Clean Up City of St. Augustine, Florida

In secret, behind locked gates, the managers of the Nation's oldest (European-founded) City illegally dumped 40,000 cubic yards of contaminants in the Old City Reservoir, where people fished and swam for generations. St. Augustine's pollution symbolizes our City's putative leaders' lack of trust in the public's right to know. This is advanced citizenship. Please share your questions and whistleblower disclosures about City government. Then let's demand answers. Expect democracy.

Monday, December 07, 2009

Corporativist Stealth Congressional candidate HEATHER BEAVEN runs into sales resistance on her Congressional candidacy to run against JOHN LUIGI MICA

Call me back
November 30th, 2009

How come every one I speak to these days is “right in the middle of something” and wants to know if I can call them back?

annie stephens says:
December 3, 2009 at 5:52 pm

welcome to phone sales, my dear! annoying isn’t it!


http://beavenforcongress.com/blog/?p=196#comments

Rep. JOHN LUIGI MICA stiffs veterans and stiff-arms national health care




Rep. JOHN LUIGI MICA -- you know where he stands.

WIth Americans losing jobs and health care, he's against national health care. MICA supports socialism -- corporate swocialism for his campaign contributors and their earmarks.

MICA stiffed St. Augustine veterans by not attending a November 8, 2009 Veterans Day observance at Flagler College -- claiming to be in D.C., MICA was actually in Seminole County with REpublican swells (and JOHN BOEHNER, above left). MICA had promised publicly only a few days earlier to be at the Flagler College event and to speak about the importance of veterans.

Self-important MICA stiffed the veterans, attending the Seminole County event.

THe Seminole County Republican swells paid $250 to attend a VIP reception and hear MICA and an Ohio representative denounce Democrats and health care.

Harvard Law School Professor Elizabeth Warren in Huffington Post:: America without a middle class?

Warren in Huffington Post: America without a middle class
Professor Elizabeth Warren


December 07, 2009

HLS Professor Elizabeth Warren wrote the following op-ed entitled “America without a Middle Class,” which appeared in the Dec. 2, 2009 edition of The Huffington Post. Warren is chair of the Congressional Oversight Panel on the Troubled Asset Relief Program (TARP).

Can you imagine an America without a strong middle class? If you can, would it still be America as we know it?

Today, one in five Americans is unemployed, underemployed or just plain out of work. One in nine families can't make the minimum payment on their credit cards. One in eight mortgages is in default or foreclosure. One in eight Americans is on food stamps. More than 120,000 families are filing for bankruptcy every month. The economic crisis has wiped more than $5 trillion from pensions and savings, has left family balance sheets upside down, and threatens to put ten million homeowners out on the street.

Families have survived the ups and downs of economic booms and busts for a long time, but the fall-behind during the busts has gotten worse while the surge-ahead during the booms has stalled out. In the boom of the 1960s, for example, median family income jumped by 33% (adjusted for inflation). But the boom of the 2000s resulted in an almost-imperceptible 1.6% increase for the typical family. While Wall Street executives and others who owned lots of stock celebrated how good the recovery was for them, middle class families were left empty-handed.

The crisis facing the middle class started more than a generation ago. Even as productivity rose, the wages of the average fully-employed male have been flat since the 1970s.

But core expenses kept going up. By the early 2000s, families were spending twice as much (adjusted for inflation) on mortgages than they did a generation ago -- for a house that was, on average, only ten percent bigger and 25 years older. They also had to pay twice as much to hang on to their health insurance.

To cope, millions of families put a second parent into the workforce. But higher housing and medical costs combined with new expenses for child care, the costs of a second car to get to work and higher taxes combined to squeeze families even harder. Even with two incomes, they tightened their belts. Families today spend less than they did a generation ago on food, clothing, furniture, appliances, and other flexible purchases -- but it hasn't been enough to save them. Today's families have spent all their income, have spent all their savings, and have gone into debt to pay for college, to cover serious medical problems, and just to stay afloat a little while longer.

Through it all, families never asked for a handout from anyone, especially Washington. They were left to go on their own, working harder, squeezing nickels, and taking care of themselves. But their economic boats have been taking on water for years, and now the crisis has swamped millions of middle class families.

The contrast with the big banks could not be sharper. While the middle class has been caught in an economic vise, the financial industry that was supposed to serve them has prospered at their expense. Consumer banking -- selling debt to middle class families -- has been a gold mine. Boring banking has given way to creative banking, and the industry has generated tens of billions of dollars annually in fees made possible by deceptive and dangerous terms buried in the fine print of opaque, incomprehensible, and largely unregulated contracts.

And when various forms of this creative banking triggered economic crisis, the banks went to Washington for a handout. All the while, top executives kept their jobs and retained their bonuses. Even though the tax dollars that supported the bailout came largely from middle class families -- from people already working hard to make ends meet -- the beneficiaries of those tax dollars are now lobbying Congress to preserve the rules that had let those huge banks feast off the middle class.

Pundits talk about "populist rage" as a way to trivialize the anger and fear coursing through the middle class. But they have it wrong. Families understand with crystalline clarity that the rules they have played by are not the same rules that govern Wall Street. They understand that no American family is "too big to fail." They recognize that business models have shifted and that big banks are pulling out all the stops to squeeze families and boost revenues. They understand that their economic security is under assault and that leaving consumer debt effectively unregulated does not work.

Families are ready for change. According to polls, large majorities of Americans have welcomed the Obama Administration's proposal for a new Consumer Financial Protection Agency (CFPA). The CFPA would be answerable to consumers -- not to banks and not to Wall Street. The agency would have the power to end tricks-and-traps pricing and to start leveling the playing field so that consumers have the tools they need to compare prices and manage their money. The response of the big banks has been to swing into action against the Agency, fighting with all their lobbying might to keep business-as-usual. They are pulling out all the stops to kill the agency before it is born. And if those practices crush millions more families, who cares -- so long as the profits stay high and the bonuses keep coming.

America today has plenty of rich and super-rich. But it has far more families who did all the right things, but who still have no real security. Going to college and finding a good job no longer guarantee economic safety. Paying for a child's education and setting aside enough for a decent retirement have become distant dreams. Tens of millions of once-secure middle class families now live paycheck to paycheck, watching as their debts pile up and worrying about whether a pink slip or a bad diagnosis will send them hurtling over an economic cliff.

America without a strong middle class? Unthinkable, but the once-solid foundation is shaking.

Tuesday, December 01, 2009

Three Cheers for the U.S. Supreme Court (and Florida Supreme Court Justice Harry Lee Anstead)

Without arguments or briefs, the Supreme Court of the United States (SCOTUS) just erased a death sentence against a Melbourne, Florida man, reversing the 11th Circuit Court of Appeals and the Florida Supreme Court, finding that a convicted murderer's defense lawyer rendered ineffective counsel when he failed to put on evidence of the murderer's post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) resulting from Korean War military service.

The U.S. Supreme Court's unanimous per curiam decision showed Florida (like Texas) needs judges and legislators who are more sensitive to constitutional rights.

Florida Supreme Court Justice Harry Lee Anstead, writing for himself and another justice, dissented in the death penalty case in 1990. Porter v. State, 564 So. 2d 1060 (1990).

STAND DOWN PROJECT TEXAS == Porter v. McCollum

Porter v. McCollum

"Post-combat stress as a defense," is the title of Lyle Denniston's SCOTUS Blog post.

The Supreme Court, in a sign of the times for a nation at war on two fronts, on Monday put defense lawyers on notice that they should be prepared to use evidence of “post-traumatic stress disorder” to try to save accused veterans from the death penalty. Ruling without full briefing or a hearing, and with no dissent noted, the Court apparently overturned the death sentence of a Florida veteran whose “combat service unfortunately left him a traumatized, changed man,” as the Court put it in Porter v. McCollum (08-10537), involving Korean war veteran George Porter, Jr. The unsigned opinion can be found here.

“Our Nation has a long tradition of according leniency to veterans in recognition of their service, especially for those who fought on the front lines as Porter did,” the opinion said. “The relevance of Porter’s extensive combat experience is not only that he served honorably under extreme hardship and gruesome conditions, but also that the jury might find mitigating the intense stress and mental and emotional toll that combat took on Porter.”

Because the case turned mainly on the specific facts of the prosecution and defense of Porter for murdering his former girlfriend and her boyfriend, it is not clear that the ruling will have a direct impact on other criminal cases in which combat stress might be a key factor. However, parts of the Court’s opinion read as if the Justices did intend to speak more broadly.

It noted that post-traumatic stress disorder “is not uncommon among veterans returning from combat,” and cited testimony before Congress this year by Veterans Affairs Secretary Eric K. Shinseki that “approximately 23 percent of the Iraq and Afghanistan war veterans seeking treatment at a VA medical facility had been preliminarily diagnoses with PTSD.” It also noted that, in Porter’s case specifically, a medical expert testified that his symptoms “would ‘easily’ warrant a diagnosis” of PTSD.

Adam Liptak writes, "Justices Say War Trauma Must be Weighed in Capital Cases," in the New York Times.

A death penalty lawyer’s failure to present evidence of the trauma his client suffered in combat in the Korean War requires a new sentencing hearing, the Supreme Court ruled unanimously on Monday.

The decision makes clear that lawyers for clients facing the death penalty must present evidence of post-traumatic stress disorder resulting from military service if it is available.

The unsigned 15-page decision displayed unusual solicitude for a death-row inmate, noting that “our nation has a long tradition of according leniency to veterans in recognition of their service, especially for those who fought on the front lines.”

The defendant, George Porter Jr., was convicted in 1987 of murdering his former girlfriend, Evelyn Williams, and her boyfriend, Walter Burrows, in Melbourne, Fla., the previous year. Mr. Porter represented himself for part of his trial and then decided to plead guilty.

He turned to a court-appointed lawyer, Sam Bardwell, to represent him in the sentencing hearing. Mr. Bardwell, who had never represented a defendant in a capital sentencing proceeding, did not interview any of his client’s relatives and did not obtain any school, medical or military service records. He presented only one witness, Mr. Porter’s ex-wife.

Mr. Bardwell’s investigation, Monday’s decision said, was not “even cursory.” Mr. Bardwell has explained that his client had been fatalistic and uncooperative. He did not respond to a message seeking comment on Monday.

Mr. Bardwell’s conduct “did not reflect reasonable professional judgment,” the decision said. “Had Porter’s counsel been effective, the judge and jury would have learned,” among other things, “about Porter’s heroic military service in two of the most critical — and horrific — battles of the Korean War.”

Today's Chicago Tribune carries, "Supreme Court cites combat stress in reversing death penalty," by David Savage.

The Supreme Court on Monday threw out a death sentence for a decorated veteran who fought on the front lines of the Korean War, ruling for the first time that combat stress must be considered by a jury before it hands down the harshest punishment.

"Our nation has a long tradition of according leniency to veterans in recognition of their service, especially for those who fought on the front lines as [George] Porter did," the justices said in a unanimous, unsigned opinion.

Porter, 76, was convicted and sentenced to die for the 1986 shooting and killing his ex-girlfriend and her new boyfriend during a drunken rage in Melbourne, Fla. But his jury was never told, and his appointed lawyer did not know, of his valiant military service more than three decades earlier.

In the past, the high court has set aside just a few death sentences because a defense lawyer failed to tell jurors of crucial "mitigating evidence" that would likely have persuaded them to spare his life.

Monday's decision appears to be the first in which the court cited "post-traumatic stress disorder" from military combat as the kind of crucial evidence that calls for leniency. It comes as thousands of U.S. soldiers are being treated for the disorder from the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan.

Both the Florida Supreme Court and the 11th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals in Atlanta upheld Porter's death sentence, despite his overlooked military record, but the high court said those decisions were mistaken.

"George Porter is a veteran who was both wounded and decorated for his active participation in two major engagements during the Korean War. His combat service unfortunately left him a traumatized, changed man," the justices said.

The court's opinion put defense lawyers in capital cases on notice that they have a duty to look into their client's background and to tell jurors about any mitigating evidence that would call for leniency.

In Porter's case, his appointed lawyer testified later that he had only one short meeting with his client before the trial and that he did not meet with Porter's family and was unaware of his military record.

Tony Mauro writes, "Supreme Court Sides With Florida Inmate on Ineffective Assistance," for the BLT.

Returning from its Thanksgiving break, the Supreme Court today issued a powerful unsigned "per curiam" opinion agreeing that the ineffective assistance of counsel for Florida death row inmate George Porter Jr. prejudiced the sentence he received after his murder trial in 1988. He was convicted in the murder of a former girlfriend and her boyfriend. The Florida Supreme Court and the U.S. Court of Appeals for the 11th Circuit previously rejected his ineffective assistance claim.

Ruling in Porter v. McCollum, available here, the Court extensively detailed Porter's "horrible family life" and his trying Korean War experiences that earned him two Purple Hearts and other decorations -- none of which was told to the trial court as mitigating evidence during sentencing. The trial lawyer's failure to introduce the evidence "did not reflect reasonable professional judgment" and could well have affected the outcome of the case, the Court said.
In language that is sure to be cited in future cases involving veterans, the Court said that the fact that Porter went AWOL in Korea did not detract from the significance of his combat experience as mitigating evidence.

Landmark U.S. Supreme Court decision in Porter v. McCollum

GEORGE PORTER, Jr. v. BILL McCOLLUM,
ATTORNEY GENERAL OF FLORIDA, et al.

on petition for writ of certiorari to the united
states court of appeals for the eleventh circuit

No. 08-10537. Decided November 30, 2009

Per Curiam.

Petitioner George Porter is a veteran who was both wounded and decorated for his active participation in two major engagements during the Korean War; his combat service unfortunately left him a traumatized, changed man. His commanding officer's moving description of those two battles was only a fraction of the mitigating evidence that his counsel failed to discover or present during the penalty phase of his trial in 1988.

In this federal postconviction proceeding, the District Court held that Porter's lawyer's failure to adduce that evidence violated his Sixth Amendment right to counsel and granted his application for a writ of habeas corpus. The Court of Appeals for the Eleventh Circuit reversed, on the ground that the Florida Supreme Court's determination that Porter was not prejudiced by any deficient performance by his counsel was a reasonable application of Strickland v. Washington, 466 U. S. 668 (1984). Like the District Court, we are persuaded that it was objectively unreasonable to conclude there was no reasonable probability the sentence would have been different if the sentencing judge and jury had heard the significant mitigation evidence that Porter's counsel neither uncovered nor presented. We therefore grant the petition for certiorari in part and reverse the judgment of the Court of Appeals.1

I

Porter was convicted of two counts of first-degree murder for the shooting of his former girlfriend, Evelyn Williams, and her boyfriend Walter Burrows. He was sentenced to death on the first count but not the second.

In July 1986, as his relationship with Williams was ending, Porter threatened to kill her and then left town. When he returned to Florida three months later, he attempted to see Williams but her mother told him that Williams did not want to see him. He drove past Williams' house each of the two days prior to the shooting, and the night before the murder he visited Williams, who called the police. Porter then went to two cocktail lounges and spent the night with a friend, who testified Porter was quite drunk by 11 p.m. Early the next morning, Porter shot Williams in her house. Burrows struggled with Porter and forced him outside where Porter shot him.

Porter represented himself, with standby counsel, for most of the pretrial proceedings and during the beginning of his trial. Near the completion of the State's case in chief, Porter pleaded guilty. He thereafter changed his mind about representing himself, and his standby counsel was appointed as his counsel for the penalty phase. During the penalty phase, the State attempted to prove four aggravating factors: Porter had been "previously convicted" of another violent felony (i.e., in Williams' case, killing Burrows, and in his case, killing Williams);2 the murder was committed during a burglary; the murder was committed in a cold, calculated, and premeditated manner; and the murder was especially heinous, atrocious, or cruel. The defense put on only one witness, Porter's ex-wife, and read an excerpt from a deposition. The sum total of the mitigating evidence was inconsistent testimony about Porter's behavior when intoxicated and testimony that Porter had a good relationship with his son. Although his lawyer told the jury that Porter "has other handicaps that weren't apparent during the trial" and Porter was not "mentally healthy," he did not put on any evidence related to Porter's mental health. 3 Tr. 477-478 (Jan. 22, 1988).

The jury recommended the death sentence for both murders. The trial court found that the State had proved all four aggravating circumstances for the murder of Williams but that only the first two were established with respect to Burrows' murder. The trial court found no mitigating circumstances and imposed a death sentence for Williams' murder only. On direct appeal, the Florida Supreme Court affirmed the sentence over the dissent of two justices, but struck the heinous, atrocious, or cruel aggravating factor. Porter v. State, 564 So. 2d 1060 (1990) (per curiam). The court found the State had not carried its burden on that factor because the "record is consistent with the hypothesis that Porter's was a crime of passion, not a crime that was meant to be deliberately and extraordinarily painful." Id., at 1063 (emphasis deleted). The two dissenting justices would have reversed the penalty because the evidence of drunkenness, "combined with evidence of Porter's emotionally charged, desperate, frustrated desire to meet with his former lover, is sufficient to render the death penalty disproportional punishment in this instance." Id., at 1065-1066 (Barkett, J., concurring in part and dissenting in part).

In 1995, Porter filed a petition for postconviction relief in state court, claiming his penalty-phase counsel failed to investigate and present mitigating evidence. The court conducted a 2-day evidentiary hearing, during which Porter presented extensive mitigating evidence, all of which was apparently unknown to his penalty-phase counsel. Unlike the evidence presented during Porter's penalty hearing, which left the jury knowing hardly anything about him other than the facts of his crimes, the new evidence described his abusive childhood, his heroic military service and the trauma he suffered because of it, his long-term substance abuse, and his impaired mental health and mental capacity.

The depositions of his brother and sister described the abuse Porter suffered as a child. Porter routinely witnessed his father beat his mother, one time so severely that she had to go to the hospital and lost a child. Porter's father was violent every weekend, and by his siblings' account, Porter was his father's favorite target, particularly when Porter tried to protect his mother. On one occasion, Porter's father shot at him for coming home late, but missed and just beat Porter instead. According to his brother, Porter attended classes for slow learners and left school when he was 12 or 13.

To escape his horrible family life, Porter enlisted in the Army at age 17 and fought in the Korean War. His company commander, Lieutenant Colonel Sherman Pratt, testified at Porter's postconviction hearing. Porter was with the 2d Division, which had advanced above the 38th parallel to Kunu-ri when it was attacked by Chinese forces. Porter suffered a gunshot wound to the leg during the advance but was with the unit for the battle at Kunu-ri. While the Eighth Army was withdrawing, the 2d Division was ordered to hold off the Chinese advance, enabling the bulk of the Eighth Army to live to fight another day. As Colonel Pratt described it, the unit "went into position there in bitter cold night, terribly worn out, terribly weary, almost like zombies because we had been in constant--for five days we had been in constant contact with the enemy fighting our way to the rear, little or no sleep, little or no food, literally as I say zombies." 1 Tr. 138 (Jan. 4, 1996). The next morning, the unit engaged in a "fierce hand-to-hand fight with the Chinese" and later that day received permission to withdraw, making Porter's regiment the last unit of the Eighth Army to withdraw. Id., at 139-140.

Less than three months later, Porter fought in a second battle, at Chip'yong-ni. His regiment was cut off from the rest of the Eighth Army and defended itself for two days and two nights under constant fire. After the enemy broke through the perimeter and overtook defensive positions on high ground, Porter's company was charged with retaking those positions. In the charge up the hill, the soldiers "were under direct open fire of the enemy forces on top of the hill. They immediately came under mortar, artillery, machine gun, and every other kind of fire you can imagine and they were just dropping like flies as they went along." Id., at 150. Porter's company lost all three of its platoon sergeants, and almost all of the officers were wounded. Porter was again wounded and his company sustained the heaviest losses of any troops in the battle, with more than 50% casualties. Colonel Pratt testified that these battles were "very trying, horrifying experiences," particularly for Porter's company at Chip'yong-ni. Id., at 152. Porter's unit was awarded the Presidential Unit Citation for the engagement at Chip'yong-ni, and Porter individually received two Purple Hearts and the Combat Infantryman Badge, along with other decorations.

Colonel Pratt testified that Porter went absent without leave (AWOL) for two periods while in Korea. He explained that this was not uncommon, as soldiers sometimes became disoriented and separated from the unit, and that the commander had decided not to impose any punishment for the absences. In Colonel Pratt's experience, an "awful lot of [veterans] come back nervous wrecks. Our [veterans'] hospitals today are filled with people mentally trying to survive the perils and hardships [of] ... the Korean War," particularly those who fought in the battles he described. Id., at 153.

When Porter returned to the United States, he went AWOL for an extended period of time.3 He was sentenced to six months' imprisonment for that infraction, but he received an honorable discharge. After his discharge, he suffered dreadful nightmares and would attempt to climb his bedroom walls with knives at night.4 Porter's family eventually removed all of the knives from the house. According to Porter's brother, Porter developed a serious drinking problem and began drinking so heavily that he would get into fights and not remember them at all.

In addition to this testimony regarding his life history, Porter presented an expert in neuropsychology, Dr. Dee, who had examined Porter and administered a number of psychological assessments. Dr. Dee concluded that Porter suffered from brain damage that could manifest in impulsive, violent behavior. At the time of the crime, Dr. Dee testified, Porter was substantially impaired in his ability to conform his conduct to the law and suffered from an extreme mental or emotional disturbance, two statutory mitigating circumstances, Fla. Stat. §921.141(6). Dr. Dee also testified that Porter had substantial difficulties with reading, writing, and memory, and that these cognitive defects were present when he was evaluated for competency to stand trial. 2 Tr. 227-228 (Jan. 5, 1996); see also Record 904-906. Although the State's experts reached different conclusions regarding the statutory mitigators,5 each expert testified that he could not diagnose Porter or rule out a brain abnormality. 2 Tr. 345, 382 (Jan. 5, 1996); 3 id., at 405.

The trial judge who conducted the state postconviction hearing, without determining counsel's deficiency, held that Porter had not been prejudiced by the failure to introduce any of that evidence. Record 1203, 1206. He found that Porter had failed to establish any statutory mitigating circumstances, id., at 1207, and that the nonstatutory mitigating evidence would not have made a difference in the outcome of the case, id., at 1210. He discounted the evidence of Porter's alcohol abuse because it was inconsistent and discounted the evidence of Porter's abusive childhood because he was 54 years old at the time of the trial. He also concluded that Porter's periods of being AWOL would have reduced the impact of Porter's military service to "inconsequential proportions." Id., at 1212. Finally, he held that even considering all three categories of evidence together, the "trial judge and jury still would have imposed death." Id., at 1214.

The Florida Supreme Court affirmed. It first accepted the trial court's finding that Porter could not have established any statutory mitigating circumstances, based on the trial court's acceptance of the State's experts' conclusions in that regard. Porter v. State, 788 So. 2d 917, 923 (2001) (per curiam). It then held the trial court was correct to find "the additional nonstatutory mitigation to be lacking in weight because of the specific facts presented." Id., at 925. Like the postconviction court, the Florida Supreme Court reserved judgment regarding counsel's deficiency. Ibid.6 Two justices dissented, reasoning that counsel's failure to investigate and present mitigating evidence was "especially harmful" because of the divided vote affirming the sentence on direct appeal--"even without the substantial mitigation that we now know existed"--and because of the reversal of the heinous, atrocious, and cruel aggravating factor. Id., at 937 (Anstead, J., concurring in part and dissenting in part).

Porter thereafter filed his federal habeas petition. The District Court held Porter's penalty-phase counsel had been ineffective. It first determined that counsel's performance had been deficient because "penalty-phase counsel did little, if any investigation ... and failed to effectively advocate on behalf of his client before the jury." Porter v. Crosby, No. 6:03-cv-1465-Orl-31KRS, 2007 WL 1747316, *23 (MD Fla., June 18, 2007). It then determined that counsel's deficient performance was prejudicial, finding that the state court's decision was contrary to clearly established law in part because the state court failed to consider the entirety of the evidence when reweighing the evidence in mitigation, including the trial evidence suggesting that "this was a crime of passion, that [Porter] was drinking heavily just hours before the murders, or that [Porter] had a good relationship with his son." Id., at *30.

The Eleventh Circuit reversed. It held the District Court had failed to appropriately defer to the state court's factual findings with respect to Porter's alcohol abuse and his mental health. 552 F. 3d 1260, 1274, 1275 (2008) (per curiam). The Court of Appeals then separately considered each category of mitigating evidence and held it was not unreasonable for the state court to discount each category as it did. Id., at 1274. Porter petitioned for a writ of certiorari. We grant the petition and reverse with respect to the Court of Appeals' disposition of Porter's ineffective- assistance claim.

II

To prevail under Strickland, Porter must show that his counsel's deficient performance prejudiced him. To establish deficiency, Porter must show his "counsel's representation fell below an objective standard of reasonableness." 466 U. S., at 688. To establish prejudice, he "must show that there is a reasonable probability that, but for counsel's unprofessional errors, the result of the proceeding would have been different." Id., at 694. Finally, Porter is entitled to relief only if the state court's rejection of his claim of ineffective assistance of counsel was "contrary to, or involved an unreasonable application of" Strickland, or it rested "on an unreasonable determination of the facts in light of the evidence presented in the State court proceeding." 28 U. S. C. §2254(d).

Because the state court did not decide whether Porter's counsel was deficient, we review this element of Porter's Strickland claim de novo. Rompilla v. Beard, 545 U. S. 374, 390 (2005). It is unquestioned that under the prevailing professional norms at the time of Porter's trial, counsel had an "obligation to conduct a thorough investigation of the defendant's background." Williams v. Taylor, 529 U. S. 362, 396 (2000). The investigation conducted by Porter's counsel clearly did not satisfy those norms.

Although Porter had initially elected to represent himself, his standby counsel became his counsel for the penalty phase a little over a month prior to the sentencing proceeding before the jury. It was the first time this lawyer had represented a defendant during a penalty-phase proceeding. At the postconviction hearing, he testified that he had only one short meeting with Porter regarding the penalty phase. He did not obtain any of Porter's school, medical, or military service records or interview any members of Porter's family. In Wiggins v. Smith, 539 U. S. 510, 524, 525 (2003), we held counsel "fell short of ... professional standards" for not expanding their investigation beyond the presentence investigation report and one set of records they obtained, particularly "in light of what counsel actually discovered" in the records. Here, counsel did not even take the first step of interviewing witnesses or requesting records. Cf. Bobby v. Van Hook, ante, at 6-8 (holding performance not deficient when counsel gathered a substantial amount of information and then made a reasonable decision not to pursue additional sources); Strickland, 466 U. S., at 699 ("[Counsel's] decision not to seek more character or psychological evidence than was already in hand was ... reasonable"). Beyond that, like the counsel in Wiggins, he ignored pertinent avenues for investigation of which he should have been aware. The court-ordered competency evaluations, for example, collectively reported Porter's very few years of regular school, his military service and wounds sustained in combat, and his father's "over-disciplin[e]." Record 902-906. As an explanation, counsel described Porter as fatalistic and uncooperative. But he acknowledged that although Porter instructed him not to speak with Porter's ex-wife or son, Porter did not give him any other instructions limiting the witnesses he could interview.

Counsel thus failed to uncover and present any evidence of Porter's mental health or mental impairment, his family background, or his military service. The decision not to investigate did not reflect reasonable professional judgment. Wiggins, supra, at 534. Porter may have been fatalistic or uncooperative, but that does not obviate the need for defense counsel to conduct some sort of mitigation investigation. See Rompilla, supra, at 381-382.

III

Because we find Porter's counsel deficient, we must determine whether the Florida Supreme Court unreasonably applied Strickland in holding Porter was not prejudiced by that deficiency. Under Strickland, a defendant is prejudiced by his counsel's deficient performance if "there is a reasonable probability that, but for counsel's unprofessional errors, the result of the proceeding would have been different." 466 U. S., at 694. In Florida, the sentencing judge makes the determination as to the existence and weight of aggravating and mitigating circumstances and the punishment, Fla. Stat. §921.141(3), but he must give the jury verdict of life or death "great weight," Tedder v. State, 322 So. 2d 908, 910 (Fla. 1975) (per curiam). Porter must show that but for his counsel's deficiency, there is a reasonable probability he would have received a different sentence. To assess that probability, we consider "the totality of the available mitigation evidence--both that adduced at trial, and the evidence adduced in the habeas proceeding"--and "reweig[h] it against the evidence in aggravation." Williams, supra, at 397-398.

This is not a case in which the new evidence "would barely have altered the sentencing profile presented to the sentencing judge." Strickland, supra, at 700. The judge and jury at Porter's original sentencing heard almost nothing that would humanize Porter or allow them to accurately gauge his moral culpability. They learned about Porter's turbulent relationship with Williams, his crimes, and almost nothing else. Had Porter's counsel been effective, the judge and jury would have learned of the "kind of troubled history we have declared relevant to assessing a defendant's moral culpability." Wiggins, supra, at 535. They would have heard about (1) Porter's heroic military service in two of the most critical--and horrific--battles of the Korean War, (2) his struggles to regain normality upon his return from war, (3) his childhood history of physical abuse, and (4) his brain abnormality, difficulty reading and writing, and limited schooling. See Penry v. Lynaugh, 492 U. S. 302, 219 (1989) (" '[E]vidence about the defendant's background and character is relevant because of the belief, long held by this society, that defendants who commit criminal acts that are attributable to a disadvantaged background ... may be less culpable' "). Instead, they heard absolutely none of that evidence, evidence which "might well have influenced the jury's appraisal of [Porter's] moral culpability." Williams, 529 U. S., at 398.

On the other side of the ledger, the weight of evidence in aggravation is not as substantial as the sentencing judge thought. As noted, the sentencing judge accepted the jury's recommendation of a death sentence for the murder of Williams but rejected the jury's death-sentence recommendation for the murder of Burrows. The sentencing judge believed that there were four aggravating circumstances related to the Williams murder but only two for the Burrows murder. Accordingly, the judge must have reasoned that the two aggravating circumstances that were present in both cases were insufficient to warrant a death sentence but that the two additional aggravating circumstances present with respect to the Williams murder were sufficient to tip the balance in favor of a death sentence. But the Florida Supreme Court rejected one of these additional aggravating circumstances, i.e., that Williams' murder was especially heinous, atrocious, or cruel, finding the murder "consistent with ... a crime of passion" even though premeditated to a heightened degree. 564 So. 2d, at 1063-1064. Had the judge and jury been able to place Porter's life history "on the mitigating side of the scale," and appropriately reduced the ballast on the aggravating side of the scale, there is clearly a reasonable probability that the advisory jury--and the sentencing judge--"would have struck a different balance," Wiggins, 539 U. S., at 537, and it is unreasonable to conclude otherwise.

The Florida Supreme Court's decision that Porter was not prejudiced by his counsel's failure to conduct a thorough--or even cursory--investigation is unreasonable. The Florida Supreme Court either did not consider or unreasonably discounted the mitigation evidence adduced in the postconviction hearing. Under Florida law, mental health evidence that does not rise to the level of establishing a statutory mitigating circumstance may nonetheless be considered by the sentencing judge and jury as mitigating. See, e.g., Hoskins v. State, 965 So. 2d 1, 17-18 (Fla. 2007) (per curiam). Indeed, the Constitution requires that "the sentencer in capital cases must be permitted to consider any relevant mitigating factor." Eddings v. Oklahoma, 455 U. S. 104, 112 (1982). Yet neither the postconviction trial court nor the Florida Supreme Court gave any consideration for the purpose of nonstatutory mitigation to Dr. Dee's testimony regarding the existence of a brain abnormality and cognitive defects.7 While the State's experts identified perceived problems with the tests that Dr. Dee used and the conclusions that he drew from them, it was not reasonable to discount entirely the effect that his testimony might have had on the jury or the sentencing judge.

Furthermore, the Florida Supreme Court, following the state postconviction court, unreasonably discounted the evidence of Porter's childhood abuse and military service. It is unreasonable to discount to irrelevance the evidence of Porter's abusive childhood, especially when that kind of history may have particular salience for a jury evaluating Porter's behavior in his relationship with Williams. It is also unreasonable to conclude that Porter's military service would be reduced to "inconsequential proportions," 788 So. 2d, at 925, simply because the jury would also have learned that Porter went AWOL on more than one occasion. Our Nation has a long tradition of according leniency to veterans in recognition of their service, especially for those who fought on the front lines as Porter did.8 Moreover, the relevance of Porter's extensive combat experience is not only that he served honorably under extreme hardship and gruesome conditions, but also that the jury might find mitigating the intense stress and mental and emotional toll that combat took on Porter.9 The evidence that he was AWOL is consistent with this theory of mitigation and does not impeach or diminish the evidence of his service. To conclude otherwise reflects a failure to engage with what Porter actually went through in Korea.

