Journalist @baltimoresun writer artist runner #amwriting Chaplain PIO #partylikeajournalist

Journalist @baltimoresun writer artist runner #amwriting Chaplain PIO #partylikeajournalist
Journalist @baltimoresun writer artist runner #amwriting Md Troopers Assoc #20 & Westminster Md Fire Dept Chaplain PIO #partylikeajournalist

Tuesday, October 02, 2007

20071001 CBS/AP: Travel: Lose Your Cares, Luggage, Sanity


Travel: Lose Your Cares, Luggage, Sanity

Airline Fashion Cops, Missing Suitcases And Runway Rage; In 2007, Consumers Said "Enough"

Oct. 1, 2007


(CBS/AP) For the thousands of passengers who spent hours stuck on runways, on crowded planes, staring at signs that quickly flashed from "on time" to "delayed" to "cancelled," 2007, was the year that time stood still.

This was the year air rage became part of the traveling lexicon and being successfully reunited with one's luggage became more wishful thinking then an expected occurrence. Once you were unsure if the airlines would search your bags for contraband contact lens solution. Now your too-sexy clothes may get you booted off a plane.

And it wasn't just the airlines who were behaving badly. According to the The Wall Street Journal American Airlines told the Transportation Security Administration in July that a passenger on a flight to New York had slapped a flight attendant when the plane was ordered emptied in Miami after bad weather kept the flight from leaving.

"Abnormal, aberrant or abusive behavior in the context of the air-travel experience" is back with a vengeance, Andrew Thomas, an assistant professor of business at the University of Akron, who has written books about air rage and aviation "insecurity," told the Journal.

More than 1 million pieces of luggage were lost, damaged, delayed or pilfered by U.S. airlines from May to July, according to data from the Bureau of Transportation Statistics, reports the Washington Post.

June and July ranked among the 20 worst months for mishandled baggage in 20 years.

The year started out bad and only got worse.

[…]

Then, a harsh winter storm back in February triggered hundreds of flight delays. JetBlue suffered a terrible blow to its customer-friendly public image when ticket holders were stuck on the tarmac for nearly 11 hours. The airline weathered the storm but not before the incident sparked a new wave of consumer advocates and proposed guidelines that ideally guarantee the weary traveler "clean sanitary facilities, regardless of class of service" and truthful information regarding delays and flight status.

The summer was no better with problems piling upon cancellations. The nation's seven busiest airports now account for 72 percent of the nation's flight delays.

[…]

Read the entire article here: Travel: Lose Your Cares, Luggage, Sanity

http://www.cbsnews.com/stories/2007/10/01/travel/main3314904.shtml

Related:

Reporter's Journal: Faulty Towers

Slide show: Worst Airports for Delays

Untangling the Traffic Jam in the Air

Terminal Traffic: Five U.S. airports among the world's busiest in 2006.

Travel Tips: Get tips from CBSNews.com's How-To Travel Guru, Jim Gullo, and share your travel experiences.

The Politics Of Airline Travel

Passport Wait Times Back To Normal

####

20071002 CNSNews.com E-Brief The Right News, Right Now

CNSNews.com E-Brief The Right News, Right Now

Tuesday, Oct. 2, 2007

Visit our web site at www.cnsnews.com

(I have been keeping up with the Rush Limbaugh story by way of the “WorcesterRight,” which has consistently posted timely news and analysis on the matter. I recommend that you also go there to be fully informed… And oh – great work Worcester Right. I really appreciate your time and effort… Kevin Dayhoff)


Sen. Levin Read Only ‘Part’ of Limbaugh’s ‘Phony Soldiers’ Transcript

On the Spot. (CNSNews.com) - Radio talk show host Rush Limbaugh is under fire from liberal media critics and congressional Democrats for using the term “phony soldiers” to describe Jesse Macbeth, who was sentenced to five months in prison for falsifying his military records. “Was he (Limbaugh) referring to a single person?” Sen. Carl Levin (D-Mich.) asked on Monday...

Democrats Get Personal in Their Campaign Against Limbaugh

(CNSNews.com) – In a speech on the Senate floor Monday, Sen. Tom Harkin (D-Iowa) blasted radio talk show host Rush Limbaugh for his “phony soldiers” comment: “Well, I don't know, maybe he was just high on his drugs again…If so, he ought to let us know, but that shouldn't be an excuse,” Harkin said...

Texas Mayor Threatens Suit to Block Border Fence

(CNSNews.com) - Upset over the Department of Homeland Security’s newly released map for 102 miles of fencing along the U.S.-Mexico border, the mayor of Brownsville, Tex., is trying to block construction of the border fence and has denied DHS officials access to city property...

Iraqi VP Credits Surge for ‘Major Improvement’ in Security

(CNSNews.com) - Visiting predominately Sunni Jordan on Saturday to promote Sunni-Shiite reconciliation, Iraq’s Shiite Vice President Adel Abd-al-Mahdi said in a televised press conference that the surge strategy being pursued by the U.S. military has increased security in his country and that he has seen increasing signs of political reconciliation there...

Supreme Court Case Pits Texas Against Bush and International Court of Justice

(CNSNews.com) - One of the cases the Supreme Court will hear in its new term has officials from Texas accusing their former governor, President George W. Bush, of overstepping his authority by ordering them to follow an international court's ruling concerned an illegal immigrant convicted of murder...

