More Opining on Leopold
Labels: John Leopold
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Labels: John Leopold
"It forces everyone to come together (to find a solution)...We do need to have revenues if we are going to continue to fund the way we have historically done....It is going to be very difficult to get 24 votes (for a majority) in the Senate for any of these thing. It takes a lot of heavy lifting and a lot of support."So it becomes apparent that the Senate neither wants to raise taxes, nor do they want to reduce spending. That becomes somewhat problematic in a state that is Constitutionally obligated to pass a balanced budget.
Lawmakers killed the Senate immigration bill today, voting 46 to 53 to move to a final vote on the controversial measure, 14 short of the 60 required.Now can we all agree that Congress should stop trying to find ways to help illegal immigrants and get back to the important business of the country?
"Even if you disagree with this bill, don't end this debate," said Sen. Richard Durbin, D-Ill., who urged his colleagues to reject "these voices of exclusion" opposing the measure and not "say we are surrendering to these negative voices across America."What can you say?
Labels: Maryland, Republican
There is a great deal of irony and chutzpah associated with John Leopold, because this was the same guy who wanted nothing to do with a referendum on the school board bill. A vote that would have been anything but symbolic.County Executive John R. Leopold called for a regional referendum on a new Chesapeake Bay crossing yesterday, but Queen Anne's County officials demurred, calling it a "waste of money."Leaders from both counties sat down together in Chester yesterday to hash out regional transportation concerns, and Mr. Leopold suggested that both jurisdictions hold the largely symbolic vote to show residents' antipathy for a third span on Route 50.Mr. Leopold said he wanted to quantify public sentiment about the prospect of a new bridge as the process moves forward.
"Maybe they don't even want a discussion" of a new span, he said.
Labels: John Leopold
So basically, Smith believes that the only constructive contribution to the budget debate is to stick it to working and middle class taxpayers, as opposed to reducing the overgrown blob that is State Government. And that philosophy is anything but constructive.Busch also used the appearance to build the case for raising the income and sales tax, noting that the levies in Maryland are lower than in most surrounding states.
"I don't think a tax increase is going to drive jobs outside of the state," Busch said.
Busch said it is important for lawmakers to meet the challenge ahead. "People don't expect us just to go to receptions and eat shrimp and drink cocktails," he said. "They expect us to make tough decisions."
Democrats may be winning elections. But they still can't win a baseball game.Nine Democratic errors...sounds like what Congress does each day before lunch.Despite an influx of fresh talent from Pennsylvania -- and the coaching skills of Rep. Mike Doyle of Forest Hills -- the new majority party on Capitol Hill last night extended its losing streak in the annual congressional baseball tournament to seven games.
The GOP soundly defeated the Democrats 5-2, at RFK Stadium, home of the Washington Nationals.
Nine Democratic errors didn't help.
But some of the new players were disappointments. Rep. Heath Shuler of North Carolina, a former Washington Redskins quarterback, went hitless.
Labels: Republican
Part of a vehicle barrier along the U.S.-Mexico border was erected in the wrong country and soon will be removed and rebuilt on American soil, federal officials confirmed Monday.At least there is some place on the border that has a boundary. Even if we managed to, uh, annex a portion of Mexico for the past several years."We respect our international boundary, and we want to be good neighbors," U.S. Customs and Border Protection spokesman Michael Friel told The Associated Press. "...We want to move quickly to ensure that we place the vehicle barrier where it should be, which is north of the border."
Yes, Mexico is lecturing the United States as to what is and what is not appropriate."Mexico had indicated that it is not appropriate for this type of United States structure to be located in Mexican territory, and we agree," said Sally Spener, a spokeswoman for the commission.
On Monday, Mexico's Foreign Relations Department said it has sent a diplomatic note to the United States protesting the barrier.
"Our country will continue insisting for the removal (of the fence) to be done as quickly as possible," the Foreign Relations Department said.
Labels: Border Security
Labels: Orioles
High-level school administrators who do an outstanding job could get as much as a 15 percent raise under a new plan adopted by the county Board of Education.The "pay-for-performance" plan approved Wednesday replaces longevity increases given to 55 employees.Nonunion employees still would get annual cost-of-living increases, but raises would be tied to their performance evaluations.