As the two dissenting justices in the Florida Supreme Court reasoned, "there exists too much mitigating evidence that was not presented to now be ignored." Id., at 937 (Anstead, J., concurring in part and dissenting in part). Although the burden is on petitioner to show he was prejudiced by his counsel's deficiency, the Florida Supreme Court's conclusion that Porter failed to meet this burden was an unreasonable application of our clearly established law. We do not require a defendant to show "that counsel's deficient conduct more likely than not altered the outcome" of his penalty proceeding, but rather that he establish "a probability sufficient to undermine confidence in [that] outcome." Strickland, 466 U. S., at 693-694. This Porter has done.

The petition for certiorari is granted in part, and the motion for leave to proceed in forma pauperis is granted. The judgment of the Court of Appeals is reversed, and the case is remanded for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.

It is so ordered.


FOOTNOTES

Footnote 1

We deny the petition insofar as it challenges his conviction.

Footnote 2

It is an aggravating factor under Florida law that "[t]he defendant was previously convicted of another capital felony or of a felony involving the use or threat of violence to the person." Fla. Stat. §921.141(5)(b) (1987). In Porter's case, the State established that factor by reference to Porter's contemporaneous convictions stemming from the same episode: two counts of murder and one count of aggravated assault. Tr. 5 (Mar. 4, 1988).

Footnote 3

Porter explained to one of the doctors who examined him for competency to stand trial that he went AWOL in order to spend time with his son. Record 904.

Footnote 4

Porter's expert testified that these symptoms would "easily" warrant a diagnosis of posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD). 2 Tr. 233 (Jan. 5, 1996). PTSD is not uncommon among veterans returning from combat. See Hearing on Fiscal Year 2010 Budget for Veterans' Programs before the Senate Committee on Veterans' Affairs, 111th Cong., 1st Sess., 63 (2009) (uncorrected copy) (testimony of Eric K. Shinseki, Secretary of Veterans Affairs (VA), reporting that approximately 23 percent of the Iraq and Afghanistan war veterans seeking treatment at a VA medical facility had been preliminarily diagnosed with PTSD).

Footnote 5

The State presented two experts, Dr. Riebsame and Dr. Kirkland. Neither of the State's experts had examined Porter, but each testified that based upon their review of the record, Porter met neither statutory mitigating circumstance.

Footnote 6

The postconviction court stated defense counsel "was not ineffective for failing to pursue mental health evaluations and ... [Porter] has thus failed to show sufficient evidence that any statutory mitigators could have been presented." Record 1210. It is not at all clear whether this stray comment addressed counsel's deficiency. If it did, then it was at most dicta, because the court expressly "decline[d] to make a determination regarding whether or not Defense Counsel was in fact deficient here." Id., at 1206. The Florida Supreme Court simply paraphrased the postconviction court when it stated "trial counsel's decision not to pursue mental evaluations did not exceed the bounds for competent counsel." Porter v. State, 788 So. 2d 917, 923-924 (2001) (per curiam). But that court also expressly declined to answer the question of deficiency. Id., at 925.

Footnote 7

The Florida Supreme Court acknowledged that Porter had presented evidence of "statutory and nonstatutory mental mitigation," 788 So. 2d, at 921, but it did not consider Porter's mental health evidence in its discussion of nonstatutory mitigating evidence, id., at 924.

Footnote 8

See Abbott, The Civil War and the Crime Wave of 1865-70, 1 Soc. Serv. Rev. 212, 232-234 (1927) (discussing the movement to pardon or parole prisoners who were veterans of the Civil War); Rosenbaum, The Relationship Between War and Crime in the United States, 30 J. Crim. L. & C. 722, 733-734 (1940) (describing a 1922 study by the Wisconsin Board of Control that discussed the number of veterans imprisoned in the State and considered "the greater leniency that may be shown to ex-service men in court").

Footnote 9

Cf. Cal. Penal Code Ann. §1170.9(a) (West Supp. 2009) (providing a special hearing for a person convicted of a crime "who alleges that he or she committed the offense as a result of post-traumatic stress disorder, substance abuse, or psychological problems stemming from service in a combat theater in the United States military"); Minn. Stat. §609.115, Subd. 10 (2008) (providing for a special process at sentencing if the defendant is a veteran and has been diagnosed as having a mental illness by a qualified psychiatrist).

Lyle Denniston's SCOTUS Blog: Post-combat stress as a defense

Monday, November 30th, 2009 1:14 pm | Lyle Denniston | Print This Post

The Supreme Court, in a sign of the times for a nation at war on two fronts, on Monday put defense lawyers on notice that they should be prepared to use evidence of “post-traumatic stress disorder” to try to save accused veterans from the death penalty. Ruling without full briefing or a hearing, and with no dissent noted, the Court apparently overturned the death sentence of a Florida veteran whose “combat service unfortunately left him a traumatized, changed man,” as the Court put it in Porter v. McCollum (08-10537), involving Korean war veteran George Porter, Jr. The unsigned opinion can be found here.

“Our Nation has a long tradition of according leniency to veterans in recognition of their service, especially for those who fought on the front lines as Porter did,” the opinion said. “The relevance of Porter’s extensive combat experience is not only that he served honorably under extreme hardship and gruesome conditions, but also that the jury might find mitigating the intense stress and mental and emotional toll that combat took on Porter.”

Because the case turned mainly on the specific facts of the prosecution and defense of Porter for murdering his former girlfriend and her boyfriend, it is not clear that the ruling will have a direct impact on other criminal cases in which combat stress might be a key factor. However, parts of the Court’s opinion read as if the Justices did intend to speak more broadly.

It noted that post-traumatic stress disorder “is not uncommon among veterans returning from combat,” and cited testimony before Congress this year by Veterans Affairs Secretary Eric K. Shinseki that “approximately 23 percent of the Iraq and Afghanistan war veterans seeking treatment at a vA medical facility had been preliminarily diagnoses with PTSD.” It also noted that, in Porter’s case specifically, a medical expert testified that his sysmptoms “would ‘easily’ warrant a diagnosis” of PTSD.

The Court also cited, clearly with approval, laws of two states that provide special legal protection for veterans involved in crimes and suffering from combat stress — a California law providing a special hearing for a person convicted of crime who claims the offense resulted from PTSD or other conditions stemming from military combat service, and a Minnesota law providing a special sentencing process for a vetrer dianosed with a mental illness.

In Porter’s case, the Court did not say explicitly that it was overturning his death sentence for his 1986 crimes. Rather, it concluded that he was entitled to relief in a post-conviction federal habeas case, on the theory that the jury, had it heard about his wartime experiences and other evidence about mental problems, it might well have refused to recommend a death sentence. The Court sent the case back to the Eleventh Circuit Court, presumably to order a new sentencing proceeding. The Court’s order did not say what the Justices expected to happen next.

Porter was wounded in two bouts of heavy fighting during his Army service in Korea. When he sought habeas relief after losing challenges in state court, his former commanding officer gave what the called a “moving description of those two battles” — testimony that was “only a fraction of the mitigating evidence that his counsel failed to discover or present during the penalty phaqse of his trial in 1988.”

Although a federal District judge had ruled in Porter’s favor, finding that the defense lawyer’s failure to put on the mitigating evidence resulted in a violation of his right to counsel, the Eleventh Circuit disagreed, finding that the Florida Supreme Court was justified in finding that Porter did not suffer any prejudice from the omission of that evidence.

In its order, the Supreme Court said Porter was entitled to prevail on his habeas claim that his defense lawyer at trial had provided ineffective legal assistance. “The Florida Supreme Court;s decision that Porter was not prejudiced by his counsel’s failure to conduct a thorough — or even cursory — investigation is unreasonable.”

Quoting the dissenting judges on the state court, the Supreme Court opinion remarked that ” ‘there exists too much mitigating evidence that was nto presented to now be ignored.’ ”

The Court, however, voted to leave intact Porter’s guilty verdict for the murder of his girlfriend and her boyfriend. Thus, Porter’s remaining legal opportunity is for a new sentence, presumably with all of the favorable evidence put before the jury.

ROB FIELD Flacking for HEATHER BEAVEN -- Both would have public ignore lithium battery safety issues on aircraft

Usually, it's Democrats who want to regulate safety and Republicans who want legislative loopholes big enough to smash a Mack truck through them.

As he does once every ten years or so (the last time was on Glass-Steagall repeal), Congressman JOHN LUIGI MICA spoke out in favor of regulating something. Good for him. MICA spoke his truth about exothermic, fire-prone lithium batteries on aircraft. HEATHER BEAVEN attacked him, with ROB FIELD flacking for her, talking about how few incidents there are where there are fires. This is what a non-serious Congressional candidate dared to say about airplane fire safety:
NEW VIDEO: JOHN MICA’S ARCHAIC IDEAS ARE OUT OF STEP WITH THE MODERN WORLD

While our families await help from Congress to spur job creation in Florida, John Mica introduced legislation prohibiting lithium batteries on airplanes. This would ban cell phones, laptops and I-pods on commercial airplane flights in America. If John Mica is successful, this would greatly harm large and small business communication. Clearly John Mica is not only out of touch with today's business traveler, he does not understand today's world. In the 20th century, we could "unplug" for days but that just isn't how the world works today.

Even his fellow Republicans in Congress disagree with John Mica on his legislation. They know that Mica's legislation would further depress innovation and job creation.

Click here to watch Mica's comments on banning laptops, cell phones and lithium batteries on commercial airplanes.

http://www.beavenforcongress.com/newsletter/BFCEmail11-24-09a.htm

HEATHER BEAVEN is a low-blow, cheap shot artist who does not research issues.
She emotes. She does not deserve our votes.

As the article below states, "DOT said that "more than 40 air transport-related incidents involving lithium batteries and devices powered by lithium batteries have been identified" since 1991, adding that "many of these incidents were directly related to the lack of awareness of the regulations, risks and required safety measures applicable."

HEATHER BEAVEN sounds ageist and haughty, as if she caught MICA doing something naughty. While MICA is out of touch on many issues, airplane fire safety is not one of them.

During the 1990s, I assisted a fireman whistleblower when USAF took his security clearance for reporting fire safety concerns on the new Air Force One under construction. I also helped a NASA contractor space flight hardware designer raise concerns about exothermic materials on board the Space Shuttles. Knowing about air safety and exothermic chemical reactions (and what can happen), I reckon I know better than ROB FIELD and HEATHER BEAVEN this issue needs.

Good science. Fidelity to safety standards. Expertise.

Not BEAVEN's flippant excuses for "debate" from someone who's never debated MICA.

Not publicity-hogging nostrums by someone who has no pertinent expertise.

In Congress, there are "work horses" and "show horses."

Sadly, it seems that HEATHER BEAVEN would not be a "work horse" -- she would be a show horse, all hat and no cattle.

In their lust to land a nice gig on Capitol Hill, some Democratic lightweights are willing to lie about JOHN MICA (or even other Democrats).

In particular, noisome ex-MALLOY flack ROB FIELD is despicable, having falsely accused Faye Armitage of noncompliance with the Federal Election Commission filing requirements. ROB FIELD is neither a scholar or a gentleman. False reports are torts and crimes. They should be treated as such.

Thanks for nothing to ROB FIELD and HEATHER BEAVEN.

Thanks and a tip of the hat to Faye Armitage for running for Congress and earning nearly 150,000 votes after spending only some $32,000.

Faye Armitage hasn't raised a lot of money for 2010 yet (not even enough to trigger FEC reporting requirements ROB FIELD couldn't begin to understand).

Faye Armitage is in no hurry to sell her soul, and she won't.

But Faye Armitage has something special -- the respect of Democrats throughout the Seventh Congressional District, who know the difference between sincerity and hypocrisy.

Is HEATHER BEAVEN a "spoiler" because she came out of nowhere to run for Congress as a Stealth candidate, one who won't study before opining and one who has no principled reason why we should run anyone else other than the courageous lady who got nearly 150,000 votes last year running against JOHN LUIGI MICA?

Like Edgar Bergen and Charlie McCarthy, some consultants and candidates resemble a ventriloquist act.

To ROB FIELDS and HEATHER BEAVEN: "hypocrisy is the compliment that vice pays to virtue."

Air Transport World: DOT issues advisory on air shipping lithium batteries, warns of fire hazard

DOT issues advisory on air shipping lithium batteries, warns of fire hazard
Thursday October 8, 2009

US Dept. of Transportation yesterday issued a safety advisory regarding the shipment of lithium batteries in passenger and cargo aircraft, warning that battery-caused "fires in aircraft can result in catastrophic events presenting unique challenges not encountered in other transport modes."

The Air Line Pilots Assn. in August detailed incidents in which "smoke or evidence of fire associated with battery shipments has occurred" aboard aircraft and called for the US government "to prohibit shipments of lithium batteries on. . .aircraft until new regulations are in place" (ATWOnline, Aug. 26). Two DOT agencies, FAA and the Pipeline and Hazardous Materials Safety Administration, jointly issued yesterday's advisory.

"PHMSA and FAA are concerned that many persons who ship lithium batteries do not recognize the hazards posed by these batteries during transportation," the agencies warned, adding that "overheating has the potential to create a thermal runaway, a chain reaction leading to self-heating and release of the battery's stored energy."

Transportation Secretary Ray LaHood said in a statement that "this advisory puts all shippers on notice that noncompliance with the safety regulations is not acceptable. I have asked the department's enforcement personnel to increase their inspections and step up enforcement where necessary."

The advisory states that when a package contains multiple lithium cells or batteries, it "must" be "marked to indicate that it contains lithium batteries and that special procedures should be followed in the event the package is damaged." It should be accompanied by a document also indicating its contents and procedures to be followed in the event of damage. Further, the package should be "capable of withstanding a 1.2-meter drop test in any orientation without damage to cells or batteries contained in the package, without shifting of the contents that would allow short circuits and without release of package contents." The package also cannot be more than 30 kg. (66 lb.) in gross mass, the agencies said.

DOT said that "more than 40 air transport-related incidents involving lithium batteries and devices powered by lithium batteries have been identified" since 1991, adding that "many of these incidents were directly related to the lack of awareness of the regulations, risks and required safety measures applicable."

by Aaron Karp

During Republican Administrations, Did Rep. JOHN LUIGI MICA Ever Ask An Inspector General to Investigate Anything?

Creepy U.S. Rep. JOHN LUIGI MICA just asked the Inspector General of the FAA to investigate something. Good on him. See below.

But how many times has JOHN LUIGI MICA ever asked anyone to investigate anything?

Seriously, during Republican administrations, MICA is a toady.

During Democratic administrations, is MICA a bully? We remember his horrible remarks about President Clinton, whom he called "a little booger."

When it comes to rhetoric vs. performance, who needs a snotty Congressman, too snooty to speak November 8th to St. Augustine veterans and friends, to whom his aide lied about his unavailability (MICA was attending a Republican fundraiser in Altamonte Springs)?

Federal Times: Rep. Mica Asks for Inspector General Audit

IG to audit FAA stimulus spending

The Transportation Department's inspector general plans to audit $1.3 billion in economic stimulus money earmarked for projects at the Federal Aviation Administration, according to a memo released last week.

The money was designated for two programs: The Airport Improvement Program, a grant program that helps airports improve safety; and a facilities and equipment fund that pays for FAA improvements. Rep. John Mica, R-Fla., asked the IG to review the spending to see whether it is creating or saving jobs.

A memo released by the IG in August raised questions about the agency's use of stimulus funds. FAA awarded a $13.9 million contract, for example, to improve the airport in Akiachak, Alaska — a town of 659 residents that's just 14 miles from Bethel, which has one of the busiest airports in the state.

TULSA WORLD: Web site shows what House members spend

by: JIM MYERS World Washington Bureau
Tuesday, December 01, 2009
12/1/2009 3:58:44 AM

Search the new House disbursements Web site for expenses reported by U.S. representatives from Oklahoma and the rest of the nation.

WASHINGTON — For the first time, the U.S. House on Monday posted an electronic version of a document detailing the way its members spend public funds in their individual offices.

Officially known as the Statement of Disbursements, the document has been published previously in printed form. Those books, however, have not been readily available to the general public.

Salaries make up the bulk of the expenses.

Other expenses detailed by the document can range from office supplies and travel reimbursements to the amounts lawmakers have spent on bottled water and pest control.

U.S. Rep. Dan Boren, D-Okla., said he was pleased that greater transparency has been added to the work of the U.S. House of Representatives.

"By shining more light on the process, citizens have greater access to information about how official resources are used to represent them," Boren said.

House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, who directed the online posting in June, said it provides a full accounting of members' spending for official congressional business.

"The continued publication of these statements online will expand accountability to taxpayers and the press," said Pelosi, D-Calif.

The statements have been published quarterly since 1964. The Statement of Disbursements electronically posted Monday covers the third quarter of 2009.


Oklahoma delegation expenditures
According to the figures in the newly posted report that covers expenditures from July 1 through Sept. 30:

Rep. John Sullivan, R-Okla., spent $2 0,339 for staff compensation; $33,330 for printing and reproduction; $28,628 for rent, communication and utilities; $10,588 for franked mail; $9, 5 for travel; $5,708 for supplies and materials.

Rep. Dan Boren, D-Okla., spent $215,580 for staff compensation; $27,29 for rent, communication and utilities; $27,281 for franked mail; $20,579 for travel; $3,363 for printing and reproduction; $5,581 for supplies and materials.

Rep. Frank Lucas, R-Okla., spent $187,398 for staff compensation; $35, 92 for rent, communication and utilities; $33,092 for travel; $28,236 for franked mail; $25, 18 for printing and reproduction; $5,589 for supplies and materials.

Rep. Tom Cole, R-Okla., spent $2 0,189 for staff compensation; $ 3,613 for franked mail; $31,598 for travel; $25,0 6 for printing and reproduction; $2 , 96 for rent, communication and utilities; $ ,595 for supplies and materials.

Rep. Mary Fallin, R-Okla., spent $212,881 for staff compensation; $29,159 for rent, communication and utilities; $18,295 for franked mail; $16, 27 for travel. $1,260 for supplies and materials.

Jim Myers 202-484-1424
Jim.Myers@tulsaworld.com



Copyright © 2009, World Publishing Co. All rights reserved

CONGRESSMAN JOHN LUIGI MICA PREVARICATES TO VETERANS




There was a lovely Veterans Day tribute presented by Coquina Crossing residents on November 8, 2009, commencing from 3-6 PM at Flagler College. The focus was on Korean War. (Last year was World War II and next year will be Vietnam).

St. Augustine and St. Johns County veterans, residents and public officials attended, including our 2008 Democratic Congressional candidate Faye Armitage.

Our Seventh District Congressman JOHN LUIGI MICA (R-Winter Park) was a no-show, with his remarks read by an aide, WILEY DECK.

Veterans and guests were informed by WILEY DECK that JOHN MICA was "on the House floor last night" implying that MICA was just too tuckered to come to St. Augustine.

Well, hold on to your seats. It turns out that MICA was in Altamonte Springs later that day, inveighing against health insurance reform at a $150 a plate Republican fundraiser, which is named after Lincoln and Reagan. It was Lincoln who said, "we must disenthrall ourselves."

There was a VIP reception at 6 PM in Altamonte Springs, where people paid $250 to hobnob with JOHN LUIGI MICA and U.S. Rep. JOHN BOEHNER (R-Ohio). MICA chose to go to the GOP fundraiser and stiffed the St. Johns County veterans, who were told only five days before that MICA would be attending and speaking about the importance of veterans.

Again, here's the Seminole Sentinel story that shows U.S. Rep. JOHN LUIGI MICA's staff prevaricated about MICA's putative unavailability:

National officials rally conservatives

By Abraham Aboraya
November 11, 2009

ALTAMONTE SPRINGS - On Saturday, Representative John Boehner and Representative John Mica voted in the capital against President Barack Obama's signature health care legislation.

On Sunday, they were more than 830 miles south, speaking at the Seminole County Republican Party's Lincoln Reagan Day Dinner at the Altamonte Springs Hilton.

Mica, whose district includes parts of Altamonte Springs and Casselberry, and Boehner, the highest ranking Republican in the House, were the featured speakers.

Both used the opportunity to take shots at the Democrats' bill, saying that the 2010 election would bring a check to the Democrats.

"This is the beginning of the end of the other side for what they did to the American people last night," Mica said.

Boehner's statements a few minutes later echoed Mica's.

"The only thing we can do over the next year is make sure we elect Republicans to congressional districts around the country, and if we do, we will win," Boehner said. "We'll put a check on this administration's ability to socialize our economy."

Boehner represents Ohio's Eighth Congressional District, and comes from a catholic family with 11 brothers and sisters. Boehner told the full Crystal Ballroom that he was raised as a Democrat but began changing his mind when his business paid more in taxes in 1978 than it earned gross in 1976.

Boehner said that, in 1970, the top income tax rate bracket was 70 percent.

"I went to Washington because I was convinced government was choking the goose that was laying golden eggs," Boehner said. "I went there to get government's hand off the goose so the goose could keep laying golden eggs. Needless to say, I haven't succeeded yet."

Out of all the speakers, Boehner seemed to draw the biggest laughs and the biggest applause. His speech style seems to blend tongue-in-cheek and serious rhetoric.

He said that the American people have been rejecting the change the new administration is bringing.

"I went to Washington because I believe in our cause," Boehner said. "You're here tonight because you believe in our cause. One only has to look at what's happened this year to realize that our cause is the right cause. ... Every change that [Obama]'s offered, the American people soundly rejected."

The speakers weren't just federal, either. Florida Attorney General and gubernatorial candidate Bill McCollum spoke at the dinner.

He said that, historically, Florida has depended on agriculture and tourism as its two main industries. And while he said he would work to keep those industries booming, Florida has to branch out.

"We cannot any longer depend on just those two industries for the future of Florida," he said. "We have to grow our state. I happen to believe in growing wealth, not redistributing it. I think that's extraordinarily important."

The dinner included a plethora of elected officials and notables in Seminole County. Former Oviedo congressman Tom Feeney was at the event, as was Florida representative Sandy Adams.

County Commissioners Bob Dallari and Mike McLean were at the event - a fundraiser for local Republicans - as well as Oviedo's recently re-elected Mayor Mary Lou Andrews. Deputy Mayor Dominic Persampiere was also in attendance.

Persampiere said he liked the event. He almost won one of the silent auctions for a framed picture of Lincoln, complete with complete strands of his hair and a piece of the flag from his funeral procession.

"It was a well put-on event, and, as always, well attended," Persampiere said. "The Republican Party certainly isn't dead. They just talked about balancing the views on what's going on. It wasn't completely partisan, it wasn't over the top, it was 'Hey, let's have a conversation.' The speakers were excellent."

Boehner touched on how difficult it's been to be a Republican as of late.

"Over the last couple election cycles, it hasn't been easy to be a Republican," he said. "We made our share of mistakes; the American people gave up on us. My job as Republican leader of the House ... is to help give the American people reasons to believe."

All the speakers were introduced by Patsy Gilbert, a professional Sarah Palin impersonator. She gave the keynote speakers boxes of Mooseburger Helper - buckshot free and "locked and loaded for flavor."

"I've been doing it (the Palin impressions) since the morning after her nomination acceptance speech," Gilbert said. "I go all over the country doing it. ... I've been almost everywhere in the lower 48 doing it, but I'm based out of Orlando."



Now, MICA's been known to play fast and loose with the truth before. This hard-hearted hanna is no veteran. His staff lied to veterans and their friends -- some 800 of them in Flagler College Auditorium.

















Here's the St. Augustine REcord article stating only five days before that MICA was planning to speak at the veterans tribute:

Variety show at Flagler to honor Korean War veterans
PETER GUINTA
peter.guinta@staugustine.com
Published Tuesday, November 03, 2009

During the bloody Korean War, American and United Nations forces battled below-freezing temperatures, impassable mountain terrain, icy swollen rivers and hundreds of thousands of Communist Chinese and North Korean troops launching fanatic human wave attacks.

A 1953 armistice ended the fighting, but America mourned its 36,516 dead, 92,134 wounded, 8,176 missing in action and 7,245 prisoners of war, and a weary nation soon dropped Korea from its national consciousness.

Now, however, St. Augustine producer Michael Rothfeld and the St. Johns County Veterans Council want Americans to "unforget" Korea and to honor those who fought there.

Rothfeld, a retired high school history teacher, said, "I was in college during the (Vietnam) war, married with a child. (But) I've always had an interest in what our veterans did for this country. I wanted to preserve their memory."

He and the council will present a patriotic variety show at 3 p.m. Sunday at Flagler College Auditorium.

It is titled "Korea: Forgotten War, Remembered Heroes" and will feature the personal stories of five local Korean War veterans, and entertain with patriotic music, skits by the Coquina Players, a service salute, comedy, dancing by the Coquina Dancers, and singing by Tim Rippey.

The show is free and open to the public.

U.S. Rep. John Mica, R, Winter Park, will remark on "The Importance of Veterans Day," and retired master sergeant and Veterans Council chair Ray Quinn (U.S. Army, Ret.), will serve as master of ceremonies.

At the end of the show, a short film directed by Dr. Nadia Ramoutar called "Korea: Forgotten War, Remembered Heroes," the same as the show, will be screened.

Ramoutar is media arts and documentary director for Art Institute of Jacksonville and she worked with Professor Steve Voguit of Flagler College, a documentary historian, on the film.

In the documentary, as well as at the show, five local veterans, soldiers Richard Bassett, Jack Wentz and George Gaspard, and U.S. Marines Bob Bey and James Vanairsdale, relate their experiences and remembrances of Korea.

Dr. Henry Moreland, a University of North Florida professor, commander of the Korean War Veterans Association, Jacksonville, will present Ms. Susie Birdsong, who was a child in Korea during the Korean War.

Rothfeld said that in 2007 he filled Flagler Auditorium with a similar show he produced.

"The purpose of this (show) is to remind people that the average person on the street could be someone who served our country in Korea and that we should remember that service," Rothfeld said. "That was what motivated me."

If You Go

Show and film: "Korea: Forgotten War, Remembered Heroes"

Cost: Free

Time: 3 p.m. Sunday, Nov. 8

Place: Flagler Auditorium

Parking: A free shuttle to and from the downtown parking garage will be provided by Old Town Trolley Tours.

NY TImes: No Big Cost Rise in U.S. Premiums Is Seen in Study

By ROBERT PEAR and DAVID M. HERSZENHORN

WASHINGTON — The Congressional Budget Office said Monday that the Senate health bill could significantly reduce costs for many people who buy health insurance on their own, and that it would not substantially change premiums for the vast numbers of Americans who receive coverage from large employers.

Senator Harry Reid, the majority leader, said the debate on health care was one of the most significant in Senate history.

The eagerly awaited report, which came as the Senate began debate on the legislation, provided Democrats with ammunition against Republicans who have criticized the bill on the ground that it would raise costs for a majority of Americans.

Centrist Democrats like Senator Evan Bayh of Indiana, whose votes are vital to President Obama’s hopes of getting the bill approved, had feared that the measure would drive up costs for people with employer-sponsored coverage. After reading the budget office report, Mr. Bayh said he was reassured on that point.

Before taking account of federal subsidies to help people buy insurance on their own, the budget office said the bill would tend to drive up premiums. But as a result of the subsidies, it said, most people in the individual insurance market would see their costs decline, compared with the costs expected under current law. The subsidies, a main feature of the bill, would cost the government nearly $450 billion in the next 10 years and would cover nearly two-thirds of premiums for people who receive them.

For most people who get health insurance through employers — five-sixths of the total market — the budget office concluded that there would be little change in their premiums relative to the amounts projected under current law.

Administration officials said the report provided a lift to the bill, which embodies Mr. Obama’s top domestic priority.

“The C.B.O. has rendered a fundamental judgment that this will reduce the deficit and reduce people’s premium costs,” said Rahm Emanuel, the White House chief of staff, who huddled with Senate Democratic leaders on Capitol Hill on Monday. “All the Republican leadership will guarantee you is the status quo.”

But Republican senators like Charles E. Grassley of Iowa and Mitch McConnell of Kentucky, the minority leader, said the report validated their concerns. They focused on the prediction that unsubsidized premiums in the individual insurance market, less than a fifth of those with health insurance, would rise an average of 10 percent to 13 percent.

“The analysis by the Congressional Budget Office confirms our worst fears,” Mr. Grassley said. “Millions of people who are expecting lower costs as a result of health reform will end up paying more in the form of higher premiums. For large and small employers that have been struggling for years with skyrocketing health insurance premiums, C.B.O. concludes this bill will do little, if anything, to provide relief.”

The Senate majority leader, Harry Reid, Democrat of Nevada, said the highly partisan floor debate that opened Monday afternoon was one of the most significant in the history of the Senate. It is expected to continue for much of December, with supporters and opponents alike offering a raft of amendments as the White House and Democratic leaders seek to put together the 60-vote coalition necessary to win passage.

Administration officials continued to reach out to lawmakers in both parties to try to build support. Senator Susan Collins, Republican of Maine, said she met Monday for 45 minutes with Nancy-Ann DeParle, director of the White House Office of Health Reform, to discuss her concerns about the legislation.

In its report, the budget office compared estimates of premiums in 2016 under the new legislation and under current law. In either case, after seven years of inflation, premiums would be substantially higher than they are today.

The budget office said the analysis of premiums was extremely complex, so the experience of individuals and families "could vary significantly from the average.”

“In general,” it said, “the proposal would tend to increase premiums for people who are young and relatively healthy, and decrease premiums for those who are older and relatively unhealthy.”

Under the legislation, it said, the average premium per person in the individual insurance market would be 10 percent to 13 percent higher than under current law. But, it said, most people in this market — 18 million of the 32 million people buying insurance on their own — would qualify for federal subsidies, which would reduce their costs well below what they would have to pay under current law.

For people receiving subsidies, the budget office said, premiums would be 56 percent to 59 percent lower than under current law.

Without subsidies, it said, premiums under the bill would average $5,800 a year for individuals and $15,200 a year for families buying coverage on their own. Under current law, the comparable figures would be $5,500 and $13,100.

“This study indicates that, for most Americans, the bill will have a modestly positive impact on their premium costs,” Mr. Bayh said. “For the remainder, more will see their costs go down than up.”

Under the bill, the budget office said, individual policies would have to provide more benefits and pay a larger share of costs than most existing policies do. In other words, it said, some people would pay more, but would also get more.

Insurers, it said, would have to cover certain services that, in many cases, are not covered by existing policies in the individual insurance market. These include maternity care, prescription drugs, mental health services and substance abuse treatment. Moreover, it said, under the legislation, insurance would cover an average of 72 percent of medical costs for people buying insurance on their own, up from 60 percent under current law.

The budget office said it foresaw “smaller effects on premiums for employment-based coverage.”

In groups with 50 or fewer employees, it said, unsubsidized premiums in 2016 would average $7,800 a year for individuals and $19,200 for families — scarcely any different from the amounts expected under current law. Of the 25 million people receiving coverage from small businesses, it said, 3 million would qualify for subsidies, which would reduce their premiums by an average of 8 percent to 11 percent.

Large employers would generally not be eligible for such assistance. Their premiums in 2016 under the bill would average $7,300 for individual coverage and $20,100 for family coverage, the report said. Under current law, the comparable figures would be $7,400 for individual coverage and $20,300 for family coverage.

The Senate bill would impose an excise tax on high-premium health plans offered by employers. People who remain in such “Cadillac health plans” would pay higher premiums, but most people would avoid the effect of the tax by enrolling in plans with lower premiums, the budget office said.

Carl Hulse contributed reporting.

JOHN LUIGI MICA BRAGS OF VOTING AGAINST HEALTH INSURANCE REFORM AS MILLIONS OF JOBLESS LOSE HEALTH INSURANCE



Jobless Americans are losing their health benefits in record numbers. See below. Health insurance reform will cover everyone for the same money (see above).

Talk about being out of touch with the American people. Our extremist Congressman, JOHN LUIGT MICA, bragged (above) about voting against health insurance reform. MICA and other Congressman have the best health insurance in America, the Cadillac of Cadillacs, as well as the House physician, at their beck and call.

Color him deeply insensitive -- he represents the George W. Bush constituency -- "the haves and the have mores" -- his "base."

NY TImes: Millions of Jobless Lose Health Insurance

Prescriptions - Making Sense of the Health Care Debate
November 30, 2009, 7:03 pm
Millions of Jobless Lose Insurance Aid
By KATHARINE Q. SEELYE

The changes that the health-care bills in Congress envision are years away — not soon enough to help the millions of unemployed people who, on Monday, lost their temporary federal subsidies for health insurance.

