Friday, April 11, 2014

Hypocrisy is alive and well in Louisiana




 

The GOP, along with Governor Bobby Jindal, have issued a demand that U.S. Rep. Vance McAllister, the man caught ‘passionately kissing’ one of his staff members should resign.  Since he ran and won election on the theme of Christian family values, the Republicans have accused him of ‘hypocrisy.’  Roger Villere, Jr., chairman of the Louisiana Republican Party chimed in that McAllister’s actions are “why people are fed up with politics.”

 

The way I see it, the hypocrisy doesn’t just apply to McAllister, but to the GOP itself.  When U.S. Sen. David Vitter was caught doing more than just ‘passionately kissing’ a whore (which he admitted), the GOP boys came up with all kinds of excuses not to invoke legislative censorship or demand his resignation.  I guess they figured that since his actions weren’t caught on a cell phone, everything was ok.

 

But as confusing as this may sound, now they are endorsing him as a candidate for the governor of Louisiana.

 

Therein lies the true hypocrisy.  And to boot, most of our registered Republicans will vote for him. Hypocrisy at its finest!

Jindal Sets Up His Own Exclusive Club




Two weeks ago the Associate Press ran a story about Republican standouts being considered as possible candidates for president.  Guess whose name was not even mentioned?  Bobby Jindal.

Last week, a poll was taken among prominent Republicans asking them to choose individuals whom they felt would make a good presidential candidate.  Bobby could muster only 2% in his camp.

I guess since Bobby figured no one outside Louisiana really considers him a plausible candidate, he’d set up his own club, known as a Political Action Committee (PAC).  The name of his club is Stand Up to Washington and, although Bobby claims its purpose is to help fund conservative candidates in their run for Congress, the real purpose is for self- promotion.  The PAC will give Bobby the opportunity to mingle with well-moneyed people,  make powerful new friends, and perhaps convince them that he’s not the vindictive, elitist,  self-centered , spoiled child, ‘shoot from the hip’, kind of guy that he appears to be.

However, I suspect that deep down inside, Jindal realizes that he doesn’t even have a remote chance of landing the Republican presidential nomination.  But I bet what Bobby is really shooting for is the vice president nomination.  His ego would never let him admit that publicly, so let’s stay tuned and  see what happens.

An Open Letter to Rep. Brett Geymann, Lake Charles and Rep. Cameron Henry, Metairie in Opposing Common Core




 

Since legislative mandate in 1986, Louisiana has patterned the education of its youth around state developed teaching standards and assessments. In case you have forgotten, this paradigm was known as the Louisiana Educational Assessment Program (LEAP).  We held students back and denied graduation to seniors who did not meet these state standards.  The latest national assessment (NAEP) of Louisiana 4th and 8th graders in the areas of reading and math skills found them either tied for 48th place or dead last out of the 50 states tested.  This, after almost 30 years and billions of tax payers dollars spent using, as you propose, Louisiana developed standards and assessments.

 

Why we anyone in their right mind trust the education of their child to the so called ‘educational experts’ in our state?  If I were designing educational standards, I wouldn’t even ask for Louisiana’s opinion as to their appropriateness. 

 

Your present legislation against the adoption of the Common Core Standards, developed by a consortium of educational experts throughout the country, is a total disservice to the youth of Louisiana.  As Mark Twain so aptly put it, “It is better to keep your mouth closed and let people think you are a fool, than to open it and remove all doubt.” 

 

What’s the connection with this consultant?


Governor Bobby Jindal just hired for $4.2 million, without public bid, the New York consulting firm of Alvarez and Marsal to find ways the state can save money.  Although the irony of this is quite self- evident, my immediate concern is directed towards the consulting firm itself.   Prior to Jindal’s latest hiring, this same firm was given the job of assessing the state’s tax structure, when Jindal started his push for elimination of the state income tax, which failed to gain support.  Just how much the firm was paid for these services is unclear, and whether this was another no bid contract is also unclear.

