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Either way, it is positive news for the country and net positive for Obama's campaign as I don't think this report moves the needle that much and to the extent it does, it goes in favor of the general trend towards Obama.
It should be noted -- which you failed to do here, I might add -- that the "official" estimated cost of this proposed rail system has more than doubled in the six years since it was first proposed by former Honolulu Mayor Mufi Hannemann, from $2.7 billion in 2006 to its present $5.7 billion as of Sept. 2012, when the courts halted construction.
Further, we should also note for those TL readers here who remain interested in learning more about the quid pro quo-style politics plaguing the City & County of Honolulu, that the proposed segment from Ala Moana Center to the University of Hawaii at Manoa has since been deferred indefinitely by current Mayor Peter Carlisle's office to keep those burgeoning costs down.
Because otherwise, according to a May 9, 2012 letter from Dan Grabauskas, executive director for the Honolulu Authority for Rapid Transportation (HART), to City Councilmember Ann Kobayashi, the project's cost would balloon to $9.1 billion!
Now, perhaps you have a perfectly plausible explanation regarding how the original estimated cost of a capital project of this size and scale more than effectively tripled from $2.7 billion to $9.1 billion in only six years' time, were the rail system to be built as initially sold by Mayor Hannemann and his administration to the people of Oahu.
Well, from my considerable experience in public sector policy development, I'd offer that it can most likely happen either one of two ways:
After all, Horner's only serving simultaneously as the current chairs of both the Hawaii State Board of Education AND the Board of Directors for the Hawaii Visitors & Convention Bureau!
Doesn't that rather unique and remarkable consolidation of power over three very influential governing bodies, all in the well-greased hands of this one extraordinarily influential corporatist, even bother you in the slightest?
In the meantime, Honolulu has thus far only collected $480 million on the 0.5% excise tax that was specifically enacted by the Hawaii legislature in 2007 to pay for rail and has further diverted $444 million from the city's existing (and excellent) bus system toward the rail project, which has in turn forced a 25% increase in fares and some very steep cuts in service on key routes.
The $1.5 billion in federal funding promised by Sen. Inouye has yet to be approved by Congress, and as long as the GOP remains in control of the U.S. House, there's no guarantee at all that these funds will either appropriated or released any time soon.
The Honolulu City Council has also approved the initial issuance of over $2 billion in general obligation bonds to pay for the first phase of construction. However, it should again be noted that without providing a sufficient means of revenue to pay for it, this bond issue will increase the city's debt service from its current 12% annual share of general revenues to 30% -- that's right, I said 30% -- by the year 2018, should a hefty increase in property taxes not be forthcoming.
Because without an increase in revenues, the city's bond rating would undoubtedly crater at that point, compelling the state government to intervene financially in order to prevent its largest municipaity from going belly-up fiscally.
Simply put, the City & County of Honolulu doesn't presently have a revenue stream that's in any way adequate to both pay for the project's construction and account for projected cost overruns (by 25%, conservatively) and the rail system's projected maintenance costs, neither of which has even been budgeted.
Further, the State of Hawaii's own finances are hardly sufficient to take on a project of this magnitude and also sustain its own obligations, without a corresponding increase in its own revenues.
In spite of this, former acting Mayor Kirk Caldwell has explicitly promised that if elected he would not raise property taxes to meet the anticipated shortfall in city and county revenues, even as he collects huge campaign donations from contractors and firms who would benefit financially from this muti-billion dollar boondoggle.
And when I consider the sheer chutzpah of Caldwell's corporate allies, who continue to falsely accuse former Gov. Ben Cayetano via an extensive media campaign of "pay to play" corruption -- Mahalo Nui Loa, SCOTUS and Citizens United -- I have to consider the Caldwell / Hannemann hui to be the penultimate example of irresponsible, crass and cynical politicking.