Miller to Review Procedures for Approving Local Sponsorships after Folsom Fair

(CNSNews.com) – Miller Brewing Company announced Monday that it is “conducting an immediate audit” of its procedures for approving local marketing and sales sponsorships to ensure that the use of its logo in events like the sadomasochistic Folsom Street Festival doesn’t happen again...

Critics Call for Olympic Boycott Over Burma

(CNSNews.com) – Burma’s clampdown on pro-democracy protesters has given new impetus to calls for Western countries to boycott the 2008 Beijing Olympic Games over China’s poor human rights record. So far, no government has pledged to do so...

Burma Regime Says Things Are Back to ‘Normal’

(CNSNews.com) – A day before the U.N.’s top human rights body holds a special session on Burma’s bloody clampdown on opposition protests, the military regime’s foreign minister declared that “normalcy” had returned to the country...

Israeli Official Accuses French TV of Staging Palestinian Boy’s Death
Jerusalem (CNSNews.com)
– An Israeli government official for the first time has accused a French television station of staging the shooting of a 12-year-old boy, whose death in the arms of his wounded father sparked the Palestinian uprising seven years ago...

Click here for much more of this hour's top news...


OTHER CNSNEWS.COM HEADLINES:

Putin Outlines Future Political Steps

Ukraine's Political Uncertainty Continues

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NEWS FROM THE WEB:

New Planned Parenthood Clinic Opening for Business on Tuesday

Protesters Vow to Stop Columbus Day Parade

Poll: Americans Want War Funding Cut

Chertoff: Route for Border Fence Still Undecided

Homosexual Groups Angered by Weaker Antidiscrimination Bill


COMMENTARY

Clinton Campaign ‘Media-Controlled, Media-Obsessed’

By Tom Fitton

Two stories hit the press last week that highlight the Clinton campaign’s obsession with secrecy and control, especially when it comes to their public image. The Clintons have always been controlling, paranoid and secretive. The real shame of it all is the fact that the media allows it to happen…


LETTERS TO THE EDITOR

Dingell Out of Touch

####

20071001 Stock Market: Dow Jones Passes 14,000 for Record High

Stock Market: Dow Jones Passes 14,000 for Record High

NEW YORK – By JOE BEL BRUNO, The Associated Press, October 1, 2007

Wall Street began the fourth quarter with a huge rally Monday, sending the Dow Jones industrial average to a record close. Stocks were buoyed by a growing belief that the worst of the credit crisis has passed.

The Dow rose 191.92, or 1.38 percent, to 14,087.55, surpassing its closing record of 14,000.41 set in mid-July. The blue chip index rose as high as 14,115.51 to eclipse its previous intraday high of 14,021.95 set July 17.

[…]

Meanwhile, the market was optimistic that new economic data might nudge the Federal Reserve toward another interest rate cut at its Oct. 30-31 meeting. The Institute for Supply Management said the manufacturing sector grew in September at the slowest pace in six months; the trade group said its index of manufacturing activity registered at 52.0 in September, below forecasts for a reading of at least 52.5.

"People are getting more confident there is going to be an October rate cut," said John C. Forelli, portfolio manager for Independence Investment…

[…]

Broader market indexes also rose sharply. The Standard & Poor's 500 index rose 20.29, or 1.33 percent, to 1,547.04, nearing its all-time trading high of 1,555.90, also reached in mid-July. The Nasdaq composite index rose 39.49, or 1.46 percent, to 2,740.99; the tech-laden index remains well below its high of 5,048.62, reached in 2000 when it was bloated by the dot-com boom.

The Dow finished a turbulent third quarter with a 3.6 percent gain, after the Fed eased investor concerns over the credit and housing markets by lowering key interest rates half a percentage point.

Bonds moved higher Monday, with the yield on the benchmark 10-year Treasury note falling to 4.55 percent from 4.59 percent late Friday. Fixed-income investors, currently concerned about the dollar's recent weakness, interpreted the ISM report as not necessarily portending an interest rate cut, which would further erode the U.S. currency.

The dollar was mixed Monday against other major currencies, while gold prices rose.

A barrel of light, sweet crude fell $1.42 to $80.24 on the New York Mercantile Exchange. This extended last week's decline amid concerns that oil market fundamentals do not support recent high prices.

[…]

Read the rest of the article here: Stock Market: Dow Jones Passes 14,000 for Record High

20071001 House fire on Golden Eagle Court in Westminster



House fire on Golden Eagle Court in Westminster, Carroll County Maryland

October 1, 2007

Firefighters from seven county fire departments, including members of the Westminster Fire Department, responded to a two-alarm fire on Golden Eagle Court around noon today in Westminster.

The home on the western end of town was completely destroyed and several nearby homes damaged. No one was hurt.

This video was taken several hours after the fire companies had left the scene.

20071001 CyberAlert

CyberAlert

Monday October 1, 2007


1. MSNBC Smears Limbaugh with 'Phony Soldiers' Distortion

All day Friday, even after Rush Limbaugh corrected the misinformation, MSNBC promoted a story fed to them by the far-left Media Matters about how Rush Limbaugh had called military personnel who served in Iraq and oppose the war "phony soldiers."

Limbaugh opened his noon EDT radio show on Friday by explaining how he was referring not to any real soldier but a phony one, notably Jesse MacBeth, who became a hero to the left when he recounted how his Army unit murdered innocent Iraqis. In fact, he hadn't even completed basic training.