That means that people like Linda Rasor, 56, who lives in Haslett, near East Lansing, Mich., and was laid off from her energy consulting job in February, will have to start paying triple the cost for their health insurance.

As losses rippled out from Michigan’s devastated auto industry, Ms. Rasor was laid off from Johnson Controls Inc. With the federal subsidy, she has been paying $407 a month to cover herself, her husband, who is an independent contractor, and her daughter, who is in college. But with the subsidy now gone, her premiums will jump to $1,100 a month.

The subsidies, which Congress approved earlier this year under the economic stimulus package, expired Monday for the first wave of recipients. The package provided $25 billion in temporary financial help for unemployed people who were still on their employers’ insurance plans under the decades-old Consolidated Omnibus Budget Reconciliation Act, popularly known as Cobra.

The subsidies were intended to allow an estimated 7 million people who lost their jobs between September 2008 and December 2009 to help keep that insurance for up to nine months starting in March; normally they would have to pay the full premiums, but the subsidies covered 65 percent of that cost.

Ms. Rasor receives $1,400 in unemployment insurance, which means the new premiums will leave her with just $300 at the end of each month — cutting into her ability to help her husband pay the mortgage and her daughter’s tuition.

A new report by Families USA, http://www.familiesusa.org/ a health advocacy group based in Washington, has found that the average Cobra premium varies widely from state to state — and in nine states is actually higher than the average unemployment insurance check.

Ron Pollack, executive director of Families USA, predicted that most people who lost their subsidies on Monday would not be able to pay the full cost of their premiums and would drop their coverage altogether.

He said that the broader health care legislation in Congress would help by establishing new insurance marketplaces with tax credits — but they would not be set up for several years, leaving millions of people stranded in the interim.

Some Democrats have introduced legislation outside of the health care bills to extend the Cobra subsidies a few months and even increase them. The subject may come up as part of a new jobs bill in the near future, but nothing has been approved so far.

Ms. Rasor has stitched together some consulting work, but it carries no health benefits and the local jobs landscape is bleak.

“I’m in Michigan,” she said. “Need I say more?” The state’s unemployment rate is 15 percent, the highest in the nation.

Ms. Rasor said she would pay the full Cobra premium for now because she could not find the same coverage for less, and she is afraid that she would be turned down by a new insurer because she just had a knee cap replacement, which would be considered a pre-existing condition.

But she will have to find an alternative sometime next year anyway, because eligibility for Cobra lasts only 18 months.

She has given herself until the end of December to find work, she said, then she and her husband will start looking out of state.

“I feel like I’m part of the Grapes of Wrath,” she said. “I’ve got to leave home to find a job.”

Monday, November 30, 2009

Now that DEREK MAY is Leaving the St. Augustine WRecKord, Morris Needs to Re-Hire Cartoonist Ed Hall, Wrongfully Fired for Cartoon on School Budgets

It was an outrage then and it's an outrage now. Now that 41-year old publisher DEREK MAY is leaving the St. Augustine WRecKord, the paper needs to reinstate longtime political cartoonist Ed Hall, wrongfully fired last year after pressure brought on the Morris Communications by our local School Superintendent (JOSPEH JOYNER) and self-appointed arts maven (PHIL McDANIEL).

Injustice against one is injustice against everyone -- Hall's cartoon was of a generic bloated Florida school superintendent. Hall made people think. Advertising-minded DEREK MAY didn't get it.

Under new management, Ed Hall needs to return as a political cartoonist.

PR Newswire: St. Augustine WRecKOrd Publisher Derek May Promoted (or was it kicked upstairs)? Will be working on advertising, not journalism, @ GA HQ


Derek May Named Assistant to the President, Morris Communications Company

AUGUSTA, Ga., Nov. 30 /PRNewswire/ -- Derek May has been named assistant to the president of Morris Communications Company, LLC. His appointment to the newly-created position is effective Jan. 4, 2010.

"Derek has been part of the Morris Communications family for more than two decades, and he brings broad-ranging experience to this new position," said William S. Morris IV, President. "We are pleased to have the opportunity to work with him in this new capacity."

A native Augustan and graduate of Augusta State University, he began his career at Morris in 1988, working in information technology at the corporate headquarters. He has held positions with The Augusta Chronicle and the Lubbock (Texas) Avalanche-Journal, served as director of sales and marketing at the Athens (Ga.) Banner-Herald, and was named publisher of The St. Augustine (Fla.) Record in 2006. In his new role, Mr. May will work with all Morris business entities, with special emphasis on advertising. He will be based in Augusta.

"I am thrilled to have this opportunity to work with the entire Morris family of businesses in this capacity. I'm also excited to move back to my family's hometown," said Mr. May.

"Derek May is a bright young man who has applied his skills and energy to all the tasks we have asked him to undertake, and he has handled them with distinction. He has developed a broad base of newspaper experience which will serve him well in his new role at the corporate level," said William S. Morris III, Chairman and CEO.

Morris Communications Company, LLC is a privately held media company with diversified holdings that include visitor guide publishing, outdoor advertising, magazine publishing, radio broadcasting, book publishing and distribution and online services.

Morris Publishing Group, LLC, Morris Communications' affiliate, is a privately held media company based in Augusta, Ga. Morris Publishing currently owns and operates 13 daily newspapers as well as nondaily newspapers, city magazines and free community publications in the Southeast, Midwest, Southwest and Alaska.

For more information, visit Morris' Web site, morris.com.

SOURCE Morris Communications Company, LLC

Witness for the people -- Stetson Kennedy's work earns him a spot in new film

By KATI BEXLEY

Stetson Kennedy, 93, has made countless historical contributions, all to improve human rights.

In his latest project, Kennedy is being honored for "holding up a mirror to America," something he says he has tried to do throughout his entire life.

He is part of a film and exhibit shown on the Smithsonian channel and touring 30 libraries throughout the country. So far, the only library in Florida scheduled to have the film and exhibit is the Broward County Library. Kennedy would like to see more libraries display it.

The exhibit, called "Soul of a People," tells of the 1937 Federal Writers Project that fell under the Works Progress Administration, created by President Franklin Roosevelt. The project sent numerous writers and photographers across the nation to produce a portrait of the United States for travel guides, according to the Smithsonian.

But Kennedy, a leader on the project, had something else in mind.

"They wanted bathing beauties and palm trees," he said Sunday. "We wanted to show the warts, like the Ku Klux Klan, lynching and Jim Crow laws."

Kennedy was only 21, but he was put in charge of the project's folklore, oral history and ethnic studies. He landed the job by sending in old sayings to the Library of Congress' director of folklore that he had collected from rural white and black families in St. Johns County.

He gathered the stories while working for his father who owned a furniture business that allowed poor families to purchase items by paying a dollar at a time.

"My job was to collect the dollar," Kennedy said. "I began to take down a list of old sayings from the people that I went to see."

Kennedy oversaw famous writers such as Zora Neale Hurston, with whom he traveled throughout Florida.

The "Soul of a People" project is touting Kennedy as one of its main focuses. Stetson said the reason why he was more successful than other directors in the Federal Writers Project is because he sent African-American writers to interview African-Americans.

"Others sent out white men and they weren't going to tell them the truth," Kennedy said. "I used the idea of black on black. It paid off."

Stetson said they interviewed some African-Americans in their 80s and even a few more than 100 years old who were former slaves.

"We'd run into characters," he said. "They all mostly said, 'I always had to work hard just to live.' I know there's a lot of people who can still say that."

And that's what keeps Kennedy going at 93. Last week he was seen protesting with the Coalition of Immokalee Workers outside Publix at Cobblestone Village. The coalition has been touring the state for the past few months to protest the food chain for, coalition members say, contributing to poor working conditions in tomato fields by continuing to buy from suppliers who pay unfair wages. The coalition says these wages amount to -- what they called "modern-day slavery."

Kennedy has written several award-winning books, but he also has a dozen manuscripts in the works.

His wife Sandra Parks said, "As long as he's got a book in mind and is adored he's not going anywhere."

Kennedy said he's happy to see the Federal Writers Project getting recognition.

"There aren't too many of us left who worked on the project," he said. "A good many people are paying attention to it and here it is three-quarters of a century after it ended."

*

'SOUL OF A PEOPLE'

* Stetson Kennedy is being featured in a film and exhibit called "Soul of a People."

* It tells of the 1937 Federal Writers Project that fell under the Works Progress Administration, created by President Franklin Roosevelt.

* The film has aired on the Smithsonian channel and will travel to 30 libraries throughout the nation, including The Broward County Library in Fort Lauderdale.

Washington Post: House expenses go online

House expenses go online

By Ben Pershing
Forty-five years after Congress first began publishing its expenditures, the House took another step into the modern age Monday by putting those numbers somewhere the public can actually find them -- the Internet.

After years of lobbying by watchdog groups and other critics, the House has finally begun posting electronic copies of its Statement of Disbursements, a detailed accounting of how every House office -- including those of members, committees and support organizations -- spends its money. The numbers include everything from staff salaries to expenses for mundane office items such as water and magazine subscriptions.

Only one volume is online so far at disbursements.house.gov, covering July 1 through Sept. 30. At close to 3,400 pages, the document is available in one massive (9.4 MB) PDF file or three smaller ones. Unwieldy as the electronic files might be, they still represent a stark change from the old (and still available) version of the disbursements, which came only in thick, expensive books full of tiny type.

The House has been publishing its disbursements since 1964, but only this past June did Speaker Nancy Pelosi (D-Calif.) finally order the chamber's Chief Administrative Officer to begin posting them online. In a statement issued by her office Monday, Pelosi said, "The continued publication of these statements online will expand accountability to taxpayers and the press."

The Sunlight Foundation, a nonprofit watchdog group, said on its blog that the posting Monday showed "a proactive stance from the US House" but is "just a first step." The foundation and other groups hope eventually for the data to be released more quickly and in a format easier to search and digest than a giant PDF.

LegiStorm, a private Web site, already publishes some congressional expenditures online, allowing users to look at salary data for Hill staffers. But the site does not publish the complete Statement of Disbursements in one file, as the House now does.

The Senate is also working toward putting its expenses online, though that effort is not expected to bear fruit until 2011.

By Ben Pershing | November 30, 2009; 2:42 PM ET

Million Dollar Congressman JOHN MICA has already raised more than $200,000 in PAC contributions

Source: Friends COmmittee on National Legislzation

Representative John L. Mica (R-FL 7th)
Political Action Committee Contributions: 2009-2010 Campaign Cycle
Total 2009-2010 campaign contributions: $200,250
Sort by: Total Amount | Contributor
Contributor Total
3M COMPANY PAC $1000
ABX AIR INC. PAC $1000
AIR LINE PILOTS ASSOCIATION PAC $2500
AIRCRAFT OWNERS AND PILOTS ASSOCIATION POLITICAL ACTION COMMITTEE $4500
AIRPORTS COUNCIL INTERNATIONAL-NORTH AMERICA POLITICAL ACTION COMMITTEE (AIRPORT PAC) $1000
AMERICAN AIRLINES POLITICAL ACTION COMMITTEE $2000
AMERICAN ASSOCIATION OF AIRPORT EXECUTIVES $3500
AMERICAN BANKERS ASSOCIATION PAC (BANKPAC) $-1500
AMERICAN BUS ASSOCIATION-BUSPAC POLITICAL ACTION COMMITTEE $1000
AMERICAN CHEMISTRY COUNCIL PAC $1000
AMERICAN COUNCIL OF ENGINEERING COMPANIES (ACEC/PAC) $2000
AMERICAN CRYSTAL SUGAR COMPANY POLITICAL ACTION COMMITTEE $5000
AMERICAN FOREST & PAPER ASSOCIATION POLITICAL ACTION COMMITTEE $1000
AMERICAN MARITIME OFFICERS RETIREES ASSOCIATION VOLUNTARY POLITICAL ACTION FUND $1000
AMERICAN MARITIME OFFICERS VOLUNTARY POLITICAL ACTION FUND $3500
AMERICAN MOVING AND STORAGE ASSOCIATION POLITICAL ACTION COMMITTEE (AMPAC) $1000
AMERICAN ROAD & TRANSPORTATION BUILDERS ASSOCIATION PAC $4000
AMERICAN SHIPPING AND LOGISTICS GROUP INC FREEDOM PAC/ASL FREEDOM PAC $1000
AMERICAN SHIPPING GROUP MARINE RESOURCES GROUP $1000
AMERICAN TRAFFIC SAFETY SERVICES ASSOCIATION PAC $1000
AMERICAN WATERWAYS OPERATORS-PAC $1000
APL LIMITED PAC $2500
ARCADIS U.S., INC. POLITICAL ACTION COMMITTEE (ARCADIS PAC) $2000
ASSOCIATED BUILDERS AND CONTRACTORS, PAC $1000
ASSOCIATED EQUIPMENT DISTRIBUTORS POLITICAL ACTION COMMITTEE $1500
ASSOCIATED GENERAL CONTRACTORS OF AMERICA POLITICAL ACTION COMMITTEE $1000
ASSOCIATION OF AIR MEDICAL SERVICES POLITICAL ACTION COMMITTEE $500
AT&T INC. FEDERAL POLITICAL ACTION COMMITTEE (AT&T FEDERAL PAC) $1000
BAKER, DONELSON, BEARMAN, CALDWELL & BERKOWITZ, PC PAC $1000
BALCH AND BINGHAM LLP FEDERAL POLITICAL COMMITTEE $1000
BANK OF AMERICA CORPORATION FEDERAL PAC $1000
BIKES BELONG COALITION, LTD. POLITICAL ACTION COMMITTEE $2500
BLANK ROME PAC $1000
BOEING COMPANY POLITICAL ACTION COMMITTEE, THE $3000
BURSON-MARSTELLER/YOUNG & RUBICAM POLITICAL ACTION COMMITTEE $500
CEMEX INC. EMPLOYEES POLITICAL ACTION COMMITTEE $1000
CHEVRON EMPLOYEES POLITICAL ACTION COMMITTEE - CHEVRON CORPORATION $1000
COMCAST CORPORATION POLITICAL ACTION COMMITTEE- FEDERAL $1000
CROPLIFE AMERICA POLITICAL ACTION COMMITTEE $1000
CUBIC CORPORATION EMPLOYEES' POLITICAL ACTION COMMITTEE $2500
DISTRICT NO. 1-PCD MEBA POLITICAL FUND (MEBA-PAF) $2500
DLA PIPER LLP (US) POLITICAL ACTION COMMITTEE (DLA PIPER PAC) $750
DMJM HARRIS PAC $3500
EMPLOYEES OF NORTHROP GRUMMAN CORPORATION PAC $1000
EXXON MOBIL CORPORATION POLITICAL ACTION COMMITTEE (EXXONMOBIL PAC) $1000
FEDEXPAC FEDERAL EXPRESS POLITICAL ACTION COMMITTEE $4000
FERT PAC (THE POLITICAL ACTION COMMITTEE OF THE FERTILIZER INSTITUTE) $2000
FLORIDA SUGAR CANE LEAGUE PAC $1000
FLORIDA TRANSPORTATION BUILDERS' ASSOCIATION INC FEDERAL PAC $5000
FLUOR CORPORATION POLITICAL ACTION COMMITTEE (FLUOR PAC) $1000
FULBRIGHT & JAWORSKI L L P FEDERAL COMMITTEE $1000
GENERAL ATOMICS POLITICAL ACTION COMMITTEE $1000
GENERAL AVIATION MANUFACTURERS ASSOCIATION POLITICAL ACTION COMMITTEE $1000
GENERAL DYNAMICS VOLUNTARY POLITICAL CONTRIBUTION PLAN (GDVPCP) $1000
GENERAL ELECTRIC COMPANY POLITICAL ACTION COMMITTEE (GEPAC) $2000
GRANITE CONSTRUCTION INC. EMPLOYEE PAC - GRANITEPAC $1500
HARRIS CORPORATION POLITICAL ACTION COMMITTEE $5000
HERZOG CONTRACTING CORP POLITICAL ACTION COMMITTEE $500
HNTB HOLDINGS LTD. PAC $1000
HONEYWELL INTERNATIONAL POLITICAL ACTION COMMITTEE $5000
HORIZON LINES LLC ASSOCIATES GOOD GOVERNMENT FUND/HORIZON LINES ASSOCIATES GOOD GOVT FUND $1000
INSTITUTE OF MAKERS OF EXPLOSIVES POLITICAL ACTION COMMITTEE (IMEPAC) $2000
INTERNATIONAL COUNCIL OF SHOPPING CENTERS INC POLITICAL ACTION COMMITTEE (ICSC PAC) $2500
INTERNATIONAL PAPER POLITICAL ACTION COMMITTEE $1000
JACOBS GOOD GOVERNMENT FUND OF JACOBS ENGINEERING GROUP INC. $5000
K&L GATES LLP POLITICAL ACTION COMMITTEE (DC) $1000
KING & SPALDING NONPARTISAN COMMITTEE FOR GOOD GOVERNMENT $1000
KRAFT FOODS GLOBAL INC. POLITICAL ACTION COMMITTEE (KRAFTPAC) $1000
LOCKHEED MARTIN CORPORATION EMPLOYEES' POLITICAL ACTION COMMITTEE $6000
MAERSK INC. GOOD GOVERNMENT FUND $2500
MASTERS, MATES AND PILOTS POLITICAL CONTRIBUTION FUND $2500
NAIOP-PAC $1500
NATIONAL AGRICULTURAL AVIATION ASSOCIATION AG-AV PAC $1000
NATIONAL ASSOCIATION OF CHEMICAL DISTRIBUTORS RESPONSIBLE DISTRIBUTION POLITICAL ACTION CO $1000
NATIONAL ASSOCIATION OF WATER COMPANIES POLITICAL ACTION COMMITTEE (NAWC - PAC) $1000
NATIONAL BEER WHOLESALERS ASSOCIATION POLITICAL ACTION COMMITTEE $2500
NATIONAL CATTLEMEN'S BEEF ASSOCIATION POLITICAL ACTION COMMITTEE (NCBA-PAC) $2500
NATIONAL PROPANE GAS ASSOCIATION POLITICAL ACTION COMMITTEE $1000
NATIONAL READY MIXED CONCRETE ASSN. PAC (CONCRETEPAC) $1000
NATIONAL RIFLE ASSOCIATION OF AMERICA POLITICAL VICTORY FUND $1000
NATIONAL SCHOOL TRANSPORTATION ASSOCIATION $1000
NATIONAL STONE, SAND & GRAVEL ASSOCIATION ROCKPAC $3000
NATIONAL UTILITY CONTRACTORS ASSOCIATION LEGISLATIVE INFORMATION AND ACTION COMMITTEE $1500
NATSO INC. NATSO PAC $1000
NCR CORPORATION POLITICAL ACTION COMMITTEE (NCRPAC) $500
NELSON, MULLINS, RILEY & SCARBOROUGH FEDERAL POLITICAL COMMITTEE $1000
NORFOLK SOUTHERN CORPORATION GOOD GOVERNMENT FUND $5000
OLDCASTLE MATERIALS INC. PAC $3000
OUTDOOR ADVERTISING ASSOCIATION OF AMERICA POLITICAL ACTION COMMITTEE $1000
OXBOW CARBON & MINERALS HOLDINGS, INC. POLITICAL ACTION COMMITTEE $500
PARSONS CORPORATION POLITICAL ACTION COMMITTEE $1000
PHILIPS ELECTRONICS NORTH AMERICA CORPORATION EMPLOYEES POLITICAL ACTION COMMITTEE $500
PORTLAND CEMENT ASSOCIATION INC. PCA PAC $1000
PROGRESS ENERGY EMPLOYEES' FEDERAL PAC $1000
R.J. REYNOLDS POLITICAL ACTION COMMITTEE; REYNOLDS AMERICAN INC. $1000
RAILAMERICA INC FEDERAL POLITICAL ACTION COMMITTEE $500
RAYTHEON COMPANY POLITICAL ACTION COMMITTTEE $5000
RIO TINTO AMERICA INC. PAC $500
ROCKWELL COLLINS INC. GOOD GOVERNMENT COMMITTEE $1000
ROLLS-ROYCE NORTH AMERICA HOLDINGS INC. PAC (ROLLS-ROYCE NORTH AMERICA PAC) $1000
SAFETY-KLEEN INC. POLITICAL ACTION COMMITTEE $1000
SEAFARERS POLITICAL ACTIVITY DONATION-SEAFARERS INTERNATIONAL UNION OF N.A.-AGLIWD/NMU $1000
SIEMENS CORPORATION POLITICAL ACTION COMMITTEE $2000
SONNENSCHEIN NATH & ROSENTHAL LLP POLITICAL ACTION COMMITTEE(SONNENSCHEIN PAC) $1000
SRA INTERNATIONAL INC FUND FOR BETTER IT IN GOVERNMENT $1000
TAXICAB LIMOUSINE $2000
TRANSPORTATION INTERMEDIARIES ASSOCIATION'S TIAPAC $1000
TRAVELPORT INC. PAC $1000
TRUCKING POLITICAL ACTION COMMITTEE OF THE AMERICAN TRUCKING ASSOCIATIONS, INC. $1000
UNITED PARCEL SERVICE INC. PAC $5000
UNITED PILOTS PAC/AIRLINE PILOTS ASSOCIATION $2500
UNITED TECHNOLOGIES CORPORATION POLITICAL ACTION COMMITTEE $1000
UNITED TRANSPORTATION UNION POLITICAL ACTION COMMITTEE (UTU PAC) $5000
VULCAN MATERIALS COMPANY POLITICAL ACTION COMMITTEE $1500
WEXLER & WALKER PUBLIC POLICY ASSOCIATES PAC (A UNIT OF HILL & KNOWLTON) $1000
WINSTEAD PC POLITICAL ACTION COMMITTEE $1000

Million Dollar Congressman JOHN LUIGI MICA Spends $63,224/year on rent for district offices

Rep. JOHN LUIGI MICA has small offices in five counties in our District. He spends $63,224/year on them for rent alone (more for phone and utilities).

Who are MICA's lucky no-bid landlords?


EQUITY HOLDING CORP. OF FLAGLER $4200/year Registered agent is MICA contributor.

FLORIDA HOSPITAL MEMORIAL $6600/year

JOHNS FAMILY PARTNERSHIP, LTD $9600/year St. Augustine office

LARRY KENT $1920/year

POINT 100 BUILDING LP $23,904/year Tri-Cor International HQ, Maitland

Why won't Rep. JOHN LUIGI MICA rent space in federal government buildings from the Post Office, the National Guard, the Social Security Administration or other federal agencies?

Inquiring minds would like to know.

Aviation Today: FAA Reports Lithium Battery Fire Could Burn Through Cargo Hold on Airplanes

Monday, July 26, 2004

Lithium Battery Fire Could Burn Through a Cargo Hold

Halon extinguishing agent has no effect on fire intensity

Lithium batteries may represent the ultimate hazardous material, especially when shipped in bulk as cargo, with the potential to breach all defenses should they catch fire. That is the principal finding of a June report of lithium battery fire tests conducted by the Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) Technical Center at Atlantic City, N.J.

The extreme hazard portrayed in the report suggests that it may be time to consider restricting lithium battery shipments to cargo aircraft. Presently, lithium battery shipments require prominent labeling as hazardous cargo, and, after Jan. 1, 2005, the batteries must undergo a "battery" of tests in order to be approved for shipment. However, those tests - for altitude, vibration, shock, etc. - do not include a test for fire resistance. In a shipment of closely packed lithium batteries, should one battery catch fire, a chain reaction results. The fire spreads from battery to battery in an explosive conflagration of molten lithium, according to the Technical Center report.

The examination of lithium battery fires was undertaken after a pallet of such batteries caught fire on the ground at Los Angeles International Airport in April 1999. The pallet was inadvertently dropped onto the tarmac, and a battery fire resulted, despite there being no external ignition source. There are no confirmed reports of bulk lithium battery fires in the air, but that is precisely the reason the FAA Tech Center undertook its examination of this more dangerous scenario. There is one case where a lithium battery fire may have played a role in the crash of a transport category airplane. In November 1987 a South African Airways B747 combi (a hybrid freighter with a partition separating cargo from passengers on the main deck), with 159 passengers aboard and cargo which included a consignment of lithium watch batteries, disappeared into the Indian Ocean off Mauritius.

After a wreck survey by robot cameras and limited debris recovery, investigators determined that the lithium batteries were located in the same area that was established to have been the seat of the fire. The airplane also was carrying a cargo of ammonium perchlorate, a rocket propellant known to be unstable and capable of spontaneous ignition. As a propellant with its own oxygen, ammonium perchlorate would have rapidly promoted a fire. However, in revealing testimony to the South African Truth and Reconciliation Commission, the presence of the lithium battery shipment was mentioned, and is pertinent to what has been revealed by the FAA lithium fire tests about battery venting, explosions, and accelerated self-reactive fires. The testimony obviously was dealing with the batteries' packaging material, but the general description of the fire that doomed the plane reinforces the point that lithium batteries can be extremely dangerous if they catch fire.

Using a steel test chamber to simulate an aircraft cargo hold, the FAA tests show that a runaway fire involving a shipment of lithium batteries might well result in loss of the aircraft. The batteries involved were those used commonly in consumer electronic products (e.g., video cameras).

Batteries were tested singly, and in groups of 32, 64 and 128. Tests also involved groups of batteries packed in rows inside cardboard boxes.

For test purposes, the battery fires were started by igniting a "fire pan" filled with alcohol. The findings were fearful. To summarize:

  • A relatively small fire source was sufficient to start a lithium battery fire.
  • The heat from a single battery afire was sufficient to ignite adjacent batteries.
  • The outer plastic coating on the batteries easily melted, fusing the batteries together, adding to the intensity of the fire.
  • The chain reaction ignition continued until all batteries were consumed.
  • The molten lithium burned explosively, spraying white-hot lithium to a radius of several feet as the batteries bounced around.
  • The duration of the peak temperature increased with the number of batteries, reaching as high as 1,400� F (as a matter of interest, the melting temperature of aluminum is around 1,200� F).
  • The cardboard packing proved highly flammable. The packing delayed battery ignition by about 30-60 seconds, but once ignited, the fire among the close-packed batteries was worse.
  • While thick-wall cargo liners were able to contain the fire (barely), thin-walled fire liners proved ineffective. The battery fire ignited the resin in the liner, and the liner was completely penetrated by molten lithium.
  • Halon fire-suppressing agent, injected in sufficient concentration to "knock down" a fire, proved totally ineffective, even when injected after just the first battery had caught fire. Nor did it have any effect on the peak temperature. The fire continued as if Halon were not present.
  • Lithium batteries catch fire with explosive force. When they burst, they create a pressure pulse. The eight-battery test produced a pressure pulse of 1.8 psi, and the 16- battery test generated a 2.6 psi pulse.

According to the Tech Center report:

"These results are significant. The cargo compartment is only constructed to withstand a 1-psi pressure differential in order to rapidly equalize the pressure in the event of a depressurization. Anything over 1 psi would activate the blowout panels, compromising the cargo compartment's [fire-resistant] integrity."

The effect is the same as perforating the cargo liner.

  • A cargo bay fire from a totally unrelated source can cause a shipment of lithium batteries to ignite. Tech Center investigators found that the temperatures found in a suppressed smoldering cargo fire are sufficient to ignite a lithium battery.

Add one other factor - the butane used as propellant in personal care products packed into passengers' bags - and put it all together: A cargo fire of unknown origin starts and ignites a shipment of lithium batteries. With a cargo bay fire warning in the cockpit, the pilots discharge Halon, with no effect. The molten fireworks of lithium burns through the cargo liner, and penetrates the aluminum skin of the cargo bay. The holes allow for an inrush of air, adding oxygen to the fire. The exploding batteries create sufficient overpressure to punch out the blowout panels - allowing for more inrush of oxygen and spread of the fire outside the hold. The heat rise is sufficient to cause aerosol cans of shaving cream, hairspray, etc., to burst. Earlier tests have demonstrated that a single such can, placed in a bag located near the ceiling, can explode with sufficient force to distort and heave up the cabin floor.

Although they must be marked as hazardous cargo, there presently is no limit on the number of lithium batteries that can be shipped on a commercial aircraft.

There are two obvious implications of this scenario. First, ETOPS (extended range operations) is based on the presumption that a belly-hold fire can be suppressed by Halon for three hours. It does not account for the catastrophic progression of a pallet of lithium batteries catching fire. Such a fire would easily burn its way through current defenses.

The danger is such that a terrorist would not need to use explosives that could be detected in his checked or hand luggage by an explosives detection system (EDS). A lithium fire would create havoc enough. This scenario supports the need, as a minimum, for positive passenger bag-match (PPBM) for domestic flights as well as the current requirement for international flights (see ASW, Nov. 12, 2001).

There is one bit of final irony to this tale: the smoke detector units of some aircraft fire detection systems are powered by lithium batteries.

(The full report, "Flammability Assessment of Bulk-Packed, Nonrechargeable Lithium Primary Batteries in Transport Category Aircraft," Report No. DOT/FAA/AR-04/26, may be viewed at http://www.fire.tc.faa.gov/pdf/04-26.pdf. The UK Civil Aviation Authority produced a report in July 2003 in which Halon was found effective for suppression of single-battery lithium fires, although in these cases the batteries were contained in their electronic devices. For this report, see http://www.caa.co.uk/publications/publicationdetails.asp?id=985)

AP: Pilots Support Regulation of Lithium Batteries on Airplanes

Union: Ban Lithium Batteries on Planes

Air Line Pilots Association Says Bulk Shipments of Batteries Can Start Fires in Cargo

(AP) The world's largest pilots union said Tuesday it wants bulk shipments of lithium batteries and products containing the batteries banned from passenger and cargo planes because they can start a fire.

In seeking a federal ban, the Air Line Pilots Association pointed to three incidents since June in which lithium battery shipments apparently caused fires aboard U.S. planes.

On Aug. 14, a fire in a shipment of 1,000 e-cigarettes - a battery-powered device that provides inhaled doses of nicotine - was discovered in the cargo compartment of a plane after it landed at Minneapolis-St. Paul International Airport. Each cigarette contained a rechargeable lithium-ion battery.

In another instance, a package of cell phone batteries shipped from Michigan to the Dominican Republic[] was found smoking and smoldering after a United Parcel Service plane landed in Santo Domingo on July 15. The package documentation indicated "used batteries - non-haz."

A burned package containing a lithium-ion "bicycle-power device" was discovered in the cargo of a UPS flight from Ontario, Calif., to Honolulu on June 18, the union said.

"The evidence of a clear and present danger is mounting," Mark Rogers, director of the union's dangerous good program, said in a statement. "We need an immediate ban on these dangerous goods to protect airline passengers, crews and cargo."

The union emphasized that it is not seeking a ban on passengers carrying electronic devices containing lithium batteries onto planes, such as laptop computers, cell phones, and cameras. Instead, the union's concern is with cargo containing multiple batteries, either loose or inside products.

If a battery short-circuits, it can catch fire and that fire can ignite other batteries.

John Prater, the union's president, said in a letter to Cynthia Douglass, acting deputy administrator of the Pipeline and Hazardous Materials Safety Administration, that an immediate ban on shipments is necessary until the agency can develop regulations for safe packaging of the batteries for transport.

He noted that Douglass told a House panel this spring that the safety administration is working on new regulations for the shipment of lithium batteries. However, he said that if the government doesn't act quickly, the union will ask Congress to step in.

Officials for the safety administration didn't immediately return a phone call seeking comment.

Prater said the three recent incidents are similar to a Feb. 7, 2006, incident in which a UPS DC-8 made an emergency landing at Philadelphia International Airport after the flight crew detected smoke in the cargo hold, which worsened as the plane descended. The plane landed safely and the crew escaped with minor injuries, but the plane and most of the cargo were destroyed.

"We have been most fortunate that the lithium-ion battery malfunctions (in the three recent incidents) didn't cause an accident, but luck is not a sound safety strategy," Prater said.

The Federal Aviation Administration no longer permits large, pallet-size shipments of lithium-metal batteries on passenger planes. Airline passengers are not allowed to pack loose lithium batteries in checked luggage. Consumer electronics containing lithium batteries are still allowed in carry-on and checked luggage. However, passengers are limited to two spare lithium batteries in carry-on baggage.


Seminole Chronicle: Rep. JOHN LUIGI MICA Rails Against Democratic Reform of Health Care

National officials rally conservatives

By Abraham Aboraya
November 11, 2009

ALTAMONTE SPRINGS - On Saturday, Representative John Boehner and Representative John Mica voted in the capital against President Barack Obama's signature health care legislation.

