Feeds:
Posts
Comments

Archive for April, 2012

“Here’s the commandment issued from the Governor’s Mansion: everyone shall sing the same notes from the Bobby Jindal hymnal.”

“If department heads or undersecretaries cannot candidly testify before Senate and House committees without the threat of reprisal from the governor, the hearings become a farce.”

–Jeff Crouere, a conservative political radio commentator from New Orleans and former Deputy Chairman and Executive Director of the Louisiana Republican Party, discussing Gov. Jindal’s firing of Martha Manuel from her post as executive director of the Governor’s Office of Elderly Affairs following her testimony before the House Appropriations Committee early last month.

Read Full Post »

Gov. Piyush Jindal, aka Bobbin Hood (robs from the poor, gives to the rich), certainly loses no time.

No sooner does he ram through his education “reforms,” which, among other things, removes from local school boards all authority over parish superintendents, than he institutes his reign of terror.

It seems that the administration, even before passage of his education reforms, had already initiated a policy of monitoring email communications between some, if not all, parish school superintendents and school employees.

That’s the word out of northeast Louisiana and at least one of the Florida parishes.

Livingston Parish Superintendent Bill Spear, speaking last week at a parish chamber of commerce luncheon, revealed that Jindal’s administration has wasted no time in making a public records request for emails concerning proposed changes to education sent to Livingston parish school employees.

The emails, without question, are public record, available for the asking to anyone interested enough to ask for them.

It’s just that it seems rather peculiar that someone as busy as the governor of a state and who plainly has ambitions for bigger and better things would have time to review the emails of a parish school superintendent.

Unless…

Unless there are underlying motives of reprisals against those who do not fall into line quickly enough.

This governor has already exhibited a sufficient propensity to take swift and severe actions against subordinates who dare express an independent opinion that is at odds with his.

Inspired by the phrase coined by an acquaintance who shall remain nameless because he is a state employee, we have applied the term Teagued to those who have felt the wrath of Piyush:

• Department of Social Services grant reviewer Melody Teague in October 2009 testified against Jindal’s proposed streamlining of state government. She was fired the very next day. It took six months but she got her job back;

• Office of Group Benefits (OGB) Director Tommy Teague, husband of Melody, wasn’t quick enough to bow and scrap when Jindal proposed the privatization of OGB. Fired.

• Jim Champagne, executive director of the Louisiana Highway Safety Commission, disagreed with Jindal’ plan to repeal the state’s motorcycle helmet law. Out the door;

• Ethics Administrator Richard Sherburne hit the bricks when Jindal gutted the Ethics Board’s adjudicatory authority, giving that authority to administrative law judges. Jindal neutered the board after he was hit was an ethics fine shortly after taking office. Coincidence? Not likely.

• Tammie McDaniel, a member of the Board of Elementary and Secondary Education (BESE), questioned budget decisions by the administration and was immediately asked to resign by Jindal. She did after first resisting his heavy-handed methods;

• Martha Manuel, executive director of the Office of Elderly Affairs, was critical of an administration decision to move her agency from the governor’s office to the Department of Health and Hospitals. Axed by phone;

• State Rep. Harold Richie (D-Bogalusa), a member of the House Ways and Means Committee and vice chairman of the House Committee on Insurance, was stripped of his vice-chairmanship of the latter after voting no on a tax rebate for those who donate money for scholarships to private and parochial schools while sitting on the former.

With passage of Jindal’s sweeping education reform package, the state, through the Department of Education, now assumes authority over local school superintendents.

The local school boards will continue to hire the superintendents but they will answer to State Superintendent John White and not the local boards that appoint them.

That would be moral equivalent of the Louisiana Supreme Court’s suddenly deciding to micromanage the affairs of a local traffic court or the Louisiana State Police commander’s monitoring the time clock of the Shongaloo town marshal.

Simply put, such action trivializes the office of the governor.

Could Jindal’s demanding copies of superintendents’ emails to local school employees be the first step down a slippery slope toward disciplinary action for imagined sins of the local superintendents?

If so, it would seem reasonable that the next logical step for this governor would be to seek out and destroy the school employees themselves, especially teachers who dare question the reforms, for punishment.

That’s the way Piyush Jindal operates.

It’s also the way it’s done in Third World dictatorships around the globe.

One would think it’s not the way it’s done in a free society.

One would be wrong.

It’s a bone-chilling message that the citizens of this state, whether state employees or not, should not ignore.

Read Full Post »

“I wanted you to hear it from me that I will be a friend and supporter of both state employees and retirees.”

“I do not believe we should punish people for working, and certainly do not believe teachers and state workers in Louisiana should be singled out for penalty.”