Nonetheless, MSNBC headlined a 4pm EDT segment "'PHONY SOLDIERS' INSULT; Rush Limbaugh: U.S. Troops Who Oppose Iraq War are 'Phony.'"

At the top of the next hour, Chris Matthews teased Hardball: "Radio talk show host Rush Limbaugh says veterans who support withdrawing the troops are 'phony soldiers.' Those are his words."

Then at 8pm EDT, with "Limbaugh Bashes Vets for Withdrawal" on screen, and briefly "...Phony Soldiers..." over video of Limbaugh, Keith Olbermann teased Countdown: "Comedian Rush Limbaugh tries to back out of his quote: Servicemen protesting the war are quote, 'phony soldiers.'"

2. Sore Loser: With No Thomas Interview, NBC Features Anita Hill

CBS's 60 Minutes got the first interview with Clarence Thomas on the occasion of the release of his memoir and ABC's Good Morning America is in line for the morning show exclusive interview with him to air multiple days this week, thus leaving NBC News out of the mix.

So, the losing network decided to resurrect Anita Hill.

Anchor Lester Holt teased Sunday's NBC Nightly News: "Her story. Justice Clarence Thomas speaks out, and tonight so does the woman who nearly derailed his confirmation. My exclusive interview with Anita Hill."

Though Hill's charges against Thomas look pretty tame through the later revelations of Bill Clinton's actions with women, Holt depicted them as "charges of crude sexual advances" and "shocking allegations." Also, without any mention of the left-wing activists with whom Hill colluded, Holt sympathetically described her as "a reluctant witness."

3. Steph on Clinton: 'Philanthropist Who Happened to Be President'

ABC's George Stephanopoulos put on a sycophantic display in his pre-taped interview on Sunday's This Week with his former boss, ex-President Bill Clinton.

Holding up the magazine as the two sat in a room at the Clinton Global Initiative meeting, Stephanopoulos touted "this great story in The Atlantic this month about your philanthropy" which "says you're basically re-inventing philanthropy" and, quoting the author, "'history may remember Bill Clinton as the philanthropist who happened to be President.' You okay with that?"

The ever humble Clinton insisted: "I'll have to live a very long time to have as positive an impact on as many people in the United States and around the world in my after life as I did as President."

Next, Stephanopoulos oozed that the 1991 campaign slogan of "buy one, get one free" with Bill and Hillary is now "about as resonant as ever" with Hillary and Bill.

As Clinton chuckled, Stephanopoulos wondered: "Is it more true now than it was then?" In the previous segment, Stephanopoulos was a bit less celebratory about GOP prospects, asking in-studio guest Newt Gingrich: "How much are you worried that, you know, this year, 2008, is shaping up to be another 1964 for the Republican Party?"

4. ABC Lobbies for Liberal Legislation on Time Off; Touts '08 Dem

On Friday's Good Morning America, for the fourth time this year, the ABC program skewered America for not being generous with paid leave and openly lobbied viewers to support a Democratic, big government initiative.

After lumping the U.S. in with countries such as Liberia and Lesotho, as being one of only five countries that don't provide paid maternity leave, GMA contributor Tory Johnson appeared with Democratic presidential candidate Chris Dodd to promote his legislation. "First and most important is to make your voice heard, Johnson exclaimed. Openly advocating this government expansion, she added, "On the GMA Web site, we have links to all the Senator's and Congressmen's offices. Call them. E-mail them. Let them know where you stand."

5. Field Charges that Anti-War Comment Caused Fox to Bleep Her

Actress Sally Field charged, on Friday's Good Morning America, that Fox censored, as part of some pro-war agenda, her Emmy night remark that "if mothers ruled the world, there would be no Goddamned wars."

According to the Flying Nun star, "when it has to do with war at all on Fox, I think they all ran around like a bunch of chickens and started pulling wires, you know, 'Get her off the air!'"

Of course, the actual reason her comments were edited was because Fox feared being fined by the FCC for her use of "Goddamned."

Other edits that night included a profanity and Ray Romano's use of the word "screwing." In fact, Fox allowed several conservative-slamming, non-vulgar jokes to air unimpeded.

GMA co-host Diane Sawyer again indicated that the TV star's edited anti-war tirade at the September 16 Emmys was simply no big deal. Sawyer dismissively observed: "Again, we were saying at the time, everybody in Canada heard the whole thing, sat at home and watched it."

Agreeing with the implication of American provincialism, the Brothers and Sisters star noted, "And in London. A friend of mine in London." Sawyer added that the cultured British must have been "thinking probably nothing much of it."

6. NBC Gives Springsteen Platform for Litany of Liberal Complaints

Giving a live concert on the Friday Today show, Bruce Springsteen didn't just sing but railed against the past six years of George W. Bush's administration. Although he didn't mention Bush by name, the outspoken liberal rocker didn't need to connect the dots as he hit just about every complaint leftists have charged against the current administration. During his talk-up before his performance of "Living In the Future," Springsteen yelled about "rendition," "illegal wiretapping," "voter suppression," "an attack on the Constitution," "the neglect" of New Orleans and "the loss of our best young men and women in a tragic war."

Check Out the MRC's Blog

The MRC's blog site, NewsBusters, "Exposing and Combating Liberal Media Bias," provides examples of bias 24/7. With your participation NewsBusters will continue to be THE blog site for tracking and correcting liberal media bias. Come post your comments and get fresh proof of media misdeeds at: http://www.newsbusters.org

A usually-daily report, edited by Brent H. Baker, CyberAlert is distributed by the Media Research Center, the leader since 1987 in documenting, exposing and neutralizing liberal media bias.

