Graff: ‘Local’ angry old man = Trump

After Garrett Graff’s 2016 kerfuffle over not meeting residency requirements brought to a crashing end his plans on running for Vermont lieutenant governor, I’d have thought he’d be more aware of what local means. Born in Vermont but residing outside the state for the immediate-past 10 years, Graff left his job at politico.com and had moved back to the state in 2016 with plans to run for the second-highest elected office in the state. Sadly for him, a candidate for lieutenant governor has to have lived in Vermont for the four years before the election “without interruption of residency”- a requirement he did not meet.

Now I happen to notice he tweeted the following this Sunday in response to one of Donald Trump’s earlier tweets about immigration law and order: Local angry old man continues to lack third-grade understanding of US Constitution, or even basic creed engraved on US Statue of Liberty….

bye local

If Vermont approval polls are correct it is likely that a majority of residents would agree with Graff’s quip and his point about Trump’s understanding of the US Constitution.  But I’m not sure thatif asked toI could find any Vermont resident who would consider Donald Trump a local angry old man. Vermont is just not where he’s coming from.

President of the United States: Baby-Snatcher-in-Chief

Nothing Donald Trump does comes as a complete surprise anymore.  The more odious the things he said on the campaign trail, the more likely it has become that he will, sooner or later, hand down policy edicts as President that make those outrageous statements pale by comparison.  I am convinced that his early quip about shooting someone on Fifth Avenue and getting away with it was not merely a throw-away line.

So, no surprise there…

What still totally takes my breath away are the polls describing a malevolent turn to the Republican party as a whole, and the complicity of its surviving elite.  I call them “surviving elite” because a number of that elite have seen the writing on the border wall, folded their tents and stolen silently into the night.  Some, like John McCain, have not been so silent.

The defections only seem to strengthen Trump’s cult-like hold over the so-called “Grand Old Party.”

Last night, Kate Larose, candidate for the Vermont House from St. Albans held a campaign launch in the Bliss Ballroom of the Franklin County Museum.  Everyone was welcome, including the kids for whom there was a mountain of empty cardboard boxes and an invitation to build their own town.  Pizza, salad and ice cream sundaes were served up on a side-table.

Even though I know that Kate is running as a Democrat/Progressive, there was no specific reference to political party and the theme of the evening was our community: what we like about it and how we hope that it will improve.

I’m sure that this was a deliberate effort to counter the poisonous vapor of national politics wafting our way from the south, and refocus voters on local/regional concerns.

I commend Kate and the other gathered optimists who can see a future of harmony worth fighting for.  I am grateful for their positive fervor.

I once felt exactly as they do and wish I did still.

This year, I will volunteer to man the phones for Democratic/Progressive candidates and contribute what I can to each campaign, as I always have.  Not to do so would be inexcusable, I know.  

But I will do so without much hope for the future of our fragile greater democracy.

I like to think that local Republicans, my neighbors, could not possibly support the Fascistic inclinations and pure mean-spiritedness of Donald Trump, but those polls have forced me to look at them in a troubling new light.  While we always differed on matters of policy, I never doubted that they were good people with whom I shared most overarching values.  

That certain knowledge always made participating in the political process a pleasure.  Win or lose, It felt good to be part of something greater than myself, and I always came away with confidence in the overarching better nature of the “system.”

Not anymore.

Donald Trump has violated nearly every civil and moral norm of American society; has never accepted responsibility for any of the evil he has unleashed on that civil society; lies uncontrollably;  indulges his personal vanity in the most grotesque manner; enriches himself and his family, whenever possible, at everyone else’s expense; and has cynically undertaken a personal assault on the constitution, the like of which we’ve never seen before.

Anyone who excuses or enables this devil is not my neighbor, nor my countryman.  This is what constitutional crisis looks like.

If we survive this period of infamy, somehow reclaiming our democracy from the brink of oblivion,  we must be prepared to eliminate private funding from elections, reign-in influence by lobbyists, clearly define legal parameters to limit the ultimate power of the presidency, and seriously question the legitimacy of the two party system.   We will also have a heap of fence-mending to do with our traditional international allies: “Mea culpa, mea culpa, mea maxima culpa…”

Failing rigorous commitment to reform, we will justly assume our place on the dustheap of fallen empires throughout the ages.

Governor Scott: Who else governs this way ?

