Wednesday, August 3, 2011

New Arena in Nassau Voted Down

The proposal went down in flames, a rout.

People are catching on. Specifically, they are figuring out that when the government spends money, it doesn't come from some magic place. It comes from taxpayers. And taxpayers have had enough.

The center of this debate has shifted massively in the last year, both locally and nationally.

Friday, May 6, 2011

People Needed

Attend THE TAX CAP RALLY
 
 
ALBANY, TUESDAY  MAY 10, 2011

Thursday, April 28, 2011

What Went Unsaid at the Bedford 20/20 Indian Point Panel

I attended the Bedford 20/20 Forum on Indian Point. Sadly, after the rather lengthy comments from panel members, only three people from the audience were asked to comment. Had I been one of them, this is what I would have added:

  1. The host from 20/20 said Indian Point supplied 20% of our regional power. This is inaccurate. Depending on the time of day/year, it's actually as high as 40%. It is a huge source of power.
  2. While I will credit Mike Kaplowitz for acknowledging that we'll have to build a large gas or coal fired plant to replace IP, neither he, nor anyone else, mentioned cost. Long Island has the highest electric bills in the nation because they are still paying for the de-commissioning of Shoreham. Close IP, and we will leapfrog them.
  3. There is a moral dimension to increasing the cost of local living that few seem to consider. Higher energy costs are, essentially, a regressive form of taxation, i.e. it affects the poor and middle class the most. Does anyone think that's desirable?
  4. I thought Bedford 20/20 was all about decreasing carbon emissions. The immense new coal or gas plant that would replace IP would produce lots of emissions. IP produces zero.
  5. The Japan earthquake, which was much discussed, was 1000 times as powerful as the biggest earthquake ever recorded in our area. Even then, it was the tsunami that did the real damage. It is simply not possible for events like these to happen in Buchanan, NY. We don't live in the ring of fire.
  6. Even if we did shut down IP, we'd be left with the spent fuel rods, which are most people's area of concern. Shut down the plant and the net result is a huge spike in our cost of living and yet no reduction in (perceived) danger.

And as for the minister who asked us all to consider the "spiritual" aspects of the issue, I confess I have no idea what she was talking about. I hope her church can afford a higher energy bill.

Thursday, March 17, 2011

Time for a Little Levity

Top ten ways to tell if you might be a member of a public employees union...
By David Letterman  
10.) You take a week off to protest in Wisconsin and your office runs better. 
9.)  On a snow day when they say “non-essential” people should stay home you know who they mean. 
8.) You get paid twice as much as a private sector person doing the same job but make up the difference by doing half as much work. 
7.) It takes longer to fire you than the average killer spends on death row. 
6.) The worse you do your job, the more your boss avoids you. 
5.) You think the French are working themselves to death. 
4.) You know that by having a copy of the Quran on your desk your job is 100% safe. 
3.) You spend more time at protest marches than at church. 
2.) You have a Democratic congressman's lips permanently attached to your butt. 
And the #1 way to tell your a public union member.  
DRUM ROLL PLEASE……. 
1.)  You pay more in union dues than you do for your health care insurance.

Tuesday, March 1, 2011

Did You Know Teachers Are Millionaires?


Public sector unions, we're on to you, particularly the teachers union. Some of us have been on to you for years, warning that inflated salaries and benefits would lead to fiscal calamity. For many states, that calamity is here. It's unfortunate that it takes a crisis to get anyone to focus.

How many times have we heard, "You can't pay teachers enough," or, "We have to pass bigger budgets to preserve our home values." These stubbornly held shibboleths seem risible now. Our home values have been trashed by tax levies, and all that money wasn't going into the classroom, anyway. It was never about the kids.

As far as teacher pay, here are the words, like Voldermort, that one dares not say: teachers are paid too much. (Pause…hey, I'm still here.) Consider two facts. First, our area private schools manage to attract first–rate talent for around 70% of public teacher salaries. Further, private school teachers don't get guaranteed lifetime pensions and family health, they don't get paid extra for coaching or helping with the school play or monitoring recess, they don't get tenure, automatic raises irrespective of performance, 15 sick days, five bereavement days, three religious holidays (in addition to Christian and Jewish), and four personal days. They don't get $1339 for overseeing the juggling club. (See the BCSD contract for all of this.) If private school teachers get sick, they don't come in that day like the rest of us. The average private school teacher takes less than one sick day a year.

Second, did you know most teachers are millionaires? If you present value their retirement benefits, you get to $1 million pretty easily. Say a teacher retired this year. That teacher gets 70%, give or take, of their salary for the rest of his or her life. That's about $84,000 a year (not taxed by the state, incidentally). Plus, they get health benefits for their entire family for life. That's worth another $16,000 a year, for a total of $100,000 a year. Live for 25 years and that's a total 0f $2.5 million. Discounted at 4%, it's $1.6 million.

There is zero difference between this and having an IRA with a value of $1.6 million, except the rest of us didn't demand that taxpayers fund our IRAs. Still think teachers are underpaid?

We need grownups to wrest control of the situation. For years, politicians, from governors down to school boards, have been giving away taxpayer money in exchange for votes and political contributions. It is institutionalized corruption and it has brought our state and others to edge of calamity. It has raised taxes so much that 1.8 million people have fled the state in the last decade, including my mother who left last month after 80 years because she couldn't take it anymore.

I am not anti-teacher. We have many fine ones, and sadly they are forced by law to join the union.  That union plays a nasty and thuggish game, and for years no one called them on it. Now everyone is, and across political parties. Cuomo, Bloomberg, Christie; Democrat, Independent, Republican. And it's all got to go: tenure, LIFO, automatic raises, the Triborough Amendment…the entire edifice will collapse under its own weight because people are finally paying attention. 

Cue the caterwauling. It won't change the facts.

Thursday, February 17, 2011

Moving to Facebook

All:

Much of this will now be moved over to Facebook. Please find and "like" the page "Freeze New York School Budgets Now."

This is going to be a very important effort. We need it to go viral around the state, because the big battle is now with Albany. I will continue to post now and then on this blog on issues that are strictly local.

Please go to the page and hit "suggest to friends" and send it to everyone you know who might be sympathetic. You can even send it to out-of-state friends who are on our side. The goal here is a big number - 500,000 or more.

For too long the broad, diffuse interests of the taxpayer have taken a back seat to narrow, loud, and well-funded interests. Social networking is how we even the playing field.

Let's make it happen.

P.S. If you're not on facebook, please consider it. It is not frivolous, and grows more important as an organizational tool by the day.

Monday, February 14, 2011

Friday, January 28, 2011

More Great Chris Christie Video

Why isn't anyone saying these things in New York?

Christie Telling It Like It Is