The 2,499th CyberAlert. Tracking Liberal Media Bias Since 1996

6:25am EDT, Monday October 1, 2007 (Vol. Twelve; No. 172)

20070929 Duke Apologizes To Lacrosse Players

Duke Apologizes To Lacrosse Players

President Says University Should Have Better Supported Students During Rape Investigation

http://www.cbsnews.com/stories/2007/09/29/national/main3311631.shtml

DURHAM, N.C., Sept. 29, 2007


(AP) Duke University President Richard Brodhead apologized Saturday for not better supporting the men's lacrosse players falsely accused in last year's highly publicized rape scandal.

Brodhead, speaking at the university's law school, said he regretted Duke's "failure to reach out" in a "time of extraordinary peril" after a woman accused three players of raping her at a March 2006 party thrown by the team.

"Given the complexities of this case, getting the communication right would never have been easy," Brodhead said. "But the fact is that we did not get it right, causing the families to feel abandoned when they were most in need of support. This was a mistake. I take responsibility for it and I apologize for it."

Brodhead spoke at a school-sponsored forum on legal and ethical issues common to high-profile cases, and he received a standing ovation following his speech. He left afterward and school officials said he would not be available for further comment.

As authorities began to investigate the allegations, Brodhead and the university initially suspended the highly ranked team from play. He later canceled the remainder of its season and ousted longtime coach Mike Pressler. Meanwhile, Durham County prosecutor Mike Nifong labeled the team "hooligans" as he searched for suspects.

But even as Nifong won indictments against players Reade Seligmann, Collin Finnerty and Dave Evans, it became clear the allegations had no merit.

State prosecutors determined in February the accuser's story was a lie, and North Carolina Attorney General Roy Cooper called the three players innocent victims of Nifong's "tragic rush to accuse."

[…]

Read the rest: Duke Apologizes To Lacrosse Players

Monday, October 01, 2007

20070930 Maryland Governor Martin O’Malley’s September 2007 press releases

Maryland Governor Martin O’Malley’s September 2007 press releases

September 30th, 2007

September 27 Governor O’Malley Presents Comprehensive Solution to the State's Structural Deficit

September 26 Governor O’Malley Meets with Seniors on Budget Solution

September 25 Governor O’Malley Outlines Plan to Recapture Slots Revenue for Maryland

September 24 Governor O’Malley Announces Plan to Invest in Higher Education and Transportation

September 21 Governor O’Malley Announces Plan to Close Corporate Loopholes

September 20 Governor O’Malley Receives Woodrow Wilson Award for Public Service

September 20 Governor O’Malley Announces Plan to Cut Property Taxes by 3 Cents

September 19 Governor O’Malley Announces Plan to Reform Maryland's Income Tax Structure; Makes Tax Structure Fairer for Working Families; 95% of Marylanders to Pay Less

September 18 Statement by Governor Martin O’Malley On Court of Appeals Ruling

September 14 Governor O’Malley Announces Maryland Life Sciences Advisory Board

September 12 Governor O’Malley Launches BayStat Website

September 10 Governor O’Malley Awards Governor's Cup to Winner of 2007 Maryland Wine Competition

September 8 Governor Announces Executive Order to Commemorate War of 1812

September 6 Governor O’Malley Announces Assistance for Mount Airy, Maryland

September 6 Governor O’Malley Announces Ralph S. Tyler Maryland Insurance Commissioner

20070925 New designs to commemorate Lincoln cent in 2009

New designs to commemorate Lincoln cent in 2009

The Kansas City Star is carrying an Associated Press article on the designs under consideration for a remake of the Lincoln cent in 2009. For numismatists and presidential history buffs – especially those who are particularly fascinated with President Abraham Lincoln; this is fun stuff.

Hat Tip: Don Surber.

The Associated Press

[…]

To commemorate the event (the 200th anniversary of Abraham Lincoln’s birth and the 100th anniversary of the introduction of the Lincoln cent,) the U.S. Mint, at the direction of Congress, will introduce four rotating designs on the 1-cent coin for that year depicting different aspects of Lincoln’s life.

Those designs will replace the engraving of the Lincoln Memorial on the “tails” side of the coin. The famous profile of the 16th president will remain on the “heads” side.

The Citizens Coinage Advisory Committee, which provides recommendations on such matters, met Tuesday and got into a lively debate over what those rotating images should be.

The panel chose a log cabin depicting where Lincoln was born in 1809 for the first image. Lincoln as a young man reading a book and taking notes with a quill pen was the panel’s choice for Lincoln’s early years, and Lincoln on the floor of the Illinois Legislature won out for the best design of Lincoln in early adulthood.

[…]

Read the entire article here: New designs to commemorate Lincoln cent in 2009

20040900 Just For Fun Presidential Trivia


Just For Fun Presidential Trivia


Retrieved September 30, 2007 – For folks who enjoy Unites States presidential history and trivia, I came across a fun section on the National Park Service web site the other night doing some research for an upcoming column.


Just For Fun: Presidential Trivia can be found here: http://www.nps.gov/pub_aff/pres/trivia.htm


Enjoy.


