Thursday, April 30, 2015
About new WI GOP rules for food stamp recipients
Posted by James Rowen at 4:13 PM 7 comments
Waukesha Great Lakes water diversion needs WI DNR info update
What gives?
Recent history from this blog and other sources:
TUESDAY, APRIL 14, 2015:
About Waukesha's hurry-hurry water diversion plan...
We noted it a few days ago - - as of April 8th, everyone's into planning year six, still marking time.
TUESDAY, MARCH 31, 2015:
Wednesday, April 8th, is the five-year anniversary of the Waukesha Common Council's adoption of the Waukesha Water Utility's application for a precedent-setting diversion of Lake Michigan water out of the Great Lakes Basin.
But rein in your optimism if you think the application's implementation after all that time is just around the corner.
Though the city is facing a June, 2018 court-approved deadline to provide customers with a cleaner water supply, delays and missed deadlines - - accompanied by inaccurate progress estimates - - have pushed that projected compliance date to the summer of 2020, and there is no "plan B," according to a City of Waukesha document which The Journal Sentinel prompted and cited.
Posted by James Rowen at 9:30 AM 5 comments
Patience Roggensack gets her asterisk
Posted by James Rowen at 1:35 AM 7 comments
Wednesday, April 29, 2015
As Walker sells his 'success,' layoffs on his watch peaking
WI on pace for most layoff notifications of Walker administration in 2015Tell the story. The whole story - - of false-speaking, economic stagnation and failed trickle-down/favored-donor state financing beyond $1 Kohl's' sweaters, motorcycle rides, and Divine-Reagan inspiration.
Posted by James Rowen at 4:46 PM 6 comments
Walker hoodwinked Iowa. Also Minnesota. Who's next?
Iowa hoodwinked, I said.
I'd also written a few days earlier about absurd political and economic claims Walker made in Minnesota, where, in fact, jobs are being added and the economy is stronger than Wisconsin has been under Walker.
It's well known since Walker was sworn in that Minnesota has been eating Wisconsin's lunch.
You might as well be a Vikings fan, travel to the Green Bay Packers Hall of Fame, and convince the locals there that the Vikings are the superior team.
Yet Walker told Minnesotans their state was in better shape than Wisconsin because Democrats had run the show in Wisconsin for a longer period than they actually did, and PolitiFact today rates Walker's claim "false."
Wisconsinites will not be surprised about Walker's vetted ability to speak falsely: PolitiFact finds his "False" and even-worse "Pants on Fire" misstatements happen almost three times as frequently as remarks he makes that are fully "True."
I've been tracking Walker's PolitiFact ratings for years: there was one stretch of nearly eight months in 2011 when Walker did not receive a single finding of "True" or even "Mostly True."
Remember - - we're talking about a Governor with a huge staff to fact-check if he chooses, a presidential hopeful, and a man who claims his life is directed by God.
The only question left is when national media will begin to expose Walker's record, and explain how a person who wraps himself in faith and the integrity implied can also be so familiar with false speaking?
Walker has been misleading people for years. A summary post about that, here.
Posted by James Rowen at 1:09 PM 6 comments
WI to set 70 MPH top speed limit, so...
Right now, with a few exceptions, first-time-caught OWI is only a ticket.
And I know that policy is made these days in a facts-don-t-matter environment, but will legislators making the ridiculous argument that the boosted speed limit will enable vacationers to spend a few minutes of extra time with the kids take a closer look at a real issue - - the safety implications of letting heavy trucks go faster and take about 100 feet longer to stop?
Posted by James Rowen at 9:00 AM 7 comments
Tuesday, April 28, 2015
Umteenth study links warming, climate change and weather extremes
Continually ignored. For the record, I have several times blogged about a conference I attended in Chicago in 2003 with then-Milwaukee Mayor John Norquist, where the Bush administration's EPA warned local officials that a warming climate was going to produce severe, costly extreme weather events.