On Sunday, they were more than 830 miles south, speaking at the Seminole County Republican Party's Lincoln Reagan Day Dinner at the Altamonte Springs Hilton.

Mica, whose district includes parts of Altamonte Springs and Casselberry, and Boehner, the highest ranking Republican in the House, were the featured speakers.

Both used the opportunity to take shots at the Democrats' bill, saying that the 2010 election would bring a check to the Democrats.

"This is the beginning of the end of the other side for what they did to the American people last night," Mica said.

Boehner's statements a few minutes later echoed Mica's.

"The only thing we can do over the next year is make sure we elect Republicans to congressional districts around the country, and if we do, we will win," Boehner said. "We'll put a check on this administration's ability to socialize our economy."

Boehner represents Ohio's Eighth Congressional District, and comes from a catholic family with 11 brothers and sisters. Boehner told the full Crystal Ballroom that he was raised as a Democrat but began changing his mind when his business paid more in taxes in 1978 than it earned gross in 1976.

Boehner said that, in 1970, the top income tax rate bracket was 70 percent.

"I went to Washington because I was convinced government was choking the goose that was laying golden eggs," Boehner said. "I went there to get government's hand off the goose so the goose could keep laying golden eggs. Needless to say, I haven't succeeded yet."

Out of all the speakers, Boehner seemed to draw the biggest laughs and the biggest applause. His speech style seems to blend tongue-in-cheek and serious rhetoric.

He said that the American people have been rejecting the change the new administration is bringing.

"I went to Washington because I believe in our cause," Boehner said. "You're here tonight because you believe in our cause. One only has to look at what's happened this year to realize that our cause is the right cause. ... Every change that [Obama]'s offered, the American people soundly rejected."

The speakers weren't just federal, either. Florida Attorney General and gubernatorial candidate Bill McCollum spoke at the dinner.

He said that, historically, Florida has depended on agriculture and tourism as its two main industries. And while he said he would work to keep those industries booming, Florida has to branch out.

"We cannot any longer depend on just those two industries for the future of Florida," he said. "We have to grow our state. I happen to believe in growing wealth, not redistributing it. I think that's extraordinarily important."

The dinner included a plethora of elected officials and notables in Seminole County. Former Oviedo congressman Tom Feeney was at the event, as was Florida representative Sandy Adams.

County Commissioners Bob Dallari and Mike McLean were at the event - a fundraiser for local Republicans - as well as Oviedo's recently re-elected Mayor Mary Lou Andrews. Deputy Mayor Dominic Persampiere was also in attendance.

Persampiere said he liked the event. He almost won one of the silent auctions for a framed picture of Lincoln, complete with complete strands of his hair and a piece of the flag from his funeral procession.

"It was a well put-on event, and, as always, well attended," Persampiere said. "The Republican Party certainly isn't dead. They just talked about balancing the views on what's going on. It wasn't completely partisan, it wasn't over the top, it was 'Hey, let's have a conversation.' The speakers were excellent."

Boehner touched on how difficult it's been to be a Republican as of late.

"Over the last couple election cycles, it hasn't been easy to be a Republican," he said. "We made our share of mistakes; the American people gave up on us. My job as Republican leader of the House ... is to help give the American people reasons to believe."

All the speakers were introduced by Patsy Gilbert, a professional Sarah Palin impersonator. She gave the keynote speakers boxes of Mooseburger Helper - buckshot free and "locked and loaded for flavor."

"I've been doing it (the Palin impressions) since the morning after her nomination acceptance speech," Gilbert said. "I go all over the country doing it. ... I've been almost everywhere in the lower 48 doing it, but I'm based out of Orlando."

HEATHER BEAVEN Eschews the Precautionary Principle

It is a sine qua non among serious Democrats to research before speaking. That's the "precautionary principle."

Where exothermic reactions on aircraft are concerned, the "precautionary principle" governs public policy, just as it does on other hazardous substances and other potential terrorism tools.

HEATHER BEAVEN does not get it. Please see below.

Parvenu HEATHER BEAVEN eschewed the precautionary principle twice -- once in not researching lithium batteries on aircraft before emitting errant nonsense, and again in mocking Congressman JOHN LUIGIC MICA"s following the precautionary principle.

Ordinarily, JOHN LUIGI MICA is a gambler who runs the table, betting the environment and tourist economy of state on offshore oil drilling, for example. When MICA actually takes the time to work to protect people (as on lithium batteries today and the Glass-Steagall Act in the 1990s), he deserves to be listened to before he is dismissed with ridicule.

Again, JOHN LUIGI MICA is right. HEATHER BEAVEN is wrong. Please regulate lithium batteries on aircraft. It will save lives.

Wikipedia re: The Precautionary Principle

The precautionary principle is a moral and political principle which states that if an action or policy might cause severe or irreversible harm to the public or to the environment, in the absence of a scientific consensus that harm would not ensue, the burden of proof falls on those who would advocate taking the action.[1] The principle implies that there is a responsibility to intervene and protect the public from exposure to harm where scientific investigation discovers a plausible risk in the course of having screened for other suspected causes. The protections that mitigate suspected risks can be relaxed only if further scientific findings emerge that more robustly support an alternative explanation. In some legal systems, as in the law of the European Union, the precautionary principle is also a general and compulsory principle of law.[2]

....

New York Times: A Fire Risk That Clears Security

October 27, 2009

A Fire Risk That Clears Security

Battery fires in personal electronic devices can be scary. But if a battery ignites on a plane, the risks are much greater.

With more people traveling with an assortment of portable electronics — sometimes a plane has more devices than passengers — fires are occurring on airliners with increasing frequency. More than half of the 22 battery fires in the cabin of passenger planes since 1999 have been in the last three years. One air safety expert suggested that these devices might be “the last unrestricted fire hazard” people can bring on airplanes.

This month, the Federal Aviation Administration along with the Pipeline and Hazardous Materials Safety Administration issued special advisories to airlines about yet another gadget: the credit card readers that many have begun to issue to flight attendants to ring up sales of food, drinks and other amenities.

While airlines have used portable credit card readers for several years, the F.A.A. said earlier this month that they needed approval from the agency’s hazardous materials division. Like the majority of hand-held consumer electronic devices, the readers are powered by rechargeable lithium batteries, which the government considers hazardous.

“The carriers came and asked if we would allow them to have the credit card readers on aircraft and they wanted spare lithium batteries to allow them to switch out the batteries,” said Christopher Bonanti, director of the F.A.A. office of hazardous materials. “I was concerned about having spare lithium batteries, and I asked them not to do that.”

Some airlines have agreed to special training for handling batteries and were allowed to carry spares, Mr. Bonanti said. But other airlines, like Delta and JetBlue, figured it was safer to avoid carrying extra batteries altogether.

“They’re not charged onboard the aircraft and batteries aren’t removed from these devices while onboard,” Bryan Baldwin, a JetBlue spokesman, wrote in an e-mail message.

While no fires from credit card readers have been reported, the list of spontaneous combustion events with other devices reads like a thriller. Last month, a portable DVD player was dropped on an American Airlines flight, causing a fire. In March 2008, a United Airlines employee placed a flashlight in the storage compartment of a Boeing 757 at the Denver airport. A report said the flashlight exploded “like gunshots,” turning the on-off switch into a projectile. On a flight to Miami that same month, eight people were injured when a small battery fell against a metal seat frame. In the ensuing explosion, debris singed a passenger’s ear and hair and the smoke sickened seven crew members.

In 2004, an ABC News camera exploded on a plane being used by the presidential candidate John Edwards. A seat caught fire, causing an emergency return to the airport. Even more events go unreported, the authorities said.

“If you have an issue in the air there’s not a whole lot you can do to recover from it,” said Gerald McNerney, a vice president at Motorola, which provides hand-held devices to airlines. “You put your brand at risk if one of your devices has an issue with the battery. What we’ve done is look at creating backups, duplicity in development so that you’re not going to have an explosion.”

Figures from the Consumer Product Safety Commission Web site show that at least 400,000 portable device batteries have been recalled so far this year, an indication that manufacturing problems are sometimes to blame. Batteries are also becoming more powerful, so that even the smallest have the potential to unleash a lot of heat.

“The battery industry is trying to squeeze more juice into these batteries for longer life,” said Joe Delcambre, a spokesman for the hazardous materials agency. “Smaller battery, more life, with a terminal that can overheat the product — it’s a risk.”

Considering that problems with batteries are occurring on passenger planes at a rate of one every four months, Merritt Birky, formerly a fire and explosions expert with the National Transportation Safety Board who is now a private consultant, suggests they should be kept where passengers can keep an eye on them and out of overhead storage bins.

“Any time you have a fire on board it’s alarming, especially in the overhead bin,” Mr. Birky said. “That area is chock full of luggage and coats so you have lots of fuel for a fire and it’s going to go undetected for quite some time.”

The Transportation Department has created a Web site that includes the rules on traveling with lithium batteries, and it works with the manufacturers of portable electronic devices to spread the word about the hazards. But the transportation safety board estimated that only one person in every 170 to 190 travelers had actually visited the Web site.

“Most air passengers and flight crews are likely unaware of the fire risks posed by rechargeable lithium batteries,” the board wrote in 2008 in recommending a more aggressive approach to educating the public. The F.A.A. plans to follow that suggestion when it begins broadcasting public service announcements in airports next year, Mr. Bonanti said.

“There’s a whole slew of things that can go wrong with a lithium battery,” he said, adding that no matter how comfortable people are with their devices, caution is the best course of action.

International Air Transport Assn (IATA) re: Lithium Batteries on Aircraft

GUIDANCE FOR PORTABLE ELECTRONIC DEVICES FIRES IN AIRCRAFT CABINS
Brief for Airline Management
Issue December 2007
Background
Lithium batteries are regulated for transport across all modes of transport (road, rail, sea
and air) as dangerous goods. For air transport, the provisions of the UN Model Regulations
are incorporated into the Technical Instructions for the Safe Transport of Dangerous Goods
by Air published by ICAO. IATA publishes the Dangerous Goods Regulations (DGR), which
incorporate all of the provisions of the ICAO Technical Instructions together with additional
operational requirements developed by the IATA Dangerous Goods Board.
Batteries pose a unique hazard during transport because they contain stored energy, which
if released through a short circuit is capable of causing a fire.
Lithium batteries can be divided into two groups:
• primary (non-rechargeable) lithium metal batteries; and
• secondary (rechargeable) lithium ion batteries.
Because of their chemistry lithium batteries also pose a chemical hazard because of the
presence of metallic lithium or flammable liquid electrolyte.
Primary (non-rechargeable) lithium metal and secondary (rechargeable) lithium ion
batteries are widely used in various consumer electronic devices. Typically the primary
lithium batteries are used in smaller devices such as watches, calculators and cameras, or
as a back-up power supply. Lithium ion batteries, which tend to be larger, are used in
devices such as laptop computers, mobile telephones and camcorders.
Based on experience gained in transport, and following representation from industry, the
UN Subcommittee provides for some relief from the full regulatory requirements for “small”
lithium batteries. This relief is addressed by way of a Special Provision. The special
provision excepts lithium batteries from the provisions of the dangerous goods regulations
provided that:
• the lithium batteries are below a certain size. The size is determined by the quantity of
lithium contained in the battery;
• the batteries have been tested in accordance with the defined test requirements; and
• batteries are packed to prevent short circuit.
2/4
03/12/2007
Carriage by Passengers and Crew
Because of the widespread usage of lithium batteries in consumer electronic devices such
as laptop computers, cell phones, MP3 players and PDAs there are provisions in the DGR
to permit crewmembers and passengers to carry lithium battery powered equipment in
checked or carry-on baggage. Crewmembers and passengers are also permitted to carry
spare lithium batteries for such devices, up to a defined size. Spare lithium batteries must
be in carry-on baggage. For the most part, lithium ion batteries in such consumer electronic
devices will not exceed a capacity of 100 Watt hours (Wh). As an indication a typical laptop
computer battery has a capacity of approximately 53 Wh. Most new batteries will be
marked with the Wh rating.
Regulatory Action
Amend the Cabin Crew checklist and the amplified Cabin Crew checklist for dangerous
goods incidents in passenger cabin during flight. Changes will be incorporated into the
2009-2010 edition of the ICAO Technical Instructions, 2009-2010 edition of the ICAO
Emergency Response Guidance for Aircraft Incidents Involving Dangerous Goods and
2009 edition of the IATA DGR.
Tests on lithium battery fire
The FAA has created a video which can be downloaded from the following link:
http://www.fire.tc.faa.gov/temp/laptop.htm
Further Information please contact:
For Inflight issues: For other issues:
Lisa Angiolelli Dave Brennan
Manager Airport & Inflight Assistant Director Special Cargo Standards
+41 22 770 2704 +1 514-874-0202
angiolellil@iata.org brennand@iata.org
3/4
03/12/2007
CABIN CREW CHECKLIST
INITIAL ACTION
• Notify Pilot-in-Command
• Identify the item
In case of fire:
• Use Standard procedure / check use of water
In case of fire involving a portable electronic device:
• Use standard procedure / obtain and use fire extinguisher
• Remove external electrical power form device (if applicable)
• Douse deice with water (or other non-flammable liquid) to cool cells and prevent
ignition of adjacent cells
• Do not move device
• Remove power to remaining electrical outlets until the aircraft’s system can be
determined to be free of faults, if the device was previously plugged in
In case of spillage or leakage:
• Collect emergency response kit or other useful items
• Don rubber gloves and smoke hood or smoke mask - probable oxygen
• Move passengers away from area and distribute wet towels or cloth
• Place dangerous goods item in polyethylene bags
• Stow polyethylene bags
• Treat affected seat cushions / covers in the same manner as dangerous goods item
• Cover spillage on carpet / floor
• Regularly inspect item stowed away / contaminated furnishings
AFTER LANDING
• Identify to ground personnel dangerous goods item and where stowed
• Make appropriate entry in maintenance log
4/4
03/12/2007
AMPLIFIED CABIN CREW CHECKLIST
IN CASE OF FIRE
USE STANDARD PROCEDURE / CHECK USE OF WATER
Standard emergency procedures must be used to deal with any fire. In general, water
should not be used on a spillage or when fumes are present since it may spread the
spillage or increase the rate of fuming. Consideration should also be given to the possible
presence of electrical components when using water extinguishers.
IN CASE OF FIRE INVOLVING A PORTABLE ELECTRONIC DEVICE
USE STANDARD PROCEDURE / OBRTAIN AND USE FIRE EXTINGUISHER
Standard emergency procedures must be used to deal with any fire. Although Halon has
been shown to not be effective against lithium metal fires, Halon will be effective in fighting
the subsequent fire of surrounding materials, or in fighting lithium ion battery fire.
REMOVE EXTERNAL ELECTRICAL POWER FORM DEVICE (IF APPRLICABLE)
A battery has a higher likelihood of catching fire through thermal runway during or
immediately following a charging cycle, although the effects of thermal runaway may be
delayed for some period o time. By removing external power form the device, it will be
assured that additional energy is not being fed to the battery to promote a fire.
DOUSE DEVICE WITH WATER (OR OTHER NON-FLAMMABLE LIQUID) TO COOL
CLLS AND PREVENT IGNITION OF ADJACENT CELLS
If available, a water extinguisher should be used to cool the cells in a batter that have
ignited, preventing the spread of heat to adjacent cells. If a water extinguisher is not
available, any non-flammable liquid may be sued to cool the cells and device.
DO NOT MOVE DEVICE
A battery pack involved in a fire has been shown to reignite and emit flames multiple times
as heat is transferred to other cells in the pack. It is preferable to cool the device using
water (or other non-flammable liquid); injuries may occur if the device reignites while it is
being moved.
REMOVE POWER TO REMAINING ELECTRICAL OUTLETS UNTIL THE AIRCRAFT’S
SYSTEM CAN BE DETERMINED TO BE FREE OF FAULTS, IT THE DEVICE WAS
PREVIOUSLY PLUGGED IN
By removing power to the remaining electrical outlets it can be assured that a
malfunctioning aircraft system does not contribute to additional failures of passenger
portable electronic device

HEATHER BEAVEN Apparatchik ROB FIELDS Whines About BEAVEN's Opposition to Air Safety Legislation

The thick plottens.

See ex-CLYDE MALLOY fumer factotum ROB FIELDS' Anonymice comment below, posted to his blog. http://www.rantsofrob.com/

Not one word in defense of BEAVEN's $20 million flop -- a government and corporate funded propaganda program that teaches at-risk kids to be docile workers.

That's right.

HEATHER BEAVEN's program won't teach at-risk kids anything about occupational safety and health, minimum wages, whistleblower rights or union rights, while BEAVEN prattles on about air safety.

When BEAVEN or her acolytes talk about safety, they subtract from the sum total of human knowledge.

BEAVEN thought MICA was wrong to raise concerns on air safety and lithium batteries. We don't need airheads dismissing air safety concerns without scientific support. FIELDS' post hoc rationalization of BEAVEN's ukase is hardly enlightening. Like a drunk leaning on a lampost, FIELDS cites "experience" more for support than illumination. He has no statistics. He has no scientific studies.

We don't mind depositing laptops and cell phones in fireproof containers while in flight if that's what it takes to make air transport safer. Even one life saved from a horrible fire at 30,000 feet -- one that current airplane fire extinguishers can't extinguish -- is worth the effort.

When MICA is actually right about something -- when he tries (for a change) to protect the public, opportunistic HEATHER BEAVEN blasts MICA without caring about consequences.

HEATHER BEAVEN reminds me of what the late Democratic Anderson County (Tennessee) Sheriff and County Clerk Ken Caldwell would call an "aginner" -- someone who is opposed to an incumbent, but has no cogent ideas.

Yet ROB FIELDS ululates as only a wannabee apparatchik can, like a hog caught under a gate.

Why do the heathen rage?

Because Faye Armitage is "the real deal" and HEATHER BEAVEN is a fake, just like CLYDE MALLOY before her. Like CLYDE MALLOY, BEAVEN seems like a "Stealth" candidate, with no detectable pre-existing positions that would make one believe she is a Democrat.

Is HEATHER BEAVEN a shameless opportunist?

With some of the same staff (and funders), FIELDS is mistaken to dub BEAVEN "the frontrunner" when no one has ever voted for BEAVEN, and 2008 Democratic nominee Faye Armitage earned nearly 150,000 votes last year against reprobate Representative JOHN LUIGI MICA for the Seventh Congressional District race.

Wednesday, November 25, 2009

Reckon JOHN LUIGI MICA is right about banning lithium batteries on airplanes? (Heather Beaven, unsafe at any speed?)




Yes. Heather Beaven is wrong. Dead wrong.

Congressman JOHN LUIGI MICA was right in seeking to ban lithium batteries from airplanes. They are a fire hazard. They are extremely flammable. The Transportation Security Administration (TSA) says that "Primary lithium batteries cannot be extinguished with firefighting agents normally carried on aircraft."

We can't carry gasoline or other flamable products on board airplanes, either. No one complains.

It is a matter of air safety. When we fly, we don't want to die.

We need fireproof containers on airplanes to contain lithium batteries.

The Valu-Jet crash in South Florida killed 105 people on May 11, 1998 and was caused by exothermic reactions from chemical oxygen generators wrongfully carried on board.

Heather Beaven's demagogic E-mailing (below) is the sort of misguided partisanship that causes people to die. We need a real Democratic nominee (Faye Armitage, who earned nearly 150,000 votes in 2008).

We don't need as a Democratic nominee an unwise, uncouth Republican act-alike wannabee, someone who prattles (below) airily, as if she were a Stepford WIfe lobbyist from the National Association of Manufacturers. She says that MICS's amendment would "greatly harm large and small business communication. Clearly John Mica is not only out of touch with today's business traveler, he does not understand today's world."

Her "greatly" is as mistaken as her "clearly," adverbs in defense of the indefensible -- a troglodytic anti-safety point of view that verges on mockery and ignorance.

Heather Beaven describes herself as a "social entrepeneur." Evidently Beaven must also be a high-stakes gambler, one who is willing to gamble on air safety with human lives.

When even JOHN LUIGI MICA, a right-wing Republican is willing to stand up for air safety, he deserves praise, not vilification.

So here goes: JOHN LUIGI MICA is right on lithium batteries. Beaven is wrong.
Beaven is unscientific. She wants to make public policy based on slogans, not facts. She's willing to go demagogic, and it is not even 2010 yet. If she's willing to sacrifice air safety, what else is she willing to sacrifice? Occupational safety and health? (Yes, see below).

In fairness, JOHN LUIGI MICA was also right in the 1990s when he voted against the repeal of the Glass-Steagall Act, which allow banks to sell stock and investments. Time has proven that JOHN MICA was correct on that vote, too.

The difference between statesmen and politicians is that statesmen can work with people of differing political persuasions for the common good. My first boss, Senator Ted Kennedy, was a statesman. Senator Orin Hatch was one of his best friends, and he would make deals with Hatch and other Republicans to pass progressive legislation.

In contrast, Heather Beaven's reflexive anti-MICA posturing shows that she is a hack, someone with little public policy experience, more mouth than mensch.

Heather Beaven says she's "CEO & President of The Florida Endowment Foundation for Florida's Graduates who oversees all aspects of a monumental, $20 million dollar, growth campaign in stay-in-school, school-to-career and return-to-school initiatives designed to positively impact the graduation rate, employability (sic) readiness and the post secondary education enrollment of students' of untapped promise."

Questions that need to be asked about Heather Beaven's "monumental, $20 million dollar, growth campaignm" a 501(c)(3):

Who funds it? (Government and big corporations).

What does it do? (Little but fancy brochures).

What's the purpose of it (further funding, feel-good for donors, and encouraging "at risk" high school students to become docile workers who show up for work on time, but are never never taught their rights under minimum wage, occupational health and safety, and other laws).

It makes sense that someone who thinks they're doing students a favor not teaching them about OSHA would want to blast JOHN MICA for a pro-safety amendment.

It makes sense that someone who has no business experience would ascribe mean and base motives to all business travelers. Who would want to risk their fellow passengers' safety for the use of a dumb 'ole laptop computer at 30,000 feet?

Heather Beaven, the Stealth corporativist candidate from the "monumental, $20 million dollar, growth campaign" that teaches workers nothing about OSHA.

Heather Beaven: unsafe at any speed?

Heather Beaven attacks Mica on his effort to ban lithium batteries on airplanes

NEW VIDEO: JOHN MICA'S ARCHAIC IDEAS ARE OUT OF STEP WITH THE MODERN WORLD

While our families await help from Congress to spur job creation in Florida, John Mica introduced legislation prohibiting lithium batteries on airplanes. This would ban cell phones, laptops and I-pods on commercial airplane flights in America. If John Mica is successful, this would greatly harm large and small business communication. Clearly John Mica is not only out of touch with today's business traveler, he does not understand today's world. In the 20th century, we could "unplug" for days but that just isn't how the world works today.

Even his fellow Republicans in Congress disagree with John Mica on his legislation. They know that Mica's legislation would further depress innovation and job creation.

Click here to watch Mica's comments on banning laptops, cell phones and lithium batteries on commercial airplanes.

George Gardner's St. Augustine report: The REAL First Thanksgiving


The REAL First Thanksgiving
"As the Thanksgiving holiday approaches, school children everywhere are dusting off their Pilgrim costumes and asking their parents for contributions of turkey, dressing, and cranberry sauce for classroom recreations of the famous Plymouth meal. REAL Thanksgiving book cover
"But Florida schoolchildren in particular should really be researching the attire of Spanish soldiers and Timucuan Indians and asking grandma to help them find garbanzo beans and chorizo sausage for their communal school meal."
So starts a treatise on the Florida Humanities Council website, setting the record straight on America's traditional holiday.
It echoes the assertion by Historian Michael Gannon that earned him the title "The Grinch Who Stole Thanksgiving" in New England circles.
"The REAL first Thanksgiving took place in St. Augustine, Florida in 1565. . . . The meal, shared by Spanish soldiers and natives of the Seloy tribe, was a celebration of the safe arrival of the Spanish expedition of Pedro Menéndez de Avilés."
Ponte Vedra's Robyn Gioia is bringing that message to young students in her book, America's REAL First Thanksgiving.

American Bar Association Endorses Free Flow of Information Act (Federal Press Shield Law)

Senate Proposal on Federal Shield Law Wins ABA Endorsement

American Bar Association Supports Specter-Schumer Substitute to S. 448, Free Flow of Information Act

The ABA is calling on the Senate Judiciary Committee to move forward with its consideration of the newly-introduced bipartisan Specter-Schumer substitute to S. 448, the Free Flow of Information Act 2009.

The substitute for the proposed federal shield law is scheduled for mark-up this week. In a letter sent to Senate Judiciary Committee Chair Patrick Leahy and all committee members, the ABA noted that the compromise “is the first to be vigorously supported by both the news industry and the Department of Justice.”

“Their joint support signifies that this substitute strikes the right balance and will protect the free flow of information to the public through a free and active press without impeding legitimate criminal investigations or threatening national security,” continued the letter.

The ABA praised the substitute measure for its definition of who is covered under the shield law, its shift in the burden of proof required for not revealing a source, a broadened national security exception, and allowances for in camera or ex parte judicial review of evidence.

A full copy of the letter, signed by ABA Governmental Affairs Director Thomas Susman, will be posted at http://www.abanet.org/poladv/letters/additional/2009nov19_fedshields_l.pdf

Additional background or interviews available upon request.

With nearly 400,000 members, the American Bar Association is the largest voluntary professional membership organization in the world. As the national voice of the legal profession, the ABA works to improve the administration of justice, promotes programs that assist lawyers and judges in their work, accredits law schools, provides continuing legal education, and works to build public understanding around the world of the importance of the rule of law.

November 20, 2009

BBC News: US pledges carbon emissions cuts

President Barack Obama is to pledge to cut greenhouse gas emissions in the US in several stages, beginning with a 17% cut by 2020, the White House has said.

The offer will be made at December's UN climate talks in Copenhagen, which Mr Obama will attend.

But he does not plan to be there for the crucial last days, when delegates including other world leaders are hoping to pull together a deal.

The talks aim to draw up a new treaty to supplant the 1997 Kyoto Protocol.

UN climate chief Yvo de Boer said his attendance could be vital for a deal.

CUTS ALREADY PLEDGED
# EU - 20% cut from 1990 levels, rising to 30% in the event of a global agreement
# Australia - 25% from 2000 levels
# Japan - 25% from 1990 levels

"It's critical that President Obama attends the climate change summit in Copenhagen," he told journalists.

The cuts Mr Obama has proposed are similar to those included in a bill passed by the US House of Representatives in June.

But with legislation currently stuck in the Senate, correspondents say the president will be unable to commit to any of the figures he is proposing at the summit.

So far more than 60 world leaders have said they will attend.

Observers say the presence of such figures as Mr Obama will raise hopes for action on climate change, although the talks are not expected to result in a new treaty.

'Momentum for talks'

Officials said the US would pledge a 17% cut in emissions from 2005 levels by 2020, 30% by 2025, 42% by 2030 and 83% by 2050.
COPENHAGEN SUMMIT
# Planning to attend: Leaders of United States, Britain, Germany, France, Spain, Australia, Japan, Indonesia and Brazil Yet to commit:
# Leaders of China and India

Mr Obama will outline a "pathway" towards the US goals at the summit, a White House statement said.

It described the cuts as "a significant contribution to a problem that the US has neglected for too long".

But most other countries' targets are given in comparison with 1990 figures.

BBC environment correspondent Richard Black says that on that basis the US figure amounts to just a few percentage points, as its emissions have risen by about 15% since 1990.

This is much less than the EU's pledge of a 20% cut over the same period, or a 30% cut if there is a global deal; and much less than the 25-40% figure that developing countries are demanding.

The US president will be in the Danish capital on 9 December, a day before receiving his Nobel Peace Prize in Oslo.

But he does not plan to return for the key last stages of the summit, which runs from 7-18 December.

White House aide Mike Froman said the decision to go to Copenhagen was "to give momentum to the negotiations there".

The decision follows intense speculation about whether the US president would go at all.

Delegations from 192 countries will be attending the summit. HAVE YOUR SAY I'm sure the event in Copenhagen will be beneficial for Planet Earth Juan Leonidas Vega G, San Salvador

Leaders saying they will attend include UK Prime Minister Gordon Brown, French President Nicolas Sarkozy and Brazilian President Luis Inacio Lula da Silva.

Hu Jintao, president of the world's largest polluter, China, is yet to commit to attending.

The US is the second largest polluter after China.

Mr Obama has made climate change a major priority for his administration, after previous incumbents had failed to ratify the Kyoto treaty.

But a bill to cap US emissions and establish a national carbon trading scheme is currently stuck in the Senate and is not expected to pass before the end of the year.

Correspondents say most nations have given up hope of a legally binding treaty because of uncertainty about the US position.
Story from BBC NEWS:
http://news.bbc.co.uk/go/pr/fr/-/2/hi/americas/8378890.stm

Published: 2009/11/25 17:38:54 GMT

© BBC MMIX

Letter to Florida Department of Environmental Protection regarding suitable projects for City of St. Augustine re: 611,294 gallons of sewage pollution

Good afternoon:
1. Some 611,294 gallons of sewage pollution were unlawfully deposited in the San Sebastian River (which is immediately adjacent to our office, with sewage having been detected off our deck by FDEP and COSA).

2. Regarding suitably ambitious projects for our City of St. Augustine to atone for the 611,294 gallons of sewage deposited in San Sebastian River,please see the Oak Ridger article:
http://www.oakridger.com/news/x1682934206/Draft-plan-aims-for-greener-city

3. A suitable project would be for the City of St. Augustine to:
A. Appoint a Director of Environment, Safety, Health and Archaeology (ESHA);
B. Adopt an ordinance protect environmental whistleblowers (as the
Anastasia Mosquito Control Commission of St. Johns County does);
C. Place all environmental, safety, health and archaeological
protection information online, including all MSDS. Data about
water and sewer systems and pollution.

4. As part of this project, The City of St. Augustine should endorse the proposed St. Augustine National Historical Park, Seashore and Scenic Coastal Parkway Act, www.staugustgreen.com, and work to adopt an "emerald necklace of parks."

5. The City of Atlanta created $40 million in xx did for a Supplemental Environmental Project (SEP) due to its sewage pollution when John Henry Hankinson, Jr. was EPA Regional Administrator.

6. Will FDEP now kindly take steps for the City Manager to be investigated by the Statewide Grand Jury regarding all of the pollution for which he is responsible (which is a dogged pattern not remedied by DEP's paltry fines to date)?

7. Is that too much to ask? What do you reckon? Please see article below.

Sincerely,
Ed Slavin

The Oak RIdger: Draft plan aims for 'greener' city

By John Huotari | john.huotari@oakridger.com
The Oak Ridger
Posted Nov 23, 2009 @ 09:00 AM
CLINTON, Tenn. —

A climate action plan aimed at reducing local greenhouse gas emissions and making Oak Ridge a "sustainable" community will be discussed at an Oak Ridge City Council work session tonight.

The climate action plan's "draft," developed during many meetings and hours of work by the Oak Ridge Environmental Quality Advisory Board, calls for work in five areas that range from reducing energy consumption and conserving natural resources to enhancing the business community and educating the public.

Goals include promoting the production and use of local food, developing a transportation master plan, reducing waste, improving air and water quality, and encouraging new businesses that produce "green" products or services.

Possible actions include a comprehensive energy audit of city facilities and services and establishment of minimum building code compliance standards for re-selling homes, part of an effort to revitalize existing residential and commercial properties.

EQAB is recommending the formation of a public-private partnership -- the Oak Ridge Energy and Climate Collaborative -- to oversee and guide early implementation of the plan.

EQAB has recommended emissions reduction targets of 10 percent by 2015, 50 percent by 2030 and 80 percent by 2050. Those goals, based on a 2004 baseline, are meant to help stabilize atmospheric levels of carbon dioxide, a so-called greenhouse gas, at or below levels that would avoid the most severe and catastrophic potential impacts of climate change.

An emissions study has found that most of the city government's equivalent carbon dioxide emissions -- or 52 percent of them -- come from water and sewer operations. Transporting water through the city's mountainous terrain uses a lot of energy, the draft report says.

In the community, commercial and industrial operations account for 45 percent of the emissions, the report says.

Besides reducing emissions, the climate action plan is meant to provide long-term community and economic benefits to Oak Ridge citizens.

