Friday, February 13, 2015

Governor Kitzhaber Resigns

One of the best dialogue exchanges from one of the best movies goes like this:
Rick (the club owner): How can you close me up?  On what grounds?
Captain Renault (police chief):  I’m shocked, shocked to find that gambling is going on here!
Casino manager (to Renault):  Your winnings, sir.
Why did this jump to mind when I heard of Oregon Governor Kitzhaber’s resignation this afternoon?  The contexts certainly aren’t glaringly analogous. I think it has to do with the cynicism that so often comes with the reasons given for holding public people to account.  So am I saying Rick’s cafe should have been shut down?  No, the reasons were a pretext.  How about the Governor?  Is the hue and cry just a pretext?  No, the guy’s gotta go.


I am not the Governor’s best friend as can be divined from my blog.  Neither am I shocked and appalled that a public official could allow himself to so egregiously betray the public trust.  I’ve seen far more sordid examples of public disgrace.  On a scale of one to ten, failing to keep his girlfriend on a shorter leash isn’t even on the radar compared to the execrable behavior of any number of mighty personages who have fallen.  


So why hang the poor guy out to dry?  Don’t take it so hard, John.  It’s not you.   But in government, ethics matters.  Not to say that ethics is - or ever was - the absolute touchstone of government.  But when the fault is obvious, glaring, and fundamentally contrary to the public interest, the latitude for lenience narrows to about zero.  A corrupt government can not serve the people.  It’s not a question of relatively how dirty the Governor’s hands are. This is a seasoned political operative who knows. He knew the conflict of interest and he knew what Cylvia was doing.  Instead of being a steward of the public interest, Kitzhaber was a party to using personal power illegally for personal gain.  Sounds extreme: wasn’t he abetting the looting of the treasury?

So, good call, John.  The resignation takes effect 10 a.m., February 18, 2015.


What’s the aftermath?  Well, it’s never good when the President, Governor, Mayor, CEO etc. is booted out of office. Political capital and prestige also matter for the parent country/state/city/corporation, etc.  Such a disaster certainly slows momentum or unseats one from the high ground.  I imagine it plays hell with bond ratings and stock values.

But we have a constitution so even a high-profile and popular governor is not irreplaceable. In Oregon, succession to the governorship goes to the Secretary of State and that is Kate Brown. I voted for her for that office.  She’s been proficient and effective in a low-profile job.  I wish her the best  in her new position.

Monday, February 9, 2015

Richmond will not go quietly.

This is not the song of the Richmond that fell the night they drove ol’ Dixie down.  There is a Richmond on the left coast in a working class stronghold, on the other shore of the San Francisco Bay, where it stands shoulder-to-shoulder with Berkeley and Oakland. Richmond keeps popping up on the radar for the unlikeliest of reasons.


Bill Moyers says that Chevron has treated Richmond like “a company town.”  We learned about those in high school when we studied the Robber Barons and the Gilded Age.  A company town was built in an urban or rural wilderness when some valuable resource was identified (location, trained labor, natural resource) and the company had to provide infrastructure to sustain a workforce to extract or exploit that resource.  Texaco - since bought out by Chevron - built a huge refinery in Richmond. The refinery has been the largest employer and taxpayer in Richmond for decades. Chevron is the third largest company in the world.  They were in the news in 2012 when a  fire at the refinery poured toxic smoke into the air which drove 15000 area residents to the hospitals with respiratory ailments.



Labor Notes  describes Chevron’s annoyance when confronted by organized local candidates who thought that Chevron should be more responsible for its effects:  global and local pollution, hazards to workers and residents, emission of greenhouse gasses.  
In addition, the city was suing for damages caused by the fire, including plummeting property values. Chevron wanted pliable people in office, people who would give the company a cheap settlement.


Chevron took a lot of heat for attempting to buy the election.  Their response to the criticism was to throw more money.  They lost and the radical weirdos (RPA - Richmond Progressive Alliance) won.  Chevron spent about $150 for every vote cast, outspending RPA  15 to 1.  


