Saturday, January 22, 2011

The Florida Legislature: A Cuckoos Nest ... by gimleteye


Here is what the new Florida legislature wants to do, with the apparent approval of Gov. Twitter Scott:

"HB 239 2011
55 (1) The department, water management districts, and all other state, regional, and local governmental entities may not implement or give any effect to the United States Environmental Protection Agency's nutrient water quality criteria rules for the state's lakes and flowing waters, finalized on December 6, 2010, and published in Volume 75, No. 233 of the Federal Register, in any program administered by the department, water management district, or governmental entity."

Is the Florida Legislature an insane asylum run by high functioning mentally ill, or, is it a barely legal, criminal syndicate protected by corporate-run political action committees? Whatever, legislators and lobbyists are baying at the moon-- these are the business interests-- the Florida Chamber of Commerce, Associated Industries (and jack-ass-in-chief Barney Bishop), Big Ag (ie. Big Sugar)-- promoting legislation that says, in fact, Florida has to live in the stinking mess it created; this sea of pollution that rings the state. The fact is: the state's polluters will not be held accountable to clean up the cost they impose on us, for the toxic soup they have created.

Forget health care reform: what is really driving these wing-tipped and neatly coiffed to fund The Tea Party and the politically illiterate is the conviction that environmental rules are what caused the Great Recession. This is the idiocy driving the proposed Florida House legislation.

In my view, the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency is doing more in the Obama administration to redress its lackluster performance than since its earliest days in the 1970's. Yes!, to the EPA for holding the Legislature's feet to the fire. Or, at least trying to. Floridians deserve to know what the idiotic legislature is trying to do (in more than a tweet by our governor.)

Kendall Coffey Talks to the Press. By Geniusofdespair


Natacha Seijas's PAC attorney Kendall Coffey talks to the press January 18th. He is trying to get hundreds of petitions to recall Vile Natacha thrown out. His argument doesn't seem very convincing. Notice at 40 on the counter he is asked to give examples and he dodges the question. Link to Video.

What Happened to Mick Jagger? By Geniusofdespair


We all have to face the music, even Mick.

Friday, January 21, 2011

Gov. Rick Scott's State of the State Speech (on Twitter) by gimleteye

@ jobs no 1 in my term
@ good signs ahead. freeze regs good for bznss
@ shout out 2 all gud bznss men
@ 4 curious I use twitter cuz too busy 2 tlk 2 press
@ there is no Dpreshion come to my place bbq sunday aft chrch
@ gd bless florda

$3.6 Million Dollar County Boondoggle. By Geniusofdespair

We now have 64 posts in our boondoggle file -- most have occurred under the watch of Miami-Dade County Manager George Burgess. Once again we have proof that the County is just too big and bloated to manage. Our last boondoggle post was only a week ago on transit. To the County Commissioners' credit on the HUD money the Feds want back, they wouldn't release general funds to bail out management staff. According to Miami Herald reporter Martha Brannigan:

"In the latest sign of weak financial controls in Miami-Dade government, the county must pay back $3.6 million in federal grant funds received from the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development after a federal audit found that county officials couldn't show the money was properly used."



Thursday, January 20, 2011

Why We Can't Win: Because POLITICAL ACTION COMMITTEES suck. By Geniusofdespair


One thing PAC's are teaching me, WE CANNOT FOLLOW THE MONEY! I am an excellent researcher but even I get bogged down in trying to sift through the money in these PAC's to see where the money finally ends up. It goes into one only to be funneled into another. Where it ends up is a dizzying trail. I stumbled on all these PAC's, in the graphic above, when doing a search on a David Rivera address. You can see mostly all are registered by Nancy Watkins. The same Watkins mentioned by the Orlando Sentinel,"Candidate for governor Bud Chiles took on political spending committees...standing outside Tampa accountant Nancy Watkins’ office and declaring it the site of “legal money laundering.”

I am going to go over some of these PACs but if you hit the links you can review their financial reports yourself. Basically political action committees (PAC's) and their sister, committees of continuing existence (CCE's), are used to both raise enormous sums from one entity and hide money funneling into campaigns for candidates. Also they fund campaigns to squash things we might like that business does not. We can never win in these well funded campaigns because people are not paying attention and expensive sound bites bordering on truth rule, as you can see in the graphic at left. Citizens for Lower Taxes and a Stronger Economy PAC (it had over $7 million dollars) and other pricey PACs led to the defeat of Amendment 4, Florida Hometown Democracy.

(Hit read more)

Alliance for a Strong Economy
The purpose and mission of the Committee is to promote economic growth and job creation in Florida through sound fiscal policies, lower government spending and reduced taxation. The Committee is empowered to raise funds for the purpose of furthering these principles; to make contributions from such funds to those persons seeking public office, who by their acts have demonstrated an interest in implementing these principles.

The name that came up in a google search Alex Diaz de la Portilla. $73,000 went to Truth Matters in Miami. A lot of money went to the Republican Party but a lot of money came from the Republican Party. Oh, on Truth Matters, Truth Matters appears to be operated by Richard S. Cole of Miami. In June, the group took $73,000 from a state Senate leadership committee known as Alliance for a Strong Economy (it’s managed by Palm Beach Gardens council candidate Howard Rosenkranz) and sent nearly all of it — $69,800 — to Citizens Speaking Out Committee, another group run by Alachua County Republican Chairman Stafford Jones that is aiding McCollum.

Florida Liberty Fund
The purpose and mission of the Committee is to identify and support candidates, committees, organizations and political parties whose ideals and action reflect American values and responsible government. The Committee is empowered to raise funds for the purpose of furthering these principles.

Rep. Dean Cannon is the only associated legislator. The fund gave $250,000 to Let's Get to Work - our Governor. $650,000 thousand went to the Republican Party but $655,000 came from the Republican Party. They gave $50,000 to a Georgia PAC.

Preserve the American Dream
The purpose and mission of the Committee is to identify, construct and advance solutions to the fiscal challenges facing Floridians today. Runaway property taxes, skyrocketing insurance rates, rising costs of homes, uncontrolled government spending, and inefficient excessive regulation are suppressing the ability of Florida families in achieving their goals.

Norman Braman gave big to this Jeff Atwater PAC, about $25,000. Lots of money went to the Republican party but Public Concepts in West Palm Beach got plenty over $100,000 to do who knows what.

Let's not forget to note Ron Book's PAC, Floridians for a Better Tomorrow, with $594,409. Of that Ron Book himself got $125,000 for consulting. Winner and Mandabach campaigns got $200,000 -- in Santa Monica California?? All the money that came in was from the Fountainbleau Hotel in Miami Beach.

This is a link to a St. Pete Times article on soft money in Florida:

Atwater is one of more than two dozen lawmakers who together have amassed millions of dollars under a continuing anomaly in Florida' political fund raising laws.

While state election law limits individual contributions to candidates' campaign accounts to $500, there is no similar limit on committees of continuing existence or CCEs.

Who Should Be Investigating Congressman David Rivera? By Geniusofdespair

The Miami Herald reported that in a surprise move, State Attorney Katherine Fernandez Rundle removed one of her top prosecution teams from the criminal investigation of Congressman Daivd Rivera.

????????????????????????????????

Her reason: Lame. The investigation of small time alleged crook Michelle Spence Jones is more pressing? I think the Feds should take this investigation over before it is completely botched.

Bankrupt:ProPublica on Florida's unemployment fund ... by gimleteye


The website ProPublica, journalism in the public interest, published a fascinating investigation of the crisis in the nation's unemployment finance systems. There are some interesting statistics that I did not know: Florida ranks 46 of 51 states in average weekly benefits. I'd like to hear Associated Industries take, on that. Or the Chamber of Commerce. I know their response: Florida's regulatory environment inhibits jobs. Baloney. We have one growth model in Florida and it has performed miserably: chew up wetlands and open space for suburban sprawl. Fueled by the supply chain, the growth engine remains active in Tallahassee but no where else. The Tea Partiers who are against federal funding for the states: check out where Florida is borrowing money from, to keep the unemployment trust fund afloat. Yes to states rights, no to federal intervention? Voters need to wake up, but so far Floridians are sleep walkng.

Wednesday, January 19, 2011

PAC Money to help Vile Natacha Seijas. By Geniusofdespair

Video of Natacha with some of her attitude on display.