Posted by James Rowen at 10:29 PM 4 comments
Firm with Walker tax credits again moves jobs to Mexico
If we had a real Attorney General in Wisconsin instead of a Republican corporate tool, we'd be deep into an investigation of how the WEDC - - already having missed Walker's job-creation goal by 100,000 positions, and its long record of untraceable and abused taxpayer-provided financing clearly established - - could have given tax credits to a company that for the second time is moving Wisconsin jobs to Mexico, business media report:
This is the second time the Dublin, Ireland-based [Eaton] company has shipped jobs south of the border since 2012, during which time the Wisconsin Economic Development Corp. has given it significant support via state tax credits.
The company said it is permanently discontinuing certain manufacturing operations in Watertown, axing 93 jobs.Also for the record: Kremlin-style, Walker has whitewashed the 250,000 jobs pledge. The number he now touts as a success is 150,000 - - as Wisconsin has fallen to 40th among the states in jobs added.
How long before these facts well-known in Wisconsin but still emerging nationally jell into a narrative that what Walker is selling in Iowa and elsewhere is phony?
I see signs that at least the awareness is quickening:
It appears as if Massachusetts' activists were more prepared Monday for Walker's talking-point whitewashing of the economy he's crashed in Wisconsin than Iowans were last weekend.
Massachusetts Democratic Party chairman and state Sen. Tom McGee, Massachusetts AFL-CIO president Steve Tolman and a handful of state lawmakers spoke against the "shadowy Republican Super PAC masquerading as a taxpayer subsidized non-profit" and against Walker's "record of attacking working families."
"Republican Gov. Scott Walker’s time in Wisconsin is marred by an anti-working family agenda that's resulting in the worst job creation in the region while Wisconsin’s middle class has been shrinking at one of the fastest rates in the country," said Massachusetts Democratic Party executive director Matt Fenlon. "Massachusetts voters won't be fooled by the talking points of a Republican presidential wannabe who came here to address a fundraiser for a shadowy Republican group."
Posted by James Rowen at 12:54 PM 5 comments
Massachusetts better prepared for Walker masquerade
It appears as if Massachusetts' activists were more prepared Monday for Walker's talking-point whitewashing of the economy he's crashed in Wisconsin than Iowans were last weekend.
Massachusetts Democratic Party chairman and state Sen. Tom McGee, Massachusetts AFL-CIO president Steve Tolman and a handful of state lawmakers spoke against the "shadowy Republican Super PAC masquerading as a taxpayer subsidized non-profit" and against Walker's "record of attacking working families."
"Republican Gov. Scott Walker’s time in Wisconsin is marred by an anti-working family agenda that's resulting in the worst job creation in the region while Wisconsin’s middle class has been shrinking at one of the fastest rates in the country," said Massachusetts Democratic Party executive director Matt Fenlon. "Massachusetts voters won't be fooled by the talking points of a Republican presidential wannabe who came here to address a fundraiser for a shadowy Republican group."I had noted earlier that Walker told Iowans that things were better in Wisconsin under his direction, but data on everything from wage growth to job creation to road deterioration is shown by data to have worsened since he was sworn in four years ago:
*... Wisconsin is facing a projected 2015-'17 budget deficit - - in fact, Walker had the state skip a recent debt payment because the projected deficit has risen to $283 million - - so the budget Walker has submitted for the upcoming biennium will be adjusted by the Legislature into balance as state law requires through some combination of added fees, taxes, spending cuts or borrowing.
And before you let Walker say he's never proposed a state tax increase, the record shows he proposed three in his 2011-'13 adopted budget aimed at low-income Wisconsin residents, according to the state government's non-partisan Legislative Fiscal Bureau and reported by PolitiFact.
* Finally, about the state's falling rate of unemployment. Yes, that number is down in the post-recession recovery, but beware how cherry-picked that number is from among many other statistics that show how poorly our state's economy is performing since Walker took office.