Richmond is also not shy about getting in the face of the financial players that arguably precipitated the 2008 economic meltdown.  San Francisco may continue where Richmond left off in using municipal powers of eminent domain to buy up and forgive the debt of homeowners whose homes are “underwater” - who can’t refinance their mortgages because the value of their homes has dropped below what they owe on their mortgage.  In spite of battalions of expensive attorneys suing Richmond for their dark design, Richmond, led by then-mayor Gayle McLaughlin  (an erstwhile RPA candidate) was relentlessly on-track.  


The New York Times summarized:
The eminent-domain strategy is not a fabulous idea. Like virtually every other proposal to help homeowners hurt by the housing crash, it tries for simplicity but falters in the face of the enormity of the post-financial-crisis mess, and, as markets improve, it may come too late to make much difference. The plan’s legality and wisdom have been debated in editorials and blog posts, with questions ranging from the true value of the mortgages to whether the chosen homeowners deserve the help.


But to advocates, eminent domain offers perhaps the only chance to remedy the failure of the federal government and mortgage servicers to offer widespread, meaningful relief to the hardest-hit communities.


Mayor McLaughlin’s position was, “The risk that is really confronting us is waiting on the sidelines for the next wave of foreclosures.” She was ready to follow through but the issue became moot:  Housing markets are improving.  Local foreclosure rates are declining.  With the improving economy, many of the previously threatened homeowners are no longer “underwater”. Risk-reward factors no longer pencil out. Richmond called off the council vote that would have implemented the plan.


Extraordinary stats on crime and poverty have, for decades, also tended to raise Richmond’s profile in a tragic way:
For years, the Bay Area city had been battling one of the nation's worst homicide rates and spending millions of dollars on anti-crime programs to no avail. A state senator compared the city to Iraq, and the City Council debated declaring a state of emergency. In September 2006, a man was shot in the face at a funeral for a teenager who had been gunned down two weeks earlier, spurring local clergy to urge city hall to try something new—now. "If you always do what you've always done, you'll always get what you've always gotten," says Andre Shumake Sr., a 56-year-old Baptist minister whose son was shot six times while riding his bicycle. "It was time to do something different."


Chris Magnus, the new police chief - tough and deeply experienced - can take a lot of credit for trying “something different.”  He turned a lot of heads when he held up a sign reading "#blacklivesmatter" during a protest over the deaths of two unarmed black suspects at the hands of Missouri and New York police.  Chief Magnus has dismantled the "street teams," units of heavily armed officers deployed in high-crime areas. His focus on community policing includes “code enforcement, homeless outreach and a shake-up of command duties to build stronger ties to the community ... along with equipping patrol officers with body cameras and a call for more social media communications.”


The numbers are indisputable and moving in the right direction, especially in the rates of murders and shootings.  It may be hard to sort out the reasons for this.
Richmond benefits from a confluence of forces, including improvements in policing strategies and the ONS, along with community groups and faith leaders who conduct frequent "peace walks" in the city's most crime-plagued neighborhoods


The above-mentioned ONS is the most controversial and seemingly wacky approach among all of them.  The city council, after intense debate in the face of a public safety crisis, commissioned DeVonne Boggan to go out and “do something different” and he established Richmond’s Office of Neighborhood Safety.  Critics have called the program  “hugs for thugs,” a softhearted approach that coddles criminals and rewards shooters for their deadly behavior.  This characterization is belied by the technocratic methods and assumptions used in its formulation.   Mother Jones reports:
It has done it with a mix of data mining and mentoring, and by crossing lines that other anti-crime initiatives have only tiptoed around. Four times a year, the program's street team sifts through police records and its own intelligence to determine, with actuarial detachment, the 50 people in Richmond most likely to shoot someone and to be shot themselves. ONS tracks them and approaches the most lethal (and vulnerable) on the list, offering them a spot in a program that includes a stipend to turn their lives around. While ONS is city-funded and has the blessing of the chief of police, it resolutely does not share information with the cops. "It's the only agency where you're required to have a criminal background to be an employee," Boggan jokes.


Quixotically, Richmond is finding ways to struggle out from under a manhole cover of crime, poverty, ignorance and the forces of lots and lots of money who stand to  benefit from such a dismal status quo.  Richmond's confidence and brashness is the very image of pulling one’s self up by his or her bootstraps.   Certainly Richmond must be admired by bold captains of industry and all those fearless and resilient self-made individuals who are ever-ready to define the American way for the rest of us.

