Does Billion Dollar Spending Hike Loom For Pa. After All?

McCall.Com is reporting that Gov. Rendell along with the leadership in the state Senate and House has agreed that state spending will increase by $1 billion for 2010-11.

“We’ve agreed with the Legislature we will try to hold spending growth to about 4 percent,” Rendell reportedly said in a conference call. That would mean mean a $1 billion increase to the current $27.8 billion budget.

State Senate Minority Appropriations Committee Chairman Jay Costa (D-43) said a $1.2 billion spending hike is expected.

Anna Chacko Kept VA Job After Intervention By N.C. Dem

Anna Chacko Kept VA Job After Intervention By N.C. Dem — The head of radiology at the Veterans Affairs Pittsburgh Health System had her job saved by North Carolina Congressman Brad Miller (D-NC13).

Why?

Dr. Anna Chacko was hired in October 2008  or, according to Miller, September 2008. Previously, she had headed the radiology  department at St. James Hospital in Butte, Mt., a job she left after 15 months in which she left the department in turmoil and was prominently named in at least four lawsuits, according to Mike Volpe at BigGovernment.Com.

Before that she spent  a year at the Boston University until she was removed after complaints of sexual harassment to the human resources department, according to Volpe.

And before that she spent six years at Lahey Clinic in the Boston suburb of Burlington before being fired after which security reportedly had to forcibly carry her out   while  Dr. Chacko — who is of Indian descent — screamed “Kiss my big Indian Ass,” according to Volpe.

Well, in March ’09 the Pittsburgh VA had convened an administrative investigative board regarding Dr. Chacko and the expectation was that she would lose her job after just five months. A lawyer got Dr. Chacko some breathing room when he convinced the powers-that-be that she was denied due process, and a new hearing was scheduled for May 21.

It never convened, however, due to this letter from Miller to Gen. Erick Shinseki, the secretary for the Department of Veterans Affairs and the word was passed to stop the attempts to remove Dr. Chacko.

Dr. Chacko was ordered to complete an anger management course and she returned to work Aug. 1. Complaints resumed, however, and in October she was placed on indefinite administrative leave.  A formal notice of termination has been issued to her effective Jan. 25.

So why did a North Carolina congressmen intervene in this matter and how did Dr. Chacko get the job in the first place?

Volpe has contacted Miller for a response, and Miller has declined to give him one.

Anna Chacko Kept VA Job After Intervention By N.C. Dem

Rick Schenker Quits Lt. Gov Race

Maybe you can chalk this one up as a victory for President Obama. Former Erie County Executive Rick Schenker, a Republican,  announced yesterday that
he is ending his bid for lieutenant governor.

“My employment and economic circumstances have changed drastically causing me to look for employment all over the country,” Schenker said.

Still
in the race for the GOP nomination are:

Carol Aichele (Chester County Commissioner)
Bruce L. Castor Jr. (ex-Montco D.A.)
James F. Cawley (Bucks County Commissioner)
Russ Diamond (founder of  PACleanSweep)
Dominic D. “Nick” DiFrancesco II (Dauphin County Commissioner)
John H. Eichelberger, Jr. (state senator representing the 30th District)
James R. Matthews (Montco Commissioner, last GOP Lt. Gov candidate, Chris Matthews’ brother)
Frank L. Rizzo Jr. (Philly councilman, son of legendary mayor)
Mike Turzai (state representative for the 28th District)
Joseph P. Watkins (pastor of Christ Evangelical Lutheran Church, the oldest African American Lutheran Church in Philadelphia)

Seeking the Democratic nod are:

Michael F. “Mike” Gerber (state representative for the 148th District)
Valerie McDonald Roberts (Allegheny County recorder of deeds)
Jonathan A. Saidel (former Philadelphia city controller)
Josh Shapiro (state representative for the 153rd District)
Doris Smith-Ribner (former Commonwealth Court judge)

The primary election is May 18.

Rendell Wants $170 Million In Spending Cuts

Rendell Wants $170 Million In Spending Cuts — Pennsylvania’s Obamaconic budget crisis has caused Gov. Ed Rendell to announce a plan to cut state spending by $170 million and has specified where $161 million of those cuts would be.

It should be noted that Rendell said he was cutting last year but spending actually rose.