"Future economic growth in Oak Ridge will depend on how quickly we transition to a new way of living that is based on a far more diversified energy mix, more efficient use of energy and development of our communities in ways that strengthen neighborhoods and urban centers, preserve natural areas and enhance the quality of life in Oak Ridge," the report says.

The 62-page draft plan says initial implementation of priority action items is not expected to be costly, and the return on investment should be realized quickly.

Meanwhile, delaying action on reducing greenhouse gas emissions could add to potential costs, reducing economic benefits and "making it more difficult to reach long-term goals."

"If we fail to take action, the consequences to human populations are potentially severe," the report says. "If we are wrong about the causes, but we take the actions that have been recommended, man and the environment will certainly be no worse off and arguably better off than under a business-as-usual scenario."

In the summer of 2008, city officials asked EQAB to develop a baseline inventory of greenhouse gas emissions, recommend emissions reduction targets, develop a "local action plan," and offer recommendations that could help make the city more environmentally friendly.

The draft climate action plan says the "most significant reductions in emissions will come from increasing energy efficiency in all sectors of our community, continuing to increase sources and use of renewable energy, and designing our communities to reduce our reliance on automobiles for transportation."

The plan includes 25 strategies, along with 74 tactics for possible implementation.

Development of the plan included a well-attended public forum in January that generated more than 400 ideas.

Today's work session begins at 6:30 p.m. in the Multipurpose Room at the Central Services Complex.

John Huotari can be contacted at (865) 220-5533.

Monday, November 23, 2009

NY TImes: November 23, 2009 As Sewers Fill, Waste Poisons Waterways

November 23, 2009
As Sewers Fill, Waste Poisons Waterways
By CHARLES DUHIGG

It was drizzling lightly in late October when the midnight shift started at the Owls Head Water Pollution Control Plant, where much of Brooklyn’s sewage is treated.

A few miles away, people were walking home without umbrellas from late dinners. But at Owls Head, a swimming pool’s worth of sewage and wastewater was soon rushing in every second. Warning horns began to blare. A little after 1 a.m., with a harder rain falling, Owls Head reached its capacity and workers started shutting the intake gates.

That caused a rising tide throughout Brooklyn’s sewers, and untreated feces and industrial waste started spilling from emergency relief valves into the Upper New York Bay and Gowanus Canal.

“It happens anytime you get a hard rainfall,” said Bob Connaughton, one the plant’s engineers. “Sometimes all it takes is 20 minutes of rain, and you’ve got overflows across Brooklyn.”

One goal of the Clean Water Act of 1972 was to upgrade the nation’s sewer systems, many of them built more than a century ago, to handle growing populations and increasing runoff of rainwater and waste. During the 1970s and 1980s, Congress distributed more than $60 billion to cities to make sure that what goes into toilets, industrial drains and street grates would not endanger human health.

But despite those upgrades, many sewer systems are still frequently overwhelmed, according to a New York Times analysis of environmental data. As a result, sewage is spilling into waterways.

In the last three years alone, more than 9,400 of the nation’s 25,000 sewage systems — including those in major cities — have reported violating the law by dumping untreated or partly treated human waste, chemicals and other hazardous materials into rivers and lakes and elsewhere, according to data from state environmental agencies and the Environmental Protection Agency.

But fewer than one in five sewage systems that broke the law were ever fined or otherwise sanctioned by state or federal regulators, the Times analysis shows.

It is not clear whether the sewage systems that have not reported such dumping are doing any better, because data on overflows and spillage are often incomplete.

As cities have grown rapidly across the nation, many have neglected infrastructure projects and paved over green spaces that once absorbed rainwater. That has contributed to sewage backups into more than 400,000 basements and spills into thousands of streets, according to data collected by state and federal officials. Sometimes, waste has overflowed just upstream from drinking water intake points or near public beaches.

There is no national record-keeping of how many illnesses are caused by sewage spills. But academic research suggests that as many as 20 million people each year become ill from drinking water containing bacteria and other pathogens that are often spread by untreated waste.

A 2007 study published in the journal Pediatrics, focusing on one Milwaukee hospital, indicated that the number of children suffering from serious diarrhea rose whenever local sewers overflowed. Another study, published in 2008 in the Archives of Environmental and Occupational Health, estimated that as many as four million people become sick each year in California from swimming in waters containing the kind of pollution often linked to untreated sewage.

Around New York City, samples collected at dozens of beaches or piers have detected the types of bacteria and other pollutants tied to sewage overflows. Though the city’s drinking water comes from upstate reservoirs, environmentalists say untreated excrement and other waste in the city’s waterways pose serious health risks.

A Deluge of Sewage

“After the storm, the sewage flowed down the street faster than we could move out of the way and filled my house with over a foot of muck,” said Laura Serrano, whose Bay Shore, N.Y., home was damaged in 2005 by a sewer overflow.

Ms. Serrano, who says she contracted viral meningitis because of exposure to the sewage, has filed suit against Suffolk County, which operates the sewer system. The county’s lawyer disputes responsibility for the damage and injuries.

“I had to move out, and no one will buy my house because the sewage was absorbed into the walls,” Ms. Serrano said. “I can still smell it sometimes.”

When a sewage system overflows or a treatment plant dumps untreated waste, it is often breaking the law. Today, sewage systems are the nation’s most frequent violators of the Clean Water Act. More than a third of all sewer systems — including those in San Diego, Houston, Phoenix, San Antonio, Philadelphia, San Jose and San Francisco — have violated environmental laws since 2006, according to a Times analysis of E.P.A. data.

Thousands of other sewage systems operated by smaller cities, colleges, mobile home parks and companies have also broken the law. But few of the violators are ever punished.

The E.P.A., in a statement, said that officials agreed that overflows posed a “significant environmental and human health problem, and significantly reducing or eliminating such overflows has been a priority for E.P.A. enforcement since the mid-1990s.”

In the last year, E.P.A. settlements with sewer systems in Hampton Roads, Va., and the east San Francisco Bay have led to more than $200 million spent on new systems to reduce pollution, the agency said. In October, the E.P.A. administrator, Lisa P. Jackson, said she was overhauling how the Clean Water Act is enforced.

But widespread problems still remain.

“The E.P.A. would rather look the other way than crack down on cities, since punishing municipalities can cause political problems,” said Craig Michaels of Riverkeeper, an environmental advocacy group. “But without enforcement and fines, this problem will never end.”

Plant operators and regulators, for their part, say that fines would simply divert money from stretched budgets and that they are doing the best they can with aging systems and overwhelmed pipes.

New York, for example, was one of the first major cities to build a large sewer system, starting construction in 1849. Many of those pipes — constructed of hand-laid brick and ceramic tiles — are still used. Today, the city’s 7,400 miles of sewer pipes operate almost entirely by gravity, unlike in other cities that use large pumps.

New York City’s 14 wastewater treatment plants, which handle 1.3 billion gallons of wastewater a day, have been flooded with thousands of pickles (after a factory dumped its stock), vast flows of discarded chicken heads and large pieces of lumber.

When a toilet flushes in the West Village in Manhattan, the waste runs north six miles through gradually descending pipes to a plant at 137th Street, where it is mixed with so-called biological digesters that consume dangerous pathogens. The wastewater is then mixed with chlorine and sent into the Hudson River.

Fragile System

But New York’s system — like those in hundreds of others cities — combines rainwater runoff with sewage. Over the last three decades, as thousands of acres of trees, bushes and other vegetation in New York have been paved over, the land’s ability to absorb rain has declined significantly. When treatment plants are swamped, the excess spills from 490 overflow pipes throughout the city’s five boroughs.

When the sky is clear, Owls Head can handle the sewage from more than 750,000 people. But the balance is so delicate that Mr. Connaughton and his colleagues must be constantly ready for rain.

They choose cable television packages for their homes based on which company offers the best local weather forecasts. They know meteorologists by the sound of their voices. When the leaves begin to fall each autumn, clogging sewer grates and pipes, Mr. Connaughton sometimes has trouble sleeping.

“I went to Hawaii with my wife, and the whole time I was flipping to the Weather Channel, seeing if it was raining in New York,” he said.

New York’s sewage system overflows essentially every other time it rains.

Reducing such overflows is a priority, city officials say. But eradicating the problem would cost billions.

Officials have spent approximately $35 billion over three decades improving the quality of the waters surrounding the city and have improved systems to capture and store rainwater and sewage, bringing down the frequency and volume of overflows, the city’s Department of Environmental Protection wrote in a statement.

“Water quality in New York City has improved dramatically in the last century, and particularly in the last two decades,” officials wrote.

Several years ago, city officials estimated that it would cost at least $58 billion to prevent all overflows. “Even an expenditure of that magnitude would not result in every part of a river or bay surrounding the city achieving water quality that is suitable for swimming,” the department wrote. “It would, however, increase the average N.Y.C. water and sewer bill by 80 percent.”

The E.P.A., concerned about the risks of overflowing sewers, issued a national framework in 1994 to control overflows, including making sure that pipes are designed so they do not easily become plugged by debris and warning the public when overflows occur. In 2000, Congress amended the Clean Water Act to crack down on overflows.

But in hundreds of places, sewer systems remain out of compliance with that framework or the Clean Water Act, which regulates most pollution discharges to waterways. And the burdens on sewer systems are growing as cities become larger and, in some areas, rainstorms become more frequent and fierce.

New York’s system, for instance, was designed to accommodate a so-called five-year storm — a rainfall so extreme that it is expected to occur, on average, only twice a decade. But in 2007 alone, the city experienced three 25-year storms, according to city officials — storms so strong they would be expected only four times each century.

“When you get five inches of rain in 30 minutes, it’s like Thanksgiving Day traffic on a two-lane bridge in the sewer pipes,” said James Roberts, deputy commissioner of the city’s Department of Environmental Protection.

Government’s Response

To combat these shifts, some cities are encouraging sewer-friendly development. New York, for instance, has instituted zoning laws requiring new parking lots to include landscaped areas to absorb rainwater, established a tax credit for roofs with absorbent vegetation and begun to use millions of dollars for environmentally friendly infrastructure projects.

Philadelphia has announced it will spend $1.6 billion over 20 years to build rain gardens and sidewalks of porous pavement and to plant thousands of trees.

But unless cities require private developers to build in ways that minimize runoff, the volume of rain flowing into sewers is likely to grow, environmentalists say.

The only real solution, say many lawmakers and water advocates, is extensive new spending on sewer systems largely ignored for decades. As much as $400 billion in extra spending is needed over the next decade to fix the nation’s sewer infrastructure, according to estimates by the E.P.A. and the Government Accountability Office.

Legislation under consideration on Capitol Hill contains millions in water infrastructure grants, and the stimulus bill passed this year set aside $6 billion to improve sewers and other water systems.

But that money is only a small fraction of what is needed, officials say. And over the last two decades, federal money for such programs has fallen by 70 percent, according to the New York State Department of Environmental Conservation, which estimates that a quarter of the state’s sewage and wastewater treatment plants are “using outmoded, inadequate technology.”

“The public has no clue how important these sewage plants are,” said Mr. Connaughton of the Brooklyn site. “Waterborne disease was the scourge of mankind for centuries. These plants stopped that. We’re doing everything we can to clean as much sewage as possible, but sometimes, that isn’t enough.”

Friday, November 20, 2009

USDOJ Press Release: Fumo's Former Secretary Sentenced for Fraud

For Immediate Release
November 17, 2009 United States Attorney's Office
Eastern District of Pennsylvania
Contact: (215) 861-8200

Fumo's Former Secretary Sentenced for Fraud

PHILADELPHIA—Susan Skotnicki, a/k/a “Susan Swett,” 53, of Camp Hill, Pennsylvania, was sentenced today by the Honorable Anita Brody to four years probation, a fine of $1,000, and a special assessment of $100 for her conviction for engaging in a scheme to defraud the Senate of Pennsylvania by submitting fraudulent invoices and reimbursement requests on behalf of former Pennsylvania State Senator Vincent J. Fumo, announced United States Attorney Michael L. Levy. Skotnicki pleaded guilty to the charge on January 9, 2009, admitting that she used the net proceeds from the scheme to write checks to herself in the amount of $70,113. Defendant Skotnicki paid full restitution in that amount earlier this year.

The case was investigated by the Federal Bureau of Investigation and was prosecuted by Assistant United States Attorneys John J. Pease and Robert A. Zauzmer.

Press Releases | Philadelphia Home

Vacuous, Vicious Varmint SARAH PALIN Is Signing Books in Orange Park Next Tuesday


HOMOPHOBIC BIGOT ANITA BRYANT GETS PIE IN FACE

WILL BIGOT SARAH PALIN GET A PIE IN HER FACE TUESDAY?

In honor of the late Soupy Sales, will SARAH PALIN get a cream pie in her furious, famously funny face?

For someone who shoots caribou from helicopters (like shooting a cow), isn't she's what KARL ROVE would call "Fair Game?"

News4JAX: Draconian GOP Guidelines Released On Palin Book Stop Former Vice-Presidential Candidate Will Promote New Book

UPDATED: 7:05 am EST November 18, 2009
JACKSONVILLE, Fla. -- Former vice-presidential candidate and former Alaska Gov. Sarah Palin will be coming to northeast Florida as she promotes her new book, "Going Rogue."

The book was released on Tuesday. Palin's tour began the next day in Michigan.

The tour ends on next Tuesday in Florida. The first stop that day will be in Orange Park. Palin will be at the Books-A-Million at the Orange Park Mall from 9 to 11 a.m.

If you're interested in attending the book signing, Books-A-Million has released some guidelines that must be followed:

* 1,000 line numbers will be distributed the day before her appearance, Monday, Nov. 23, beginning at 5pm.
* Wristbands (1,000) will be distributed beginning at 5pm, Nov. 23 at Books-A-Million in Orange Park.
* You must be present to obtain a wristband. One wristband per person.
* Receipt from Books-A-Million or www.booksamillion.com for "Going Rogue" must be presented in order to obtain a wristband. Please keep receipt with your book because you will need to show it the day of the signing.
* You are allowed a maximum of two copies of the book per wristband to be signed. There will be no personalization.
* Please arrive prior to 8:00 a.m. on Tuesday, Nov. 24. If you arrive after 8:30 a.m., you forfeit your place in line. The book signing begins at 9 a.m.
* Every person with a wristband must have a copy of "Going Rogue" in order to enter the line. If you have a wristband and no book, you will not be allowed in line.
* After 1,000 wristbands are given out, the line becomes first-come, first-servef based on the remaining time Gov. Palin has. Those after 1,000 are not guaranteed to have their booked signed.
* No memorabilia or additional items will be signed.
* No photos/videos of any kind in the signing area.
* Please leave large bags and back packs at home or in your car. You will be required to turn over cell phones, cameras and bags before reaching the signing table. No items besides copies of "Going Rogue" are allowed in the signing area.
* These items will be returned immediately after you exit the signing area.
* Contact Books-A-Million for more information, 904-215-2300.

After the Orange Park stop, Palin will make appearances in The Villages and in Orlando.

Copyright 2009 by News4Jax.com. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

USDOJ Press Release: Former Owners of Pennsylvania Business Indicted in $136 Million DBE Fraud Said to be One of the Largest in USDOT History

For Immediate Release
November 19, 2009 United States Attorney's Office
Middle District of Pennsylvania
Contact: (717) 221-4482

Former Owners of Pennsylvania Business Indicted in $136 Million DBE Fraud Said to be One of the Largest in USDOT History

Dennis C. Pfannenschmidt, United States Attorney for the Middle District of Pennsylvania; Janice K. Fedarcyk, Special Agent in Charge of the Philadelphia Division of the FBI; Ned Schwartz, Regional Special Agent in Charge, U.S. Department of Transportation, Office of Inspector General; John Spratley, Special Agent in Charge, U.S. Department of Labor, Office of Labor Racketeering and Fraud Investigations; and Leslie P. DeMarco, Special Agent in Charge of the Philadelphia Field Office, Internal Revenue Service, Criminal Investigation Division, announced today that the former owners of Schuylkill Products Inc. (SPI) were indicted by the federal grand jury in connection with one of the largest Disadvantaged Business Enterprise (DBE) fraud schemes in U.S. Department of Transportation (USDOT) history. The scheme, which is alleged to have run for over 15 years, involved the improper award of hundreds of federally-funded highway and mass transit contracts in Pennsylvania and other states. In Pennsylvania alone, over 300 contracts were improperly awarded that were valued at approximately $136 million.

Joseph W. Nagle, of Deerfield Beach, Florida, and Ernest G. Fink, Jr., of Orwigsburg, Pennsylvania, co-owned and operated SPI and its wholly owned subsidiary CDS Engineers (CDS) until April 2009 when they sold the companies to Northeast Prestressed Products. SPI manufactured concrete products for use on highway construction projects and CDS operated as its engineering and erection division. Both companies were based in Cressona, Pennsylvania. Nagle was the President and Chief Executive Officer of SPI and Fink was Vice-President and Chief Operating Officer of SPI.

The 32-count Indictment filed today charges Nagle and Fink with two counts of conspiracy, 11 counts of wire fraud, six counts of mail fraud and 11 counts of unlawful monetary transactions, as well as two forfeiture counts. If convicted, Nagle and Fink face up to five years' imprisonment on the first conspiracy count, up to 10 years' imprisonment on the second conspiracy count, up to 20 years' imprisonment on each wire and mail fraud count, and up to 10 years' imprisonment on each unlawful monetary transaction count. Each count also carries potential fines of up to $250,000 or twice the gross gain or gross loss and the Indictment subjects Nagle and Fink to potential forfeiture of the proceeds traceable to the offenses.

The Indictment alleges that Nagle, Fink and others used a small Connecticut highway construction firm known as Marikina Construction Company as a front company to obtain lucrative government contracts reserved for small and disadvantaged businesses. Marikina was owned by Romeo P. Cruz, of West Haven, Connecticut, a naturalized American citizen with origins from the Philippines. Marikina was designated a disadvantaged business by PennDOT in 1993 which made it eligible to bid on and receive Pennsylvania highway construction contracts reserved for DBEs.

The Indictment alleges that between 1993 and 2008, Marikina received hundreds of federally-funded contracts for highway and mass transit construction projects worth millions of dollars but did not perform the work. In Pennsylvania alone, over 300 federally-funded contracts that were worth approximately $136 million were awarded to Marikina, and the Indictment alleges that the work was actually performed by SPI and CDS personnel. The Indictment alleges that the money from the contracts merely passed through Marikina to make it appear that a DBE was involved, when in reality, SPI and CDS personnel actually found, negotiated, coordinated, performed, managed and supervised all the contracts awarded to Marikina. All the profits from the contracts allegedly ended up with SPI and CDS and in exchange for allowing SPI and CDS to use its name, Marikina was paid a small fixed fee. Essentially, SPI and CDS, which were not DBEs, rented Marikina’s name to obtain lucrative government contracts reserved for small and disadvantaged businesses.

Previously, three former executives associated with SPI, CDS, and Marikina entered guilty pleas for their role in this scheme. On February 13, 2008, Dennis F. Campbell, SPI’s former Vice- President in charge of sales and marketing, pled guilty to conspiracy. On April 15, 2008, Timothy G. Hubler, CDS’s Vice- President in charge of field operations, pled guilty to conspiracy and tax fraud charges. On August 28, 2008, Romeo P. Cruz, the former owner and President of Marikina, pled guilty to conspiracy and on January 9, 2009, he pled guilty to tax fraud. All three men are cooperating with the investigation and await sentencing. All three previously admitted that the scheme was able to last for so long without detection because of the numerous fraudulent steps the co-conspirators took to conceal the true relationship between SPI, CDS, and Marikina. These steps included SPI and CDS personnel pretending to be Marikina employees by using Marikina passwords, Marikina signature stamps, Marikina business cards, Marikina letterhead, and Marikina e-mail addresses, as well as using magnetic placards and decals bearing the Marikina logo to cover up SPI and CDS logos on SPI and CDS trucks.

In announcing the Indictment United States Attorney Pfannenschmidt stated: “The disadvantaged business enterprise program is designed to ensure that all Americans can enjoy the full promise of prosperity that is an essential part of this country’s history. Today’s Indictment, is one of the largest frauds ever reported involving this program, underscores the basic message that those who attempt to use this program, as a pathway to greed will face severe consequences. I want to commend all of those involved in this groundbreaking investigation including, the FBI, the U.S. Department of Transportation Inspector General's Office, the U.S. Department of Labor Inspector General's Office, the Criminal Investigation Division of the IRS, and Senior Litigation Counsel Bruce Brandler, who is supervising the prosecution.”

The investigation is being conducted by the FBI, the U.S. Department of Transportation Inspector General's Office, the U.S. Department of Labor Inspector General's Office, and the Criminal Investigation Division of the IRS. Senior Litigation Counsel Bruce Brandler is supervising the prosecution.

USDOJ Press Release: Former Ukrainian Prime Minister Sentenced to 97 Months in Prison,Fined $9 Million for Role in Laundering $30 Million of Extortion

white spacer
For Immediate Release
November 19, 2009 United States Attorney's Office
Northern District of California
Contact: (415) 436-7200

Former Ukrainian Prime Minister Sentenced to 97 Months in Prison,Fined $9 Million for Role in Laundering $30 Million of Extortion Proceeds

SAN FRANCISCO—Pavel Ivanovich Lazarenko was sentenced yesterday to 97 months in prison, ordered to pay a $9 million fine and forfeit $22,851,000 and various specified assets resulting from his money laundering convictions, First Assistant United States Attorney David Anderson announced. The court deferred decision on restitution.

“The U.S. Attorney’s Office has maintained throughout this case that Pavel Lazarenko misused his office to extort tens of millions of dollars from a Ukrainian citizen, lied to the people of Ukraine about his assets, and abused our banking system in an attempt to establish a safe haven in the United States,” First Assistant U.S. Attorney Anderson said. “Yesterday’s sentence should send a strong message to corrupt foreign public officials—they will be held accountable if they misuse their office and try to make safe harbor in the United States.”

After a 10-and one-half week trial, Lazarenko was convicted by a jury on June 3, 2004, on 29 counts of money laundering, wire fraud, and interstate transportation of stolen property. During the trial, evidence showed that starting in the early 1990s, when he was the governor of an industrialized region in Ukraine, Lazarenko abused his official authority to extort Ukrainian businessman Peter Kiritchenko of 50 percent of his profits. Over time, and as Lazarenko rose in office to become the Prime Minister, Kiritchenko paid Lazarenko $30 million, which was half of Kiritchenko’s $60 million in profits. At Lazarenko’s direction, Kiritchenko assisted him in laundering the proceeds of that extortion through accounts in Poland, Switzerland, Antigua, and, ultimately, the United States, where Lazarenko used a shell company to conceal his purchase of a multi-million dollar residence in Marin, Calif. Kiritchenko pleaded guilty to one count of receipt of stolen property and testified against Lazarenko.

After trial, the court dismissed 15 counts and sentenced Lazarenko on 14 counts. The Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals later affirmed all of Lazarenko’s money laundering convictions (eight counts) dismissed the other charges and vacated the original sentence. Yesterday’s sentencing was on the eight counts of money laundering. Because the judge who presided over the trial and initial sentencing, the Honorable Martin J. Jenkins, left the federal bench, the case was reassigned to the Honorable Charles R. Breyer, who handled the resentencing.

“We are pleased Mr. Lazarenko has been held accountable for his crimes,” said FBI Special Agent in Charge Stephanie Douglas. “The wanton abuse of official power undermines people’s faith in their elected leaders and the effectiveness of any government. In this age of internationalization, we must diligently pursue corruption wherever it takes hold to help ensure public officials act for the benefit of their constituency, not for their own personal gain.”

“Uncovering the trail of money was key in identifying the corrupt actions of Mr. Lazarenko,” said Scott O’Briant, Special Agent in Charge, IRS Criminal Investigation. “If you put illegal money gain ahead of obeying the law, you can expect to be investigated, prosecuted and sent to prison."

This case is the first prosecution of a foreign leader for laundering the proceeds of extortion through financial institutions in the United States.

Peter B. Axelrod, Stephanie Hinds, Patricia Kenney and Hartley West are the Assistant U.S. Attorneys who are prosecuting the case with the assistance of Wilson Wong, Alicia Chin, and Carolyn Jusay. The Department of Justice Organized Crime and Racketeering Section supported this prosecution. The prosecution is the result of a six-year investigation by the FBI and IRS.

Further Information:

Case #: 00-284 CRB

Thursday, November 19, 2009

LA Times: AG Jerry Brown Says Cut in Legislators' Pay is Legal, Constitutional

Cut in lawmakers' pay is OK, in Jerry Brown's opinion
November 19, 2009 | 11:44 am

The state attorney general today said a citizens commission acted within its powers when it decided to slash pay for state lawmakers by 18% last summer, rejecting arguments of legislative leaders who had challenged the panel’s authority.

Atty. Gen. Jerry Brown said in a broad legal opinion that the state Constitution allows the California Citizens Compensation Commission, which is appointed by the governor, to reduce the salaries of legislators and other elected officials in the middle of their terms.

The commission had previously been told by an attorney for the state personnel department that salary cuts could only be applied to those elected in the future, so the panel voted to cut salaries for those elected starting next year.

Charles Murray, the Los Angeles businessman who chairs the commission said he would ask the state controller to implement the pay reduction Dec. 7

Brown pointed to the voters' 1990 approval of Proposition 112, which requires the commission to "adjust the annual salaries of state officers" each year. "Any other interpretation would require assuming against all evidence that the voters in 1990 intended mid-term annual adjustments to only go up and never down, even in the face of a faltering economy and huge budget deficits," Brown wrote to legislative leaders.

His opinion did not address a challenge to the commission’s 18% cut in legislators’ per diem and car allowances.

-- Patrick McGreevy in Sacramento

House of UnAmerican Activities



Here's the Reagan/Bush Administration -- the callous, reckless, feckless crony capitalists who brought you the financial meltdown, mortgage foreclosures, pension losses and worker deaths. Remember: "Friends don't let friends vote Republican."

Florida coalition targets pending federal pollution rules -- Rule requires federal monitoring of St. Johns, other state waterways, beaches

By From Wire Reports

After losing on the legal front, a powerful coalition of agriculture and business interests, wastewater utilities, water managers and tax watchdogs is mounting a lobbying assault on pending federal rules that could force Florida to clean up pollution fouling lakes, canals, streams and beaches statewide.

The target: A settlement a federal judge in Tallahassee approved last week in a lawsuit brought by five environmental groups against the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency.

It requires that federal regulators, for the first time, step in and set a state's water quality standards for nutrients such as nitrogen and phosphorus that flow into waterways from fertilized lawns, sewage plants, farms fields, cattle pastures and a host of other sources.

Opponents -- Associated Industries of Florida, Florida Farm Bureau, Florida Chamber of Commerce, Florida Stormwater Association, Florida Tax Watch, Sugarcane Growers Cooperative of Florida and some 60 other organizations that collectively wield considerable political clout -- argue the economic impacts could be staggering and far outweigh the environmental benefits.

They've called on state congressional leaders to block the EPA action, enlisted two former state environmental secretaries, Virginia Wetherell and Colleen Castille, and created a website branding the EPA rules a federal "water tax.'' Their projections for the cost to local and state governments for the cleanup: As much as $50 billion -- and that's just for overhauling the state's sewage systems, a price tag that could double customer's bills.

"I wish Florida were in a financial position to be able to throw billions at this issue,'' said Wetherell, who ran the state Department of Environmental Protection from 1993 to 1998. "I am concerned about the economy of Florida. I am concerned about how local government is going to fund all this.''

David Guest, an attorney for Earthjustice, a public interest law firm that sued the EPA for the environmental groups, called the opponents' projected numbers for cleanup wildly inflated "smoke and mirrors.''

"They're just making them up,'' he said. "You don't even know what the standards are going to be yet.''

Environmentalists said the tougher numeric standards are years overdue for nutrients, which have become the state's most widespread water woe.

High concentrations have triggered repeated algae blooms in Lake Okeechobee, the St. Johns, St. Lucie and Caloosahatchee rivers, along the beaches of Southwest Florida and other waterways. The nastiest blue-green blooms have left fish dead, waters too unhealthy to swim in and residents and tourists wheezing. The EPA, citing the Clean Water Act, first urged states to set legal water quality limits for nutrients more than a decade ago and warned the agency would set them itself by 2004 if states did not comply. Instead, Florida's Department of Environmental Protection adopted "narrative'' standards that state regulators have insisted are needed to address varying natural conditions in the waterways and water bodies.

The environmental groups -- the Florida Wildlife Federation, Sierra Club, St. Johns Riverkeeper and Environmental Conservancy of Southwest Florida -- sued in July 2008, arguing the state's standards were too vague, a point the EPA agreed with.

Under the settlement, approved over motions filed by lawyers for Florida Agricultural Commissioner Charles Bronson as well as objections from local governments and industries, EPA is scheduled to propose nutrient limits for lakes, streams and creeks in January and finalize them by October 2010. Limits for coastal waters and estuaries are due in January 2011, with final rules expected to be set by October 2011.

POLLUTERS ON RADARThe agreement could have significant impacts on polluters big and small, potentially requiring sewage plants to add new layers of treatment before discharging to surface waters or limiting or banning fertilizer use by suburban gardeners. Former state environmental secretary Castille said agency scientists had worked for years to develop standards and a regional cleanup plan with the EPA that reflected, and protected, the diversity of the state's waterbodies.



Castille acknowledged the state still had a long way to go, but said its existing system was working and dramatically cutting nutrient loading. She pointed to one model, adopted with cooperation of utilities, that cut nutrient flow to the St. Johns River in half.

"When I left in 2006, I thought we were all ready to go,'' she said. "Apparently, EPA changed its mind.''

Wetherell and Castille -- who led the DEP when state lawmakers overhauled Everglades pollution regulations, essentially pushing deadlines back a decade -- defended state oversight, calling Florida a national leader in water quality. Both became lobbyists after leaving the state but said they weren't representing clients in joining the fight against numeric standards they and other critics call ``scientifically unsound.''

But the bulk of the concern is the potential price tag of meeting those standards, whatever they may be, when Florida's economy and tax revenues remain in a free fall. Paul Steinbrecher, vice president of the Florida Water Environment Association Utility Council, said the EPA is rushing to meet an arbitrary deadline without adequately analyzing the costs. The $25 to $50 billion estimates to retrofit the state's sewage plants with microfiltration and reverse osmosis systems, he said, "are just the tip of the iceberg.'' Cities might face far larger bills to clean fertilizers flushed from suburban lawns every time it rains.

"This is really about the return for the investment and the environmental benefits we will get,'' he said.

Environmentalists counter that foes are ignoring the long-term impact of stagnant lakes and estuaries and rotting fish on beaches to an economy that more than ever needs to draw visitors and home buyers.

VAGUE 'NARRATIVE'They contend opponents are primarily looking to preserve revenue streams and profit margins protected by the vague "narrative'' state standards that allow the continued release of high volumes of nutrients. The St. Johns, for instance, remains periodically under health advisories despite the state cleanup plan, they said.

"Asking for clean water is not a stretch,'' said St. Johns Riverkeeper Neil Armingeon. "There are algae blooms even today in the St. Johns River. Moving forward quickly is an imperative.''

Florida coalition targets pending federal pollution rules -- Rule requires federal monitoring of St. Johns, other state waterways, beaches

By From Wire Reports

After losing on the legal front, a powerful coalition of agriculture and business interests, wastewater utilities, water managers and tax watchdogs is mounting a lobbying assault on pending federal rules that could force Florida to clean up pollution fouling lakes, canals, streams and beaches statewide.

The target: A settlement a federal judge in Tallahassee approved last week in a lawsuit brought by five environmental groups against the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency.

It requires that federal regulators, for the first time, step in and set a state's water quality standards for nutrients such as nitrogen and phosphorus that flow into waterways from fertilized lawns, sewage plants, farms fields, cattle pastures and a host of other sources.

Opponents -- Associated Industries of Florida, Florida Farm Bureau, Florida Chamber of Commerce, Florida Stormwater Association, Florida Tax Watch, Sugarcane Growers Cooperative of Florida and some 60 other organizations that collectively wield considerable political clout -- argue the economic impacts could be staggering and far outweigh the environmental benefits.

They've called on state congressional leaders to block the EPA action, enlisted two former state environmental secretaries, Virginia Wetherell and Colleen Castille, and created a website branding the EPA rules a federal "water tax.'' Their projections for the cost to local and state governments for the cleanup: As much as $50 billion -- and that's just for overhauling the state's sewage systems, a price tag that could double customer's bills.

"I wish Florida were in a financial position to be able to throw billions at this issue,'' said Wetherell, who ran the state Department of Environmental Protection from 1993 to 1998. "I am concerned about the economy of Florida. I am concerned about how local government is going to fund all this.''