Who gave to support Natacha Seijas to stop her Recall -- I thought I would name the offending parties so they can hang their heads in shame and be listed in google forever as disappointments to the people of Miami Dade County in their quest for good Government:


Dade County PBA Gave money to STOP the Recall of Natacha Seijas
10680 NW 25th ST
Miami, FL 33172 Committee
$10,000.00

Zitro Inc. Gave money to STOP the Recall of Natacha Seijas
8105 West 20th Ave
Hialeah, FL 33014
$10,000.00

Jorge Luis Lopez Law Firm LLC Gave money to STOP the Recall of Natacha Seijas
131 Madeira Avenue PH
Coral Gables, FL 33134
$1,000.00

Bercow Radell & Fernandez, PA Gave money to STOP the Recall of Natacha Seijas
200 S. Biscayne Blvd., Suite 850
Miami , FL 33131
$2,500.00

Riviera Preparatory School Gave money to STOP the Recall of Natacha Seijas
99 SW 7 Street, Suite B
Miami, FL 33130 Business
$750.00

Andrew L. Dolkart Gave money to STOP the Recall of Natacha Seijas
6861 SW 89th Terr
Miami, FL 33156
$150.00

Cathy S. Sweetapple Gave money to STOP the Recall of Natacha Seijas
101 N. Gordon Rd.
Fort Lauderdale, FL 33301-3735
$500.00

Pascual Perez & Associates,Inc Gave money to STOP the Recall of Natacha Seijas
1300 NW 84th Avenue
Doral, FL 33126 Business
$300.00

Service Employees International Gave money to STOP the Recall of Natacha Seijas
18441 NW 2nd Ave, Ste 502
Miami Gardens, FL 33169
$20,000.00

Arenal Building Enterprises Gave money to STOP the Recall of Natacha Seijas
7785 NW 146 Street
Miami Lakes, FL 33016
$1,250.00

Villaverde Properties, Inc. Gave money to STOP the Recall of Natacha Seijas
7785 NW 146 Street
Miami Lakes, FL 33016
$1,250.00

Granada Shopping Plaza, Inc. Gave money to STOP the Recall of Natacha Seijas
1390 South Dixie Highway, Suite 2120
Coral Gables, FL 33146-2945
$1,250.00

Sheridan Enterprises, Inc. Gave money to STOP the Recall of Natacha Seijas
7785 NW 146 Street
Miami Lakes, FL 33016
$1,250.00

Krome Grove Investors/Ed Easton's Company Gave money to STOP the Recall of Natacha Seijas
10165 NW 19th Street
Miami, FL 33172
$5,000.00

Corwil Architects, Inc. Gave money to STOP the Recall of Natacha Seijas
4102 Laguna Street
Coral Gables, FL 33146
$5,000.00

Greenberg Traurig Gave money to STOP the Recall of Natacha Seijas
8400 NW 36th Street, Suite 400
Miami, FL 33166 Business
$3,000.00

Ford Engineers, Inc. Gave money to STOP the Recall of Natacha Seijas
1950 N.W. 94th Avenue, 2nd Floor
Miami, FL 33172 Business
$100.00

The Curtis Group, Inc. Gave money to STOP the Recall of Natacha Seijas
7520 S. Red RD., Suite M
South Miami, FL 33143
$500.00

Ford, Armenteros & Manucy, Inc Gave money to STOP the Recall of Natacha Seijas
1950 NW 94th Avenue, 2nd Floor
Miami, FL 33172
$100.00

Demetra D. Burton Gave money to STOP the Recall of Natacha Seijas
4000 Island Boulevard, Apt. 2602
Aventura, FL 33160Check
$250.00

CEMEX Materials, LLC Gave money to STOP the Recall of Natacha Seijas
1501 Belvedere Road
West Palm Beach, FL 33406
$2,500.00

SHOMA Development Corporation Gave money to STOP the Recall of Natacha Seijas
5835 Blue Lagoon Drive, 4th Floor
Miami, FL 33126 Business
$1,000.00

Dade County PBA Gave money to STOP the Recall of Natacha Seijas
10680 NW 25th ST
Miami, FL 33172 Committee
$10,000.00

White Rock Quarries Gave money to STOP the Recall of Natacha Seijas
P.O. Box 15065
West Palm Beach, FL 33416-5065
$2,500.00

Manuel J. Rodriguez Gave money to STOP the Recall of Natacha Seijas
5955 SW 88th Court
Miami, FL 33173
$220.00

Maria V. Fogarty Gave money to STOP the Recall of Natacha Seijas
6790 SW 64th Street
Miami, FL 33143-3102
$1,130.00

Pedro G. Hernandez Gave money to STOP the Recall of Natacha Seijas
8495 SW 68th Street
Miami, FL 33143-2435
$150.00

Cruz Transportation Consultant Gave money to STOP the Recall of Natacha Seijas
9701 SW 120th Street
Miami, FL 33176-4901
$500.00

William Ho Gave money to STOP the Recall of Natacha Seijas
7331 SW 61st Street
Miami, FL 33143
$250.00

Rene Silva Gave money to STOP the Recall of Natacha Seijas
811 Parma Ave
Coral Gables, FL 33146
$750.00

Arun Sharma Gave money to STOP the Recall of Natacha Seijas
4849 Ronda Street
Coral Gables, FL 33146-1729
$500.00

Pedro Modia Gave money to STOP the Recall of Natacha Seijas
9250 West Flagler ST
Miami, FL 33174
$500.00

Frank V. Isabella Gave money to STOP the Recall of Natacha Seijas
11300 SW 120th Street
Miami, FL 33176
$500.00

Stephen E. Romig Gave money to STOP the Recall of Natacha Seijas
8681 NW 57th CT.
Coral Springs, FL 33067-2872
$500.00

Lanzo Construction Co. Gave money to STOP the Recall of Natacha Seijas
125 SE 5th Court
Deerfield Beach, FL 33441
$5,000.00

Meridian International Group Gave money to STOP the Recall of Natacha Seijas
P.O. Box 331990
Miami, FL 33133
$2,000.00

Pedro R Pelaez Gave money to STOP the Recall of Natacha Seijas
6955 NW 77th Ave, #204
Miami, FL 33166
$3,000.00

Edwin W. Hannum Gave money to STOP the Recall of Natacha Seijas
16135 Emerald Estates Drive, Apt. 269
Weston, FL 33331-6128
$250.00

Francis T. Jantzen III Gave money to STOP the Recall of Natacha Seijas
17982 NW 9th CT,
Pembroke Pines, FL 33029-3113
$250.00

Communitel, Inc. Gave money to STOP the Recall of Natacha Seijas
6955 NW 77th Ave, Suite 204
Miami, FL 33166 Business
$500.00

Miami Dade Ambulance Service Gave money to STOP the Recall of Natacha Seijas
2766 NW 62nd ST
Miami, FL 33147
$5,000.00

Gov. Rick Scott: opaque as far as the eye can see ... by gimleteye

Under the best of circumstances, one must read multiple news sources to untangle fictions from fact in the political and public policy sphere. Most readers don't have time. Most newspapers, under severe pressure from the economic depression, have sharply reduced independent journalism. News sources that most closely hew to corporate lines, like Fox News and its devil spawn, provide a fascimile of "fair and balanced". Now comes a new generation of officials elected to office though they by-passed the media altogether. Florida's Governor Rick Scott won the race for governor without talking to a single newspaper editorial board. He may believe that he won because he didn't open up to the press.

No one knows what Scott believes about public policy to protect the economy and people, other than sound bites. What we do know is that he assembled a transition team cobbled together from the nearest GOP source: acolytes of the Jeb! Bush political pater familia. Scott continues with a policy of sharply restricting media access. He and Florida top officials can only be judged on their actions. For example, one of Scott's first acts was to announce a 90 day freeze on all new regulations. The operative principle is that somehow regulations are stifling demand for business in Florida. (This notion flies in the face of facts that Florida's dominant business lobbies pushed the oversupply of construction that has wrecked so many mortgage holders. They are the crew that sailed the ship of state onto the reef and are now plundering its remains.)

What is interesting-- and what you cannot read in the press, yet-- is that the only agencies that are in fact freezing regulations are the ones that polluters and special interests have commandeered. (Cabinet officers who control their own agencies have already pushed back against the governor's decree.) Front and center: the Florida Department of Environmental Protection. Cleaning up Florida waters, for example, from pollution is apparently something Florida cannot afford. The truth is that assessing Florida's polluters-- like Big Sugar-- the full costs of their pollution is something the Republican majority cannot do. The media is shut down from access to an inexperienced governor who believe the best way to protect voters is through corporate self-interest, hooking the public just like schooling fish who mistook bait for the real thing.

Miami Voice Joins Natacha Seijas's Recall Case. By Geniusofdespair


Today is the day to contribute to Miami Voice NO EXCUSES!! They take credit cards and paypal. Looks like all the intimidation of recall petition gatherers will stop, Natacha Seijas's legal team was told by Judge Amy Steele Donner (who set Seijas' hearing at 5pm on February 7th) that they can:

"...Go ahead with depositions of petition gatherers and notaries. But she curtailed the scope of discovery and said those being deposed shouldn't have to show drivers' licenses, as Natacha's PAC Abre Los Brazos had requested; any valid ID will suffice. Michael Pizzi, an attorney for Miami Voice, heralded the pared-back discovery as a victory that protects those who were involved in petition-gathering from 'a fishing expedition.'"

Read the story in the Miami Herald on the hearing. I am just posting photos from the hearing yesterday.

I wrote about this guy during the Bell campaign, Jose Luis Castillo, seen lurking in the background at the hearing. More Photos and commentary:

Miami Lakes Mayor Michael Pizzi (Miami Voice Lawyer), above, talks to the County Attorney. Why did the County Attorney not object to the Unions joining the case? It almost seems they will do a half-ass defense of the petition certification. And, is that former NOW President Patricia Ireland representing the SEIU, AFL-CIO, TWU and Unite Here? What happened to you woman? Too many years with James Humble? Below is David Reiner, Attorney assisting the PAC Miami Voice.



Above is Kendall Coffey Attorney on Vile Natacha's defense team with Stephen Cody, the other attorney, below. I guess Natacha finally got smart on something. Coffey, you disappoint. He should have been thrown off the case since his wife works for the County but the Judge did not do it even though requested by Miami Voice.


