine Luetkemeyer

John Morris

Joe Frost

Libertarian

Steven Hedrick

U.S. Representative – District 4

Democratic

Jim White

Nate Irvin

Republican

Vicky Hartzler

John Webb

Libertarian

Randall (Randy) Langkraehr

Herschel L. Young

U.S. Representative – District 5

Democratic

Mark S Memoly

Emanuel Cleaver II

Bob Gough

Eric Holmes

Charles Lindsey

Republican

Bill Lindsey

Berton A. Knox

Samuel Alao

Michael Burris

Jacob Turk

Libertarian

Roy Welborn

U.S. Representative – District 6

Democratic

W. A. (Bill) Hedge

Edward Dwayne Fields

Gary Lynn Crose

Republican

Kyle Reid

Brian L. Tharp

Sam Graves

Christopher Ryan

Libertarian

Russ Monchil

U.S. Representative – District 7

Democratic

Genevieve Williams

Jim Evans

Republican

Marshall Works

Billy Long

Libertarian

Kevin Craig

U.S. Representative – District 8

Democratic

Barbara Stocker

Republican

Jason Smith

Libertarian

Rick Vandeven

Constitution

Doug Enyart

In case you were wondering, twenty-two republicans, seventeen Democrats, nine Libertarians, and one individual from the Constitution Party have filed in Missouri as candidates for Congress.

Jacob Turk (r) must have saved all those large campaign signs from 2012.

HB 2174: Guns, check. Sort of nullification, check.

25 Tuesday Mar 2014

Posted by Michael Bersin in Uncategorized

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Chuck Gatschenberger, General Assembly, guns, HB 2174, missouri

A bill, filled today by Representative Chuck Gatschenberger (r):

SECOND REGULAR SESSION

HOUSE BILL NO. 2174

97TH GENERAL ASSEMBLY

INTRODUCED BY REPRESENTATIVE GATSCHENBERGER.

6406H.02I   D. ADAM CRUMBLISS, Chief Clerk

AN ACT

To amend chapter 571, RSMo, by adding thereto one new section relating to the enforcement of federal executive actions.

Be it enacted by the General Assembly of the state of Missouri, as follows:

           Section A. Chapter 571, RSMo, is amended by adding thereto one new section, to be known as section 571.145, to read as follows:

           571.145. 1. No federal executive action issued by the President of the United States including, but not limited to, executive orders, memorandums, proclamations, or signing statements not specifically appropriated by the United States Congress shall compel the state of Missouri to expend any of its own funds or commandeer any of its own employees or designees to enforce such executive actions.

           2. Any existing or proposed federal executive action described in subsection 1 of this section that infringes upon the second amendment of the Constitution of the United States or article I, section 23 of the Constitution of Missouri, as interpreted by the United States Supreme Court or the Missouri supreme court, shall have no force and effect, and no funds shall be appropriated by this state, and no employees or designees of this state shall be required or permitted to promulgate or enforce such executive actions.

[emphasis in original]

Representative Chuck Gatschenbereger (r), working to keep Missouri safe from whatever.

Or, maybe it’s a requirement when you file to run for the state senate:

UNOFFICIAL Candidate Filing List

Primary

State Senator – District 2

Republican Name Mailing Address Random Number Date Filed

Bob Onder 2090 KEY HARBOUR DR LAKE ST LOUIS MO 63367 80 2/25/2014

Vicki Schneider 429 N MAIN ST O FALLON MO 63366 116 2/25/2014

Chuck Gatschenberger 2491 FOXBRIDGE CT LAKE ST LOUIS MO 63367 477 2/25/2014

Yeah, that’s probably it. No one in the Missouri General Assembly ever files a bill for the express purpose of wasting time and effort. Oh, wait…

Campaign Finance: Accumulating campaign funds…

25 Tuesday Mar 2014

Posted by Michael Bersin in Uncategorized

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2016, campaign finance, Catherine Hanaway, governor, missouri, Missouri Ethics Commission

…in ten thousand dollar increments appears to be the norm.

Today, at the Missouri Ethics Commission:

C141055 03/25/2014 HANAWAY FOR GOVERNOR D John Sauer 9172 Robin Ct St Louis MO 63144 Requested Requested 3/24/2014 $20,000.00

[emphasis added]

We didn’t get a memo about that.

