Monthly Archives: July 2010

Kincora Application Approved

I know there are a lot of divisions about this one. But I’m really glad that this vote is over.

I understand where people are coming from on not wanting residential in that area. I also understand where others are coming from in saying that this is a good mixed development, that the road and other transportation proffers are really needed.

Me? I’m happy about the shuttle. I like buses.

So? What’s your opinion of the Kincora application? Remember our guidelines: No personal attacks, no belittling language. Keep it to the application itself, please.

Sign This, Send That 7

As the temperature rises, so do actionable issues.

Mott’s apple sauce and juice products are everywhere, and their earnings are huge: their parent company earned $555 million last year alone and its stock is up a whopping 180 percent since March 2009!

At the Williamson, NY, facility, they’re actually trying to slash wages by as much as $2.50 per hour. They’re even trying to take away the workers’ pension plan!

  • Mott’s: 100% juice, 180% greed – Mott’s profits and market share are up hundreds of percent over the past couple years, and they’re trying to slash the wages and benefits of their workers at their facility in New York. Taking a stand for them is taking a stand for all of us.
  • BP Makes Me Sick – “BP blocked workers cleaning up the oil disaster in the Gulf from wearing protective respirators.” RFK Junior leads a coalition calling for BP to let clean up workers wear protective equipment.

Living Green in Loudoun

I just finished reading Potomac District Supervisor Andrea McGimsey’s letter, “Accolades” in Leesburg Today.  She was responding to earlier letters from folks opposed to the Chesapeake Bay Preservation Act(CBPA).  Her points were:

1. That the Republican Governor of VA in a letter to Sec. of Energy Chu noted that Loudoun County is only one of two counties in the USA that “serve as beacons at the local government level for …energy planning.”

2. The head of the Loudoun Chamber of Commerce said that “going green, saves green”

3. Loudoun is stacking up awards for many things including Energy Star Schools that saved taxpayers 34 million dollars.

4. The BP spill and resulting impact on the environment makes the case for strong rules to preserve our environment.

So why are some folks against these rules?  They have had their say but some are still twisting the truth. It is now time to move on and stop spreading falsehoods.  Thanks to Supervisor McGimsey for clarifying the issues and for being a champion of the environment.

Newbie

Just logging in for the first time and look forward to great discussion

Links We’re Reading – June 29 – July 3 2010

Happy links of July! Or fourth.

I feel a lot better thinking about the concrete victories, however few,  that were won on health care, education, and, if it passes, financial reform, then I do thinking about Al Gore opposing the Iraq war even as I marched in the streets against it. – Chris Bowers

How are you celebrating?  

  • When intuition and math probably look wrong – A mind-bending discussion of the relationship between information and probability. Wonderfully illustrative of the strengths and weaknesses of intuitive reasoning.
  • How Should Schools Handle Cyberbullying? – It’s one thing when the bullying happens on school property, but the parents in the article who say that dealing with the issue themselves, by going to the other kid’s parents, would be “too awkward” need to decide whether their kid’s well-being is more important than their own sense of discomfort. Sheesh.
  • Theory of Change: How I Stopped Being A Radical – Chris Bowers explains how governing isn’t the same as protesting. A worthy read for why the Democratic Party, while not perfect, is the right place to channel your action when you actually want to get things done.

Help Fix The Senate

Last night, David Waldman came to the LCDC presented his work on Congressional procedure and how to reform the cloture rules in the Senate. He was invited because not only is he a nationally-recognized expert on the subject, but he’s also a neighbor who lives right here in Loudoun.

His presentation was a total success, as many members spent a long time afterward discussing the niceties of procedure, the Senate and what can be done. The essential process for fixing the filibuster is as follows.

If nothing else, passing these three motions (1. The motion to open up the rules for discussion, 2. Making a motion to proceed non-debateable, 3. Making the number of votes necessary for cloture variable with the length of the debate) would get the Senate moving, in a legislative sense, again. It wouldn’t become the superhighway that the House is, but it wouldn’t be total gridlock either.