As if he planned it all along Governor Phil Scott is getting his veto showdown and possible government shutdown.

In May a budget bill was passed in the Senate with tri-partisan unanimous support. Since that time the legislature has offered up a number of responsible alternatives and possibilities for compromise with the Governor. All of them were rejected.

And on July 1st if no budget agreement is madewe face a government shutdown. Funding for state colleges, state police, state parks, Medicaid programs, food stamps, Department of Motor Vehicle services and more would be in jeopardy, and closures are definitely a possibility. Vermont State treasurer Beth Pierce has warned repeatedly that this upheaval would damage the state’s cherished credit rating.

scott for gov2018

And now as if on cue, Scott’s re-election campaign has jumped in with both feet and sent around an email to his followers charging: “A small number of extremist Democrat and Progressive party leaders, and their political allies, are trying to scare Vermonters about a government shutdown,” the mailer said. “Don’t believe them.”

Scott’s campaign spokesperson, Brittney Wilson, said “legislative leaders are trying to startle Vermonters with a government shutdown, which is very unlikely and being used as a scare tactic.”

Here’s a question Vermonters might want to ponder as Governor Scott prints out his “VETO” bumper stickers for re-election: Who else governs this way? And do we want it here in Vermont?

Maybe it is time or even past time  for the popular notion that we have a special  “Vermont way” of “doing” politics be laid to rest. Thanks Phil, for bringing brinkmanship and a taste of conflict induced dysfunction  to Vermont government.

Growing tensions with Canada: Welcome to Trump’s World

Did you ever think you might see a headline like this one from Newsweek?  DHS Announces ‘Strengthened Northern Border Strategy’ Amid Growing Tensions Between U.S. and Canada

US CAN splitzPresident Trump isn’t exactly saber rattling, but after imposing tariffs on Canadian steel, aluminum and autos he does seem to be “rattling” the DHS’ Northern Border Strategy in a threatening manner.

The Department of Homeland Security (DHS) has announced a “strengthened” Northern Border Strategy that it claims will help “combat terrorism” and “help facilitate travel and trade” at its border with Canada. 

In a press release published on Tuesday, the DHS said its new strategy “establishes a clear vision and concrete actions that will improve DHS’s efforts to safeguard our northern border against terrorist and criminal threats, facilitate the safe and efficient flow of lawful cross-border trade and travel and strengthen cross-border critical infrastructure protection and community resilience.” 

All this is taking place less than a week after President Trump citing “national security threats” announced the imposition of tariffs on Canadian steel, aluminum and autos entering the US.

Canadian Prime minister Justin Trudeau called the tariffs insulting and in response  imposed tariffs on the US. Trudeau said: “I have made it very clear to the president that it is not something we relish doing, but it is something that we absolutely will do,” Trudeau said. “As Canadians, we are polite, we’re reasonable, but also we will not be pushed around.”

Vtdigger.com says Vermont officials are “fretting” over the tariff issue because: According to the U.S Trade Representative, exports to Canada are a major factor in the Vermont economy. Vermont exported $1.2 billion in goods to Canada in 2016 — more than a third of the total international exports.

canada_trade_us

Of course the U.S. isn’t massing troops and tanks along our 90 mile border with Canada. But the tariffs and “tension” resulting from Trump’s bullying engineered on Twitter could very well damage Vermont’s economy.  What’s next Donald, a northern border wall? I wish it was obvious that was a joke but in Trump World …

Think!Vermont still in its little box: “The problem with Vermont’s bright idea”

Jeff Yang, a columnist for the Wall Street Journal, has an interesting look in a CNN commentary at the state’s pay people to move to Vermont & work remotely program.*  The program, designed to entice people to Vermont and increase the workforce, was described by Governor Scott as an example of thinking “outside the box.” In his CNN piece, Yang describes what a real “outside-the-box” Vermont  program might look like. Hint: it’s much more than what we’re doing now layers of glossy websites, and flash & bang headlines.

outothebox

From  CNN: What’s ironic is how inside the box its “outside-the-box” thinking really is. Because while Vermont could be taking this moment to bring new diversity to a state that’s the second-whitest in the United States, it’s instead investing in initiatives that could easily end up maintaining the state’s culturally monolithic status. If Vermont had aimed this policy at explicitly encouraging new Americans to migrate to the state (the policy does not), it would be redressing a significant shortfall in the state’s demographics.