Saturday, January 24, 2015

Good News and Bumper Stickers

I have had a crisis of confidence; a long crisis of confidence.  I have not posted to my blog since May 2014.  It was getting harder and harder to post until I finally stopped completely. I hated my blog.  I couldn’t imagine why anyone would read it … it was so .. depressing.  I was searching for - and finding in abundance - bad news.  I found much to deplore in the human condition:  greed, selfishness, cruelty, pettiness, cynicism, and more generally, unfettered malignant intent.  I was not driven by a crusade; primarily I was (still am) driven by a desire for wide readership.  Ostensibly, I was developing a readership as a  vehicle for selling trinkets - bumper stickers, actually.  But the posts were all-me:  sincere and earnest.  There was no artifice in my righteous indignation and that constant exposure to bitterness began to tell.


Remarkably, there is good news to report on social injustice and income inequality and all of that is about the responses of good people in the face of that injustice.  I can blog about that; maybe I won’t feel so bad all of the time.  Maybe more people will read my blog.  Then, while I have their attention, I can sell them bumper stickers.


Didja hear the one about the college administrator that took his $90,000 raise and split it among 24 staffers to raise their pay to $10.25/hr - $3 more than the state’s minimum wage?  This was reported by msnbc on August 6, 2014:


Raymond Burse, the interim president of Kentucky State University, recently gave up more than $90,000 of his salary so 24 employees earning the state’s $7.25 minimum wage could collect $10.25 per hour. The minimum wage rate in Kentucky is the same as the federal amount, which took effect on July 24, 2009.


Wait. Wait. How about this one; this is great.  Remember Occupy Wall Street?  Through their Rolling Jubilee Fund, OWS was able to wipe away $3.9 million of student debt for 2761 students of “Everest College - a “predatory” institution that is helping fuel the $1.2 trillion in total student loan debt in the United States.”  


“We chose Everest because it is the most blatant con job on the higher ed landscape,” the organizers said. “It’s time for all student debtors to get relief from their crushing burden.”


The scheme, which will only work in limited application, is brilliant and cheap.


There’s more - thankfully, much more.  Another taste is the example of Jobs with Justice .  JWJ is a non-profit.  They are, nationally, an umbrella for extremely effective local branches.  The local steering committees monitor the landscape for assaults on the rights of workers.  They use a mailing list to raise a crowd of demonstrators, at a moments notice, to show up at work sites, picket lines, courtrooms or other venues, to be seen and heard in support of exploited groups.

These are the stories I would prefer to tell.  



Did I mention?  I opened a store using Cafe Press as the platform.  It’s pretty bare-bones at the moment.  I’m still trying to figure it out. For example, I haven’t been able to change the canned text heading the site.  I only have, I think, about five bumper stickers ready to sell on the site.  From tiny acorns do mighty oaks grow.

Here is the header text that I would like to appear on site:
 Bumper Sticker Wisdom is my vehicle for selling bumper stickers and other slogan-related paraphernalia. At 4 or 5 dollars a pop, I will probably not be selling in bulk. But at my level, and with my limited resources, I can achieve zero economies of scale. So my bumper stickers are for a strictly niche market. Hopefully, the tag lines resonate with you enough that you will pay an outrageous price for a message you may not have heard expressed in exactly this way. Thank you for visiting. Please stay and browse. Please read my blog, Bumper Sticker Wisdom, at http://shareandbenice.blogspot.com/

Saturday, May 3, 2014

Arne Duncan is harming public schools.

Arne Duncan is Secretary of Education for the Obama administration.  What Arne Duncan does not know about education would fill the Gamma Quadrant. That is the charitable view.  It faults him only for ignorance. A darker assessment is that he is pandering to some of the most pernicious opponents of public schools.  Those parties comprise the following: corporations who see huge market potential to peddle their tests, curricula and off-the-shelf charter schools; the very rich who want to privatize public schools and most public services in order to wipe them from their tax bills; the religious right who wants to subvert the public will to keep religion out of the schools; corporate “reformers” and ideologues who want to muzzle their sharpest critics and keep the voting masses ignorant.
This is playing out in what should have been the
sunset-days of the failed No Child Left Behind Act (NCLB or “Nickleby”), the regime left over from the early days of the GW Bush administration.  The guiding premise behind NCLB is that the best way to coax excellence from the public schools is through intimidation and punishment:  Threaten the schools with being labelled “failed”.  Pull their funding or resources if they fail to demonstrate “adequate yearly progress.”  Redirect district resources to testing and more testing to enforce mandates.  Focus on “accountability” of individual teachers and school districts.  De-emphasize the importance of externalities like poverty, community support or parent involvement.  De-emphasize professional development and innovation.


