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 30, 2007

20071029 News Clips


News Clips

Oct. 29, 2007

STATE NEWS

Raising money raises doubts
Propriety of events prompts questions as lawmakers meet
http://www.baltimoresun.com/news/local/politics/bal-te.md.fundraisers29oct29,0,2750588.story
If the General Assembly's special session beginning today were to last 30 days, it would coincide with at least 10 lawmakers' fundraisers -- events that are forbidden during regular sessions. For a decade, Maryland has banned state officials from holding fundraisers during the 90-day sessions that begin in January. The goal, backers say, is to curb the appearance of impropriety by stopping lawmakers from soliciting campaign contributions while voting on legislation that could affect their donors. But holding fundraisers during specia l sessions is legal.
Mary Boyle, spokeswoman for Common Cause, a watchdog group, said the different rules for fundraising are another reason why Maryland should adopt public financing of elections. "What should be prohibited is people raising money from lobbyists or interests that have direct business before the General Assembly during the special session; anyone who has their hand out on the budget, which I am sure is a lot of interests. We would hope legislators would show some self-control and not try to take advantage of this. It may be legal, but is it in the best interests of Marylanders?" Boyle said.

Sales tax lightning rod of session : Adding services to mix sets up a lively debate
http://www.capitalonline.com/cgi-bin/read/2007/10_28-08/TOP
The sales tax has been around in Maryland for abo u t 60 years and typically only pops up when a resident buys a new shirt or blender. As the state's economy shifts from one based on goods to one centered on specialties, however, lawmakers are starting to eye the selective world of service taxation.One of the special session lightning rods will be Gov. Martin O'Malley's attempt to raise the sales tax from 5 cents on the dollar to 6 cents, which would be the first sales tax hike in 30 years. Another piece of that proposal, however, is the governor's wish to expand the sales tax to services it does not presently cover, such as tanning salons and health club memberships.There is no shortage of opposition to both of those measures, particularly with Republicans. Critics blast the sales tax as the most "regressive" form of taxation because it hits everyone evenly and therefore, proportionally, will have the biggest impact on people who earn the least amount of money.

General Assembly: Lawmakers ad d ress budget deficit
http://www.fredericknewspost.com/sections/news/display.htm?StoryID=66952
Gov. Martin O'Malley will address both houses of the Maryland General Assembly tonight as state lawmakers begin a special session intended to address the state's operating budget deficit.
Legislators will spend the rest of the week, and possibly the next, in committee hearings.
Four members of Frederick County's delegation serve on committees scheduled to meet next week: Delegate Galen Clagett on the House Appropriations Committee, Delegate Joseph Bartlett on the House Ways and Means Committee, Delegate Paul Stull on the Environmental Matters Committee and Senator David Brinkley on the Senate Budget and Taxation Committee and on the Spending Affordability Committee.
Republican Delegate Patrick McDonough, who represents Baltimore and Harf o rd counties, put a notice on his website asking people to contact Democratic legislators in conservative or moderate districts.
He calls those legislators the "tax target 39," and Frederick County's two Democratic representatives are among them.

Lawmakers set to tackle taxes, slot machines
http://www.washingtontimes.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20071029/METRO/110290066/1004
The General Assembly"s special session begins tonight with lawmakers from across the state returning to consider Gov. Martin O"Malley"s plan to increase taxes and legalize slot-machine gambling to close Maryland"s budget shortfall. Though Senate President Thomas V. Mike Miller Jr. and House Speaker Michael E. Busch ultimately will decide how and which of Mr. O"Malley"s six bills pass, lawmakers in key committees and from such important voting blocs as Prince George"s County plan on tying their support to local aid.
The O'Malley administration can expect that lawmakers will bring such concerns back to Annapolis and that the governor will have to make some deals if he wants to pass his tax-and-slots plans to close Maryland's $1.7 billion shortfall and increase transportation and health care spending. The session is expected to last several weeks.
Montgomery County lawmakers have been hesitant to support the O'Malley plan to overhaul the personal-income-tax structure because of a report from Comptroller Peter Franchot that showed that the county would bear more than 80 percent of the increased tax burden on high-wage earners. Still, most lawmakers say legalizing slot machines remains the hardest call.
Republican leaders say slots always have been needed to have a successful budget plan because of how much Mr. Miller has tied himself to the issue. "The slots bill right now is Miller's price for passage," said House Minority Whip Christopher B. Shank, Western Maryland Republican. "That's his political price."

Session Has High Stakes for O'Malley
Potential Fates: Gaining in Polls Or Losing Face
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2007/10/28/AR2007102801525.html
In meetings with Democratic legislative leaders, Maryland Gov. Martin O'Malley has invoked the final scene from the 1990s movie "Thelma and Louise" to suggest their shared fate if they fail to close the state's estimated $1.7 billion shortfall.
The film ends with the two friends-turned-outlaws kissing and then plunging off a cliff to their certain deaths rather than taking responsibility for their actions. It is a powerful image, and lawmakers certainly have much at stake in the s p ecial legislative session that O'Malley (D) has called starting today to fix the budget. But no one has more riding on the outcome than the governor.
If the General Assembly passes his plan to close the shortfall by raising taxes and legalizing slot-machine gambling, O'Malley undoubtedly will be given most of the credit for tackling a long-festering problem that his predecessors largely avoided, analysts and lawmakers said. That, in time, could bolster his lackluster job-approval rating, if experiences of governors elsewhere are any guide. But if the session ends in stalemate, it will be a major embarrassment for the governor, who is summoning lawmakers to Annapolis against the advice of their leaders.

If O'Malley is unable to orchestrate a successful session, "it could really hurt his future dealings with legislators," said Republican consultant Kevin Igoe.

"They would question his understanding of Annapolis." Igoe and other Republicans hope that O'Malley's championing of tax increases will result in lasting political damage, regardless of the session's outcome. "If the taxes are passed and people are paying them, I think it becomes more of a burden to him," Igoe said. "Having pushed for the special session, it's going to be very clearly viewed as a test of his leadership," said Mike Morrill, a longtime Democratic operative. "This will redefine the governor's relationship, for better or for worse, with the General Assembly."

Stakes high at session eve
O'Malley says consensus near on $1.7 billion deficit plan
http://www.baltimoresun.com/news/local/politics/bal-md.session29oct29,0,5372017.story
Legislators are taking hiatus from their regular jobs and heading to A n napolis. Lobbyists are readying PowerPoint presentations and making the rounds with legislative leaders and top aides. Special-interest groups are planning a series of rallies on Lawyers Mall. Everyone, it seems, has a stake in the special session of the Maryland General Assembly that begins today. We're on the verge of a consensus for all of the major components of this package," O'Malley said in an interview.
"The reason I'm opposed is we should have done this some time ago," House Minority Leader Anthony J. O'Donnell said on WBAL Radio's Robert and Kendel Ehrlich Show. "It's wrongheaded and it's a way for people to dodge the issues." He said he favors a yes-or-no vote by the legislature on the issue.
Among the bills to be introduced is the "Tax Me More" legislation from Sen. E.J. Pipkin, an Eastern Shore Republican and outspoken foe of tax increases. It would give M aryland taxpayers the option of contributing more during tax return time. "These Marylanders that want to invest more in their state government will have that option," Pipkin said."We don't want these closed-door meetings that have typified past special sessions where they cut deals and then ram it down our throats," said Del. Christopher B. Shank, the House minority whip from western Maryland.
With such a broad range of proposals, interest groups are lining up to give testimony and planning rallies. The Republican Party, for instance, is planning an anti-tax rally today.