Walmart Is Not A Person: from Truth Out

Published on Truthout (http://www.truth-out.org)
Wal-Mart Is Not a Person
Thom Hartmann | Monday 17 January 2011

The peculiar evil of silencing the expression of an opinion is that it is
robbing the human race; posterity as well as the existing generation; those
who dissent from the opinion, still more than those who hold it. If the
opinion is right, they are deprived of the opportunity of exchanging error
for truth: if wrong, they lose, what is almost as great a benefit, the
clearer perception and livelier impression of truth, produced by its
collision with error.

—John Stuart Mill

In 2003, after my book Unequal Protection was first published, I gave a talk
at one of the larger law schools in Vermont. Around 300 people showed up,
mostly students, with a few dozen faculty and some local lawyers. I started
by asking, “Please raise your hand if you know that in 1886, in the Santa
Clara County v. Southern Pacific Railroad case, the Supreme Court ruled that
corporations are persons and therefore entitled to rights under the
Constitution and the Bill of Rights.”

Almost everyone in the room raised their hand, and the few who didn’t
probably were new enough to the law that they hadn’t gotten to study that
case yet. Nobody questioned the basic premise of the statement.

And all of them were wrong.



We the People are the first three words of the Preamble to the Constitution;
and from its adoption until the Robber Baron Era in the late nineteenth
century, people meant human beings. In the 1886 Santa Clara case, however,
the court reporter of the Supreme Court proclaimed in a “headnote”—a summary
or statement added at the top of the court decision, which is separate from
the decision and has no legal force whatsoever—that the word person in law
and, particularly, in the Constitution, meant both humans and corporations.

Thus began in a big way (it actually started a half century earlier in a
much smaller way with a case involving Dartmouth University) the corruption
of American democracy and the shift, over the 125 years since then, to our
modern corporate oligarchy.

Most recently, in a January 2010 ruling in Citizens United v. Federal
Election Commission, the Supreme Court, under Chief Justice John G. Roberts,
took the radical step of overturning more than a hundred years of laws
passed by elected legislatures and signed by elected presidents and declared
that not only are corporations “persons” but that they have constitutional
rights such as the First Amendment right to free speech.

This decision is clear evidence of how far we have drifted away as a nation
from our foundational principles and values. Particularly since the
presidency of Ronald Reagan, over the past three decades our country and its
democratic ideals have been hijacked by what Joseph Pulitzer a hundred years
ago famously called “predatory plutocracy.”

The Citizens United decision, which empowers and elevates corporations above
citizens, is not just a symbolic but a real threat to our democracy, and
only the will of We the People, exercised through a constitutional amendment
to deny personhood to corporations, can slay the dragon the Court has
unleashed.

The “Disadvantaged” Corporation

In 2008 a right-wing group named Citizens United put together a 90-minute
“documentary,” a flat-out hit-job on Hillary Clinton (then a senator and
presidential aspirant) and wanted to run commercials promoting it on TV
stations in strategic states. The Federal Election Commission (FEC) ruled
that the movie and the television advertisements promoting it were really
“campaign ads” and stopped them from airing because they violated
McCain-Feingold (aka the Bipartisan Campaign Reform Act of 2002), which bars
“independent expenditures” by corporations, unions, or other organizations
30 days before a primary election or 60 days before a general election.
(Direct corporate contributions to campaigns of candidates have been banned
repeatedly and in various ways since 1907, when Teddy Roosevelt pushed
through the Tillman Act, which made it a felony for a corporation to give
money to a politician for federal office; in 194 7 the Taft-Hartley Act
extended this ban to unions.)

McCain-Feingold was a good bipartisan achievement by conservative senator
John McCain and liberal senator Russ Feingold to limit the ability of
corporations to interfere around the edges of campaigns. The law required
the “I’m John McCain and I approve this message” disclaimer and limited the
amount of money that could be spent on any federal politician’s behalf in
campaign advertising. It also limited the ability of multimillionaires to
finance their own elections.

But the law offended the members of the economic elite in this country who
call themselves “conservatives” and believe that they should be able to
spend vast amounts of money to influence electoral and legislative outcomes.

The Conservative Worldview

In part, this belief is derived from a more fundamental—and insidious—belief
that political power in the hands of average working people is dangerous and
destabilizing to America; this is the source of the antipathy of such
conservatives to both democracy and labor unions. They believe in “original
sin”—that we’re all essentially evil and corruptible (because we came out of
the womb of a woman, who was heir to Eve’s apple-eating)—and therefore it’s
necessary for a noble, well-educated, and wealthy (male) elite, working
behind the scenes, to make the rules for and run our society.

Among the chief proponents of this Bible-based view of the errancy of
average working people are the five right-wing members of the current U.S.
Supreme Court—John Roberts, Samuel Alito, Clarence Thomas, Antonin Scalia,
and Anthony Kennedy—who have consistently worked to make America more
hierarchical, only with a small, wealthy “conservative/corporate” elite in
charge instead of a divinely ordained Pope.

And even though the Citizens United case—which landed in the Supreme Court’s
lap after the federal court in Washington, D.C., ruled in favor of the FEC
ban—was only about a small slice of the McCain-Feingold law, the Republican
Five used it as an opportunity to make a monumental change to
constitutionally em- power corporations and undo a century of legal
precedents.

Join the movement for truth - support brave, independent reporting today by
making a contribution to Truthout.


After listening to oral arguments in early 2009, the Roberts Court chose to
ignore those arguments and the originally narrow pleadings in the case,
expanded the scope of the case, and scheduled hearings for September of that
year, asking that the breadth of the arguments include reexamining the
rationales for Congress to have any power to regulate corporate “free
speech.”

In this they were going along with a request from Theodore B. “Ted” Olson,
the solicitor general under George W. Bush, and would now go back to
reexamine and perhaps overturn the Court’s own precedent in the Austin v.
Michigan Chamber of Commerce case of 1990. In that case the Court held that
it was constitutional for Congress to place limits on corporate political
activities; and in a 2003 case, the Court (before the additions of Alito and
Roberts) had already upheld McCain-Feingold as constitutional.1


Thus, on January 21, 2010, in a 5-to-4 decision, the Supreme Court ruled in
the Citizens United case that it is unconstitutional for Congress to
approve, or the president to sign into law, most restrictions on the “right”
of a corporate “person” to heavily influence political campaigns so long as
they don’t directly donate to the politicians’ campaign or party.

The majority decision, written by Justice Kennedy at the direction of Chief
Justice Roberts, explicitly states that the government has virtually no
right to limit corporate power when it comes to corporate “free speech.”2
5.htm>

Kennedy began this line of reasoning by positing, “Premised on mistrust of
governmental power, the First Amendment stands against attempts to disfavor
certain subjects or viewpoints.”

It sounds reasonable. He even noted, sounding almost like Martin Luther King
Jr. or John F. Kennedy, that:


By taking the right to speak from some and giving it to others, the
Government deprives the disadvantaged person or class of the right to use
speech to strive to establish worth, standing, and respect for the speaker’s
voice. The Government may not by these means deprive the public of the right
and privilege to determine for itself what speech and speakers are worthy of
consideration.

But who is that “disadvantaged person or class” of whom Kennedy was
speaking? His answer is quite blunt (the parts in single quotation marks are
where he is quoting from previous Supreme Court decisions): “The Court has
recognized that First Amendment protection extends to corporations.... Under
that rationale of these precedents, political speech does not lose First
Amendment protection ‘simply because its source is a corporation.’”

Two sentences later he nails it home: “The Court has thus rejected the
argument that political speech of corporations or other associations should
be treated differently under the First Amendment simply because such
associations are not ‘natural persons.’” (Historically, natural persons has
been the term for humans under both British common law and American
constitutional law; corporations, churches, and governments are referred to
as artificial persons.)

Bemoaning how badly corporations and their trade associations (like the U.S.
Chamber of Commerce, the nation’s leading front-group player in both
national and local politics for decades and the number one lobbyist in terms
of spending) had been treated by the Congress of the United States for more
than a hundred years, Kennedy stuck up for the “disadvantaged” corporate
“persons” the Roberts Court was seeking to protect:


The censorship we now confront is vast in its reach. The Government has
“muffled the voices that best represent the most significant segments of the
economy.” And “the electorate has been deprived of information, knowledge, and
opinion vital to its function.” By suppressing the speech of manifold
corporations, both for-profit and non-profit, the Government prevents their
voices and viewpoints from reaching the public and advising voters on which
persons or entities are hostile to their interests.

By reinterpreting the Fourteenth Amendment, which says that no “person” (the
amendment’s authors didn’t add the word natural because it was written to
free the slaves after the Civil War, so they figured person was sufficient)
shall be denied equal protection under the law, the Roberts Court turned
American democracy inside out. “We the People” now explicitly means “We the
Citizens, Corporations, and Churches” with a few of the richest humans who
run them thrown in.

Such a view is antithetical to how the Framers of our Constitution viewed
corporations.

A Historical Perspective

The Founders of this nation were so wary of corporate power that when the
British Parliament voted to give a massive tax break— through the Tea Act of
1773—to the East India Company on thousands of tons of tea it had in stock
so that the company could wipe out its small, entrepreneurial colonial
competitors, the colonists staged the Boston Tea Party.

This act of vandalism against the world’s largest transnational corporation,
destroying more than a million dollars’ worth (in today’s money) of
corporate property, led the British to pass the Boston Ports Act of 1774,
which declared the Port of Boston closed to commerce until the city paid
back the East India Company for its spoiled tea. It was an economic embargo
like we declared against Cuba, Iraq, and Iran, and it led the colonists
straight into open rebellion and the Revolutionary War.

