Monthly Archives: March 2005

Connaughton Campaign Responds to “The Politics of Lies”

Phillip Rodokanakis’ “The Politics of Lies,” posted March 28 on Bacon’s Rebellion, is mind-boggling in its deceitful mudslinging and campaign chicanery, especially since it comes from someone claiming certification as a fraud investigator.

The “half-truths, falsehoods and outright lies” Mr. Rodokanakis lays to Sean Connaughton – chairman-at large of the Prince William Board of County Supervisors running for the Republican nomination for Virginia lieutenant governor in the June 14 primary – actually better describe his own article.

Tellingly, Mr. Rodokanakis’ screed includes false allegations against Sean Connaughton almost identical to those made by his opponent, state Sen. Bill Bolling, in a campaign flier mailed to Virginia voters in December. (Read full text of response.)

The Inmates Are Running the Asylum

If you ever wondered why local governments always run out of money and keep on raising property taxes, the story that ran today in the Washington Times says it all!

Local governments are asking Gov. Warner to amend a bill approved by both Houses of the General Assembly with veto-proof majorities, to exempt them from having to comply with the requirements of this bill.

And what is does this bill mandate that our local governments find so offensive? It forbids government agencies from providing Medicaid and welfare benefits to illegal aliens over 19 years of age. What a novel idea, eh?

But our local governments are up in arms over this bill. Such a draconian bill could put an end to the out-of-control spending of local jurisdictions. How can they continue justifying huge social welfare staffs if they have to cut back to providing such services to illegal aliens? After all, they just don’t have the manpower to screen anyone that comes in through their doors and asks for benefits we’re told—yet they have the manpower to provide all these benefits in the first place.

Do you get the idea that the inmates are running the asylum?

Silly me, I had this ill-conceived notion that such benefits were reserved for the truly needy and were restricted to legal residents only. Now that Gerry Connolly and the other local jurisdictions have explained it to me, I have a much clearer vision of exactly how our tax dollars are being squandered by the likes of Gerry Connolly and out-of-control Boards of Supervisors.

Is More Money Really the Answer, Jerry?

First off, let me give credit where credit is due. Instead of basing his campaign on sound bites and attacks on Tim Kaine, Jerry Kilgore has finally issued a serious position paper. This paper, “Better Pay for Better Teachers” gives us the first meaningful detail into Kilgore’s thinking about education policy. Thank you, Mr. Kilgore, for humoring the policy wonks among Virginia’s electorate — a tiny but vocal constituency.

Second, let me state that Mr. Kilgore addresses a real problem: The increasing difficulty recruiting and retaining qualified teachers into Virginia’s public schools. It is an issue that merits the attention of our gubernatorial candidates.

Now that I’ve gotten the obligatory niceties out of the way, let me get to the point. What are you thinking? Who drew up this plan for you — the teacher’s lobby? What’s your goal here — to run to the left of Tim Kaine?

Kilgore’s solution entails the following: helping teachers repay student loans in exchange for taking jobs in distressed school districts; increasing retirement benefits; providing $5,000 bonuses to teachers who complete the National Board Certification process; and providing $5,000 bonuses to teachers who complete advanced degrees related to their teaching areas. The one really promising idea– creating a performance-based pay system–will be relegated to an Excellence in Education task force.

Here’s what I’m reading between the lines: Even with Virginia schools awash in more state and federal money than they’ve ever had in their histories, we still need to spend more money! There’s nothing wrong with the public school system in Virginia that spending even more money won’t solve. Moving to a performance-based pay system could, potentially, entail structural change. But pardon my cynicism for suspecting that a performance-based system will turn out to be all carrots (reward good teachers) and no sticks (no thought to actually punishing, demoting or removing anyone).

Virginia’s educational system needs serious structural reform. Pouring more money into the system is not likely to yield meaningful improvements to outcomes. There’s always the possibility that Kilgore will have more to say about education, so I’m withholding a final judgment. But he could not have launched a policy initiative less likely to appeal to fiscal conservatives.

