Saturday, March 26, 2011

Journal Sentinel Acknowledges Facts And Consequences Of Regional Segregation

Glad to see a Journal Sentinel editorial about a complaint over housing discrimination in Waukesha County, and the larger context, including gaps in transportation.

"Segregation is a burden on everyone in the region, whether they realize it or not. It's a poison that eats away at the fabric of a community - and at prospects for a healthier economy. Poor minorities, who mostly live in Milwaukee's central city far away from jobs in the suburbs, have a harder time raising themselves out of poverty. It's not the only reason, clearly, but it's a contributing factor.

"Milwaukee bears the brunt of providing services for the unemployed and the poor. But taxpayers in the largely white suburbs pay, too, through taxes to fund those services. Better transportation is one answer, but more affordable housing in adjacent counties needs to be part of the mix...."
"...The county, and municipalities in the county, need to guard against approaches or attitudes that serve to make the Milwaukee area one of the most segregated in the country."
These issues have been documented and analyzed on this blog often - - a sample is here - - and let me add below a few facts from a more recent posting to the transportation and housing issues acknowledged in the editorial:
"As this very moment, Scott Walker has accelerated the spending of $1.7 billion in state and federal highway funds to ease the commute through the Zoo Interchange that sits between the two counties. And more spending is on the horizon west across Waukesha County to the Jefferson County line, and on a separate north-south bypass west of the City of Waukesha without similar expenditures for public transit.

"The Southeastern Wisconsin Regional Planning, headquartered in the exurban Waukesha County community of Pewaukee - - one-third of SEWRPC's annual operating budget comes from Milwaukee County taxpayers - - wrote the freeway expansion and rebuilding plan.

"And has green-lighted the spending of another $23 million in local, state and federal dollars to build The Interchange To Nowhere - - a full-diamond interchange to the never-built shopping mall in the relatively upper-income, sprawly Pabst Farm development in Western Waukesha that is, along with the interchange site itself, on land that the commission's master plan said should be preserved.

"And you still cannot take a direct, public transit bus from the region's major job center that is the City of Milwaukee (with its majority-minority population) to the largest such employment site in Waukesha County - - the New Berlin Industrial Park - - in the same, heavily-white city that, a year ago, blocked after protests, the construction of a housing development to have included so-called workforce, or affordable rental units.

"Some public financing assistance was to have been included in the project.

"Additionally, SEWRPC repeatedly touted its master plan for decades without researching and issuing an updated, contemporary regional housing study - - an ongoing endeavor it agreed to begin, under pressure from fair housing advocates, after a 35-year lull."

See the picture emerging?"

Friday, March 25, 2011

Wisconsin, Under Walker And The Fitzgeralds, Has Lost Its Grip

Through the back door, the Walker union-busting bill gets published despite an injunction.

Another sign that we're in distress, folks, and proof that we need to recall every one of these Constsitution deniers.

State Sen. Chris Larson Fighting For Local Schools, Home Rule

I'm reprinting below from Milwaukee Democratic State Sen. Chris Larson's e-mailed newsletter because it offers analysis and links for bills aimed from the outside to strip funds and control from Milwaukee schools, residents and elected officials.

Note also a community meeting Tuesday evening at UWM about education.

The Senate Education Committee held a public hearing this past Wednesday to discuss three bills that could have severe consequences for our neighborhood schools. The three bills introduced aim to dismantle our public school system and instead follow the path towards private, for-profit education.

The first bill discussed was Senate Bill 20, which would give the Milwaukee Common Council the authority to lease or sell school buildings if they determine these buildings are being underutilized or unused.

Senate Bill 34 was the second bill taken up by the committee and would prohibit Milwaukee Public Schools from having residency requirements for teachers. Many of our neighbors made the trip to Madison to testify on the negative implications this bill would have on our community. Senate Bill 34 infringes on the right of our local government to implement policies determined to be in the best interest of our community. This legislation mirrors other bills to eliminate residency requirements for other Milwaukee municipal employees and will have a negative long-term impact on our homeowners and tax base.

Finally, the committee heard comments from Wisconsin residents on Senate Bill 22, the most contentious of the three bills. This legislation would take additional funds away from our neighborhood schools and instead give it to non-traditional schools, which have lower professional standards for their teachers and staff, and limited accountability and transparency. According to DPI, if this legislation were to pass, our community alone would lose nearly $10.8 million from our public schools.

