• One Step Closer to Boomergeddon

    The U.S. Senate approved another bail-out Wednesday, this one for state governments. In a 61-38, mostly party-line vote, Virginia Senators Jim Webb and Mark Warner agreed to provide $26 billion in aid to the states, nominally to save the jobs of some 145,000 teachers and prop up state Medicaid programs. Approval by the House of Representatives and signature by President Obama seems to be a foregone conclusion.

    Thus do 50 state governments join the long list of beggars, special pleaders, con artists and others addicted to Uncle Sam’s Keynesian cocaine. The passage of the $787 billion porkulus bill last year gave states a brief reprieve. Now Congress hands out another vial of crack. Next year, the states will be back for more.

    As Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell, R-Kentucky, said: “For the first time in our history, the federal government is the single largest source of revenue for the states. When does it end?”

    End? Why should it end? That’s the way it works in Washington, D.C. — keep everyone on the dole. Keep everyone on bended knee, as dependents and supplicants. That’s the way incumbents hold onto power.

    Here’s my question: Why should Virginia’s senators participate in a bailout which is driven by the bankrupt politics of other states? We made tough choices here in the Old Dominion. We kept our fiscal house in relative order. Admittedly, Virginia is far from perfect, as demonstrated by the $650 million under-funding of the Virginia Retirement System this year. But the commonwealth has been far less improvident than, say, California, Illinois and New York. This vote does a huge disservice to Virginia taxpayers.

    It also does a disservice to the nation. Add that $26 billion to the $34 billion that Congress appropriated to extend unemployment benefits, and that’s $60 billion not contemplated in the proposed FY 2011 budget — a budget that Congress hasn’t gotten around to passing yet. But, hey, who needs a budget? Just put the $60 billion on the nation’s tab. Borrow the money from the Chinese, Japanese, the petro-states and the hot European flight-to-safety money seeking refuge from the Greek bail-out.

    One more question: What happens when Boomergeddon comes? What happens when the federal government defaults on its debt and literally can borrow no more? What happens when Congress can spend no more money than the country brings in from taxes — requiring a cut of some 30 to 40 percent of total spending? Who will bail out state governments then? Who will pay for extended unemployment benefits then?

    Senators Warner and Webb say they believe in fiscal responsibility. Yet they still vote for every budget-busting bill that comes their way. I mock their empty words.

  • The Many Questions About Privatizing ABC

    Robert F. McDonnell has so far had a shaky tenure as governor. His plans for offshore oil development sank with the Deepwater Horizon rig in the Gulf of Mexico, he just can’t seem to remember there were slaves in Virginia and his much-touted erasure of the state’s $2 billion budget deficit was marred by smoke-and- mirrors maneuvers such as deferring payments to the state pension fund.
    Taking a script from other Republican governors, McDonnell wants to make a name for himself by limiting government by streamlining or privatizing. His big goal is to sell off the state’s more than 300 ABC stores in a scheme that he claims will net the state and extra $300 million to $500 million in a one-time hit and somehow generate more revenue after that.
    He’s now on the road touting the plan that still has a lot of unanswered questions. First, there’s nothing wrong with privatizing alcohol sales. Only about 18 states still maintain the post-Prohibition Era state control on alcohol sales. Virginians do pay more for booze and selections are often sparse. Plus, privatizing probably won’t do much to generate more alcoholics, or so the conventional wisdom goes.
    But as The Washington Post points out in an article today, Virginia makes an awful lot of money in the booze business and McDonnell could be giving that away. For instance, a bottle of Jack Daniel’s Tennessee whiskey costs the state about $11.48 when it buys it from the distiller. After all the taxes and fees are added, including one of the highest excise taxes in the country, that bottle retails for $24.68 (including state sales tax). How much does the state get? A lot.
    In the District of Columbia, not a control area, the same bottle retails for $22.90 or $25.06 with DC sales tax. In cheap-o and private Maryland, the same bottle would retail for $20.02, including sales tax.
    What this means is that Virginia gets a lot more dough for its booze — $248 million to precise — in 2009. Maryland and DC get tens of millions, not hundreds. So, it will be giving up a lot with privatization.
    There are some other questions with McDonnell’s plan:
    • Even if he privatizes, someone is going to have to keep an eye on those retail outlets. Only about 300 or so exist now in the controlled system, but McDonnell envisions about 1,000 liquor stores statewide. The ABC now has only about 130 special agents with are armed law officers to enforce law at not just ABC stores but at up to 15,000 bars and restaurants. Robert Grey, a Richmond lawyer and former ABC chairman, told me in a piece I did for Style Weekly that privatizing liquor stores will increase ABC enforcement responsibilities by up to 40 percent. How does McDonnell intend to handle the extra staffing, assuming he doesn’t turn the function over to local or state police? And if he does that, are they up to the task budget-wise? Do they want the extra responsibility?
    • How much tax money will the scheme really generate? This is something of a mystery since McDonnell has said that it will depend on the kind of licensing deals the state arranges. For instance, a big box Wal-Mart might get a liquor store. It may pay more for it as opposed to a mom and pop store.
    • I’m still not clear what happens to wholesaling. Under the current system, the ABC board controls both retail and wholesale, doing the latter through a big warehouse in Richmond. McDonnell wants to sell the facility. Will private wholesalers suddenly swoop in? Maybe this is why lobbyists are thicker than fleas at the state capital this summer.
    • Will private stores mean better choice and prices. Obviously prices will improve, but maybe not so choice. If you live in an urban area with sophisticated tipplers, sure, you’ll see a lot of new stuff. Northern Virginians may stop their weekend drives to cheaper booze across the Potomac. But private stores in the outback probably will not carry a big inventory because they won’t be able to afford it.

