Sunday, August 7, 2011

Spend Smarter

In their Blog entry " Ways we can improve education funding ", my fellow student made some suggestions for ways to help our schools deal with their financial shortfalls. Although some sounded alright at the surface level, most are the types of ideas that I like to play Devil’s Advocate against due to their potential negative impacts.

My colleague begins by touting the Keller ISD “Pay to Ride” plan. In this plan, Families must pay a fee if they wish for their children to ride the bus to school. It is implemented as a cost saving measure but I feel this is the wrong way to go about it.

I will start by reiterating Article 7, Section 1 of the Texas Constitution:

Sec. 1. SUPPORT AND MAINTENANCE OF SYSTEM OF PUBLIC FREE SCHOOLS. A general diffusion of knowledge being essential to the preservation of the liberties and rights of the people, it shall be the duty of the Legislature of the State to establish and make suitable provision for the support and maintenance of an efficient system of public free schools.

Right now, many African nations provide for the “Free education” of their population. However, the schools themselves have implemented “fees” for various items that are not much by our standards; but they are still sufficient to block millions of their poor from receiving their “Free Education”. Once you open the door to “fees”, where do you draw the line? Do the athletes pay a fee for the bus to take them to football games? Do they charge fees for using the microscopes? For art supplies? None of these are essential for the basic core education but are part of the overall operation of delivering the education. Even if you waive the fees for those that can’t afford them, with the level of Poverty in Texas (We are very high up in the rankings remember), and increasing income gap, this would still impose barriers and develop a two tier system between the “have” and “have not” classes.

Transportation to and from school came about for many reasons, distance from the school was the original barrier that it was developed to overcome. I lived in a small town that was over 15 miles from the nearest school. Second, even for those who might live close to the school, for many the path to school involves having to transverse dangerous roads and, in some cases, divided highways. Third, not all parents’ occupations are compatible with school hours, many start work long before the school opens in the morning or may work long after school gets out. Without access to the bus system, many of these kids would be left to fend for themselves. They would be more exposed to the dangers already outlined as well as subject to the many other social dangers that present themselves on the pathway home, e.g. bullying, gangs and predators. Transportation is an essential element for many families and for many any fee is a burden or barrier, it is relative to your disposable income, not just your actual income.

I will take a minute to agree with the Author regarding the trades programs. Everyone is not college material and there should be some route for those that are not. Now, although I question the dominance and elevated status of football in the school system, in most cases the football programs do at least pay for themselves through ticket sales, booster clubs and sponsorships. In the few cases where it does not, it is an extracurricular activity and not an educational essential so maybe players could pay for their own equipment or get more aggressive with local business to provide it in exchange for advertising.

Now, in the cases of the other programs, e.g. shop, cosmetology etc… again, these are not essential educational programs, and for them to be paid for by public funds is legitimately debatable. But the benefit to the non college bound is hard to dispute. Part of learning a trade is learning the market for the trade so make these programs self-sustaining. When I took Ag and Shop (it was combined), we made things like Salt Licks and Feeders that were sold and we raised animals that were sold. Have days where the students cut hair for a fee and find a product for the shop students to make and sell. Same for other programs. If there is not enough of a market to sustain their program, is there enough of a market for the skill for them to make a living once they graduate? This would teach the students skills, economics, business and not present any barrier for lower income students.

Now, moving on to E-books, once again I must disagree. To use e-books or online texts would require a functional and maintained computer or e-book reader available to every student anytime they needed it. This would be a huge investment to do this for every single classroom and student home. For the internet generation it may be hard to fathom, but as of 2009 only 72.91 percent of the population in Texas has computers and the Internet. " US Census Internet Connectivity by Connection Type and State What do you do for the other 27.09%? Do you pay for their internet, computers, e-readers so they have equal access? As stated in the referenced Video, Irving ISD had to sell 38 million dollars in bonds in order to equip their students with laptops, which means they borrowed the money to do it and are pushing the costs off to a future generation to pay for it. Irving ISD has an enrollment of 34,000 which comes out to $1117 per student. Multiply that by all the School districts in Texas, or 4,674,832 students, and you get a price tag of 5.2 Billion Dollars. That is just one per student and does not count equipping classrooms that might require specialized hardware. Furthermore, it is still a developing technology so this investment would have to be repeated every so many years. Computers don't last 20 years like a good microscope.

