Sunday, January 30, 2011

T&A is running scared...

Gee, I guess the T&A thinks we've forgotten what happened last fall. Well, we haven't.




Apparently, the T&A gets that the taxpayers who are forced to pay their salaries have NO faith in their ability to carry out their responsibilities with any sort of reasonable, reality-based effort. So...they have decided to end a program that allowed airports to replace the T&A with private companies who, while structured to provide the same services in probably a more cost-effective way, still had to conform to T&A oversight. Better nip that one in the bud ~ 16 airports, including San Francisco and Kansas City, had already opted for the private option.

Worried about losing power and money...and looking even more inept? Probably.



Place a bet...

When I was growing up in Minnesota, cars were driven out to the middle of frozen lakes and bets were made on the exact day in the spring the car would collapse through the ice. Anything to pass the time during sub-zero temperatures.



One of our cars, while not sitting on a frozen lake, is buried in a snow bank.




Yes, there is a car underneath that snowbank. When do you think the roof of the car will be free of snow? I'm going with St. Patrick's Day. 

Shocking update: more snow coming.


All winter we've used the penguins on our front porch to measure how much more snow we've received after each storm. Last week all but the one sitting on the top step were buried.


This morning there are two heads, at least for now.


Every week should be school choice week...

As National School Choice Week comes to a close the evidence keeps mounting that there is more and more support for reforming our public schools and, more importantly, ending the dominance of the teachers unions and placing the power of school choice back in the hands of parents.

While I remain unconvinced that the parent trigger laws gaining popularity around the country, after California passed one a year ago, are an efficient way to reform failing schools, it may trigger parents into believing it's time to stand up and fight. The California law allows parents, if 51% or more of them are willing to sign a petition, to demand reform for a failing school by replacing it with a charter school, by making administration changes or by shutting it down altogether.

The law is being tested in Compton, CA by 62% of the parents whose children attend McKinley Elementary School. They are asking for the school to be replaced by next September with a charter school they've already chosen.





It's not hard to imagine how vicious the push-back is from the-powers-that-be. Spreading lies and fear, the status quo education establishment is working hard now to rewrite the law. Let's not forget what the new head of the Washington, DC teachers union said when he took the job...it's all about protecting the teachers. Hopefully the parents in the video will get that and stay strong.

Remember my post discussing the dismantling of the DC Opportunity Scholarship Program (OSP) by Education Secretary Arne Duncan and the US Senate? Well, there is hope that the program will be revived, an effort spearheaded by Speaker of the House John Boehner. OSP offered vouchers, definitely the third rail of the school reform movement, to 2000 children from low income families stuck in maybe the worse school district in the US. Put Kids First is a DC parents group who worked hard to keep the program alive.

President Obama understands that the DC schools are in a wretched state.





But President Obama stood by while his Education Secretary pulled 213 students, all new to the Opportunity Scholarship Program, out of the program last year in order to stop the growth of OSP. If the bill to reinstate funding for OSP passes in the Republican-controlled Congress, and in the Democrat-controlled Senate, and actually reaches the President's desk, I hope he'll watch this before he makes the decision to sign the bill or push it off of his desk.





In fact, I hope he watches it several times...with his daughters. I have a feeling they'd know which decision is the right decision.

Further signs the education powers-that-be need to be more open-minded: vouchers are gaining more attention. They are usually associated with falling school systems in inner cities. Interestingly, a wealthy county outside of Denver, CO is considering adding vouchers to the wide variety of choices the school system already offers, including nine charter schools, two magnet schools and even a school online. A school board member likens it to the choices we enjoy in other areas of our lives. The Superintendent, Elizabeth Celania-Fagen, has a more expansive view of how vouchers (and other proposals the Board is considering) fit into a model for education:

...in a recent letter to parents of the district's 56,000 students, she said her leadership team "did not find the ideas alarming" and pledged the district would "set the stage for new thinking in education."