Wisconsin under Walker has fallen to 40th among the states in jobs added, and to 42nd in wage growth - - with virtually all the jobs created since 2010 clustered in low-wage categories, according to a review of official data by the University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee Center for Economic Development.Walker is signaling that he anticipates a long campaign, so activists have their work cut out for themselves. On the other hand, the record about Walker and Wisconsin is filled with information that exposes who he really is and where he would take country.
Here is one summary post about Walker's history in Wisconsin, and there are more than 7,000 other posts at this blog since early 2007.
All free for the taking.
Posted by James Rowen at 11:50 AM 1 comments
Walker to Bush, GOP: More divide-and-conquer coming
It is a gamble at once audacious and born of necessity: Gov. Scott Walkerof Wisconsin, a likely Republican candidate for president, has put campaign plans in motion that cede early momentum to his chief rival, Jeb Bush, in favor of beating Mr. Bush and other opponents with a long-game strategy designed to achieve financial and political success next winter.So Walker is lowering expectations about the winning the early battle for money, figuring no one can beat him in a marathon.
While he hits the books and studies harder than ever, if you know what I mean.
Posted by James Rowen at 9:00 AM 4 comments
Sorry, Iowa, but he had to be moving on
Look, Iowa, he said he'd back to visit - - a lot - - and he's given you a lot of attention, so learn from us and try not to get possessive.
Posted by James Rowen at 1:09 AM 4 comments
Monday, April 27, 2015
Walker hoodwinks Iowa
Walker told the Iowa Faith & Freedom Coalition that four years after his election, Wisconsin is better off. The unemployment rate has dropped from 9.2 percent to 4.6 percent, the state's budget is balanced and the state's pension fund is fully funded."Wisconsin is better off?"
Some quick facts, if they still matter:
* Wisconsin's roads - - starved for state pothole and repair aid - - are now rated third worst in the nation, a study shows, so if you're coming here, drive carefully, check your tires and update your AAA towing insurance.
* Walker is not responsible for the success of the Wisconsin Retirement System. Its national reputation is long-standing and well-known, and its funding at virtually 100% has been consistent and documented since at least 2003, this report says.
Additionally, the fund itself is conservatively-managed and insulated from politics, adjusting payments depending on market performance and does not over-distrbute payouts to retirees.
Furthermore, Walker began making noises about meddling with the system's basic structure, but backed off in 2012 when no one else was interested in messing with success.
* Yes, Wisconsin's budget is balanced, but that's because balanced budgets in Wisconsin are required by state law.
However, Wisconsin is facing a projected 2015-'17 budget deficit - - in fact, Walker had the state skip a recent debt payment because the projected deficit has risen to $283 million - - so the budget Walker has submitted for the upcoming biennium will be adjusted by the Legislature into balance as state law requires through some combination of added fees, taxes, spending cuts or borrowing.
And before you let Walker say he's never proposed a state tax increase, the record shows he proposed three in his 2011-'13 adopted budget aimed at low-income Wisconsin residents, according to the state government's non-partisan Legislative Fiscal Bureau and reported by PolitiFact.
* Finally, about the state's falling rate of unemployment. Yes, that number is down in the post-recession recovery, but beware how cherry-picked that number is from among many other statistics that show how poorly our state's economy is performing since Walker took office.
Wisconsin under Walker has fallen to 40th among the states in jobs added, and to 42nd in wage growth - - with virtually all the jobs created since 2010 clustered in low-wage categories, according to a review of official data by the University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee Center for Economic Development.
Couple all that with Walker's refusal to allow any increase in the minimum hourly wage above the legal floor of $7.25, his signing of a wage-depressing 'right-to-work law, and his promised 250,000 new private-sector jobs coming in 100,000 short and you're left with a political spinner declaring victory when there's little to cheer about.
Here's one link to the bigger picture.
C'mon, Des Moines Register: do a little digging and fact-checking.