Not everyone lives in a good neighborhood and imagine if the criminal element knew that every student was carrying a $500-$1000 laptop in their backpack. Textbooks are a much lower target for theft. I would rather replace a $100 Textbook than a $1000 laptop, and and not all the incidents would be non-violent.

Also, not every textbook is available in electronic format or as “open source”. Publishers typically charge around 50% to 75% of the published price. With E-books you must pay again for each new user (even a “seat” license structure must be renewed). I think you would find the cost to be tenfold over time compared to a published book. And lastly, some people find reading extensive amounts of literature on an electronic device to be quite uncomfortable. I actually dropped a lit course because it was an “E-text” class; it gave me headaches and eye strain trying to read that much literature on a monitor.

Whereas online material will have a place in the future, it will be just another tool in the arsenal where they are proven effective e.g. virtual dissection. I don’t see it replacing textbooks on a wholesale basis anytime soon nor the adoption being a cost saving measure to address the current budget shortfall.

I think a better solution is to limit how often textbooks can be changed and narrow the selection available. Whereas subjects like Social Studies and History must occasionally be updated (or supplements issued), other subjects could go 10-15 years+ with the same textbook. If you can extend the use of a printed book out for many years, the cost becomes minimal. When I went to school, you got one set of books and if you lost it, you paid for it, which is fair. I remember in Jr. High seeing the names of people on the inside cover that had already graduated. A book can be read on the bus, on vacation, in the car, it doesn’t need electricity or batteries and, if they break, they can be fixed with tape. If going completely E-book was economically and logistically feasible it would have already been done by more than one district.

During the last decade Schools enjoyed a nice revenue boost from the increase in property values and now that those values are going back down, they are going to have to set their spending accordingly. In addition to the overall budget cuts, for the first time the legislature failed to finance expected growth. This means that for the next two years schools are going to have to absorb the burden of that growth without state help. Every time you hear about the state bringing in a new business to Austin, remember that all those workers children were not funded for. Now, I don’t agree that should have been done, but now the districts have to deal with the cards they have been dealt.

Like any business facing a slump, schools are going to have to learn to do more with less. Cutting teachers is the easy way out but not the end-all solution. There are many ways to do this without releasing teachers or imposing fees. They can eliminate cars for Administration, limit extracurricular programs, increase class sizes, postpone construction, control equipment/capital purchases and make labs/programs/offices work with what they have for longer. They can implement energy and water conservation programs. They can also draw on community resources by asking for volunteers to provide some functions they now pay outside sources for and by getting more aggressive seeking business sponsorships. School administrators are going to have to get innovative and think creatively.

It’s not a matter of how much you spend per pupil but how you spend it. Although there has been a decrease in state contributions, we still spend about as much or more than several other states with far worse results. I have seen some new schools built that look more like luxury resorts. The town where I went to school finally built a new school a few years ago, it's a metal building. We demand a lot from the pupils, it’s time we demand better of the Administration. " US Census Public Education Finances (Look at Table 8)"

Wednesday, August 3, 2011

Tossing out the baby with the bathwater

Throughout this course we have covered most of the elements of Texas government and rather than just a “This is how it is” type class, the course material addressed not only the history but also many of the problems with our current system. Through the discussions boards and blog entries there were many opinions on how to fix this and that, but one thing that was not brought up much was just doing away with the entire mess and starting over.

One fact that is undeniable is that Texas is very quickly growing and modernizing as a state, but we are still using an 1800’s model of government. We have a part time legislature that meets ever 2 years and “guesses” how much the state might have the next two years and doles out the money. And when they miss the mark, it is the next legislature that has to try and fix it. During those two years the economy can go through massive swings, technology changes. I don’t handle nearly as much money but I am continually reworking my personal budget as things come up and there is no way I could guess what the future would hold for me 2 years from now.