Apparently, Alvarez and Marsal have a long history with the state of Louisiana which spans different governors’ tenures.   I traced it as far back as June, 2005,  when the then State Superintendent of Education, Cecil Picard, demanded that the New Orleans Public School Board hire the consulting firm, Alvarez and Marsal, to restructure the financial and administrative operations of the 127 schools under its control.  Whether this was a no bid contract, or not, still remains a mystery.  However, this marked the beginning of a school system take-over plan, by the state, which Picard convinced, the then governor, Kathleen Blanco, was necessary to improve the schools in the city of New Orleans.

August, 2005, Katrina hit, and the consulting firm was elevated, without public bid, to the job of overseeing the renovating, repairing, and rebuilding of the New Orleans Public School System.  Part of this involved replacing the interim superintendent of the school system with an Alvarez and Marsal consultant who held a master’s degree in business administration.

Financially, 2005 was great year for Alvarez and Marsal for by the end of that year it was estimated that the consulting firm was paid more than $50 million with tax payers’ money, with billing fees ranging from $150 to $500 an hour.  What started out as basically accounting related responsibilities ballooned into a very lucrative enterprise after Katrina hit. 

The firm’s contracts continued, unchallenged,  for additional years despite the fact that one of its chief assignments after Katrina, the disposition of left-over NOPS real estate, was handled without the services of a single local architect, engineer, or construction expert.  It was estimated that this omission cost the city a year of progress in determining how and where to build damaged schools and jeopardized hundreds of millions of FEMA monies.  The total money paid to the firm for the New Orleans’ project is well hidden because of the different accounts utilized.

How this out of state firm, Alvarez and Marsal, first immerged on the scene, how many contracts it has received, and  how it continues to obtain lucrative, sometimes no bid contracts,  remain a mystery-one that certainly demands better investigation by the media.  Why is Louisiana continuing to export all this money out of state to this firm?

A lesson learned from Baton Rouge


New Orleans may be the fun capital of Louisiana, but Baton Rouge is on the fast track to be the economic capital.  The Standard and Poor’s Rating Service just upgraded Baton Rouge’s credit rating to ‘AAA’, the highest in the state.

While New Orleans has chosen to rely almost entirely on tourism to support its economy, Baton Rouge has chosen to take a more realistic, diversified business approach.  One less influenced by the whims of the national economy.

Even though Baton Rouge is our capital city, it has always played second fiddle to New Orleans.  However that appears to be changing.  While Standard and Poor’s assigns a lower rating of ‘A’ to New Orleans, the Finch Rating Service just recently downgraded New Orleans to the negative category of ‘A-‘.  This negative outlook is based on the city's finances, which remains a credit weakness.  Efforts by the current Landrieu administration to regain structural budgetary balance have shown gains, but new challenges in the form of jail and police mandated spending, and fireman pension contributions place additional pressure on the city’s operations.

Additionally, the city continues to depend heavily on federal recovery monies from Katrina to help finance its infrastructure needs.   Soon these funds will cease.

While the residents of New Orleans continue to feverishly defend their city as the best city for partying and eating in the world,  maybe it’s time for them to pull their heads out of the sand and face the realities of our present day economic system for city survival.

Presently, New Orleans relies disproportionately on federal grants for its budgetary needs.  A funding source destined to be drastically reduced due to the present political agendas operating at the national level.

Bottom line, New Orleans can no longer continue to survive on a t-shirt, tourism economy.  As repulsive as this may sound to New Orleans, it’s time to take a lesson from Baton Rouge.  

Wednesday, February 19, 2014

Facts Check for Jindal's Claims


In response to yet another poll of Louisianans indicating strong disapproval of Jindal as governor, he responded by stating that he doesn’t care about polls because the only numbers that matter are jobs created, graduation rates, student test scores, and the number of kids formerly trapped in failing schools who are getting the opportunity for a good education.  Bobby firmly stated, and I quote, “Those are the numbers that matter to me and the people of Louisiana.”

Talk is cheap and our governor is never at loss when it comes to stretching the truth.

Let’s examine the facts regarding those numbers that matter to Governor Jindal:

Jobs Created:  Louisiana’s unemployment rate has risen sharply since Jindal took office, from 3.8 percent in January, 2008 to 6.8 percent in May, 2013.   To be fair, the national unemployment rate has also risen during that time, from 5 percent to 7.6 percent, but not as fast as Louisiana’s.