David Guest, an attorney for Earthjustice, a public interest law firm that sued the EPA for the environmental groups, called the opponents' projected numbers for cleanup wildly inflated "smoke and mirrors.''

"They're just making them up,'' he said. "You don't even know what the standards are going to be yet.''

Environmentalists said the tougher numeric standards are years overdue for nutrients, which have become the state's most widespread water woe.

High concentrations have triggered repeated algae blooms in Lake Okeechobee, the St. Johns, St. Lucie and Caloosahatchee rivers, along the beaches of Southwest Florida and other waterways. The nastiest blue-green blooms have left fish dead, waters too unhealthy to swim in and residents and tourists wheezing. The EPA, citing the Clean Water Act, first urged states to set legal water quality limits for nutrients more than a decade ago and warned the agency would set them itself by 2004 if states did not comply. Instead, Florida's Department of Environmental Protection adopted "narrative'' standards that state regulators have insisted are needed to address varying natural conditions in the waterways and water bodies.

The environmental groups -- the Florida Wildlife Federation, Sierra Club, St. Johns Riverkeeper and Environmental Conservancy of Southwest Florida -- sued in July 2008, arguing the state's standards were too vague, a point the EPA agreed with.

Under the settlement, approved over motions filed by lawyers for Florida Agricultural Commissioner Charles Bronson as well as objections from local governments and industries, EPA is scheduled to propose nutrient limits for lakes, streams and creeks in January and finalize them by October 2010. Limits for coastal waters and estuaries are due in January 2011, with final rules expected to be set by October 2011.

POLLUTERS ON RADARThe agreement could have significant impacts on polluters big and small, potentially requiring sewage plants to add new layers of treatment before discharging to surface waters or limiting or banning fertilizer use by suburban gardeners. Former state environmental secretary Castille said agency scientists had worked for years to develop standards and a regional cleanup plan with the EPA that reflected, and protected, the diversity of the state's waterbodies.



Castille acknowledged the state still had a long way to go, but said its existing system was working and dramatically cutting nutrient loading. She pointed to one model, adopted with cooperation of utilities, that cut nutrient flow to the St. Johns River in half.

"When I left in 2006, I thought we were all ready to go,'' she said. "Apparently, EPA changed its mind.''

Wetherell and Castille -- who led the DEP when state lawmakers overhauled Everglades pollution regulations, essentially pushing deadlines back a decade -- defended state oversight, calling Florida a national leader in water quality. Both became lobbyists after leaving the state but said they weren't representing clients in joining the fight against numeric standards they and other critics call ``scientifically unsound.''

But the bulk of the concern is the potential price tag of meeting those standards, whatever they may be, when Florida's economy and tax revenues remain in a free fall. Paul Steinbrecher, vice president of the Florida Water Environment Association Utility Council, said the EPA is rushing to meet an arbitrary deadline without adequately analyzing the costs. The $25 to $50 billion estimates to retrofit the state's sewage plants with microfiltration and reverse osmosis systems, he said, "are just the tip of the iceberg.'' Cities might face far larger bills to clean fertilizers flushed from suburban lawns every time it rains.

"This is really about the return for the investment and the environmental benefits we will get,'' he said.

Environmentalists counter that foes are ignoring the long-term impact of stagnant lakes and estuaries and rotting fish on beaches to an economy that more than ever needs to draw visitors and home buyers.

VAGUE 'NARRATIVE'They contend opponents are primarily looking to preserve revenue streams and profit margins protected by the vague "narrative'' state standards that allow the continued release of high volumes of nutrients. The St. Johns, for instance, remains periodically under health advisories despite the state cleanup plan, they said.

"Asking for clean water is not a stretch,'' said St. Johns Riverkeeper Neil Armingeon. "There are algae blooms even today in the St. Johns River. Moving forward quickly is an imperative.''

Wednesday, November 18, 2009

USDOJ Press Release: President Obama Establishes Interagency Financial Fraud Enforcement Task Force

Press Release

U.S. Department of Justice
For Immediate Release
November 17, 2009


PAO
(202) 514-2007
TDD (202) 514-1888
www.usdoj.gov

President Obama Establishes Interagency Financial Fraud Enforcement Task Force

WASHINGTON—Attorney General Eric Holder, Treasury Secretary Tim Geithner, Housing and Urban Development (HUD) Secretary Shaun Donovan, and Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) Chairwoman Mary Schapiro today announced that President Barack Obama has established by Executive Order an interagency Financial Fraud Enforcement Task Force to strengthen efforts to combat financial crime. The Department of Justice will lead the task force and the Department of Treasury, HUD, and the SEC will serve on the steering committee. The task force’s leadership, along with representatives from a broad range of federal agencies, regulatory authorities and inspectors general, will work with state and local partners to investigate and prosecute significant financial crimes, ensure just and effective punishment for those who perpetrate financial crimes, address discrimination in the lending and financial markets and recover proceeds for victims.

The task force, which replaces the Corporate Fraud Task Force established in 2002, will build upon efforts already underway to combat mortgage, securities and corporate fraud by increasing coordination and fully utilizing the resources and expertise of the government’s law enforcement and regulatory apparatus. The attorney general will convene the first meeting of the Task Force in the next 30 days.

“This task force’s mission is not just to hold accountable those who helped bring about the last financial meltdown, but to prevent another meltdown from happening,” Attorney General Eric Holder said. “We will be relentless in our investigation of corporate and financial wrongdoing, and will not hesitate to bring charges, where appropriate, for criminal misconduct on the part of businesses and business executives.”

“Through the Financial Fraud Task Force, we are making clear that the Obama Administration is going to act aggressively and proactively in a coordinated effort to combat financial fraud,” said Treasury Secretary Geithner. “It’s not enough to prosecute fraud only after it’s become widespread. We can’t wait for problems to peak before we respond. We’re seeking comprehensive financial reform to create a more stable, safer financial system and stepping up our enforcement strategy. Doing so will help to stop emerging trends in financial fraud before they’re able to cause extensive, system-wide damage to our economy.”

“To give American families the protection and peace-of-mind they need, it’s clear the federal response must be as interconnected and multi-dimensional as the challenges we face,” said HUD Secretary Shaun Donovan. “No one agency is going to be able to stop financial fraud. This Task force will build upon many of the inter-agency collaborations already underway to protect consumers and restore confidence.”

“Many financial frauds are complicated puzzles that require painstaking efforts to piece together. By formally coordinating our efforts, we will be better able to identify the pieces, assemble the puzzle and put an end to the fraud,” said SEC Chairman Mary Schapiro.

The task force is composed of senior-level officials from the following departments, agencies and offices:

*
the Department of Justice;
*
the Department of the Treasury;
*
the Department of Commerce;
*
the Department of Labor;
*
the Department of Housing and Urban Development;
*
the Department of Education;
*
the Department of Homeland Security;
*
the Securities and Exchange Commission;
*
the Commodity Futures Trading Commission;
*
the Federal Trade Commission;
*
the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation;
*
the Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System;
*
the Federal Housing Finance Agency;
*
the Office of Thrift Supervision;
*
the Office of the Comptroller of the Currency;
*
the Small Business Administration;
*
the Federal Bureau of Investigation;
*
the Social Security Administration;
*
the Internal Revenue Service, Criminal Investigations;
*
the Financial Crimes Enforcement Network;
*
the United States Postal Inspection Service;
*
the United States Secret Service;
*
the United States Immigration and Customs Enforcement;
*
relevant Offices of Inspectors General and related Federal entities, including without limitation the Office of the Inspector General for the Department of Housing and Urban Development, the Recovery Accountability and Transparency Board and the Office of the Special Inspector General for the Troubled Asset Relief Program; and
*
such other executive branch departments, agencies, or offices as the President may, from time to time, designate or that the Attorney General may invite.

In addition, the attorney general will invite representatives of the National Association of Attorneys General, the National District Attorneys Association and other state, local, tribal, and territorial representatives to participate in the task force through its Enforcement Committee

LA Times: Judge orders compensation for gay couple denied benefits

Judge orders compensation for gay couple denied benefits
November 18, 2009 | 11:15 am

A federal judge today ordered compensation for a Los Angeles couple denied spousal benefits by the federal government because they are gay men.

U.S. 9th Circuit Court of Appeals Judge Stephen Reinhardt deemed the denial of healthcare and other benefits to the spouse of federal public defender Brad Levenson to be a violation of the Constitution's guarantee of due process and discrimination on the basis of sexual orientation, which is prohibited by California state law.

Levenson married his longtime partner, Tony Sears, on July 12, 2008, during the five-month period when same-sex marriage was legal in California. A ballot measure, Proposition 8, was passed a year ago defining marriage as between one man and one woman.

Reinhardt, who is the federal judge responsible for resolving employee disputes in the Federal Public Defenders office within the 9th Circuit, had earlier ordered the Administrative Office of the U.S. Courts to process Levenson's application for spousal benefits for Sears. The federal government's Office of Personnel Management stepped in to derail the enrollment, however, citing the 1996 Defense of Marriage Act that prohibits the recognition of same-sex marriage for the purpose of federal benefits or programs.

Levenson appealed, seeking either an independently contracted benefits package for his spouse or payment of the equivalent value of the coverage denied. Reinhardt ordered the latter, based on a "back pay" provision in the law covering federal defense lawyers' employment.

"Considering that the federal government won't give Tony the equal benefits package of other spouses, we are very pleased with this decision," said Levenson. "Is it equal treatment? No. Is it a good remedy? Yes. And we are appreciative of the judge's order."

Levenson said he and Sears have been keeping track of the costs of insuring Sears independently and estimate the back pay and future compensation will amount to thousands of dollars each year.

The judge's order is expected to resolve the injustice Reinhardt has cited in previous orders in Levenson's case. But it also recognizes the status quo of federal government rejection of gay marriage under the Defense of Marriage Act. Several other challenges by those denied federal benefits, like filing joint tax returns, are making their way slowly through the federal courts.

The Obama administration has spoken out against what it sees as a discriminatory policy toward gay spouses of federal employees but Atty. Gen. Eric Holder has also said his office is obliged to defend the practice as long as the Defense of Marriage Act remains law.

-- Carol J. Williams

Mosquito Board clears vote for new headquarters

By PETER GUINTA

Anastasia Mosquito Control District officials looked more tired than joyful Tuesday morning after the St. Johns County Commission, in two votes, approved a zoning and land use change that clears the way to build the district's proposed $2 million, 8,000-square-foot headquarters on 9.2 acres off State Road 16.

But that positive result for the district didn't come without twists and turns.

It took the commission four votes to reach a conclusion. Commissioner Cyndi Stevenson first voted against the rezoning, then voted against denying it, then ultimately made the motion to approve and voted for it.

After the approval, attorney Douglas Wyckoff, representing AMCD, said, "We've got the land use change and rezoning. We're happy about that. We're looking to move ahead."

AMCD staff had been stressed by a months-long standoff with the county over a side issue -- the district's efficiency -- as well as trying to blunt a nasty, public campaign by board member John Sundeman, who wanted to tank the headquarters project.

Sundeman said Tuesday that AMCD didn't need a new headquarters and accused board and management of approving a long-term budget that is "a travesty and a brutal waste" of $17 million over the next five years.

Teresa Bishop, long-range planning division director, said the Planning and Zoning Agency recommended the change in a 6-0 vote on July 2.

The application seemed closer to approval when Sundeman said AMCD planned to eventually fly two helicopters from the property, which lies in a Residential B area.

He said AMCD would operate the aircraft at night, with pilots using night-vision goggles.

"We don't need helicopters," he said.

That led to a 2-2 vote on the rezoning, meaning the motion to pass had failed.

Stevenson -- probably envisioning pesticide-loaded helicopters flying low over a residential neighborhood nearby -- voted against, citing safety reasons.

Mays voted across the board to deny both the land change and rezoning. His motion to deny failed when Stevenson voted against it.

"It's clear to me that if (the rezoning) fails, we go right across the street to the courthouse," she said.

The district had threatened suit against the county if the land use change rezoning were rejected, because the county had signed a memorandum with the district that it would approve both when they came before the board.

Stevenson suggested modifying the rezoning ordinance to remove the helicopter, and when the appropriate language was inserted, she made a motion to approve it if the helicopter would be allowed only by a special use exemption.

That passed 3-1 with Mays against and Mark Miner, who is in Fort Dix, N.J., for military training, absent.

Mays said he voted against it due to the project's lack of compatibility with the surrounding area, which now is only woods.

At one point, discussion veered toward the county's past head-to-head relationship with AMCD.

Stevenson said, "This is a land use decision. It's not a policy decision on the role of government."

Dissension at Mosquito Control meeting

By JENNIFER EDWARDS

The Anastasia Mosquito Control District is a step closer to constructing a new headquarters, but the five-member commission remains divided about whether a new building is necessary.

The St. Johns County Commission agreed Tuesday during the day to rezone the land needed for the headquarters, but discussion at Tuesday's meeting later that day of the Mosquito Control Board did little to contradict that commission's image as fractious and argumentative.

Mosquito Control Commissioner John Sundeman said a plan to construct the headquarters on land off State Road 16 near Interstate 95 has "some serious problems" about its cost, estimated at $3.6 million.

"I don't want to do anything out there," he said, referring to the rezoned property. "I want to stay right here," meaning the Mosquito Control District's office on Anastasia Island.

Commissioner Vivian Browning said that the goal of the board's five-year plan was "to get the cost of the facility down."

Another commissioner, Ron Radford, also said that the board should look at ways to make a new facility more cost efficient.

"What we are doing now is understanding what the costs of a new facility would be," he said. "We are going to be looking at what the most cost-effective facility could be."

"You're a good salesman," Sundeman replied.

Sundeman and the others members of the board also disagreed over the background of the board's attorney, details of the attorney's bill and the need for a public relations firm. Sundeman was in the minority in every vote.

The sparring started early in the meeting when Commissioner Jeanne Moeller moved that the board remove from its agenda an item that Sundeman initiated on the background of the board's attorney, Douglas Wycoff.

Chairwoman Janice Bequette repeatedly called order as Sundeman sought to get on the record questions about Wycoff's background and personal finances.

"I don't care about the (personal) life of our attorney ...," Jeanne Moeller said. "We don't need to degradate one of our own."

The board agreed, and in a 4 to 1 vote removed the item from the agenda.

Sundeman also questioned non-itemized bills from Wycoff that included charges for telephone calls to undisclosed parties.

"If the board wants me to change my invoicing pattern, I will," Wycoff replied. "I am not at the whim and caprice of one commissioner."

Sundeman made a motion to have Wycoff detail his bill but it died for lack of a second.

He also found himself on the losing end of a discussion whether to explore hiring a public relations company.

Bequette was in favor of hiring a company.

"I think we have some definite damage control that needs to be tended," she said.

Sundeman disagreed.

"Why should we spend money to make the commissioners look good?" he said. "To me, that's an absolute waste of money."

The issue was tabled until the next regular meeting in December.

A St. Johns County Sheriff's Deputy attended the meeting. The deputy said he was there "to keep the peace" because of the presence of Sundeman and community activist Ed Slavin, a regular at the Mosquito Board. He said it was not the first time he has been asked to attend Mosquito Control Board meetings.

Also at the meeting:

The board approved changing employees' health insurance policies for budget reasons. The plans will now pay for 80 percent of costs after the deductible is met, rather than 100 percent.

The upside is that the amount employees pay for the plan will decrease, Assistant Director Priscilla Greene said.

To see the district's draft five-year plan, check out its Web site, http://www.amcdsjc.org.

AP: Salt Lake OKs gay rights laws with Mormon backing

By JENNIFER DOBNER, Associated Press Writers Jennifer Dobner, Associated Press Writers Wed Nov 11, 11:36 am ET

SALT LAKE CITY – The Mormon church for the first time has announced its support of gay rights legislation, an endorsement that helped gain unanimous approval for Salt Lake city laws banning discrimination against gays in housing and employment.

The Utah-based church's support ahead of Tuesday night's vote came despite its steadfast opposition to gay marriage, reflected in the high-profile role it played last year in California's Proposition 8 ballot measure that barred such unions.

"The church supports these ordinances because they are fair and reasonable and do not do violence to the institution of marriage," Michael Otterson, the director of public affairs for The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints said.

Passage made Salt Lake City the first Utah community to prohibit bias based on sexual orientation or gender identity. Under the two new ordinances, it is illegal to fire someone from their job or evict someone from their residence because they are lesbian, bisexual, gay or transgender.

Utah lawmakers tend to quickly fall in line when the influential church makes a rare foray into legislative politics. So Tuesday's action could have broad effects in this highly conservative state where more than 80 percent of lawmakers and the governor are church members.

"What happened here tonight I do believe is a historic event," said Brandie Balken, director of the gay rights advocacy group Equality Utah. "I think it establishes that we can stand together on common ground that we don't have to agree on everything, but there are lot of things that we can work on and be allies."

But the church has pointed out an inherent dispute it has with gay relationships. Mormonism considers traditional marriages central to God's plan. Gays are welcome in church, but must remain celibate to retain church callings and full membership.

Its strong support for Proposition 8 in California last year drew a sharp reaction from gay rights supporters nationwide, with many protesting outside temples that singled out Mormons as the key culprits in restricting the rights of gay couples.

Since then, however, Utah's gay community has sought to engage church leaders in quiet conversations to help foster better understanding, said Valerie Larabee, executive director of the Utah Pride Center.

"I thought this conversation would never come to be while I was here in Salt Lake City," said Larabee, adding that the discussions have "shifted her perspective of what's possible" and could foreshadow a different relationship between the two sides.

But addressing the council on Tuesday, Otterson said the endorsement is not a shift in the church's position on gay rights and stressed it "remains unequivocally committed to defending the bedrock foundation of marriage between a man and a woman."

Church support for the ordinances is due in part to the way the legislation was drafted to protect those rights. Exceptions in the legislation allow churches to maintain, without penalty, religious principles and religion-based codes of conduct or rules.

"In drafting these ordinances, the city has granted commonsense rights that should be available to everyone, while safeguarding the crucial rights of religious organizations," Otterson said Tuesday.

Previous Utah legislation that sought statewide protections for the gay community did not contain those exceptions.

And although this was the church's first public endorsement of specific legislation, it is not the first time the church has voiced support for some gay rights. In August 2008 the church issued a statement saying it supports gay rights related to hospitalization, medical care, employment, housing or probate as long as they "do not infringe on the integrity of the traditional family or the constitutional rights of churches."

Last year, church leaders were silent on a package of gay rights bills known as the Common Ground Initiative, dooming them from the start, despite the bill having the support of the most popular governor in state history, Jon Huntsman. Huntsman resigned this summer to become U.S. ambassador to China.

His successor, Gov. Gary Herbert, has repeatedly said it shouldn't be illegal to discriminate against someone for being gay.

Mosquito Control Staff Loses Battle of the Books

At Anastasia Mosquito Control Commission of St. Johns County (AMCD) meetings, there's a notebook on the podium with the agenda packet and handouts.

Except at the last two meetings, when the "staff" decided it would be cute and play fast and loose with the public's right to know. There were some handouts at the last meeting that were not shared with the public until after they were discussed, while the "staff" hoarded copies on their desk.

Stiff-necked, hostile, ex-military officer PRISCILLA GREENE, the Assistant Director of AMCD, decided to place the board book materials on the Internet, with AMCD attorney Doug Wyckoff archly saying there was no legal requirement to have an agenda book available to the public. Before the meeting last night, I had to borrow one of the Commissioner's books before the meeting to know what's going on.

Looking on during our pre-meeting discussion was a St. Johns County Sheriff's Deputy in full-on gray SWAT drag, one of many fashion designer uniforms our fashion-conscious SHeriff DAVID SHOAR purchases for "his" troops.

The deputy told the Record's reporter he was there to keep an eye on Commissioner John Sundeman and community activist Ed Slavin. (See story above).

So much for illegal surveillance and chilling First Amendment protected activity.

Also looking on were two St. Augustine Record reporters, a photographer, and the News Editor. They got to see first-hand the flimsy excuses offered by GREENE for her display of mendacity in eliminating the public's board book.

Chair Janice Bequette was aghast at the staff's perfidy. The public has a right to know what's going on in meetings, and to see the agenda book. It's our book. It's our board. It's our money.

Whereupon, upon convening, Commissioners voted to make two board books available for the public and the press in the future.

Not one Commissioner tried to defend GREENE's being a cognitive miser with our board books.

There's a lesson here: petty tyrants in government who think they can discourage reporters and citizens with tacky displays of animosity are wrong. It's never worked. Since the 1970s, not once has a government official's snootiness or nastiness deterred anyone I know (whether reporters or activists) from investigating government agencies and making their views none. Not once. The harrumphery and nastiness emitted by the Richard Nixon clones of the world actually encourages reporters and activists to dig deeper.

As subtle as a roach crawling across a white carpet, GREENE's display of adolescent pique at public participation and public questioning took the form of her requesting (at the behest of Commissioner RONALD RADFORD, a/k/a "COLONEL RONNIE RADFORD") to have a Sheriff's deputy at the meeting. Neither the staff nor the "COLONEL" consulted with the Chair before their feckless display of fashionable fascism, aimed at Commissioner Sundeman (and me).

"COLONEL" RADFORD follows in the despicable footsteps of disgraced former AMCD Chair BARBARA BOSANKO (spouse of controversial former County Attorney DAN BOSANKO). It was BARBARA BOSANKO who in 2007 called the Sheriff's deputies on Don Girvan, a former Army Captain who was speaking against the helicopter.

The helicopter contract was canceled in part due to BOSANKO's call (and subsequent videotaped Sunshine violation with another Commissioner and the Board's then-lawyer). You should have seen the young SHeriff's deputy come in and ask the Commissioners at the 2007y meeting, "what's going on here" and "who's in charge here," as he demanded that I go out in the hall with him. (I declined).

Matters being discussed at AMCD last night included a $6 million building, alleged misconduct by the District's counsel and director, and arsenic contamination of soil and groundwater at the Ponte Vedra mosquito control station.

During last night's the meeting, I publicly and proudly praised AMCD for its having become the first governmental agency in Northeast Florida to ban anti-Gay discrimination. As I said, it is the first, but it won't be the last. I actually nominated AMCD for a "bouquet" from Folio Weekly, which actually sends real bouqets for its weekly honors.

It was the first time in over ten years living here that I ever nominated anyone or any organization for either a "brickbat" or a "bouquet" from Folio. (The bouquet arrived at AMCD without a card, and the staff was without a clue for a week, not knowing who sent it or why, and apparently not reading Folio, which circulates 150,000 copies in Northeast Florida).

Clueless, reckless and feckless, PRISCILLA GREENE needs more than what could become up to a $150,000/year public relations contract (up for discussion next year).

PRISCILLA GREENE needs to learn manners.

PRISCILLA GREENE needs to learn some class.

PRISCILLA GREENE needs to stop wearing her emotions on her sleeve.

PRISCILLA GREENE needs to stop showing her a--.

Galveston County, Texas Daily News: SECRECY NO BASIS FOR DEMOCRACY

Secrecy no basis for democracy

By Michael A. Smith
The Daily News

Published November 14, 2009
Disappearing people has become so fashionable among government agencies in this country we may soon be forced to pull down the Stars and Stripes and choose some other flag; one modeled after Argentina’s or Bulgaria’s perhaps.

Take two recent examples.

First, former federal Judge Samuel B. Kent, who was convicted in May of obstructing justice and sentenced to 33 months in prison, was moved last week from Devens Federal Medical Center in Ayers, Mass., to somewhere in Florida. Citing security, Florida Department of Corrections spokeswoman Joellyn Rackleff refused to provide details about where Kent is housed.

The people of United States convicted Kent. The people will pay his room and board for the 33 months. The people have a right to know whether he’s being kept at the bottom of a dry well with a bag over his head, at a country club mocked up to look vaguely like a prison or at some place between those extremes.

It has gotten far too easy for even fourth-tier bureaucrats to deny such fundamental rights by invoking some ephemeral security concern. None of our rights is safe when that’s allowed.

Even more troubling, a pair of FBI agents appeared in Galveston early this week and disappeared with Clayton Eric Claflin, 37, a homeless man who had been locked up for criminal trespassing and had sent some weird letters to a judge and an official at the housing authority.

In response to such reasonable questions as “Where did you take Claflin, why and under what authority?” Darrell Foxworth, a San Diego FBI spokesman, offered answers as creepy as anything George Orwell might have dreamed up.

“It is not appropriate for the FBI to confirm or deny the existence of investigations, absent certain circumstances,” Foxworth said in an e-mail.

“Our investigations are conducted in accordance with Department of Justice guidelines to ensure fairness, confidentiality and integrity of all aspects of investigations as much as possible.”

That translates to: Trust us, we’re from the government.

That’s good enough for some people. They assume themselves to be among the chosen, forever and ever, amen.

Students of history know that’s a risky assumption.

Other people demand better. Those like the country’s founders who preferred guaranteed rights over the crap-shoot variety, for example.

Government’s instinctive desire to operate secretly seldom has anything to do with legitimate security concerns. It more often is in service to the strongest bureaucratic instinct of all, self preservation.

Secrecy is handy. It allows governments to hide their mistakes and highlight their successes. It’s good for everything except the maintenance of democracy.

Copyright © 2009 The Galveston County Daily News

Monday, November 16, 2009

Ululating Rep. MICA misses the point

We don't want a new $10 million visitor center across from the Castillo.

All his taste is in his mouth.

We don't want pork -- we need a park -- the St. Augustine National Historical Park, Seashore and Scenic Coastal Parkway.

JOHN LUIGI MICA didn't comment on Faye Armitage's column on November 8th. Why not?

REP. JOHN LUIGI MICA "explains 'no' vote 'Interior' bill"

JOHN L. MICA
U.S. Representative, District 7
Publication Date: 11/15/09

I wanted to respond to some of the comments in the St. Augustine Record relating to the Visitors Center and my vote on final passage of the Interior Appropriations bill.

First, it is important to again note that the Visitors Center for the Castillo de San Marcos will focus on the history of this historic national monument and provide museum and education facilities for more than 8,000 archeological and historic items related to both the fortress and St. Augustine which have not been available to the public. The center will also provide educational and visitor accommodations that are impossible in the 350-year-old fortress.

Millions of visitors will access the new center along with students and local residents. With this appropriation, it will not only provide a long-term economic boost to the community but also be a centerpiece of St. Augustine's 450th anniversary celebration. Having worked for six years on this project, I was pleased that this initial funding was included in a much larger Department of Interior appropriations bill.

While I support reasonable funding levels for the Interior department and protection of the environment during a time of economic crisis, I could not support the Interior appropriations bill Congress passed recentlly because the final appropriations measure increased spending $4.7 billion, or 17 percent, over the Fiscal Year 2009 enacted level.

This spending is in addition to $10.95 billion included for the Interior department in the stimulus. Spending for Interior and Environment accounts over the last year totaled an enacted bill, $10.95 billion in the stimulus and $250 million in the FY2009 Emergency Supplemental. Just as I supported infrastructures projects and certain funding in the stimulus package, the final stimulus package did not have my vote on final passage because of the $787 billion price tag and a number of other objectionable and unworthy provisions. In the past Republicans were criticized for one and two percent increases in discretionary appropriations spending in our federal budgets.

My father used to say, "It is not how much you spend, it is how you spend it.'' In nearly all of this year's appropriations bills there are items that I support that are important to our district and that can withstand scrutiny. However, I have voted and intend to vote against what I consider excessive spending in any and all final spending bills. This is not hypocrisy; it is responsible stewardship over hard-earned taxpayer dollars.

The Castillo project was properly authorized under a separate law, was completely and appropriately vetted, went through numerous reviews and is one of best investments the department will make over the next decades. Very few other projects will have more of an impact on jobs or future economic activity in our community than this Department of Interior initiative.

*

U.S. Rep. John L. Mica represents the Seventh Congressional District of which all of St. Johns County is included.

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http://staugustine.com/stories/111509/opinions_2172072.shtml

© The St. Augustine Record

Friday, November 13, 2009

Welcome back, Senator McGovern

We're all proud that Senator George S. McGovern chose to live half of each year in St. Augustine (see below). Welcome home!

Remembering veterans -- George McGovern, others describe memories at Veterans Day ceremony

MARCIA LANE
marcia.lane@staugustine.com
Publication Date: 11/12/09

To hear former Sen. George McGovern tell it, a junior high school gym coach was responsible for him becoming a bomber pilot during World War II.

His story, told at the only Veterans Day ceremony in St. Johns County on Wednesday, drew knowing chuckles from veterans in the audience who seemed to enjoy a guy who knows how random life's choices can be.

McGovern explained that as a young teen, part of his hym class drill was to run as fast as possible across the gym floor and then dive over the leather gymnastics pommel horse at the other end and land on a mat.

McGovern could run but couldn't bring himself to go over the horse because he knew "I would break my neck."

His coach finally asked, "What the hell's the matter with you?" and didn't accept McGovern's excuse.

"You're a physical coward," the coach told McGovern, who told Wednesday's audience he "wanted to die" when the coach said that in front of his 60-member class.

"That's why I became a bomber pilot. To show (the coach) he didn't know what he was talking about," McGovern explained.

McGovern, the longtime Democratic senator from South Dakota, is now a self-described "snow bird" in St. Augustine. He flew back Tuesday to be here in time for the ceremonies at St. Augustine Beach.

McGovern got laughs at the ceremonies as he explained why he became an Army flyer rather than a Navy flyer. McGovern was one of 10 young pilots from Dakota Wesleyan University who headed together to Omaha, Neb., to enlist shortly after Pearl Harbor was bombed. There was no Air Force in those days, so the young men were debating which recruiter to go see.

One said he understood the Army recruiter gave out a meal ticket to those who signed with him. It was worth about a dollar. All 10 signed with the Army, especially after one talked of what it must be like to try and land on a flight deck in a driving rain.

"That's the cheapest I ever sold out," McGovern told the crowd.

During WW II, while stationed in Italy, McGovern flew 35 missions over Europe and earned the Distinguished Flying Cross in the Dakota Queen, a bomber named after his wife, Eleanor.

McGovern turned more serious as he saluted, first, veterans and, then, Americans in general.

"We all contribute to this country," McGovern reminded them.

He took the opportunity to address something that has "upset" him - the "rash of condemnations of the federal government."

McGovern listed some of the "great things" the federal government has done, including the Veterans Administration and the millions of veterans helped by them. He spoke of the help they had given a friend of his - retired Sen. Robert Dole, a Republican.

Dole, he noted, was wounded in fighting during World War II, and his injuries required surgery for several years. He often carries a pen in his right hand, to keep people from trying to shake that still-damaged hand, McGovern said.

When another speaker mentioned Dole and McGovern's work to set up an international school food program, the crowd applauded and shouted.

McGovern pointed out other contributions by the federal government, including the Defense Department, the Food and Drug Act, the national forests and the interstate highway system.

"I wanted to take an opportunity to say a word on behalf of Uncle Sam and the U.S. government," McGovern said, drawing heavy applause from the crowd of more than 250.

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© The St. Augustine Record

County ampitheatre doing great job

Aretha Franklin is the latest internationally acclaimed performer recruited to perform at the St. Augustine Ampitheatre.

Our St. Augustine Ampitheatre is run by County Recreation Department employees.

These government employees doing an excellent job of putting St. Augustine on the map.

Aren't you glad we didn't contract out the work?

Aretha Franklin coming to town

From Staff
Publication Date: 11/12/09

The Queen of Soul herself, Aretha Franklin, will perform in St. Augustine on March 19 at the Amphitheatre.

With 18 Grammy awards at age 67, the singer, songwriter and pianist will entertain crowds with hits such as ÒRespect,Ó ÒI Knew You Were Waiting (For Me),Ó Ò(You Make Me Feel Like) A Natural WomanÓ and ÒChain of Fools.Ó

In 1987, Franklin became the first female artist to be entered into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame.

Tickets will go on sale Nov. 20.

Also heading to the Oldest City next spring will be the British Invasion band The Moody Blues. Known for hit songs ÒNights in White Satin,Ó ÒTuesday AfternoonÓ and ÒLong Distance Voyager,Ó the band has sold more than 70 million albums worldwide.

Tickets go on sale at 10 a.m. Friday for the March 6 show.

Tickets are $39, $49, $59 and $79 and are available at the St. Augustine Amphitheate Box Office, ticketmaster.com and all Ticketmaster locations, or by calling (800) 745-3000.

American folk singer Richie Havens will perform Feb. 11 in Flagler College Auditorium. The concert will benefit the Gamble Rogers Folk Festival Foundation.