Power is spread across so many different authorities, and even overlaps in many cases, to the point that it is not always really clear as to who does what. The complexity makes it hard for the average citizen to really participate and isn’t that the point of a government by the people? In the 1800’s it was much harder to participate so more delegation and regionalization made sense but now the participation is hindered by that same process that was needed to ensure participation back then. I can now cross the state in a day whereas the same trip once took weeks, and with modern technology quite often the trip isn’t needed as most business can now be done via voice or data that didn’t exist then.

Sometimes when you have a really old car, you reach a point where it doesn’t make sense to fix it anymore and you just need to get a newer model. With the Texas economy now being larger than that of most countries, I propose that we might just be at that moment.

The problems in the state, the poverty, lack of insurance, rich/poor divide, environmental problems, energy issues, road construction, education problems… they require a full time government to deal with them. As a Texan, I would love to be proud of how we do things but when it comes to our government I’m afraid that just isn’t possible. I think our Texas pride should allow us to collectively agree that we need to be the best even if it means changing our ways.

To start, we need a legislature that meets on a very regular basis. There were a massive number of bills and issues that were not addressed last session simply because there was not enough time to get around to them, and it will be 2 more years before most have a chance to come up again. We need to shift the budgeting incrementally to the point to where they are spending the money after we make it, based on the prior year’s revenues instead of future projections. We need to study areas of the country where the citizen participation is the highest, find out why and mirror their processes.

We need to draw in neutral experts in every field, from government to criminal corrections, energy, education, road construction and actually listen to them, even if what they say does not mirror our religious or political philosophies. Everyone likes to armchair quarterback, but this is a game that affects lives.

As a Texan, I have no doubt that we could find ways to maintain a healthy business environment while still helping our poor, educating our children and protecting our environment. But we won’t do it working part-time with closed minds spending money we don’t have yet and most likely won’t.

Wednesday, July 27, 2011

The Utility of Reality... Strike that, reverse it

In the Blog Erebus Idea, my fellow student wrote “ Over Our Heads During A Drought ”, about the “Water Plant #4” controversy and advocated against the project.

I will be presenting an alternate viewpoint.

As an environmentalist, it interested me that the S.O.S. coalition and Sierra Club both came out against this project when such a large portion of the costs was due to addressing the environmental concerns of running the pipelines and there should be little or no effect on groundwater recharge. The lakes all around us do not exist naturally but were specifically made to address the water needs of the area way into the future. The amount of groundwater recharge as the result of the creation of the lakes pales in comparison to what seeped down when there was only a river there and we shouldn’t gripe when someone tries to use them for their intended purpose.

That aside, the point made in the blog being reviewed was that the building of the plant was poor management. I take the opposite viewpoint and feel that the plant is an example of the Water Utility doing what it should be doing, ensuring they have the capacity to address the areas water needs. The article raised the question ”The one glaring issue that is being overlooked is how is this plant going to save us water?”. Well, it won’t save us a drop. A treatment plant “Provides water”, Conservation is done on the consumption end. Conservation reduces demand but does not completely eliminate the need for the resource; the remaining demand must still be met. What the plant will conserve is energy. As a consumer of electricity, the plant will be approximately 7% more efficient, thus, reducing greenhouse gas emissions. The energy saved will be enough to supply 2000 homes. About WTP4

Although this is being called “Water Plant #4”, currently the city of Austin only has 2 other plants, The Davis (Built in 1954) and Ulrich (Built in 1969) plants. The Green Plant was decommissioned in 2008. Now, I do think that was not bright, but it was in the name of “Development” and we have all seen how “Development” gets priority. What is done is done, and we must address what we have to work with now.

Now, to explain why this plant is needed, I am actually getting my facts from a site opposing the plant as it is more simply laid out and readable than official sources. FACTS About Austin's Water Supply and Usage Also used the City site that explained the rationale for the plant.

Now, reading through here, “Austin currently has 285 MG per day (MGD) water treatment capacity and 167 MG of storage capacity. Treatment and storage must combine to meet “peak” demands on a reliable basis.” Check! (Note: Storage makes up the difference between demand and treatment in extreme circumstances, too much demand over treatment several days in a row will deplete storage.

“In 2007 Austin completed a 67 MGD capacity expansion to its Ullrich water treatment plant, for a total of 167 MGD at the Ullrich plant. Austin’s “Davis” plant can treat 118 MGD.” Check!