####

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10 20071001 Erratum

Sunday, September 30, 2007

20070929 12-Year-Old Asks Bush To Sign Children's Health Bill

20070929 12-Year-Old Asks Bush To Sign Children's Health Bill

12-Year-Old Asks Bush To Sign Children's Health Bill

September 29th, 2007

"I don't know why President Bush wants to stop kids who really need help from getting CHIP…”

Graeme Frost, 12, delivers this week's Democratic Radio Address. Because of the Children's Health Insurance Program (CHIP), Graeme was able to get the medical care he needed after a serious car accident caused severe brain trauma, paralyzed one of his vocal chords and put him in a coma. He asks President Bush to sign into law the renewal of CHIP that both houses of Congress passed this week with broad bipartisan support.

The text of the radio address, as delivered, is below:

"Hi, my name is Graeme Frost. I'm 12 years old and I live in Baltimore, Maryland. Most kids my age probably haven't heard of CHIP, the Children's Health Insurance Program. But I know all about it, because if it weren't for CHIP, I might not be here today.

"CHIP is a law the government made to help families like mine afford healthcare for their kids. Three years ago, my family was in a really bad car accident. My younger sister Gemma and I were both hurt. I was in a coma for a week and couldn't eat or stand up or even talk at first. My sister was even worse. I was in the hospital for five-and-a-half months and I needed a big surgery. For a long time after that, I had to go to physical therapy after school to get stronger. But even though I was hurt badly, I was really lucky. My sister and I both were.

"My parents work really hard and always make sure my sister and I have everything we need, but the hospital bills were huge. We got the help we needed because we had health insurance for us through the CHIP program.

"But there are millions of kids out there who don't have CHIP, and they wouldn't get the care that my sister and I did if they got hurt. Their parents might have to sell their cars or their houses, or they might not be able to pay for hospital bills at all.

"Now I'm back to school. One of my vocal chords is paralyzed so I don't talk the same way I used to. And I can't walk or run as fast as I did. The doctors say I can't play football any more, but I might still be able to be a coach. I'm just happy to be back with my friends.

"I don't know why President Bush wants to stop kids who really need help from getting CHIP. All I know is I have some really good doctors. They took great care of me when I was sick, and I'm glad I could see them because of the Children's Health Program.

"I just hope the President will listen to my story and help other kids to be as lucky as me. This is Graeme Frost, and this has been the Weekly Democratic Radio address. Thanks for listening."

###

Graeme Frost, 12, was in a serious car accident a few years ago and suffered severe brain trauma. He was in a coma and lost his ability to eat and walk. Fortunately, Graeme was covered by the CHIP program and was able to get the medical care he needed. After extensive therapy and continual treatments at a clinic he goes to every summer, Graeme has regained his functional abilities. He still needs to visit several different specialists, and his mother, Bonnie, says he would not have survived - or would at least be wheelchair-bound - without medical coverage.

Saturday, September 29, 2007

20070926 Daily Photoblog


"N. Main St."

Kevin Dayhoff

20070928 News Clips


News Clips

Sept. 28, 2007

STATE NEWS

Republican long shots get moment in spotlight
Candidate debate on issues of importance to minorities is notable as much for who's not there as for what's said
http://www.baltimoresun.com/news/nation/bal-te.debate28sep28,0,7413692.story?coll=bal_tab01_layout
The lesser-known Republican presidential candidates had the stage to themselves last night at Morgan State University, taking advantage of high-profile absences to pitch themselves to a national audience. The no-shows meant a larger share of the spotlight for contenders all polling in single digits. But it came with challenges: The event's hosts and some questioners voiced skepticism that the Republican Party offered any opportunities for people of color.Even if the Republican s won converts, it was unlikely they would benefit anytime soon, given the relatively few blacks and Hispanics expected to vote in the GOP primaries.
The debate was perhaps most noteworthy for who wasn't there.

Leading GOP Candidates Skip Debate on Black Issues

4 Contenders Attend Fundraisers Instead

http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2007/09/27/AR2007092702264.htmlFred D. Thompson was at a fundraiser in Franklin, Tenn. Mitt Romney was gathering checks in Rancho Santa Fe, Calif. Rudolph W. Giuliani was in California raking in some last-minute cash just north of Napa. John McCain spent the day in New York City, giving a speech and raising money.

Such were the scheduling conflicts that left the lecterns for the leading candidates for the Republican presidential nomination empty at what was billed as the first GOP debate tailored to the concerns of black voters, held last night at Morgan State University in Baltimore.

Right cheek or left, it still feels like a slap
At GOP debate on minority issues, absent candidates incur resentment
http://www.baltimoresun.com/news/nation/bal-te.scene28sep28,0,2898579.story?coll=bal-business
Outside the debate hall at Morgan State University, African-Americans across the political spectrum used the phrase "slap in the face" when expressing their frustration at the decision of four leading Republican presidential candidates to skip last night's debate. About two-thirds of the 2,000-plus-seat Murphy Fine Arts Center was filled for the debate. "I heard there was really bad traffic," said Public Broadcasting Service representative Carrie Johnson. "But I think we're overall proud and pleased." The chairman of Morgan's political science department called the debate "a major event" for the university. "It will give us some national showcasing," said Max Hilaire.

Maryland might take tip from Del.
http://www.baltimoresun.com/news/local/politics/bal-md.slots28sep28,0,7832441.story?coll=bal_tab01_layout
Gov. Martin O'Malley's announcement that he will push for legalized slot machine gambling to help solve Maryland's budget woes was short on specifics, but he gave clues to his thinking that suggest he is exploring a slots program that would be similar to Delaware's. While O'Malley said he favors "state ownership" of slot machines, that doesn't mean the state would build facilities and hire contractors.
Maryland could, like Delaware, lease slot machines from vendors, link them to a central computer through the state's lottery and place the devices in privately run racetracks or other facilities.