“Any statements to the contrary are simply false.”

–Piyush Jindal, in a 2007 campaign brochure in which he attempted to ingratiate with state workers but instead only succeeded in prostituting himself for votes.

Read Full Post »

Now that Piyush Jindal has shoved the education reform bills down our throats with minimal time for debate and even less attempt at actually reading the bills, he is ready to turn his attention to his state retirement reform package.

First up are three bills by Sen. Elbert Guillory (D-Opelousas). Senate bills 51, 52 and 740 are scheduled to be heard by the Senate Retirement Committee, which Guillory chairs, beginning at 9 a.m. on Monday.

The bills may have Guillory’s name on them but make no mistake: they were written by corporate members of the American Legislative Exchange Council (ALEC) and spoon-fed to Guillory to introduce at Jindal’s behest.

SB 51 would require rank and file state employees who are members of the Louisiana State Employees’ Retirement System (LASERS) to work until age 67 before being able to realize full retirement benefits. Those retiring before that age would receive sharply reduced benefits under terms of the bill.

SB 52 would require members of LASERS, who have not had a pay raise for three years, to contribute an additional 3 percent of their salaries. Originally, that increase was to have been offset by a corresponding reduction in the amount the state contributes. The money saved by the state would have gone into the state General Fund to help Jindal fill in a big hole anticipated in the state budget.

That would have meant that employees would not have realized any advantage either toward reducing the LASERS unfunded accrued liability (UAL) or in providing increased retirement benefits, thereby defining the increase as a tax—illegal during an even-number year’s legislative session.

Now, though Jindal, in his usual method of smoke and mirrors economics, says the 3 percent additional will go to pay down the UAL.

The really curious thing about Jindal’s incessant barking about the UAL is that LASERS presently has a UAL of $6.3 billion, only about a third of the total UAL of the four retirement systems–teachers ($10.8 billion), school employees ($863 million) and state police ($313 million), yet he continuously blathers as if the entire amount is the liability of LASERS alone.

Smoke and mirrors.

The governor soldiers on with his ALEC-inspired bills despite a report by the Dallas law firm Strasburger & Price which says that virtually all components of the retirement bills would be ruled unconstitutional if subjected to legal challenges—as they will most surely will be.

The report was commissioned by Legislative Auditor Daryl Purpera.

Jindal dismissed the Strasburger report through his press lackeys, saying the analysis was conducted without a thorough read of the bills and that the 38-page analysis was done with no examination of case law.

It appears that the Strasburger report was the document that did not receive a thorough read—from the governor and his “brown shirts,” to borrow a term from Rep. Sam Jones (D-Franklin)—because the report specifically cited case law from 18 other states and a handful from right here in Louisiana as legal precedents.

Smoke and mirrors.

If Jindal’s bills are passed and somehow survive legal challenges (highly unlikely), we might brace ourselves for an attempt in his three-plus years left as governor (He is not going to be Romney’s veep, though there is a chance he may run for the U.S. Senate against Mary Landrieu) to reduce benefits for already retired state employees. We certainly would not put it past him.

Regardless of the legal outcome of the retirement bills, he will probably make another run at abolishing Civil Service as he did through Rep. John Schroeder (R-Covington) two years ago.

In contrast to Jindal’s slash and burn tactic of benevolent governance, the words of former Gov. Edwin Edwards come to mind. Quoted in the book Bad Bet on the Bayou by Tyler Bridges, Edwards, who grew up the son of a sharecropper, said, “I remember when government made it possible for electricity to be brought to my house.”

He was referring to President Franklin Roosevelt’s Rural Electrification Act of 1936, when Edwards was just nine.

“I remember when the government made it possible for a (school) bus to pick me up and drive me eight miles into town,” he continued. “I remember when government made it possible for me to eat a free hot lunch at school. I remember when government made books available to me that I otherwise would not have been able to have.”

If the governor pushes his retirement bills through, then the sins of Edwin Edwards will pale by comparison to the cumulative harmful effects of Jindal’s privatization of the Office of Risk Management, the Office of Group Benefits, Medicaid, his “reforms” to education and state employee retirement, his cutting of higher education, thereby forcing tuition increases, his granting of tax cuts to favored corporations, his allowing friendly former legislators to settle into do-nothing jobs at six-figure salaries (jobs for which they are woefully unqualified), and the sale of state prisons.

No matter what the shortcomings of Edwin W. Edwards, he never shafted teachers or state workers. For that matter, he never turned his back on Louisiana’s working citizens. Nor did he ever dodge a reporter’s questions or refuse an interview—claims Jindal could never make. When a reporter left a message for Gov. Edwards to return his or her call, it was Edwards, not some flunky, who personally returned the call.