“In the drought summer of 2009 Austin water use peaked at 228 million gallons (MG), the day before the one-day per weak drought water restrictions were to begin. In 2010, a relatively wet year, Austin water use peaked at 193 MG on a single day” Check!... er... wait! Lets look at this. Even in a “WET” year, peak usage exceeded the treatment capacity of any one plant, and now we have only 2 of them. In the dry year of 2009, Austin was using 80% of it’s full capacity.

Now, the Austin area grew 37% from 2000 to 2010. Austin area population increases by nearly half million, 2010 census data show What happens if we have a repeat performance in the next decade, or even grow only 20%. Get the math? What would happen if we lost just one of those plants? Subtract the daily usage from the remaining capacity and divide the deficit into the 167 MGD storage. It does not last very long.

Even with water conservation increasing, the population growth will offset the gains and water usage will eventually continue to rise. The water plant they are building is intended to tap into a water reservoir that was specifically made to supply the area with water. Additionally, the two existing plants both draw water from Lake Austin and WTP4 will draw from Lake Travis. Should some form of contamination occur to the Lake Austin water, this provides a secondary source that does not currently exist. If a theoretical contamination did occur, current “storage” would last one, maybe 2 days.

The high cost is due to the fact that the water must be piped to the City’s water distribution head, and, going through an environmentally sensitive area, they must bore the pipeline under it instead of digging ditches through it. To do it any other way would require re-running a zillion major water mains and would make the 500 million look like pocket change. Water Treatment Plant 4 plans move forward

I actually view this as the city doing it’s supposed to do. Provide a reliable source of drinking water with failsafe capacity and capacity to accommodate growth. It can take a decade to plan and built a plant and these people are water professionals, not politicians. They are looking decades ahead. The two existing plants will eventually be beyond obsolete and the utility must look to the future. Although the initial capacity will be 50 MGD, the facility will be able to eventually draw 300 MGD. ENR features AECOM’s Austin's Water Treatment Plant No. 4 project

Yes, it will be expensive, but at 500 Million dollars divided between the 800,000 residents, that averages out to $625 per person. The cost to drill a private well is around $7500. I think you’re getting a darn good deal. If you want clean, reliable water now and in the future, it’s time to pay for it. The cost will be spread out over time and by tying it to utility rates, those that use the water will pay for the water.

Monday, July 25, 2011

Pushmi-Pullyu

One question that has come up in both US and Texas government classes is whether a politician can properly represent a constituency that is different than they are. Watching the new “Tea Party” inspired Republican party, I almost have to rephrase the question to; How can a politician represent a constituency that they hate.

Well, the word “Hate” may be a little extreme, but not by much in many cases. Watching many of the political debates and speeches lately, I have to wonder who Republicans do like. They seem to have slowly evolved from simply a party advocating small government to the party of intolerance. Beginning in the 80’s and 90s when they embraced the evangelical Christian and moral majority for support, they have slowly inched along to where now almost anyone “not exactly like them” is treated like the scourge of the earth.

I also have to wonder how long this political party will be able to retain influence if they continue to assault the very people who have to vote them into office. How long will it be before they are hated back so strongly that they inspire the non-politically inclined people to register to defend themselves.

Lets go down the list and look at a few…

Of course, they hate Democrats and Liberals. I don’t think this one need much evidence, They regard these two words to be at a comparable level to pedophiles, murderers and communists. You can see the look on their face when they say them, like they accidently bought sour candy at the movie theatre. In Texas the Republican/Democrat Split is around 60/40, but I will say 70/30 just to be safe. That is the first 30% they hate.

But let’s see who else they are alienating… I am doing this looking primarily at Texas

The poor: With the divide between the have and have-nots continuing to grow and unemployment remaining a problem, this is one of the fasted growing groups in America, The middle class is becoming lower class and the lower middle class in slipping into poverty. As the one Republican said when he was asked about the unemployed (as he was getting into an elevator during the unemployment compensation extensions debate), “F*ck Them”. People remember things like this. O.K… Unemployment hovering around 10%, Another several percentage points permanently out of the workforce or long term unemployed. Since unemployment is a little better in Texas, I will combine these groups and call them both 10% and add them to the 15% living in poverty Poverty rates for the United States and for Texas. 25% for the poor folks.

