There is really only one thing that matters in Kentucky right now and that is what we need to do now to survive a full-blown crisis in our state employee benefit plans.
It is nearly impossible to exaggerate this disaster. The best analogy I can think of is that we are on the Titanic and can only avoid getting sunk by the iceberg if we start turning now.
We are nearly $30,000,000,000 short in the funds we use to write pension checks and pay health benefits for state government workers. If we don't raise taxes, -- and we can't afford to raise taxes -- we are going to have to cut spending. A lot. There is no other way around this and if the people don't start screaming about it now we will see, within ten years, employers fleeing the state and leaving a real mess behind them.
And we can't fund our state government on Social Security checks.
What this will take is radically changing the way we look at state government. We are going to have to get out of providing a lot of services we have gotten used to. We will have to cut out a lot of programs.
Our bloated and inefficient school system might be a good place to start with a surgeon's knife. Did you know that no other state has a higher percentage of non-teacher school employees than Kentucky? If we start there and then eliminate most of the Kentucky Department of Education we will be heading in the right direction.
Then we need fewer state employees and we need them to stop retiring from one government job only to take another. Did you know only fourteen states have more state and local government employees per 10,000 people than Kentucky does? Kentucky has a law limiting the number of state employees to 33,000 but every two years the legislature votes itself an exemption from this law. In January they are going to do it again unless we make them stop it. Ask your Senator or Representative why he or she thinks government can't get by with less when the rest of us have to sometimes.
If you want your children to be able to live in Kentucky ten or fifteen years from now, you will take this threat very seriously.
Wednesday, December 19, 2007
I Guess We Know Results Of Stumbo Poll
Now we know what a political hit job looks like. Rep. Brandon Spencer just last week was filing a bill to line his own pockets with Medicaid money and now he is resigning quietly so Greg Stumbo can have a job.
Could Jody Richards be the one quaking in his boots this morning?
Could Jody Richards be the one quaking in his boots this morning?
Tuesday, December 18, 2007
Monday, December 17, 2007
Yarmuth: I Wanna Go Home NOW!
An hour ago, House Democrats in Washington D.C. tried to shut down their session for the year. Yarmuth voted to surrender.
Has he been talking to Jody Richards?
Has he been talking to Jody Richards?
Smart Republicans Won't Touch Medicaid Fight
I just got off the phone with a spokeswoman from the Cabinet for Medicaid Services who told me they didn't have a comment on the Auditor's Performance Audit of their activities. She told me they are reviewing the audit and might have a comment by the end of the week.
The only problem with that is the audit included -- on page 108 -- a letter from the department dated December 5 responding to the audit.
This doesn't look good for what is left of the Fletcher administration.
The only problem with that is the audit included -- on page 108 -- a letter from the department dated December 5 responding to the audit.
This doesn't look good for what is left of the Fletcher administration.
Sniffing Out (Some) Conflicts Of Interest
The state just lost an appeal to eliminate what it said was a conflict of interest for a lowly technician at the airport in Frankfort who took on a second job to improve his skills.
But there has still been no official action taken against Rep. Harry Moberly in his conflict of interest as Budget Chairman and Vice President of Eastern Kentucky University.
I thought Governor Beshear said he was going to be different.
But there has still been no official action taken against Rep. Harry Moberly in his conflict of interest as Budget Chairman and Vice President of Eastern Kentucky University.
I thought Governor Beshear said he was going to be different.
Sunday, December 16, 2007
Tax Reform Idea Catching On
I will be on Leland Conway's radio show at 9:00 Monday morning talking about the Fair Tax. You can catch it in the Lexington area on 630 AM or on the net at www.wlap.com.
Saturday, December 15, 2007
Baseball Analogy For Fayette Jail Employees
Some of the criminals working inside the Fayette County Detention Center continue to delude themselves. They seem to think lack of mainstream media interest in their crimes and the fact no one with dark sunglasses and arrest warrants has shown up yet means no one is coming for them.
But several internal conversations at the jail have turned to the the inconvenient fact investigators took four years to indict slugger Barry Bonds.
The jail abuse evidence isn't nearly as hard to sort through as the steroid evidence, though.
But several internal conversations at the jail have turned to the the inconvenient fact investigators took four years to indict slugger Barry Bonds.
The jail abuse evidence isn't nearly as hard to sort through as the steroid evidence, though.
Happy Hanukkah: MIller "Mistakes" Like Noodling?
Told you three weeks ago about the Lexington Herald Leader sitting on a Jonathan Miller scandal. Why they put it out now, in the middle of December and on one of the slowest circulation days of the year, makes about as much sense as this:
It may well sound like sour grapes at this point, but this sordid episode displays perfectly how the mainstream media in Kentucky covers for Democrats. Can there be any doubt if Miller were a Republican that the last three weeks would have featured wall-to-wall news stories speculating about wild sex and gambling parties in Las Vegas and systematic abuse of the merit system?
This story is far from over.
Overall, Parker saw her salary rise from $21,000 a year when Miller hired her out of college as a secretary in 2000 to $78,981 a year this year as deputy state treasurer. That's an increase of nearly 380 percent in seven years.
Miller denied any suggestion that he gave Parker undue favorable treatment but said he has relied on her input regarding "personal business" matters such as future job opportunities.
For instance, Parker accompanied Miller on a trip to Las Vegas between May 14 and 17, just after Miller dropped out of the Democratic primary for governor.
Miller said in an interview in September that he flew to Las Vegas in May for a trip that was "personal or personal business" in nature.
"No state government work," he said. "I'm kind of looking at my own job opportunities after I'm treasurer and also it's a nice place to relax."
It may well sound like sour grapes at this point, but this sordid episode displays perfectly how the mainstream media in Kentucky covers for Democrats. Can there be any doubt if Miller were a Republican that the last three weeks would have featured wall-to-wall news stories speculating about wild sex and gambling parties in Las Vegas and systematic abuse of the merit system?
This story is far from over.
Blog Blockergate 2
The Beshear administration is trying to decide if state employees should be reading political blogs on the job.
Friday, December 14, 2007
Is A Blog Without Comments Really A Blog?
Kentucky's Rep. Adam Koenig has started our first state legislator blog. It will be interesting to see how he does with it, who else follows him in putting one up, and if he decides to accept comments.
U.S. Sen. Mitch McConnell already has a blog.
U.S. Sen. Mitch McConnell already has a blog.
Sentenced To Life In New Jersey
We already know that half the people living in casino paradise New Jersey want to leave the state as soon as they can.
So it's hard not to wonder if they are now getting rid of the death penalty as some kind of economic development ploy.
So it's hard not to wonder if they are now getting rid of the death penalty as some kind of economic development ploy.
Price Tag For Relevant KY Schools? $60 Million
This bill might have a chance to improve low-performing schools if it didn't have to depend so heavily on the Kentucky Department of Education.
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