Posted by James Rowen at 8:00 PM 5 comments
US Right tells Pope to shut up on climate change
But the effort [by Pope Francis] is already angering a number of American conservatives, among them members of the Heartland Institute, a libertarian group partly funded by the Charles G. Koch Foundation, run by the billionaire industrialist Koch brothers, who oppose climate policy.
“The Holy Father is being misled by ‘experts’ at the United Nations who have proven unworthy of his trust,” Joseph Bast, the president of the Heartland Institute, said in an interview. “Though Pope Francis’ heart is surely in the right place, he would do his flock and the world a disservice by putting his moral authority behind the United Nations’ unscientific agenda on the climate.”Walker has long been a Koch brothers favorite and is apparently their 2016 presidential candidate; the Heartland Institute sponsored a $250-per-ticket dinner for Walker in 2013, and last year took credit for pushing Walker to more strongly oppose Common Core school curricula.
These people must have forgotten that the incumbent Pope took the name Francis, not Pope Keystone XL.
They need to Google "St. Francis."
Posted by James Rowen at 6:08 PM 2 comments
Failing roads-ranking another Walker 'achievement'
To 40th in jobs added and 42nd in wage growth nationally, you can add roads and streets rated third-worst in the country, a study finds. Not long ago, Wisconsin was 22nd, so the state of the state's basic transportation infrastructure has really deteriorated. Literally.
The reason: cuts in state funding in Walker's budgets to fix potholes and make other repairs.
Walker often flies the few miles from an airport in Waukesha near his Wauwatosa home to Madison on the odd day he's in Wisconsin, and is always driven by a State Trooper if the plane is unavailable, so has little personal experience dodging potholes,
Posted by James Rowen at 11:48 AM 3 comments
Sunday, April 26, 2015
Walker still in Wisconsin 51% of the time, records show
Funniest part of the story is that he defended the absences - - on a media conference call. From Spain.
Posted by James Rowen at 8:33 PM 3 comments
Walker knows - - or cares- - nothing about science or the DNR
Besides, if it does not get him votes in Iowa, or attention in South Carolina, he ain't interested.
Posted by James Rowen at 6:01 PM 19 comments
Ever the zealot, Walker still backs same-sex marriage bans
No wonder that in Wisconsin, two of the same plaintiffs who successfully overturned the state's discriminatory ban on same-sex marriages which Walker had supported has had to return to court to have both their names on their child's birth certificate.
Walker and allies here just can't concede defeat and are willing to put everyday citizens through the wringer purely for ideological spite.
And in his newly-adopted state of Iowa, where Walker speaks far more openly about his extremist views than he did when running for re-election in Wisconsin, he expanded yesterday also that God is telling him to run for President, The Cap Times reported:
Reading a passage from the devotional book "Jesus Calling," Walker told the crowd about his decision to run for governor in 2010 — something he and his wife, Tonette, decided through discussion and prayer.
Walker has previously said he doesn't believe he should run for president because it's the "next logical step" in his career. Rather, he has said, it should be because he feels called to it.
"The best way to minister is to accept God's calling when you least expect it," Walker said. "We felt it was a calling to get in that election. We felt we were called to do the right thing, so we worried more about the next generation than we did the next election."
Posted by James Rowen at 1:36 PM 11 comments
Rising awareness of oil train dangers; Milwaukee hearing Wed.
A supportive editorial was added by the paper Tuesday evening.
The hearing begins at 9:00 a.m. in Room 301-B, should be well-attended, will provide important information and sentiment, and could last for several hours.
Below is a photo I took and began posting in early January that tells you all you need to know about what an oil train derailment with its potentially-explosive crude oil cargo could do to downtown Milwaukee, or another Wisconsin community.
Oil train passing through Milwaukee's Third Ward above 1st Street at 12 noon. |
Posted by James Rowen at 10:30 AM 0 comments
Why do other candidates tolerate Walker's theft of Reagan's ID?
In his stop in Urbandale [Iowa], Walker dismissed an assertion by Rubio that "there's no way (governors running for president will) be ready on day one to manage U.S. foreign policy."