[…]  The fact is, as Vermont, and America as a whole, ages and sees its workforce decline, immigration is unquestionably a critical part of the solution. But Vermont is paying American workers to move to its small towns and rolling hills, even as millions of people are willing to do just about anything to move to the United States. Some are desperately fleeing horrific conditions in their native countries.

The difficulties of taking on such a task, Yang, says are great but not impossible. And although, he says correctly, Vermont is a welcoming state, he notes the mostly unsuccessful efforts to relocate Syrian refugees to his city by the former Mayor of Rutland in 2016. As a candidate that same year, Governor Scott called for a pause in the effort over what he called his “concerns” about security vetting of those new immigrants. Under criticism for his less than convincing argument, he softened his tone but remained committed to aggressive vetting of those particular immigrants.

Yang suggests that funds could instead be directed to encourage companies to hire immigrants and set up partnerships with universities to assist newcomers to build the state population, workforce, and economy.

If Vermont really wants to boost its economy while attracting young professionals and technology entrepreneurship to the state here’s a radical idea: It should use the funds it has set aside to line the pockets of mobile American workers and put them instead toward becoming a better destination for immigrants from Africa, Latin America, Asia, and the Middle East.

Now a program like that would put Think!Vermont way outside the comfortable little box it now lives in.

*Where were the media people who make up the snazzy names like Stay to stay, Think!Vermont etc. when Scott launched the get-paid-to-move-to-Vermont-work-remotely program? Maybe they ran out of budget to pay out-of-state pr-hype firms …

FLASH, BANG: “Move to VT get $10,000” Small print: poof gone!

And “the payout is immense” screamed one story. Hmmm ten grand to relocate to Vermont? Sounds almost too good to be true! Well you don’t have to look too far to see that the promoted media campaign is running a few miles ahead of the actual plan. The fine print should cause anyone taking this bait seriously to hold off packing their bags.

The media grabbed it and ran with it: Vermont, the stories said, will reimburse out-of-staters $10,000 to move here provided they work remotely for a company not located here. The goal, the state says, is to encourage tech workers and young families to move to the state. In turn the theory is this will help grow our work force, boost our tax base, and we Vermonters will all live happily ever after. According to the Burlington Free Press, the programwhich was passed unanimously in the legislatureoriginated when  Sen. Ginny Lyons, D-Chittenden,  wondered what it would take to get more workers like her son-in-law, who works remotely  while living  in Vermont, to move here.

like that Flash

The man charged with running the offer and managing the payouts, Governor Scott’s  secretary for the Agency of Commerce and Community Development Michael Schirling explains: “[It’s] very important to note from the outset that we have to design a program that we have not yet begun to contemplate the details of,”  Schirling said. “And there will be parameters around, you know, which of the allowable areas can be reimbursed for what amount over the two-year reimbursement period that’s allowed by the law.”

Basically it’s not that a remote worker who moves to Vermont gets a guaranteed $10,000 — which Schirling notes some of the recent buzz around the plan seemed to imply — but how they decide who gets how much is still being figured out.

In addition to not having worked out vital details of the plan, Sec. Schirling appeared unaware the roll-out was going to happen so soon and how the word about it spread. He told VtDigger.com he wasn’t sure what company among the ones they use for to promotion was behind the media blitz representing the valuable state brand. “I don’t know if it’s special PR. We have a company that we use, among many, that does some of our economic development marketing and helps with placement,” he said.

The State of Vermont and the Scott administration is pushing the brand and move-to-VT in particular hard.But even a good brand can begin to look foolish or desperate for attention. Especially if the details are not ready and the reward smaller than advertised. It’s just flash & bang, and then poof it’s gone.

No cell service? No, thanks to Vermont’s telecom providers

Vanu CoverageCo’s utility pole-mounted cell phone relay devices were, it was hoped, part of the solution to the state’s rural coverage problem. But the company is now in financial trouble and  struggling to pay its own “phone bill.” They are in effect facing a shutoff notice from Consolidated Communications (formerly FairPoint Communications) for an outstanding bill of $100,000 for connecting the pole-mounted microcell devices to their landline network.

phonesoutIt’s worth recalling that over the last decade or more Vanu CoverageCo (along with several other telecoms including the problematic company VTel and FairPointnow Consolidated Communications) were recipients of a cornucopia of federal and state grants (our tax dollars) to encourage these businesses supply cell service to receptionless areas. Over the years, millions in funds and federal grants (our tax dollars at work) were approved and distributed through the Vermont  Telecommunications Authority. [The VTA, now “mothballed,” was a Vermont state hybrid agency established in 2007during the Douglas Administration. Created by legislation, the concept reportedly originated with Gov. Douglas’ Administration Secretary Mike Smith, who surprise, surprise!later became Vice President for Vermont affairs at FairPoint.]

