Category Archives: Politics: North Carolina

Immigration

Immigration.  Illegal immigration.  These are words that cause our politicians to pause.  They should.  It is my opinion that immigration is one of the few issues that has caused many many people to shy away from the current iteration of the Republican Party.  I don’t know why we, as conservatives, are taking such a hard line on this one.  Especially when I think that we are wrong.  And more especially because I think a lot of people feel that same way I do.

This past Tuesday, the N&O published an article on Chatham’s unwillingness to have it’s officers participate in the ICE program.

…a federal program that would allow local law enforcement officers to enforce federal immigration laws.

Chatham officials are concerned about such participation and expressed themselves very well:

Enforcement of ICE agreements can lead to violations of civil rights and liberties, distrust of law enforcement, the separation of family members and racial profiling,

As a conservative, I think that we are wrong on illegal immigration in general and ICE in specific.   We have people all over the globe trying to come to the United States.  These folks bring with them a love of freedom and will also bring a love of their new country.  These people are the kinds of people we want.  These are the folks that have taken a good hard look at there position and have found that they may be able to do better for themselves and their families by sacrificing.  By giving up the life they currently have for one in the United States.  Almost always these are the types of people that bring with them a work ethic that is strong.  They bring a willingness to participate and interact.  In short, these people are DO’ERS!  They are not get along’ers.

Because we have a situation where both parties feel they will gain, we should make the process to become a citizen easier.  This business of 9+ years to become a citizen is incredibly inefficient and needless.  The only thing that you need to know about the process is that it is the government that is in charge of it.  Any good conservative will tell you that a program run by Uncle Sam is one that is inefficient.  So, this creates a situation where people are in the country illegally.  Except for their legal status, they are critical and productive members of society.  They are winning and we are winning.

For the specifics of ICE, well, immigration and the illegal entry of people into our country is a Federal matter.  This should be handled by Federal Agents; not local police forces.  To think that the feds can just push down the responsibility to the local and often times struggling police force is not fair, and not how the whole system of jurisdiction works.  Further, Chatham has it right.  A community has to trust it’s police team.  It has to trust it’s officers, their supervisors and the chief himself.  The whole system has to be trusted.  And it can’t be for exactly the reasons Chatham pointed out.

We have to get this one right.  We can not afford to take every opposite positions that the Democrats through at us.  When they are wrong, oppose them and run on that platform.  But when they are right, then take their idea, make it better, do it better and run on THAT platform. How does that ol’ jingle go?

Anything you can do I can do better; I can do everything better than you!

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The State’s Budget

Having been recently sworn in, the Govna is faced with a budget shortfall of nearly 3 billion bucks.  This on a total nut of 21.5 billion.  We are currently budgeted to be just about 10% short.  Now, to be sure, tax revenue is down, how could it not be?  With unemployment at a rate we haven’t seen in quite some time, the state is simply pulling in less money from fewer people.  Understandable.  Same could be said for corporate and sales tax.  I get it, tax revenue is down.

But serious, 3 billion down?  Where else did we go wrong?  Where are we spending the money that we didn’t have.

The News and Observer reported on this here.  They do a fair job showing the loss of revenue, but come up short on the whole “spending side”.  How are we going to manage our way out of this?

Congrats Senator Burr

Probably a minor news topic, but hey, we’ll take what we can get.

Sen. John Kyle of Arizona, the Senate Republican whip, appointed Burr to serve as his chief deputy whip. Kyle cited Burr’s “outstanding leadership skills.”

All Aboard!

amtrak1So, while this is not light rail and that whole boondoggle, this may come close?  Or not.  I’m not sure.  But while reading this I was struck by two key facts:

Local leaders drew encouragement last year from an economic study by Amtrak and the state Department of Transportation. A Hillsborough stop would boost ticket revenue enough to trim the state’s Amtrak subsidy by a projected $56,000 a year.

Now, first of all, any study done by either Amtrak or the State Department of Transportation should sound the alarms in any neutral observer.  But, okay, for the sake of the article, lets go with it.  Let’s go with 56k a year.  Then this:

To protect one potential site for a train station, the Hillsborough town board agreed last summer to pay $600,000 for 20 acres known as the Collins property, just south of downtown.

So, let me get this straight.  In order to save $56,000 year, the town of Hillsborough spent 600 large to buy the land!.  Before this is over, with building costs creating the side line for the actual railroad and the rest of what I am sure is non-trivial costs, this station is going to cost several million dollars.

To save 56k a year.  You could invest 1 million dollars and pull back 56k a year.

Am I missing something?