This is really much less about planning for Honolulu's future, than it is about protecting a lucrative and publicly funded cash cow, by locking in public funding for those private developers and well-connected contractors who expect to reap a healthy windfall from the single largest capital project ever undertaken in the history of the Hawaiian Islands.
I proudly support Ben Cayetano for Mayor of Honolulu. I do so with my eyes wide open, in full knowledge that I have many friends up at the Capitol who for whatever their reasons are backing the other side.
But speaking for myself only, I am simply not willing to risk financial havoc for the City & County of Honolulu, and potentially compromise the future socio-economic well being of its residents, for the mere sake of installing a political crony and corporate shill like Kirk Caldwell in the mayor's office at Honolulu Hale.
And that's where I stand. Aloha. Parent
But.
This is a 100 year investment. Do you think in 100 years it will really matter if this cost $5 billion vs. $10 billion? No, it wont because in the end the total cost of the system will be a tiny fraction of the overall economic growth this will create. I don't think there's a mass transit project built in the US wasn't derided as boondoggle so expensive it will surely doom future generations. But can you point to any cities that actually are so buried under mass transit debt that they can't function? No, because it's all histrionics. It's entirely possible taxes will have to be raised in the future to help cover costs. It's possible the Feds will have to step in a contribute more to the project. But to claim that this project is somehow so unique in being expensive and out of control that it will doom Honolulu is, well lying. It's costs are in line with other mass transit projects in the U.S. (which again, by European standards, are extremely high). There will be growing pains, but just like every other city in the US that has embraced mass transit and dense developement, it will become an intergal and essential part of Hawaii's transportation network & urban fabric.
At the end of the day, it's about the future of Honolulu. Doing nothing simply isn't an option. It isn't. Whatever happens, billions are going to be spent on some kind of expansion of Honolulu's transportation network. So you can either build rail that will spur dense, walkable, mixed-used, environmentally-friendly development (that yes, private developers will profit from!) or you can continue with 1950's-era road expansion which will only increase auto-dependence, and create more sprawling, polluting, energy-inefficient, un-walkable, cookie-cutter suburbs (that again, private developers will profit from!). I just don't understand how anyone could look at an auto-dependent city like Houston or LA where literally more than half of their downtowns are parking lots, then look at a transit-friendly city like DC or New York or Seattle, and say that you prefer the auto-centric model (it should be noted that both Houston and LA, but LA especially, are currently pouring huge amounts of money into their transit networks, having largely realized how damaging auto-dependence is to cities).
For all of Obama's failings, he's been the most mass transit and city-friendly president we've had since probably LBJ. If he's reelected, Honolulu's rail will be built. There's absolutely no way he'd let a small-minded guy like Ben stand in the way of Honolulu's future (especially with the line already under construction and federal funds having been already spent). I wouldn't be voting for him if that weren't the case. Parent
So, let's please get one thing straight here. What's currently being proposed for Honolulu is not a light rail system making use of existing publicly-owned corridors and rights of way, such as we see in Sacramento, Portland and Seattle.
Rather, what first the Hannemann administration and then the Carlisle administrations have sought to impose on us is a heavy train running on elevated platforms ranging from 50 to 120 feet above the ground, not unlike a modern version of Chicago's L.
Further, HART is not following public rights of way, but is instead using the eminent domain process to purchase private property upon which to build the system. This has led to real estate speculation driving up the system's costs, as well-connected friends of the powers-that-be seek to line their pockets at taxpayer expense by flipping properties to be condemned and thus gaming the city procurement system.
Even further, in the central Honolulu corridor, this cement-and-steel-rail monstrosity will be running along the entire length of the city's waterfront, effectively obliderating all sight plains from Honolulu Int'l Airport to Ala Moana Shopping Center. Does that make any sense for a large city that's already inordinately dependent upon tourism for our economic lifeblood as it is?