Support for shaking up the education status quo does seem to be increasing. I do wonder, though, why Waiting For Superman, after so much positive attention, excellent reviews and it's effect on increasing support for school reform from every corner ~ Oprah, Prince, Mark Zukerberg, to name a few ~ was not nominated for an Academy Award. Guess it doesn't matter. The film has opened a lot of minds to the failures of our schools and will, in the future, change the lives of thousands of children.

Friday, January 21, 2011

Enough already...

Was kept away from the computer for a few days by reality rearing its ugly head. Of course, aside from the repeal of Obamacare, nothing much has happened.

Except for even more snow...


Jeez. Enough with the snow. Even Gracie is tired of it.


Thursday, January 13, 2011

Excellent documentary about Realtors...

In my experience as a Realtor, most everyone is interested in real estate, especially with the change in the market. I just got back from seeing an excellent movie about the business with a close friend who is also a Realtor. We both agreed that this movie shows the nitty-gritty behind-the-scenes dynamics of real estate, especially given most Realtors are women. The scene showing the woman acting snarky towards each while they put their make-up on in preparation for work is particularly realistic, as is the furtive nastiness directed at the top agent.
Apparently it's headed towards at least a couple of Oscar wins so it's probably worth seeing while it's still showing in theatres.





Well, it seemed like it was about sociological dynamics of real estate.

Actually, The Black Swan is not what it's cracked up to be. This is slightly better.




But only slightly.

It goes without saying though, Realtors are scary.

Wednesday, January 12, 2011

This is ridiculous...

This is what the penguins who live on our front porch every winter looked like on December 27, the day after the infamous snow storm that showed the powers-that-be at New York City Sanitation Department at their worst.


This is how they look this morning, an additional 22" of snow later...and it's still snowing. Fortunately for New York City, only eight inches fell there and the Sanitation Department seems to have decided that another work slow-down wouldn't further their agenda.




This is my backyard the day before the Christmas storm.




Three snow storms later.



It's pretty but I like the first picture better.

Well, back to work. Won't be going anywhere anytime soon.




Can you find all three cars in this picture, not counting the one behind the zebras?

Monday, January 10, 2011

Sounds like a plan to me...

StudentsFirst, the non-profit organization started by Michelle Rhee to organize a national movement for school reform, came out with its plan for fixing our broken schools today. A lot of it is familiar to anyone who has been following Ms. Rhee via her appearances on Oprah or in the film Waiting For Superman.

The pleasant surprise is the inclusion of vouchers. It makes sense to increase educational options by allowing access to private schools with public money but, historically, 'voucher' has been a dirty word in political circles as it rocks the union boats. Career politicians do not like to jeopardize reliable sources of campaign contributions.

Anyway, here's the list:

Our policy agenda outlines our immediate objectives and the reasoning behind them. It’s a big document, about 20 pages, so here’s an outline of our core priorities:

Priority One: Elevate the Teaching Profession by Valuing Teachers’ Impact on Students

StudentsFirst believes that all students can achieve at high levels when they have effective teachers. We will work to ensure every child is guaranteed that right. Excellent teachers and principals are the backbone of public education, they must be recognized as professionals with whom we entrust the awesome responsibility of developing our nation’s future.

For this reason, we will work to ensure, among other things, that teachers are evaluated based on evidence of student results rather than arbitrary judgments; that principals are evaluated for their ability to attract, retain, manage, and develop great teachers; and that excellent teachers are paid substantially more for their vital work.

Part of this will involve separating teacher evaluation from collective bargaining in union contracts (given the inherent conflict of interest), and removing certain seniority-based policies, such as “First in, Last Out,” which require districts to terminate the most recent hires when layoffs are required. The bottom line is that we can make teaching a profession based on respect and performance, not tenure.

Priority Two: Empower parents with real choices and real information.

Parents naturally put the interests of their children above the interests of the system, so the more power parents have over their children’s education, the more our education system will be a students-first system.