Thus the Framers of our Constitution intentionally chose not to even use the
word corporation in that document, as they wanted business entities and
churches to be legally established at the state level, where local
governments could keep an eye on them.

Throughout most of the first 100 years of our nation, corporations were
severely restricted so that they could not gain too much power or wealth. It
was illegal for a corporation to buy or own stock in another corporation, to
engage in more than one type of business, to participate in politics, and to
even exist for more than 40 years (so that the corporate form couldn’t be
used by wealthy and powerful families to amass great wealth in an
intergenerational way and avoid paying an estate tax).

All of that came to an end during the “chartermongering” era of the 1890s
when, after Ohio prepared to charge John D. Rockefeller with antitrust and
other violations of the corporate laws of that state, he challenged other
states to broaden and loosen their laws regarding corporate charters. A
competition broke out among, primarily, Connecticut, New Jersey, New York,
and Delaware, which Delaware ultimately won by enacting laws that were the
most corporate-friendly in the nation. This is the reason why today more
than half of the NYSE-listed companies are Delaware corporations.

In addition, the largest corporations of the era—the railroads—began a
relentless campaign in the 1870s that reached its zenith in 1886, claiming
that as “corporate persons” they should have “rights” under the Bill of
Rights in the Constitution. That zenith was the Santa Clara County v.
Southern Pacific Railroad case, where the Supreme Court did not rule that
corporations are persons, but the court reporter claimed it had,
establishing language that was cited repeatedly in subsequent Court
decisions ratifying this newly found “corporate personhood” doctrine and
cementing it into law.*

A Patriotic Dissent

When the Republican Five on the Supreme Court ruled in the Citizens United
case and handed to corporations nearly full human rights of free speech, it
didn’t come out of the blue. Although no bill in Congress from the time of
George Washington to Barack Obama had declared that corporations should have
these “human rights” (to the contrary, multiple laws had said the opposite),
and no president had ever spoken in favor of corporate human rights, the
five men in the majority on the Supreme Court took it upon themselves to
hand our country over to the tender mercies of the world’s largest
transnational corporations.

The Court’s Minority Pushes Back

This didn’t sit well with the other four members of the Supreme Court.

Justice John Paul Stevens, with the concurrence of Justices Ruth Bader
Ginsburg, Stephen Breyer, and Sonia Sotomayor, wrote the dissenting opinion
in the Citizens United case.

Calling the decision “misguided” in the first paragraph of the 90-page
dissent, Stevens (and his colleagues) pointed out that the Court majority
had just effectively handed our country over to any foreign interest willing
to incorporate here and spend money on political TV ads.


If taken seriously, our colleagues’ assumption that the identity of a speaker
has no relevance to the Government’s ability to regulate political speech
would lead to some remarkable conclusions. Such an assumption would have
accorded the propaganda broadcasts to our troops by “Tokyo Rose” during World
War II the same protection as speech by Allied commanders. More pertinently,
it would appear to afford the same protection to multinational corporations
controlled by foreigners as to individual Americans: To do otherwise, after
all, could “‘enhance the relative voice’” of some (i.e., humans) over others
(i.e., corporations).

In the same paragraph, Stevens further points out the absurdity of granting
corporations what are essentially citizenship rights under the Constitution,
suggesting that perhaps the next Court decision will be to give corporations
the right to vote: “Under the majority’s view, I suppose it may be a First
Amendment problem that corporations are not permitted to vote, given that
voting is, among other things, a form of speech.”

Quoting earlier Supreme Court cases and the Founders, Stevens wrote: “The
word ‘soulless’ constantly recurs in debates over
corporations...Corporations, it was feared, could concentrate the worst
urges of whole groups of men.” Thomas Jefferson famously fretted that
corporations would subvert the republic.

And, Stevens reasoned, the Founders could not have possibly meant to confer
First Amendment rights on corporations when they adopted the Constitution in
1787 and proposed the Bill of Rights in 1789 because, “All general business
corporation statutes appear to date from well after 1800”:


The Framers thus took it as a given that corporations could be
comprehensively regulated in the service of the public welfare. Unlike our
colleagues, they had little trouble distinguishing corporations from human
beings, and when they constitutional- ized the right to free speech in the
First Amendment, it was the free speech of individual Americans they had in
mind.

To make his point, Stevens even quoted Chief Justice John Marshall, who
served from his appointment by President John Adams in 1800 until 1835,
making him one of America’s longest serving chief justices. Sometimes
referred to as the “father of the Supreme Court,” Marshall had written in an
early-nineteenth- century decision some text Stevens quoted into his
Citizen’s United dissent: “A corporation is an artificial being, invisible,
intangible, and existing only in contemplation of law. Being a mere creature
of law, it posses only those properties which the charter of its creation
confers upon it.”

Stevens’s dissent called out Roberts, Alito, Scalia, Thomas, and Kennedy for
their behavior in the Citizen’s United ruling, which he said was “the height
of recklessness to dismiss Congress’ years of bipartisan deliberation and
its reasoned judgment...”:


The fact that corporations are different from human beings might seem to need
no elaboration, except that the majority opinion almost completely elides
it....Unlike natural persons, corporations have “limited liability” for their
owners and managers, “perpetual life,” separation of ownership and control,
“and favorable treatment of the accumulation of assets....that enhance their
ability to attract capital and to deploy their resources in ways that maximize
the return on their shareholders’ investments.” Unlike voters in U.S.
elections, corporations may be foreign controlled..

Noting that “they inescapably structure the life of every citizen,” Stevens
continued:


It might be added that corporations have no consciences, no beliefs, no
feelings, no thoughts, no desires. Corporations help structure and facilitate
the activities of human beings, to be sure, and their “personhood” often
serves as a useful legal fiction. But they are not themselves members of “We
the People” by whom and for whom our Constitution was established.

In this very eloquent and pointed dissent, Stevens even waxed philosophical,
asking a series of questions for which there couldn’t possible be any clear
or obvious answers if the Court were to maintain the “logic” of its Citizens
United ruling:


It is an interesting question “who” is even speaking when a business
corporation places an advertisement that endorses or attacks a particular
candidate. Presumably it is not the customers or employees, who typically have
no say in such matters. It cannot realistically be said to be the
shareholders, who tend to be far removed from the day-to-day decisions of the
firm and whose political preferences may be opaque to management. Perhaps the
officers or directors of the corporation have the best claim to be the ones
speaking, except their fiduciary duties generally prohibit them from using
corporate funds for personal ends. Some individuals associated with the
corporation must make the decision to place the ad, but the idea that these
individuals are thereby fostering their self-expression or cultivating their
critical faculties is fanciful.

The dissenting justices argued that the majority’s ruling wasn’t merely
wrong, both in a contemporary and a historical sense, but that it was
dangerous. The dissent was explicit, clear, and shocking in how bluntly the
three most senior members of the Court (along with the newbie, Sotomayor)
called out their colleagues, two of whom (Roberts and Alito) had been just
recently appointed by George W. Bush.

The dissenters noted that it was their five colleagues (and their friends in
high places) who were clamoring for corporations to have personhood and
free-speech rights, not the American people who were the “listeners” of such
speech: “It is only certain Members of this Court, not the listeners
themselves, who have agitated for more corporate electioneering.”

They continued, noting that corporate interests are inherently different
from the public (and human) interests:*


[The] Austin [Supreme Court decision that upheld McCain/ Feingold in 2003]
recognized that there are substantial reasons why a legislature might conclude
that unregulated general treasury expenditures will give corporations “unfair
influence” in the electoral process, and distort public debate in ways that
undermine rather than advance the interests of listeners. The legal structure
of corporations allows them to amass and deploy financial resources on a scale
few natural persons can match. The structure of a business corporation,
furthermore, draws a line between the corporation’s economic interests and the
political preferences of the individuals associated with the corporation; the
corporation must engage the electoral process with the aim “to enhance the
profitability of the company, no matter how persuasive the arguments for a
broader or conflicting set of priorities.”

By having free-speech rights equal with people, Stevens argued, corporations
will actually harm the “competition among ideas” that the Framers envisioned
when they wrote the FirstAmendment:


“[A] corporation...should have as its objective the conduct of business
activities with a view to enhancing corporate profit and shareholder gain..”
In a state election...the interests of nonresident corporations may be
fundamentally adverse to the interests of local voters. Consequently, when
corporations grab up the prime broadcasting slots on the eve of an election,
they can flood the market with advocacy that bears little or no correlation to
the ideas of natural persons or to any broader notion of the public good. The
opinions of real people may be marginalized.

Moreover, just the fact that corporations can participate on an unlimited
basis as actors in the political process will, inevitably, cause average
working Americans—the 99 percent who make less than $300,000 a year—to
conclude that their “democracy” is now rigged.

The result will be that more and more people will simply stop participating
in politics (it’s interesting to note how many politicians announced within
weeks of this decision that they would not run for reelection), stop being
informed about politics, and stop voting. Our democracy will wither and
could even die.


When citizens turn on their televisions and radios before an election and
hear only corporate electioneering, they may lose faith in their capacity, as
citizens, to influence public policy. A Government captured by corporate
interests, they may come to believe, will be neither responsive to their needs
nor willing to give their views a fair hearing.


The predictable result is cynicism and disenchantment: an increased
perception that large spenders “call the tune” and a reduced “willingness of
voters to take part in democratic governance.”

And even if humans were willing to try to take on corporations (maybe a
billionaire or two with good ethics would run for office?), virtually every
single person who tries to run for office will have to dance to the
corporate tune or risk being totally destroyed by the huge and now-unlimited
amounts of cash that corporations can rain down on our heads.