Superintendent Kevin M. Maxwell said the new system will promote greater accountability for senior staff.
"I want to thank the board for having the courage to move away from the traditional system of pay increases simply for longevity to a system of accountability where those who are making the greatest contributions to the success of our children are recognized for the efforts they make," he said in a statement.
And this is a good thing. We should be paying our school system administrators and teachers based on their performance, and not just standard blanket raises negotiated by TAAAC. Hopefully, this will actually encouraged better performances by administrators.
The new plan takes effect July 1. Employees who earn a "satisfactory" level of performance would get 1 to 5 percent raises. An "exceptional" performance would merit a 6 to 10 percent raise, while outstanding performers would get raises of 11 to 15 percent.
Under the new plan, Dr. Maxwell also can award performance bonuses for stellar work.
Many administrators earn $100,000 or more. A 15 percent raise for a $100,000 earner would give the employees a $15,000 pay bump.
Those amounts seem a little more than excessive for a one year pay hike. A more realistic goal would have been capping all potential raises to a maximum of 8 percent.
Labels: Anne Arundel, Education, School Board Reform
Out to raise some cash for the Democratic Party, Baltimore Orioles owner Peter Angelos is inviting select baseball fans — those with big wallets — to join him and Democratic National Committee Chairman Howard Dean in the owner's box at Camden Yards on Wednesday night, when the slumping Birds take on the New York Yankees.Maybe if Angelos took some time off from being a Democratic Party hack and took some time to run his business, perhaps the business wouldn't be suffering so badly.
Becoming a game "chair" will cost you $28,500; a "host" pays $5,000; or come as yourself for a mere $1,000.
So now we have an unaccountable Superintendent of Schools, supervised by an unaccountable Board of Education (who are still bitching about the budget), going completely off of the reservation to spend money in a way that was shady at best and illegal at worst.As school and county leaders tango through the budget season, Superintendent Kevin M. Maxwell took a bold step yesterday to seize the lead.Dr. Maxwell bought a $4.6 million payroll software system two days after the County Council voted against granting money to pay for it.......The council wanted to delay the purchase for 30 days to determine whether the pricey human resources system could be used for all county employees. Administrators on both sides were midway through discussions to bring that to reality when Dr. Maxwell issued a letter yesterday saying he signed the contract anyway.
"It undermines the whole spirit of what we were doing," county Budget Officer John Hammond. "We have one part of the government march off on their own direction and say you're either with us or we'll leave you in the dust."
County Auditor Teresa Sutherland questioned whether the expenditure violates state law, and referred the action to county attorneys.
Dr. Maxwell said county officials shouldn't be shocked, because the schools face a crisis.
Labels: Education, School Board Reform
Solar scientists predict that, by 2020, the sun will be starting into its weakest Schwabe solar cycle of the past two centuries, likely leading to unusually cool conditions on Earth. Beginning to plan for adaptation to such a cool period, one which may continue well beyond one 11-year cycle, as did the Little Ice Age, should be a priority for governments. It is global cooling, not warming, that is the major climate threat to the world, especially Canada. As a country at the northern limit to agriculture in the world, it would take very little cooling to destroy much of our food crops, while a warming would only require that we adopt farming techniques practiced to the south of us.Read the whole thing.
Labels: Global Warming
Labels: Media
Orioles shortstop Miguel Tejada appeared just long enough to extend his streak of consecutive games played to 1,152, the fifth-longest in big league history. Tejada, who got hit on the left wrist by a pitch from reliever Doug Brocail on Wednesday night, bunted in his only at-bat in the first inning. Roberts was forced at second on the play, and Gomez then pinch-ran for Tejada.For a team and a town that saw Cal Ripken and his streak extended only in legitimate fashion, this is a sad, sad commentary on both Tejada and the state of this franchise...
I don't understand realistically how any rational human being can take the side of the terrorists, particularly in defense of a Democratic nation whose has been threatened with extermination on and off for the last sixty years. Then again, blaming the U.S. for two terrorist groups shooting at each other takes its own special type of insanity, too.Former President Jimmy Carter is accusing the US, Israel and the European Union of seeking to divide the Palestinian people.
Carter says that's being accomplished by reopening aid to President Mahmoud Abbas' new government in the West Bank while denying the same to the Hamas-controlled Gaza Strip. He made the comment at a human rights conference in Ireland.
