Friday, January 8, 2010

Perry's account of stimulus worth questioning

Perry's account of stimulus worth questioning: "

Revisiting those stimulus dollars … A new Political Parlor podcast … A comeback falls short



Happy birthday to Rep. Joe Crabb and Texas Republican Party Chair Cathie Adams (today) and Charley Wilkison of the Combined Law Enforcement Association of Texas (Saturday).



Austin weather from News 8 Austin’s Maureen McCann: Bitter cold and blustery. High of only 35, but wind chill values will make it feel like the teens.



(Send me an e-mail at jembry@statesman.com if you want a link to First Reading as soon as I post it. Also, you can follow me on Twitter for news updates around the clock.)



Thursday highlights and the day ahead



Let’s go back to 2009. Congress approved the federal stimulus package, Gov. Rick Perry said the state would seek to use the dollars for one-time expenses, Texas accepted most of the money and it was used for more than one-time expenses. We can all agree on that, right?



Apparently not.



In Houston yesterday, Perry was talking about his desire to see a balanced-budget amendment in the U.S. Constitution. Then, talking about Texas, he said, “The argument … you took stimulus dollars so therefore you were part of this problem — no, we took dollars, put them into place, one-time expenditures,” Perry said. “We said we would not create any new programs with these dollars that were ongoing costs,” according to the Associated Press.



Whether new programs were created could be a matter of interpretation. For example, some of the most knowledgeable staffers in the Legislature have told me that the $2 billion bill updating the school finance formulas would not have been possible without the stimulus dollars. Do you call a reworking of school finance programs a new ongoing program? Seems like that argument could certainly been made.



Meanwhile, a number of experts have made clear that stimulus dollars were not just used for one-time expenses.



From Bob Garrett of the Dallas Morning News in August: “About one-third of the federal stimulus money Texas accepted this year will probably translate into ongoing obligations, the Legislature’s top budget-writing adviser said today. Despite state leaders’ pleas that all stimulus dollars be spent on one-time, non-recurring items, “there are a couple of areas where that’s just not going to be possible,” said Legislative Budget Board director John O’Brien.”



And Dale Craymer of the Texas Taxpayers and Research Association told the Texas Tribune, “directly very little of the stimulus money was really spent on any one-time items.”



• Here’s a sign that Perry likes the poll numbers he’s seeing: His new ad does not mention Kay Bailey Hutchison at all. Watch it here.



• There’s a new highway in the Midland area: The Nadine and Tom Craddick Highway, the Midland Reporter-Telegram reports.



Rolling Stone put U.S. Rep. Joe Barton on its list of the Climate Killers, “the 17 polluters and deniers who are derailing efforts to curb global warming.” Also on the list are Dick Gephardt, John McCain, George Will and Warren Buffett.



• Remember that bill last year that aimed to crack down on cockfighting? The folks with the Humane Society Legislative Fund haven’t forgotten about it, and they’re blaming Rep. Terri Hodge, D-Dallas, for its demise: “It was, unfortunately, no surprise to animal advocates that Rep. Hodge would do the bidding of criminal cockfighters. In a meeting of the Subcommittee on Violent Crimes this past March, Rep. Hodge opined that ‘cockfighting is a way of life’ and ‘we all have different tastes and should respect that.’ Apparently she believes that ‘taste’ is an excuse to engage in a form of animal cruelty that is a felony offense in her state.”



• Ken Herman and I joined KUT’s Ian Crawford in the Texas Political Parlor on Thursday. We discussed the parties’ 2010 slates of candidates, the upcoming GOP debate and 2011 redistricting. You can listen here. Or you can download up in the top right corner of this page.



Stat of the day



Three years after a sexual abuse scandal rocked the Texas Youth Commission, one in five juvenile offenders in Texas youth lock-ups report being forced into sexual acts with staff or other inmates, according to a federal report. Source: Texas Tribune.



Poll watch



From Gallup: People identifying conservatives (40 percent) outnumbered both moderates (36 percent) and liberals (21 percent) across the nation in 2009. More broadly, the percentage of Americans calling themselves either conservative or liberal has increased over the last decade, while the percentage of moderates has declined.



A poll of 109 Republican leaders and political pros says Mitt Romney is most likely to be the party’s presidential nominee in 2012, followed by Tim Pawlenty and John Thune. Sarah Palin finished sixth. Source: Hotline



Countdown



24 days until the last day to register to vote.