The majority’s unwillingness to distinguish between corporations and humans
similarly blinds it to the possibility that corporations’ “war chests” and
their special “advantages” in the legal realm may translate into special
advantages in the market for legislation.

Scalia Is Offended

Horrified by the blunt language of the dissent and of being called
“misguided,” “dangerous,” and “reckless” by his colleagues, Justice Scalia
wrote a short concurring opinion in an attempt to once more speak up for the
“disadvantaged” corporations:


Despite the corporation-hating quotations the dissent has dredged up, it is
far from clear that by the end of the 18th century corporations were despised.
If so, how came there to be so many of them?...Indeed, to exclude or impede
corporate speech is to muzzle the principal agents of the modern free economy.
We should celebrate rather than condemn the addition of this [corporate]
speech to the public debate.

Justice Roberts offered his own short concurring opinion, in self-defense,
saying that for “our democracy” to work, the voices in the public arena
shouldn’t just be a human on a soapbox but must include massive
transnational corporations:


First Amendment rights could be confined to individuals, subverting the
vibrant public discourse that is at the foundation of our democracy.


The Court properly rejects that theory, and I join its opinion in full. The
first Amendment protects more than just the individual on a soapbox and the
lonely pamphleteer.

In other words, if a single corporation spends $700 million in television
advertising to tell you that, for example, Senator Bernie Sanders is a “bad
person” because he sponsored legislation that limits its profitability, and
Sanders can raise only $3 million to defend himself with a few local TV
spots, that’s just the reality of “the vibrant public discourse that is at
the foundation of our democracy.”

The Decision and the Damage Done

There is no better evidence of the harm that the Citizens United decision
poses to our democracy than to see the immediate reaction from the
corporations—or, more accurately, the persons who run the corporations.

Two weeks after the decision, a headline in the New York Times said: “In a
Message to Democrats, Wall St. Sends Cash to G.O.P.” The article quoted
banking industry sources (who now knew that they could use their
considerable financial power politically) as saying that they were
experiencing “buyer’s remorse” over having given Obama and the Democrats $89
million in 2008: “Republicans are rushing to capitalize on what they call
Wall Street’s ‘buyer’s remorse’ with the Democrats. And industry executives
and lobbyists are warning Democrats that if Mr. Obama keeps attacking Wall
Street ‘fat cats,’ they may fight back by withholding their cash.”3


The article quoted several banking sources as saying they were outraged that
the president had criticized their industry for the financial meltdown of
2008 or their big bonuses. It wrapped up with a quote from John Cornyn, the
senator from Texas tasked with raising money for the National Republican
Senatorial Committee, noting that he was now making regular visits to Wall
Street in New York City. Speaking of the Democrats who dared challenge the
banksters, he crowed: “I just don’t know how long you can expect people to
contribute money to a political party whose main plank of their platform is
to punish you.”

It was a loud shot across Obama’s bow, and within two weeks the president
had changed his tune on a wide variety of initiatives, ranging from taxes on
the wealthy to backing away from truly strong regulations on the banking,
insurance, and pharmaceutical industries and instead embracing more-cosmetic
“reforms.”

The fact is that about $5 billion was spent in all the political campaigns
from coast to coast in the elections of 2008, a bit less than $2 billion of
that on the presidential race. Compare that with January 2010, when a small
cadre of senior executives and employees of the nation’s top banks on Wall
Street split up among themselves more than $145 billion in personal bonus
money.

If those few thousand people had decided to take just 3 percent of their
bonus and redirect it into a political campaign, no politician in America
could stand against them. And now none do. And that’s just the banksters!
Profits in the tens and hundreds of billions of dollars were reported in
2009 by the oil, pharmaceutical, insurance, agriculture, and retailing
industries—all now considering how to use a small part of their profits to
influence political races.

While WellPoint’s Anthem Blue Cross division was raising insurance rates in
California by up to 36 percent, the company declared a quarterly profit of
well over $2 billion. And the six largest oil companies were making more
than a billion dollars in profits per week. Even the smallest coalition,
funneling their money through the U.S. Chamber of Commerce, now has the
ability to promote or destroy any politician.

There are now no limits to what corporations (or rich individuals using a
corporation as a front) can spend to influence elections or ballot measures.
Every member of Congress will now know before he or she votes in favor of
any legislation that is opposed by a particular industry, or votes against a
bill that is favored by that industry, that it will have consequences come
reelection time.

Anyone concerned with the integrity of the political system should note that
this decision affects the legitimacy of elections not only of the
legislative and executive branches but also of judges. As Bill Moyers and
Michael Winship wrote in the Huffington Post in February 2010,4



Ninety-eight percent of all the lawsuits in this country take place in the
state courts. In 39 states, judges have to run for election— that’s more than
80 percent of the state judges in America.


The Citizens United decision made those judges who are elected even more
susceptible to the corrupting influence of cash, for many of their decisions
in civil cases directly affect corporate America, and a significant amount of
the money judges raise for their campaigns comes from lobbyists and lawyers.

Those inclined to underestimate the influence of cash on judicial elections
should be reminded of some basic facts that Moyers and Winship provided:


During the 1990s, candidates for high court judgeships in states around the
country and the parties that supported them raised $85 million...for their
campaigns. Since the year 2000, the numbers have more than doubled to over
$200 million.


The nine justices currently serving on the Texas Supreme Court have raised
nearly $12 million in campaign contributions. The race for a seat on the
Pennsylvania Supreme Court last year was the most expensive judicial race in
the country, with more than four and a half million dollars spent by the
Democrats and Republicans. With the Supreme Court’s Citizens United decision,
corporate money’s muscle got a big hypodermic needle full of steroids.

This decision was a naked handoff of raw political power to corporate forces
by five unelected judges; and as we saw earlier, the other four members of
the Court said so in the plainest and most blunt terms.

Indeed, the First Amendment now protects the “free speech” rights of the
presidents of Russia and China and Iran to form corporations in the United
States and pour millions of dollars toward supporting or defeating members
of Congress or presidential aspirants who favor trade policies or a foreign
policy that suits their interests.

This decision also protects the “right” of the largest polluting
corporations on earth to politically destroy any politician who wants to
give any more authority to the Environmental Protection Agency or to elevate
to elected status any politician who is willing to dismantle the EPA.

This Supreme Court decision has vested power in already powerful
corporations that they never had before: to directly affect the outcome of
elections for public office and of ballot measures.

So what’s to be done?

Such a radical decision requires an equally radical response that must be
both far-reaching and permanent.

Move to Amend

There are only three ways to undo a bad Supreme Court decision. All three
have been used at various times.

The first is to wait until the composition of the Court changes —one or more
of the bad judges retires or dies and is replaced by others more competent.
(It’s worth noting that even former Justice Sandra Day O’Connor, a Ronald
Reagan appointee and longtime Republican activist, condemned the Citizens
United ruling.) Then the Court takes on a case that involves the same issues
and, like with Brown v. Board of Education and Roe v. Wade, pushes the Court
forward in time.

The second is for the American people, the president, and Congress to
understand the horror of the consequences of such a decision and break with
the Court.

Arguably, this happened with the Dred Scott v. Sanford decision in 1857,
which ruled that black persons were actually property and thus led us
directly into the Civil War. That Supreme Court decision led to Abraham
Lincoln’s Emancipation Proclamation and the passage of legislation
clarifying the rights of African Americans, although it ultimately took a
war and the passage of the 13th, 14th, and 15th Amendments to purge slavery
from our laws and our Constitution.

Ironically, the Citizens United case is the mirror of Dred Scott in that it
ruled that a property—a corporation—is now a person. The third way to
undo—or supersede—a Supreme Court decision is to amend the Constitution
itself so that the Court can no longer play with the semantics of ambiguous
or broadly worded language. We did this, for example, to both institute and
then repeal the prohibition, manufacture, and sale of alcohol.

The constitutional amendment route seems the most practical and long
lasting, even though it may be the most challenging.

More than 29,000 amendments to our Constitution have been put forth in
Congress since the founding of our republic, and only 27 have passed the
hurdle of approval by two-thirds of the members of Congress and
three-fourths of the states. Nonetheless, successful amendments are driven
by a widespread sense that the change is absolutely essential for the good
of the nation.

An example of this is the Twenty-sixth Amendment to drop the voting age from
21 to 18. It was largely brought about by the rage and the impotence that
young people felt in America during the Vietnam War era (as expressed in the
song “Eve of Destruction”: “You’re old enough to kill, but not for
votin’...”). The need for young people to participate in a political process
that could lead them to war was so clear that the Twenty-sixth Amendment
passed the Senate in March 1971 and was completely ratified by the states on
July 1, 1971.

As Americans see our politicians repeatedly being corrupted by corporate
influence—from health care to banking to labor standards to the
environment—and the middle class continues to collapse as a result, this may
well be one of those moments in time when an amendment can make it through
the Congress and the states in a relatively short time.