After 10 hours of debate and discussion, it was evident that the overwhelming majority of individuals that participated in the hearing, most of whom were from our community, were adamantly opposed to all three legislative proposals. 

Wisconsin has always been highly regarded for the educational opportunities we provide to all of our children. Each Wisconsin generation before us has made an investment in our state's education. Now it is time for those of us who have benefited from these past efforts to uphold this generational promise--to provide the next generation with the educational opportunities they will need to help them succeed.

To view the legislative proposals previously mentioned, please click on the links listed below:




Town Hall on Education Budget Provisions
Tuesday, March 29 from 5:30 to 9:30 p.m. at UW-Milwaukee
The Milwaukee Democratic Legislative Caucus is holding a town hall meeting this upcoming Tuesday to discuss education-related provisions in the 2011-2013 Biennial Budget. This will be the first of a number of hearings and listening sessions on the budget proposal. Please do not hesitate to contact my office for additional information.

UW-Milwaukee's Wisconsin Room
2200 E. Kenwood Boulevard
Milwaukee, WI 53211

Ohio's Gov. Kasich Has The Walker Playbook And Something New: The Moral High Ground

I guess Kasich is Domino #2 (Walker claimed Domino #1 status when chatting up the fake David Koch) as he tells his sympathetic interviewer that his Walkeresque privatization blueprint and budget cuts have a moral purpose, too.

Jeff Stone's Democratic Party Favor

Jeff Stone earned a "half-Flip" on PolitiFact's "Flip-O-Meter" in Friday's Milwaukee Journal Sentinel for statements he made about his support for Scott Walker's union-busting bill.

Stone, a Republican state representative from suburban Greendale, is also a candidate on the April 5th ballot for Milwaukee County Executive. In the assembly, he voted for Walker signature, controversial bill - - twice - - band voted against many amendments to soften the bill - - but in statements distanced himself from wht the bill will do.

It's easy to see why he meandered and tacked.

Only 37% of Milwaukee County voters cast ballots for Walker in the November 2010, gubernatorial election, and a sizable majority of County residents live in the deeply blue, union-friendly City of Milwaukee.

The newspaper concluded that Stone made "clearly inconsistent statements."

Twists and turns that good - - even righty radio talker Charlie Sykes was cited in the newspaper story admitting to confusion - - deserve a special representation.

How's this?
Large Pretzel

"R" Is For Retribution; State GOP Goes After A Critic

UW-Madison History professor William Cronon wrote a blog posting about the rise of the right in Wisconsin, received worldwide attention for it (I posted it, as I did his subsequent New York Times op-ed)- - and also an Open Records request from the Republican Party of Wisconsin for his emails.

Joe McCarthy lives.

Opposition To Zoo Interchange Expansion Can Still Be Submitted Through April 4th

If you missed the meetings Tuesday and Wednesday at State Fair Park, you can still submit your concerns by:


Mail a form from on-line: 
www.sefreeways.org 
 
Fax, to: 262-548-5662.  

Thursday, March 24, 2011

On Walker Union-Busting Bill, Prosser Says "No" To Recusal

I guess that settles that.

But remember...

Prosser's experienced campaign manager had this to say when he was hired to run the campaign in December.

"Our campaign efforts will include building an organization that will return Justice Prosser to the bench, protecting the conservative judicial majority and acting as a common sense complement to both the new administration and Legislature."
"Complement," according to the Google online dictionary, means "a thing that completes or brings to perfection."

When given a chance to disassociate himself from his campaign manager's statement, Prosser didn't muster much outrage:
"Prosser, for his part, has said he wouldn’t personally have used the word “complement” and describes himself as being in the middle of the court," wrote columnist Mike Nichols.
Now a Prosser apologist dismisses the matter as "a boast made by his then-new campaign chief to a newspaper, one Prosser hadn't approved and swiftly disavowed."

Really?

And that "then-new campaign manager." Makes you think new, as in wet-behind-the-ears, maybe?

Nah.

Brian Nemoir has had a nice career for the last 18 years in politics, communications and government - - and his LinkedIn profile adds more details - - so can we stop the excuse-making?

GOP Prosecutor In Indiana Quits After Urging Walker-Sanctioned Violence

Against himself (Walker), no less!

And this is the second Indiana prosecutor to go down in flames over an email about the Wisconsin protests. Remember this guy? What's happening down there?