A patch or fix to soften this big-hammer approach has been to allow the states to apply for Nickleby waivers.  Under Arne Duncan, a waiver is most likely to be granted if there is still clear observance of the principle of accountability.  Oregon has unilaterally imposed “achievement compacts” on each of the school districts. The local “compacts”, to be accepted by the state, must include some device to tie teacher evaluation to student performance on state tests.  


I guess Oregon’s formula has been found wanting by the Department of Education.  Oregon has been declared to be at “high risk” of losing its waiver.  Oregon has just advanced a Matrix Model to address whatever deficiencies had put the waiver in jeopardy.  Oregon waits.


The wait is over in Washington state.  Their waiver has been revoked.  I understand this is because the state of Washington has steadfastly refused to tie teacher evaluation to  standardized test results.


Why the Obama administration is supporting those who would kill public education - or suck it dry - is an important question.  The validity of presuming widespread inefficiency and incompetence in teaching - the “accountability” premise - is a hot-button issue.  But the most important consideration is only recently being aired.  The victims in this crossfire are the students.


I presume older students do not like high stakes standardized tests. Their teachers can be excused if they are cynical about mandated testing in their schools.  Whether or not their personal evaluations are tied to student test results, teachers will do everything in their power to optimize those scores. There is more to self-preservation than a personal evaluation.  The teachers will rally to protect their administrators and their districts.  They will teach to the test.  They will displace their own curriculum with content congruent with the tests.  The teachers will sacrifice days of instructional time for prep and administering the tests.  Teachers will pull out their old-tech Plan B lessons because computers are not available during testing season.  Much creative and administrative energy is now devoted to the tests.  This is at the direct expense of the resources that used to be available for the traditional mission of the schools, that of education.


The tests are manifestly harmful to younger students.  The anecdotes are readily available:  very young children, despondent because they are “failures” according to the tests; children who are bullied or teased because they failed the the test; anxiety disorders fueled or caused by anticipation of the tests.  This is contrary to the first objective of every K-12 teacher - to create a safe and inviting learning environment.


The spurious “data” generated by the tests are automatically powerful ammunition for those who are taking aim at the schools.  Inevitably, districts and states are competing because the data identify winners and losers.  Clearly the losers must be - take your pick - taken over by the state, replaced by charter schools, stripped of their current staff, closed and their students dispersed, etc. These are not scenarios for supporting or improving our schools.


Incredibly, the most high-profile example of this very destructive competitive model is from Arne Duncan and the Department of Education.  The Race to the Top (RTTT) is a scheme announced by Arne Duncan and Obama in 2009.  States compete for grants on the basis of earning points, especially for adopting performance-based standards and using test scores in teacher evaluations.  Diane Ravitch commented when Portland Public Schools passed on participating in RTTT:
Maybe the school system figured out that the money is not discretionary and that the mandates that come with RTTT will cost districts more than whatever money it brings to the district.


The 2014 federal budget provides $71.2 billion for the Department of Education.  That’s gotta be good for something.  Moving the whole appropriation over to food stamps would have a more demonstrably positive effect on education than what we are getting from Arne Duncan and the Department of Education.

Sunday, April 13, 2014

Jill Gibson Odell: Fronting for Right to Work

The fix is in.  Governor Kitzhaber cut a deal and Right to Work is absolutely, totally off the table.  The working people of Oregon and their unions have nothing to worry about until 2016.  Then the whole cluster of Right to Work initiatives will come roaring back like a tsunami.  That means Jill Gibson Odell will be back, too.


Jill Gibson Odell was and is the poster presence of Right to Work initiatives during this 2013-2014 election cycle here in Oregon.  Her name is prominently tied to the now-withdrawn Right to Work ballot initiative known as IP-9 or the Public Employee Choice Act.  Jill has a tidy, but not expansive, footprint on the internet.  Braeda Libby is also listed as a petitioner for IP-9 but there is virtually nothing on her.