O'Malley has given few details of what kind of slots program he envisions for Maryland, including where machines would go and how revenues would be divided.

"We're going to introduce something very close to what the House did," O'Malley said, referring to a slots bill that passed in the House of Delegates in 2005 but died in the Senate. "In the House plan, the machines were going to be state-owned," he said. "We'll have something in bill form in the not-too-distant future."

School fund plans emerge
O'Malley renews push to boost city, D.C. suburbs

http://www.baltimoresun.com/news/education/bal-md.omalley28sep28,0,1648983.story?coll=bal_tab01_layout
Gov. Martin O'Malley is renewing his push to funnel tens of millions more in state dollars a year to schools in Baltimore City and suburban districts, a move aimed at helping counties with higher costs of living bear the price of providing a more expensive education. Under the plan, 12 high-cost districts would share $38 million in the fiscal year that starts in July 2008, $76 million in the following year and $129 million by 2011. The biggest beneficiaries would be Baltimore City and the Washington suburbs. His plan requires the General Assembly's approval.
According to the formula in the landmark Thornton legislation that recommended initiatives such as statewide full-day kindergarten, Montgomery and Prince George's counties and Baltimore City would receive the most, with Montgomery receiving as much as $12 million and Baltimore City receiving between $7 million and $9 million in the first year. It's O'Malley's second shot at providing this cost adjustment. A measure stalled in the Maryland General Assembly during the past legislative session amid concerns over budget deficits.

Though the study found test scores rose in every county and the city over the three-year period, particularly in the elementary grades, fiscal conservatives on local school boards and at the state level have criticized schools for using the money to boost salaries. They say this is a move away from Thornton's intent to put in place programs that closed achievement gaps among minority and poor students and their peers.

Cummings urges halt to razing of homes
Congressman says rebuilding plans must be done first
http://www.baltimoresun.com/news/local/baltimore_city/bal-te.ci.housing28sep28,0,6433253.story
Rep. Elijah E. Cummings called yesterday for a moratorium on the demolition of public housing in Baltimore until "demonstrable progress" is made in constructing homes for low-income residents.
In a letter to city Housing Commissioner Paul T. Graziano, the Democratic congressman said he is "gravely concerned" about plans to demolish housing at 15 sites in Baltimore before redevelopment plans are complete. The demolition is being paid for with money from the city's affordable housing fund. "I think Mr. Graziano needs to stop and pause," Cummings told The Sun yesterday. "I don't want this to be a bulldozer going through the city, leaving a trail of dust with the people standing on the sidelines with no place to go."

Panel seeks fly-ash rules
MDE developing standards tougher than those of U.S.
http://www.baltimoresun.com/news/local/annearunde l/bal-ar.ash28sep28,0,2297501.story
As Maryland's environmental agency tries to broker a deal over the disposal of billions of pounds of coal ash in Gambrills, an internal panel is quietly working to create standards that would surpass those of the federal government and many states.


Stephen L. Pattison, assistant secretary of the Maryland Department of the Environment, said a panel of regulators was assembled last month to begin considering new rules, fueled by the discovery of cancer-causing metals in 23 private drinking wells near the fly-ash disposal site operated by BBSS Inc. The state does not intend to pursue an outright ban on fly-ash disposal in Maryland, though Anne Arundel County Executive John R. Leopold has called for such a ban. "There's a strong interest in what's going on in Gambrills," Pattison said Wednesday. "The lesson learned is: We need to have a much stronger regulatory program." Leopold, a Republican who has intr oduced a bill to ban dumping of fly ash in Anne Arundel, called the effort to create more stringent regulation of fly ash "welcome." But he again criticized the O'Malley administration for not involving the county in the discussions. "Just as the state has precluded county involvement in the negotiations, the state has precluded the county's involvement in drafting new regulations," Leopold said Wednesday. "That is unfortunate and not helpful." Leopold said he will seek to eliminate a loophole in his fly-ash ban legislation, offering an amendment to prohibit dumping such ash at rubble landfills.

Harford officials propose land tax credit
http://www.baltimoresun.com/news/local/harford/bal-md.ha.credits28sep28,0,813208.story
Harford County officials proposed an agricultural land tax credit yesterday intended to spur interest in saving farmland and help those who already have acreage in the preservation program. "This is all about making Harford affordable for people who already live here," County Executive David R. Craig said yesterday, when he announced the proposal in Churchville. County Council President Billy Boniface, a lifelong farmer, said the credit, which has not changed since Harford began its land preservation efforts in 1994, would help increase farm profit and attract other landowners to the program that permanently safeguards land from development.

Local leaders meet with lawmakers
http://www.fredericknewspost.com/sections/news/display.htm?StoryID=65662
Local leaders are hopeful a Thursday afternoon meeting with state lawmakers will help their message get to Annapolis, but still fear major budget cuts could wreak havoc on county and municipal budgets.
The Frederick County Commissioners initiated the meeting after the state's Department of Legislative Services released the so-called "doomsday budget" in June. The budget calls for almost $21 million in funding cuts to Frederick County.
Sen. David Brinkley, the Senate minority leader, said the doomsday budget was designed by Democrats in favor of new taxes to spur meetings exactly like the one Thursday. "(The purpose) was to initiate people to have activity back in the hinterlands and frankly to scare the local governments and scare the county governments into saying this is what's going to happen to us," Brinkley said.