Under the just announced plan, State Correctional Institutions would receive $15.377 million less than last year. This appears to be the biggest line item cut.

Public Welfare would be cut $53.688 million, with County Child Welfare (-$10.4 million), Acute Care Hospitals (-$4.7 million), Autism Intervention and Services (-$4.5 million), the Human Services Development Fund (-$4 million), and Health Care Clinics (-$3 million) taking the biggest hits. Money to the acute care hospitals and health care clinics would, in fact, being zeroed out.

State money for education would be cut by $27.835 million with the biggest share of the cuts coming in the Authority Rentals and Sinking Fund Requirements line item at $11.5 million.

Things like Cultural Preservation Assistance, Regional History Centers and Minority Business Development would be zeroed out.

For the complete list see here.

Rendell Wants $170 Million In Spending Cuts

Are the GOP’s Boyars Rohrer Ignorers?

Congressman Jim Gerlach (R-Pa6) has ended his quest for governor but two other Republican candidates remain besides front-runner Attorney General Tom Corbett, and today’s Philadelphia Inquirer has a story about how the supporters of one of them — state Rep Sam Rohrer who holds the seat for  the 128th District in Berks County — feel the GOP establishment is unduly dismissing their man.

Which is probably true and is a shame since Rohrer, who has held his seat since 1992, has some interesting ideas and is not afraid to take on the special interests about the most pressing problems facing this state such as the ever increasing school property tax.

Rohrer has introduced House Bill 1275  — the School Property Tax Elimination Act  — in every session since 2004 which would replace the $6 billion to $8 billion in lost
residential school tax revenue by broadening the state sales tax to
include more goods and services, such as nonprescription drugs and the
fees that a home plumber charges.

If you think about it, it is more sensible to tax the plumbing work than the home itself.

Still the better means of attacking the threat to home ownership would be on the expense side — such as ending prevailing wage requirements for municipal projects, allowing school districts to hire outside the educational establishment for administrators and, most importantly, ending the right to strike for teachers which would curtail the ever increasing cost of salaries which is by far the largest part of any school district’s budget and takes the largest bite from the taxpayers wallet even including county and township/borough/city expenses.

The primary election is May 18.  The third candidate on the GOP gubernatorial ballot is National Guardsman Sgt. Robert Allen Mansfield.

Pa. House Speaker Will Not Seek Re-Election

Keith R. McCall, the Democrat from the 122nd District (Carbon County) who is Speaker of the State House is not seeking re-election.

He said he wants to spend time with his family.

McCall has represented the district since 1982 when he was elected to replace his late father.

Curt Schroder Drops Out Of Pa6

State Rep. Curt Schroder (R-155) has announced that he is ending his bid to represent the 6th District of Pennsylvania in Congress due to incumbent Jim Gerlach’s decision to seek re-election upon aborting his run for governor.

Schroder said:

I am ending my candidacy for the 6th Congressional District. I know to many of you this will come as a bitter disappointment. It certainly is to me. . . The sudden and unexpected re-entry into the 6th District race of the current incumbent presented a new and potentially insurmountable obstacle to my effort to be your next Congressman. . . After speaking with many donors and people I highly respect such as Congressman Bob Walker and Pat Toomey, it became clear that the prospect of adequate finances to convey my positions and strong convictions to the public were diminished. While I know for certain that I have the passion, energy, and commitment to do the job, I cannot answer the question of where the resources would come from to win this campaign in light of this development.I am ending my candidacy for the 6th Congressional District. I know to many of you this will come as a bitter disappointment. It certainly is to me. . . The sudden and unexpected re-entry into the 6th District race of the current incumbent presented a new and potentially insurmountable obstacle to my effort to be your next Congressman. . . After speaking with many donors and people I highly respect such as Congressman Bob Walker and Pat Toomey, it became clear that the prospect of adequate finances to convey my positions and strong convictions to the public were diminished. While I know for certain that I have the passion, energy, and commitment to do the job, I cannot answer the question of where the resources would come from to win this campaign in light of this development.

The gerrymanded  6th District includesLower Merion in Montgomery County, Coatesville and Yellow Springs in Chester County, a large part of Berks County and part of Lehigh County.

Kudos to Nathan Benefield for the tip.