    McDonnell wants a special General Assembly session to consider the issue. But there’s a lot more explaining to do. Democratic legislators have slammed McDonnell’s revenue estimates about privatizing alcohol. In any event, there’s a lot of dough at risk, which a governor who portends to be so fiscally-minded ought to realize.

    Peter Galuszka

  • “The Cooch’s” Big Week


    It’s been quite a week so far Ken Cuccinelli, Virginia’s right-wing attorney general.

    On Monday, U.S. District Judge Henry E. Hudson, a Richmond jurist appointed by Republican President George W. Bush, allowed Cuccinelli’s lawsuit against the federal Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act, otherwise known as “Obamacare”, to go forward.
    Also on Monday, following a request by fellow Republican, Del. Robert G. Marshall of Prince William County, Cuccinelli said it was okay to detain and “briefly question” someone they have stopped or arrested whom they suspect may be an illegal immigrant. This flies in the face of last week’s ruling by U.S. District Judge Susan Bolton, an appointee of Democratic President Bill Clinton.
    And, on Sunday, The Washington Post magazine published a gushy profile of Cuccinelli that casts him as the protector of women’s rights, loving father of seven children, regular guy who hoists a few with the staff at Richmond’s Capital Ale House, amateur baseball hitter and a fun-loving outdoorsman dressed in cammies as he prepares to blast away, presumably at liberals, in a paintball game.
    The article, which has sparked well over 200 passionate comments on the Post’s Web page, ignores or sidesteps Cuccinelli’s more incendiary aspects, such as opining legally that public universities cannot protect gays, that social security numbers can let the dangerous government track you, that scientists who are critical of global warming are likely public money frauds, and so on.
    And it’s only Tuesday.
    Peter Galuszka

  • WHAT ABOUT THE OVER-RICH AND THE UNDER POOR?

    MORE ON THE WEALTH GAP and SWEEPING UP THE DUNG LEFT AFTER THE RICH-PERSON, POOR-PERSON POST OF 25 JULY.

    EMR was hoping that the RICH-PERSON, POOR-PERSON post of last Sunday (25 July) would generate substantive ideas on how to narrow the Wealth Gap.

    No such luck.

    There HAVE to be better answers than

    Dictator / demagogue – driven socialism on the one hand, and

    Demise of civilization driven by โ€œI have mineโ€ greed, xenophobia and 18th century concepts of rights without commitments to 21st century responsibilities

    on the other.

    Before going on, let us clear the air on the issue of โ€œover regulationโ€ of shelter being responsible for kicking off the Great Recession:

    EMR received a note from a housing professional in Austin (that is in Texas) and here are some quotes:

    โ€œWhen you clean up the RICH-PERSON, POOR-PERSON post please toss out all that trash about how land use controls are what have saved Texas from high foreclosure rates.

    โ€œAt least set the record straight:

    โ€œThere are three major reasons that the foreclosure rate is lower in the Texas’ Regions that had growing economies than in other southern states:

    โ€œ1. Very stringent usury laws that have the impact of controlling the use of second mortgages, the size of down payments, the cash one can take out of a refi, multiple dwelling investments, etc.

    โ€œ2. Very high property tax rates that make running up the price of housing an unattractive idea for everyone but flippers who are caught by the usury laws anyway.

    โ€œ3. Texas has squandered vast sums of oil revenue on roads and expressways rather than spending it on quality of life investments. Houston, for example, has three beltways, multiple radials, including toll roads and still is near the top of the Texas A&M congestion measures year after year.

    (EMR addressed the gross overbuild and dysfunctional design of Texas’ limited access roadways in Column # 50 Interstate Crime, 14 March 2005.โ€ (All columns are now accessible from the RESOURCES page at www.emrisse.com)

    The Texas roadway building extravagance opened up vast areas in โ€˜the next county outโ€™ and so there has always been an over build of Wrong Size House, Wrong Location.)

    โ€œ’The reason for fewer foreclosures is less regulationโ€™ myth is just the latest zone of deception that has been a hobby horse for ideologies and idiots on the topic of โ€˜onerous regulationsโ€™ for years.

    (That is especially true for those who write for and quote โ€œThe New Geographyโ€ โ€“ Kotkin, Cox, et. al. As EMR has pointed out, the lack of regulation has generated not one whit of difference in settlement patterns at the Dooryard or Cluster scale in Texas vis a vis other states โ€“ just more scatteration due to excessive road building.)

