Thursday, May 14, 2015
Senator John Alario Shares the Shovel
Senator John Alario has been hanging around the state capital almost as long as the dinosaurs inhabited our earth. Well maybe not quite that long, but since 1972. He was twice speaker of the House before becoming Senate president. A longtime Democrat who served in a leadership position under former Gov. Edwin Edwards, Alario became a Republican in recent years and joined the legislative leadership under Gov. Bobby Jindal. Alario has faced no opponent since 2007.
Tuesday, Mr. Alario made the announcement that the present $1.6 billion budget shortfall can’t be fixed this legislative session because it is simply too big. He admitted that, “We don’t have time now to come up with a long term solution.” “The hard work will come next year.” Consequently the cuts will be forth coming to health care and to a lesser extent education. Mr. Alario’s statements make it appear as though he has no responsibility for this present mess, when in fact he and the rest of Jindal’s minions had 7 years to prevent this budget catastrophe, but instead chose to support Jindal’s “kick the can down the road” solution. Something Alario is perpetuating yet again.
John Alario, as Senate president, was the point man for ALL of Bobby Jindal’s budgets including this year’s. During those years he stood side by side with Jindal as he continued to dig the budgetary grave that has finally come to fruition this year.
Not once during the seven years of smoke and mirrors budgets did this man, considered by many as one of the most powerful lawmakers in the legislature, even remotely challenge Jindal. In fact, he even blocked attempts to call special sessions to override Jindal’s vetoes of bills offered by some legislators to prevent the present budget collapse. Alario has been a loyal puppet to Jindal and has been rewarded many perks for this loyalty.
However, he need not insult the intelligence of the Louisiana voter by acting as though he is trying to solve a budgetary situation that was simply handed to him by an incompetent governor. John Alario shares equal responsibility with Jindal for the bankruptcy of Louisiana.
In six months the residents of Louisiana will get a chance to elect a new governor along with 144 legislators. It's time to throw all these legislators out of office and start anew.
Tuesday, May 12, 2015
Let's get Serious About Finding Money for the State
From initial reports it appears that the 2015 Jazz and Heritage
Festival will once again post record attendance figures despite the high ticket
prices. However, since the state years ago granted tax-exempt status to
the operators of the festival, the Jazz and Heritage Foundation, an opportunity
to score some significant cash for the state has been missed yet again.
When questions arise about the wisdom of this tax-exemption
status the foundation always responds with the pat answer that they attempt to
keep the ticket prices as low as possible and that sales tax would raise those
prices for customers. Obviously that is just B.S. because they
continue to deal with the Ticket Master Corporation for the sale of online
tickets which adds a sizable surcharge to each ticket purchase. In
fact, that fee is higher than my proposed 4% state sales tax additional
cost. Apparently, the Foundation has no problem with the Ticket Master
increase.
Besides I am not suggesting that they pass the sales tax on to
the customer, just pay it out of their profits. Last year over 435,000
attended. If sales tax had been assessed on these ticket purchases
alone, over $1.2 million would have flowed into the state coffer.
Not bad for a seven day event.
The same can be applied to the Mercedes Benz Superdome and
the Audubon Nature Institute, both of which also enjoy a tax-free status.
The dome charges $8.00 to $9.00 for a beer and yet NO sales tax is
assessed on that purchase or on any food purchased along with it. Again
pay the sales tax out of the $8.00.
Just think of all the revenue the Zoo, the Aquarium, the
Jazz Festival, the Saint’s games, and concerts could generate to plug the $1.6
billion deficit. Bet our legislators won’t touch these sacred cows, but
they have no problems cutting health care and education.
When is enough, enough?
While our
esteem legislators waste precious time passing symbolic legislation resulting
in miniscule budgetary savings to plug a $1.6 billion state funding deficit,
they continue to allow spending that adds significantly to that debt.
A good
example is Jindal’s unrestricted spending in his quest to derail the Common
Core Standards. Our legislators permitted our Rhodes Scholar governor to
hire the Faircloth Law Firm, run by Jimmy Faircloth, Jindal’s former executive
counsel, to handle the case. However, since Louisiana already has legal
counsels in house, known as the Attorney General’s Office, whose salaries are
already being paid with tax payers’ money, I wondered why our legislators did
not attempt to stop this. From Jindal’s point of view, I guess the fact
that Faircloth and his law firm donated over $25,000 to his gubernatorial
campaigns had nothing to do with his decision to add to the state’s debt.