But enough with the reminiscing; let’s turn our attention to the makeup of the respective House and Senate retirement committees and the key campaign contributions of the members of those two committees.

The heavy hand of ALEC is ever-present, as is that of Jindal himself.

Following are members of the Senate Retirement Committee and the contributions received from corporate members of ALEC and from Jindal’s own campaign fund:

• Guillory—$45,200 from Alec, $7500 from Jindal;

• Page Cortez (R-Lafayette), vice chairman—$2500 from Jindal;

• Conrad Appel (R-Metairie)—$2500 from Jindal;

• A.G. Crowe (R-Pearl River)—$4500 from ALEC, $2500 from Jindal;

• Gerald Long (R-Natchitoches)—$35,000 from ALEC, $2500 from Jindal;

• Barrow Peacock (R-Bossier City)—No contributions;

• Jonathan Perry (R-Kaplan)—No contributions.

Both Crowe and Long are members of ALEC.

Following are members of the House Retirement Committee and the contributions received from corporate members of ALEC and from Jindal’s campaign:

• Kevin Pearson (R-Slidell), chairman—$2500 from Jindal;

• Nick Lorusso (R-New Orleans), vice chairman—$6500 from ALEC;

• Anthony Ligi (R-Metairie)—$20,500 from ALEC, $5000 from Jindal;

• Jack Montoucet (D-Crowley)—$6000 from ALEC;

• Alan Seabaugh (R-Shreveport)—$11,750 from ALEC, $2500 from Jindal;

• Kirk Talbot (R-River Ridge)—$5000 from Jindal;

• Jeff Thompson (R-Bossier City)—No contributions;

• Paul Hollis (R-Covington)—No contributions;

• Sam Jones (D-Franklin)—No contributions;

• Edward Price (D-Gonzales)—No contributions;

• Eugene Reynolds (D-Minden)—No contributions.

Lorusso, Ligi, Montoucet, Seabaugh and Talbot are ALEC members.

One state employee said in a recent email to LouisianaVoice that Jindal’s proposed comprises on his retirement bills “are in no way acceptable.” The compromises, he said, “are still breaking a contract with state employees.”

Here is the rest of that email:

“Sometimes people forget that pensions are the sole source of retirement planning for many state employees. We receive no match on any IRAs we may be able to afford on our relative low salaries and we are not allowed to contribute to Social Security.

“I think some legislators need to be reminded that they do not answer to a political party, to a governor, or to their largest campaign contributors. They answer to the people, the taxpayers and the voters of this state. And contrary to what many legislators believe, state employees are, in fact, people, taxpayers and voters. We have the same financial obligations that private sector employees have, yet we are ‘solely’ asked to bear the burden of a historically irresponsible legislature.

The true measure of a society is how it treats the weakest among it. State employees are the weakest among all civil servants; therefore, we have been intentionally targeted. Our hands are tied by ridiculous civil service regulations that do not afford us the same opportunity as teachers or law enforcement officers to speak on issues that directly impact us. In addition, many state employees have been intimidated into thinking that they cannot speak out against these reforms for fear of retribution.

“This targeted approach is both abusive and discriminatory towards state workers. In my opinion, (legislators’) true character will be especially clear after this vote. While many of us are afraid to speak out, we can vote. We can sign a recall petition. So, please do not play unnecessary politics with the livelihoods of your constituents.”

Read Full Post »

Attached is a video of my rambling address to a small group of state employees at the weekly brown bag lunch on the State Capitol grounds last Thursday.

http://youtu.be/ZFmDh6Rg2yE

http://youtu.be/O5ITaOF32D8

The talk was about the influence of money from the American Legislative Exchange Council (ALEC) on Louisiana Legislators. ALEC is a national organization that drafts laws for state legislators to take back home with them for enactment.

Florida’s Stand Your Ground law that helped lead to the shooting death of Trevon Martin by a neighborhood watch volunteer is an example of ALEC-inspired legislation.

Now State Sen. Neil Riser (R-Columbia), a member of ALEC, is pushing his SB 303 which, among other things, would allow the possession of firearms in churches, schools, theaters, and college campuses. Such is the insanity current prevailing in ALEC-friendly state legislatures.

Gov. Bobby Jindal’s retirement bills, his privatization efforts, the sale of state prisons, and tax breaks favorable to corporations and detrimental to the funding of state operations are all part of the ALEC legislative strategy.

Watch closely in the first video and you will see a Jindal spy making an editorial comment on my remarks.

Read Full Post »

« Newer Posts - Older Posts »