Finally, the proposed system will be using steel-on-steel technology for the trains and tracks themselves, which in and of itself an absolutely ludicrous travesty of planning for a salt air-saturated environment like Honolulu's. Do you have any idea what the ongoing mainstenance costs for such a system will be?
Now, I honestly don't know whether or not you actually live here on Oahu, like I do. Given that your discussion about rail transit has been limited to whether or not one opposes the concept of rail transit as an effective means of public transportation, I'm guessing that perhaps you may not.
If you don't live here, then I'd offer that it's really not your place to weigh in on a critical matter of local concern like this, particularly when it includes offering your personal opinions about the veracity of our two mayoral candidates, about both of whom you obviously know little or nothing. As a local Democratic Party official, I happen to know them both personally, because both are Democrats. (Municipal elections in the City and County of Honolulu are designated nonpartisan.)
I trust Ben Cayetano, even though he's a rather cantankerous individual and admittedly hard to get along with. But while Kirk Caldwell is a genuinely nice and amenable guy in person, I don't trust him politically, because for the quarter-century that I've known him, he's been offering himself up to the powers that be as an all-too-willing tool for their use.
I don't disagree with you about the knee-jerk opposition of many people across the country to various urban and intra-urban mass transit proposals, such as high speed rail in California and Florida, to name but two.
But we're well past the stage of talking about a hypothetical rail system out here. What's on the table is a truly hairbrained and dangerously flawed proposal, one that holds rich potential to drive this city into financial insolvency if it's allowed to proceed as is.
I also consider it irresponsible for a public official like Mayor Peter Carlisle and a mayoral candidate like Kirk Caldwell to attempt to restrict the public debate on this matter to a nebulous discussion of hypotheticals and generalities about the virtues of rail transit.
Because while few of us will disagree about the very real benefits of mass transit, I've been arguing here that the devils inherent in the current HART proposal are very much in those details that Carlisle and Caldwell so desperately want to avoid talking about, for obvious reasons.
As it stands now, Carlisle and Caldwell ought to congratulate themselves, for thanks to them and former Mayor Hannemann, we've now been left to a dreary choice between an extraordinarily flawed transit plan for this city, and no viable alternative at all.
That's why I support Ben Cayetano for Honolulu mayor. We need to hit the reset button.
Aloha. Parent
You mentioned places such as Denver, Los Angeles, Houston New York, etc., in your discussion. Well, you ought to consider that all those metropolitan areas have populations which are anywhere from four to fourteen times the size of the City & County of Honolulu, which per the 2010 census has 953,000 residents.
We simply do not have the financial tax base to build and support this expensive type of rail system network at $5.7 to $9 billion, unless we're willing to raise taxes significantly upon our residents, particularly when we already have the highest taxes in the country as it is.
At public hearings, I repeatedly testified that we should instead consider an integrated transit network that blends a grade-level light rail system using existing rights of way with our already-existing bus system that's long been rated one of the very best in the entire country.
This would cost less than $2.5 billion to build, would be far less intrusive and unsightly than an elevated heavy rail running two-thirds the length of Oahu's south shore (mostly along the waterfront), and would be much easier and more affordable to maintain and even expand if necessary or desired.
I was roundly ignored by Mayor Hannemann and his allies on the Honolulu City Council. They wanted to shower their corporate contractor friends with public monies, and weren't interested in really solving our obvious transit problem.
Therefore, at this point, I think I've more than amply demonstrated that rail transit on Oahu is one issue about which I'm prepared to go into an awful lot of detail -- certainly a lot more than you.
Please take that into consideration when you comment about an issue of paramount local concern to us out here, and please refrain from labeling people like me as shortsighted liars -- because I really don't enjoy telling people ex post facto when something goes horribly FUBAR that I told them so.
And FYI, both the Hawaii State Supreme Court and the U.S. Ninth Circuit Court (as of yesterday) have ordered a complete halt to all construction on the project, because the Carlisle administration was found to have violated numerous state laws and local ordinances in their haste to get this project fully vested before the mayoral election took place.