Indiana prosecutor denies encouraging Wisconsin violence

By Kate Golden
Wisconsin Center for Investigative Journalism
***
Updated 3:59 p.m. Carlos Lam has admitted writing the email and resigned as deputy prosecutor of Johnson County, according to a statement from the Johnson County Prosecutor.

The new, post-resignation version of the story is here.

***

The email came to Gov. Scott Walker from the personal account of a deputy prosecutor and Republican activist in Indiana.

After praise for Walker, the email — sent Feb. 19, during union demonstrations against Walker’s budget repair bill — then took a darker turn. It suggested that the situation in Wisconsin presented “a good opportunity for what’s called a ‘false flag’ operation.”

“If you could employ an associate who pretends to be sympathetic to the unions’ cause to physically attack you (or even use a firearm against you), you could discredit the unions,” the email said.

“Currently, the media is painting the union protest as a democratic uprising and failing to mention the role of the DNC and umbrella union organizations in the protest. Employing a false flag operation would assist in undercutting any support that the media may be creating in favor of the unions. God bless, Carlos F. Lam.”

Email headers with detailed IP addresses suggest that the message was sent from Indianapolis.

But Carlos F. Lam, the deputy Johnson County, Ind., prosecutor and an Indianapolis resident, said he never wrote it.

Reached Tuesday by phone at the number listed on the email, Lam confirmed his email address matched the Hotmail address appearing on the Walker email, but said he had never written to Walker.

“I am flabbergasted and would never advocate for something like this, and would like everyone to be sure that that’s just not me,” he said, after being read the email.

Indiana deputy prosecutor Carlos Lam confirms this email appears to be from his email address, but he denies sending it. Click to see a larger version in a new page.

Asked his views on Scott Walker, Lam said, “I think he’s trying to do what he has to do to get his budget balanced. But jeez, that’s taking it a little bit to the extreme,” he said of the email’s suggestion to fake violence. “Jeez!”

Lam said he hasn’t filed a police report, but he intends to do so by the end of the week.
He said he was minivan-shopping with his family when the email was sent.

Walker’s bill to balance the budget and strip most collective bargaining rights from public employees was introduced Feb. 11 and triggered protests involving tens of thousands of people at the Capitol for weeks.

The email was sent the same Saturday on which another Indiana law-enforcement figure, state Deputy Attorney General Jeffrey Cox, tweeted that riot police should “use live ammunition” to clear the Capitol of protesters.

Cox was fired Feb. 23 after Mother Jones magazine published the suggestion from his private Twitter account.

The Wisconsin Center for Investigative Journalism discovered the email to Walker among tens of thousands released to media organizations last week as part of an open-records lawsuit settlement with Isthmus and the Associated Press.

It was in a folder produced by the governor’s office called “Pro,” full of emails supporting the governor’s budget repair bill.

A lawyer in the governor’s office, Nate Ristow, said most of the emails to Walker were sorted into folders automatically by a computer, though some were added to the folders manually.

What’s a false flag operation?

The expression derives from the naval practice of flying another country’s flag to deceive one’s enemy. It was used in World War II several times, as when the British dressed up a U.S. destroyer, the Campbelltown, as a German sub-chaser. That allowed them to get close enough to the German-held dry-dock at St. Nazairre to blow it up.

It’s been used to describe political activities, too. An aide to Republican Congressman Charlie Bass resigned in 2006 after posing as a supporter of a Bass opponent and posting discouraging messages on political websites.

Cullen Werwie, Walker’s press secretary, said no one at the office had seen the email or contacted Lam. Werwie condemned the email’s suggestions Monday in a statement to the Center.

“Certainly we do not support the actions suggested in (the) email. Governor Walker has said time and again that the protesters have every right to have their voice heard, and for the most part the protests have been peaceful. We are hopeful that the tradition will continue,” Werwie wrote.

On Feb. 22, when a prank-caller posing as major Walker campaign donor David Koch suggested planting troublemakers in the crowd, Walker began by saying, “Well, the only problem with that — because we thought about that,” but ultimately said he’d decided it was a bad idea.

“My only fear would be is if there was a ruckus caused is that that would scare the public into thinking maybe the governor has gotta settle to avoid all these problems,” Walker told the blogger.