In gritty area, slots draw mixed review
Discussion swirls over aspects of O'Malley plan
http://www.baltimoresun.com/news/local/baltimore_city/bal-md.slots28oct28001524,0,6454863.story
Serving midday beers at Colleen's Corner Tavern in Baltimore's blighted Westport neighborhood, Mike Eanes wasn't so sure that slot machines were the answer to the area's woes. "There comes a lot of grief with that kind of stuff," Eanes said yesterday when told that Gov. Martin O'Malley had proposed a referendum to approve slot machine gambling in five places, including along the Patapsco River's Middle Branch, which Westport overlooks. "You get high crime and riffraff, so I don't know how that would play out in the neighborhood."
Eanes, whose aunt, Colleen Van Skiver, has owned the tavern that bears her name for 26 years, said that the neighborhood "has been neglected for a while," and that if it takes slots to help it improve, so be it.
"I'm not going anywhere any time soon, because I want to see what all this brings," Eanes said.

Slots referendum call renews debate
Leaders, residents tr y to assess the effects gambling parlors might have in their areas
http://www.baltimoresun.com/news/local/politics/bal-md.politics28oct28,0,7219690.story
A day after Gov. Martin O'Malley proposed a referendum letting voters decide whether slots should be legalized, state and local leaders considered the impact that slots would have on their communities. Some vowed to fight against slots, while others said yesterday that the expected financial benefits trumped their reservations about gambling parlors.The plan, to be debated at a special legislative session that begins tomorrow, would allow up to 15,000 slot machines at five locations -- one each in Allegany, Anne Arundel, Cecil and Worcester counties, and Baltimore City. The proposed sites include two horse racing parks, Laurel Park and Ocean Downs, and areas strategically located to divert p e ople from driving to out-of-state gambling parlors.
The mayor of Ocean City, an area with a long history of opposition to slots, said that his community was prepared to fight against any bill to allow them, particularly at a proposed location at the Ocean Downs racetrack in Worcester County.
"We realize that the governor and the legislature have some very tough decisions to make, but we don't believe gambling is the answer," Mayor Rick Meehan said.
State Sen. George C. Edwards, a Republican representing Allegany, Garrett and parts of Washington counties, said that he supports slots, but with caveats. Edwards said that he would support slots only if the counties hosting them -- and perhaps surrounding counties that would be forced to accommodate increased traffic -- reaped a direct benefit from the revenue.

NAACP to state: No slots
http://www.examiner.com/a-1015806~NAACP_to_state__No_slots.html
A proposal to allow up to 15,000 slot machines in Maryland drew criticism Sunday from the NAACP and the state comptroller.
Emerging from its annual convention in Ocean City, the NAACP asserted that slots would prey on the poor and never bring economic development to inner-city neighborhoods. "It will be devastating for the low-income people," said Jenkins Odoms, president of the state conference of the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People. "It will bring crime and it is addictive. It does nothing for the community." The comptroller, Peter Franchot, warned slots could be just the beginning of a push to bring more legalized gambling to the city."Its not just a debate about putting a few slot machines in Baltimore; it's a debate about whether t h e city is going to become a gambling destination," Franchot said."It is a predatory industry. There is no such thing as limited slots. In state after state where slots have been legalized, the effort to expand them begins before the first machine is turned on.

Spotlight's on governor tonight
http://www.examiner.com/a-1015807~Spotlight_s_on_governor_tonight.html
It's showtime for Martin O'Malley. When the governor comes to the podium tonight to address the 188 members of the General Assembly, his soliloquy raises the curtain on the second act of the make-or-break performance of his first term. For O'Malley to be even partially successful with so many possible roadblocks to victory will be an achievement. He needs at least $1 billion in new revenues to make his budget plan come close to working.
U nbidden by the governor, the second act of this improvisational theater will include crowd scenes of sometimes unfriendly extras such as the Republican anti-tax rally called this afternoon for Lawyer's Mall between the governor's residence and the State House. Lawyer's Mall will be the staging ground for other rallies, pro and con, throughout this week of long, intensive hearings.
On slot machine gambling, he has had to compromise not just with House and Senate leaders, but with his own past positions. In 2003 in a WBAL radio interview, he said: "It's embarrassing to me that one of the wealthiest states in America would seek to solve its fiscal problems with a gambling gimmick that disproportionately targets poor people. That's the very definition of regressive." But in the same interview, he said: "I'm not opposed to some slots at the tracks so that we don't lose the racing industry." "A limited number of slots at racetracks" was his regular position, until September.

Teachers fighting freeze on state aid for retirement
http://www.examiner.com/a-1015802~Teachers_fighting_freeze_on_state_aid_for_retirement.html
Teachers across the state are fretting over the governor's threat to freeze $63 million in state aid for retirement benefits.
Reducing retirement benefits will hurt efforts to improve teacher retention because many educators are eventually lured away to neighboring states, such as Pennsylvania, which have better pension packages, teachers say.
The Baltimore Teachers Union plans to travel to Annapolis today to lobby lawmakers to preserve state aid for retirement benefits, said Marietta English, union president.
Teachers have already successfully lobbied a change in education funding - even before the special session begins.

State Tax Imbalance Could Sway Debate
Low Sales Tax Revenue May Draw Scrutiny During Drive to Close Budget Gap
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2007/10/27/AR2007102701254.html
When Maryland lawmakers convene for a special session tomorrow to close a potential $1.7 billion budget shortfall, they will consider overhauling a state tax system that is currently weighted more toward the personal income tax and away from sales and property taxes than most states'.
Maryland relies more heavily than almost any state on personal income taxes for revenue, according to a national analysis. It generates $1,638 per capita in personal income tax, well above the national average of $813 and ranking Maryland third in the nation. Fiscal analysts said Maryland, which this year was named the nation's wealthiest state by the U.S. Census Bureau, relies so heavily on the personal income tax to generate revenue because it is one of the only states to allow local jurisdictions to levy additional personal income taxes.
But Maryland has one of the most outdated personal income tax structures in the country, analysts said.
Marylanders appear divided over whether the tax structure is fair, according to The Post's poll. When asked about the overall state tax system, 55 percent said it was "very fair" or "moderately fair" and 44 percent said it was "not too fair" or "not fair at all."