Several proposals are on the table, but I particularly recommend the models
put forth by Jeff Milchen and David Cobb. Milchen, who founded
ReclaimDemocracy.org, is one of the leading resources on the issue of
corporate personhood; and Cobb’s Web site, www.MoveToAmend.org
, incorporates Jeff’s proposed constitutional
amendment as well as other options. Milchen’s proposed amendment, more
explicit than simply inserting the word natural before the word person in
the Fourteenth Amendment, could seriously begin the process of returning the
United States to a democratic republic that is once again responsive and
responsible to its citizens instead of its most powerful corporations. The
proposed amendment reads as follows:

* Section 1. The U.S. Constitution protects only the rights of living human
beings.
* Section 2. Corporations and other institutions granted the privilege to
exist shall be subordinate to any and all laws enacted by citizens and their
elected governments.
* Section 3. Corporations and other for-profit institutions are prohibited
from attempting to influence the outcome of elections, legislation or
government policy through the use of aggregate resources or by rewarding or
repaying employees or directors to exert such influence.
* Section 4. Congress shall have power to implement this article by
appropriate legislation.
Other variations on this amendment, some simpler and some more complex, can
be found at www.MoveToAmend.org .

The elegance of explicitly denying constitutional rights to anything except
“living human beings” is that it will not only roll back Citizens United but
also allow future legislatures to challenge corporate claims to “rights” of
privacy (Fourth Amendment), protection from self-incrimination (Fifth
Amendment), and the power to force themselves on communities that don’t want
them because to do otherwise is “discrimination” (Fourteenth Amendment).

We must be very careful that any amendment put forth isn’t just limited to
giving Congress the power to regulate campaign spending; to do so would
leave a wide swath of other Bill of Rights powers in the hands of
corporations. Instead, an amendment must explicitly overturn the headnote to
the 1886 Santa Clara decision that asserted that corporations are the same
as natural persons in terms of constitutional protections.

By doing this we can begin the transition back from a corporate oligarchic
state to the constitutionally limited representative democratic republic our
Founders envisioned.

Even before the Citizens United case blew open the doors to a corporate
takeover of American politics, the corrosive influence of corporations
having “rights” was already evident. Now corporate influence in our politics
can completely dominate and determine the outcome of elections—unless and
until We the People once again assert our right to do what’s best for the
common good and, through the mechanism of a constitutional amendment,
relegate corporations to their rightful place—as legal fictions and not
natural persons.

*Again, the words in quotation marks are where, in the dissent, the justices
themselves are quoting from previous Supreme Court rulings. I’ve removed all
the reference citations, as they make it hard to read; anybody wanting to
dive deeper into this 90-page dissent can read it online at
http://www.supreme+court.gov/opinions/09pdf/08-205.pdf.

1. Robert Barnes, “Justices to Review Campaign Finance Law Constraints,”
Washington Post, June 30, 2009,
http://www.washington+post.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2009/06/29/AR200906290
3997+.html.

2. Citizens United v. Federal Election Commission, 558 U.S. __ (2010),
http://www.supremecourt.gov/opinions/09pdf/08-205.pdf.
216 Rebooting the American Dream

3. David D. Kirkpatrick, “In a Message to Democrats, Wall St. Sends Cash to
G.O.P.,” New York Times, February 7, 2010,http://+%3ca+href=/
.nytimes.com/2010/02/08/us/politics/08lobby..html
"> http://www
.nytimes.com/2010/02/08/us/politics/08lobby..html
.

4. Bill Moyers and Michael Winship, “What Are We Bid for American Justice?”
Huffington Post, February 19, 2010,
http://www.huffington+post.com/bill-moyers/what-are-webid-for-ameri_b_469335
.html.

Source URL: http://www.truth-out.org/wal-mart-is-not-a-person66831


Tuesday, January 18, 2011

Check Out The 'NO PANTS' Subway Ride Video on South Florida Daily Blog. By Geniusofdespair


Link to The South Florida Daily Blog.

Miami-Dade police won't repay "stolen" environmental funds and Mayor Alvarez will pay the price ... by gimleteye

It's only $6 million, according to the Miami Herald, "misspent" by the Miami-Dade police department but it is the brazen culture of snatch and grab politics that will speed Mayor Carlos Alvarez out of office in the general recall election scheduled for March 15.

We are used to the bad cop narrative. A lone policeman goes rogue. This is a different story. The crime begins with the diversion of funds collected as a result of successful environmental prosecutions-- including the U.S. EPA-- to feather the beds of police captains with connections to an official elevated out of the police ranks to Miami-Dade mayor for his reputation for integrity and honesty: Miami-Dade mayor Carlos Alvarez.

Mayor Alvarez and the police department allowed the top cop responsible for the fiasco to retire without consequence except for a severe bruising in the press. According to comments on this blog, he retired with full benefits. (I have not investigated this assertion.) Now the police department has responded to a recommendation by the Office of the Inspector General: no, we will not replenish the "misspent" funds. In the recent Herald report, the Police Director James Loftus says, "... that over the life of the trust funds, the department paid some $27 million out of its general fund for the salaries and benefits of officers and directors working environmental investigations -- that, in sum, the contribution of personnel costs far offset the questioned expenses."

I have a couple of follow up comments to this sad story, that will certainly contribute to recalling Mayor Alvarez. First of all, what was the return on investment of that $27 million spent by Miami-Dade police to investigate and prosecute environmental crimes. In other words, what did the public get for that money spent? Were all those high tech cameras used to stake out "drum dumpers" and how many drums were stopped and how many criminals prosecuted? Did any of those police funds result in prosecutions against developers who have failed to pay either citations or permit fees? I'd like to know. Or, was our drinking water protected from criminals who pollute our drinking water wells in West Dade?

This raises another very serious issue: the US Department of Justice is responsible for prosecutions resulting in fines by the U.S. EPA. Environmental crimes are extraordinarily difficult to prosecute. The $6 million contributed to the Miami Dade Police environmental crimes unit was, in my opinion, token "blood money" for the massive criminal enterprise that government permits to promote economic activity at the expense of our environment. In other words, a successful environmental prosecution is like manna falling from heaven. For the police department to have allowed this money to be squandered is unconscionable.

Years ago, I asked on behalf of local environmental groups, whether they could have access to the funds collected by the U.S. Department of Justice through prosecutions of environmental crimes. It made sense. Why not use fines collected from criminals to help fund chronically under-funded environmental groups? Wouldn't this be fair? Call it a "Robin Hood Fund". Well, DOJ was very uncomfortable with the idea. What they worried about most were the political atmospherics. Environmental groups, the reasoning goes, are too partisan and "too political". So what did DOJ do? They turned the money over to the police. After all, what are the police going to do, steal it?

It is extraordinarily disappointing that Mayor Carlos Alvarez and his administration have brushed off the complaints as though they were lint on a sweater. Perhaps Mayor Alvarez feels aggrieved: that in the public eye he can do nothing right. Why, under this circumstance, even try? But this particular bit of idiocy is just so easy to fix. Make the police department pay the damn money back. Let Maimi-Dade environmental groups chartered as non-profits with environmental missions have access to those funds. But so far, Mayor Alvarez hasn't lifted a finger. I hope that the U.S. Department of Justice sues Miami-Dade County over this mess. I really do.


Posted on Thu, Jan. 13, 2011
Miami-Dade police won't repay misspent environmental funds

BY MATTHEW HAGGMAN
mhaggman@MiamiHerald.com

The Miami-Dade Police Department is acknowledging it misspent funds meant to fight environmental crime on flat-screen TVs, SUVs and firearms.
``Clearly inappropriate,'' Police Director James Loftus says.

But putting the money back into the green funds, as the county's inspector general has requested? Not so fast.

``No, we are not,'' county police spokeswoman Nancy Perez said.

Miami-Dade Inspector General Christopher Mazzella said in a recent memo to Mayor Carlos Alvarez that the police have adopted many of his recommended fixes, following a scathing IG audit that found the police used two environmental trust funds as a kitty for pricey purchases with little connection to environmental crime-fighting.

But the police department is flatly rebuffing two IG recommendations: that it stop using green-fund money to pay expenses such as monthly cellphone and aircard bills, and that it repay the misused public dollars.

``We continue to stand by our original recommendations that the Trust Funds be reimbursed,'' Mazzella said in a Dec. 21 memo to Alvarez.

The police department isn't obligated to follow the IG's recommendations, unless the mayor or the county commission act. And there's little push coming from the county executive's office.

Mayoral spokeswoman Victoria Mallette would only say in a statement that ``administrative procedures have been strengthened.'' When pressed whether the mayor thinks county police should pay up, she referred questions to Loftus and hung up.

The standoff is the latest chapter in a scandal that erupted last year over county stewardship of funds that were meant to combat polluters. Instead, amid ``overall chaotic administration,'' the funds were steered to ``excessive, unreasonable, or unnecessary'' purchases, the IG audit found.

The IG's inquiry, following a Miami Herald series last year that detailed dubious spending, focused on nearly $6 million spent from 2000 to 2009 from two funds: the South Florida Environmental Task Force Trust Fund and Florida Environmental Task Force Trust Fund.

More than $1.1 million was spent on vehicle-related expenses, including the purchase of 23 SUVs and trucks that went to top brass rather than environmental investigators working in remote areas. Another $1.1 million went for cellphones used, in many cases, by officials in non-environmental departments.

Three Sharp 52-inch flat screen TVs were snapped up for about $6,000. Nearly $35,000 was spent on 30 Smith & Wesson M&P-15 rifles and holographic sights. Police justified the firearms on the grounds that an environmental investigator might encounter ``a wildlife poacher armed with a high-powered rifle.''

Three Segways were bought for $25,000. One was used periodically to patrol MDPD's suburban headquarters, and two were found ``sitting unused in a warehouse,'' auditors found.

The episode served as an embarrassment for embattled Mayor Alvarez, who is facing a recall vote on March 15.