Hispanics: The recent debate on sanctuary cities in Texas left a pretty bad taste in the mouth of the Hispanic population. I reviewed a good article on this for my last Blog entry. "Will ‘Sanctuary Cities‘ Galvanize Texas Latinos?" Texas is now 38% Hispanic and growing.

Gays: Even if they do not “Hate” gays, the Republican Party for sure does not support their agenda. With bills like The Defense of Marriage Act” and opposing the repeal of “Don’t Ask, Don’t Tell”, It is clear that this is one group they want to stay in the closet. Estimates vary on how high the occurrence rate of Homosexuality is since a large portion of their population is an “underground” social group, They average around 10-15% though. Per Wiki "Homosexuality"

Women: Well, not all women, but definitely the ones that won’t let middle aged white men make their reproductive decisions. The recent sonogram law stands a good chance of politicizing many women who previously were on the sidelines. The U.S. Population is currently split 50-50 on this issue and women are approximately 50% of the population so this makes 25%.

Potheads: Well, any debate about “entitlements” always results in cries of “piss test” er… excuse me, “Urinalysis”. Florida just passed a law requiring a drug test before receiving state welfare benefit. You can spend it on gambling, hookers or alcohol… but by god, you better not buy any pot! Even a bust for a small amount can cause you to lose many Federal benefits as well as student financial aid. Another percentage that is hard to lock down due to the underground nature of the culture, this one averages about 20% to 40%. With 750,000 Americans charged every year just for posession, it is not a small percentage; those are just the ones getting caught. We will split the difference and say 30%

Islam: One of the actual Republican Presidential debate questions was if the candidate would have an Islamic cabinet member with many responding strongly to the negative. John Stewart had a field day with this one. Although, they are an easy target and estimated at only about 0.5% of the US population. It does make you wonder if these folks have read about freedom of religion. They wave the constitution but have they read it? 0.5% for the Muslims and probably a few more percentage points for those alarmed by the intolerance. Imagine the uproar if you replaced Muslim with Jew. Sound like anything familiar from 20th century history? 2.5%

Now, Lets have a look at the numbers

Democrats: 30%
Poor: 25%
Gay: 15%
Hispanic: 38%
Women: 25%
Potheads: 30%
Muslim and sympathisers: 2.5
Total: 165.5%

So, there you have it by the numbers, for every 100 people they Represent, Republicans Hate 165.5 of them.

Now,, there is some cross over between the groups, and this commentary is a bit satirical for those of you who have not picked up on the fact yet. But if you look at all the groups who the Republicans support some piece of legislation to repress, it makes you wonder how long they will remain a viable party. They have even started feeding on their own, going after established incumbent candidates who are not "conservative enough". You push people far enough and they will eventually push back.

With the diversity of America increasing and society coming to accept more and more personal liberty for diverse groups, how much longer will it be before the influence of these groups overpower the aging support base for Radical Conservatism? By rejecting them, the Republican Party is pushing them to support the opposition party regardless of their political ideology and losing a say as to how these previously disenfranchised groups are incorporated into the mainstream.

Wednesday, July 20, 2011

Adios Republicanos

I originally was going to review an article I found in the Austin American Statesman concerning how the Texas representatives run around on the floor using the electronic voting machines to enter votes for non present members, and even signing the absent lawmakers as present when in fact they are not. A practice referred to as “Ghost Voting”. "Specter of Voting Practice Present"

In my opinion this amounts to outright fraud, as citizens we would be fired if another employee clocked us in at work and we would be expelled for dishonesty if another student signed us in on a class roll. However, the Texas legislature seems to feel they are exempt from even their own rules on this matter.