And now Consolidated Communication’s threatened action which might shut down CoverageCo servicecould have a life-and-death impact: loss of emergency 911 capacities for a portion of the state. In legislative hearings on the issue state Senator Randy Brock (R- Franklin County) raised the alarm over CoverageCo’s possible demise: If we let this die on the vine, it’s hundreds or thousands of Vermonters without 911 cell service .Just wait until a couple of people die because there’s no coverage.”

And it is no small irony that Consolidated Communications (FairPoint’s successor) is the one forcing this issue on the state. The company was awarded the E-911 contract from the state in 2014: the contract offered to pay $1.8 million for the set-up, followed by a total of roughly $9.5 million for 60 months of operations and maintenance. FairPoint struggled for years with consistently poor customer service issues and at one point was heavily fined by Vermont, Maine and New Hampshire. FairPoint, struggling and on the verge of going down the tubes, prevailed on the state of Vermont. FairPoint executives successfully lobbied the state into a deal on the fines. “Benevolently” Vermont regulators agreed to waive $7 million in assessed unpaid penaltiesproviding that the same amount be redirected by FairPoint for statewide broadband build-out. It is not clear if any accounting was ever undertaken to guarantee this million dollar build-out would or ever did actually happen.

Not sure how  FairPoint may have thanked the state for the $7 million favor, but now re-born as Consolidated Communications, the company thinks nothing of squeezing CoverageCo  over $100,000an action that may cause parts of the state to not only lose cell service but potentially lifesaving emergency 911 service. Well, thanks a lot, Consolidated. Get ready to “Console” the survivors.

Phil Scott vetoes structural mechanism for preventing working families from becoming the working poor

One of the bills Governor Scott vetoed was H.196 an act relating to paid family leave. The bill was designed to: enable Vermont workers to take up to 12 weeks of paid parental and family leave, with a cap on six weeks of family leave per year. Supporters of the bill say that paid family leave will reduce stress for families and attract young people to Vermont who want to start families.ttvphilscott1

Research recently completed at Florida Atlantic University and Cleveland State University quantifies what had been suspected for years, namely that families without paid sick leave or family leave time are more likely to have incomes below the poverty line, experience food insecurity and require expensive state funded welfare services.

The studies published in two academic, peer-reviewed journals, Social Work in Health Care and the American Journal of Orthopsychiatry, utilized data collected from the 2015 National Health Interview Survey to assess the effect of no paid sick leave on two key indicators of poverty, income and the need to utilize welfare services.[…] The authors argue that the main reason for these correlations are the higher cost of medical expenses, lack of preventive care and missed wages incurred by individuals and families who do not have paid sick leave benefits.

As LeaAnne DeRigne, Ph.D., associate professor of FAU’s Phyllis and Harvey Sandler School of Social Work, simply puts it, the study shows : “Paid sick leave benefits serve as a structural mechanism for preventing working families from becoming the working poor. Given the public investments made in welfare, food stamps and other social services, mandating paid sick leave is a clear policy lever for reducing the need for these services among millions of individuals nationally.”

If Vermont House bill H. 196 had not been vetoed and had instead become law, it would according to reporting in vtdigger.com have been paid for with a 0.136 percent employee payroll tax covering parental and family leave insurance. This would have provided workers taking this benefit to receive 70 percent of their income during the leave period.

Remarking on his veto of this bill Governor Scott said “While the goals of this legislation are admirable,” the governor said in a statement accompanying his veto, “it simply is not responsible to impose a new $16.3 million payroll tax on Vermonters.”

So Governor Scott, help us voters understand why exactly is it “simply responsible” to veto rather than sign H. 196 a bill that clearly supports working families. Because I found that even the conservative Koch bros.-funded American Enterprise Institute concluded that financing such a plan through a payroll tax was a sensible approach.The group  admits it is not a “terrible” additional burden to pay for implementing family leave. And that seems almost an endorsement considering it’s from Koch Bros. funded organization.