Havens inspired and electrified an audience of more than half a million with his legendary three-hour opening performance at the world famous Woodstock Festival in 1969. Forty years later, he continues to perform his unique brand of rhythmic folk and captivate audiences around the world.

Havens has appeared on the Ed Sullivan Show and the Tonight Show with Johnny Carson and played at President Bill ClintonÕs inauguration.

Tickets go on sale at 10 a.m. Nov. 14.

Cost is $35; available at ticketmaster.com, all Ticketmaster locations, or by calling (800) 745-3000.

For details on Amphitheatre concerts and events, go to staugamphitheatre.com or call 471-1965.

Click here to return to story:
http://staugustine.com/stories/111209/news_2171208.shtml

© The St. Augustine Record

Wednesday, November 11, 2009

Manuel sentencing delayed -- Judge recused after continuance granted

MARCIA LANE
marcia.lane@staugustine.com
Publication Date: 11/11/09

The U.S. District judge scheduled to sentence former St. Johns County Commission chairman Tom Manuel recused herself from the sentencing, according to court documents filed late Tuesday.

Judge Marcia Morales Howard's decision came a day after she granted defense attorneys' request for a continuance on Manuel's sentencing, which was supposed to take place Monday.

A new sentencing date has not been set. The proceedings have been continued until January.

The judge did not give a reason why she removed herself from the case and attorneys for the defense and prosecution could not be reached for comment.

Manuel's attorney Matthew R. Kachergus filed the continuance motion Monday. The prosecution did not oppose the motion.

Manuel was scheduled to appear in U.S. District Court in Jacksonville for sentencing on Monday before Howard.

Kachergus's motion said Manuel, a heart transplant survivor, has a series of medical tests scheduled for Nov. 20.

Also, "certain issues ... have arisen which have impeded counsels' ability to prepare for the sentencing hearing." Those issues were to be raised at the status conference Tuesday and were not made public.

The attorney also said the defense team was hampered because a mitigation specialist, engaged by Manuel, has been injured. Certain symptoms, including double vision, have prevented him from assisting the defense.

In August, Manuel pleaded guilty to one count of official corruption. He has remained free pending the sentencing hearing.

At the time, Howard said in a brief that federal defendants may remain free until their prison reporting date unless they are drug offenders or violent criminals.

His plea agreement includes a provision that Manuel would be sentenced "at the low end" of possible federal prison terms. If he had gone to trial and been found guilty, he might have received 20 years.

He has already satisfied the restitution part of his plea agreement by turning over $10,000, the amount he admittedly accepted in April 2008.

Shortly after Manuel took office in 2007, FBI agents initiated what turned out to be an 18-month investigation into his business dealings, using both video and audio surveillance.

He was filmed accepting $10,000 on one instance. After he accepted $50,000 in June during dinner at a Ponte Vedra Beach restaurant, FBI agents detained him outside the restaurant and seized the money.

Click here to return to story:
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© The St. Augustine Record

Tuesday, November 10, 2009

Reckon FITCH Was Ever Told About Sewage Spill Problems?

See below. Can you say SEC rule 10b-5?

PR NEWSWIRE: Fitch Affirms St. Augustine, Florida's Water and Sewer Revs at 'A'

NEW YORK--(Business Wire)--
In the course of routine surveillance, Fitch affirms St. Augustine, Florida's
approximately $26.4 million in water and sewer revenue bonds at 'A'.

The 'A' rating reflects the system's sound debt service coverage, adequate legal
provisions, and above-average rates. The utility's service area includes the
city limits and a portion of unincorporated St. Johns County surrounding the
city. Water and sewer system accounts have increased a rapid 4.4% over the past
five years, with most of the growth occurring outside of the city. Rates are
comparatively high while income levels within the city are below average.
Customers outside city limits are charged a 25% surcharge on water and sewer
rates. Growth is expected to level off over the next few years with roughly a 3%
annual increase in customer base projected.

Water supply is derived from the city's wellfield, which extracts water from the
Floridan aquifer, and has an 8.55 millions of gallons per day (mgd) withdrawal
capacity, well above current demand. A recent expansion to the water treatment
plan increased treatment capacity to 6.0 mgd. Based on current flows, the system
has roughly 40% capacity remaining which should be sufficient to handle
projected growth in system demand over the long term. The city's wastewater
system provides collection and treatment with a maximum capacity of 4.95 mgd.
Average daily flows (average gallons daily [agd]) have historically been
significantly greater than water demand due to a large amount of infiltration
and inflow (I&I) resulting from clay piping. Recent capital efforts to reduce
I&I have contributed to agd decreasing over 20% in the last five years and
becoming comparable to system water flows.

System financial operations are sound, providing strong debt service coverage.
Coverage has increased rapidly over the past few years largely driven by
connection fees and capital contributions from the rapid development of
unincorporated areas of the county. Fiscal 2007 results show 5.8 times (x)
maximum annual debt service coverage from all pledged revenues. Excluding
connection fees and capital contributions, coverage declines to a still healthy
2.3x. Unaudited fiscal 2008 total coverage decreased to 3.6x reflecting the
slowing housing market. Recurring revenues generated 3.1x coverage. While the
system does not have formal projections, coverage is expected to remain
adequate. Liquidity is sufficient with 101 days cash on hand for fiscal 2007.

Long-term capital needs are manageable focusing on general maintenance and the
continuation of a 10-year plan to implement slip-line system piping. The system
is currently under a consent order mandating the replacement of a wastewater
treatment plant outflow pipeline. Construction on the project is expected to
begin this month with completion scheduled for the end of the fiscal year.
Related penalties are minimal.

Fitch's rating definitions and the terms of use of such ratings are available on
the agency's public site, www.fitchratings.com. Published ratings, criteria and
methodologies are available from this site, at all times. Fitch's code of
conduct, confidentiality, conflicts of interest, affiliate firewall, compliance
and other relevant policies and procedures are also available from the 'Code of
Conduct' section of this site.





Fitch Ratings
Rachel A. Barkley, +1-212-908-0514 (New York)
Kelly McGary, +1-813-224-0492 (Tampa)
Media Relations:
Cindy Stoller, +1-212-908-0526 (New York)
cindy.stoller@fitchratings.com



Copyright Business Wire 2009

No discussion on FDEP fine for dumping 611,294 gallons of untreated raw sewage in San Sebastian River


Controversial St. Augustine City Manager WILLIAM B. HARRISS
Photo credit: J.D. Pleasant

As the St. Augustine Record wryly reports this morning, four City Commissioners voted last night without discussion to pay a $33,000 fine (or provide an in-kind project) as penalty for spilling 611,294 gallons of untreated raw sewage in San Sebastian River. As the Record reported, "the sewage spill wasn't discussed at all -- it was simply passed in the board's consent agenda."

Al Gore wrote in his book,Earth in the Balance, that Americans are like members of a dysfunctional family when it comes to discussing environmental problems. We don't do it well. City Commissioners took the easy route last night, with no one moving to a discussion item the $33,000 fine for dumping 611,294 gallons of untreated sewage.

Government pollution is disgusting and would have made our Founding Fathers sick at heart.

Government pollution must be prosecuted or the private sector won't take pollution laws seriously. Government pollution is wrong, whether 4.2 million pounds of mercury dumped into Oak Ridge, Tennessee creeks (and workers' lungs and brains) or 40,000 cubic yards dumped into our Old City Reservoir (a coquina pit lake that is "an open sore going straight down to the aquifer and groundwater," according to John Henry Hankinson, Jr., longtime EPA Regional Administrator) or the City's longtime dumping of semi-treated sewage effluent into our saltwater marsh, or the dumping of 611,294 gallons of untreated sewage into the San Sebastian River on May 30, 2009.

As I asked then-Rep. Gore in my July 11, 1983 testimony on the Oak Ridge mercury pollution: "Will this case be fixed? That depends on what happens next."

In the immortal words of Jack Lord in the TV series, "Hawai'i FIve-O," I say, "Book 'em, Dan-o."

Note to FBI and EPA: Please take the City Manager to jail, with no "get-out-of-jail free" card.

If this a democracy and not a dictatorship -- if the City Manager does not own them all -- then City Commissioners' task must now focus on prosecuting and firing City Manager WILLIAM B. HARRISS (a/k/a "WILL HARASS") for cause (starting with his numerous environmental and civil rights violations).

"What happens next" must include apology by the City of St. Augustine for past environmental racism and for the depredations of City Manager WILLIAM B. HARRISS (a/k/a "WILL HARASS"). We need a national search to hire the next City Manager. No more clones need apply.

For an an "in-kind project," I suggest creating an Office of Environment, Safety, Health and Archaeology, reporting directly to City Commission, without being bossed and bullied by any future City Manager.

I also suggest an "in-kind project" in which the City of St. Augustine stops pollution, stops energy waste and passes a resolution by Christmas that supports the St. Augustine National Historical Park, Seashore and Scenic Coastal Parkway. See below.

So, what do you reckon about "what happens next?"

City vows to clean up waterways -- Starting environmental project an option instead of paying $33K fines for pipe leak

City vows to clean up waterways -- Starting environmental project an option instead of paying $33K fines for pipe leak

CHAD SMITH
chad.smith@staugustine.com
Publication Date: 11/10/09

St. Augustine City Commissioners on Monday weighed regulating the city's waterways to make them cleaner and safer for boaters and then agreed to pay the state $33,000 in fines for a sewage spill in the San Sebastian River in May.

The City Commission set a second reading, public hearing and further discussion on the mooring fields ordinance for their Dec. 14 regular meeting. The mooring fields are planned for Matanzas Bay and Salt Run, a move that would let the city control who moors their boats where and for how much.

The proposal was discussed for several minutes, but the fine for the sewage spill wasn't discussed at all -- it was simply passed in the board's consent agenda.

On May 30, a water main installed across the San Sebastian River in the 1960s broke near Oyster Creek.

By the time the leak was stopped June 1, an estimated 611,294 gallons of untreated wastewater made it into the river, according to a Florida Department of Environmental Protection report.

The city's wastewater permit expired in September 2008, and the state found the city violated several rules when the pipe broke.

As penalty, the city must pay the state $3,000 in administrative fees and $30,000 worth of fines.

Instead of the fines, however, the city can elect to start an environmental project worth 1 1/2 times the penalty -- $45,000.

City Manager Bill Harriss said after the meeting that city officials would likely choose to take on a project instead of paying the money.

The city has 15 days to submit a proposal for a project.

Harris said the main in question was the city's only cross-river wastewater pipe from the 1960s that had not been replaced when it burst.

Giving a presentation about the proposed mooring fields, James Piggott, director of general services for the city, told commissioners there would be room for 178 moorings, though it wasn't clear how much the city would charge.

Piggott said the policy would also make it easier to find the owners of derelict boats.

The problem of derelict boats is mounting, not to mention expensive, he said.

Last year, five of them had to be fished from the bay at the cost of $10,133.19.

So far this year, the city has removed seven at the cost of $51,790.51.

Commissioner Don Crichlow said officials need to be cautious that, if it institutes the mooring proposal, not to overcharge and, thus, deter boaters.

"They can bring a lot of money into this town," Crichlow said. "We need to keep it very attractive. We need to keep it a good deal."

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http://www.staugustine.com/stories/111009/news_2165359.shtml

© The St. Augustine Record

Monday, November 09, 2009

Environmental Racism 101 -- letter to Florida Department of Environmental Protection re: Wrist-slap for 611,000 Gallons of Raw Sewage in Sebastian R.

Good afternoon, everyone:

1. Thank you for sending me the documents. This penalty seems woefully inadequate – will you please refer it to EPA CID? This is the third major pollution violation by the City of St. Augustine in recent years (previous events involved 40,000 cubic yards of solid waste in our Old City Reservoir and years of semi-treated sewage polluting our saltwater marsh). Compare, United States of America v. City of Venice, Florida – five felony indictment counts for lesser pollution with treated sewage.

2. I look forward to our Democratic Florida CFO Alex Sink being elected Governor, so that pollution laws will again be enforced without fear or favor. I look forward to there being a St. Augustine National Historical Park, Seashore and Scenic Coastal Parkway, the pollution of which will become a federal crime, with no ability for FDEP to coverup for the City of St. Augustine’s environmental racism.

3. Is FDEP is guilty of desuetude, hampered by insouciant corporativist, polluter-coddling leadership, a 31-year old penalty matrix, a lack of imagination and failure of nerve, and a refusal to prosecute recidivist polluters? My late friend David Thundershield Queen said DEP meant, “Don’t Expect Protection.” Reckon he was right?

Sincerely,
Ed Slavin
Clean Up City of St. Augustine, Florida
www.cleanupcityoftaugustine.blogspot.com
Box 3084
St. Augustine, Florida 32084
904-829-3877 (o)
904-427-9918 (fax-h)

Massive sewage pollution by City of St. Augustine, no punishment:: 611,294 gallons of untreated domestic wastewater was discharged

St. Augustine City Commission voting on a consent decree during tonight's City Commission meeting -- State of Florida FDEP wants to fine them $30,000 but forgive them in the event there's a suitable in-kind project approved.

Massive sewage pollution by City of St. Augustine, no punishment: 611,294 gallons of untreated domestic wastewater was discharged May 30, 2009, but no one is going to jail (at least not based on inadequate prosecution by the tatterdemalion FDEP). Perhaps the U.S. Justice Department would like to prosecute, as they did the City of Venice, FLorida (five felony indictments for sewage pollution).

Another DOD Earmark Beneficiary In Trouble For Fraud

Rep. Todd Tiarht (R-Kan.) put down Kaman Dayron's parent company down for a cool million. Now Kaman Dayron's being sued by the Justice Department for False Claims Act violations -- selling defective bunker buster fuzes that could have exploded and killed pilots, airmen and sailors. Sounds like the plot of Arthur Miller's play, All My Sons. When will they ever learn?

USDOJ Press Release: United States Sues Kaman Dayron, Inc. Under False Claims Act -- Allegedly Used Dangerous Component in Bunker Busters

or Immediate Release
November 6, 2009 United States Attorney's Office
Middle District of Florida
Contact: (813) 274-6000

United States Sues Kaman Dayron, Inc. Under False Claims Act -- Allegedly Used Non-Conforming Component in Military’s Bunker Buster Bombs

WASHINGTON—The United States has filed a lawsuit against Kaman Dayron, Inc., alleging that the Orlando, Fla., defense contractor violated the False Claims Act by knowingly substituting non-conforming parts in fuzes (sophisticated ignition devices incorporating mechanical and/or electronic components) supplied to the military for use in “bunker buster” bombs, the Justice Department announced today. The suit was filed today in U.S. District Court in Orlando.

The allegations relate to FMU-143 fuzes for use in hard target penetration warheads, colloquially referred to as “bunker buster” bombs. The government alleges that Kaman Dayron knowingly substituted non-conforming bellows motors for the specified parts in three lots of fuzes supplied to the military, and that the non-conforming parts could cause the fuzes to fire prematurely, creating a hazard for military personnel and causing misfires of the warheads. The military discovered the parts substitution and has quarantined the defective fuzes.

“I take seriously the Department of Justice’s obligation to pursue allegations that a defense contractor is creating a safety risk to our military,” said Assistant Attorney General Tony West, in charge of the Department’s Civil Division. “We owe it to our military personnel to ensure that contractors know that this type of misconduct will not be tolerated.”


This case is being prosecuted as part of a National Procurement Fraud Initiative. In October 2006, the Deputy Attorney General announced the formation of a National Procurement Fraud Task Force designed to promote the early detection, identification, prevention, and prosecution of procurement fraud associated with the increase in government contracting activity for national security and other government programs.

The Procurement Fraud Task Force is chaired by the Assistant Attorney General for the Criminal Division and includes U.S. Attorneys’ Offices, the FBI, the U.S. Inspectors General community, and a number of other federal law enforcement agencies. This case, as well as others brought by members of the task force, demonstrate the Justice Department’s commitment to helping ensure the integrity of the government procurement process.

CONGRESMAN JOHN LUIGI MICA (R-7th)

He may get earmarks for special interests, but he's not there for preserving our City and our beaches or for helping our veterans. See below.

CONGRESMAN JOHN LUIGI MICA (R-7th) WAS A NO-SHOW AT YESTERDAY'S ST. AUGUSTINE VETERANS EVENT (BUT FAYE ARMITAGE WAS THERE)

Variety show at Flagler to honor Korean War veterans


PETER GUINTA
peter.guinta@staugustine.com
Publication Date: 11/03/09

During the bloody Korean War, American and United Nations forces battled below-freezing temperatures, impassable mountain terrain, icy swollen rivers and hundreds of thousands of Communist Chinese and North Korean troops launching fanatic human wave attacks.

A 1953 armistice ended the fighting, but America mourned its 36,516 dead, 92,134 wounded, 8,176 missing in action and 7,245 prisoners of war, and a weary nation soon dropped Korea from its national consciousness.

Now, however, St. Augustine producer Michael Rothfeld and the St. Johns County Veterans Council want Americans to "unforget" Korea and to honor those who fought there.

Rothfeld, a retired high school history teacher, said, "I was in college during the (Vietnam) war, married with a child. (But) I've always had an interest in what our veterans did for this country. I wanted to preserve their memory."

He and the council will present a patriotic variety show at 3 p.m. Sunday at Flagler College Auditorium.

It is titled "Korea: Forgotten War, Remembered Heroes" and will feature the personal stories of five local Korean War veterans, and entertain with patriotic music, skits by the Coquina Players, a service salute, comedy, dancing by the Coquina Dancers, and singing by Tim Rippey.

The show is free and open to the public.

U.S. Rep. John Mica, R, Winter Park, will remark on "The Importance of Veterans Day," and retired master sergeant and Veterans Council chair Ray Quinn (U.S. Army, Ret.), will serve as master of ceremonies.

At the end of the show, a short film directed by Dr. Nadia Ramoutar called "Korea: Forgotten War, Remembered Heroes," the same as the show, will be screened.

Ramoutar is media arts and documentary director for Art Institute of Jacksonville and she worked with Professor Steve Voguit of Flagler College, a documentary historian, on the film.

In the documentary, as well as at the show, five local veterans, soldiers Richard Bassett, Jack Wentz and George Gaspard, and U.S. Marines Bob Bey and James Vanairsdale, relate their experiences and remembrances of Korea.

Dr. Henry Moreland, a University of North Florida professor, commander of the Korean War Veterans Association, Jacksonville, will present Ms. Susie Birdsong, who was a child in Korea during the Korean War.

Rothfeld said that in 2007 he filled Flagler Auditorium with a similar show he produced.

"The purpose of this (show) is to remind people that the average person on the street could be someone who served our country in Korea and that we should remember that service," Rothfeld said. "That was what motivated me."

If You Go

Show and film: "Korea: Forgotten War, Remembered Heroes"

Cost: Free

Time: 3 p.m. Sunday, Nov. 8

Place: Flagler Auditorium

Parking: A free shuttle to and from the downtown parking garage will be provided by Old Town Trolley Tours.

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Preserve and protect all of our city's history

FAYE ARMITAGE
Fruit Cove
Publication Date: 11/08/09

On Nov. 2, I received my First America Passport at the City of St. Augustine's 450th Commemoration Town Hall Meeting at the Flagler College Auditorium. A beautiful rubber-stamp adorns page one of my new passport (co-sponsored by augustine.com). Seven other events are planned, paying tribute to Native Americans, colonists, pirates, the British, Florida "Crackers," Flagler's Age of Opulence, and the Civil Rights era in St. Augustine. Each can earn you another stamp on your way to becoming an ambassador for the first city in our nation: St. Augustine.

Attendance was terrific, about 150. The presentation by Dana Ste. Claire was excellent. See www.staugustinegovernment.com.

Mayor Joe Boles urged attendees to "be creative," explaining how Jamestown welcomed 3-4 million visitors during its 400th birthday, bringing more than $1 billion in economic activity, along with international visitors (including the Queen of England). Heritage and environmental tourism is a very sustainable tourism, growing jobs without pollution. Our planning must preserve and protect, in the words of Frederick Law Olmsted, an "emerald necklace of parks," with a museum covering 11,000 years of history, including Indian, Spanish, African-American, French, English, Minorcan, Civil War, Flagler era and Civil Rights history.

This would empower Florida's schoolchildren to learn from history and nature, while providing the unique St. Augustine "branding" opportunity to grow our economy. That's why I support creation of a St. Augustine National Historical Park, Seashore and Coastal Parkway. Let's combine five state parks into one national park to better protect these local treasures (adding other lands as appropriate, including current St. Johns River Water Management District land).

For more information, check staugustgreen.com. Anyone who watched Ken Burns' 12-hour PBS documentary, "The National Parks, America's Best Idea," knows that our national parks are a uniquely American idea that protects nature and history from destruction. From the Everglades to the Grand Canyon to volcanoes to historic Philadelphia, Boston and New Bedford, the National Park Service is uniquely qualified to interpret our human and natural history. Let's ask NPS to educate Americans about our Nation's Oldest City.

The park could include light rail to connect St. Augustine to the beaches and what are currently state parks, like Guana-Tolomato-Matanzas National Estuarine Reserve (GTM-NERR) and Anastasia State Park, relieving traffic congestion and enhancing the visitor experience.

The park would raise our property values, help fight coastal erosion and wetland destruction, increase sustainable tourism, providing better jobs. Tourism drives our local economy. A national park would increase the length and quality of tourist stays, while making visits here a learning experience for everyone.

Seventh District incumbent U.S. Rep. John Mica recently obtained $500,000 funding for design of a brand-new National Park Service visitors center, located directly across from Castillo de San Marcos.

St. Augustine doesn't need a new building there. That's why I support a visitors' center located elsewhere, perhaps in restored buildings on St. George Street or at Sebastian Inland Harbor, interpreting all of our history and nature, while showing off and encouraging our visitors to enjoy our port, marshes, rivers, seashore and forests. Let's not worsen congestion of downtown. We need a park, not more pork.

We are blessed to live in St. Augustine and St. Johns County and we must adopt legislation to ensure that the places we love are preserved forever, preserving our way of life with an "emerald necklace of parks."

Rose Kennedy's favorite Bible quote was: "To whom much has been given, much is expected." (Luke 12:48).

Let's honor our precious cultural heritage, protect our environment and help grow our economy by having portions of St Augustine and St. Johns County designated as America's next National Park. Yes we can.

*

Faye Armitage is an economist and mother of five who lives in Fruit Cove. She was the Democratic nominee in the Seventh Congressional District against Rep. John Mica in 2008, earning nearly 150,000 votes in a district, which stretches from Ponte Vedra to Daytona Beach and Orlando.

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© The St. Augustine Record

Friday, November 06, 2009

Fixing seawall requires federal funds -- National Park Service can provide the funds

See below. We need a St. Augustine National Historical Park, Seashore and Scenic Coastal Parkway, which will provide the funds we need to host presidents, kings and the Pope, among millions of visitors from 2012-2015. A National Park -- there is no substitute.

Squabble over seawall -- City, state spar over responsibility for repairing 50-year-old seawall


JENNIFER EDWARDS
Staff Writer
Publication Date: 11/06/09

A simple repair to a rusty fence post along the bayfront has revealed a bigger question: Whose responsibility is it to pay for repairs to the aging seawall?

City Attorney Ron Brown said it's the state Department of Transportation's responsibility. The state is not sure.

For now, the city has reinstalled the post atop the portion of the seawall that runs from the Castillo de San Marcos to the Bridge of Lions. But, Brown said, the state Department of Transportation needs to pay for the work.

The city fixed the post because, "We don't want people to fall in the bay," Brown said. But "The state had to reluctantly admit (the wall) was theirs."

Brown said deeds from 1991 show that DOT is responsible for the seawall, and he sent a letter to the state about two weeks ago telling them that.

But state officials are not convinced the seawall is their responsibility, and have ignored two other maintenance bills Brown sent for repairs the city made over the past year to the seawall, including one for $104.47 for repairs to some of the chain between the posts. Ê

Over time, maintaining the wall could become quite expensive, Brown said.

Gina Busscher, public information director for FDOT District 2, speaking for the state's legal department, said, "We are investigation the issue."

She provided documents that indicates that the state considers the city responsible for the wall, and thus its repairs. The state Department of Transportation general counsel, Alexis Yarbrough, could not be reached for comment.

The post-and-chain fence is sprouting rust in several places and some posts are now brown rather than the original black.

"They've been there for years and I can see that the condition of them has become critical," said Greg Moore, St. Augustine Historical Society board member.

Brown said the deteriorating railing creates unsafe conditions.

"The condition of the seawall and the stanchions (posts) and chain railing on the seawall have deteriorated over time and have not received recent maintenance or repair except for emergency repairs ...," he wrote in the letter to the state. "The chains and stanchions ... serve as the only barrier between crowds on the seawall and the easterly edge of the wall."

There's also the condition of the wall itself, which is showing deep cracks.

The area beneath the post the city reinstalled, for instance, has deteriorated, another city official said.

"The concrete broke loose where it was bolted," said Tim Shields, facilities manager. "I am sure that the age of it and the salt and the environment has taken its toll."

The city will have to wait for the state's response. In the meantime, it will keep making emergency repairs.

"We're going to keep doing that, and we're going to keep billing the state for it," he said.

About the wall:

* The portion of the seawall that runs from just south of the Castillo de San Marcos to the Bridge of Lions is about 50 years old.

* The original seawall was constructed from 1833-1844, said Greg Moore, St. Augustine Historical Society board member. Jason Sheffield, city administrative service manager, has said 675 feet of the original wall remain south of the bridge.

* The original portion north of the bridge, however, is located beneath the median that divides the north- and south-bound lanes of Avenida Menendez. It was replaced with a new sea wall when Avenida Menendez was widened as part of the remodeling of the bayfront that took place at the end of the 1950s, said Charles Tingley, senior research librarian for the Historical Society Research Library.

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© The St. Augustine Record

Impressive turnout for the first of "First America" fora

800 people! See below. That's more people than I've ever seen in that auditorium, and we first moved to St. Augustine exactly ten years ago yesterday. Our residents are passionate about our history and environment and want to protect it. That's why we support a St. Augustine National Historical Park, Seashore and Scenic Coastal Parkway, with an "emerald necklace of parks," a national indigenous history museum and a national civil rights museum, right here where European-American history began in 1565.

Native peoples tell of their hardship, wars

Native peoples tell of their hardship, wars



PETER GUINTA
peter.guinta@staugustine.com
Publication Date: 11/06/09

St. Augustine's 450th Commemoration Commission's first historical presentation Thursday night was billed as a way for city residents to learn about the "Peoples Before Ponce de Leon," but the Timucuans were mentioned only briefly and in passing.

The presentation mostly focused on Native Americans in Florida who lived hundreds of years after the Spanish arrived.

Still, Flagler Auditorium's 800 seats were packed to overflowing, with people sitting on the floor. The program was laced with humor and was well-received by the audience.

In introducing this first event, St. Augustine Vice Mayor Errol Jones -- substituting for Mayor Joe Boles, who is out of town -- said, "We have a rich history and hope to tell it to the world over the next five years."

To begin, Dana Ste. Claire, executive director of the 450th Commission, introduced Seminole historian and cultural specialist Willie Johns and Herbert Jim of Tampa, who belongs to an independent tribe.

Johns lives on the Brighton reservation, one of seven Seminole reservations in Florida.

He told of his recent emotional visit to the site here where Osceola was betrayed and captured by U.S. soldiers while the Seminole chief was under the protection of a white flag of truce.

Osceola was kept captive at the Castillo de San Marcos. He died there three months later of malaria.

"The history (of the native peoples) is alive, and it's here," Johns said. "Not many people know about it."

Timucuan villages, here when Pedro Menendez arrived, disappeared, their people Christianized, he said, adding that some went to Cuba and some blended into tribes which later became the Seminoles.

He remembered his great-grandmother, who died in the 1930s at 95, coming to St. Augustine to buy slaves.

"My family has always owned slaves," he said. "Slaves were kept until the 1920s. Nobody told us about the Emancipation Proclamation."

Now the Seminoles have casino gambling, thousands of head of cattle and 97 restaurants around the globe.

"We've done all right for a tribe that was left for dead. We're going to take St. Augustine back," he joked.

He said the name Seminole comes from a mispronounced Spanish word meaning "untamed."

Herbert Jim, a storyteller, told of the poverty and hardships his ancestors had to endure and how the children of his tribe were told to only speak their own language and not to learn English.

"We survived," he said. "My great-grandmother died in 1993 at 103 years old."

A family story relates the burning of his great-great-great-grandmother's village by horse soldiers. She sent the children out the back of her dwelling into the woods while soldiers came in the front and killed her, he said.

"That story has been passed down," he said. "We came out of the woods. We had to fight back. We fought. We survived."

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© The St. Augustine Record

City needs to save money

Another free trip to Spain for city burghers -- when will they ever learn? See below.

City staffers headed for Aviles, Spain

PETER GUINTA
peter.guinta@staugustine.com
Publication Date: 11/06/09

St. Augustine's history has always been connected to the northern Spanish city of Aviles -- the birthplace of Pedro Menendez -- and now the city's upcoming 450th birthday will make that connection deeper and more pronounced.

Mayor Joe Boles and his wife, plus three other St. Augustine couples, have traveled to Aviles for a week to meet unofficially with business, cultural and government officials, making friends and contacts. Boles and his wife are paying their own way.

City Manager Bill Harriss said Thursday that Hariss sent two city employees, John Regan, the city's chief operations officer, and Dana

Ste. Claire, executive director of St. Augustine's 450th Commemoration Commission, to accompany the unofficial delegation.

The trip's cost, including airfare, hotel and meals, will total roughly $4,000 for the two men, he said.

"I won't know exactly until they come back," he said.

Regan will be there the entire week, Ste. Claire only two days.

Ste. Claire had to be here to present the initial offering of "Discover First America: Legacies of La Florida," shown at Flagler College Auditorium on Thursday night. The presentation was called "People's Before Ponce de Leon."

He also was expected to ask about a Spanish ship that Aviles said it would build and sail to St. Augustine by the time of the birthday. The 450th Commission plans to build a caravel here as well, the type of ship used by Ponce De Leon.

Harriss said, "Basically, this is not a city trip. Any time our commissioners go (on trips), I want to make sure a staff member's there to keep things in perspective."

And, though the trip is unofficial, some official city business is bound to be discussed, he said.

Plus, since Mayor Boles is the only commissioner going and it's an unofficial trip, Florida's Sunshine Law does not apply.

"This was an opportune time for the visit," Harriss said. "Dana hadn't been over there yet and wanted to go. I need to keep everyone walking down the same path."

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© The St. Augustine Record

Wednesday, November 04, 2009

FOX-TV 17 NASHVILLE: Congressman JOHN LUIGI MICA IN TENNESSEE PROMOTING MORE ROADBUILDING AND PORK BARREL

New Hope For I-65 Project-Sky Arnold

Twice a day one stretch of I-65 becomes a Williamson County mess.

The interstate drops from 8 lanes to either 6 or 4 in between highway 96 and 840.

"It's awful, what should take 15 or 20 minutes tops to get to work takes a minimum of 30 minutes and if it's rainy it's another 10 minutes," said Elaine Sage.

Sage says she often takes the back roads from her Thompson Station home to Cool Springs to avoid the traffic jam.

She says the frustrating thing is the problem only lasts for a few miles.

"As soon as you get past highway 96 there are no cars anywhere," said Sage.

Tennessee has a $100 million dollar plan to fix it but the State is waiting for federal money to arrive.

"Without the federal funding coming in for congress which is very restrictive right now...without transportation bill we're kind of waiting to see what congress will do," said TDOT's Joe Carpenter.

Carpenter says projects across the State have stalled, because Congress has yet to approve the Federal Highway Bill.

It will pay about 80% of the cost of the project in Williamson County.

That plan gained some important support Monday morning.

John Mica, the ranking Republican on the House Transportation Committee, joined Congresswoman Marsha Blackburn for a tour of the area.

Both say they support it.

"One of the things we have seen an agreement on for citizens in this area is that fixing that traffic on I-65 is a pretty high priority," said Blackburn. New Hope For I-65 Project-Sky Arnold

Posted: Monday, November 2 2009, 08:11 PM CST

Tuesday, November 03, 2009

National Park Service Presence in St. Augustine Must Increase

The City of St. Augustine now agrees that the National Park Service presence in St. Augustine must increase.

The National Heritage Area for the Port is a nice idea, but not enough.

There is no land acquisition and no regulation with a National Heritage Area.

There is land acquisition and there is regulation with a National Park, Seashore and Scenic Coastal Parkway -- along lines to be developed by Congress and local citizens.