    โ€œThere have not been the high foreclose rates in Texas like there have been in California, Nevada, Arizona, Geogia and Florida.

    โ€œHowever, Texas has quality of housing for those at the bottom of the food chain on a par with Arkansas, Mississippi and Alabama.

    โ€œThe idea that less regulation is a solution for Affordable and Accessible Housing is worse than wrong, it is fraud and borderline criminal because so many at the bottom of the food chain are deceived by these misrepresentations.

    โ€œThose at the bottom of the food chain cannot afford big, scattered, detached dwellings in Texas any more than they can anywhere else.

    โ€œWhile housing is less expensive in Texas, lower income families spend more to own and drive cars than they do on food or housing โ€“ and in some cases both.โ€

    That pretty much wraps up the โ€œover-regulationโ€ issue.

    By the way on the topic of Affordable and Accessible Housing, she recommends a new report from Todd Littman

    www.vtpi.org/aff_acc_hou.pdf

    On the topic of settlement pattern dysfunction and its most vocal apologist (Joel Kotkin), it is worth reading about the recent debate between Kotkin and Chris Leinberger at

    http://www.fastcompany.com/1668425/america-in-2050-urban-or-suburban-both-neither

    In a recent Blog post, Leinberger says that after this debate, he realized that he and Kotkin actually AGREE on many aspects of the shape of the future, they just use different Vocabulary.

    Robust Vocabulary and comprehensive Conceptual Framework โ€“ understand the need for them or flounder in Geographic Illiteracy and Spacial Ignorance.

    OK, enough about cleaning up after the last post, lets see if there are not SOME ideas for narrowing the Wealth Gap. Please do not bother with more blabber about โ€˜freedomโ€™ and โ€˜rightsโ€™ without responsibilities. Also avoid tossing rocks at empty pigeon holes.

    How about some REAL insights into how to narrow the Wealth Gap and provide a safety net without abandoning a market economy and democracy.

    EMR


  • Corey Stewart’s Xenophobic Games


    Corey A. Stewart is playing “Whack -A-Mole.”

    Now that Susan Bolton, a federal judge in Arizona, has struck down the more noxious parts of that state’s racist and xenophobic anti-immigrant law, the chairman of the Prince William County Board of Supervisors has freshened up his version of the Copper State law for all of the Old Dominion.

    Stewart, a Republican, shepherded a similar law in his largely white, affluent bedroom county outside of Washington and had plans to infect all of Virginia with it as he takes credit for helping brainstorm Arizona’s ill-advised venture.

    Judge Bolton blocked parts of the Arizona law that would make it a crime for immigrants not to carry their registration papers with them 24/7, make it illegal to seek employment in public areas, authorize police to make warrantless arrests of people they assume to be illegal aliens, and require police to check a person’s immigration status wherever possible.

    In response, Stewart has done a quick sidestep shuffle and is proposing revisions for Virginia. They include not requiring immigrants to carry with them IDs showing they are legit (it was struck down in Arizona anyway), but he would make it illegal for undocumented aliens to buy property or register a car. If someone wants to make a wire transfer out of the country, they must pay fees ranging $5 for $500 or 1 percent of the sum above that. It isn’t clear if this would apply to all Virginians or just immigrants but Stewart says it would stem immigrants from sending home the money they earn in the state. You get it back as a tax credit when you file your taxes (I thought Republicans were against regulation and bureaucracy).

    Just after Bolton issued her ruling hours before Arizona’s law took effect on July 28, Stewart said:

    “I think the Obama administration has made a strategic blunder.” By filing suit against Arizona’s law, the administration “is just trying to intimidate Arizona.”

    “Intimidate”? Now that’s a curious choice of words.

    If you want to see examples of intimidation, check out the Web site for Virginia Rules of Law campaign, which Stewart launched in June. On it, a smiling Stewart (family photo on right rail) brags that thanks to his law, “illegal aliens fled the county, and the violent crime rate has plummeted.” (The former may be true, but the latter is seriously in doubt as statistics have shown little connection between the law and violent crime.

    Granted, as a state bordering Mexico, Arizona has a lot more immigrant traffic than does Prince WIlliam. The Copper State, which didn’t join the union until 1912, has for centuries been a spillover region linking Latin America, Native America and European America. It really didn’t become Anglo-ized until white retirees started showing up in the 1960s, and only after that did immigration suddenly become a big problem.

    As a rather sleepy and affluent suburb, Prince William has not been awash with immigrants in the same way. It is not the hotbed of serious crime that one sees in the District or in Virginia metropolitan areas such as Richmond or Portsmouth. The vast majority of immigrants, documented or otherwise, seem to be hard-working, law-abiding Latinos filling low-end jobs that whites don’t want.

    As obnoxious as Stewart’s views are, he still has support in Virginia. Attorney General Kenneth Cuccinelli filed papers in Arizona supporting that state’s law.

    It amazes that Stewart keeps coming up with such xenophobia when Virginia and the U.S. are more closely tied to the global economy than ever before. As a graduate of Georgetown University’s School of Foreign Service, he ought to know this.