We will work to create more high-quality, public-funded school choices by removing caps on the number of charter schools allowed, eliminating the barriers to replicating high-performing public charter schools, and supporting private-public scholarship programs for students without quality options.

Likewise, we will work to empower communities by giving them the power to reform failing schools; we will encourage open enrollment policies that allow families to choose better-suited schools outside their neighborhoods; and we will offer parents clear and useful data about their schools, such as whether their child’s teacher has a track record of helping students progress academically.

Priority Three: Spend Taxpayer Resources Wisely to Get Better Results for Students.


Over the past 40 years, per-pupil funding has more than doubled, but students have little to show for it. Student achievement has remained flat. This funding/achievement disconnect exists because in many cases states have spent money on some “feel good” things that have not been proven to increase student achievement, such as smaller classes or raising salaries based on advanced degrees instead of effectiveness. They also spend a lot on infrastructure, technology and facilities that could be streamlined and redirected to proven areas that improve student progress.

StudentsFirst will advocate for aggressive reforms in critical structural, operational, and budgeting activities throughout the country. We will work to eliminate laws that hamper superintendents’ and principals’ abilities to optimize their resources, help curb ineffective spending on the state level, and end bureaucratic policies that force district leaders to choose the cheapest food and facilities services, without regard to quality.

Well worth checking out the long version.


Go Michelle!

Useful Idiots Get All the Attention...

Within, it seemed like, seconds after the horror in Tucson, AZ on Saturday, the left credited Sarah Palin, conservatives and the ever-reliable Tea Party as the motivation for the man who brought death and destruction to a grocery store parking lot, nearly killing Congresswoman Gabrielle Giffords (D-AZ), and bringing the life of a nine year old girl to an end.

Of course, the focus of a lot of the endless news coverage since Saturday has been about the role political rhetoric (supposedly) played in pushing the shooter to act. It's not worth discussing what sort of violent political hyperbole Keith Olbermann, Paul Krugman and too many others to count come up with on a daily basis in their avoidance of thoughtfully and honestly discussing the issues. Hypocrites one and all.



Pretty funny, huh?




Enemy lines? Targets? Political hate speech? Ask the Democrats who published it.

But blaming the violence in Arizona on conservatives in melodramatic soundbites is a perfect way to get useful idiots on board with one's agenda. Rep. Carolyn McCarthy (D-NY) and Sen. Frank Lautenberg (D-NJ) are planning on introducing new gun control bills, Rep. Robert Brady (D-PA) wants to ban threatening language or symbols and Rep. Jim Clyburn (D-SC) believes this is a perfect opportunity to limit free speech by reinstating the Fairness Doctrine (more here). Vultures, one and all.

I'm choosing to believe more people will discount manipulative soundbites and, instead, listen to the words of John Green, the father of nine year old Christina, who speaks from a place of incomprehensible loss. He asks that no further restrictions be placed on our freedoms in reaction to the violence that killed his daughter on Saturday. Mr. Green believes his daughter would not have wanted that.




Grace and courage.

And there's this:


Sunday, January 9, 2011

Uff Da!

Those dang Swedes.

Two elderly men beat each other bloody with snow shovels during a fight in a residential neighbourhood in Jönköping in southern central Sweden.

I mean, really.

But, with the shooting of the American version of The Girl With the Dragon Tattoo taking place in Sweden right now and, of course, the possible reunion of Abba, it's important to keep up with what's happening in Sweden.

Friday, January 7, 2011

The best thing...

Watch this three times and try to feel bad. Won't happen.





Elbow to elbow; heart to heart.

HT Ann Althouse

So, how's it going?

This is what is happening off my side porch right now:


Wonder how it's going 53 miles to the SW?

Thursday, January 6, 2011

More snow is coming! Plows up!


Snow is coming to New York! I don't know how the NYC Sanitation Department can improve on the A+ they received after the last storm, even if they actually plow the snow this time. We'll know by Saturday morning.