An ‘Educated’ Radnor High Grad, Tea Parties, ‘Climate Change’ And The Philadelphia Inquirer

David Brooks, a 1979 graduate of Radnor High School (Pa.) and the “conservative” columnist for the New York Times, has written a column about the growth of the tea party movement in which he expresses concern about how the ideas of the educated class have fallen from favor.

“The educated class believes in global warming, so public skepticism about global warming is on the rise. The educated class supports abortion rights, so public opinion is shifting against them. The educated class supports gun control, so opposition to gun control is mounting,” he said.

Now what Brooks is referring to “educated class” are people who have been certified as educated by self-proclaimed authorities, and their “education” consist mostly of why one must not question those authorities.

Most of that “educated class” does not know the Bible very well — think Howard Dean putting the Book of Job in the New Testament; and the ignorance extends to things like the Declaration of Independence, the Constitution and pretty much most of American History. A noted 1993 poll of Ivy League students showed that 75 percent of them couldn’t identify who defined democracy as “a government of the people, by the people and for the people”, and half of them didn’t know their senators.

Which gets us to “global warming”. The skepticism isn’t about global warming but about whether it is a crisis. There are plenty of people who are not certified as educated by self-proclaimed authorities yet have the brains to understand that  claims should be rejected out-of-hand when someone who has gained financially and politically  by making those claims  has been found not to be forthright in presenting his evidence.

Perhaps, Brooks should re-define his class as the sucker-that-can-be-seen-a-mile-away class.

And that gets us to the Philadelphia Inquirer and the story it ran Saturday in which it attempted to whitewash the deeds of  Michael Mann, the director of Pennsylvania State University’s Earth System Science Center, whose emails were prominent among those leaked from East Anglia Climate Research Unit showing the entire movement to be an exercise in financially lucrative fear-mongering.

The Inky said:

Mann was affable and calm as he answered the assertions of his critics.The hardest part for him, he said, is having his integrity questioned. Scientists, he said, are “not trained to deal with these kinds of attacks.””My suspicion is, this has been orchestrated at a high level,” he said of the hacking.Behind his desk were a picture of his 4-year-old daughter and aplaque commemorating his contribution to the 2007 Nobel Peace Prize,shared by the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change. Mann was the lead author on the group’s 2001 assessment report.

No where does it mention that

— mention that data from East Anglia was destroyed.

— put in context that what Mann was advocating regarding the Climate Research Journal amounted to behind-the-scene censorship of legitimate dissenters.

— show that there was an attempt to distort data to fit the desired conclusion.  Here is an elaboration on what was being attempted

Here is a list of some of the more damning emails. Remember this group was trying to restrict your — not their own or Al Gore’s or Michael Moore’s — energy use, and make you  much poorer.

Legislators Not Passing Out Calendars This Year

Legislators Not Passing Out Calendars This Year — The calendars featuring photos of the state capitol  that our legislators bestow on favored constituents were not printed this year due to Pennsylvania’s financial difficulties.

The Senate spent $59,612 in 2009 on printing and distributing
calendars. The cost to the House was about $90,000.

Meanwhile assistants to the assistants of school superintendents are still making six figures in many if not most districts in this state.

But the calendar cutting is a start.

Legislators Not Passing Out Calendars This Year

Bill Naulty, R.I.P.

William P. Naulty died Thursday of complications from an infection at Penn Presbyterian Medical Center. He was 73 and lived in Cinnaminson, N.J..

Mr. Naulty joined the Army after graduating from West Philadelphia Catholic High School. After his discharge, he joined the Philadelphia Evening Bulletin as a copy boy. He would become a police reporter then cover Burlington County, N.J. until the paper closed in 1982. His next career was as  a legislative aide to Republican Assembly members and senators in New Jersey’s 8th Legislative District, a post from which he retired in 2003.

Mr. Naulty was  secretary for the Philadelphia Press Association until his death.

He is survived by a son, William Jr., a daughter, Marie Ritchie, and grandchildren. His wife of 41 years, Marie Newman Naulty, died in 2007.

Friends may call 6 to 9 tomorrow eveing at Perinchief Chapels, 438 Hight St., Mount Holly, N.J. and at 10 a.m., Monday, before a Funeral Mass at 11 a.m. at Sacred Heart Chuerch, 103 Fourth St., Riverton. Burial will be in Lakeview Memorial Park, Cinnaminson.

 

 

Bill Naulty, R.I.P.