39 days until early voting begins.



53 days until the March 2 primary.



In the news



The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency proposed Thursday stricter smog standards, putting the Austin area in jeopardy of violating clean air rules. If Travis and surrounding counties fail the new standard, they could face federal penalties that hamper business growth and delay transportation projects. Austin American-Statesman



Former SMU football star and ESPN Analyst Craig James has made news recently regarding his role with his son and former Texas Tech Football Coach Mike Leach. But James could be making news this year in politics, too. His name is being tossed around as a possible candidate to run for Kay Bailey Hutchison’s seat when she resigns. WFAA



Texas needs more money - hundreds of billions of dollars more - to maintain its roads and bridges and build the new ones needed to serve the state’s growing population, the Texas Department of Transportation’s executive director said Thursday. Amadeo Saenz, opening a conference on transportation, said no amount of technological innovations or other improvements will be enough if Texas can’t find more money to spend on roads. Dallas Morning News



Gov. Rick Perry announced Thursday he would pardon Timothy Cole, a Fort Worth man who died while serving time in prison for a rape he did not commit, as soon as he receives a recommendation from the state Board of Pardons and Paroles. Houston Chronicle



Legalizing the status of the roughly 12 million unauthorized immigrants living in this country would create jobs, increase wages and boost the sagging U.S. economy, an academic study released Thursday says. San Antonio Express-News



Well almost everybody who’s been there knows you leave a little money in Las Vegas, but they say you can come back and visit it anytime. Texas taxpayers left a little green there in October, as it turns out. Gov. Rick Perry’s went to Vegas on Oct. 24 to attend a bachelor party dinner for his son - oh yes, and to also meet with Brian Sandoval, a Republican candidate for Nevada’s governor. The cost for his security detail for the overnight trip - overtime, hotel, airfare, rental cars - was $12,321, according to documents just released by the Department of Public Safety. Dallas Morning News



Everything else



The Longhorns put up a mighty fight and never gave up, but in the end, it was Alabama 37, Texas 21. Colt McCoy was injured early in the game, forcing freshman backup Garrett Gilbert into the game. After a rocky start, Gilbert threw two touchdown passes in the second half and almost led the Longhorns to a historic combeback.



Kirk Bohls: “Saviors usually don’t come in the form of freshman quarterbacks who hadn’t thrown a touchdown pass in 13 games, but he threw two in the last 17 minutes of the season against arguably the best defense in the country. He came up short. But he’s been in this position before and will be again. Of course, the last time he lost a game, he won the next 30 straight.”



Richard Justice: “They displayed the heart of a champion even while another team was being crowned. They endured their worst nightmare. They had weaknesses exposed. But they almost won because they have heart and toughness and resolve. They did themselves proud in defeat.”



Bill Carter of the New York Times reports that NBC is planning to put Jay Leno back in late night with a half-hour show to air at 10:30 our time, followed by Conan O’Brien at 11 p.m.



Elvis Presley would turn 75 today.

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Thursday, January 7, 2010

Eurostar train breaks down in Channel tunnel

Eurostar train breaks down in Channel tunnel: "

Passengers stranded in freezing weather after Brussels to London St Pancras train gets stuck

Eurostar was hit with further weather-related woes today when another train was stranded in the Channel tunnel for more than an hour.

Several trains were cancelled because of freezing temperatures and the company was forced to offer full refunds or exchanges to all passengers who were due to travel.

The affected train left Brussels at 8.05am local time and was due to arrive at London St Pancras about two hours later. It had to be towed out of the tunnel by a service engine.

As a result, three subsequent trains that had left Paris, London and Brussels were turned back. Passengers on the 8.07am Paris-London train stranded in Calais said they were told they could take a ferry to England or return to Paris.

A spokeswoman for Eurostar said the stranded train was towed to Ashford and passengers were transferred on to a train for London that arrived at 12.19pm. It is not known why the train broke down but further details are expected to be released this afternoon. Breakdowns in December were caused by heavy snow.

The stranded train quickly had a knock-on effect and by the early afternoon Eurostar was advising passengers whose travel was not essential to rebook their tickets or claim a full refund.

A spokeswoman said passengers making essential trips should check in as normal but services could be cancelled or delayed.