Wednesday, January 5, 2011

Saga of the NYC Winter Storm No-Plow, Part 3: You're kidding, right?

The head of the New York City Sanitation Department, the department responsible for garbage pick-up all year round, and PLOWING SNOW off NYC streets after winter storms, felt his workers did a great job plowing after the recent record-breaking storm:

"From my point of view, they get an A+. From the public's point of view, a C-," Sanitation Commissioner John Doherty said of the workers...

Really? An A+? Really?

Not only did did Mr. Doherty's department fail to plow the streets after the storm, but his workers have been unable to do their regular garbage pick-ups because...they're finally working on snow removal so they can actually get to the piles of garbage lining the sidewalks throughout the City.

This video was taken on December 30th and shows the piles, piles and more piles of garbage piling up (with a short, lovely interlude of the skaters at Rockefeller Center and a couple of under-dressed woman heading into the MTV studios).





Remember, this video was taken on December 30th, three days after the storm ended. Garbage pick-up didn't even begin until January 3, two days ago, and it's still a huge problem in many parts of the City, except for the rats, of course. Understandably, the rats give the sanitation workers an A+ and additional points for extra credit.

It seems to me that:

* if the sanitation workers deliberately screwed up the plowing job they were supposed to do after the big storm, they should be fired because they didn't do the job they are paid to do,

or

* if the sanitation workers did the best plowing job they were capable of after the big storm, they should be fired because they couldn't do the job they are paid to do.

But that's just me.

Update:

Some people did enjoy the storm, as it turns out.


Keeping watch...

Very few of the new members of Congress are planning on spending their off-time in Washington, DC. In fact, all but one of them are going to remain based, with their families, in their home states. That means they'll be running through either the Dulles or Reagan National Airports on a regular basis. Hopefully this will imprint on their brains:


While many of us have great expectations for the 112th Congress and what the new Representatives might accomplish, someone has to keep a close watch to make sure they stick to their guns. Pajamas Media is starting a project to so just that. It'll be called Nothing Washes Over and it will come online soon.

Part of the pre-launch of the new site includes a report card on what the lame-duck Congress did and didn't accomplish over the past couple of months. Not that I care, but here's the conclusion:

Final tally: 4-2 Democrats, with two draws. There were actually several other wins for Obama, a couple of them regulatory — including the nightmare of FCC control of the Internet — but these are the big ones. Fortunately the Republicans are in better shape to oppose some of this for the next two years, and may be able to repair or at least mitigate some of the damage these bills will cause.

But they’ve got to do better than they did during the lame duck session. And we’ll be seeing to that.

As will the rest of us.


Good bye and Hello, for now...

Goodbye.




Hello.




For now.


A Rasmussen poll published today shows that a majority of 'likely voters' favored Tea Party-identified candidates over candidates defined as progressive.

Tomorrow Speaker Boehner will open the first session of the 112th Congress by reading the Constitution. Cato's Roger Pilon, in the Wall Street Journal, discusses why that largely symbolic gesture is important and more importantly, how it will hopefully effect the efforts of this Congress. Well worth reading the whole article, including this:

The 112th Congress will have its hands full simply monitoring what the more than 300 federal agencies are up to. But if the new members want to get to the root of the problem—if they want to start restoring limited constitutional government—they'll have to do far more...

First, they'll have to keep the debate focused on the Constitution, not simply on policy or practicality.

Rising up...

This opinion piece in today's New York Times discusses a program in Brazil that gives grant money to poor people if they comply with certain rules, making sure their children attend school, for example. The program has, apparently, increased the income of its participants and has reduced the poverty rate from 22% down to 7%.

A similar program in Mexico has also successfully met its goals of increased school attendance and more visits to medical clinics. Forty countries around the world have started linking welfare money to standards of behavior.