EDITORIALS/OP-EDS

Opportunity in Annapolis
http://www.baltimoresun.com/news/opinion/editorial/bal-ed.session28oct28,0,1271963.story
Tomorrow, as state lawmakers convene for a special session to addres s Maryland's fiscal woes, they will face the complex and controversial multibillion-dollar plan proposed by Gov. Martin O'Malley. In the days that follow, Mr. O'Malley's $2 billion budget-balancing blueprint - as well as a handful of related bills likely to be offered by legislators - will be scrutinized, debated and voted upon. In the end, their success can be measured by only one result: the adoption of a real and long-term solution to the state's growing structural deficit.
But that's not to suggest state senators and delegates ought to be readying their rubber stamps. There's much in Mr. O'Malley's proposal with which to disagree. To name a few: We'd prefer linking state property taxes to capital spending and not cutting them slightly to earn political points, spending more on transportation projects, and applying a sales tax more broadly to services (and not just tanning salons) before raising it.

Easier to take money from hard-working Marylanders
http://www.times-news.com/opinion/local_story_300212833.html
As legislators from all over the state once again converge on Annapolis to fix the $1.7 billion structural deficit, I believe that it's worth asking the age old question: "What's in it for us?" Unfortunately, from everything that is being presented, Marylanders are truly getting the short end in this proposition.
President Reagan once said that we all sometimes have to gather around the kitchen table and talk about household budgets. There's always room to cut out the frivolous spending in order to stretch every dollar even further.
In this case, I am afraid that Gov. O'Malley and the Democratic leadership are skipping the kitchen table and have decided it is far more profitable to talk the neighbors into giving up their wallets. For the people of the state, Gov. O'Malley, please come ba c k to the table.
Brandon Butler, chairman
Garrett County
Republican Central Committee

Challenges await state reps
http://www.carrollcountytimes.com/articles/2007/10/29/news/opinion/opinion/opinion849.txt
I was surprised to see a pushback on the idea of a special session from a number of representatives, including some of our own. To me, it's obvious that a $1.7 million deficit isn't going to be an easy thing to fix, and there's much work that should be done sooner rather than later.
Even though the deficit won't kick in until next fiscal year, if anything the special session comes too late. Initial steps to help solve a recognized fiscal crisis should have been taken during the last regular session of the General Assembly to allow more time to fix a very difficult problem.As unpalat a ble as tax increases are, they have to be on the table as an option to consider. You really can't have a serious discussion about deficit reduction without including the tax burden in its many forms, unless of course you can spend money you don't have like the federal government does.O'Malley has also made revenues from slot machines a centerpiece of his proposal to avert the deficit. Sadly, the legalization of slots is starting to look like an inevitable outcome for the state. I just can't bring myself to support this proposal, although that apparently puts me in the minority according to statewide polls on the issue.Still, spending cuts and deferrals must be on the table right alongside revenue increases. It's the only responsible way for lawmakers to address the issues at hand.

O'Malley tax hike an unnecessary rip-off
http://www.examiner.com/a-1015788~Pat_McDonough__O_Malley_tax_hike_an_unnecessary_rip_off.html
Recently, a Wall Street Journal editorial described Gov. Martin O'Malley's statewide visits as a tax increase a day tour. The newspaper expressed sympathy for Maryland's taxpayers. After the O'Malley tour was completed, the final wreckage included 10 new tax hikes, costing a minimum of $2.5 billion the first year.
None of these proposed increases - to be debated in the special session starting today - are necessary. The real solution is reducing spending. Increasing spending by only 2 percent would eliminate about $1 billion from the deficit. Gov. O'Malley has used shameful class warfare rhetoric to promote the tax hikes, claiming only "the rich" will bear the burden of the increases. The reality is the so-called rich (people earning more than $150,000) will guarantee only $170 million in new funds. The other $1.5 billion in tax revenue that O'Malley claims he needs will come from the wallets of everyone else.
The O'Malley tax hikes create a minimum of 10 new tax increases and are the largest in the history of our state. Maryland will jump from the third-highest income tax in America to No. 1.Our most productive citizens, retirees and small-business owners will continue to vote with their feet and flee Maryland.
Del. Pat McDonough, a Republican, represents Baltimore and Harford counties.

Monday, October 29, 2007

20071029 Maryland General Assembly Special Session Public Hearing Schedule beginning October 30th, 2007

Maryland General Assembly Special Session Public Hearing Schedule beginning October 30th, 2007

Maryland General Assembly

Special Session Public Hearing Schedule

Tuesday, October 30

10:00 a.m., Joint Hearing Room

House Appropriations Committee, House Ways and Means Committee, Senate Budget and Taxation Committee, and the Spending Affordability Committee

(1) Spending Affordability Presentation – State Budget Overview

(2) Briefing on Governor’s Cost of Delay Budget Reductions

(3) Governor’s Proposed Budget Solution – Overview

1:00 p.m., Joint Hearing Room

House Appropriations Committee, House Ways and Means Committee, Senate Budget and Taxation Committee

(1) Hearing on the Governor’s Budget Reconciliation and Financing Act

a. Freeze on Education Implicit Price Deflator for State and Local Governments

b. Elimination of Electric Utility Property Tax Grant and Repeal of Electric Utility Company Property Tax Exemption

Wednesday, October 31

9:00 a.m., Joint Hearing Room

House Ways and Means Committee, House Appropriations Committee, and the Senate Budget and Taxation Committee

(1) Hearing on Governor’s Transportation Funding legislation

a. Vehicle Excise Tax

b. Motor Fuel Tax Indexing

c. General Fund Transfers

1:00 p.m., Joint Hearing Room

House Ways and Means Committee, House Appropriations Committee, and the Senate Budget and Taxation Committee

(1) Hearing on Governor’s Corporate Tax legislation

a. Controlling Interest

b. Corporate Income Tax Rate – dedication to Higher Education and Transportation

c. Combined Reporting

Thursday, November 1

10:00 a.m., Joint Hearing Room

House Ways and Means Committee, House Appropriations Committee, and the Senate Budget and Taxation Committee

(1) Hearing on Governor’s Property Tax Reduction legislation

House Ways and Means Committee and the Senate Budget and Taxation Committee

(2) Hearing on Governor’s Tobacco Tax legislation

1:00 p.m., Joint Hearing Room

House Ways and Means Committee and the Senate Budget and Taxation Committee

(1) Hearing on Governor’s Income Tax Restructuring legislation

a. Increase of Refundable Earned Income Tax Credit

b. Restructuring of Income Tax Rates

c. Refundable Sales Tax Credit

d. Senior Income Tax Exemption

(2) Hearing on Governor’s Sales Tax legislation

a. Sales Tax Rate

b. Expansion of Sales Tax to Certain Services

c. Sales Tax Holidays

1:00 p.m., 3 East, Miller Senate Building

House Health and Government Operations Committee and the Senate Finance Committee