Angry travellers at the Gare du Nord complained that little information about the disrupted service had been given. The French journalist and commentator Agnès Poirier, speaking from the station's waiting lounge, said a 'huge' queue had formed outside the Eurostar entrance and there were few staff to answer queries. 'The Eurostar staff are very kind and sympathetic but their knowledge is very limited, they don't seem to be getting any feedback from the head office,' she said.

There were familiar scenes at St Pancras in London, with long disgruntled queues snaking through the station. Passengers waiting in freezing temperatures were told a limited service would resume this afternoon.

Hundreds of passengers were stranded in the tunnel for hours on 18 December when five trains broke down because of electronic faults caused by snow. Thousands of passengers on either side of the Channel were stuck for several days and left wondering whether they would get home for Christmas. An estimated 75,000 passengers were caught up in the backlog.


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Tuesday, January 5, 2010

Mike Tyson LAX Fight Video -- 'I Will Kill You'

Mike Tyson LAX Fight Video -- 'I Will Kill You': "Filed under: , ,

Mike Tyson threatened to kill the paparazzo he allegedly assaulted at LAX back in November -- and now the tape has finally surfaced ... but, it's heavily edited.In the vid, Iron Mike is stoic as he walks through the airport with his wife and their ...

Permalink

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Saturday, January 2, 2010

Pennsylvania reconsidering toughest sentencing laws due to prison overcrowding

Pennsylvania reconsidering toughest sentencing laws due to prison overcrowding: "
This article from the Pittsburgh Post-Gazette, which is headlined "Pa. sentencing guidelines eyed: Throw-away-the-key policy has state prisons bursting at the seams," details how Pennsylvania is being forced to rethink certain sentencing laws and policies. Here is how the effective piece starts:

Faced with a serious overpopulation of its prisons and now the need to ship inmates to other states, state legislators may consider easing some harsh sentencing guidelines so that nonviolent offenders aren't automatically sent to prison for lengthy terms.

State Rep. Tom Caltagirone, D-Reading, chairman of the House Judiciary Committee, said judges should be given more latitude in deciding on sentences for minor offenses -- leeway they don't have now due to mandatory sentencing laws approved 10 or 20 years ago in the heyday of "lock 'em up, throw away the key" thinking.

"We are throwing some prisoners, including many from the inner city, into the pit for small offenses, and they don't get help for their problems," he said at a recent Judiciary Committee meeting, where one interested observer was outgoing state Rep. Don Walko, D-North Side. He's leaving the Legislature for his new job as a Common Pleas judge in Allegheny County.

One new tool to help reduce prison overcrowding, said state Corrections Department Deputy Secretary William Sprenkle, would be to allow any prisoner with eight months left on his or her sentence to serve the time at a pre-release center or halfway house. "Short-time offenders are clogging up our prison system," he said.

There also are rules involving drug offenses, such as a two-year mandatory minimum sentence for possessing as little as two grams of cocaine within 2,500 feet of a school, Mr. Caltagirone said. Perhaps that could be adjusted, he said, such as by reducing the distance from a school or raising the amount of the drug a person possesses before a prison term is mandated. Persons convicted of having small amounts of cocaine and who are not seen as a violent threat to the community could perhaps serve their sentence in a halfway house instead of adding to the prison population.

Some lawmakers fear that worsening overcrowding could lead to prison riots or federal lawsuits against the state. But obviously there are risks with expanding parole, both political and public safety-related. No legislator wants to be seen as "soft on crime" if he or she votes to let more convicted criminals get out on parole, even if they are still monitored via ankle bracelets and parole officers.

And no matter how careful state officials are in classifying a parolee as "nonviolent," it's almost impossible to be right 100 percent of the time, Mr. Caltagirone admitted. The population of the state's 27 prisons is now more than 51,000 and growing, compared to capacity of 43,000, and one reason for that was a horrible event that happened in Philadelphia two years ago.

A prisoner with two years left on his sentence was paroled after 10 years. A few weeks later he killed a Philadelphia policeman, outraging the police and public. Gov. Ed Rendell, a former Philadelphia mayor, imposed a moratorium on all paroles for a few months, causing the prison population to rise by 3,000.

Mr. Sprenkle said Pennsylvania will soon begin shipping 2,000 inmates to prisons in two other states, Michigan and Virginia. Half of them will leave in February and the other 1,000 will be moved in March and April. Michigan and Virginia will supply the transportation.

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