That is about all I really have to say on the subject though… not a very interesting review. I do feel that it is something that deserves to be mentioned so I posted the link above for you to read at your leisure.
__________________________________________________


Now, moving on, since our Discussion Question 2 was concerning an Arizona style immigration law, I thought I would expand on the subject and review "Will ‘Sanctuary Cities‘ Galvanize Texas Latinos?" written by Julian Aguilar in " The Texas Tribune "

In the article, Mr. Aguilar discusses how the recent attempt to pass a conservative leaning “Sanctuary City” bill in the recent Texas legislative session might act as a catalyst for bringing more Hispanics into the political process and cost the Republican party their support. Mr. Aguilar writes mostly articles that reflect issues relative to the Hispanic community and relations with Mexico. Although writing for a specialized niche, he maintains a high degree of journalistic integrity. His writing is emotionally neutral and he refrains from the use of extremist nomenclature and incitement. He neutrally includes various sources and opinions to paint a broad and informed picture for the audience from which they can then base their own opinions. I really wish we would see this more in the "mainstream" media.

I actually found the article very interesting. I am not Hispanic myself and, although Texas is now around 38% Hispanic, I have to admit that I actually have very little exposure to the Hispanic community on a daily basis living in western Round Rock. This article gives an insight to political elements within the Hispanic community and how the same issues are viewed through different lenses. In addition It also presented a historic parallel from California in which an attempt to pass similar legislation contributed to the virtual demise of the Republican party in that state and helped turn California solidly blue.

Rather than just being a typical “Democrats bash Republicans” article, it draws a lot of its commentary from Hispanic Republicans themselves and their concerns that the anti-immigration stance of the conservatives is hurting support for the Republicans within their demographic.

It also provides the viewpoint of a Hispanic Republican that left the party to become an Independent and their dissatisfaction with how both parties have treated the immigration issue. Representing the Right Wing, Comments from a member of the Texas Tea Party indicate they will be out in force as well to retaliate against the Republican lawmakers who failed to pass the bill.

It will be interesting to see how all the elements discussed play out in 2012. If the Democrats can capitalize on the Hispanic vote and the Republicans continue their attacks on moderates within their own party, it could make some closely challenged races and independents shifting back to the left… but I will save the rest of that idea for my next entry.

Thursday, July 14, 2011

Are ya hungry there partner?

It was actually really hard for me to find something local to write about this time. I should have taken this the last session when I would have had plenty to flame on about. But with the legislature adjourned and the damage done, things are pretty calm as everyone rests from the long battles. Most of the opinion editorials are now either revolving around the federal deficit fight or some local news issue not really involving politics. Finally, I struck upon and article that ties nicely into how the fight in Washington could directly affect us here at home.


In the article Food program cuts would strain local hunger assistance printed in the Austin American Statesman, the author, Kathy Golson, discusses the impact that some proposed cuts would have right here in Austin. The intent of the article is to mobilize the socially conscience or humanistic audience as well as to inform and possibly influence the “fence sitters”. The delivery is very professional, delivering facts, statistics and predictions while refraining from name calling and other polarizing tactics.

Golson starts out discussing the USDA commodities program that buys surplus products from farmers and distributes them to recipients and food banks. According to the article, currently proposed reduction could slash commodity donations by up to 50% from the current figure of 6.9 million pounds distributed last year. Cuts like this are a “double whammy” as they hurt both the agricultural sector and our poor.

A second element of concern she outlined was the proposal to turn SNAP into a block grant. Right now Texas gets SNAP funds based on the current need. Under this block grant scenario, the State would simply get a fixed amount of money. The author estimates that this would result in a rough average of $53 less per family for food benefits. What the author fails to also mention is that should the number of recipients go up; this would mean even less per family. They do however point out that unlike the current system, the state would be able to spend the money on other programs as it chooses. I know you’re thinking that our state government would never take money away from the hungry for other programs, but they did exactly that to an education grant just a few years ago. Money that was supposed to go toward educating our children was instead placed in the general revenue fund.

She does not provide the source for her statistics, but I was able to verify enough from the Capital Area Food Bank website to believe those figures and the detail of the article leads me to believe they most likely came from direct collaboration with the food bank. The SNAP figures were available on the Texas Health and Human Services Commision website and, to be honest, are quite chilling.

During this research, I had found an article on how Texas was so deficient in handling SNAP that they were fined just over 3 Million dollars by the federal government. The actual article was about how they had since corrected these deficiencies but one statistic presented there was that only about half the eligible SNAP recipients actually sign up for the program. The Turning Tides for Texas SNAP Participation

Now, Lets play Yahtzee…. Put all these dice into a cup, shake it up, and let’s see what comes out.