(1) Hearing on Governor’s Health Care Reform legislation

1:00 p.m., Room 120 House Office Building

House Appropriations Committee

(1) Briefing and hearing on further budget reduction options

Friday, November 2

11:00 a.m., Joint Hearing Room

House Ways and Means Committee and the Senate Budget and Taxation Committee

(1) Hearing on Governor’s Video Lottery Terminal legislation

11:00 a.m., Room 250, House Office Building

House Environmental Matters Committee

(1) Hearing on Green Fund legislation

11:00 a.m., Room 120, House Office Building

House Appropriations Committee

(1) Briefing on Mandated Budget Appropriations

Saturday, November 3

10:00 a.m., 3 West, Miller Senate Building

Senate Budget and Taxation Committee

Work Session

10:00 a.m., Room 130, House Office Building

House Ways and Means Committee

Bill hearings to be announced

10:00 a.m., Room 120, House Office Building

House Appropriations Committee

Bill hearings to be announced

####

20071026 Len Lazarick: County officials back tax package

County officials back tax package


Len Lazarick, The Examiner, 2007-10-26 07


BALTIMORE


Elected county officials from across Maryland came to the State House on Thursday to support the governor’s entire revenue-raising package, including slots machines, but none of them would say whether they would accept slots in their own jurisdictions.


They were adamant in their opposition to anything like the $866 million in local funding cuts Gov. Martin O’Malley said he would make if his tax increases fail to pass.


“Those cuts will have serious consequences,” said Frederick County Commissioner Jan Gardner, president of the Maryland Association of Counties. “That pain will be very real. ... Families will suffer, the elderly will suffer, the children will suffer, the future will suffer. It will not be a pretty picture.”


[…]


Carroll County Commissioner Julia Gouge, one of two Republicans at the event, worried about the effect on senior citizens if counties had to raise property taxes to make up for aid county. “We cannot continually afford not to be getting our fair share.”


Read the entire article here: County officials back tax package


Related: Len Lazarick - The Examiner watch

October 29, 2007

Voters say 'No new taxes' - 10/29/2007
Their cry was loud and unified: “No new taxes.” A series of demonstrations by taxpayer, conservative and Republican groups around the State House on Monday lead the way for Gov. Martin O'Malley's call for a special session of the General Assembly where he was to give a short pep talk before legislators are to act on a series of taxes hikes.
http://www.examiner.com/a-1017112~Voters_say__No_new_taxes_.html

Spotlight’s on governor tonight - 10/29/2007
It’s showtime for Martin O’Malley. When the governor comes to the podium tonight to address the 188 members of the General Assembly, his soliloquy raises the curtain on the second act of the make-or-break performance of his first term.
http://www.examiner.com/a-1015807~Spotlight_s_on_governor_tonight.html

County officials back tax package - 10/26/2007
Elected county officials from across Maryland came to the State House on Thursday to support the governor’s entire revenue-raising package, including slots machines, but none of them would say whether they would accept slots in their own jurisdictions.
http://www.examiner.com/a-1011259~County_officials_back_tax_package.html

O’Malley proposes more to be spent on uninsured - 10/26/2007
Gov. Martin O’Malley is proposing the state spend as much as $250 million more each year to offer health insurance to 100,000 uninsured people by adding them to the Medicaid rolls and subsidizing very small businesses that begin offering health insurance to workers.
http://www.examiner.com/a-1011260~O_Malley_proposes_more_to_be_spent_on_uninsured.html

O’Malley starts outreach program - 10/25/2007
“No Americano extra” is what Gov. Martin O’Malley told a group of Hispanic business people when they taught him the Spanish version of one of his signature lines — “There is no such thing as a spare American.”
http://www.examiner.com/a-1008909~O_Malley_starts_outreach_program.html

Poll: Support up for slots, but down for O’Malley - 10/25/2007
Gov. Martin O’Malley’s approval rating has declined among Maryland voters, but those voters overwhelmingly support the governor’s plan to bring slot machines to the state, according to a new statewide poll released Wednesday.
http://www.examiner.com/a-1008938~Poll__Support_up_for_slots__but_down_for_O_Malley.html

O’Malley unveils big budget cuts - 10/24/2007
Big cuts in aid to counties, libraries, schools, universities, health care, state police and dozens of other programs will be needed if the legislature doesn’t pass tax increases next month, Gov. Martin O’Malley said Tuesday as he unveiled his own version of a “doomsday” budget.
http://www.examiner.com/a-1006600~O_Malley_unveils_big_budget_cuts.html

Poll: Support for slots is up, down for O’Malley - 10/24/2007
Support for slots among Maryland voters is up, but it's down for Gov. Martin O’Malley, according to a new statewide poll. The poll also found overwhelming backing for a referendum on slot machine gambling.
http://www.examiner.com/a-1006485~Poll__Support_for_slots_is_up__down_for_O_Malley.html

The 3-minute interview: Warren Deschenaux - 10/23/2007
Warren Deschenaux is the director of the Office of Policy Analysis for the Department of Legislative Service in Annapolis. He and his staff will play a key role in analyzing the governor’s deficit-cutting tax changes.
http://www.examiner.com/a-1004461~The_3_minute_interview__Warren_Deschenaux.html

Plucky O’Malley needs luck of the Irish - 10/22/2007
In Martin O’Malley’s visit to Dublin this weekend, he was perhaps able to pick up an extra portion of the luck of the Irish. That’s what many legislators think he needs to get what he wants out of the special session he’s ordered next week, a call seen as a risky roll of the dice.
http://www.examiner.com/a-1002528~Plucky_O_Malley_needs_luck_of_the_Irish.html


20071029 CyberAlert


CyberAlert

Monday October 29, 2007


1. CBS Uses Fires to Remind Viewers Bush 'Never Stopped' for Katrina ABC and CBS on Sunday night pivoted from the success, of the aide efforts for fire evacuees at San Diego's Qualcomm Stadium, to make political points: ABC highlighted a protest about "immigrant rights" and CBS focused on how President Bush's visit to victims contrasted with how after Katrina Bush "flew home from vacation" in Air Force One "thousands of feet above the evacuees" and "never stopped." Reporter Seth Doane contended, over 2005 video on the CBS Evening News of the Superdome evacuees, Bush peering out the window of Air Force One and that plane flying over the stadium, that "for many it was a sharp contrast with another football stadium two years ago: The Superdome in New Orleans during Katrina -- overcrowded, miserable conditions, all under a leaking roof, while thousands of feet above the evacuees, President Bush flew home from vacation in Air Force One and never stopped." Doane suggested: "Contrast this past week when the President came to a burned-out area to press the flesh..."