    Not only are his proposals hateful, some are just plain stupid. Take the fee on wire transactions overseas. Let’s see how this might affect my family personally. My wife was born in Russia and has been a naturalized U.S. citizen since 1993. She has since earned a B.S. and an M.A. degree in this country and has been teaching in school and paying taxes since 2000. I can vouch for this. I stood next to her when she was naturalized (and we had a hell of a party afterwards) and I know she pays taxes because I have filed them.

    Her nephew still lives in Russia and is a middle schooler who is nuts about ice hockey. He needs equipment and money for training camp. Sometimes she sends it via wire transfer. So now we are going to have to pay some ridiculous extra fee designed to punish Virginians who happen to have been born in a different country. How American.

    How Stewart’s wicked brew of discriminatory laws plays out in autumn congressional elections and the ones for Virginia General Assembly in 2011 depend on how higher courts handle Judge Bolton’s decision. It could very well be that the courts will strike down all of the Arizona law, not just parts of it. If so, Prince William’s immigration law would be in jeopardy. Efforts to pass one in Virginia will be moot. And Stewart will look like a fool.


    Peter Galuszka



  • Americans Cutting Back on Health Care?

    Well, how about that. It appears that privately insured Americans are using fewer medical services these days. Patient visits, drug prescriptions and procedures were down in the second quarter of 2010 compared to year-ago levels, reports the Wall Street Journal.

    Weak demand could put downward pressure on spiraling health care costs and insurance premiums, the WSJ suggests. And what could be behind this remarkable change? Health economist Paul Ginsburg attributes some of the new behavior to the weak economy. But, he adds, โ€œThis could go beyond the recession. Being a less aggressive consumer of health care is here to stay.โ€

    Perhaps this has something to do with it: More Americans are buying high-deductible health plans that make them bear a bigger share of the cost of their medical services. Eighteen million people have such plans compared to 13 million last year, according to the Journal. Believe it or not, people exercise more discretion and care as consumers when they have to pay for medical services themselves! Imagine that. They donโ€™t go to the doctor as often โ€” presumably cutting back on more frivolous trips โ€” and they look for better deals when buying pharmaceuticals.

    Most extraordinary! Who could have predicted it? Is there some body of thought that could explain why people consume more of a product or service when someone else is paying for it, and consume less when they pay for it thmselves? Could the field of economics shed some light on this perplexing question?

    Finish reading this blog post on the Boomergeddon blog.


  • Opening Soon: Farmville’s Private GULAG

    We Americans love to lock people up.
    As “The Economist” recently notes, the U.S. has an incarcerated population of 2.3 million, which is bigger than the entire population of individual 15 states. The rate of incarceration in the United Kingdom is one fifth of the U.S. a ninth what is is in Germany and a 12th of Japan’s (assuming comparing the U.S. with other advanced industrialized countries doesn’t defame them.)
    With this as a backdrop, Virginia is about to start incarcerating even more people, but not necessarily Americans. They are foreigners who are undocumented or are here legally but have broken laws that can range from rape and murder to gambling or hoisting a brew in a public parking lot.
    The newest depository for such people is in the small college town of Farmville which gained fame in the late 1950s for closing its entire school system rather than moving on with court-ordered integration. Next month a new $21 million facility operated by a private company opens to house foreign people.
    The jail will house 584 immigrant detainees and eventually grow to 1,000 inmates with criminal records, some of whom will have been snagged by the federal “Secure Communities” program that uses advanced biometrics to identify foreign nationals or foreign-born individuals who might have criminal records.
    But are we talking talking murder or loitering? The Web site of the federal Immigration and Customs Enforcement agency states that the program is supposed to tag only those with serious criminal records. But since 2008, according to a Texas immigration lawyer, it has been used to detain and deport thousands of undocumented workers for minor transgressions such as gambling.
    The other curiosity about the jail is that its origin is as much a business opportunity for entrepreneurs as a public service. It is being built by the Richmond-based Immigration Company of America, which has no experience running prisons. The firm has operated a
    taxi service to haul detained immigrants from jail to court for several years.
    ICA’s executives include Richmond businessmen Ken Newsome, Warren Coleman and Russell Harper. Newsome is a prominent contributor to Republican political causes and was a major contributor to former Republican Gov. Jim Gilmore. When I wrote about ICA in September, its
    executives would not talk to me, referring my inquiry instead to Farmville Town Manager Gerald J. Spates — an unusual way of handling public scrutiny, to say the least.
    Furthermore, the ICA alien depot has been on shaky financial ground. A year ago, banks declined to finance it, and the firm has gotten funding from the public in the form of
    money received by Virginia in a 1998 settlement with four major tobacco companies.
    To make up for its lack of experience ICA plans to hire away guards and other prison personnel from a state-run, regional jug a short distance away in the Farmville area. The ghost of one dead immigrant hangs over that facility, however,
    In 2008, a German man named Guido R. Newbrough, an Air Force brat who had lived most of his life in the United States and resided in Northern Virginia, was picked up in a sweep of immigrants previously convicted of sex crimes. (The well-publicized effort was organized by then-attorney general Robert F. McDonnell.) After his 2002 sexual battery conviction, Newbrough served his sentence and underwent therapy, but he was arrested in the sweep
    nonetheless.
    He died in a state detention jail in Farmville in November 2008 of a heart ailment after complaining to guards of pain. Fellow detainees say he was thrown to the ground and placed in isolation before his death.
    The Right Wing Media Network would have us believe that jails like ICA’s are needed because of the crime rampage caused by foreigners, legal or illegal. Such beliefs can only fuel the arguments of the anti-immigrant lobby.
    But what are we really doing here? Arresting and detaining improperly documented bus boys? Or are they Hannibal Lecters who happen to speak Spanish? If we believe the Economist, it probably doesn’t matter because we Americans like to lock up just about anyone.
    What Virginia and the United States need is comprehensive immigration reform, not “private” prisons built partly with public money by politically connected businessmen who have never run a jail before.