Walker’s comments troubled Madison Police Chief Noble Wray and Mayor Dave Cieslewicz.
“I find it very unsettling and troubling that anyone would consider creating safety risks for our citizens and law enforcement officers,” Wray said in a statement at the time.

Lam, who asked that his name not be used, said he was particularly concerned since “the person who wrote this seems to know a lot about me” and his account “had been hacked in the past.” After being read the email, he said he took down his Facebook page, changed his cell phone number, email passwords, “library, medical, bank, student loan, and a whole host of records,” and was afraid for his and his family’s safety.

Madison Police Det. Cindy Murphy said that if Lam’s account was hacked and his identity was stolen, either Wisconsin or Indiana could have jurisdiction over that crime. If he filed a complaint, it would be straightforward to request information from Hotmail and Lam’s Internet service provider (ISP) about the location of the computer logged into his account when the email was sent, said Murphy, who specializes in computer forensics.

“If we run all this down and it does turn out that he was hacked into, then he is a victim, and he should be outraged — and somebody should be held responsible,” she said. “And no one can fake the data that’s held by the ISPs.”

Prosecutor outspoken about conservative views

All the information about Lam in the email was available online, including his email and phone number.

His blog posts, video appearances and comments on the Internet paint the picture of an outspoken, politically active, longtime Republican who has publicly lambasted collective bargaining for state employee unions and alluded to government taxation as “essentially taking money at gunpoint.”

Carlos Lam's comments online are consistent with some of the sentiments in the email, which he denies sending. 

Click for a larger version. Image: Screengrab from SeekingAlpha.com.

In one of his 1,306 comments on a stock investors’ site, Lam called Indiana “an unsustainable public worker gravy train bubble.”

In another, he said “unions & companies that feed at the gov’t trough will fight tooth & nail against anything that un-feathers their nests.”

Lam wrote in his account profile there that he “believes that to truly prosper as the republic envisioned by the Founding Fathers, we must return to principles of sound money and limited government. He has his own ‘3G network’ that is quite apart from Apple: guns, gold and gasoline.’ ”

After reviewing the email to Walker, Erik Guenther, a criminal defense and constitutional lawyer at the Madison law firm of Hurley, Burish and Stanton, said that if the writer were to participate in devising such a scheme, he could be held accountable for conspiracy to obstruct justice — “but an unsolicited and idiotic suggestion itself probably is not a crime.”

Madison criminal defense lawyer Michael Short said that if Lam wrote the email, he should be investigated for a possible breach of the Indiana Rules of Professional Conduct, for “suggesting that officials in the Walker administration commit a felony,” namely, misconduct in public office.

Those rules state that “conduct involving dishonesty, fraud, deceit or misrepresentation” amount to professional misconduct. They are the rules to which lawyers are held accountable by the Indiana lawyer discipline system.

But Lam’s boss, Johnson County Prosecutor Brad Cooper, adamantly defended Lam, whom he has known for most of his career.

The nonprofit Wisconsin Center for Investigative Journalism (www.WisconsinWatch.org) collaborates with Wisconsin Public Television, Wisconsin Public Radio and the UW-Madison School of Journalism and Mass Communication and other news media. Kate Golden is at kgolden@wisconsinwatch.org


All works created, published, posted or disseminated by the Center do not necessarily reflect the views or opinions of UW-Madison or any of its affiliates.

Glad To See Abele Speaking Out

I've said more than once on this blog that I support Chris Abele for Milwaukee County Executive.

His campaign has had a rough few days, but I am glad to see that he is still on offense because he will bring fresh ideas and independence to an office misused and ruined by Scott Walker - - an office that would be further degraded if Jeff Stone were to win and govern here as Walker did, and as he is doing now to the state, and especially to Milwaukee, from the governor's office.

I know from personal experience in my one-and-only run for office (Madison, 1979) that it's no picnic being a candidate.

My unsolicited advice to Abele is to keep your head up, work hard and stay positive. County government needs you and your independence from Scott Walker and the far-right cabal to whom he reports.

Can The State Supreme Court Objectively Consider How Walker's Union-Busting Bill Became Law?

It was kicked there Thursday afternoon by the Wisconsin Court of Appeals, District IV.

Which raises this question:

Can incumbent David Prosser sit as an objective member of the Supreme Court and decide if the bill's adoption complied with the Wisconsin Open Records law if his campaign manager said this in a campaign news release:

"Our campaign efforts will include building an organization that will return Justice Prosser to the bench, protecting the conservative judicial majority and acting as a common sense complement to both the new administration and Legislature."