2. Elevating Publicity Stunts: Lauer Asks Condi About Code Pink Matt Lauer's Friday morning interview with Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice ended badly. It wasn't that Rice brought bad answers to the interview. It wasn't that Lauer mocked or insulted Rice. It was that Lauer elevated a tired publicity stunt from the radical leftists at Code Pink to something approaching "newsworthy" status: "Let me end on just a different subject. On Wednesday you were set to appear before the House Foreign Relations Committee, and a protestor walked right up to your face, Madam Secretary, and said, with red paint on her hands and said, quote, 'the blood of millions of Iraqis is on your hands.' She was taken out of the room. Not on a policy level, on a personal level, what was your response to that moment? Were you angered? Were you upset? Were you frazzled? How did you respond to it?"

3. GMA Doubts U.S. 'Credibility' on Iran; Celebrates Hillary's 60th According to former Bill Clinton operative George Stephanopoulos one reason the United States wouldn't start a war with Iran is because the Bush administration doesn't possess the "troops or the allies or the credibility that it would take to launch a war right now." Stephanopoulos, who is now the host of ABC's This Week, slipped that take into a discussion on Friday's Good Morning America of new sanctions the White House is imposing on Iran. Would the network journalist ever casually assert that his old boss is lacking in credibility? Perhaps if the issue was inappropriate relationships in the workplace? It seems unlikely. A few minutes earlier, guest co-host Deborah Roberts could hardly refrain from gushing while she reported the details of Hillary Clinton's 60th birthday party on Thursday night. The ABC correspondent lauded: "And a lovely touch from former President Clinton who said at 60, his wife looks very beautiful. Isn't that nice?...Isn't that sweet?" Fellow guest co-host Elizabeth Vargas swooned over the "beautiful" birthday song with which rocker Elvis Costello serenaded the 2008 candidate. GMA regular Chris Cuomo enthused: "She definitely enjoyed it. I can guarantee you that."

4. Latest Postings on the MRC's TimesWatch Site: NY Times Bias Headlines from postings last week on the MRC's TimesWatch site dedicated to documenting and exposing the liberal political agenda of the New York Times.

5. Don't Miss 'NewsBusted' Comedy Videos Making Fun of Liberals Have you yet watched the MRC's "NewsBusted" comedy video show posted on our NewsBusters blog? If not, two fresh two-minute editions were posted last week. "NewsBusted" is a new, twice a week, comedy show with jokes about politics, Hollywood and media bias.

6. Worst 'Notable Quotables' of Past 20 Years: Potpourri of Idiocy

Now Online with 50 Flash Videos: 20th Anniversary Notable Quotables with more than 100 of the most outrageous quotes from our past two decades, many accompanied by audio and video clips. Last week, the MRC's Rich Noyes posted, on the MRC's NewsBusters blog, a daily installment of quotes from the anniversary issue. The one posted Friday: Potpourri of Idiocy. For sheer wackiness, it's hard to top then-CNBC anchor Geraldo Rivera, who sang his disdain for independent prosecutor Kenneth Starr during the height of the Lewinsky scandal, July 21, 1998, on his Rivera Live program, to the tune of "Twinkle, twinkle, little star."

_____

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 2,518th CyberAlert. Tracking Liberal Media Bias Since 1996

6:35am EDT, Monday October 29, 2007 (Vol. Twelve; No. 191)

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

20071029 Carroll County News Briefs from the Westminster Eagle

Carroll County News Briefs from the Westminster Eagle

News Briefs: Parade, trick-or-treating set in Westminster and other local events from the Westminster Eagle

10/25/07

Parade, trick-or-treating set in Westminster

The annual Halloween Parade in Westminster, hosted by American Legion Post 31, will be held Tuesday, Oct. 30, along Main Street.

The parade begins at 6 p.m. at Dutterer Family Park on Monroe Street, continues to Pennsylvania Avenue and then down Main Street to Longwell Avenue.

For more details, call Junior Fisher at 410-848-1180.

Meanwhile, the Mayor and Common Council have designated the evening of Wednesday, Oct. 31 to be Halloween trick-or-treating night.

Trick-or-treating should be conducted between the hours of dusk and 8 p.m. and restricted to children age 12 and under. Children should be accompanied by parents or adult guardians.

Residents who wish to participate should turn on their outside lights. Children should wear light-colored clothing so as to be more visible, and only visit houses in their neighborhood that have outside lights on.

Motorists are asked to pay special care on the evening of Oct. 31.

For a comprehensive list of other local events in Carroll County go here: Carroll County News Briefs from the Westminster Eagle

20071028 NPR: Backlash Against Slot Machines in W.Va. and other news from Appalachia

NPR: Backlash Against Slot Machines in W.Va. – and other news items from Appalachia

http://www.npr.org/search.php?text=slots

Oct-28-2007, All Things Considered

...at race tracks and other locations. Tomorrow, Maryland state legislature takes up the governor's proposal to legalize slots. It's also a big issue in the current governor's race in Kentucky....

Backlash Against Slot Machines in W.Va.

by Scott Finn

All Things Considered, October 28, 2007

West Virginia is one of a handful of states that allows slot machines and other forms of video gambling in neighborhood bars, as well as at racetracks. But while other states, such as Maryland and Kentucky, are considering expanding their gambling options, many West Virginians are now having second thoughts. Some find themselves torn between their socially conservative beliefs and the state's need for jobs.

Finn reports for West Virginia Public Broadcasting.

Inside Appalachia Listen hear.

Host: Beth Vorhees

Saturdays at 6 am - Sundays at 6 pm on radio

This hour-long weekly radio news magazine is devoted to topics of interest in the southern Appalachian region - shared issues, shared culture and shared history - with a new perspective.

_____

WV: Table Games by Keri Brown

In West Virginia, gamblers at three of the state's four racetracks will be able to play poker 24 hours a day. The state Lottery Commission approved all day gambling this week. Also, this week, the tracks that can offer casino style table games were given the go-ahead to open their poker rooms after a test of dealers and the regulatory processes. Players used play money and played for charity.


KY NewsBeshear Profile by Tony McVeigh, KPR

The governor’s race pits a republican incumbent against a democrat with a long political history.

Gov. Debate by Stu Johnson, WEKU

The two candidates for governor got their first shot before a statewide television audience this week on KY Educational Television.

Casino Gambling by Charles Compton, WEKU

Both the governor and the state horse industry say next week's election is a referendum of expanded gaming.


PA: Wind Farms

By Lisa Ann Pinkerton, Allegheny Front

By the end of 2008, PA will have 10 wind farms generating electricity. These farms are built without any state regulations. Instead, wind companies and the state work together to find what they consider to be appropriate sites. PA officials say this voluntary agreement, as it’s called, is a flexible set of rules that can change as the state's knowledge of wind farms grows. But critics say the agreement does more to protect companies than the environment.


WV: Bridge Day By Anna Sale

This weekend in October means its Bridge Day in Fayette County, WV. It’s the day each year when for six hours, it’s legal to parachute off the New River Gorge Bridge. As many as 200,000 spectators will watch. And organizers say despite a jumper fatality last year, participation this year was expected to be about the same.