Previously: Campaign Finance: lining up that all important grassroots support… (March 15, 2014)

2016 has been here for a while

25 Tuesday Mar 2014

Posted by Michael Bersin in Uncategorized

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2016, bumper sticker, Hillary, missouri, president

Yesterday, on a vehicle in west central Missouri:

Ready for Hillary.

Interestingly, we’ve yet to see a Jeb Bush bumper sticker.

Campaign Finance: best friends forever

24 Monday Mar 2014

Posted by Michael Bersin in Uncategorized

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Tags

campaign finance, missouri, Missouri Ethics Commission

What friendship means, at the Missouri Ethics Commission:

C141108 03/22/2014 FRIENDS OF GINA JAKSETIC Friends of Rick Stream 1229 Lockett Lane Kirkwood MO 63122 3/20/2014 $10,000.00

C131098 03/24/2014 FRIENDS OF THE 8TH CONGRESSIONAL DISTRICT Friends of Tilley 100 S Jackson Perryville MO 63775 3/24/2014 $10,000.00

[emphasis added]

$10,000.00 is a might friendly.

Have you ever wondered why no one uses “Mortal Enemies of” in their committee name?

Attorney General Chris Koster (D) in Warrensburg – March 22, 2014

23 Sunday Mar 2014

Posted by Michael Bersin in Uncategorized

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2014, 2016, Attorney General, Chris Koster, governor, missouri, Warrensburg

Johnson County Democrats held their annual James Kirkpatrick Dinner in Warrensburg on Saturday evening, this year honoring former Johnson County Collector and former State Representative Deleta Williams for her service to the community. Attorney General Chris Koster (D) was the keynote speaker. There were about two hundred fifty people attending the event.

The transcript of Attorney General Koster’s remarks:

Attorney General Chris Koster (D): ….I’m gonna give a little bit of a nonpartisan talk tonight. Um, even though we’re in a Democratic room, partially because I’ve spoken so many times to all of you before, uh, and there, I’ve so many dear friends in the room, not just friends, but dear friends, and partially because I want to be somewhat informative about what is occurring in our state these days and some of the challenges that we face.

You know, what is the Attorney General’s job? It’s a fairly opaque, uh, title sometimes. And it, I like to think of it as, as something that is different than just a political job. The Attorney General is the general counsel of the corporation that is the State of Missouri. I fell in love with this job and saw the potential of it back when I was about twenty-four years old. I interned there as a law student. Uh, and fell in love with the history of the office. And whether it be on the Democratic side or the, or on the Republican side this, this office had enormous history to it. Tom Eagleton had served in that position from nineteen sixty to sixty-four, Jack Danforth from nineteen sixty-eight to nineteen seventy-six, and now, for sixteen years prior to my tenure there, Jay Nixon occupied the, the highest law enforcement office, uh, in the State of Missouri…

Attorney General Chris Koster (D), the keynote speaker at the annual James Kirkpatrick Dinner in

Warrensburg on March 22, 2014, visiting after the dinner.

…And as general counsel it, it plays an important role in the administration of our state. We don’t think of the State of Missouri as a corporation, but in a sense it has aspects of that. There are twenty-seven billion dollars in state revenues that come in, so Joe [Dandurand] and I serve as general counsel to a corporation that is about as large as Anheuser Busch is in their global revenue structure, twenty-seven billion dollars. State of Missouri has about sixty-five thousand employees, so that puts it on a par just a little bit behind Enterprise Leasing in terms of how many employees they have throughout North America. But we have, rather than, these corporations that do one thing, very well and concentrate on one single topic like selling beer or renting cars, the State of Missouri, our corporation, the corporation that we are all shareholders of, this corporation is involved in every aspect of our human existence. And it is enormously complicated when you compare it to companies that do one thing well.

We insure the lives, for example, of eight hundred thousand citizens and provide them health care. To the other end of the extreme, we incarcerate thirty thousand individuals. We operate thirteen four year universities and twenty community colleges, and five hundred and sixty-five school districts. And we are involved in every other aspect of life, economic development, agricultural policy, banking regulation. It’s an enormously wondrous and complicated task.

And like, you would think that when you have a corporation that is that complicated what you would really like is a board of directors that is very unified and highly educated on the task at hand [laughter] , but we don’t have that. [laughter]  We operate under the General Assembly [laughter] which fights, unfortunately, like cats and dogs from time to time.