Jill is a good choice.  If I were trying to sell something as unsavory as IP-9, I would pick her for the face on the bus poster.  I would expect riders to gaze and bask in her radiant credibility until their stop came up.


Ostensibly, Jill wrote IP-9 and she probably did.  The content and the evidence of craft certainly match her credentials.  Jill is striking, stylish, impressive actually (PHOTO).  She is an articulate, intelligent and effective professional.  Details of her biography are either sketchy or can only be inferred from the record.  For example, she has three beautiful children. Her home address is in Beaverton.  There does not appear to be a husband currently in the picture.  She’s, maybe, in her late forties or early fifties.  It seems reasonable to surmise that she honed her political philosophy and made some important business contacts for the future when she was legislative director for the Oregon House Republican Caucus.  Apparently, after a successful stretch as an attorney with Odonnell Clark and Crew, she started her own firm about two years ago.


Jill said that the thrust of her initiative is about individual freedom and the right to choose.  If she believes that, then I am my Aunt Matilda. (Full disclosure: I don’t have an Aunt Matilda.)  I am more inclined to believe her when she said, “There’s national money to be had, and there are large donors in the state that definitely want to move forward.”  That has more the ring of truth and seems to sum up her participation if you read anything about IP-9 outside the Oregonian.


Pick from your favorite mix of metaphors - Jill is a tool, a handmaiden, a hired gun.  On the Oregon Secretary of State website, transactions for the Public Employees Choice Act Committee can be tracked.  The first transaction is to Jill Odell, Attorney at law.  

Much has been made of a $6000 contribution to the Committee by Loren Parks.  But $8000 was contributed to PECA Committee by Stimson Lumber timber baron, Andrew Miller ...  which contribution pales in comparison to the $53000 donated by fellow timber barons, the Freres brothers of Freres Lumber.  A total of $12000 was paid to the Signature Gathering Company of Oregon by PECA Committee.  But the majority of large, regular payments - a total of $49740 - was made to Jill or her firm from February of 2013 to March of 2014.  

When Jill made her impassioned manifesto for worker civil rights in the Oregonian on September 9, 2013, she was performing with turbo-charged competence for her client, PECA Committee, and its major contributors, Andrew Miller, The Freres brothers and Loren Parks.
On unions and individual worker freedom, Rob Freres said, ““I believe that if Oregon is going to be a place where our children and grandchildren can get a good education, it’s important that the public employees’ unions do not dominate the politics in this state.”  This sentiment was substantially echoed by Arthur Miller when he said, “The Democratic Party has been a monolithic front for public-employee unions.”  Loren Parks, although difficult to quote directly, is well-known for bankrolling many anti-union initiatives.


Of course Jill can not be faulted for doing a good job in her professional capacity.  Indeed Jill has many admirable qualities and I would like to like her.  But I can’t get past the cynicism she shares with her clients.  I can’t get past the manipulation when the truth gets in the way.  I can’t get by the lies.


Sunday, April 6, 2014

Who's Who - ALEC in Oregon

It is encouraging that ALEC (American Legislative Exchange Council) is being forced out of the closet.  Much of their power has been from their ability to operate anonymously.  Another hopeful sign is that a number of well-known corporations are withdrawing their membership and support from ALEC:  they do not like the negative publicity.

Alecexposed.org is a helpful website to appreciate the full width and depth of ALEC’s activities and effects.  Like Wikipedia, it has limitations and you have to use it with discretion.  ALEC is a moving target.  What’s reported on Alecexposed is subject to change - perhaps even to manipulation - and is only as good as its sources and the integrity of its editors.  That’s the usual caveat for any reference.

ALEC has by no means run out of steam.  It remains an extraordinary threat to civil society and to a strong middle class.  ALEC needs to remain under the microscope.
 
Alecexposed has lists, kind of a Who’s Who.  This post is about ALEC’s connections in the Oregon legislature.  The Alecexposed  site also lists legislators who have cut ties with ALEC.  Regrettably, no Oregon legislators who are tied to ALEC have made that decision yet.  