$750 Million Savings in Search of a Candidate

From the Wilder Commission
FINAL REPORT
December 12, 2002
The Commission recommends that the following steps be taken to streamline and consolidate Virginia state government.
• Merge the Virginia Museum of Natural History into the Science Museum of Virginia
• Merge the Chesapeake Bay Local Assistance Department into the Department of Conservation and Recreation and maintain as a separate division within the department.
• Merge the Commission on Local Government into the Department of Housing and Community Development (maintaining the annexation functions and the collegial body within DHCD)
• Merge the State Milk Commission with the Department of Agriculture and Consumer Services (with input from the Milk Commission’s regulants about the best means of accomplishing this task.)
• Consolidate the Charitable Gaming Commission, Racing Commission and Lottery into a single department under the Lottery after a determination by the Governor of the most appropriate methods and timing for the consolidation..
• Merge the Council on Human Rights with the Office of the Attorney General. (Ensure the maintenance of all functions and the continuation of public input into its operations.)
• Integrate Richard Bland College into the Community College System.
• Eliminate the Center for Innovative Technology in its existing form and reconstitute it as part of a statewide initiative to enhance Virginia’s research and development infrastructure.
• The Governor should acquire sound business assessments of the real value of a privatized ABC retail operation and develop an RFP process to realize this value and authorize legislation for the 2003 General Assembly session. Privatization should be structured so as to provide at least as equal a revenue stream to the localities and to the state activities that are presently supported by ABC earned income.
• Merge Chippokes Plantation into the Department of Conservation and Recreation
• Move the office of Consumer Services from the Department of Agriculture
• Eliminate all general fund support for the Commonwealth Competition Council
• Merge the Department for the Blind and Vision Impaired, the Department for the Deaf and Hard of Hearing and the Department of Rehabilitative Services in a manner that will result in an enhancement and not a diminution of services. The Commission believes a consolidation plan that can result in the provision of more effective services needs to have genuine input and participation from the stakeholder groups.
• Develop a common chart of accounts that can identify with precision the total amount of dollars spent on consultants, utilize a return on investment criteria for consultant engagements and implement periodic external reviews of consultant utilization and renewal procedures.
• Eliminate the Commonwealth’s function as a power plant operator by developing an energy management process that will enable the private sector to take over the management, upkeep and upgrade of power plants.
• The Governor should develop a plan for reforming the administration and funding of local constitutional officers. This plan should examine: a) ways of eliminating duplication of efforts between constitutional officers and local officials; b) the possible regional provision of services currently provided by constitutional officers; c) the possible use of constitutional officers in collecting state receivables to offset potential reductions in general fund support; and d) possible streamlinings and consolidations that could be achieved in the agencies- The Compensation Board and the Commonwealth Attorneys Services Council- that currently administer and support constitutional officers.
(Click on the comments link below to view the rest of the Wilder Commission recommendations)

WP columnist Morse is ‘stomping mad’ at both candidates

It’s Easter morning!

Oh yes, and FORGIVENESS is in the morning air. Both ‘Pubs and Dems can be angry at each other, but we have the power of forgiveness thanks to the one above.

The Blue Dog just returned from early morning Sunrise Easter service and breakfast at my favorite Evangelical church and the Dawg is feeling pretty darn good.

With church being so early in the morning, I forgot to buy my other Sunday Bible, err … the Washington Post, but the WP is Online! In the Sunday Outlook section, there’s a good article by Democratic pundit Gordon Morse, “Off to an Unimpressive Start” concerning the Kaine and Kilgore’s property tax proposals.

http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/articles/A2204-2005Mar25.html

Morse concludes in the article: “Adlai Stevenson once advised against running for office in a manner that demonstrates your unfitness for the job. Kaine and Kilgore should bear that in mind.”

Apparently, WP columnist Morse (another Warner sycophant) is stomping mad at both candidates this time. But look on the bright side, at least Gordon Morse is not another Gov. Warner “Stepford-pundit” like his RT-D counterpart, Jeff ‘Good-Copy’ Shapiro.

The VA conservative blogging community (i.e. One Mans Trash) are simply sick & tired of reading Richmond Jeff’s ‘good copy’ because he is constantly washing Gov. Warner’s dirty laundry until it’s clean for public consumption.

He’s also good at removing ‘Kaine-stains’ …

But did you realize Gordon Morse was the chief speechwriter for Democratic Gov. Gerald Baliles back in the late eighties and served with his administration. During his tenure, the Virginia State budget nearly doubled and taxes were raised numerous times under Gov. Gerald Baliles — who loved spending our taxes as much as collecting them.

Yes, siree Gordo! He worked for Gov. Gerald ‘budget-busting’ Baliles, who is better known for raising VA’s sales tax and the gasoline tax (as part of a $422 million-a-year transportation tax package that was a bust as well). Baliles is now attempting to resurrect his political career as your favorite special-interests US Senator.

How apropos considering the Christian holiday of resurrection and redemption?

Oh, that was mean of the Blue Dog 🙁

Please forgive me, Mr. Baliles?