I certainly have no problem tying standards of behavior to receiving public money, especially if the money is already on its way to a poor family. Shoot, even though I believe New York City Mayor Mike Bloomberg is the King of the Nanny State, I agreed with the rule he supported that removed soda from the list of food items that food stamps can buy. That's what happens sometimes when you use someone else's money, they get to set the rules.

I believe a better and more long term solution to poverty anywhere is the use of microloans. Microloans promote individual responsibility, and dreams for the future, better than any program that requires one to follow someone else's priorities. Kiva, only one among many organizations providing microloans around the world, makes it easy for individuals to participate in their program. 

The Blue Sweater: Bridging the Gap Between Rich and Poor in an Interconnected World offers an interesting overview of how microfinancing works as Jacqueline Novogratz makes her way from working as an international credit analyst to founding the Acumen Fund, a non-profit global venture fund.

Historically, microloans have focused primarily on Third World countries, but that is changing. Kiva, and other microloan companies like Microplace and Modestneeds, are offering the same opportunities here in the United States. To Catch a Dollar, a documentary released a year ago, shows the impact the microloans have had in the US. It focuses on Muhammad Yunas, Nobel Peace Prize winner for both pioneering the idea and proving the success of microloans in the Third World, who decided the same model could work in America. It's not available on netflix, but here's a clip





This review of the film is pretty compelling. I'll figure out some way to see it.

Tuesday, January 4, 2011

Gone in one second...

Andrew Malcolm from the Los Angeles Times tries to place some perspective on the $14 trillion (as of last Friday) national debt.

Fourteen trillion is 14-thousand billions. A billion is a thousand millions. A million is a thousand thousands.
A trillion has so many zeroes it won't fit in your checkbook -- 12 zeros, to be exact...

On [June 1] the national debt was "only" $13 trillion. It's 214 days from June 1 through last Friday, Dec. 31. That's 5,136 hours or 308,160 minutes or 18,489,600 seconds.

In those seven short months the national debt increased by $1,000,000,000,000.

That works out to be a growth in national debt of $54,084 borrowed during every single one of those 18,489,600 seconds.

Scroll down to see approximately what that brief second looks like in real money:
THIS MUCH
a Ten Thousand dollar bill
PLUS THIS MUCH
a Ten Thousand dollar bill
PLUS THIS MUCH
a Ten Thousand dollar bill
PLUS THIS MUCH
a Ten Thousand dollar bill
PLUS THIS MUCH
a Ten Thousand dollar bill
PLUS THIS MUCH
One Thousand Dollar Bill
PLUS THIS MUCH
One Thousand Dollar Bill
 PLUS THIS MUCH
One Thousand Dollar Bill
 PLUS THIS MUCH
One Thousand Dollar Bill
PLUS THIS MUCH
Fifty Dollar Bill
PLUS THIS MUCH
Twenty Dollar Bill
PLUS THIS MUCH
Ten Dollar Bill
PLUS THIS MUCH
One Dollar Bill
PLUS THIS MUCH
One Dollar Bill
PLUS THIS MUCH
One Dollar Bill
PLUS THIS MUCH
One Dollar Bill
IN BORROWED MONEY EVERY SECOND SINCE JUNE 1
Salmon P. Chase, who knew?
If there was ever any doubt about the role a teacher can play in the lives of students, the 2009 documentary Pressure Cooker puts it to rest. Wilma Stephenson, who teaches culinary-arts at the all-Black Frankford High School in Philadelphia, never lets up on her students as she guides them towards a citywide scholarship competition held every spring.

The expectations she places on them are high and, while Ms. Stephenson understands the difficulties some of her students face outside of school, there is no room for excuses in her classroom. As with Waiting For Superman and The Lottery concentrates on a few students as they push themselves to meet Ms. Stephenson's expectations and prepare for the scholarship competition. Pretty amazing.





Wonderful movie ~ available on netflix, of course. And three cheers and a big raise for Wilma Stephenson!

Monday, January 3, 2011

Why am I not surprised?