Maybe Not That Big a Deal

I was reading through the News and Observer article describing the Govna’s first day in office.  Now, I have switched jobs, taken responsibility over from someone else and even given responsibility to someone who is taking over my role.  Changes happen.  People think that they have better ideas, or fresh ideas or just, I don’t know, ideas.  I have no issue with that.  But what struck was this her quote on the Board of Transportation.  The article sets it up this way

Perdue ordered that the state Board of Transportation, criticized over the years for approving projects based on patronage and parochialism instead of need, cede its authority to approve road projects to the secretary of transportation. Such decisions would be made by the professional planners and engineers at the department, while the board acts as a planning group.

State law, however, requires that the board be consulted on any spending in districts represented by board members. Perdue acknowledged the statutory obstacle, but said the board will shift gears voluntarily.

Okay, okay, s she has some “politicking to do”.  Or, then again, maybe not:

“Because the governor of this state appoints the DOT board, we will be able to convince them very easily to delegate that authority,” she said.

Hmmm, color me naive, but that doesn’t sound right.

Government Employees: The Important Ones

So, this week the State’s Chiefs of Police are meeting in Durham.  They are here to discuss, among other things, how to attract and retain police officers.  I imagine that this is a dilemma that is not unique to police forces.  If asked, I am sure that Fire Chiefs would also list this problem at or near the top of their priority list.  So too would nearly every government agency.  And to make matters worse, we have elected or government appointed people running the show; this alone would cause me to hit the door.

As I was considering this today, I came across this awesome thought from TJIC.  While I have  never been able to express it quite this way, I have always thought that government always seem to lose their best due to circumstances like this.  Exposing your employees to competitive forces does not hurt the staff but rather increases the strength of the organization.  And, by the way, why would we want to protect our worst staff in this case?  I would seem that the top job of any supervisor to identify and remove the bottom 10% of the force?

Another way:  When you have an organization that only protects those who are not the top performers you should not be surprised when only the “not top performers” remain.

Quid Pro [Not] Quo

Serious!  Stones the size of cookie jars!

This from the American Bankers Association:

As part of an agreement reached Thursday with key Senate and House Democrats, Citigroup has agreed not to oppose legislation that would allow bankruptcy judges the authority to modify mortgages that were set up prior to the enactment of the bill. “The ABA has consistently opposed proposals that would give bankruptcy judges broad authority to unilaterally modify the terms of mortgages,” the bank lobby wrote in a statement. The majority of ABA’s members are banks with less than $125 million in assets.

Now for the quiz.  Who should be ashamed here?

pssst…..key sponsors, Sen. Richard Durbin, D-Ill., and Rep. Brad Miller, D-N.C., are hopeful the measure will be included as part of President Elect Barack Obama’s stimulus bill

If it’s Bad When it’s Bad — It’s Bad When it’s Good

So, the Govna has said that she will not be able to push through her campaign goals of free community college and a higher minimum wage.  Her reasoning?  The economy, of course.  When I read this I laughed my ass off.  Of COURSE it’s the economy!  Of course we can’t afford this!  No one thinks that we can afford this.  Even when you were on the campai—-WAIT a flippin minute!  Wait one blessed second.  Is it possible that ol’ Bev Perdue knew that such grandiose ideas as free college tuition and a hike in the minimum wage were actually BAD from an economic standpoint?

We’ll never know, of course.  But the good news is that she has decided to shelve these things for now; at least until 2012.  But, it is interesting to note that the Govna didn’t raise either issue until Richard Moore introduced them.  Possible election strategery?

I came across an interesting discussion regarding higher education the other day.  While I don’t think that I agree with Coyote, I also don’t think that the State should be offering free tuition either.  Higher education trends exceptionally well with wealth and all things responsible.  But, it is something that has to be earned, not given.  For it to have any value at all, it can NOT be given.  Now, this is not to say that we shouldn’t help otherwise responsible kids have a shot.  Trade years of service for tuition.  Make them earn it by maintaining grades throughout.  Something-anything, just not free.

And the minimum wage?  Well, lets just say that I said it here.  In it’s most simple form, labor is a commodity, a resource.  And like any other resource or raw material, when it becomes more expensive, companies buy less of it.  And by purchasing less of it, they either lay off current staff or the don’t hire potential staff.  In either case, companies are going to retain or attract only the most qualified of employees.  They are not going to take a flier on the marginal.  And so it is, that the silly foolish liberal has just fired the VERY person she was trying to help.

Anyway, I digress.  The question is:

  1. Did our honorable Govna use free tuition and increased minimum wage as an election season ploy?  Or….
  2. Does she really understand that both of these ideas are bad bad ideas?  Even in a GOOD economy?