And I’m really sorry to bust the ‘Barnie for Senate’ fan club bubble as well. But Democrats can pick their poison here and now, because it’s either ex-Gov. Gerald ‘the Tax Governor’ Baliles — or Gov. Mark ‘the Revenator’ Warner as the 2006 Democratic US Senate candidate.

Geographically speaking, Gordon Morse is a native of the Shenandoah Valley — so he is fairly knowledgeable about raising state pork and knows all the clever ways to politically spin a tax increase.

After all, Baliles is the main reason then incoming Gov. Wilder had to cut state government 15-percent across the board. That’s probably the reason why the WP columnist never publishes anything good about the ex-Gov. and current Richmond Mayor Doug Wilder or his trusty sidekick and campaign manager Paul Goldman.

I’ll need to hop back in the pickup truck before I really get in trouble — and go to town again to purchase a hardcopy of the Washington Post. Then it’s off to Grandma’s house I go — with the wife and our children.

I’m looking forward to Sunday’s Easter Dinner (and today, I’m forgetting about that ‘low-carb’ starvation diet) with turkey & country ham and mashed tatters and corn pudding and pickled eggs. And topped off with Grandma’s chocolate Coca-Cola cake for dessert.

Yummy, yummy … That’s eating right.

Lift the Wakefield Speaker Ban!

Governor Jim Gilmore informs me today that he was never allowed to speak at the Shad Planking as a candidate, though Don Beyer was invited. I never knew this and find it personally offensive. The darkest day in North Carolina’s political history, to my way of thinking, was the day the legislature there passed the infamous ‘Speaker Ban’ law. When we reach a point in this country where we are afraid of words, of views, of opinions, where we don’t feel competent to let them compete in the unfettered marketplace of public expression, we are done for as a people. Let this be out cry between now and April 20: Lift the Wakefield Speaker Ban!

Shame on the Shad Planking! Let Potts, Fitch speak!

Regardless of your political stripe, I call on all Virginia bloggers to appeal to Robert Bain, chairman of the Wakefield Ruritan Club’s Shad Planking Committee to make room for declared gubernatorial candidates Russ Potts and George Fitch on the speakers’ rostrum when the Shad Planking commences in Wakefield on April 20. Further, Kilgore and Kaine should insist on it. Potts and Fitch are declared candidates for the highest elective office in this Commonwealth. They deserve to be heard. Do we fear the views of these two men to such an extent that we will be a party to denying them the opportunity to speak? This is Virginia! I think not. If they’re not invited to speak, I’m not going. And I ask you to join me in this expression of indignation. If they’re not invited to speak, please, sit this one out. Don’t be a party to this muzzling. Stay away from Wakefield on April 20.

It all goes back to the tax vote in 2004 …

Phew! Yesterday, the Blue Dog covered two Jerry Kilgore events and interviewed a number of GOP elected officials along with a new House of Delegate GOP candidate, Matt Lohr. I also had lunch with a Republican House of Delegate member who talked about his choice for VA’s next Governor, Jerry Kilgore.

Q. Guess what I’m going to write about for the next month?
A. Republicans, Republicans, Republicans.

Mr. Kilgore and his staff were well organized with good crowds in Staunton and Harrisonburg for the campaign kickoff. Nice media handouts as well with Tim Murtaugh and others following up. The major players were out in force — Landes, Saxman, Cline and Obenshain, while 24th District Senator Hanger was AWOL from both events.

Two key ‘fiscally conservative’ points with the Kilgore speech:
1. Updated Taxpayer Bill of Rights; that would give citizens the opportunity to vote on any increase in state sales, gas or income tax.
2. Another Watchdog Commission (remember the Wilder Commission?); a bipartisan commission to identify burdensome and wasteful regulations for elimination and reform (hmm … I told candidate Kilgore that a Blue Dog on a bipartisan Watch-DOG Commission would be a perfect fit).

But it’s nice to see BOTH candidates, Kilgore and Kaine, talking the anti-tax talk with property tax relief, but as Governor, are these politicians willing to walk the anti-tax walk?

The Commonwealth has already been there, done that with Gov. Mark “I will not raise taxes” Warner.

With a wink and a smile, ‘Pub candidate Jerry Kilgore said he reads the Blue Dog Tales on a regular basis, while last year, Dem Tim Kaine said, “Oh that Blue Dog column. I don’t agree with your tax stands.”

Hmm … maybe, I should ‘Barney-it-down’ quite a bit with the anti-tax rhetoric.