Students dismiss, praise GOP contenders
http://www.examiner.com/a-960351~Students_dismiss__praise _GOP_contenders.html
Morgan State freshman Malcolm Mays walked into the Republican debate at his school not knowing which presidential candidate for whom to vote. He walked out with at least one name in mind. A few carloads of students who belong to the College Republicans at University of Maryland, Baltimore County, also attended. Another UMBC College Republican, Devon Chamberlain, came to learn more about the candidates' platforms. "I didn't know much about the candidates before this," said Chamberlain, a UMBC freshman political science major. "I was impressed with the way they thought on their feet."

O'Malley plans to freeze Thornton funding
http://www.examiner.com/a-960058~O_Malley_plans_to_freeze_Thornton_funding.html
After a week rolling out a series of tax increases and cuts, Gov. Martin O'Malley told a roomful of officials late Thursday that he would close a $1.7 billion budget deficit next year and beyond by freezing Thornton school aid funding, saving $400 million over the next two years. The freeze on the indexing of Thornton spending reverses a repeated campaign promise that "we will fully fund the entire Thornton Commission plan to improve K-12 education across Maryland."
Local education officials had not been given advance warning of the governor's school funding lid. But Kevin Maxwell, superintendent of Anne Arundel County schools, said, th"I don't think he should freeze Thornton for two years." Maxwell noted that the governor was "proposing" the change in formula that was mandated in law by the General Assembly. "There is a legislature," Maxwell said.

O'Malley fleshes out budget plan on tax tour
http://www.washingtontimes.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20070928/METRO/109280094/1004
Maryland Gov. Martin O'Malley ended his statewide tax tour yesterday with a more definitive outline of how he plans to close the state's $1.7 billion budget shortfall, including plans to cut education funding. Mr. O'Malley, a Democrat, said he would cut $207 million in mandated education spending while phasing in an optional $38 million for teachers based on where they work.
Many of the new taxes, including increasing corporate income tax and car-titling fees, will go toward increased spending, after the shortfall is erased. The sprawling plan left some Marylanders wondering what the net effect would be for them.


Democrats often attacked former Gov. Robert L. Ehrlich Jr., a Republican, for not completely funding the mandated education initiative known as the Thornton Plan, even giving students a day off from school to protest Mr. Ehrlich's plan. But Mr. O'Malley's plan to do the same with education spending had a roomful of people applauding him yesterday.

Mr. O'Malley hopes to move his plan through the assembly during a special session before November. He expect the entire plan, including slots, to generate $2.2 billion by the end of July 2009. "We don't really have a good backup plan if we don't come back for a special session," he said.

Builders Might See Big Jump In Taxes
Leggett Hoping Council Curtails Planners' Advice
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2007/09/27/AR2007092701226.html
Montgomery County's planning board yesterday agreed to recommend making it more costly for developers to build in traffic-clogge d areas and stuck to a proposal to nearly triple taxes for some new development. The planners' decision on those issues brushed aside opposition from County Executive Isiah Leggett (D) and several county council members. But the board did back off its proposal to increase the recordation tax paid by buyers and sellers when they close a real estate deal, another measure opposed by Leggett. Developers are expected to vigorously oppose the higher taxes, which they say would unfairly target new construction for problems they believe were created long ago.Jim Humphrey, who heads the land use committee for the Montgomery County Civic Federation, said he worries that the proposals rely too heavily on payments through impact taxes to offset the effect of new development. "It seems like the plan is to tell developers you can just throw money at the county and you'll get your project approved," he said.


LETTERS TO THE EDITOR

Midterm Retirement A 'Democratic Trick'
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2007/09/26/AR2007092601135.html?referrer=emailarticle
Having followed Del. Marilyn R. Goldwater's multiple absences in her prior term, I was compelled to do better and ran against her unsuccessfully last year for the District 16 seat. This retirement from her continued absences and health issues should have come at the end of her last term.
Although she can be thanked for her contributions, Goldwater's retirement one year into her new term should be exposed for what it is -- a partisan Democratic trick to maintain the lopsided majority and prevent the Republican Party from being able to participate in a fair and open election for a "vacant" seat. Once again, the majority has abused the system.
Michael Monroe
2006 Republican candidate
Maryland State House
District 16

EDITORIALS/OPEDS

Political Notes - O'Malley 'drops the puck'
http://www.fredericknewspost.com/sections/news/reporters_notebooks_display.htm?StoryID=65660
TO EXPLAIN the governor's recent budget proposals, state Sen. Minority Leader David Brinkley describes Martin O'Malley as the referee in a hockey game. He dropped the puck, is getting off the ice, and now it's up to legislative leaders to duke out the details, said Brinkley, a Republican who represents Frederick and Carroll counties. O'Malley presented the overview of his budget Thursday, but he's been going over specific components at media events throughout the state during the week. Frederick's delegation members have been following the developments carefully, but note the details are still vague, perhaps deliberately so.
Brinkley said the Senate's budget and taxation committee is just learning about the proposal and history. Nothing appears to have been decided. "The fact is no decisions have been made, no one has come to any type of a resolution on what should happen because there are so many different competing factions," Brinkley said.