The whole controversy is now headed for a very public trial in circuit court, thanks to the lawsuits brought against the city, and the ugly truth about what our city officials allowed to occur will come out.
If I had my way, those seven pillars will be left forever standing exactly as they are, as a monument to municipal duplicity and a reminder to future generations about what can happen when elected officials decide to play a shell game with their own constituents.
Now, I don't know where you got your information for these posts of yours, but it sure sounds as though you could've cut and pasted it from the Pacific Resources Partnership's website.
If you did get this from thrm, then please note that PRP is a business consortium consisting of contractors, developers and the Hawaii Carpenters Union, all of which have a substantial financial interest and stake in seeing this project go though unamended or altered in any way. They are hardly an unbiased source of information on this matter. Parent
Really? For an eviction?
WTF! Parent
Disgusting, just utterly disgusting. Parent
Think about that. Apparently Occupy is a much greater danger to the oligarchy then even they know... Parent
And here's the link to the one initiative that will be on the SC ballot this year.
Maryland has three of them - Questions 4, 6 and 7 - that are flooding the region with ads; I can't wait for it to be over.
The lines at the gas stations with supply and electricity are nuts...heard of a few donnybrooks breaking out when arsehats try cutting the line. Starting to see police doing crowd control at the gas stations. May cool heads prevail. I'm holding strong at half a tank, gonna wait some more before even bothering to try to fill up.
Almost feel guilty how well I'm making out, and all my family is now up and running....just as I was about to force my great-uncle over to my place. Lots of friends who are still out stopping by to use the shower, have a cup of joe, get warm, get stoned...any LI/NYC TL'ers need an electrified oasis email me, the more the merrier.
Hang in there party people!
Obama has also authorized the DoD to tap into the Northeast Home Heating Oil Reserves.
Now, they just have to get power to more gas stations so they can pump the gas.
The feds have also opened the Port of New York to foreign fuel tankers for unloading. Parent
The generators could be put to better use, and victims are being displaced from hotels to go home to...nothing.
The only way they should run it is in reverse...and ask every runner to lug a gallon of gas or a gallon of water over the Verrazano to the finish. Parent
A Brooklyn woman scheduled to run in the NYC Marathon is gathering a group of runners to volunteer on hurricane-battered Staten Island Sunday instead of running the race. Penny Krakoff, a social worker who lives in Crown Heights, is entered in the race, but tells us she can't participate in good conscience. Instead, she plans to user her bib to take the official bus transporting marathon runners to the starting line on Staten Island--and then spurn the race to spend the day volunteering. Krakoff says she'll collect extra food and and clothing to take with her on the bus and distribute it on Staten Island. Her neighborhood was spared the brunt of Hurricane Sandy's wrath, but Krakoff is well aware of the devastation wrought on Staten Island and elsewhere, and she's part of a growing number of New Yorkers who feel the Marathon should be postponed. She writes: I cannot start a 26.2 mile run in Staten Island--people are missing, stranded, in need of resources. Brooklyn and Queens have equal devastation. Parts of Manhattan are without electricity, water, major hospitals are closed. The Bronx too has its own challenges. Today I will volunteer at a city evacuation shelter. Sunday morning I will catch the marathon bus to Staten Island. Not planning to run. Plan to volunteer instead and gather resources (extra clothes, bottles of water, food from runners at the start). Let's not waste resources and attention on a foot race. Who is with me?
Krakoff says she'll collect extra food and and clothing to take with her on the bus and distribute it on Staten Island. Her neighborhood was spared the brunt of Hurricane Sandy's wrath, but Krakoff is well aware of the devastation wrought on Staten Island and elsewhere, and she's part of a growing number of New Yorkers who feel the Marathon should be postponed. She writes:
I cannot start a 26.2 mile run in Staten Island--people are missing, stranded, in need of resources. Brooklyn and Queens have equal devastation. Parts of Manhattan are without electricity, water, major hospitals are closed. The Bronx too has its own challenges. Today I will volunteer at a city evacuation shelter. Sunday morning I will catch the marathon bus to Staten Island. Not planning to run. Plan to volunteer instead and gather resources (extra clothes, bottles of water, food from runners at the start). Let's not waste resources and attention on a foot race. Who is with me?