Carter, a Nobel Prize winner, says the Bush administration's refusal to accept Hamas' 2006 election victory was "criminal." Carter says that far from encouraging Hamas' move into parliamentary politics, Israel and much of the West sought to subvert the election by shunning Hamas.
For once, they didn't have to open the windows on the sixth floor of the B&O Warehouse to get some fresh air.And I hope he is right. I was four years old in 1983, when the Orioles knocked off the Phillies. I cling to (and still wear regularly) my "1997 Eastern Division Champions" t-shirt, because it's the only thing I have left that signifies playoff success. I hope that, by next year, I have a reason to switch out that portion of my wardrobe.
New Orioles president of baseball operations Andy MacPhail took the podium this morning and took charge of this floundering franchise and, cynics be damned, it sure felt like a new day in Birdland.
It started with the structure of the media conference, in which club counsel (and Peter Angelos surrogate) Russell Smouse made the introduction instead of executive vice president Mike Flanagan. It started with Smouse acknowledging that ownership finally has gotten the message from the club's disgusted and diminished fan base and announcing unequivocally that MacPhail would have "full and ultimate responsibility" for the operation of the team.
Smouse was speaking for Angelos, who should have been there himself, but let's not quibble at a time like this. The Orioles -- for the first time since they hired Pat Gillick -- have a baseball operations czar with the kind of juice to affect dynamic change inside the organization and repair the team's broken image in the community and around the major leagues.
Most residents support a new student fee for participation in extracurricular sports and clubs, but strongly oppose leaving 50 teaching positions empty to help balance an $871 million budget that the school board plans to approve today, according to an online survey conducted by Anne Arundel County public schools.Of course, they don't talk too much about the poll until the next paragraph:
The results of the unscientific, informal poll, which will be released at today's Board of Education meeting, also show that 55 percent of the roughly 2,000 responses support a property tax increase that would specifically fund schools, and 50 percent back an income tax rise that would do the same.Of course, when you place the poll on your own website, do very little to advertise the fact that there was a poll, and have no control mechanisms in place or scientific sampling procedures in place, you get a useless poll.
With barely 2,000 responses, the survey does not reflect a substantial cross-section of the more than 40,000 families who send their children to public schools, nor the district's roughly 25,000 employees, retirees and their dependents. Mosier said he could not say how many of the responses came from school district employees, but that 60 of the responses apparently came from students.No kidding.
Labels: Budget, School Board Reform
"Although my plans for the future haven't changed, I believe this brings my affiliation into alignment with how I have led and will continue to lead our city," he said in a statement.I think it's painfully obvious that the guy is running for President.
Labels: 2008 Presidential Election
All Democratic and Republican presidential candidates have confirmed their attendance at the two ABC News live debates in August 2007. The 90-minute forums moderated by ABC News' George Stephanopoulos with additional questioning from David Yepsen of The Des Moines Register will be held at Drake University. The Republican debate is on Sunday, August 5, 2007 and the Democratic debate is on Sunday, August 19, 2007. The debates will begin at 8am CT and air across the country as a special edition of This Week with George Stephanopoulos.So, there are going to be two live debates, at 9 AM Eastern Time? And who exactly are the target audiences for these debates? I can't imagine it is going to be your average Iowa caucus-goer.
Labels: 2008 Presidential Election
Meanwhile, the same sources said Andy MacPhail has reached an agreement to be the Orioles' chief operating officer.
MacPhail and Girardi overlapped in Chicago during MacPhail's tenure as Cubs president and CEO of the Chicago Cubs, which began in 1994 and ended in 2006. Girardi, who managed the Florida Marlins in 2006, was the Cubs' catcher for two stints totaling six seasons, the last from 2000-02.
MacPhail won two World Series championships as general manager of the Minnesota Twins in 1987 and 1991.
And that probably makes Mike Flanagan and Jim Duquette very nervous campers right about now. MacPhail has a pedigree for winning; they don't, and this year certainly does not help their cause.
What better way to strengthen foreign policy bonafides and get into the good graces of the conservative base. Also of interest:Fred Thompson, the actor and former Tennessee senator who is expected to announce next month he is running for president, flew to London on Monday to meet Margaret Thatcher and deliver a foreign policy speech, his advisers tell The Politico.