  • RICH-PERSON, POOR-PERSON

    WaPo is full of good stuff today!

    Lets start with the front page of Business:

    Household Economics writer Michelle Singletary (The Color of Money) sketches out โ€œWhat Sherrod was telling usโ€ in a column with that subtitle. The money graf:

    There is a disturbing and widening gulf between the rich and the poor in America. And it would be even wider except for the fact that so many middle-income families have borrowed their way to a comfortable lifestyle. They are just a paycheck, a divorce or a heath crisis away from financial ruin.

    Read it all here: http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2010/07/24/AR2010072400146_pf.html
    Just for you, Peter.

    By the way the online version of the story is titled โ€œRace isnโ€™t the problem โ€“ economic inequality is.โ€

    This was the theme of Jim Baconโ€™s post โ€œWebb Shatters the Moldโ€ on Friday.

    No one had commented on Observerโ€™s note at end of the comment section on the Webb post. EMR suspects no one saw it so here is a copy:

    โ€œPeter:

    โ€œYou should not be so stern with Mr. Bacon or Senator Webb.

    โ€œThey are both trying to face the reality of the widening Wealth Gap and the fact that โ€˜affirmative actionโ€™ is being gamed by those at the top of the food chain with out respect to race.

    โ€œThe question they are both trying to answer is: How can wealth be redistributed equitably?

    โ€œAs Joseph Pulitzer said: โ€œThe inherent vice of capitalism is the unequal sharing of the blessings.โ€

    โ€œAnd Jawaharlal Nehru noted: โ€œThe forces in a capitalist society, if left unchecked, tend to make the rich richer and the poor poorer.”

    โ€œMost of those who now have โ€œa lotโ€ got it by not paying their fair of the total cost and at the expense of either the less well to do or the environment.

    โ€œGive credit to Mr. Bacon for trying to find an answer.

    โ€œAs Groveton says, it will be hard to do.

    โ€œObserverโ€

    Perhaps it should have been:

    โ€œGive credit to Mr. Bacon for pointing out that Senator Webb is trying to find an answer.โ€

    Item two from todayโ€™s WaPo:

    On the same page as Singletaryโ€™s column there is one by Ezra Klein titled โ€œDigging into financeโ€™s pay dirt.โ€ Klein argues that Broke, USA needs to be read along with The Big Short .

    The later deals with what those at the top of the Ziggurat did to cause The Great Recession, Broke, USA documents what those in the middle and at the bottom did to provide the funds.

    Same song, second verse: It is the little guy that is having to pay and, as someone said recently:

    The Wealth Gap is not sustainable in a world with instantaneous communications, mass literacy and weapons of mass destruction.

    EMR thought he had seen a second sentence for the Pulitzer quote cited by Observer. Sure enough it reads:

    โ€œThe inherent vice of capitalism is the unequal sharing of the blessings. The inherent blessing of socialism is the equal sharing of misery.โ€

    That is a perfect segue to a third item in todayโ€™s WaPo.

    Check out this book review in the Outlook (Opinion) section: The review by Andrew Higgins is titled โ€œChina, a capitalist machine with a communist engineโ€ about The Party: The Secret World of Chinaโ€™s Communist Rulers. (โ€œChinaโ€™s ruling party has disentangled itself from ideological chains.โ€)

    Sounds like Pulitzerโ€™s worst of all possible worlds.

    Is it time to focus on Regional Resiliency, Import Replacement and DeGrowth?

    EMR


  • How Obamacare Helps the Working Class (Not)

    Josh Dent is an early victim of Obamacare. The lanky, shaven-headed machine operator likes the medical insurance plan his employer, Acorn Sign Graphics, provides him. But under the newly enacted Affordable Care Act, his insurance policy will get less affordable. A provision in the law is putting his insurance company out of business, and whatever replaces Mr. Dentโ€™s current policy will likely be much more expensive.

    The way the 29-year-old sees it, Acorn will have to cut benefits or cut pay. One way or another, he figures, the switch to a new insurer will cost him.