WV: Banned Books By Scott Finn

Two critically-acclaimed novels by southern writer Pat Conroy were suspended from a Nitro High School Advanced Placement Literature Class. The parents of two students complained about graphic scenes of sex and violence in the novels "Beach Music" and "The Prince of Tides." The Kanawha Co. school board is trying to decide whether to ban the books, or allow them to remain as part of the curriculum.


WV: The Confederate Battle Flag By Beth Vorhees

Historic tradition or an emblem of racism? John Coski says the confederate flag means different things to different people. This week, Dr. Coski presented a lecture in WV on his book “The Confederate Battle Flag: America’s Most Embattled Emblem" as part of the 2007 Civil War Scholars Lecture Series at WV State University. We spoke to Dr. Coski earlier this week about his book and the controversial symbol of the American south.


PLUS: KY: Stereotypes ... WV: Mine safety & apple crop ... NPR news ... more

20071025 Counties association favors slots by James Drew Baltimore Sun

Counties association favors slots



Qualified support based on program of compensation



From Friday's Sun - baltimoresun.com



By James Drew, Sun reporter, October 25, 2007

The Maryland Association of Counties offered qualified backing Thursday for Gov. Martin O'Malley's call to legalize slot machine gambling, saying it "could be an acceptable long-term state revenue source, were such a program responsibly crafted."

"A responsible slots program must provide continuing fair and full compensation to the host subdivisions for impact expenses and respect local land use authority," according to a statement distributed at a news conference at the State House.

[…]

The Democratic governor's package includes an increase in the state sales tax from 5 cents to 6 cents, extending the tax to cover more services, changing the income tax structure so that high earners pay more and low- and middle-income filers pay less, an increase in the corporate income tax rate from 7 percent to 8 percent, closing corporate loop holes and a property tax reduction.

The governor also backs legalizing slot machine gambling, but he has signaled he might back a referendum on that proposal.

… two days after O'Malley released a 20-page report, called the "Cost of Delay" budget, that outlines cuts of $850 million to local jurisdictions and $800 million to state agencies and programs.

Republicans referred to the governor's move as a scare tactic and noted that Democratic legislative leaders released a similar list of doomsday cuts over the summer in arguing for new revenue measures.

MACo officials said that if the state chooses spending cuts over tax increases, the burden of balancing the budget would be shifted to local governments, which would be forced to consider their own cuts and property tax increases.

[…]

Writing for the Baltimore Sun, Mr. Drew has written a quick and easy snapshot of the issues swirling much of the Maryland General Assembly Special Session which has begun today, October 29th, 2007. It is well worth the time it takes to give it a quick read. Find it here: Counties association favors slots.

20071026 News Clips


News Clips

Oct. 26, 2007

STATE NEWS

What's at stake? (We're just asking)
Political futures of lawmakers, O'Malley could depend on success or failure of the special session
http://gazette.net/stories/102607/polinew65912_32356.shtml
The hype has been like the lead-up to a Super Bowl.
Now, with kickoff to the third special legislative session in four years only days away, the eyes of the state will be on how Gov. Martin O'Malley (D) and lawmakers resolve the $1.7 billion budget deficit. The stakes, personal and political, are has high as they have ever been. O'Malley has said that building the consensus needed to call the special session is the most difficult thing he has done in his political life.
Still, Republicans are lining up to decry the tax proposals, with a GOP-sp onsored anti-tax rally on Lawyers Mall before the General Assembly convenes Monday. Democrats are set to follow with their own rally in support of education and health care on the State House steps two hours later.
Republicans said they will not use the hole the state finds itself in for political gain, but are determined to influence the process of finding a solution. ''We're not in this to play a cynical game of 'gotcha' politics," said Christopher B. Shank (R-Dist. 2B) of Hagerstown, the House minority whip. ''We're in this to try to solve a problem."
Despite being heavily outnumbered, Republicans say they can influence the proceedings if enough people express their distaste for O'Malley's plan. ''It's not predestined at this point," said House Minority Leader Anthony J. O'Donnell (R-Dist. 29C) of Lusby.
Republicans are not focused on any electoral gains in 2010 that might result from passage of O'Malley's tax package , O'Donnell said. ''This should not be about partisan advantage. This should be about what's good for Maryland's economy, Maryland's competitiveness with other states, Maryland's working families and Maryland's small businesses," he said. ''Elections come and go, but let's put that stuff aside."

Counties association favors slots
Qualified support based on program of compensation
http://www.baltimoresun.com/news/local/politics/bal-md.maco26oct26,0,1336255.story
The Maryland Association of Counties offered qualified backing yesterday for Gov. Martin O'Malley's call to legalize slot machine gambling, saying it "could be an acceptable long-term state revenue source, were such a program responsibly crafted."
"A responsible slots program must provide continuing fair and full compensation to the host subdivisions for impact expenses and respect local land use authority," according to a statement distributed at a news conference at the State House.
When asked whether local elected officials there would support slots within their boundaries, Baltimore County Executive James T . Smith, a Democrat, replied: "It's too early to get into where they may be located. We don't know enough about the governor's proposal or the discussions with the speaker and the president of the Senate." Baltimore Mayor Sheila Dixon and the executives of Baltimore, Howard, Montgomery and Wicomico counties warned of the consequences if the General Assembly were to cut spending instead of raising taxes.
Yesterday, the Maryland Republican Party noted one of those polls, conducted by Gonzales Research and Marketing Strategies, that showed O'Malley's disapproval rating rose to 31 percent from 21 percent in March. The change was attributed to a shift among Republican voters. The poll also found that nearly two-thirds of voters opposed the proposed increase in the state sales tax to help reduce the budget deficit. Jim Pelura, chairman of the Maryland Republican Party, said in a statement: "Martin O'Malley owns this tax increase plan. As Ma r ylanders learn more about his tax-and-spend scheme, it comes as no surprise that O'Malley's disapproval ratings will soar. Nobody likes tax increases, and O'Malley has compounded the problem by telling folks that they will be better off after the largest tax hike in Maryland history. He has lost all credibility with Marylanders."

Governor announces details of his health care proposal
http://www.baltimoresun.com/news/local/bal-md.health26oct26,0,7780414.story
Gov. Martin O'Malley rolled out a health care plan yesterday that would expand medical coverage for uninsured residents and commit funding for data exchanges that connect the state's hospitals and allow them to share records.Addressing critics who question the wisdom of expanding programs in the face of the looming deficit, O'Malley stressed the plan's "pay-as-you-go" f e ature and said that residents who have private insurance would save money because the cost of treating the uninsured in Maryland is added to their premiums.
A similar proposal passed the House in the last session but died in the Senate, where President Thomas V. Mike Miller argued that implementing it without a solution to the state's fiscal woes would be irresponsible. Miller says he would support health care legislation during the special session if it doesn't add to the deficit.
But Republican lawmakers said they are still worried about the cost of the proposal and would prefer private-sector solutions. "Our primary concern right now needs to be reducing the structural deficit and chronic overspending, and several hundred million dollars for a new social program is only going to exacerbate the problem," said Del. Christopher B. Shank, House minority whip from Western Maryland. "These are worthwhile goals, but we have to set priorities."