Division Chief Frank Vecin, a close ally and supporter of Mayor Alvarez, was in charge of fund spending. At one point, Alvarez was ferried around in a Chevy Tahoe purchased with green-fund money. The county mayor later returned the automobile, saying he didn't know it was bought with funds meant to fight polluters.

The revelations of fund mismanagement prompted the retirement of Vecin.

``The IG believes the funds were managed improperly,'' said C. Michael Cornely, Vecin's attorney. ``It was their opinion. To me, the IG justifies its existence by looking for things and making issues out of things that are not really an issue.''

The two environmental funds, created in 2000 by the county commission and the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, were established to help fight polluters in South Florida, which the county has called a ``drum dump capital.'' Funding sources included fines and court judgments.

Police director Loftus -- named to the top job in February, after spending questions were already being raised -- now says new money will not be accepted into the two funds. The remaining balance in the accounts is $1.5 million.

In defending his position that the police department need not repay the misspent dollars, Loftus contends that over the life of the trust funds, the department paid some $27 million out of its general fund for the salaries and benefits of officers and directors working environmental investigations -- that, in sum, the contribution of personnel costs far offset the questioned expenses.

Mazzella responded that the trust fund money was ``to augment, not replace'' general funds.

If they police were to repay for misspending, the precise amount isn't clear, though the August audit provides a road map.

``We left it to the police to determine what was justified, and repay what was not,'' said Mazzella.

Miami Herald staff writer Martha Brannigan contributed to this report.

Biscayne Landing Update. By Geniusofdespair

Biscayne Landing was an unregulated garbage dump and superfund site. It has never been cleaned up as far as I know. Formerly known as munisport the property remains North Miami's boondoggle. It has a failed high rise development, two twin towers, on it and has gone through plan after plan after plan. Here is the latest.

Biscayne Landing Update written by North Miami Councilman Scott Galvin:

The Biscayne Landing saga has continued over the holidays. As of this email January 13th, the scenario is quite fluid.

You might recall a heated meeting was held on December 15th when the North Miami Development Team sought Council approval for their retail project at the site. Dozens of residents spoke against the plans. The Council listened and set strict standards the developer must meet to be considered further.

We said that North Miami Development Team must show they have $16.5 million to pay the city up front, as well as $50,000 to cover legal fees. We also sent a default notice to the bank related to a $1 million past-due payment.

Since then, Carlisle Development Group, an affordable housing developer, has sent the City a check for $50,000 and a letter attesting that they have $16.5 million in the bank. Carlisle is apparently planning to be part of the NM Development Team.

It is my opinion, however, that the City should not consider the Carlisle documents as "transferable" to NM Development without a public discussion and vote by the Council. I've spoken to the City Manager and Matthew Greer of Carlisle to say that quite clearly. I will not support any agreements that are not clearly, publicly, and transparently approved by the Council.

If a deal isn't approved by January 24th, the note to the land is scheduled to be auctioned off by Credit Suisse.

Alvarez-Seijas Recall a Citizen Revolution? By Geniusofdespair

An El Nuevo Herald reporter thinks charter changes will be coming, not just the recall. Hope so but I am not holding my breath for REAL change. In any event, I like Daniel Shoer's Roth's prediction on the outcome of the "Ides of March" election that County Commissioners have set. (You do remember "Beware of the Ides of March"? If not read the article):

"Just as Caesar's death unleashed two civil wars that marked the end of the Roman Republic, the referendum against Alvarez and Seijas will unleash other citizen movements."

Javier Souto Lectures George Burgess. By Geniusofdespair

Apparently Miami Dade County Commissioner Javier Souto doesn't just ramble in person, he does it in writing too. take a look at this press release where he wants to waste our tax dollars on one of his pet projects.

Press Release:
Memorandum from Commissioner Javier D. Souto to County Manager, George Burgess
Legal & Political Implications with Regards to the Administration’s Disregard or Outright Snub of the Legal Mandate of the Legislative Branch of Miami-Dade County

I received a copy of your memorandum dated December 23, 2010 regarding the Building Better Communities General Obligation Bond Program and the List of Projects to be Funded at .445 Millage Rate. To my utter amazement, your list ignored/dismissed/disregarded Resolution Number R-764-10 approved by the Board of County Commissioners on July 8, 2010 which:

"directs the County Mayor or Mayor’s designee (I) to list Project No. 38 in the next series resolution as a project eligible for funding, (ii) to fund the development, construction and expansion of the Ronald Reagan Equestrian Center at Tropical Park in full in the amount of $10 million from bond proceeds generated from the next BBC GOB Program bonds (scheduled to be issued in the Fall of 2010) and (iii) not to make any adjustments to said funding for any reason, including cash flow revisions authorized by Implementing Order No. 3-47, without this Board’s prior approval."

This Resolution was legally adopted by the Board of County Commissioners following a legal legislative process involving public hearings and substantial public testimony in support of the project, by many prominent taxpayers and residents of our community. I have served in the legislative level of State and County Government as a Florida Senator, State Representative and County Commissioner for more than 25 years and have never seen the Executive Branch ignore a legislative mandate. However, this mandate directing the Mayor to list this project for the specific amount stated in the resolution adopted by the Board in the next bond series resolution was ignored by the Administration; along with all the other GOB projects sponsored through Resolutions by most of my colleagues and approved by a majority of the Board of County Commissioners into law.

Now I understand that you are sponsoring legislation repealing 12 Resolutions sponsored by Commissioners, which add projects to the list of projects to be funded in the next bond sale, which also grants you the power to decide which projects to include in the bond issue and at what level of funding these projects will be funded in the future. In other words, you are sponsoring legislation that dictates policy contrary to the policy adopted by the Board of County Commissioners during the past twelve months. All these laws went through months of Committee hearings, Commission hearings, public testimony and support and thousands of hours of County Resources and thousands of dollars of tax monies expended on salaries of County personnel to produce the documentation required for the adoption of those laws and to prepare and staff all the public hearings required to pass these laws. Two of them were my Resolutions, one related to the Hispanic Cultural Center and Theater for Children, which was approved by the voters of Miami-Dade County in a Countywide election not once but twice. The other project was the Ronald Reagan Equestrian Center, which was also approved by the voters in a Countywide election and was promised to be completed by 2007 in order to attract world class revenue producing events that bring tourists from all over the world. Many residents and taxpayers came before this Board to ask for support of the Equestrian Center completion including Mr. Benjamin Leon, CEO of Leon Medical Centers, Mr. Nicolas Estrella, CEO of Estrella Insurance Company, and Mr. Carlos Blanco, President of Ironbeer Soft Drink Bottling Company, among others. These are two extremely important projects to the Hispanic Community that were approved by Countywide vote of the residents of this community and received the support of the Board of County Commissioners by majority vote on both Resolutions to move the projects forward. Your Administration adopted a policy of blocking these important projects that could produce positive economic growth for our community.

The last time I checked, Miami-Dade County is not a monarchy, we are a democratic form of government with an Executive Branch, Legislative Branch and ultimately a Judicial Branch to review the appeals of our citizenry of any laws that we adopt or decisions that we make. This is the only government body that I know where the Administrative Branch serves as a Legislator, sponsoring thousands of ordinances and resolutions annually, which is more legislation than the 13 elected County Commissioners combined. At the same time it also serves as the Executive Branch with the ability to veto laws adopted by the Board of County Commissioners, as well as administer the day to day operations of the County. This is not the first time that the you sponsor legislation with policy that is contrary to the policy of the Board of County Commissioners. In last year’s Budget Ordinance you included as part of a budget document language repealing many County ordinances sponsored by members of the Board of County Commissioners and adopted as policy of the Board of County Commissioners, including the Community Periodical Program created by the Board of County Commissioners in 1994 and ratified through Resolution and Ordinances at least four times over the past fifteen years. This Board’s power has eroded to the point that it has allowed you to gain supreme power as the County’s Chief Administrator and Policy Maker. In the Resolution you are putting forth for the issuance of GOB bonds you not only rescind the 12 Resolutions sponsored by individual Commissioners, you are also asking the Board to give you complete power to determine which projects are funded, at what level those projects are funded and whether they are funded at all. This is why you don’t list the project with the dollar amount and the year the funding will be released. I think it is time to clean up this blurry line between the Legislative policy making branch of government and the Administrative branch of government. Since we will have a Countywide election in the near future, I am going to ask the County Attorney to draft the appropriate Charter language to conform our local government legislative process to the State and federal model, by prohibiting the Administration from sponsoring legislation and requiring that they obtain a Commission sponsor for any Ordinance or Resolution that is placed on the agenda. This will clearly delineate the line between policy maker and administrator and will foster greater cooperation between County Departments, Administrators and the members of the Board of County Commissioners as you see in Tallahassee and in Washington D.C. It will also facilitate the free flow of information between the Administration and the Commissioners, because in order to secure a sponsor you have to fully brief the Commissioner and convince him or her that the policy is a good one.