And as soon as people these days, unlike when Deleta [Williams], uh, served there, or when, uh, Harold Caskey served there, today we operate under a new rule, which I think is, is very, is a great disservice to the people of our state, that as soon as people really learn the task at hand we make them leave. We have people who are terming out of office in Jefferson City who, who came in at the age of twenty-four, which is the youngest age that you can serve in the State of Missouri. We have people who are terming out at the age of thirty-two. We are throwing them out of office. So it is a, it’s a tragedy that as soon as, basically, as soon as people learn the difference between Medicare and Medicaid [laughter] and a few more other things about state government they have to go back home. And hopefully in the future we will change that.

Joe Dandurand and I have a chance to, uh, work on two kinds of problems, in my mind. We work on hard problems and really, really hard problems. [laughter] The hard problems are the ones that you don’t read a lot about but they are the typical daily grind of government, constitutional officers who are fighting, employment problems within, uh, various parts of the government, lawsuits that, uh, we are involved in of importance against Walgreens, uh, or against a giant landfill company in, in St. Louis. These are the normal routines of politics and of government.

But what we really need to concentrate on, and this is what I have come here tonight to, to speak briefly about, are the ten year problems that face this state and face all of us as a greater community. The ten year problems that we don’t have the answers to today, but over the next decade, are going to change the trajectory of this state for the next fifty years.

Problems like a broken urban education system. We have two failed, two of our largest, two of the largest three school districts in the State of Missouri, which are Kansas City, St. Louis City, and Springfield, three largest school districts, two of those school districts are today in a failed status, are unaccredited. And when we look around the country we know that there is not one failed urban school district anywhere in the country that has ever turned itself around by itself. And so we need to ask ourselves as a state over the next ten years, how are we going to put these school districts back on a path of success.

There are organizations, we can never leave behind the public school system that we cherish and embrace, but there’s no one answer that is going to raise these public school systems up in the future. There are many little answers that are going to solve this problem.

I don’t know how many of you have ever visited the KIPP schools that we have in St. Louis and Kansas City. Remarkable institutions. These KIPP schools, the children at, a, uh, arrive at school at seven thirty in the morning and when other children leave at three thirty in the afternoon, these children stay until five p.m. They go to school from seven thirty to five p.m. and they go to school on Saturdays. And they go to Summer school as a matter of a routine. These success models that we are seeing where these KIPP schools have taken really underprivileged children, children who are either proficient or advanced, only nineteen percent of them are proficient or advanced when they enter these schools. By the time they go from the fifth grade to the eighth grade they’re competing with the very best students and the very best school districts in the entire State of Missouri. And so the question of education, we’ll have to ask ourselves, over the next ten years, whether these single institutions that exist now in Kansas City and St. Louis and educate one percent of children, will over ten years begin to scale up and educate not one percent, but ten percent, and whether their scores can be added back into these districts, and these districts can be saved for the first time in a generation.

We’re gonna look at problems like the problems that face the Missouri Department of Transportation. We passed, um, Proposition 2 about ten years ago. And now all the money that, uh, came into the Missouri Department of Transportation as a result of Proposition 2 is gone. And a budget that used to be one point four billion dollars a year to repave and build new roads in our state has dwindled to a mere three hundred and fifty, four hundred million dollars a year. My friends, we can’t even keep the roads that we have today going at that level. Now the Republican Party in Jefferson City has been so afraid of this issue that they haven’t found any way to begin to fund MoDOT again for the future. They are afraid to look at any revenue plan to save our roads. But our economic development future depends on us, all of us, Democrats and Republicans, finding an answer to this question. And it is a seven hundred million a year problem. And so in the future we’re gonna have to find an answer to the question of how do we get that seven hundred million dollars back into Jefferson City. Our economic development future depends on it. And it will come from some combination of toll roads, gasoline tax, and sales tax. And all of us, Democrats and Republicans, are gonna have to go out there and find compromise and find a solution for the future.

And there are principles that are gonna face us that are in, core to Democratic movement, like standing up against right to work over the next ten years. [applause] Let me tell you a brief story about how critical this issue is to the future of our state. Because what the Republicans are proposing is simply taking the wages of working people and reducing them dramatically. That’s the goal here. The goal is to take working people’s wages and reduce them.