Update: Well, I got my answer - - "No" - - which got posted at Madison.com as I was writing my post.

Talk Radio's Incessant Support For Justice David Prosser Suggests His Polling Weakness

Charlie Sykes, Jeff Wagner, Mark Belling - - a non-stop free-media righty chorus for embattled incumbent Justice David Prosser.

Wow: bring back the fairness doctrine!

There must be polling data floating around the right side of the political world suggesting that Prosser's campaign support for Scott Walker and reports of Prosser's intemperate remarks have eroded his standing with voters.

And I know it's a given, but talk radio is filled with contradictions.

Belling today hammered Prosser's opponent, JoAnne Kloppenberg - - "vociferously" is how Belling described his argument, and then accused Kloppenberg's supports of yelling and ranting.

Earlier in the day, Wagner accused Kloppenberg of showing bias - - overlooking this statement by Prosser's campaign manager, the experienced conservative consultant Brian Nemoir:

"Our campaign efforts will include building an organization that will return Justice Prosser to the bench, protecting the conservative judicial majority and acting as a common sense complement to both the new administration and Legislature."
Go figure.

Big Crowd Of Protesters Outside The Stone/Walker Milwaukee Private Club Fundraising Event Thursday Evening

I was between obligations and could only honk in support, but I can report that there were about 200 people already in place - - with more streaming towards the location - - at 4:30 p.m., well in advance of Scott Walker's arrival for Milwaukee County Exec candidate Jeff Stone at the University Club at the corner of Wells and Prospect just north of the downtown.

I base my estimate on a quick count of people picketing on Wells St., and my guess that the double-line on the Prospect Ave. side of the intersection was at least three times the number of people on Wells.

It also seemed as if every other car's driver either honked or waved or flashed the car lights in support.

Most Amazing Thing About The Alberta Darling Lobbying Lunch?

There are so many lobbyists in Wisconsin, and so many well-heeled organizations that hire them them that they have their own separate high-powered group.

No Alberta Darling Budget Town Hall Yet For The Little People - - But She's Booked For Lobbyists - - Who Have Their Own Lobby!

AWL
AWL Upcoming Event


Alliant
Where & When
Wednesday, April 6th
11:30 am - 1:30 pm

Madison Club
5 E Wilson St
Madison, WI 53703
The AWL Luncheon will be held on Wednesday, April 6th, at the Madison Club.  

With special guests:

Senator Alberta Darling and Representative Robin Voss:  Co-chairs of Joint Finance.





"Stone And The Millstone" On Stage Together, One Evening Only - - Tonight

That would be the duo of Milwaukee County Executive candidate Jeff Stone and Gov. Scott Walker - - not a musical act, per se - - though their one-note political performance will feature some song-and-dance numbers, and spin moves from the right.

Tickets are pricey - - from $100 to $3,000! Think Stone will have any problem paying for saturation advertising the next twelve days?

A reminder:

From The Facebook page, "Where's Walker?
Where's Walker?
  • THURSDAY 3/24 MILWAUKEE 4:30 PM Event for County Executive candidate Jeff Stone with special guest: Governor Scott Walker, University Club, 924 E Wells St.

It Is So Wonderful When Republican Handlers In Wisconsin Just Talk And Talk

I. F. Stone, the legendary investigative reporter and scholar who, regrettably, is no longer with us. used to publish with his wife a small but influential newspaper and diary in Washington, DC.

One of his tactics: re-printing statements in signature, stand-alone boxes that needed no accompanying commentary.

Channeling Stone's spirit and methodology, I'm putting up without commentary or editing statements from an attorney advising Senate Republicans in Madison.

They are found in a PolitiFact piece in today's Journal Sentinel that rates as "barely true" Majority Leader Scott Fitzgerald's claim that a "constitutional crisis" was created when 14 Senate Democrats left the state. The PolitiFact piece explores the crisis claim:

"Fitzgerald’s office directed us to Madison attorney James Troupis, hired by the GOP senators to advise them about legal matters after the Democrats left.

"Troupis said the Democrats created a crisis because their departure meant the Senate couldn’t function. He called it a matter of survival of the Legislature.

"'If the Legislature cannot continue to function, and its primary job is to legislate, then it has no meaning, no function," Troupis said. "That’s precisely what happened."