I hope more join that effort. Parent
Update 10:35 a.m.: Another group of Marathon runners has also been organizing independently of Krakoff's efforts. According to their Facebook page: Runners will show up at the starting line, but will break off en masse at different points of the city to deliver supplies to places hardest hit and without power. This will mean departing from the race, to head to various buildings, running up and down stairs delivering water and canned goods, etc. Runners will show up to the marathon, as scheduled. Runners who want to help should post the words, "I'M HERE TO HELP!" somewhere on their bodies.
Runners will show up at the starting line, but will break off en masse at different points of the city to deliver supplies to places hardest hit and without power. This will mean departing from the race, to head to various buildings, running up and down stairs delivering water and canned goods, etc. Runners will show up to the marathon, as scheduled. Runners who want to help should post the words, "I'M HERE TO HELP!" somewhere on their bodies.
Comments to this article are interesting, too. Parent
Now, perhaps Bloomberg could have gotten the city cover on this by getting the city council to give itself or him emergency powers to cancel the race? But, so I read, the emergency powers that he has do not extend to cancelling this event, under the contract, for the reason that citizens need the hotel rooms, the tents, the generators.
That is, latest reports are that homeless storm survivors in hotels are being booted out for the marathoners' (and organizers') room reservations, and that the city is having to provide -- as contracted -- tents and generators to the race that could go to the citizens of Staten Island in the unseasonably colder temperatures.
All this is what I read, anyway (on other blog populated by lots of Noo Yawkers, who are angry about it but trying to explain it with balance). Maybe they're wrong, and maybe Bloomberg could have cancelled the event, and of course, he remains an a** for other reasons.
Now, the big telethon tonight with the Boss and others -- is that in New York or New Jersey, and is it using resources that could go to citizens, too? Did it really have to be held so soon? Parent
If they can run the marathon without any city workers or city generators, god bless 'em. Otherwise a leader says go ahead and sue, I've got a job to do. Parent
The show, of course, will go on. This is NYC! Parent
Oh well, they can always go see the Heat and Knicks tonight at Madison Square Garden. Parent
I guess he got lucky the storm didn't hit the day of the race. Dumb.
And far as being sued, that is BS too, is Bloomberg really worried about a jury of New Yorkers siding with them, please.
I think they screwed up and they know it and they are trying to hatch some BS. Parent
Excel is an investment trust that focuses on shopping centers around the country. According to Mr. Davis, by distributing 90 percent or more of a dividend, it helps investors avoid double taxation under the law. The elder Mr. Romney has criticized President Obama for being too soft on Russia, calling it "our No.l geopolitical foe" and if elected president he would confront Putin with more backbone. The Romney comments have caused alarm in Moscow as a throw back to the cold war. However, it appears that Young Romney may have more flexibility than the Elder Romney, this week.
Why the phrase 'Conflict of Interest' is not used in every Obama ad is a mystery to me.... Parent
The good news is not as good as it sounds. Con Ed says it will have all of its "underground networks" on by tomorrow. If that happens, that's a day ahead of schedule in the blackout area, which is a big step forward. However, that does not mean everyone will get power back. Remember, buildings connect to the electrical grid. If a building was flooded, its own electrical systems may have been damaged. This is particularly likely in high-rises, which tend to put that equipment in the basement. My understanding is that it takes 2 inspections before damaged building equipment can be reattached: one by Con Ed, another by NYC building inspectors. Even if the latter is waived on behalf of large "reputable" building operators, the former is essential. That may mean that a lot of the high-rises in the Wall Street area (particularly near Water Street and South Ferry), Battery Park City, and buildings in the lower parts of Tribeca may not have power restored (one bit of schadenfreude: this may continue to inconvenience top bank lawyer Rodgin Cohen, who is managing partner of Sullivan & Cromwell. The Financial Times reported that the white shoe firm had less than adequate disaster recovery planning. Maybe this is karmic payback for their role in acting as chief handmaiden to Wall Street).