    Steve Gillispie, Acornโ€™s president, is distressed by this unexpected development. A year and a half ago, he was facing premiums of $150,000 from an established insurer, up from $80,000 just three years before. Then along came Richmond, Va.-based nHealth. The start-up company, launched with the mission of making consumer-driven health care a reality, rescued him with a plan that kept premiums below $90,000 yearly. The plan insured his 35 employees against hospital expenses, created a $1,500 deductible for doctorsโ€™ fees and set up health savings accounts (HSAs) for employees to pay for what the health plan did not. โ€œFor most employees,โ€ Mr. Gillispie says, โ€œit netted out money in the pocket.โ€

    Lower insurance charges helped Acorn survive the recession without laying off any of its employees or cutting their compensation. Going back hat in hand to one of the dominant insurers in town, Mr. Gillispie fears, will add tens of thousands of dollars to his cost structure. Profit margins are tight in this slow-growth economy, but he hates to pass on the higher insurance costs to his employees, many of whom are paid $14 to $16 an hour. โ€œMost of these people are living hand to mouth as it is,โ€ he says. He still does not know what he will do.

    Such is the unintended consequence of Obamacare, which overhauled the health care industry with the goal of making medical insurance more affordable and accessible to all. The provision that is causing Acorn Signs so much heartache is the so-called 80/20 rule, which requires all insurance plans to pay out at least 80 percent of premiums in benefits. The goal behind the rule is to punish insurers that let administrative expenses get out of hand. In practice, the law punishes innovative, entrepreneurial companies like nHealth that kept premiums low. Read the rest of the column here.

    (This column was originally published Friday in the Washington Times, and has been republished on the Boomergeddon blog. Illustration credit: Alexander Hunter for the Washington Times.)


  • Don’t Like ObamaCare? Drive to Wise

    There’s been plenty of chatter on this site about ObamaCare and some of it seems cranked out by the right wing propaganda machine, as Larry Gross astutely calls it.
    Among the more shrill critiques is that it is not “free market” based, is way too expensive, adds to our dangerously booming debt and budget deficit, violates the supposed “Commerce Clause” (which to the conservatives applies only to medical insurance, not auto insurance which is also mandatory) and lastly, may not be even necessary.

    If you are on who believes that last point, maybe you should hop in your car and drive way, way out to the coalfields of Southwest Virginia, specifically to the town of Wise and the Wise County Fairgrounds. It will take you more than six hours and you will be farther west than Cleveland and almost on the latitude of Detroit.

    Starting today and lasting through Sunday, doctors, dentists, nurses and other health care professionals from the surrounding area will be offering free checkups, outpatient treatment, eyeglasses and dental checks to the the mountain country poor, many of whom work for minimum wage, are not eligible for Medicaid and can’t afford regular health insurance.
    The free health event has been organized in the area for the past 11 years by British-born adventurer Stan Brock, a former anacodona wrestler who started the non-profit Remote Area Medical Volunteer Corps. “It does help people who have fallen through the cracks,” Frank
    Kilgore, a lawyer in nearby St. Paul and social activist, told me.
    About 3,000 people show up for the event that begins today and runs through Sunday. They are the core of the Central Appalachian poor, who have worked at Wal-Mart, farmed rocky soil and survived the boom and bust cycle of coal mines. Folks from southern West Virginia and Eastern Kentucky go to the Wise event. Besdies the economic challenges, the up and down topography of the region can make a trip to the doctor’s office and multi-hour event.
    The question now is whether so-called Obama-care, which is now law, will make the free health clinic unnecessary. The law is designed to help provide 32 million uninsured Americans with health insurance, in part by requiring all to obtain it or face penalties. Low income people like them will have available exchanges to provide competing plans and subsidies to help pay for them, providing they meet certain income guidelines.
    It will take at least a few years to see if those goals can be achieved. Meanwhile, Kilgore says other strategies afoot in the region are to open a medical school in Southwest Virginia that will specialize in training family and rural practice physicians who are desperately needed in remote areas like Wise County.
    Kilgore’s hopeful the medical school approach will further turn things around. “It’s pathetic that one of the world’s richest countries has this sort of thing going on,” he told me.

    No argument there.
    Peter Galuszka

  • Webb Shatters the Mold

    Senator Jim Webb has always been something of a maverick, but now he has done something truly shocking: He has broken from Democrat Party orthodoxy on the intertwined issues of race, diversity and white privilege.

    In a Wall Street Journal op-ed piece today, Webb makes it crystal clear that he is sympathetic to the condition of African-Americans in this country, who still wrestle with the legacy of slavery the Jim Crow era, and is supportive of measures to remediate, in the words of Lyndon B. Johnson, “the badges of slavery.” But he is uncomfortable with the idea of extending that remediation to all “persons of color,” most of whom are newcomers to America and have never suffered discrimination from the U.S. government. Furthermore, he argues that white cultures are so diverse that lumping them together for purposes of public policy (as in bearing the brunt of reverse discrimination) is not justifiable.