"I think again he's questioning how Ronald Reagan was ready," Walker said of the former president and California governor. "I think governors innately have the ability to lead."And really, "governors innately have the ability to lead?" Some sort of natural selection, dare we say, evolution at work here?
Did Walker watch Missouri's Gov. Jay Nixon recently botch the state's response to the police shooting of Michael Brown in Ferguson, let alone to the endemic corruption of that city's police and civic administration?
Florida Gov. Rick Scott's misspending of millions of dollars of taxpayer money on unneeded drug tests for aid recipients?
His buddy New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie's bridge traffic and pension system mismanagement?
Indiana Gov. Mike Pence's destruction of the state's image and tourism appeal over that uncalled-for gay-discrimination law?
Former Minnesota Gov. Tim Pawlenty's veto of transportation improvement funding prior to the collapse of the I-35 bridge?
Or just Google Governors Faubus, Wallace, Barnett...
Posted by James Rowen at 2:01 AM 4 comments
Saturday, April 25, 2015
Doe probes said taxpayers, voters were harmed, so Walker plays the victim
If Walker were the victim in the Doe probes, his former Milwaukee County Deputy Chief of Staff Kelly Rindfleisch would not be still serving a felony jail sentence for misusing public time and resources for partisan purposes, five more Walker ex-County staffers, campaign donors and other associates would not have also been found guilty of Doe I-prosecuted crimes, and major Walker funders would not be battling in court to stop a related probe aimed at Walker personally, and his campaign, for an even bigger alleged evasion of campaign finance law in Doe II.
Polls and focus groups must be telling Walker that he needs more distance from both the Doe probes and economic issues that can also hurt him, so he's spinning the Doe probes as a distraction from news and facts like this:
Wisconsin lags Midwest: Job growth state rankings
Over the past decade, Wisconsin has mostly ranked in the middle of all states for employment growth. Among Midwestern states, Wisconsin was once among the leaders, but in recent years that trend has changed. How states rank in year-over-year percent change of private-sector employees for the third quarter ending in September each year.
Posted by James Rowen at 9:23 PM 4 comments
New ' friend' [Sic] of labor, Walker mocks workers, buries his record
"I’m going to stand with the American worker."Perhaps these workers, listed by Walker to his staff, and in his book? And what's next for this chameleon: Walker, Tree-Hugger? Feminist? $7.50/hr. minimum-wage advocate? Advocate for light rail, Amtrak?
10.) You take a week off to protest in Wisconsin and your office runs better.
9.) On a snow day when they say “non-essential” people should stay home you know who they mean.
8.) You get paid twice as much as a private sector person doing the same job but make up the difference by doing half as much work.
7.) It takes longer to fire you than the average killer spends on death row.
6.) The worse you do your job, the more your boss avoids you.
5.) You think the French are working themselves to death.
4.) You know by having a copy of the Holy Koran on your desk your job is 100% safe.
3.) You spend more time at protest marches than at church.
2.) You have a Democratic congressman’s lips permanently attached to your butt.1.) You pay more in union dues than you do for your health care insurance.
Posted by James Rowen at 3:31 PM 6 comments
In Presidential politics, payroll or prayer?
During his political rise in Wisconsin, Mr. Walker did not often emphasize his faith. But evangelicals make up nearly 60 percent of Republican caucusgoers in Iowa. They are an important factor in Southern primaries. And they continue to have an outsize influence on the Republican nominating process.So when Walker says from Iowa this weekend that the path to the Presidency runs through the Midwest - - presumably an advantage for him, he thinks - - will media make these numbers about jobs in Wisconsin and the Midwest as relevant as the data about evangelical turnout?
In recent quarters, Wisconsin has been in the bottom half of state rankings for 12-month growth in jobs and average weekly wage. In the third quarter of 2014, Wisconsin was 40th for job growth over the previous year and 42nd for wage growth.If 'it's the economy, stupid' still shapes campaigns and determines elections, will Walker be pressed to own his record (below), or will he be allowed to say, and campaign on, 'have faith."