I'm so oriented to the stand-alone, single-family home that I hadn't considered the problem with getting power to the high rise buildings. Parent
And to be fair to poor Mitt, who had to kind of go off the radar while Obama was being all presidential and stuff.
I should add that I don't mean to minimize at all what's happening on Staten Island; there is clearly suffering and devastation and great need for help. I don't know what these people are going to do when they find out that their insurance isn't going to cover the flood damage unless they had separate coverage for it.
My problem is with the media looking to start playing politics with Sandy and her aftermath; I hope I'm wrong that that's what's getting ready to happen. Parent
The only problem is this controversy seems fairly legit, namely the marathon. They had a guy on TV saying the city is looking for generators for the event tents, while Staten Islanders were still looking for bodies. Then they showed the landscape and it looked worse than New Orleans because of the fires.
Bloomberg can tell everyone that no resources will be used, but that is complete BS and everyone knows it. Parent
Then in what was really a throw-away line, the reported said that, in fact, FEMA was already working on Staten Island and the Red Cross already had relief trucks on the Island.
So, what is going on? As to the people living on Staten Island, well I can imagine that right now almost no amount of help is going to be enough. Their lives are devastated. But why is the press basically ignoring the presence of FEMA and the RC?
IMO, having the marathon displays a disgusting lack of awareness and sensitivity on Bloomberg's part. These people are freezing cold and hungry and have no homes and very little if anything to eat. And Bloomberg says the Marathon will show NYC's resilience? What an @sshole. There is no excuse for diverting any resources away from helping the people whose lives have been devastated.
Get the power back on for everyone. Instead of taking generators to the Marathon tents, take them to the gas stations who cannot pump gas because they don't have electricity.
Geez, priorities, people. Parent
Yes, we all get that the people affected are suffering - but why not report on what's being done, what the timelines are, how the manpower is being utilized, numbers and links for the outreach and relief agencies? Instead, I was left with the feeling that these people were just being abandoned.
At some point, I begin to feel like a voyeur, glomming on to so much visible pain and misery - it begins to feel manipulative and sick. It's not that I want to ignore it, or pretend it didn't happen, it's that I feel used - but I'm not sure to what end. Is this about showing how ineffective the government is? Are they trying to affect the election? Is this the beginning of the onslaught of let's-go-to-the-private-sector-for-rebuilding? Are they really showing us the people making bologna sandwiches at the fire hall to highlight the can-do spirit that emerges in times of crisis, or is it to make people ask, "where's the government when you need it?"
I feel sicker by the hour over this marathon; when I hear "corporate tents," I get a mental picture of high-end 1%-ers noshing on upscale hors d'oeuvres and sipping on Chardonnay and Malbec. Postpone the damn marathon, guilt the city or the corporate sponsors into setting up the tents to provide storm victims with food, shelter, access to relief agencies, medical attention and counseling.
I'm ranting again - sorry. I just don't get it - I probably never will. Parent
You would make a great Mayor or public servant in the middle of all this, you'd call the media out on it and do so eloquently. Parent
Yes, I know this is a major event in the running world, that people have had to qualify and make plans and all that other stuff - and that it brings in a ton of money to NY - but that's predicated on there being a normal tourist turnout under normal conditions - which don't exist; even if people can manage to get there, where do they stay?
There's an effort being made to frame it as an example of the toughness of New Yorkers, not letting a hurricane keep them down, but I think the optics, overall, are going to be just terrible. Parent
Of course this doesn't look good. And I do think it shows the wrong priorities - the city could have either postponed or canceled it and been perfectly right to do so given this storm and its historical impact.