    As Webb notes, 95% of the whites of the old South did not own slaves. The South was economically devastated by the Civil War, leaving not only blacks but whites in poverty. Of the South’s 1.8 million sharecroppers, two-thirds were white, roughly mirroring a population that was 71% white. As late as 1938, white illiteracy was far higher than the national average; all colleges and universities in the South combined had endowments smaller than Harvard and Yale combined. The legacy of that white poverty lives on today in lower-than-average levels of education. Writes Webb:

    Policy makers ignored such disparities within America’s white cultures when, in advancing minority diversity programs, they treated whites as a fungible monolith. Also lost on those policy makers were the differences in economic and educational attainment among nonwhite cultures. Thus nonwhite groups received special consideration in a wide variety of areas including business startups, academic admissions, job promotions and lucrative government contracts.

    He concludes:

    Nondiscrimination laws should be applied equally among all citizens, including those who happen to be white. The need for inclusiveness in our society is undeniable and irreversible, both in our markets and our communities. Our government should be in the business of enabling opportunity for all, not in picking winners. … Memo to my fellow politicians: Drop the Procrustean policies and allow harmony to invade the public mindset. Fairness will happen, and bitterness will fade away.

    Bravo! Well said.

  • So Much For Cleaning Up The Bay

    This May, environmentalists hailed two developments that finally seemed to bode well for Chesapeake Bay.
    The Environmental Protection Agency settled a lawsuit with activist and seafood groups to start enforcing Bay pollution rules. Also, the Obama Administration announced it would undertake a pollution survey of Bay watersheds to identify and stem pollution.
    Unfortunately, the positive moves are running into a brick wall, namely Gov. Robert F. McDonnell.
    He and his secretary of natural resources, Doug Domenech,are pushing back on Obama’s moves to cut pollution from farms and rainwater runoff from residential subdivisions that scientists believe lead to oxygen depleted “dead zones” and too many chemicals that lead to algal blooms.
    McDonnell wrote EPA Administrator Lisa Jackson recently that “the EPA’s time and energy would be better spent in Virginia educating farmers on best practices and positive actions . . .rather than expanding thew scope of its regulatory authority through enforcement measures.”
    Domenech has said in media interviews that with the economy still sputtering, now is not the time to push new regs that could stymie housing construction and forest products.
    It was probably naive to think that the anti-regulation McDonnell Administration would go along with what the Chesapeake Bay Foundation has dubbed the most significant measures to improve the health of the Bay in 38 years.
    After all, McDonnell is suing the EPA over regulating carbon dioxide, which is believed to contribute to global warming. As a staunch conservative, he is dead set against any expansion of government. Like his attorney general, Ken Cuccinelli, he is fond of attacking scientific approaches if they don’t fit his political views. In the case of the Bay, McDonnell is somehow finding that the EPA’s computer modelling methods are antiquated and inadequate which may be odd, since McDonnell has a legal, not a technical background.
    It is also curious that McDonnell believes that Virginia’s farmers need to be “educated” about pollution. He must have in mind a quaint notion that Old Dominion agrarians still work their 40 acres with a mule. The reality is that some of the biggest polluters are gigantic corporate farm operations.
    One is Smithfield Foods, which operates big hog farms that produce enormous amounts of animal waste. One such company farm was fined millions for polluting the Pagan River in the mid-1990s. And it is unlikely that Ma and Pa farms have the deep pockets to hire cooking show star Paula Dean as their pitchwoman as Smithfield Food has.
    As for Domenech, it may be no surprise that he is worried about what new Bay regs might do to the forest products industry. He worked for 12 years for the Forest Research Association, an industry lobby group before moving over to the U.S. Department of the Interior during the George W. Bush Administration (not exactly a great line on a resume after the Deepwater Horizon disaster).
    Some believe that McDonnell’s stone wall on efforts to avoid computer modelling to identify Bay pollution sources could lead to a break-up of the multi-state pact that has been trying to do something about Bay pollution for decades.
    That would be a huge price to pay for one politician’s anti-government dogma.
    Peter Galuszka

  • The New Face Of Racism in America

    Let me start with a hypothetical. Imagine it’s 2002 and a white supremacist (skinhead) is videotaped on a public sidewalk. Let’s say the skinhead says, “I hate black people. All of them. Every last iota of a n*****, I hate them”. He goes on and on and eventually says something about killing black babies.

    Now, imagine it’s two years later. It’s election night. George Bush is running against John Kerry. Bush wins. However, his victory is marred by an incident at a polling place. The same skinhead who was videotaped talking about killing black babies is standing in front of a polling place on election night. He and a friend are videotaped in paramilitary uniforms. The leader (and presumptive black baby killer) is holding a night stick. Eventually, the police are called and the racist duo are forced to leave the polling place.

    Post inauguration, George Bush has the polling incident brought to his attention. He watches the videotape of the skinhead making public racist statements. Then, he watches the videotape of the same skinhead standing in front of a polling place with a billy stick. What does he do? He lets his Attorney General (John Ashcroft) decide to forget the incident because it’s just not that important. How does the media react? Hint: They scream bloody murder calling both Bush and Ashcroft racists. How do liberals react? Hint: They scream bloody murder calling both Bush and Ashcroft racists.

    Now, let’s leave the hypothetical and enter the world of reality.