Graduation Rates:  Rates are rising.  But the figures are a lie.  With his massive budget cuts Jindal has done little to improve public education.  What he calls educational reform is nothing more than striking a deal with our colleges and universities whereby they could raise their tuitions by 10% if they raised their admission standards, and eliminated freshman remedial courses for students not fully prepared for some course work.  On paper the graduation rates rise,  but beneath those stats the crappy high schools that failed to properly educate these students still exist.  He hasn't attack the root cause of why more students aren't better prepared so they can attend and graduate from college.  The only accomplishment of Jindal's education reform plan is that more students are now being pushed out of a chance to attend a four year college, and instead into trade schools that don’t count in the nationally reported state graduation figures.  He is simply shifting the students around.

Student Test Scores:  In the most recent national assessment of the 50 states for 4th and 8th graders our 4th grade students tied for last place in math skills, and ranked 48th in reading skills.  Eight graders  were tied for 48th in math and reading.

Voucher  Program , or as Jindal defines  it, the number of kids trapped in failing schools who are now getting the opportunity for a good education:  The most recent figures available from the Louisiana Department of Education indicated at least 45% of the nearly 5,000 students participating in the voucher program last year transferred from their assigned neighborhood schools into schools rated a “D” of “F” on the state’s rating scale.  I wouldn’t classify this as evidence of  an increase in an opportunity to get a good education.

Unfortunately,  the real facts of Jindal’s failures as a governor seldom leave the confines  of our state so Jindal is able to continue to push these areas and others as examples of his  great reforms to the national audience in his quest for president.

It is becoming more and more apparent to me that you have to be somewhat delusional to be a good politician.

Thursday, December 26, 2013

Hypocrisy at its Finest


I ran across an editorial this week discussing the controversy surrounding the Duck Dynasty hero, Phil Robertson, regarding some remarks he made about African-Americans and Gays when interviewed by a popular magazine.

Governor Jindal and Sarah Palin both jumped on the fact that the TV station, A&E, was infringing on Robertson’s first amendment rights by suspending him from the Duck Dynasty show for his remarks.

It’s odd that a man of Jindal’s intelligence, and one who works so hard to foster his national image as a staunch constitutionalist would completely misinterpret this amendment.  The first amendment allows free speech without government or legal sanctions being directed towards those individuals for their actions.

The Duck Dynasty cast member received no such governmental or legal sanctions such as fines, arrest and/or imprisonment for what he said, which occurs quite often in some other countries throughout the world such as Russia and China.   Instead, a corporation decided to dismiss an individual whose professed thoughts ran contrary to theirs.  Granted, A&E was probably more worried about the loss of sponsorship revenues rather than anything else, but they had the right to suspend Robertson under our free enterprise, corporate system.

We, as consumers, have the right to disagree with this action and punish A&E by boycotting the station.

However, let’s not forget that Jindal‘s actions of removing individuals who disagree with his governing philosophy are the mirror image of A&E’s.   During his reign of terror he has ousted, or systematically removed individuals  from the LSU Board of Supervisors, the LSU system president position, positions that provide over site for the university’s public hospitals, the Board of Elementary and Secondary Education (BESE), department heads, legislative committee chairmanships, etc.  The list goes on and on.  In fact, he has been one of the most successful governors in recent history in implementing the philosophy of ‘it’s my way or the highway.’  You might have to go all the way back to Huey Long to find someone who has out done him. 

These individuals made no 'politically incorrect' statements to magazines.  Their only fault being that they disagreed with some of Jindal's plans.  Where were the public outcries regarding these firings?

Oh, I forgot, they're not TV stars, just average Joes.
From Jindal’s past actions it is readily apparent that once again he has seen an opportunity to promote himself nationally by misapplying the first amendment argument to  actions initiated by a corporation; actions, which he strictly adheres to himself.  It seems like the old adage 'People who live in glass houses shouldn’t throw stones' certainly applies to Governor Jindal in this situation.