Representative Gene Whisnant of Sun River is currently listed on the ALEC website as State Chair for Oregon.  He was ALEC State Legislator of the year in 2011.  Here is what ouroregon.org reports about Gene Whisnant:

Rep. Gene Whisnant is not just any ALEC member, but the ALEC Oregon State Chairman. This isn’t an arbitrary honorific; along with the title comes great responsibility. The ALEC charter mandates that state chairmen must “work to ensure introduction of model legislation” (ALEC bylaws, Article X). A chairman must introduce ALEC bills into his state capitol, providing a direct conduit for big corporate interests into Oregon state policy.
Leading up to the 2011 session, Rep. Whisnant wrote in one of his constituent newsletters:
“As a member of the American Legislative Exchange Council (ALEC), we vote on model legislation in the committees. I have started to draft two of ALEC’s model legislation and plan on introducing them next session. One is a Privatization Initiative panel that would create a panel to consider Oregon government’s priorities and determine which activities are best provided by the government and what services could be provided by the private sector. The other ALEC model is to create a council on efficient government.”
Rep. Whisnant’s eagerness to introduce ALEC-sponsored bills that promote privatization of government not only fulfilled his duties as Chairman (see those bylaws) but may have even been encouraged by the notion that such corporate favoritism might please some those generous corporate ALEC funders. Common Cause Oregon examined ALEC corporate members and their contributions to Oregon campaigns and discovered that, between 2001 - 2010, ALEC sponsors have dumped more than $16 million into the state, most of which went to conservative ballot measure campaigns and Republican candidates, Leadership, and Party PACS.
And mid-way through the session, in April 2011, Rep. Whisnant penned an article for Inside ALEC magazine, in which he noted that “The Oregon 76th Legislative Session is… the first session with the House equally divided 30-30. As a result, this may be the session to pass model legislation from ALEC’s State Budget Reform Toolkit.”
With such bold moves, it is unsurprising that Rep. Whisnant earned ALEC’s high honor of 2011 ALEC State Legislator of the Year. But Whisnant did not stop after his award. In the February 2012 session, Whisnant attempted to block consumer protection efforts to push big bank-friendly amendments onto foreclosure protection bills.
The same OurOregon report provides some biographical information on other Oregon legislators.  It also provides the following disclaimer:
There are many more Oregon politicians whom the award-winning website, ALEC Exposed, has listed as  members based on ALEC’s own documentation. There’s only one problem: ever since ALEC has been in the news, information about the legislators’ connections to ALEC has begun to disappear from ALEC’s archives.

Whisnant’s association with ALEC is clearly old news by now.  A February 2012 article in The Oregonian highlights the criticism he attracted when he was named ALEC State Legislator of the Year.  Additional biographical information includes that he is a member of the Homeless Leadership Council, an officer of the PTA, and a youth sports coach. He has been a member of the NRA, the VFW and the La Pine Grange.  He has military and diplomatic experience including Air Attache for the US Embassy in Belgrade.  He was Vice President of the Sunriver Homeowners Association.  He is a member of the Sunriver Christian Fellowship Church.

Here is the list of Oregon Legislators with ALEC Ties from the ALECexposed  website:

House of Representatives

Senate

  • Sen. Ted Ferrioli (R-John Day)[1]
  • Sen. Larry George (R-Sherwood)[1]
  • Sen. Fred Girod (R-Stayton)[1]

Former Representatives

Here is a partial list of their legislative email addresses:
  • Sen.TedFerrioli@state.or.us,
  • Sen.LarryGeorge@state.or.us,
  • Sen.FredGirod@state.or.us,
  • Rep.JasonConger@state.or.us,
  • Rep.SalEsquivel@state.or.us,
  • Rep.TimFreeman@state.or.us,
  • Rep.BruceHanna@state.or.us,
  • Rep.WallyHicks@state.or.us,
  • Rep.JohnHuffman@state.or.us,
  • Rep.MarkJohnson@state.or.us,
  • Rep.BillKennemer@state.or.us,
  • Rep.MikeMcLane@state.or.us,
  • Rep.DennisRichardson@state.or.us,
  • Rep.SherrieSprenger@state.or.us,
  • Rep.KimThatcher@state.or.us,
  • Rep.JimThompson@state.or.us,
  • Rep.GeneWhisnant@state.or.us,