• 1 in 7 Texans are receiving food assistance from SNAP. That makes 2 in 7 eligible.. almost 1/3 our population.

Now, to turn that into real numbers I reference the SNAP statistics directly from THHS.

• Travis County: 114,724 Recipients, which would make 229,448 eligible recipients.
• Williamson County: 31,746 Recipients, which would make 63,492 eligible recipients.
• State Total: 3,563,970 Recipients, which would make 7,127,940 eligible recipients.

58% of these are children and 6% are over 65

Now, next time you drive around, or go shopping… look around you. Almost a quarter million people in Austin alone, 1 in every 3.5 people you see are either on food assistance or do not make enough to buy adequate food. Many will be hungry as you stare at them.

It is easy to think of cuts when you call these people “Entitlements”, is it so easy after you look at their faces?

As Austin has prospered, those with upper level jobs have prospered along with it, but many of the rank and file have been left out of this prosperity, and I am not just talking the “uneducated”. As businesses roll in, and more people roll in, real estate and rental prices go up, it increases demand for everything. This is on top of the normal inflationary pressure. Average “worker bees” make $10-15 an hour and housing they can afford is slowing being redeveloped into much less affordable projects. When was the last time you saw new 2 bedroom homes or a low rent apartment being built? Healthcare is increasing and health insurance alone for a family can consume more than a third of a worker’s paycheck if it is even offered. I challenge anyone to sit down with a classified section and spreadsheet to devise a realistic budget for someone with children and a $15 an hour job. How is someone supposed to work themselves up in life if they can’t even feed themselves and their family working full time?

Pro business is fine but without some “pro people” mixed in, eventually the system will develop into such a state of imbalance that it will no longer be sustainable.

Off Topic but related:

As a side note to this commentary, I offer a real life example. The home I lived in here in the early 1970’s when I was growing up was just off 34th and Jefferson. My dad was a carpenter and my mom stayed at home. The neighbor behind us I remember was a janitor. It was a neighborhood of 2 bedroom, 1 bath houses between 1200 and 1500 Sq. Ft. built around 1940. We were a family of 6 so we closed in the back porch for another bedroom. We were able to afford the house on a single working class income and feed/clothe 6 people, have a car etc.

Flash to today… exact same 2 bedroom houses… $250,000.00 and up, average rent in excess of $2000

Average monthly take home at $15 an Hour… $2000

WTF?

Yes, there is more affordable housing elsewhere in Austin but this goes to show how once affordable areas are slowly disappearing.

E-Austin residents must leave complex

Renters feel squeeze as market explodes

And the problem isn’t limited to just Austin:

Some trampled in housing-vouchers rush

What good is a Texas that most Texans can’t afford to live in?

Monday, July 11, 2011

The One-Party State of Texas?

For my first article I chose “ Contemporary Party Politics: The One-Party State of Texas?”

Well, this article is not exactly a new story or commentary, but rather it is a political webpage from UT that talks about many aspects of Texas politics. I chose this particular section of it because it does discuss something that has happened in Texas in my lifetime. Believe it or not, Texas has not always been a Red State.

I am one of the 5th generation in my family raised “Texan” (Dad’s side), we trace can trace our families entry into Texas to the 1840’s or 1850’s and now have 7 generations. Unfortunately, my mom was in New York when I decided to come along so I don’t have the birth certificate but I have still been raised here. My upbringing was split between here in Austin and a small town a few hours up the road.

When I was growing up, Texas was more about agricultural and oil. This was old school rural Texas where you didn’t trust a banker as far as you could throw them and they thought about the same of businessmen. It was solid Democrats but still conservative. There is nothing as independent as a farmer but you also would not find anyone quicker to lend a helping hand when someone needed one.

Since this time I have seen the state taken over by the wave of Republicans. Big ranches that used to be working ranches got bought by people from “up north” who didn’t have a clue how to actually work them. Developments sprung up all over, suburbs grew, businesses moved in. Now, that is just the way progress works, but some of the changes that happened along with it really disturb me.