    New Black Panther leader King Shamir Shabazz was videotaped making exactly the same racist statements about white people as my hypothetical skinhead said about black people. The video can be seen here.

    Then, King Shamir Shabazz and another New Black Panther member appeared in paramilitary uniforms with Shabazz brandishing a night stick in front of a polling place during the last presidential election. The video can be seen here.

    Now, Obama’s justice department has decided not to follow up on a complaint about this act of voter intimidation put forth in January of 2009 – before Obama took the oath of office. You can read about it here.

    If you can’t manage to believe your own eyes (or dear ole Groveton) – consider this interview with a civil rights lawyer, former editor of the Village Voice and certifiable uber – liberal, Bartle Bull. You can watch it here. Bartle Bull was also a campaign manager for both Bobby Kennedy and Jimmy Carter.

    If you are a reader of this blog, I’d ask that you consider this post in the context of three possibilities:

    1. In the hypothetical situation of the skinheads, Bush and Ashcroft – you would have sided with the Bush Administration in believing that the skinhead with a history of making public racial slurs holding a billy club at a polling place was not a sufficiently big deal to investigate. You also excuse the New Black Panthers for their real life racism and intimidation of voters. Hint: You are not a racist. You are just stupid.

    2. You would disagree with both the hypothetical Bush situation and the all too real Obama situation by saying that there is no place for racist intimidation of voters and no administration should tolerate such actions. Hint: You are a normal, non-racist American.

    3. You think Bush and Ashcroft would have been racists while Obama and Holder are not. Hint: You are very much a racist yourself.

    Eric Holder has apparently selected option 3. He is a racist – pure and simple.


  • Harper Lee’s Masterpiece


    It’s the 50th Anniversary of the publishing of Harper Lee’s “To Kill a Mockingbird” and there’s plenty being written about the novel, the author’s only one published.

    It has been one my favorite reads since either middle or high school (I can’t remember when I first read it) and I have reread it several times just to enjoy Lee’s simple, unpretentious style that gently takes you by the hand and takes to some truly shocking and traumatic events.
    On another personal note, for a while, my family lived in a small Southern town that seemed like a latter day version of Maycomb, Ala. although it was in Eastern North Carolina. Lee’s vivid descriptions rang true of how the older buildings looked, how close and yet far apart personal relations were between the races, how kind most people were and no one ever really expected much — what they had was good enough.
    Coming out when it did, Lee’s novel was one of the most influential books. The civil rights movement was in full swing, as was the sexual revolution, and not many books were aimed at children and were seen through a young girl’s eyes dealing with such adult issues as racism, lynching and rape.
    In 1963, three years after the novel’s publication, Gregory Peck starred in a brilliant movie that punched Lee’s themes home even more and appealed to a much broader audience. As such, the novel and the movie defined what the then-in-the-news South was like for many a Yankee.
    Sure, the novel has it critics who complain that it creates straw images of Southern people and culture and that Truman Capote, Lee’s close friend, might have ghost written it. Naturally, reaction against the novel resonated in reactionary Virginia. The School Board of Hanover County near Richmond tried to ban it in 1966 after parents complained about the sex and rape. Lots of other school boards did, too. But let’s not forget that in Virginia at the time, it was a felony for a white to marry an African-American. After all, white Mayella had a hankering for black Tom Robinson.
    There are other themes that still have relevance today. In this morning’s Wall Street Journal, columnist Peggy Noonan pines for older leaders to help guide young ones such as Barack Obama. Atticus Finch is a great role model, she notes, especially because he was the loving father, an adult who knew the world is vicious and provided wise counsel and protection. We need more Atticus types these days, she says, and she well may be right.
    The idea of Atticus as the essential Good Dad runs counter to another provocative article, called “The End of Men” in the Atlantic. This a frightening piece, especially for a male like myself, since it shows just how irrelevant the male sex has become as females become better educated, take more jobs and may be better-suited for the demands of post-industrial society.
    Guys like us can’t all be Atticus, but it might be worth trying. I am a father and I have found it terrifying for the past 22 years. Meanwhile, “To Kill a Mockingbird” endures.
    Peter Galuszka

  • Earthquake Rocks DC: Obama Blamed

    A 3.6 scale earthquake rocked the Nation’s Capital Friday morning, leading prominent conservatives to say that Barack Obama’s neo-socialist spending programs are affecting the earth’s tectonic plates.

    “The globe just can’t handle the trillions in upcoming debt that it is being weighed down with,” says James A. Bacon, noted aging Baby Boomer.
    Another prominent deficit hawk, Groveton, says the link between profligate deficit spending and the earth’s overheated magma cannot be denied. “This is no phony-baloney global warming nonsense coming out of places like the University of Virginia, my alma mater. This is real,” he says.
    Virginia Atty. Gen. Kenneth N. Cuccinelli announced that he is launching seven specific CIDs (civil investigative demands) to see if any fraud was involved in placing the epicenter of the earthquake near the Maryland village of Germantown as opposed to one in the Old Dominion.
    A Cuccinelli spokesman declined comment. “We don’t comment on ongoing legal cases,” he says.
    The Goozer