There’s more retribution from the red storm that’s rising in the valley:

Because a Valley ‘Pub told me he was witness to some fireworks at the Clarke County GOP committee meeting last week. Chris Oprison gave a fiery speech denouncing Joe May (who was in attendance) in from of a strong May crowd.

… He called May’s record “abhorrent,” and said he “says one thing and does another.”

“You could hear a pin drop. Very tense. After the meeting, May and Oprison had a face to face talk. Don’t know what words were passed but it was quite a show.”

I say, like a heavy metal rock n roll show …

If you think it’s over, better think again
There’ll be no compromise
Time to hit the power, feel adrenaline
Move into overdrive

Here comes the revolution
Time for retribution

Revolution by Judas Priest

MORE WORK FOR BARNIE

Barnie:

Here is some more work for your educational program.

The following are quotes from “Leesburg Budget Plan Holds Tax Rate Level” Lila de Tantillo the The Loudoun Extra of The Washington Post 24 March 2004, Page 1.

“Leesburg Town Manager John A. Wells proposed a $109 million budget Tuesday that would keep the property tax rate at 22 cents per $100 of assessed value. But rising assessments mean that homeowners will still face significantly higher tax bills.

“Property assessments rose an average 24 percent, from $353,000 to $437,000, raising the average tax bill by about $185, to $963, according to town budget officer Michael Freda.

“Loudoun County Administrator Kirby M. Bowers has proposed a $969 million operating budget that calls for cutting the property tax rate by 3.75 cents, to $1.07 per $100 of assessed value. But the 20 percent rise in home values countywide this year means Loudoun homeowners would still see their property tax bills increase by an average of $580.”

You can see why citizens are confused and why politicians like Kilgore and Kaine try to take advantage of it.

Perhaps we need an amendment to Sec 58. 1-3321 that states that it is state policy that if assessment raise the tax bill by more than 1%, municipal governments must lower the tax rate and then cannot raise it back up for 60 days following notice…

Otherwise municipal governments will continue to let the media cover thier avoidance of stated policy so they can ride up on higher assesments. As I noted in an earlier psot, just holding another hearing does not cut it. Your thoughts?

EMR

God and Potts on Secession

In my upcoming Punditwatch column, I’ll be noting the nascent secession movement in Loudoun County. Residents of the western part of the county, angry at rampant development moving in from the east, want to secede and form a new county called Catoctin.

That got me thinking about gubernatorial candidate Russ Potts, involved in a bit of secessionism of his own. The proposed Catoctin County is awfully close to Potts’ current Senatorial District. Where does he stand?

I asked Marc Fisher, Potts confidante and Washington Post columnist:

Brandermill, Va.: How does Sen. Russ Potts feel about the Catoctin secession movement?
Marc Fisher: I don’t know, but my bet is that he loves the idea, at least in theory. I will ask next time I talk to him.

Sen. Potts has said that only he and God could say whether he was a Republican. Maybe he’ll tell Fisher where God stands on Catoctin.

The Republican double standard

“When you oppose the Republican Party nominee for the top office in the state, you are not a Republican.”

Sen. Ken Cuccinelli (R-Fairfax), in The Washington Post, March 23, 2005

Question: When will the Republican Party of Virginia ask former Republican Governor Linwood Holton to leave the party? In case you missed it, he’s supporting Democrat Tim Kaine for the top office in the state. In case you missed it, so are thousands of other Virginia Republicans. When will you try to run them off? What is your strategy these days? Do you somehow think you can shrink to greatness?

The Easter Bunny must be Republican

They sure are depending on him to meet the needs of this state!

IF YOU THOUGHT KAINE WAS BAD ON TAXES…

Kaine’s tax solutions are lame but Kilgore’s are worse.

First: Kilgore and Shear in today’s The Washington Post say:
“If local governments want more money, he said, their leaders should be forced to openly increase tax rates, not rely on rising assessments to fuel what he called “backdoor” tax increases.”

Barnie send Kilgore, his staff and Mike Shear a copy of that law you cited in response to our question. Kilgore is a lawyer and was the Attorney General?

It gets worse: “No Virginian should be forced out of his or her home because of runaway property assessments.,” Kilgore said. “My plan is an honest (sic) plan that attacks the real problem: skyrocketing property tax assessments that result in higher reals estate taxes paid by you.”

Those who trust the market should really be upset with a proposed constitutional amendment that gets government into the business of second guessing the market with assessment escalation caps. One thing Virginia has is a fair full value tax assessment system. Once the assessed value wonders away from the market value, regardless of how well meaning it sounds, the Commonwealth is on the way to a New Jersey-like mess.