Wisconsin lags Midwest: Job growth state rankings
Over the past decade, Wisconsin has mostly ranked in the middle of all states for employment growth. Among Midwestern states, Wisconsin was once among the leaders, but in recent years that trend has changed. How states rank in year-over-year percent change of private-sector employees for the third quarter ending in September each year.Or:
Walker scrubs 100,000 jobs from talking points
Posted by James Rowen at 1:24 PM 1 comments
No, Walker is not "pushing for higher wages for American workers"
And while Walker's creation of a pro-worker campaign plank might be bogus, the author also adds:
When was the last time you heard a GOP presidential nominee talk about raising the incomes of American workers in a way that did not mention tax cuts?Oh, brother. I could see this coming a few days ago.
I think the op-ed writer wanted to write something provocative that tied together reflexive Republicans' trickle-down tax policies with their everyday, anti-immigration xenophobia, but ignoring Walker's known anti-worker track record undermines the op-ed's premise and ends up giving Walker way too much credit-by-omission.
The record shows that Walker is no friend of labor, nor is he some kind of stealth GOP populist.
Remember that little game Walker played when he went to Washington, DC shortly after his election and claimed to be a "progressive?"
Some progressive. Unmasked by then-Cong. Dennis Kucinich.
Walker has reduced corporate and high-earners' taxes, fed huge loans, grants and tax credits to favored businesses through a flawed new state development corporation and cut public workers take-home pay while capping their future raises at 1% annually through Act 10 which he dropped on workers without warning.
Walker does not believe in the minimum wage, so has steadfastly blocked any increase above Wisconsin's bottom-of-the-barrel $7.25/hr. rate, just signed a 'right-to-work' wage-depressing law covering all private sector unionized workers, and is all but certain to sign an emerging bill that will throw out Wisconsin's "prevailing wage" law and the family supporting pay it provides for workers on major projects.
Nor did the op-ed mention that virtually all the jobs created during Walker's first-term - - 100,000 fewer than promised - - have been concentrated in low-wage categories, data show, and that Wisconsin's job-creation now ranks 40th among the states.
Bottom line: Walker has done nothing to push for higher wages for workers.
He's trying in this case to be the ultra-rightist on immigration among the GOP presidential hopefuls while posing to gullible voters as a blue-collar Republican.
People need to see Walker and his manipulations for what they are.
Posted by James Rowen at 12:48 AM 4 comments
Friday, April 24, 2015
Bonus buzz words from DNR Sec. Cathy Stepp
Take it away, WI DNR Secretary Cathy Stepp - - ex-developer, former agency hater - - though I will show some true human relations compassion and edit out the details from her email about who among her newly-elevated management team enjoys camping, is fixing up a new house, or roots for the New England Patriots, among other personal information:
------------------------------------------------------------
This team includes Amber Passno as the new Human Resources Bureau Director and Jennifer Gebert as a Deputy Bureau Director. Additionally, Julie Graziano, who has done a significant amount of organizational development work for our agency, has also accepted a special assignment to partner with Amber and Jennifer to develop recommendations for improving and enhancing the services offered by Human Resources.
Secretary
Wisconsin Department of Natural Resources
Phone: (608) 267-7556
Posted by James Rowen at 5:01 PM 5 comments
After layoff notices, DNR's Stepp motivates, leads with buzz words
This graf sums it up:
Regarding the comments circulating regarding reorganizing. As part of the position reductions and assessment of our business needs we have to consider how best to accomplish mission, when budgets and staffing changes occur. There is nothing to report at this time, however as the budget moves forward and we get some additional certainty, we will be engaging management teams to assist in our efforts.The full email:
Secretary
Wisconsin Department of Natural Resources
Phone: (608) 267-7556
Posted by James Rowen at 4:10 PM 1 comments