Md. officials violated provision of election law
http://www.baltimoresun.com/news/local/baltimore_city/bal-md.ci.campaign26oct26,0,664903.story
Several state elected officials - including two statewide officeholders - violated an obscure provision of election law that required them to file campaign finance reports more frequently this year because they gave money to Baltimore City candidates.
The review of state records by The Sun found that Attorney General Douglas F. Gansler and Comptroller Peter Franchot, along with a half-dozen members of the General Assembly, did not fulfil the filing requirement. But several of the officials vowed to do so after being contacted yesterday by the newspaper.Campaign finance reporting regulations are in place to ensure the public can keep track of who is funding which candi d ates. The donations were reported as receipts by the candidates who received them, but not as expenditures by those who made them.

EPA orders Arundel cleanup
Pharmaceutical plant told to comply or face fines of $32,500 a day
http://www.baltimoresun.com/news/local/annearundel/bal-te.md.ar.hazardous26oct26,0,6388390.story
The owner of a dormant Brooklyn Park pharmaceutical plant, which was found to have open chemicals and 50,000 gallons of hazardous waste on its property, has been ordered to clean up the site by year's end or face federal fines of up to $32,500 a day. Environmental regulators and Anne Arundel County officials say those pollutants pose a fire hazard and an imminent threat to public health. The warehouse and tank-storage area are within a mile of three schools and a short walk from homes and a neighborhood playground. The fear of a "potentially catastrophic fire" spurred Anne Arundel County Executive John R. Leopold to call this month for swift action by federal regulators, citing numerous violations of the county fire code.
"I am pleased with their recognition of the seriousness of this matter and their willingness to act promptly," Leopold said of the federal order.

Howard County offers free flu shots
Clinic at Gateway Business Park will double as emergency-preparedness exercise

http://www.baltimoresun.com/news/local/howard/bal-md.ho.flu26oct26,0,3474762.story
Howard County health officials are offering up to 4,000 free flu inoculations next month at a drive-through clinic designed to reach twice as many people as a similar exercise last year. "We want to bring attention to the fact that flu is a serious issue," Beilenson said, noting that twice as many people die of influenza each year as die from antibiotic-resistant staph infections, which have received extensive publicity lately.
Police Chief William McMahon and Fire Chief Joseph Herr said the vaccination event will help first responders practice for a possible avian flu outbreak or an act of biological terrorism.

'Doomsday' budget would slash state aid to convention centers http://www.examiner.com/a-1011225~_Doomsday__budget_would_slash_state_aid_to_convention_centers.html
Gov. Martin O'Malley's proposed budget cuts would drop all state aid to Maryland's two major convention centers, funding that comprises two-t h irds of the Baltimore center's annual payments and half of those for the Ocean City center. Local convention officials and national analysts said the cuts could end up costing the state and city far more than they'd ever save. O'Malley on Tuesday unveiled the budget cuts he'd have to make unless the General Assembly passes his proposed tax increases and revenues measures in a special session beginning Monday. The governor's plan would end $4.2 million in state funding toward the Baltimore Convention Center's deficit, and $1.5 million for the Ocean City Convention Center, according to a breakdown of cuts released earlier this week.

O'Malley proposes more to be spent on uninsured
http://www.examiner.com/a-1011260~O_Malley_proposes_more_to_be_spent_on_uninsured.html
Gov. Martin O'Malley is proposing the s tate spend as much as $250 million more each year to offer health insurance to 100,000 uninsured people by adding them to the Medicaid rolls and subsidizing very small businesses that begin offering health insurance to workers. The proposal hinges on passing new taxes and slot machine gambling in a special session of the General Assembly that begins Monday, O'Malley said Thursday. The plan comes two days after he disclosed $1.7 billion in budget cuts he would have to make if the legislature does not raise taxes, including doubling the cigarette tax.
"They are really part of the same mission to make our state a better place," O'Malley said. "There is broad consensus in the General Assembly" for health care improvement. "If we're unable to make progress, we will continue to backslide" on this issue.

Gilchrest accused of 'dirty tricks'
http://www.washingtontimes.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20071026/METRO/110260075/1004 Supporters of state Sen. Andrew P. Harris' campaign to unseat Rep. Wayne T. Gilchrest say the incumbent's top aide pushed another candidate into the Republican primary to dilute support for Mr. Harris. "This is [Mr. Gilchrest's] insurance card that he doesn't lose the race," said state Sen. Nancy Jacobs, Harford County Republican. "It's dirty tricks. It's what goes on behind the scenes. But to get caught with your hand in the cookie jar."
Mrs. Jacobs said one of her former staffers now working for the Gilchrest campaign told her about the plan to enlist Mr. Banks, a technology executive. Mr. Banks yesterday denied the accusations. "Absolutely not," he said. "It sounds like a vast right-wing conspiracy."
"This is the worst form of dirty tricks camp a igning," said Chris Meekins, Mr. Harris' campaign manager. "Sadly, that is what we have come to expect from Wayne Gilchrest. This is exactly why Republican voters are looking for new leadership."
Whether Mr. Banks was asked to enter the race remains in dispute, but he clearly opposed Mr. Harris' bid this summer.
He said Mr. Gilchrest was the Republicans' best chance to hold the seat.

Counties Protest Possible Cuts
http://blog.washingtonpost.com/annapolis/
A dozen county leaders from across Maryland convened in Annapolis yesterday to warn against the consequences of cutting education funding and other local aid as a solution to the state's projected $1.7 billion budget shortfall.
Gov. Martin O'Malley (D) said this week that counties could take a big hit if lawmakers do not pass his revenue package in a special session that starts Monday. So m e legislators have argued that counties should be part of the solution, given state aid to local government has swelled in recent years to about 40 percent of Maryland's general fund.
Raises for most county employees have outpaced those of state workers in recent years, and most counties have healthier reserves than the state, making them an attractive target for legislators.