Between the Democrats in D.C. and Maryland Gov. Martin O'Malley's new tax plans, I'm not sure who to be mad at the most.
http://www.carrollcountytimes.com/articles/2007/09/28/news/opinion/opinion/opinion880.txt
Anyone who believes the words of career politicians of either party ought to have their voter card revoked. House Speaker Nancy Pelosi wants to put a 100 percent tax on the obscene profits from the stock market and other investments so she can equalize the incomes of welfare recipients, the unemployed and minorities. O'Malley is in the process of touring specific areas of the state to sell his plan to increase just about ever tax there is and possibly create new ones if he can get away with it.
Redistribution of wealth is a buzzword that brings us closer to socialism. I have no problem taking responsibility for my own actions, inactions and decisions. I really wish the rest of the country would start taking responsibility again, but it is so much easier to stand there with a hand turned up and have it filled by Big Brother, isn't it? For me, socialism is too high a price to pay.

Debates rankle, not the no-shows
http://www.examiner.com/a-960029~Editorial__Debates_rankle__not_the_no_shows.html
Four leading Republican presidential candidates did not show at Morgan State University's debate last night. Big deal.
More importantly, the format of what passes for debates is so ploddingly fair and balanced and the responses so carefully scripted and focus-group approved that they serve as broadcast NyQuil.

If it were up to us, we would have moved the debate to a more crowd-friendly day and time. And we would require candidates to sign a pledge that their words are theirs alone, with no focus-group or public relations' approval. Maybe we're crazy. But if the popularity of reality shows is any indication, real sells. We just haven't seen it on the campaign trail yet.

Governor's road to slots shouldn't be traveled hastily
http://www. hometownannapolis.com/cgi-bin/read/2007/09_27-58/OPN
Gov. Martin O'Malley's attempt to chart the state's fiscal path - via a budget plan he has been gradually rolling out - took a detour on Tuesday. The governor steered toward the future and arrived back in 2005.
The governor's own plan, still short on specifics, would involve 9,500 to 15,000 slot machines, which he expects would eventually generate $650 million annually for the state. But even in the plan's early, sketchy form, there's no evidence that slots have to be approved immediately to get the state past next year's budget shortfall. Taxes and fees can be raised quickly. But slot machine gambling - which will require contracts and a complex regulatory system - will take years to set up.
That means there's no hurry for the state to pass this part of the governor's plan. And there's even less reason to try to hustle it through, with minimal public comment, during a legislative special session this au tumn - except, perhaps, as a matter of political expediency.

Political courage and the gasoline tax
http://www.gazette.net/stories/092807/policol43706_32364.shtml
Each campaign year, candidates for office flood Maryland voters with a litany of familiar-sounding promises: Vote for me, and I'll cut your health care costs. I'll reduce your children's class sizes. I'll get rid of traffic. The real test for our officials in Annapolis, however, ought not to be their passion on the issues we all agree on. Nobody opposes smaller class sizes. It ought to be their courage on issues that may not be politically convenient, but are nonetheless vital to our quality of life.

An issue like that surfaced last session in Senate Bill 949, the Transportation Funding Act of 2007. In that bill, Senate President Thomas V. Mike Miller proposed raising the state's gasoline tax from 23.5 to 35.5 cents per gallon. Neither chamber of the legislature found the courage to pass it.

It has been a decade and a half since Maryland last increased its gasoline tax. It's past time for the state to react to the inflation that has occurred over that time and lead the nation in taking our global warming and national security challenges seriously. And you need not be a liberal to agree.

What's more, maybe the legislature can find the funds to pay for all the usual campaign promises by passing the 12-cent increase. You can't reduce health care costs, class sizes and traffic for free.

NATIONAL NEWS

Gilchrest urges Gingrich to run for president
http://hosted.ap.org/dynamic/stories/M/MD_GILCHREST_GINGRICH_MDOL-?SITE=MDSAL&SECTION=STATE&TEMPLATE=D EFAULT
U.S. Rep. Wayne Gilchrest says he wants former U.S. House Speaker Newt Gingrich to run for president. Gilchrest sent out a news release this week announcing that he had sent a letter to Gingrich, urging him to seek the Republican nomination.
Gilchrest says Gingrich, who represented a district in Georgia, was controversial but he's also a visionary.
The Eastern Shore Republican stopped short of saying he would support Gingrich if he sought the Republican nomination for president. But he did stress that he hasn't yet endorsed any candidate in the Republican presidential field, and is unlikely to do so until Gingrich makes his plans clear.

Brothers to launch biodiesel plant in Baltimore
Buckeystown company plans to start production in next year
http://www.gazette.net/stories/092807/businew50337_32360.shtml
For years, the Butz brothers - Edward, Thomas, Robert and Jeremy - have been tinkering like mad scientists with the biodiesel production process. They are now on the verge of launching what they hope will be their successful entry into the growing market for the alternative fuel. Butz said he hopes widespread use of biodiesel will relieve the United States of its dependence on foreign oil, while creating a fuel with multiple benefits for the environment. Del. Paul S. Stull, who toured the Buckeystown operation Tuesday with several other members of the state's Environmental Matters Committee, said he thinks government could have a role in boosting the use of the alternative fuel. ''It's a good renewable fuel," said Stull (R-Dist. 4A) of Walkersville. ''If we can keep that going, it's going to hopefully help with the price of gasoline."
Rep. Roscoe G. Bartlett (R-Dist. 6) of Buckeystown supports tax credits for biodiesel, which for producers are $1 per gallon for biodiesel derived from agricultural products and 50 cents per gallon for fat-based products, said his spokeswoman Lisa Wright.