If you go up to Holt County, north of us here, little bit northwest, you come to a Missouri town on Highway One Fifty-nine called Fortescue, Missouri. And Highway One Fifty-nine runs from east to west across the river there, across the Missouri River into a town called Rulo, Nebraska. There’s a bridge that goes across the Missouri River there. It’s an old, the old bridge, the old Rulo Bridge was pull, put up in about nineteen thirty. If you ever saw the movie Paper Moon you’ve seen the Rulo Bridge. Tatum O’Neal and Ryan O’Neal cross it an old car time and time again. The old Rulo Bridge gave out about ten years ago and I think in about two thousand and ten , about six hundred feet to the south of the old Rulo Bridge, a new bridge was put up. It was built by laborers from Missouri and from Nebraska. And the two ends of the bridge started from the two respective states. Missouri, as you know, is not a right to work state and Nebraska is. If you go and look at the wage sheets for the laborers in those two states back during that time, the wage rates that laborers made in each of those two states, you’d find that the laborers who built that bridge out from the Missouri side made thirty-one dollars and fifty cents an hour. But the wage rate in Nebraska for laborers at that time was about eight dollars and fifty-three cents an hour. Now, you can imagine what happens when two communities value the work of a man or a woman’s hands so differently. Two men, two groups of men building that bridge out from two different states, symbolically the meet in the middle, and they look at each other and they know that their lives are very, very different. A thirty-one dollar an hour worker, an eight dollar an hour worker, those are two different pension plans, two different plans for retirement. Those are two very different ideas about health care, how to keep a family together. Those are two different hopes for education for their children. And let’s be honest with one another, those are two different marriages because a thirty-one dollar an hour worker’s gonna have a different marriage than an eight dollar and fifty cent worker. It’s just a tougher life that those in Nebraska have to face.

Missouri has always valued the work of our laborer’s hands throughout the building trades. Our job in Jefferson City is to deliver to the future of this state a Missouri that is as strong and a working life that is as strong as the state that was delivered to us. That’s why Joe [Dandurand] and I go to work every day. That’s why we work hard on these problems, to stand up for the way of life that we have come to know and appreciate, and that we desperately want to pass forward to future generations.

So, these are the principles that we as the Democratic Party stand up for, these are the principles that we intend to hold high, and that we intend to win with in the future.

So I thank you for your friendship, I thank you coming and honoring my friends who so, uh, have richly in, uh, enriched this, this county, and this area of the state, and, and our state as a whole. It’s good to be back in Warrensburg and in, uh, Johnson County with so many friends I hold dear. Thank you everyone. [applause]

A supporter arranged to display a modified 4 x 8 campaign sign at the annual James Kirkpatrick Dinner in Warrensburg.

Rep. Vicky Hartzler (r): Two years ago I couldn’t spell ‘engineer’, now I are one.

23 Sunday Mar 2014

Posted by Michael Bersin in Uncategorized

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Tags

4th Congressional District, Internet, missouri, Twitter, Vicky Hartzler

This morning, via Twitter:

Rep. Vicky Hartzler ‏@RepHartzler

Why is the United States giving up control of the Internet?! It’s a solution looking for a problem & jeopardizes something that is working. 6:16 AM – 23 Mar 2014

And, a critical reply:

Politicallulz ‏@politicallulz

@RepHartzler I suggest you learn about how the DNS system works then come back and parrot your alarmist bullshit. 8:17 AM – 23 Mar 2014

From The Telegraph:

US government to relinquish control of Internet address system

The US Commerce Department will hand over control of the Internet’s domain name system to a ‘multi-stakeholder’ community

By Sophie Curtis

10:39AM GMT 17 Mar 2014

….Strickling and ICANN’s board chair Dr Stephen Crocker both insist the US government’s role in coordinating the Internet’s domain name system was always temporary, and the intention has always been for the private sector to take over DNS management when the time was right.

“Even though ICANN will continue to perform these vital technical functions, the US has long envisioned the day when stewardship over them would be transitioned to the global community,” said Crocker. “In other words, we have all long known the destination. Now it is up to our global stakeholder community to determine the best route to get us there.”

The announcement has been welcomed by the leaders of the Internet technical organisations responsible for coordination of the Internet infrastructure, who said in a joint statement that the strength and stability of these functions are “critical to the operation of the Internet”….

From Think Progress:

Why The U.S. Is Giving Up Control Of The Internet Domain Name System

By Lauren C. Williams on March 17, 2014 at 5:02 pm

….The announcement from the U.S. Department of Commerce’s National Telecommunications and Information Administration (NTIA) on Friday marks the final step in a plan proposed in 1997 to shift ICANN to global control….

Run for the hills, the Skynet is falling…

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