Along with the businesses came Republican businessmen. Not to say they are any less patriotic, but they don’t share many of the values I remember being “Texan”. Being somewhat isolated and surviving in this state before all the damns and lakes were built, there was a lot of helping each other and sharing. And also, even though there was a lot of pride in being Texan, everyone was also proud to be an American and patriotic.

This being said, it really pains me to have witnessed the last several years and especially to have watched the last session of the legislature. We saw our children’s education and care for the poor take a back seat to “business” and that is just not right. If a business model is sound, it should not need any help. If it will make money, somebody will do it, which is the way free enterprise works. Why do we need to give millions to someone who already has millions and then cut their taxes to boot? I’m sorry, that’s not taking care of your own, that is throwing them to the gutter.

The other disturbing thing that has been happening is the Republicans in office using Texas as a platform to agitate the Federal Government just because Obama is in office. They are setting us up for several lengthy and possibly expensive legal fights on the environment, education and many other areas. Yes, we are the State of Texas but we are also one of the United States of America.

As this blog progresses you will see some more ranting by me, and hopefully this article and a lot of the other information on the other pages will help give you a point of reference for where I am coming from.

Wednesday, July 6, 2011

Introduction

I am rather long winded so this article will serve as a substitute for my profile...

I am a 43 year old Environmental Science student at Austin Community College. I am taking this Government class because it is required of course. This is not to say that I have no interest in government as environmentalism is heavily interconnected with many government agencies. If I learn one thing in this class I didn’t already know it might be the one thing that helps me in the future.

I consider myself a Moderate Libertarian and the Political Ideology test labeled me as “Disaffected” but I don’t agree with that, I am simply concerned over several important issues. I keep abreast of what is happening in the news and scored a 93.94 on the Civics Quiz for GOVT 2305 and got 11 out of 12 on the current events quiz which placed me in the 99th percentile.

I vote in most every major election. Being a Libertarian, it is very seldom a member of my party has a realistic chance to win an election so I don’t vote straight party but try to look at the individual candidates.

I voted for Bush his first term even though Gore was more in line with many of my philosophies because Gore just did not seem to be showing the “gonads” of a leader during the campaign and I was concerned Lieberman would have a negative impact on relations with the Middle Eastern countries. Bush gave the false impression of being a moderate centrist leader which is what we needed. Bush was a big disappointment to me and my ranting on the subject of his presidency would fill a blog in and of itself.

The next election was a choice between the worse of two evils. I was very Anti-Bush at that point and Kerry and Edwards at least seemed competent but gave me the impression of being more used car salesmen than leaders. Since I definately disliked both Republicans and was only "concerned" about the Democrats, I went Democrat on that ticket.

The next election was the exact opposite. I liked the positive progressive energy behind Obama and I had (and still have) a ton of respect for McCain. Obama showed good judgment in choosing a seasoned politician for VP to counter his inexperience moving 3 of the candidates into my “like” category… however, Mr. McCain, Why did you pick Sara Palin???? At McCain’s age, and considering the distinct possibility that he wouldn’t complete his first term, there was no way I could have supported that ticket. If he had found an intelligent, moderate republican to run with I’m not sure how I would have voted.

So far I think Obama has been a pretty good president and is doing a great job considering the partisan atmosphere in Washington. However, until both parties stop catering to their extreme wings and focus on real solutions, I am going to continue to be extremely concerned over our future.

When it comes to Texas I am even more concerned. The imbalance of power has allowed almost any Republican to run and win despite their intelligence or qualifications. This has left us with an overabundance of extreemists in office that tow the party line and play politics rather than realisticly deal with the problems Texas is facing. Those that are intelligent, moderate and capable find themselves mowed over completely or at least pushed to the sidelines. The letters I get from Senator John Cornyn just pretty much literally make me want to puke and do nothing to inform me about anything that is going on in Washington.

This is my second blog... my first was for GOVT 2305. Those that read my first blog might be surprised by this blog as, being that there is such an imbalance of power, I will be targeting the Right Wing almost exclusively rather than trying to balance my assaults. This does not make me a Left Wing or a Democrat, it is just a well deserved rebuke for the Texas Republicans. If you have read this far and are interested, my first blog can be found here: “Caught in the Middle”