As witnessed in the youtube video from the last posting, much of Europe has been (or soon will be) bankrupted by pensions. In fact, the United States is behind the curve in terms of unfunded pensions compared to Greece and Portugal.

 Not to worry about our sophisticated cousins though. They have come up with a great solution without having to reduce social spending ~ raid private savings accounts! Perfect! The concept of private property has always been a bit of a grey area in Europe anyway.

Hungary alone was able to stuff $14 billion (US) from individual retirement savings into the public coffers after threatening its citizens that if they didn't give up their savings they would not receive the Hungarian version of social security, even though they'd have to continue making payments on it. Sounds like blackmail to me.


Here in the US, our government would NEVER confiscate property from a citizen. And certainly, our government would NEVER raid any sort of private money account, right?



At least, not for a good reason, right?


Sunday, January 2, 2011

Rivers of tears...

Remember the New York City plow crews who, it appears, were discouraged by their supervisors from doing their job? Remember the plow guys who destroyed the parked car?  Thanks to citizen reporters pounding the beat on the streets of New York, there is evidence that plow crews did indeed find other things to do during the storm, including drinking beer in their trucks and spending the night drinking coffee in diners.




And then there were the guys who just plain didn't show up for work at all, double the usual number of no-shows.

And public employees wonder why they get picked on by taxpayers. This morning the New York Time ran an article about the abuse being heaped upon public employees including the teacher in New Jersey, infamous for arguing with Governor Christie during some public forum, who is called "horrible names [by strangers]...The mantra is that the problem is the unions, the unions, the unions.”

Yup. In 2000, according to the Times article, New Jersey legislators cut five years off of the retirement age for police and firefighters," and in 2001, a 9 percent increase in pension benefits for state employees was passed by NJ legislature. Yet another perfect example of politicians-money-votes, politicians-money-votes...it's not exactly rocket science.

Even the reliably liberal Times points out that spending huge amounts of someone else's money can buy a lot of votes, and cites an excellent article, well worth reading, from the the Manhattan Institute (via The Weekly Standard) which discusses the history of buying votes from public workers (JFK realized how politically powerful public workers would be if organized, and initiated the required legislation two years after his own very close election) and explains perfectly how the politicians-money-votes system works.

...unlike private sector unions, those in the public sector can achieve influence on both sides of the bargaining table by making campaign contributions and organizing get-out-the-vote drives to elect politicians who then control the negotiations over their pay, benefits, and work rules. The result is a nefarious cycle: Politicians agree to generous government worker contracts; those workers then pay higher union dues a portion of which are funneled back into those same politicians’ campaign war chests. It is a cycle that has driven California and New York to the edge of bankruptcy.

But public pensions and benefits aren't breaking budgets in just California and New York, it's happening all over the country on both the state and local levels.





Well, to use a tired cliche, the frigging chickens have COME HOME TO ROOST.

All that whining from people who have jobs-for-life, and benefits we can only imagine, is just about to get a whole lot worse, or better, depending on how you feel about budget-breaking public employee pensions. Some politicians, at both the city and the state levels, are taking on the unions.

The newly elected Governor of Wisconsin, Scott Walker, plans to ask state workers to contribute 5% of their salaries towards their pension and double the 6% they now pay towards their health premiums. Other governors, mainly Republicans such as John Kasich of Ohio and Mich Daniels of Indiana, are likely to take on the cost of public employees as well.

If Rep. Devin Nunes (R-CA) gets his way, the federal government will be banned from bailing out any of the budget-busted state and local governments, forcing them to accept reality and, if it's not too much to ask, show a little respect for the people who fund their paychecks ~ us.

If any of this comes to pass, we're likely to see this or worse on the news.





These are workers in France protesting the increase of the retirement age from 60 to 62. Just think if the French government had increased the retirement age to 65. Can you imagine?

The Reason Foundation has an interesting paper about the California's broken pension system ~ how it reached the crisis point and what steps can be taken to fix it.