"Troupis compared the situation to a bill passed inspired by the Sept. 11 attacks that spells out how the state would continue to function even if many of its legislative leaders perished. That bill allows the Legislature to meet virtually. An earlier, controversial plan that allowed lawmakers to secretly designate their successors in the case of an emergency died.

"'We asked Troupis: Was the departure of the Democrats a 9-11 type emergency?

"'Yes," he responded.

"'While it may be similar in that members are missing, it’s also quite different. After all, the 14 were not dead -- just in Illinois -- and in regular contact with GOP leaders, constituents, and, of course, the media.

"Is that enough?

"'If the body can’t act, if it’s denied the ability to act, it is no different than throwing somebody in jail and denying them habeas corpus," Troupis said, referring to the right of prisoners to have a prompt court hearing so they can know what charges they face.

"Said Troupis: The Democrats were "denying them (the Senate) the ability to act and that is a constitutional crisis."

"He added: "It fundamentally alters the role of the Legislature and in a republic you just can’t do that."

"If that is allowed to happen Wisconsin would be "no different than fascist regimes throughout the world," Troupis said.

"Why?

"The Democrats, Troupis said, jeopardized "the legislative branch of government" and would "give too much power to the executive branch.'"

Walker Mouths The Right's Script: Make Him Own It

Most politically-active people I know believe Scott Walker is following advice/orders from a coterie of ideologically-motivated consultants and staffers as he terminates collective bargaining, rewrites rules, derails programs and cuts funding to advance a right-wing agenda embraced from talk radio studios to The John Birch Society to Tea Party Central.

His latest outrage: the quiet elimination by Executive Order of a thirty-year-old program assisting female and minority building trades apprentice workers that the non-union, so-called ABC builders openly opposed.

But let's not focus so intently on the roles played in Walker's new administration by think tanks, Republican apparatchiks and Tea Party Internet cheer-leading that we forget to assign to Walker 100% of the responsibility for his actions.

He may turn out to be little more than a tool, a witting role player in a national movement - -  replaceable elsewhere by his funders when State Senate recalls this year drain his power, and his personal recall ousts him in 2012 - - but for now we have to keep up the pressure and make sure he owns the political and legal consequences of the damage he is doing.

That means denying him allies and any psychological lift in the April 5th elections for Milwaukee County Executive and State Supreme Court by electing Chris Abele in Milwaukee and elevating JoAnne Kloppenberg to the Supreme Court.

The right-wing machine that hauled Walker across the finish line in November with 52% of the vote know what's at stake.

That's why they are putting Walker and conservative State Rep. Jeff Stone, the tea partiers and talk radio choice for Milwaukee County Executive together at a Milwaukee fund-raiser for Stone this afternoon at the private University Club for $100-$3,000-a-ticket.

There are ads to be bought, right now. That event should raise a six-figure sum in two hours.

And it's why the Wisconsin Club For Growth framed things this way in its Wednesday, March 23rd members' update::

"The Left hopes to use the April 5th election to land a sucker punch that disables conservative reform. If liberal environmentalist and state bureaucrat Joanne Kloppenberg is elected to the state Supreme Court, the balance will tip and Wisconsin will again have a court majority willing to make up any excuse to reverse the actions of the Republican governor and legislators just elected.
"Conservative Justice David Prosser is under attack in ads designed to inflate leftist turnout in a spring election where turnout is invariably low and easy to manipulate. Two weeks ago Jesse Jackson led the mob surrounding the state Capitol chanting, “Come alive, April five.” Rev. Jackson’s many admirers will act on that advice.    
"People looking ahead to 2012 and eager to do battle with Barack Obama should make no mistake, they’re going head to head with him right here, right now."

In Gift To Non-Union Builders, Walker Kills Trades Apprenticeship Program

Scott Walker continues his rampage against working people and Milwaukee's large pool of low-income residents by quietly killing a workforce program in existence since 1971 that helps opens doors in construction jobs to minorities and women.

The guy really has a mean streak.

Hat tip, Matt Hrodey.

Massive Pipeline Would Raise Midwest Gas Prices, Threaten Land, Water

Wisconsin has had its share of damage from Canadian tar sand pipeline activity - - details, here - - but an even bigger pipeline project that would bisect the country north-to-south and cross one of the world's largest aquifers spells trouble for gas prices and the natural environment.