A few days ago, the Journal Sentinel editorial board hoped that GOP legislators managing the mining bill towards a speedy approval - - and Wednesday night's 17-16 State Senate vote makes that a certainty, given Republican domination in the Assembly - - would be reasonable and open to improving a bill the editorial board was liking more and more :
...we hope the Republican majority - which has made this measure its No. 1
priority in jobs bills - doesn't rush the bill through at the expense of
sound amendments.
At the time,
I had this to say about the editorial board's argument:
* The editorial board says it hopes the GOP legislative leadership does
not rush the bill through to passage without fair consideration of
sound amendments.
In fact, that has been exactly what has been happening because the bill
is Scott Walker's #1 priority, and he and the GOP are still smarting
over the bill's defeat last year.
On the matter of credible consideration of substantial changes, ask
Democratic State Sen. Tim Cullen how his alternative proposal, created
with public and scientific input, fared in final bill drafting.
And there would be little need for amendments if the bill-drafting
process hadn't been open to the mining company and closed to officials
and experts representing environmental issues and Native Americans
living downstream from the mine site with a water-based rice-growing
culture.
Well, power is as power does, and the GOP leadership kept the pedal to the floor, as
The Journal Sentinel reported:
Democrats sought changes to the mining bill on Monday when the bill came before the Legislature's Joint Finance Committee and again Wednesday on the Senate floor. Republicans rejected all their proposals.
sheesh. reduced to peddling 'what if' and unicorn-based hope wishes to convince its readership to support Walker and his out-of-state handlers in selling off the environmental birthright of Wisconsin citizens. Gaylord Nelson would be ashamed.
ReplyDeleteThe Audacity of Hope? Doesn't seem to apply to our J/S. The J/S is audacious of nothing.
ReplyDelete"power is as power does" - seems to be the mantra held by many of our governing officials as of late - and that terrifies us.
ReplyDeleteEverything about this bill - to those of us paying attention - feels 'fishy', feels 'misguided', feels 'detrimental', feels 'wrong' - so how did it make it through our senate? How is this happening to the proud state we choose to call home? And further more - how are we allowing this to happen?
For more articles diving further into the corruption of this bill - check out these links:
http://www.wisconsingazette.com/wisconsin-gaze/wisconsin-senate-passes-mining-bill.html
http://www.wisconsingazette.com/editorial/corruption-in-wis-is-so-obvious-that-its-blinding.html
http://www.wisconsingazette.com/breaking-news/anti-gay-group-wants-to-ditch-environmental-rules-to-help-florida-billionaire-build-iron-mine-in-northwoods.html
http://www.wisconsingazette.com/wisconsin-gaze/mining-bill-sparks-battle-to-save-greatest-lake.html