The reason property values are going up so fast is dysfunctional human settlement pattern. Public agencies and private enterprises are working together to build the wrong size houses in the wrong location. See Five “Critical Realities That Will Shape the Future” and “Wild Abandonment.”

In a democracy with a market economy what do you do when the price goes up too fast? Build more of what people want: modest sized homes with quality support close to jobs. Anyone who reads our columns knows the problem is not lack of land. It is lack of leadership that is willing to foster Fundamental Change.

Next Kilgore (and Kaine) are using the Gilmore ploy. Campaign on something the governor can not deliver (e.g. the car tax which became just an unfair burden transfer.) The legislature passes the laws and two legislatures have to pass a constitutional amendment and then the voters get a shot. By that time whomever is elected will be a one-legged duck.

Both Kilgore and Kaine are running for governor, not the chief of legislation. They will have 10s of thousands of employees who spend billions of dollars to do the states work. How will they make government run better? Jim Bacon raises some very good questions about state programs in need of help.

As we noted in an earlier post, functional government costs money. Dysfunctional government costs more money. The Kilgore/Kaine ideas suggest how some who are complaining about taxes might pay less. They do not address who pays more to cover the cost of current dysfunctions or for the future expansion of state, regional and community needs if current trends continue. They do not address how to lower the demand for services or provide them more effeciently.

Finally to solve transportation problems Kilgore proposes “regional transportation authorities.” The problem is an imbalance between transport system capacity and land use generated travel demand. A regional authority has merit only if it is an element of a system that addresses the real problem. (Of course, just raising taxes to generate more money without addressing demand generation will not solve the problem either.)

EMR

Kilgore Cop Out

Now we know how Jerry Kilgore intends to deal with the tax issue — pass the buck to the voters. Formally announcing his candidacy yesterday, he promised (according to the Richmond Times-Dispatch) “to harness hostility to taxes by promising a voter veto for any sales-, income- or gasoline-tax increase.”

Huh? If he’s against tax increases, why doesn’t he just say he’s against tax increases? Why doesn’t he just say he’ll veto a sales-, income- or gasoline-tax increase? Is this some kind of maneuver to avoid offending voters while, at the same time, avoid offending the pro-tax Republicans in the General Assembly? How wishy-washy can you get?

Admittedly, there are worse ideas than letting the voters decide. A couple of years ago, they had enough sense to vote down higher sales taxes in Hampton Roads and Northern Virginia. Here’s the problem, holding down taxes is just the beginning of governance, not the end of governance. Virginia has real problems. We have traffic congestion. We need to improve the quality of K-12 education and the quality, affordability and accessibility of higher education. We have a long way to go in cleaning up our environment. We have a metastasizing Medicaid program that threatens to eat up the state budget, and runaway spending on health care generally. It’s fine to say that Virginia can meet these challenges without raising taxes. But how?

Anti-tax candidates are right — raising taxes is bad. It hurts the taxpayers, and it makes Virginia less attractive in the competition for corporate and human capital. But holding the lid on taxes and letting the other problems spiral out of control is even worse! Unfortunately, I have heard nothing from Kilgore suggesting that he has a clue on how to deal with these problems. Kicking the tax issue back to the voters doesn’t solve anything. The voters are looking to him for solutions!

It’s spring, the campaign season!

A primer for the feeble-minded

*The marketplace sets the value (what a willing buyer will pay to a willing seller) of your house—not the governor, not the lieutenant governor, not the attorney general, not legislators, not mayors or town council members or supervisors, not the tax assessor, not the bank, not your Sunday school teacher. The marketplace sets the value of your house.

*The tax you pay on your house is determined by two things—the value of your house, as set by the marketplace, multiplied by the rate of taxation that is set by your supervisors, or by your town and city council members. The governor doesn’t set this rate. The lieutenant governor doesn’t set this rate. The attorney general doesn’t. The legislators don’t. The tax assessor doesn’t set it, nor does your Sunday school teacher. The folks you elect locally set this rate.

*If you think this rate of taxation on your house is too high, you can change it. You have the ultimate weapon. It’s called a ‘ballot.’ Use it. Vote out the local folks who have set your rate too high. It is easy. You can do it.

*And two final things to remember:

(1) There is really only one kind of tax in this country. It is income tax. One way or another it all comes out of out of your income; and

(2) It’s spring, true, but it is also the campaign season. You might not want to stand too close. That warm water you feel running down your leg might not be rain.