In addition to the Common Core case, Jimmy Faircloth is handling other high profile cases that include the defense of the governor's signature education laws creating a statewide voucher program, the rewriting of teacher tenure and pay policies, the LSU Board of Supervisors' closed-door presidential search, and the legal battle over the termination of the Medicaid provider Client Network Services. It is actually very difficult to assess just how much money the state of Louisiana has paid for Faircloth’s services due to the numerous state entities contracting with him.
In 2010 our
legislators even allowed a no-bid contract by the state’s attorney general
office to hire the Faircloth Law Firm to handle the state's litigation against
BP PLC for the Gulf of Mexico oil spill, a continuing cash cow for Faircloth.
Legal
contracts are only one example of the significant rise in outside contracts
entered into by the Jindal administration over the past 7 ½ years. . In
2012 alone Louisiana government spent $5.28 billion on professional and
consulting contracts. Most recently, the stupidest one was the no-bid $5
million contract to the out-of-state firm Alvarez and Marshal to find ways to
save money. Need I say more.
It is
already clear from the early proceedings of this year’s legislative session, that
our legislators have no intention of cutting to the chase and dealing with one
of the major cost wastes at the Baton Rouge capital, patronage contracts.
While legislators continue to waste time in the legislative session, the dooms
day clock for Louisiana’s colleges and universities continues to tick.
Sunday, April 26, 2015
No Tigers without LSU
One thing Louisiana doesn’t have a shortage of is LSU
fans. Their exuberance for LSU athletics is stupendous; even among those
who never attended the university. Ask them a question about LSU athletic
stats and you surely will receive a knowledgeable answer. But, ask them a
question about the current financial situation facing the university, and
sadly, most of these same fans will simply respond with blank stares.
They have little or no knowledge of the dire financial consequences that are
currently brewing with the rest of LSU.
LSU is running out of money to operate as the premier
research university in this state, and even the LSU students seem blasé about the seriousness of this
situation.
The funding cuts currently proposed to stem the $1.6 billion
deficit, which the Jindal administration along with our esteemed legislators
have created, would reduce the state funding for LSU next year from
around $3,500 per undergraduate student to $660 per undergraduate student.
In response to this, LSU is considering filing for
“financial exigency” or academic bankruptcy, something Southern University was
recently forced to do. This status makes it easier for public colleges to shut
down programs and lay off tenured faculty. However, it also impacts a
school's reputation, making it harder to recruit high quality faculty and
students. Yes, and that includes athletes. No one wants to
play for a school that has a bottom rung academic reputation.
Don’t take the attitude that all this bankruptcy talk is
just grand standing and that our legislators would never let this happen.
Jindal has made it perfectly clear that he will veto any kind of revenue
raising plan that is not what he has termed ‘revenue neutral’ and your
legislators have no previous history of ever overriding any of Jindal’s
vetoes. If you don’t think Jindal will sacrifice even LSU for a
presidential nod you are foolish. Just look it all the other sacrificial
lambs he has already served up on his quest.
If you like your LSU sports, you better get off your duffs
and do something, because you can’t have a premier athletic program without a
premier university.
Women are not second class citizens
The
Louisiana Republican gentlemen’s club has spoken-women are not equal to men in
job worthiness. Republicans on the House Labor Panel recently killed both
bills aimed at providing equal pay to men and women with similar skills,
performing similar jobs.
All nine
Republicans on the committee voted against the measures. I wonder if
they’re man enough to tell their spouses about their discriminatory vote which
perpetuates Louisiana’s male/female pay gap rank as dead last nationally,
another star ranking Louisiana can be proud of.
Doesn’t
matter who you are, Republican, Democrat, Libertarian, Socialist, African-American,
Caucasian, Asian, Hispanic, Latino, Native American, or Hawaiian, as long as
you’re female you will make only 66 cents for every dollar earned by a male in
the same job in this state.
For the past
several years, the national Republican Party has worked very hard trying to
shed its previous image as a party of ‘old white men’ to one that embraces all
members of our society equally.
However, it
looks as though Louisiana Republican males still haven’t gotten that
message. Many on the committee responded to criticism of their action by
stating that such bills weren’t necessary because there are already laws on the
books forbidding discrimination. Yet they were still unwilling to
legally solidify this when it comes to equal pay.
While Louisiana
Republican males actively pursue the support of conservative women for their
issues on “right to life”, “traditional marriage”, and “religious freedom”,
sadly, deep down inside, beyond the superficial rhetoric, many continue to
perceive all women as second class citizens regarding equal pay. This is
something all women need to carefully consider when they go to the polls at
election time.
Once again
it’s a sad day for the women of Louisiana.
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