If you want the seawall fixed, support the National Park.

If you want Riberia Street fixed, support the National Park.

If you want to preserve our 11,000 years of history and our beautiful beaches and forests, support the National Park.

Port may become Heritage Area -- Designation could qualify renovated port site for federal loans

Port may become Heritage Area -- Designation could qualify renovated port site for federal loans

PETER GUINTA
peter.guinta@staugustine.com
Publication Date: 11/03/09

St. Augustine, oldest port in the nation, may be a candidate for a federal designation as a National Heritage Area, historian and archaeologist Dana Ste. Claire said Monday night.

Ste. Claire, executive director of the 450th Commemoration Commission, told more than 200 St. Augustine residents during a "general assembly" at Flagler College Auditorium that the port is only one area that will be improved before the city's 450th birthday bash in 2015.

"We will build the world a stage and host this," he said.

A renovated and improved port will amplify St. Augustine's role as one of the earliest points of international trade and commerce, and would, Ste. Claire said, be the perfect place to berth the "San Augustin," a reconstructed 16th-century Spanish caravel used by Juan Ponce de Leon in 1513.

Other benefits would include increased tourism, national promotion through various sources and an eligibility for federal loans.

Sam Turner of St. Augustine Lighthouse & Museum said a National Heritage Area "would be a community undertaking."

The Lighthouse, the A1A Scenic Highway group and St. Johns County will be taking the lead, he said.

"It will allow us to showcase important aspects of the (port)," he said. "It allows the city to appreciate what is has and to convey that to visitors."

So it would "dovetail easily" with other 450th commemoration preparations, he said.

The process can take two or three years, but the entire Heritage Area would include the entire watershed -- the Port plus both the Guana and Matanzas rivers.

"Our entire history is based on the water. It was the main means of transportation both in prehistory and after Europeans arrived," Turner said.

Residents who attended the Town Hall meeting were each given "First America" passports, stamped with a unique blue seal depicting a Spanish Conquistador and confirming they were there.

Ste. Claire outlined the draft strategic plan for the celebration, saying the Steering Committee would need many subcommittee members and volunteers.

"Would anyone want to chair the fundraising committee?" he asked jokingly.

Several residents questioned how the 2-1/2 year celebration -- from April 2013 to September 2015 -- will be funded. In other words, one member of the audience asked, "Will city taxpayers bear the burden of the cost?"

Mayor Joe Boles answered that one,

"Absolutely not," he said. "Each signature event will be responsible for its own funding. Plus the city will get a piece of every T-shirt, drinking cup or commemorative coin that's sold."

In addition, he said, the Steering Committee will receive $500,000 per year from the federal 450th Commemoration Commission, though appointments to that board are moving glacially through the Interior Department because all nominations must be vetted by the White House, Boles said.

"Our goal is to dream big," he said. "We are only limited by our creativity. In some ways, we'll have to rely on ourselves, just as we've done since 1565."

Discover First America series begins Thursday

The local 450th Commemoration Commission, in partnership with Flagler College, the city of St. Augustine, St. Johns County Tourist Development Council, and The St. Augustine Record, will host the free series. Grant support for the series comes from the Florida Humanities Council, Florida Public Archaeology, Florida Trust and Historic Research Media Institute.

All programs begin at 7 p.m. at Flagler College Auditorium.

* Thursday, Nov. 5 -- "Peoples Before Ponce de Leon," presented by the Seminole Tribe of Florida; Willie Johns of the Brighton Reservation, Okeechobee; and Herbie Jim and traditional arts demonstrators, Tampa.

* Monday, Nov. 23 -- "First America: Colonial St. Augustine," Actor Chaz Mena will conduct a Chautauqua performance as Pedro Menendez; Dr. Kathleen Deagan, Distinguished Research Curator at the University of Florida and Carl Halbirt, city archaeologist, St. Augustine.

* Wednesday, Dec. 9 -- "Pirates! Fact and Fiction," Dr. Pat Croce, Pirate Soul museum curator, author and entrepreneur; and Brendan Burke, Lighthouse Archeological Maritime Program.

* Thursday, Jan. 7 -- "The British are Coming!" presenting Bill Barker as Thomas Jefferson (through the Colonial Williamsburg Foundation), John Stevely as Jesse Fish and the British Night Watch.

* Friday, Feb. 5 -- "The Great Southern Cracker Roadshow," Janis Owens, author and storyteller, Dana Ste Claire, author and Cracker historian, and bluegrass musicians.

* Tuesday, April 13 -- "Palaces in Paradise: Flagler's Age of Opulence," Dr. Tom Graham, Professor Emeritus of History, Flagler College; John Blades, executive director of Flagler Museum; and a special "Conversation with Henry Flagler," with Flagler played by Tom Rahner and Mayor Joe Boles as himself.

* Tuesday, May 18 -- "Road to Freedom: African-Americans in Florida," by Derek Hankerson and James Bullock, both actors and creative directors.

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© The St. Augustine Record

USDOJ Press Releases: Bills of Information and Guilty Plea in Baton Rouge, Louisiana in "Operation Illegal Motion"

For Immediate Release
November 2, 2009 United States Attorney's Office
Middle District of Louisiana
Contact: (225) 389-0443

Another Bill of Information and Guilty Plea in Baton Rouge, Louisiana in Operation Illegal Motion

BATON ROUGE, LA—United States Attorney David R. Dugas announced today that EDWARD C. JAMES, age 65, of Baton Rouge, LA was charged in a Bill of Information with violating the Racketeer Influenced and Corrupt Organizations Act (RICO) and with conspiracy for allegedly accepting or extorting bribes from individuals with pending criminal charges in the Baton Rouge City Court and the 19th Judicial District Court and then sharing the proceeds of the bribe or extortion with a prosecutor or court official who would arrange for the matters to be dismissed or otherwise “fixed.” JAMES was arraigned today before U.S. District Judge James Brady and pled guilty to the charges contained in the Bill of Information.

The charges against JAMES resulted from Operation Illegal Motion, an ongoing investigation conducted by the Federal Bureau of Investigation and the United States Attorney’s Office with the cooperation of the Louisiana Office of Inspector General, the Louisiana State Police, the Internal Revenue Service, Criminal Investigative Division and the Department of Homeland Security, Office of Inspector General and the Louisiana Department of Environmental Quality, Criminal Investigations Division. The cases are being prosecuted by Deputy Criminal Chief Corey R. Amundson and Assistant United States Attorney M. Patricia Jones.

JAMES is the fourth individual charged as a result of Operation Illegal Motion and the third to plead guilty. JAMES faces a maximum sentence of twenty (20) years in prison and a fine of $250,000 on the RICO charge and a maximum sentence of five (5) years in prison and a fine of $250,000 on the conspiracy charge.

After the guilty plea by JAMES, U.S. Attorney David R. Dugas stated “Operation Illegal Motion is an ongoing investigation that has uncovered evidence of corruption in the criminal court system in East Baton Rouge Parish. Anyone with knowledge of corruption at any level of government, but particularly in the court system or in law enforcement agencies, is urged to contact my office or the FBI to report that information.”

For further information, contact David R. Dugas, U.S. Attorney for the Middle District of Louisiana, or Lyman Thornton, First Assistant U.S. Attorney, at (225) 389-0443.

NOTE: A Bill of Information is a determination by the U.S. Attorneys Office that there is probable cause to believe that an offense has been committed by the defendant. The defendant, of course, is presumed innocent until and unless he is proven guilty at trial.

----------------


For Immediate Release
October 30, 2009 United States Attorney's Office
Middle District of Louisiana
Contact: (225) 389-0443

Bills of Information and Guilty Pleas in Baton Rouge, Louisiana on Charges of Using Interstate Facilities in Aid of Bribery

BATON ROUGE, LA—United States Attorney David R. Dugas announced today that FLITCHER R. BELL, age 43, of Baton Rouge, Louisiana; DARRELL JOHNSON, age 48, of Bueche, Louisiana; and LEONARD P. JACKSON, age 45, of Prairieville, Louisiana, were charged in Bills of Information alleging that each accepted bribes in exchange for “fixing” criminal matters filed and pending in Baton Rouge City Court. JOHNSON and BELL were arraigned today before U. S. District Court Judge James Brady and pled guilty to the charges contained in the Bills of Information filed against them. JACKSON is scheduled for arraignment on Wednesday, November 4, 2009, before Judge Brady.

Count One of the Bill of Information filed against FLITCHER R. BELL charges that from about 2006 through October of 2009, while serving as a senior prosecutor with the Baton Rouge City Prosecutor’s Office, BELL conspired with others to engage in bribery by soliciting and accepting payments from individuals with criminal and traffic matters pending in Baton Rouge City Court with the promise that the charges would be dismissed or otherwise “fixed.” Count Two charges that BELL received cash in exchange for dismissing a criminal charge against an undercover FBI agent. BELL faces a maximum sentence of five (5) years in prison and a fine of $250,000 on each count.

The Bill of Information filed against DARRELL JOHNSON charges that in the spring of 2009, while serving as a law enforcement officer with the Baton Rouge City Police Department, JOHNSON accepted a cash payment in exchange for causing the dismissal of prostitution charges filed against an individual. JOHNSON faces a maximum sentence of five (5) years in prison and a fine of $250,000.

Count One of the Bill of Information filed against LEONARD P. JACKSON charges that from about 2006 until October of 2009 JACKSON, while serving as a law enforcement officer with the Baton Rouge City Police Department, conspired with others to engage in bribery by soliciting and accepting payments from individuals with criminal and traffic matters pending in Baton Rouge City Court with the promise that the charges would be dismissed or otherwise “fixed.” Count Two charges that on September 17, 2009, JACKSON accepted a cash bribe payment in exchange for using his position as a police officer to collect a $10,000 gambling debt on behalf of an individual. If convicted, JACKSON faces a maximum sentence of five (5) years in prison and a fine of $250,000 on each count.

The charges resulted from Operation “Illegal Motion,” an ongoing investigation conducted by the Federal Bureau of Investigation and the U.S. Attorney’s Office with the cooperation of the Louisiana Office of Inspector General; the Louisiana State Police; the Internal Revenue Service, Criminal Investigative Division; the U.S. Department of Homeland Security, Office of Inspector General; and the Louisiana Department of Environmental Quality – Criminal Investigations Division. The cases are being prosecuted by Deputy Criminal Chief Corey R. Amundson and Assistant United States Attorney M. Patricia Jones.

After the guilty pleas by BELL and JOHNSON, U. S. Attorney David R. Dugas stated, “Public corruption at any level of government is unacceptable, but corruption of the criminal justice system threatens our most precious heritage, equal treatment under the law for all citizens. If those with access to corrupt police officers or prosecutors can obtain privileged treatment in exchange for cash bribes or other consideration, then the most important underpinnings of our legal system are threatened.”

Howard Schwartz, Assistant Special Agent in Charge of the New Orleans Division of the FBI, stated, “New Orleans usually gets all the attention relating to public corruption. As these guilty pleas today clearly demonstrate, public corruption is by no means limited to the city of New Orleans. The FBI, along with our federal, state, and local partners, each represented here today, are focusing our attention on public corruption matters in the Baton Rouge area. I’ll also take this occasion to announce the formation of our Public Corruption Working Group, which will aggressively pursue corruption at all levels. This group is comprised of the FBI, the United States Attorney’s Office, Department of Environmental Quality, Department of Homeland Security Office of Inspector General, Louisiana State Inspector General, Internal Revenue Service, and the Louisiana State Police.”

For further information, contact David R. Dugas, U.S. Attorney for the Middle District of Louisiana, or Lyman Thornton, First Assistant U.S. Attorney, at (225) 389-0443.

NOTE: A Bill of Information is a determination by the U.S. Attorney’s Office that there is probable cause to believe that an offense has been committed by the defendant. The defendant, of course, is presumed innocent until and unless he is proven guilty at trial.

EPA Press Release: FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE: U.S. EPA Takes Action Against San Francisco “Muni” following SF Bay Oil Spill City/County Pay $250,000

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE: November 2, 2009 MEDIA CONTACT: Mary Simms, Simms.mary@epa.gov, 415-947-4270

U.S. EPA Takes Action Against San Francisco “Muni” following SF Bay Oil Spill
City and County to Pay $250,000 Fine, Conduct Incident Command System Training

SAN FRANCISCO – The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency is taking action against the San Francisco Municipal Transit Authority following federal violations of the Clean Water Act and Resource Conservation and Recovery Act.
On behalf of the U.S. EPA, the Department of Justice has lodged a proposed consent decree with the U.S. District Court for the Northern District of California against the city and county of San Francisco for releasing at least 940 barrels of diesel fuel -- some of which entered into Islais Creek, a tributary of the San Francisco Bay.
The proposed consent decree, subject to a 30 day public comment period, will require the city and county of San Francisco to pay a $250,000 civil penalty. It will also require SF Muni to implement an Incident Command System training program that will improve coordination and communication during future incidents of this nature.
This enforcement action stems from red dye diesel fuel being released from the Woods bus servicing facility, located at 1095 Indiana Street in San Francisco during late November and December of 2005. The EPA estimates at least 39,000 gallons of fuel were released.
The spill originated at the Woods motor coach refueling facility when a faulty hose ruptured and underground storage tanks overflowed. The released diesel fuel landed in a storm drain where heavy flows from a major December rain storm caused the storm drain to overflow to the stormwater line. The fuel then caused an interference with a San Francisco southeast wastewater treatment pump station. From there, some of the fuel spilled into Islais Creek, which drains into Central San Francisco Bay.
“Facility operators must pay rigorous attention to operational practices in order to protect the San Francisco Bay and our coastal resources,” said Laura Yoshii, the EPA's Acting Regional Administrator for the Pacific Southwest.
The discharge of oil into Islais Creek and interference with the pump station were violations of the Clean Water Act. An EPA investigation also revealed that the release of diesel fuel was due to the failure of Muni staff to comply with federal regulations issued under the Resource Conservation and Recovery Act that governs the management of underground storage tanks. The EPA has asserted that SF Muni’s federal RCRA violations include:
• Disabling an audible alarm system intended to alert operators to an ongoing release of diesel
• Failure to respond to flashing yellow alarm lights triggered by tank sensor alarms in full alarm mode
• Failure to maintain a written log noting the status, source, or reason for alarms
• Failure to use fuel inventory controls to monitor and observe that it was losing fuel from, the tanks at a constant conspicuous rate
• Inadequate containment
• A known kink and bulge in a faulty, braided, flexible hose that ultimately failed
• Failure to timely notify authorities of the release
Following the December 2005 spill at the Woods facility, the EPA investigated compliance at additional SF Muni bus servicing facilities. EPA inspectors found varying levels of noncompliance with spill prevention requirements at three facilities: the Flynn Facility, located at 15th and Harrison Street; the Kirkland Facility, located at 151 Beach Street; and the Marin Facility, located at 1399 Marin Street.
The city and county of San Francisco conducted remedial actions to clean up the spill in 2006 and has also taken initiative to evaluate its procedures and upgrade its facilities to prevent further spills. In addition to the work required by the consent decree, SF Muni has taken steps to decrease the likelihood of any future releases. These include:
• Completing all spill prevention, control, and countermeasure requirements and including installation of adequate containment, and the preparation of spill prevention plans
• Replacing the piping in underground sumps
• Replacing the containment boxes under all diesel and gasoline dispensers,
• Repairing alarms
• Installing external alarms with light and horn notifications and a remote alarm monitoring system
• Establishing new procedures to monitor fuel inventory and provide MTA staff supervision for fuel deliveries
• Additional controls in order to quickly identify and respond to releases diesel fuel
For more information on the Clean Water Act, please visit the EPA’s Web site at
http://www.epa.gov/regulations/laws/cwa.html
For more information on the Resource Conservation and Recovery Act, please visit the EPA’s Web site at:
http://www.epa.gov/regulations/laws/rcra.html
###

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Thursday, October 29, 2009

Orlando Sentinel: Who's taking on Grayson? Anyone? Hello?

orlandosentinel.com/news/politics/orl-locgrayson-seat-mike-thomas-101101309oct13,0,2819143.column
OrlandoSentinel.com
Who's taking on Grayson? Anyone? Hello?

Mike Thomas

COMMENTARY

October 13, 2009

"This is an unstable man who has come unhinged."

National Republican Congressional Committee spokesman Andy Sere on U.S. Rep. Alan Grayson.

The path to a long political career in Central Florida is win that first election, stay out of trouble and win the rest by default.

And now comes U.S. Rep. Alan Grayson, who dynamited that model, calling Republicans knuckle-dragging obstructionists who want the sick to "die quickly."

If this fits the definition of unstable and unhinged, it certainly seems to have served a very lucid purpose.

The Republicans are cowering in knock-kneed terror.

Potential challengers are dropping out with comical regularity.

The last credible challenger standing is former state Sen. Dan Webster, who is so conflicted he can't say yes and he can't say no.

So he ponders away while the Republicans cross their fingers for a savior.

"I don't have to be in elective office," Webster says. "I am happy coasting right now. It's great."

You don't enter a race against someone like Alan Grayson with this mindset. You go into this race needing to be in Congress more than you need to breathe.

Despite all this, Orange County GOP Chairman Lew Oliver says this about Grayson, "I guarantee he's going to lose."

Oliver is an unstable man who has come unhinged.

"We'll have at least three or four candidates running," he says. "A couple will be credible or substantial people. A couple others will fall into the noncrackpot category."

If you're not a crackpot and always wanted to see Washington, call Lew immediately.

The Republicans look like a bunch of Chihuahuas yapping at the Rottweiler behind the fence. But this Rottweiler not only is snarling and frothing at the mouth, it also went to Harvard.

It is a crazy and smart Rottweiler.

So there is lots of yapping, but nobody is about to open the gate and take him on.

Consider state Rep. Steve Precourt.

Last week he boldly announced that Grayson was an "egomaniacal, socialist, loose cannon."

Then he announced someone else would have to do something about it because he wasn't running.

Yap. Yap. Yap.

Orange Mayor Rich Crotty once was considered the Republicans' best hope. In June, Grayson released a seven-page letter explaining in detail how he would gut Crotty over Crotty's leadership of the expressway authority.

In early July, Crotty said he had made a decision and would announce it shortly.

Days turned to weeks, weeks turned to months — until finally, the mayor gave us his verdict.

He could beat Grayson "handily." But he wasn't going to run.

Pretty slick. He declared victory and bowed out of the race.

The Republicans also tried and failed to recruit Florida House Speaker Larry Cretul of Ocala.

At one point, CNL Financial Group President Tim Seneff seemed like a perfect choice. He had no political record to attack, and he had deep pockets to offset what is expected to be a lackluster fundraising cycle.

Seneff didn't dawdle like the politicians. A couple days after his name surfaced, he opted out.

This leaves Dan Webster.

He was supposed to make an announcement last week. Then he was supposed to make one Monday. I called him, and he still hadn't decided.

He is doing his best Rich Crotty impersonation.

Webster sounds very much like someone pondering whether to jump off the roof.

The Republicans are yelling: Jump! Jump!

And his family is yelling: Don't! Don't!

His family loves him, and the Republicans are using him.

"That's the way it is in politics," Webster says. "People need you when they need you."

In 10 minutes, I didn't hear a single positive thing from him about entering the race.

I think he is happy here in Central Florida, near his six kids, near his five grandkids, running his air-conditioning business, going to his church.

The alternative is that he could open the gate and go in the backyard with the crazy, frothing Harvard Rottweiler and get the worst mauling of his political life. If he wins, the prize will be going to a faraway city he doesn't like, starting life in his 60s as a freshman congressman in the minority party.

If Webster opts out, Oliver says, there will be plenty of people ready to take his place.

"His [Grayson's] solid support is below 30 percent," says Oliver.

"He loses to a generic Republican in several polls I have seen."

All he has to do is get one of those generic Republicans to run.

Mike Thomas can be reached at 407-420-5525 or mthomas@orlandosentinel.com.

Copyright © 2009, Orlando Sentinel

USDOJ Press Release: Former County Commissioner Indicted

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For Immediate Release
October 29, 2009 United States Attorney's Office
Southern District of Ohio
Contact: (937) 225-2910

Former Butler County Commissioner, Dublin Attorney Each Charged with Conspiracy and Tax Crimes

CINCINNATI—A federal grand jury here has indicted former Butler County Commissioner Michael A. Fox and Dublin, Ohio attorney Robert C. Schuler, alleging that they conspired to improperly benefit from Butler County contracts involving a company doing business with the county, and that the men failed to report income from the deals on their federal income tax returns. Fox is also charged with mail fraud involving honest services for failing to disclose conflicts of interest in Ohio ethics disclosure statements he mailed annually from 2004 through 2007. Schuler is charged with perjury for allegedly false testimony he gave to a federal grand jury on October 1, 2008.

Carter M. Stewart, United States Attorney for the Southern District of Ohio, Keith L. Bennett, Special Agent in Charge, Federal Bureau of Investigation, Cincinnati Division (FBI) and Jose A. Gonzalez, Special Agent in Charge, Internal Revenue Service Criminal Investigation (IRS) announced the indictment today.

The eight-count indictment charges each defendant with one count of conspiracy to commit mail fraud, and one count of filing a false income tax return. The indictment charges Fox with four counts of mail fraud involving honest services. The indictment also seeks forfeiture of any property which is derived from proceeds traceable to the offenses alleged in the indictment, including but not limited to a sum of money equal to $460,000.

The indictment alleges that Fox, 60, of Hamilton, solicited and accepted money from individuals and businesses which were Butler County contractors from 2001 – 2005 when he was a member of the Butler County Board of Commissioners.

Many of the charges stem from a contract between Butler County and NORMAP Telecommunication LLC, in 2001 to install a county-wide fiber optics communications system. Schuler bought NORMAP after the company received the contract. Schuler received approximately $1,824,281 from Butler County. The grand jury charges that Schuler and Fox arranged for $360,000 to be transferred to a bank to pay off a line of credit in Fox’s name in March 2002 and an additional $100,000 was later transferred to a consulting company Fox owned in September 2002.

The indictment alleges that Fox also received payment from other individuals and businesses doing business with the county.

The indictment alleges that Fox committed mail fraud when he mailed his Ohio Ethics Commission Financial Disclosure Statements omitting the payments he received and failing to disclose conflicts of interest in 2004, 2005, 2006 and 2007. The indictment charges that Fox filed a false income tax return for 2002 when he failed to disclose and pay income taxes on the payment. The indictment charges Schuler with filing a false income tax return for 2002 by failing to report business income he received. Schuler, 46, of Dublin, is charged with making false statements in October 2008 to a grand jury investigating the circumstances surrounding the $360,000 transfer to Fox.

Each count of mail fraud involving honest services and conspiracy to commit mail and wire fraud is punishable by up to 20 years imprisonment. Filing a false income tax return is punishable by up to three years imprisonment, plus taxes, penalties and interest. Perjury is punishable by up to five years imprisonment.

Each man is scheduled to have an initial appearance before a U.S. Magistrate Judge today.

An indictment is merely an accusation. All defendants should be presumed innocent until and unless convicted in a court of law.

USDOJ Press Release: Bill Allen and Richard Smith, Former Officers of VECO Corporation, Sentenced for Roles in Alaska Public Corruption Scheme

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For Immediate Release
October 28, 2009 United States Attorney's Office
District of Alaska
Contact: (907) 271-5071

Bill Allen and Richard Smith, Former Officers of VECO Corporation, Sentenced for Roles in Alaska Public Corruption Scheme

WASHINGTON—Bill J. Allen and Richard L. Smith were each sentenced in separate hearings today for their participation in a corruption scheme in which they provided approximately $395,000 in corrupt payments to public officials from the state of Alaska, announced Assistant Attorney General Lanny A. Breuer of the Criminal Division. Allen and Smith were sentenced in U.S. District Court for the District of Alaska by U.S. District Court Judge John W. Sedwick.

Allen, 72, the former chief executive officer of VECO Corporation, was sentenced to 36 months in prison, a $750,000 fine and three years of supervised release. Smith, 64, the former vice president of community and government affairs for VECO Corporation, was sentenced to 21 months in prison, a $10,000 fine and three years of supervised release.

Both defendants pleaded guilty on May 7, 2007, to three-count informations charging each with bribery; conspiracy to commit bribery, extortion under color of official right, and honest services mail and wire fraud; and conspiracy to defraud the Internal Revenue Service (IRS) of the U.S. Department of the Treasury. According to court documents, Allen and Smith conspired with at least five members of the Alaska legislature to provide illegal financial benefits to several Alaska elected officials in exchange for those officials’ support on legislation pending before the Alaska state legislature. Allen and Smith also pleaded guilty to one substantive count of bribery, and admitted that they provided approximately $395,000 in benefits to public officials from the state of Alaska in connection with the scheme.

The Allen sentencing was handled by Deputy Chief James M. Trusty of the Criminal Division’s Gang Unit, Trial Attorney Kevin R. Gingras of the Criminal Division’s Appellate Section and Trial Attorney Peter M. Koski of the Criminal Division’s Public Integrity Section. The Smith sentencing was handled by Trial Attorney M. Kendall Day and Deputy Chief Raymond Hulser of the Criminal Division’s Public Integrity Section. The case is being investigated by the FBI and IRS Criminal Investigation

Wednesday, October 28, 2009

Huffington Post: Senator Reid Gets No Republican Support for Resolution Honoring Hispanic Media

For the past week, Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid's office has been looking for a Republican co-sponsor for an utterly non-controversial resolution honoring the legacy and role of Hispanic media.

None came, his office confirms. On Tuesday, Reid introduced and passed a resolution designating October 25 through October 31, 2009, the "National Hispanic Media Week" in honor of the Latino Media of America. The Nevada Democrat was joined by Sens. Robert Menendez (New Jersey), Mark Udall (Colorado) and Kirsten Gillibrand (New York) -- all of whom are Democrats.

The resolution was your typical no-thrills, superficial fare that often takes up Senate business. Just last month, for instance, North Carolina's Republican and Democratic senators (Richard Burr and Kay Hagan, respectively) introduced a resolution congratulating "the High Point Furniture Market on the occasion of its 100th Anniversary as a leader in home furnishing" (a thrilling legislative breakthrough).

In the case of the current resolution, however, there are obvious political sensibilities at stake. The Hispanic community, which has felt demonized by harsh anti-immigrant rhetoric from congressional Republicans and conservative media personalities, has gravitated further and further from the GOP tent. By declining Reid's efforts to sign on to a rather milquetoast resolution, the party may only exacerbate the alienation.

When a similar resolution honoring Hispanic media was introduced and passed in 2005, former Sens. Pete Domenici (R-N.M.) and Mel Martinez (R-FL) attached their names to the list of co-sponsors. And that was two election cycles before it became abundantly clear that the Republican Party was losing serious ground among Hispanic voters.


Read more at: http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2009/10/28/reid-gets-no-gop-support_n_337364.html

Tuesday, October 27, 2009

Cliches by the Carload, Some Fifteen (15) Grammatical Errors in One Little 'Ole Paragraph, RANDY BRUNSON Announces to Run for County Commission


From the local hate website, www.plazabum.com:

I personly (sic) believe That (sic) elected officals (sic) sould (sic) not endorse candidates. Although (sic) I will have to say I have been endorsed by elected officals (sic). If it happens this time it will no (sic) be reported by me. But someone that (sic) makes statements like (sic). I like all the candidaes (sic), or I (sic) going to say (sic) out of it, or it might be bad for my business
eventhough (sic) if I could I would support xyc, or many other statements. If you don't want to help and support your candidates then don't. But just vote. I hink (sic) that as a candidate we would like to know how you feel

I officially filed Friday Oct. 23 ed at 4:15 PM for dist.2 county commission.

Who I am
Some of my accomplishments
Issues
Solutions

Will be on My Web Site the first of Nov.
Press release this comming (sic) Wed.
Election in Aug. 2010

This is one of my invitions (sic), if you want to have fun and want to make a difference
please join our team.
Randy

Tuesday, October 20, 2009

Another Abramoff-connected Republican Bush Operative Sentenced to Federal Prison for Abusing the Public Trust

See below.

USDOJ Press Release: Former GSA Chief of Staff David Safavian Sentenced for Obstruction of Justice and Making False Statements

Department of Justice Press Release
For Immediate Release
October 16, 2009 United States Attorney's Office
District of Columbia
Contact: (202) 514-7566

Former GSA Chief of Staff David Safavian Sentenced for Obstruction of Justice and Making False Statements

WASHINGTON—Former General Services Administration (GSA) Chief of Staff David H. Safavian was sentenced today to one year in prison on charges of obstruction of justice and making false statements in connection with the investigation into the activities of former Washington lobbyist Jack Abramoff, the Department of Justice announced.

In addition to the prison term, Safavian was sentenced today to two years of supervised release by U.S. District Court Judge Paul L. Friedman of the District of Columbia.

Safavian was found guilty by a federal jury in June 2006 of obstruction of justice and making false statements, but the verdicts were later vacated by the Court of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit and remanded for a new trial. A federal jury once again convicted Safavian of one count of obstruction of justice and three counts of making false statements on Dec. 19, 2008.

The jury in the second trial heard evidence that while Safavian assisted Abramoff in connection with the lobbyist’s attempts to acquire GSA-controlled properties, Abramoff took him on a luxury golf trip to Scotland and to London. The jury found that over the span of three years, Safavian made false statements in an attempt to conceal the fact that around the time of the golf trip he aided Abramoff with business before the GSA. The false statements included statements made to a GSA ethics officer and a GSA Office of Inspector General (GSA-OIG) Special Agent as well as falsely certifying a financial disclosure form.

The jury heard evidence at trial that Safavian’s efforts to cover up the assistance he provided Abramoff continued after he left the GSA in November 2004 to become the Administrator for the Office of Federal Procurement Policy at the Office of Management and Budget. The jury found that in May 2005, Safavian made false statements to an FBI Special Agent investigating Abramoff’s lobbying activities. According to evidence introduced at trial, Safavian told the FBI agent that he was unable to assist Abramoff with GSA-related activities around the time of the golf trip because he was a new employee at GSA.

Abramoff pleaded guilty in January 2006 to charges of conspiracy, honest services mail fraud and tax evasion and was sentenced in September 2008 to four years in prison in addition to the 22 months he served prior to the sentencing date. To date, 20 individuals, including lobbyists and public officials, have pleaded guilty, been convicted at trial, or are awaiting trial in connection with the ongoing investigation into the activities of Abramoff and his associates.

The case was prosecuted by Senior Litigation Counsel Nathaniel B. Edmonds and Trial Attorney Albert Stieglitz Jr. of the Criminal Division’s Fraud Section and Trial Attorney Justin V. Shur of the Criminal Division’s Public Integrity Section. The investigation of this case was led by the FBI with assistance from the GSA-OIG. The ongoing investigation of the Abramoff matter is being led by the FBI.

Friday, October 16, 2009

Have You Heard? Can You Name the First Government Agency on the First Coast to Ban Discrimination Against Gay, Lesbian and Bisexual Employees?

Answer: The Anastasia Mosquito Control District of St. Johns County (AMCD), by unanimous vote at their October 15, 2009 meeting, voted to ban discrimination on the basis of "sexual orientation." The vote was 5-0.

Kudos to AMCD Chair Janice Bequette and Commissioners John Sundeman, Jeanne Moeller, Vivian Browning and Ronnie Radford for supporting the policy change. I salute them.

I am proud of our AMCD for supporting equality and I call upon every other governnental and private employer in St. Johns County to follow their example.

I was proud to help pass a resolution in the American Bar Association House of Delegates in Denver in February 1989 calling for such changes. My mentor, the Honorable Nahum Litt, who was then Chief Judge of the U.S. Department of Labor, was a member of the ABA House of Delegates and he helped lobby fellow judges and delegates to support the resolution, which twice before had been defeated. Numerous states and cities now ban such discrimination. Our Commander in Chief, President Barack Obama has called for ending anti-gay discrimination in the military.

Perspicacity and perseverance always work -- so does optimism.

It is reported by "Out in America" that "since 1990, seven counties and ten cities in Florida have amended their fair employment and housing laws to cover sexual orientation, and/or gender identity or expression. Such laws are in effect in Broward, Leon, Miami-Dade, Monroe, Orange, Palm Beach and Pinellas counties, as well as in the cities of Gulfport, Gainesville, Key West, Lake Worth, Miami Beach, Orlando, Sarasota, St. Petersburg, Tampa and West Palm Beach."

Thus, AMCD is the first governmental agency in the First Coast to respect Gay rights. It will not be the last.

As playwright Tony Kushner wrote in Angels in America, "only in politics does the miraculous occur.”