I'm with the person who said if ONE first responder is diverted from Staten Island cleanup/help to the race then I'm all for making whomever did that pay. Parent
From Accuweather:
Concern continues to grow that a storm will take shape along the Southeast coastline on Election Day before traversing the mid-Atlantic and New England coasts next Wednesday and Thursday. Such a storm would be accompanied by rain, some wind and the possibility of snow over a part of the Northeast's interior. [snip] The storm now brings added concerns since it threatens to impact the same places devastated by Sandy with the severity of those impacts dependent on the storm's exact track. [snip] The worst case scenario for Sandy-ravaged areas next week would unfold if the storm rapidly intensifies along the mid-Atlantic coast. Coastal communities from Virginia northward would be subject to strong onshore winds for about 12 to 18 hours. The tide would then come up a bit, potentially leading to additional beach erosion and minor overwash in unprotected areas. The strength of the winds alone along the coast could reverse the work done by utility crews and cause some more damage--again, not to the extent of Hurricane Sandy. The wind could blow around debris and structural items, such as siding, that were loosed by Sandy. Trees weakened during the hurricane may also succumb to the winds. Winds will become less of a concern along the mid-Atlantic and southern New England coasts if the storm intensifies farther offshore and takes aim at the Canadian Maritimes--a possibility AccuWeather.com meteorologists are considering.
Such a storm would be accompanied by rain, some wind and the possibility of snow over a part of the Northeast's interior.
[snip]
The storm now brings added concerns since it threatens to impact the same places devastated by Sandy with the severity of those impacts dependent on the storm's exact track.
The worst case scenario for Sandy-ravaged areas next week would unfold if the storm rapidly intensifies along the mid-Atlantic coast.
Coastal communities from Virginia northward would be subject to strong onshore winds for about 12 to 18 hours. The tide would then come up a bit, potentially leading to additional beach erosion and minor overwash in unprotected areas.
The strength of the winds alone along the coast could reverse the work done by utility crews and cause some more damage--again, not to the extent of Hurricane Sandy.
The wind could blow around debris and structural items, such as siding, that were loosed by Sandy. Trees weakened during the hurricane may also succumb to the winds.
Winds will become less of a concern along the mid-Atlantic and southern New England coasts if the storm intensifies farther offshore and takes aim at the Canadian Maritimes--a possibility AccuWeather.com meteorologists are considering.
Let's hope this is a storm that weakens or tracks away from areas that don't need to deal with any kind of storm. Parent
Staten Islanders are very Republican, I read, so the media had to know what they -- and we -- were going to hear about Obama, FEMA, etc., there. That said, the situation is bad there, the death toll highest there, and I also have to wonder why that mayor had to make such a media stink to finally get FEMA, Schumer, state legislators, and others to notice Staten Islanders were stranded, cold, and hungry. Parent
I haven't seen any of the anger directed anywhere but Bloomberg over the marathon. It seems justified to me. And while the media might not be showing what the Fed is doing, certainly they know, and even it's not enough, it's still something. I think the last they care about is the election.
I keep thinking about how many people this is going to bring into the city and how many of the service industry people are going to have to serve them instead of taking care of the own lives. How those additional people are going to drain the scare resources even more. And even if the marathon doesn't pull resources (which is non-sense) it's certainly diverting resources to transport, feed, and house visitors.
Just doesn't seem right. And for the mayor to declare no resources will be diverted is a slap in the face its so ridiculously dumb. Parent
How many Americans were killed by terrorism last year in the US, divide that by the population. About as close to zero as you can get.
For flight, there are roughly 5000 commercial planes in US airspace at any given time, and at any given moment around 260,000 souls in the US are in flight, that is a descent size city in mid air all the time.