We are in the midst of a government crisis of unprecedented proportions with the public demanding accountability for their tax dollars. I think that all these bond issues should be postponed until the voters have an opportunity to democratically decide the future direction of this County. Otherwise, these types of bonds that are funded through property taxes lend themselves to be used by your Administration to reward those you want to reward. Even more concerning is the use of this Resolution to benefit wealthy constituency who sit on the Board of Directors or who support the Miami Arts Museum who you are giving $79 million in this bond issue, the Museum of Science who you are giving $11.2 million, Fairchild Tropical Gardens who you are giving $7.5 million dollars in this bond issue, the Vizcayans $15 million in this bond issue , the Marlins with $3.5 million for improvements around the Orange Bowl area, the Zoological Society with $7 million, and other organization with wealthy patrons who may donate campaign monies to many of the political campaigns that are currently ongoing in return for the funding for the multimillion dollar projects moving forward. It would be the ultimate insult to the voters and taxpayers of the County for this government to use their property tax dollars to pay for these bonds that you propose to issue at this time to reward those who supported your Budget that increased their property taxes and also those who may financially support political campaigns or legal defense funds. I think the timing of this item is ill conceived and there is no rush to move forward with this, instead of waiting for our government to stabilize.

There are projects in the item you are putting forward that were never approved by the Voters of Miami Dade County, while you are delaying projects that were approved democratically by the voters and taxpayers of this County. There are even projects that were not approved by the voters and that were requested by Commissioners who no longer serve on this Board. I can see two items for the construction of aquatic pools, which will require the Parks Department to hire more park personnel and lifeguards to manage those pools, and yet the Parks Department is closing existing pools throughout the County during the summer months and proposed a $5 parking surcharge at parks because they stated they did not have the money to operate the existing parks and pools. The measure for these projects was revenue neutral or revenue positive, yet many of these large projects including some of the museums cannot sustain themselves financially in their current facilities and yet without a solid financial plan for operating their new facility we are asking the property tax payers to build them newer, larger facilities that will be more expensive to operate. I still remember how this Administration underestimated the operational costs for the Performing Arts Center, which more than doubled when they opened their doors. Are you asking the taxpayers who are struggling to maintain their jobs and to keep their homes out of foreclosure to fund through their property taxes a bunch of white elephants throughout the County that are doomed to fail before they open their doors? If we don’t want this tax payer revolt to turn into a tsunami, lets step back and wait for the dust to settle with the current governmental crisis and take a closer look at all of these projects. If we have to wait 6 months, 1 year or if we have to revisit the voters of this County with an election to ratify these projects, then so be it. I don’t think that the taxpayer’s monies should be used to curry favor with special interests in order to stave off the will of the voters of this community.

Monday, January 17, 2011

County Mayoral Candidate Joshua (aka Josue) Larose opens about 100 Political Action Committees in Miami Dade County. By Geniusofdespair

To understand just how odd this is, before Mayoral Candidate Larose opened these 100 PAC's, there were only about 50 PAC's in Miami Dade County...for years!! He has to open a bank account for each from what I am told. I did a spot check - he opened them in January 2011. The phone number he gives in the paperwork rings but then disconnects. I reported on Larose once before: If It Weren't So Sad...It Would Be Funny.

Hit on read more to see Larose's PAC list (wait till you see some of the names) and to read about this odd guy:

Bio:Often described as a ’serial candidate’ or ‘frequent filer’, Josue Larose qualified for the Congressional District 19 race as a write-in candidate. Larose ’s name will not appear, but the April 13 ballot will include a space for write-ins. Deerfield Beach resident Larose was also a write-in candidate in three special state legislative elections this year and has opened a 2010 campaign for governor. Haitian born and a self-described millionaire economist, music producer and lobbyist, the 28-year-old is waging three campaigns under the first names “Joshua” and “Josue” and has raised $100,000 in his bid for governor, according to the Florida Division of Elections. He has already had dramatic effect on one race. His presence as a write-in candidate in the special election for State Senate District 8 forced a Republican primary that the Duval County Supervisor of Elections said cost about $300,000 and prompted officials to consider changing the county’s election rules. He has run under different names and for numerous offices. As Joshua LaRose, he ran for Miami Mayor, however a bounced check caused him to be disqualified in Sept 2009.
Larose's PACS:
Miami-Dade County Advertising Agencies ECO ( Active-)
Miami-Dade County Aircraft Dealerships ECO ( Active-)
Miami-Dade County Banks ECO ( Active-)
Miami-Dade County Beverage Companies ECO ( Active-)
Miami-Dade County Boat Dealerships ECO ( Active-)
Miami-Dade County Business Associations ECO ( Active-)
Miami-Dade County Car Dealerships ECO ( Active-)
Miami-Dade County Construction Companies ECO ( Active-)
Miami-Dade County Credit Unions ECO ( Active-)
Miami-Dade County Cruise Lines Companies ECO ( Active-)
Miami-Dade County Elementary Schools ECO ( Active-)
Miami-Dade County Entertainment Companies ECO ( Active-)
Miami-Dade County Executive Airports ECO ( Active-)
Miami-Dade County Film Studios ECO ( Active-)
Miami-Dade County Financial Companies ECO ( Active-)
Miami-Dade County Furniture Stores ECO ( Active-)
Miami-Dade County High Schools ECO ( Active-)
Miami-Dade County Hospitals ECO ( Active-)
Miami-Dade County Hotels ECO ( Active-)
Miami-Dade County Insurance Companies ECO ( Active-)
Miami-Dade County Investment Companies ECO ( Active-)
Miami-Dade County Law Firms ECO ( Active-)
Miami-Dade County Libraries ECO ( Active-)
Miami-Dade County Lobbying Firms ECO ( Active-)
Miami-Dade County Local Chambers of Commerce ECO ( Active-)
Miami-Dade County Malls ECO ( Active-)
Miami-Dade County Medical Centers ECO ( Active-)
Miami-Dade County Middle Schools ECO ( Active-)
Miami-Dade County Mortgage Lenders ECO ( Active-)
Miami-Dade County Movie Theaters ECO ( Active-)
Miami-Dade County Music Recording Studios ECO ( Active-)
Miami-Dade County Nursing Homes ECO ( Active-)
Miami-Dade County Petroleum Companies ECO ( Active-)
Miami-Dade County Ports ECO ( Active-)
Miami-Dade County Pre-Schools ECO ( Active-)
Miami-Dade County Private Equity Firms ECO ( Active-)
Miami-Dade County Professional Associations ECO ( Active-)
Miami-Dade County Real Estate Companies ECO ( Active-)
Miami-Dade County Resorts ECO ( Active-)
Miami-Dade County Retail Stores ECO ( Active-)
Miami-Dade County Security Agencies ECO ( Active-)
Miami-Dade County Stock Brokerage Companies ECO ( Active-)
Miami-Dade County Supermarkets ECO ( Active-)
Miami-Dade County Telephone Companies ECO ( Active-)
Miami-Dade County Trade Companies ECO ( Active-)
Miami-Dade County Universities ECO ( Active-)
Miami-Dade County Venture Capital Firms ECO ( Active-)
Miami-Dade County Vocational Schools ECO ( Active-)
Miami-Dade County Wealth Management Companies ECO ( Active-)
Miami-Dade College Employees PAC ( Active-)
Miami-Dade County Architects PAC ( Active-)
Miami-Dade County Billionaires PAC ( Active-)
Miami-Dade County Business Owners PAC ( Active-)
Miami-Dade County Candidates for Clerk of Courts PAC ( Active-)
Miami-Dade County Candidates for Property Appraiser PAC ( Active-)
Miami-Dade County Candidates for State Attorney PAC ( Active-)
Miami-Dade County Celebrities PAC ( Active-)
Miami-Dade County Chiropractors PAC ( Active-)
Miami-Dade County Civil Engineers PAC ( Active-)
Miami-Dade County Commissioners PAC ( Active-)
Miami-Dade County Congressmen PAC ( Active-)
Miami-Dade County Corporate Presidents PAC ( Active-)
Miami-Dade County Courthouse Employees PAC ( Active-)
Miami-Dade County Democratic Candidates PAC ( Active-)
Miami-Dade County Democratic Leaders PAC ( Active-)
Miami-Dade County Democratic Leadership Committee ( Active-)
Miami-Dade County Democratic Officials PAC ( Active-)
Miami-Dade County Democrats PAC ( Active-)
Miami-Dade County Film Stars PAC ( Active-)
Miami-Dade County General Contractors PAC ( Active-)
Miami-Dade County Government Employees PAC ( Active-)
Miami-Dade County Health Department Employees PAC ( Active-)
Miami-Dade County Industrialists PAC ( Active-)
Miami-Dade County Investors PAC ( Active-)
Miami-Dade County Judges PAC ( Active-)
Miami-Dade County Land Developers PAC ( Active-)
Miami-Dade County Lawyers PAC ( Active-)
Miami-Dade County Lobbyists PAC ( Active-)
Miami-Dade County Mayoral Candidates PAC ( Active-)
Miami-Dade County Medical Doctors PAC ( Active-)
Miami-Dade County Multi-Millionaires PAC ( Active-)
Miami-Dade County Music Stars PAC ( Active-)
Miami-Dade County Nurses PAC ( Active-)
Miami-Dade County Officials Recall PAC ( Active-)
Miami-Dade County Republican Candidates PAC ( Active-)
Miami-Dade County Republican Leaders PAC ( Active-)
Miami-Dade County Republican Leadership Committee ( Active-)
Miami-Dade County Republican Officials PAC ( Active-)
Miami-Dade County Republicans PAC ( Active-)
Miami-Dade County School Board Members PAC ( Active-)
Miami-Dade County School Principals PAC ( Active-)
Miami-Dade County School Teachers PAC ( Active-)
Miami-Dade County Sport Players PAC ( Active-)
Miami-Dade County University Professors PAC ( Active-)
Miami-Dade State Representatives PAC ( Active-)