Thompson's advisers aim to use the London events to bolster his foreign policy credentials and elevate him above the increasingly contentious fray of the GOP race.
On Wednesday, he will pose for photos with Thatcher, which his advisers hope will enhance his support among devotees of former President Ronald Reagan.
Thompson will deliver the foreign policy speech, "Strengthening the Transatlantic Alliance," on Tuesday at the Policy Exchange, a conservative think tank based in London.
It will stress the importance of American alliances abroad, his advisers said.
Liz Cheney, the former State Department official and the vice president's elder daughter, is consulting on foreign policy. Longtime GOP guru Mary Matalin, a friend of Thompson, will help shape the campaign's message.Interesting indeed...
Labels: Fred Thompson
Gov. Martin O'Malley's administration plans to appeal a judge's ruling that the firing of a midlevel Maryland Department of Transportation employee was illegal, a spokesman for the department said today.I bolded the money quote. An admission by a cabinet-level O'Malley Administration official that a Republican was fired for political reasons; something that no Ehrlich Administration official ever publicly admitted to.
"We are taking the appropriate steps to have the ruling reviewed," said Jack Cahalan, the department spokesman, who declined to comment in detail about the procedure, because it is a personnel matter....
...The O'Malley administration has stood by the decision to fire Maddalone, but held off last week on saying whether an appeal would be made to circuit court, until legal counsel could review the judge's decision.
Maddalone, who does not have a college degree and worked as a professional ice dancer, had been employed with the state since 2003, when he had an entry-level position in former Republican Gov. Robert L. Ehrlich Jr.'s office....
....Maryland Department of Transportation Secretary John Porcari testified during the administrative law review that he fired Maddalone because he wanted to reorganize the OEPES, which is involved in homeland security. He said he was hoping to find people with experience in homeland security to fill the positions.
But the judge noted in her ruling that Porcari conceded that he never looked into Maddalone's personnel file, relying instead on what he had heard in news accounts that questioned whether Maddalone had played a role on controversial firings during the Ehrlich administration and his career as an ice dancer.
Japanese are staying cool as a cucumber this summer with "Pepsi Ice Cucumber" _ a new soda based on the crisp green gourd.Yuck. Cucumbers should be consumed with dip, not with carbonation...The soft drink, which hit stores here on Tuesday, doesn't actually have any cucumber in it _ but has been artificially flavored to resemble "the refreshing taste of a fresh cucumber," said Aya Takemoto, spokeswoman of Japan's Pepsi distributor, Suntory Ltd.
"We wanted a flavor that makes people think of keeping cool in the summer heat," Takemoto said. "We thought the cucumber was just perfect."
UN Secretary General Ban Ki-moon said that the slaughter in Darfur was triggered by global climate change and that more such conflicts may be on the horizon, in an article published Saturday.Yes, let's use the global warming bogeyman as an excuse for the slaughter of hundreds of thousands of innocent people in a mass genocide. Maybe Ban Ki-moon should spend a little more time finding solutions to this and all of the other problems the UN has failed to address in recent years, and a little less time assigning blame to the murder of thousands."The Darfur conflict began as an ecological crisis, arising at least in part from climate change," Ban said in a Washington Post opinion column.
UN statistics showed that rainfall declined some 40 percent over the past two decades, he said, as a rise in Indian Ocean temperatures disrupted monsoons.
"This suggests that the drying of sub-Saharan Africa derives, to some degree, from man-made global warming," the South Korean diplomat wrote.
"It is no accident that the violence in Darfur erupted during the drought," Ban said in the Washington daily.
Labels: Global Warming, United Nations
The Sun has made repeated requests over six weeks to the O'Malley administration to release figures detailing the number of employees that have been fired since the governor took office in January. It has refused to provide them.So..how much says that the number of firings exceeds the number of firings by Governor Ehrlich?
Labels: O'Malley
And (more importantly) how could the O'Malley administration not have known that it's really, really bad for your credibility as a leader to get caught up in the same sort of thing you (rightly) excoriated the last Governor for doing?Of course, right before that he advocated that Greg Maddalone should have been fired for political reasons...it also assume O'Malley has credibility, which I don't think anybody paying attention thinks he should have.
Labels: General Assembly, Maryland, O'Malley