Even if you do it over the 15 years to include 911, it infinitesimally small, and statistically insignificant. Parent
Another thing on my list of not gonna happen. Parent
His real point, at least in my opinion, was that this isn't something to be glib about; he endeavored to explain the factors he would consider, but you are correct that he didn't actually name any one president as "the worst." Parent
Waiting for PPP's complete results to see how the legalize MJ amendment is faring. Last time it was polled by ppp, legalizing was winning 53/43.
Still, I applaud your vote. Congratulations, I take back what I said.
Obama is coming back to Florida this Sunday, this time in Broward County. Hollywood to be exact. The only poll out of Florida today has Obama +2.
She's obviously incredibly nearsighted because you could hear her clicking thru the e-mails with her face literally 3 inches away from the desk monitor. Interesting hearing her ask questions from producers while interns hand her new bulletins. She's much more polite to her staff than O'Reilly.
She may be a beltway hack, but she's a nice one. Parent
Denver's mayor now appears to be incommunicado about where the heck he got his numbers and/or whether this was just a silly scare tactic about which he ought to have known better, as it would only create buzz on wingnut blogs and squawk radio in Wisconsin to hype Republican turnout. The state already is coping with so many factors from the new voter-suppression laws to the daily dirty tricks that it does not need more complications to make the election close and land it in more lawsuits, after similar messes lately.
I hope that buzz dies down before Tuesday, and especially for the sake of the Tammy Baldwin campaign. The rest of you really, really do not want the boy from Elroy, Tommy Thompson, in the U.S. Senate.
A candidate with a .5% lead wins 56% of the time A candidate with a 1% lead wins 64% of the time A candidate with a 2% lead wins 78% of the time A candidate with a 3% lead wins 83% of the time A candidate with a 4% lead wins 89% of the time
332-206 Parent
The only real questions remaining in Hawaii presidential politics are whether or not:
Personally, I hope there's a lot of winger meltdown on Tuesday, and I hope it starts early enough that I can really enjoy it.
Assuming Obama wins, I will hardly be able to wait to get to work on Wednesday, as the little GOP tyrant whose office is around the corner from mine will be losing his teeny-tiny little mind. Parent
GOBAMA. Parent
King County (which includes Seattle) is the most liberal county in the state and all the Republican candidates in the county are going to lose big. And the biggest portion of yes votes for R-74 (equal marriage rights) and I-502 (legalizing pot) will certainly come from King County. Gosh. Whaddya think they're gonna do with those DFH ballots when they get their hands on them?
G*ddamm evil GOP.
Ditto your last sentence, shoephone. Parent
Tampering with a ballot is a felony here. According to the news, this fraud was discovered when something the employee did triggered the election system's security measures. No news on how many ballots were affected or how this will be corrected. The State Dept. of Justice and the Secretary of State are conducting the investigation.
Clackamas County, which is just east and south of Portland, is a weird county that has more than the usual number of whackos. It is becoming more and more red with many people who consider Portland to be the modern equivalent of Sodom and Gomorrah. They are haunted by the idea of creeping Portlandism, which mostly seems to manifest as a deep-seated hatred of public transportation. Parent
And isn't tampering with a ballot illegal everywhere? It's just that in so many places the perps are not prosecuted. Just look at how that knucklehead in Virginia isn't even being charged for dumping Democrats' registrations in the trash. It's insidious.
I'd love to hear what happened to the perp in the case you stated. Parent
Complaints have been filed with the feds for more than a year now, since there is no recourse in Walker's Wisconsin. But crickets from Holder, et al. Parent
TV stations are running appeals for people to donate to the Red Cross.
But the government has already taken a sizable chunk of our money. I am asking what it will do for the victims of this nightmare.
I am interested in particular about what the government is doing for people in Staten island, NY, or other communities where people have had their homes destroyed or severely damaged.
We have given a lot of tax money to state, local and federal government. How much of it will they spend to help us recover? Parent