The power to fix the filibuster problem in the Senate rests with our Democratic Senators. Click through to see how you (yes you!) can take action, today, to help get things moving in the Senate in January.After the positive response from LCDC membership to his presentation last night, David was kind enough to send along links to the things that we can do:

As David mentioned last night, the key to getting the right thing done is getting it on the minds of our Congressmembers early. That means that for cloture reform to happen next January, we need to get Sen. Warner and Sen. Webb to start positioning themselves to vote for it now. Hearing from us makes a difference, so please take the time to write our Senators about this, today. Feel free to steal this language:

Dear Senator,

The Senate has become the graveyard of good legislation. Over 250 good bills have been passed by the House of Representatives only to be filibustered to death by Republicans in the Senate.

Abuse of the rules of the Senate has become the last refuge of Republican scoundrels, and I am asking you to put up with it no longer.  In January of 2011, I ask you to vote for changes to the cloture rules of the Senate. Specifically:

• Please vote to pass Sen. Udall’s motion to open the cloture rules for debate at the commencement of the next Congress.

• Please vote to pass Sen. Bennet’s rule change making the motion to proceed non-debatable.

• Please vote to pass Sens. Harkin and Shaheen’s proposal to gradually reduce the votes necessary to close debate as that debate continues over the course of days.

The time has come to make Congress work for the American people.

Thank you for your time.

We have the power to change Congress, let’s use it.

Frank Wolf for Wall Street

The conference report on Financial Reform passed the House the other evening, adding another accomplishment to the pile of things the House of Representatives has gotten done for the people of America since January 2009. It was a pretty solid vote, with 237 members (out of 435) voting in favor of the bill.

One of those voting against fixing our broken financial system? Frank Wolf. Along with most Republicans in the House, he put Wall Street over Main Street.

Luckily, we have a candidate for Congress who knows that you and I should come first, Jeff Barnett.  When the Bill passed the House, Jeff Barnett had this to say about Frank Wolf’s “no” vote.

“I am disappointed that my opponent voted against a bill that would empower consumers and guard against the reckless speculation that shook the foundations of our economy,” Barnett said. “Frank Wolf’s vote last night sends an unmistakable message about his priorities: our thirty-year incumbent is a powerful defender of the status quo. Frank Wolf chose to defend big banks instead of standing up for working families. Frank Wolf voted to leave intact the system that cost so many their jobs and their savings. That’s unacceptable.”

“My opponent was blind to the onset of the financial crisis when he chaired one of the committees charged with oversight of the SEC. Last night, he had an opportunity to make up for that blindness by voting to protect consumers and investors. Instead, Frank Wolf opposed a bill that will bring security and stability to the financial system. Our Nation cannot afford another two years of Rep. Wolf’s obstructive short-sightedness,” Barnett warned. “I am committed to bringing a new brand of pragmatic and anticipatory leadership to Washington. The 10th District deserves a Congressman who understands both the productive power of the markets and the need for sensible rules to hold them accountable.” – Jeff Barnett

The time has come to change who is representing us in the House. Support Jeff, today!

Senate Procedure Explained Thursday

David Waldman (aka Kagro X) is a remarkably gifted analyst of procedure. He has been writing on the intricacies of Senate rules for years, and is working on cloture reform today.

David will be the LCDC’s guest speaker this Thursday.

This month’s guest speaker, Mr. David Waldman, will share with us the lessons he’s learned and put into practice as a political activist and esteemed blogger. Mr. Waldman will be talking about how a deeper understanding of Congressional procedure promotes more effective activism and advocacy and discuss the ways we can more effectively interact with our US Congressman in the 10th CD.

Date: Thursday, July 1st

Place: Board Room of the Loudoun County Government Center, 1 Harrison Street, S.E. in Leesburg.

Directions: http://www.loudoun.gov/Default.aspx?tabid=628

Social: 6:30pm

Meeting: 7:00pm – 9:00pm

Post-meeting Social at VINTAGE 50: 9:15pm

Incidentally, the Leesburg District will be providing the food this week and we promise it will be both plentiful, and good.

So come out this Thursday and learn a thing or two about the procedures by which Republicans screw up the Senate!