So since he claims the goals of family leave bills are “admirable” yet still kills the bill, my question for Phil Scott would be: what shred of evidence a study to cite, perhaps, that shows a small payroll tax increase could possibly do as much damage to Vermont working people as the lack  family leave benefits now does?

Remember: Affordable for whom?

Coins of his realm: Trump’s chump change

What is it with Republican Presidents declaring success way before it is actually achieved? 

As if he wanted to cast in stone his own version of George Bush’s infamous “Mission Accomplished” banner (the one prematurely celebrating “winning” the war Bush & Cheney started in Iraq) the Trump administration prematurely minted commemorative coins commemorating the planned summit with North Korean leader Kim Jong UN. Trump the vainglorious fool and his GOP followers were actually anticipating he would be awarded a Nobel Peace prize telling reporters: ‘Everyone thinks I deserve the Nobel Peace Prize.’

Now since the not unexpected cancellation of Trump’s Un* meeting the commemorative coins (should we call them “Trump-pence”?) are now selling at a substantial discount. Trumpchange1pence

Given Trump’s authoritarian tendencies the photo-shopped version on the left might give Donald the title he aspires to

Some believe the Trump coin could become a collectible loosely falling into a category known by numismatists as mint-made error coins or simply error coins. These groups of coins with distinctive characteristics (often built-in defects) sound like Trump.

*Sec. of State Pompeo: “[…]the summit between the president and Chairman Un.”  What’s Kim Jong-un’s Surname? Mike Pompeo Is Learning the Hard Way

 

 

 

 

 

Goodbye, Old Friend!

Tomorrow at 11:00 AM, friends will gather at the Meeting House in East Fairfield to celebrate the life of Perry Cooper, who passed away late last fall.

I’ll be there with my husband Mark, and so will many of our mutual friends from the Northwest Citizens for Responsible Growth.  It was at a meeting of the NWCRG that I first met Perry in 2004 when we gathered to strategize a response to Walmart’s proposal to site one of their big box blights on a field of prime agricultural soil on the outskirts of St. Albans.

In the years since, Perry had become a dear friend and frequent collaborator in the ongoing fight for a progressive and sustainable community.

Perry had also added a new dimension of scientific curiosity to my life as well as some valuable historic perspective on the role of non-civilian nuclear energy in the ’50’s and the 60’s.  He had a first hand knowledge of those formative years, from his work on nuclear submarines at Electric Boat.  His stories were true spell-binders.

He had a keen intellect combined with the spirit of a rebel.  For years he worked on his own wave theory, which he explained to me at some length.  Using language and illustrations, he made it surprisingly understandable even to a science amateur like me.  I hope his written memoir and the outline of his theory will find their way to people who will appreciate them.

Perry had a lot devoted friends, children and grandchildren, so I have every confidence that they will.

I know that music played a huge role in his life, but others are much better able to expound on that than I.  He was extremely kind to animals, demonstrating a whole lot more patience with them than he could ever spare for human fools. All of my house pets over the years have been fond of Perry.

He’d occasionally drop by my house unexpectedly when he was in St. Albans to visit a healthcare professional or just to do some shopping.  That was always a treat, and if it was a cold winter day, I was glad that I usually had some homemade soup on hand to warm him up as we passed a little time catching up.

We shared our politics, and could talk for hours on that subject. He was also an occasional contributor to Green Mountain Daily, where he used the handle “Witchcat” and occasionally locked horns with one writer or the other.  Even in white-hot argument, Perry managed to be pretty articulate. 

I am very grateful that, toward the end of Perry’s life, I was able to introduce him to nuclear safety experts, Arnie and Maggie Gundersen.  They came with me to visit him just days before he passed away and it was delightful to see how much Perry rallied to enjoy Arnie’s great appreciation of his first hand accounts of being a “cowboy” in the early days of nuclear energy wrangling.  They talked for a very long time; and when we left, Perry seemed as happy and animated as his old self.  I think this was the best parting gift I could have given him.

As we grow older and lose our dearest friends, one by one, it becomes  more and more difficult to fill the void that is left behind.

I doubt I will ever again have a friend quite like Perry.