Promises

So, the good Gov’na has made many many promises over the course of her campaign.  And, according to reports, those promises have been removed from her website.  This seems to be a popular politician’s trick as we have seen the same shenanigans over at Obama’s website.  I’ll comment on each in the coming days and then we’ll follow up on the Govna’s progress from time to time.
Thanks to the Raleigh News and Observer who was able to capture those promises and then publish them in today’s edition.  They are:
EDUCATION

  • Expand and better coordinate the Smart Start and More-at-Four pre-kindergarten programs.
  • Build a volunteer corps to tutor students in math and reading.
  • Require all troubled high schools to comply with research-backed restructuring.
  • Ensure that high schools across the state are equipped to offer online college-level coursework.
  • Establish the “College Promise” program to guarantee free or affordable college for students who graduate from high school, stay out of trouble and perform community service. The program would expand a state scholarship program known as EARN and increase the scholarships from two years to four.
  • Waive tuition to all students who graduate from high school and then enter a community college full time.

ARTS

  • Support sustainable resources for community arts councils and organizations. Help them get support from the private sector.
  • Protect and develop cultural heritage sites.
  • Support arts education and expand arts programs in public schools.

WATER

  • Assist local governments with moving toward a tiered water billing system that would charge a higher rate to customers who use the most water.
  • Help small cities and towns install better meters, build connections between regional water systems and repair leaking pipes.
  • Establish water conservation standards for all new homes, businesses and state government buildings.
  • Adopt tax incentives for business to improve water conservation standards in existing buildings.

CRIME

  • Give law enforcement agencies equipment they need and fix funding gaps for high-crime communities.
  • Boost the number of district attorneys, judges, magistrates and clerks. Increase pay for those positions.
  • Toughen anti-gang laws, and attack gangs as organized-crime organizations.
  • Enact harsher penalties for crimes involving guns and drugs.
  • Give more money to law enforcement agencies participating in a federal program that allows local agencies to pursue immigration charges against illegal aliens.
  • Make sure sentences for violent criminals are strong and long.

ECONOMY

  • Dramatically expand and transform a state program that helps small towns and cities preserve and revitalize downtowns. Allow cities and towns to choose which economic development ideas best fit their needs.
  • Support an $18 million tax reform plan to exempt small businesses from the first $15,000 of their income.
  • Expand to $10 million a year a state fund that provides matching grants to start-up companies that win certain research or technology grants.
  • Make the state a leader in biofuels, solar energy and other green technology industries.
  • Increase the state’s investment in an N.C. State University partnership that fosters manufacturing businesses.

HEALTH

  • Provide health insurance coverage for all North Carolina children by giving more money to N.C. Kids Care to expand who is covered. Create a system for families to buy insurance for uninsured or uninsurable children. Expand public outreach to ensure that all children who are eligible are enrolled in Medicaid and Health Choice.
  • Encourage businesses to offer employees affordable health insurance through tax incentives. Establish an affordable small business-coverage policy that would be funded equally by the employer, the employee and the state.
  • Support stem cell research using adult, cord blood or embryonic sources. The N.C. Biotechnology Center will oversee and manage the awarding of stem cell research grants.
  • Every person served by the mental health system should have strong, effective case management.
  • Establish “mental health courts” to link at-risk and minor offenders with mental illnesses to get them treatment before they spiral into a life of crime.
  • Punish swiftly and fully those who abuse or neglect mental health patients.

GOVERNMENT REFORM

  • Make government transparent: “I’m going to open the windows wide on the state capitol, and we’re going to let the sunshine in.”
  • Create a Google-type search engine for scrutinizing all state contracts.
  • Establish an independent budget-reform panel whose recommendations must be voted up or down by the legislature without amendment.
  • Tighten controls to stop officials leaving state service from immediately going to work for businesses they were working with in their state jobs.
  • Prohibit legislators from asking lobbyists to contribute to charities.
  • Make unannounced, on-site inspections of state agencies. Meet with employees without managers present.
  • Work in Charlotte three or four days each month.
  • Change state policy to require that all e-mail messages be kept until the state develops a plan for long-term retention.

ACCESSIBILITY

  • Field questions from the news media every week.
  • Share her public schedules and prohibit staff from deleting e-mail messages.
  • Hold at least four live town hall meetings during her 4-year term. Hold an online town hall meeting once a month.

TRANSPORTATION

  • Strip most specific road-building decisions from the Board of Transportation. Convert the panel into an advisory board of directors.
  • Road building and other transportation decisions will be based on data and need.

ENERGY

  • Rely on scientific and environmental information to determine whether to allow oil drilling off the state’s coastline. North Carolina should share in the profits of any oil discovered.