Maryland tax hikes could push business to Delaware
Special session to decide on proposals to increase corporate burden
http://www.delmarvanow.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20071026/NEWS01/710260303
As legislators prepare to negotiate more than a dozen tax changes during a General Assembly Special Session on Monday, Lower Shore business owners anxiously wait to learn if they're going to be impacted and how much. Increasing ta x rates are never a popular topic, but parts of O'Malley's plan could make doing business in Maryland much harder, said Brad Bellacicco, executive director of the Salisbury Area Chamber of Commerce.
"Because we're located this close to Delaware with no sales tax, a sales tax increase is especially scary to our members," Bellacicco said. "Several of the proposals do end up shifting a lot of the tax load onto the businesses and a study indicated that businesses statewide could lose jobs." What could alter the local economy the most in Ed Rommel's eyes is not only a bump in the sales tax rate, but the expansion of sales taxes into the service industry such as accounting firms like Twilley, Rommel & Stephens P.A., where he serves as a managing partner. The proximity to Delaware makes him curious about moving operations six miles north on Route 13 to just over the state line in Delmar.
"It appears as if the services which h a ve the least amount of representation in the legislature have been targeted for this tax, as opposed to a more broad based tax that would include all professional services, medical, legal or what have you," Rommel said, adding that Maryland is developing a bad corporate reputation. "I was at a national seminar last week and I heard that Maryland has a reputation for being anti-business. The state of Maryland doesn't perceive it that way, but that's what the business community perceives."These taxes could also make a large dent into the bottom lines of small businesses, and since that's the heart of the Wicomico County economy, the long-term effects could be suffocating.

Md. Jockey Club plans rally for slots
Live racing canceled on Nov. 2 to allow supporters of industry to rally in Annapolis
http://www.baltimoresun.com/news/local/politics/bal-racing1026,0,136.storyThe Maryland Jockey Club has canceled live racing on Nov. 2 to allow employees, horsemen and racing fans to rally in Annapolis in support of bringing slot machines to Maryland, the club announced today.
The General Assembly is scheduled to hold hearings at 11 a.m. that day on various proposals to bring slot machines to the state as part of a special session that begins Monday. The rally is scheduled for 9 a.m. in front of the State House.

EDITORIALS/OP-EDS

Rally for no new taxes
http://www.examiner.com/a-1011220~Rally_for_no_new_taxes.html
Go. Just do it. Head to the anti-tax rally in Annapolis on Monday and let our legislators know raising taxes is not the answer to fixing the state's projected $1.7 billion budget deficit. Gov. Martin O'Malley's doom-and-gloom projections for how cutting the state budget will affect government services are a scare tactic, not reality.
Go to SmartGov.net to download the schedule of events, which start at noon at Lawyers Mall and end at the State House Gallery following the opening ceremony of the special session.
As Mark Twain said, "No man's life, liberty, or property are safe while the legislature is in session." Tell legislators to spend the special session cutting waste. It's premature to even contemplate taxes without first eliminating fat from current operations - and having a budget to analyze.

Governor should stop scare tactics
http://www.carrollcountytimes.com/articles/2007/10/26/news/opinion/editorial/editorial843.txt
Gov. Martin O'Malley should listen to his own Comptroller instead of trying to scare people into going along with his budget proposals. The Governor on Tuesday ran through a laundry list of ways that residents would suffer if they didn't get behind his proposals. The list included everything from closing two police barracks to cuts in health care for the poor. The doomsday ploy isn't a new tactic.
Even here in Carroll under past administrations we have seen similar tactics. O'Malley needs to listen to his own Comptroller, Peter Franchot, who criticized O'Malley's proposals and the way the Governor was rolling them out. The picture isn't as bleak as the Governor is painting, and Franchot says a more deliberative process of moving addressing issues and resolving the budget problems would be better.We need to take a long hard look at state spending, which is usually done during the legislative session, and we need to look at revenues and expenses together in order to find the best ways to move forward.
O'Malley shouldn't try to bypass the process to push through tax increases, and he shouldn't use scare tactics to try and gain support for his plan.

Odd man out
http://www.baltimoresun.com/news/opinion/editorial/bal-ed.heritage26oct26,0,1415668.story
At first, Rep. Roscoe G. Bartlett loved the idea of a collective marketing campaign to promote the scores of sites along a four-state corridor from Gettysburg, Pa., to Charlottesville, Va., that bear witness to some of American history's most momentous events.
But when the $15 million proposal got wrapped into a larger measure creating such heritage areas around the nation - and Mr. Bartlett learned that "Virginia-based" environmentalists and wealthy landowners were a driving f orce behind the one for this region - the Western Maryland Republican cried foul. He railed to his House colleagues Wednesday about a "big-government, big-spending philosophy" that threatened local property rights.
Mr. Bartlett should have trusted his initial instincts instead of playing to the inside-the-beltway anti-government crowd.

Tackling the mortgage crisis
http://www.baltimoresun.com/news/opinion/editorial/bal-ed.subprime26oct26,0,2122791.story
A state task force reviewing the impact of the subprime mortgage crisis in Maryland has come up with reasonable proposals that would tighten lending practices and help deter the loss of homes to foreclosure here. But relief won't be swift.
Their recommendations require action by the General Assembly, which won't take up the proposals until it next meets in regular session in January. Foreclosures related to subprime mortgages have an impact on more than lenders and homeowners. They result in lost revenue for governments and diminished property values for communities. It's in Maryland's interest to try to soften the blow.

Gilchrest menhaden proposal worth consideration
http://www.hometownannapolis.com/cgi-bin/read/2007/10_25-21/OPN
Rep. Wayne Gilchrest is second to none in the state congressional delegation when it comes to putting thought into environmental issues - particularly the health of the Chesapeake Bay. And his proposal for a five-year ban on the harvesting of menhaden deserves serious attention. The ban could easily do much more for the bay's rockfish population than President Bush's suggestion, on a visit to St. Michael's last week, that rockfish - or st r iped bass - be designated a gamefish, and that commercial harvesting cease. Mr. Gilchrest was there, and we hope he got a chance to talk to the president about menhaden. They are not a glamorous fish, being small, bony, oily and inedible to humans. But they are phytoplankton eaters, nourishing themselves by cleaning up the excess algae and plant material clouding the bay. And they are themselves a favorite food of rockfish and bluefish.
Of course, the jobs that would be lost if Omega's Chesapeake Bay operation shuts down are mostly in Virginia, not Mr. Gilchrest's district in Maryland. But saving the menhaden population is not a high-profile issue - just an important one. Mr. Gilchrest deserves credit for paying attention to it, and his legislation deserves consideration.

Sunday, October 28, 2007

20071028 Tribune, Patuxent Publishing Group, Baltimore Sun disclosure


20071028 Tribune, Patuxent Publishing Group, Baltimore Sun, and The Tentacle disclosure

Kevin Dayhoff writes for three of the newspapers in the Patuxent Publishing Group, the Sunday Carroll Eagle, Westminster Eagle and Eldersburg Eagle.

The Patuxent Publishing Group is owned by “Tribune.” Tribune also owns the Baltimore Sun – and as a matter of fact, the Sunday Carroll Eagle is distributed in the Sunday edition of the Baltimore Sun – see: 20071021 Baltimore Sun: “To our readers.”)

Additionally he writes for an online magazine, “The Tentacle.”

“When I stop working the rest of the day is posthumous. I'm only really alive when I'm writing.” Tennessee Williams

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Kevin Dayhoff writes from Westminster Maryland USA.

E-mail him at: kdayhoff AT carr.org or kevindayhoff AT gmail.com