Sunday, May 31, 2009

BOP is Coming Out Soon


Baby Olson-Pagnucco could be out any day now. As you see, his blogging station is ready. The mobile is a present from BOP's uncle, MPW founder David Lublin. Don't worry, dear readers - there is plenty of content already programmed over the next couple weeks for your reading pleasure (or displeasure).

Saturday, May 30, 2009

County Report: May 22


Friday, May 29, 2009

Marc Fisher Leaves the Post (Updated)

Marc Fisher wrote a farewell column today. Like many of you, I am surprised and saddened that one of the D.C. area's greatest independent voices is leaving.

On the first day I was given this space to play with, the great columnist Mary McGrory summoned me to her office with a note: "Come see me. I have three words for you."

I scurried over and presented myself. Mary looked up from her desk and said, "Three words: Cruelty is important." To do this job right, you must name and blame the bad guys. You must call it as it is. The minute you hold back, your credibility is shot. The second you stop reporting, you're just one more pontificating, pusillanimous pundit." (When my friend and colleague Marjorie Williams launched her column, she too received the gift of three words from Mary: "Subtlety is overrated.")

The beauty of a column is that you can dig up the story, then say it straight: You can expose the cynicism that leaves D.C. school kids worse off at the end of their education than they were at the start, then you can call that system a criminal enterprise. You can reveal the narrow-mindedness that threatens to put mentally retarded people out on the street, and then push until embarrassed officials do the right thing. You can keep hitting the same note until a school principal with a phony doctorate is removed.
Fisher truly excelled at this. He was always honest, occasionally tough but never petty. He told the truth as he saw it, regardless of the pushback he got. And he received attention at the highest levels because politicians knew he had credibility with the public.

From the perspective of Montgomery County politics, Fisher's greatest contribution was his reporting on the dispute over Hillmead Park in Bethesda. The county had purchased a neighboring parcel with a large home on it for addition to the adjacent Hillmead Park. Some wanted to use the home as transitional housing for the homeless. Others wanted to tear it down and use all of the land to expand the park. After a huge uproar pitting neighbors against housing advocates, the issue was resolved by a 5-4 County Council vote to demolish the house. Fisher's work inspired me to write a five-part series demonstrating that subsidized housing in Montgomery County is disproportionately concentrated in black and Latino neighborhoods and is mostly far from Metro stations. Hillmead's residual impact is influencing both incumbent County Council Members and challengers and will affect the competing messages in our 2010 election.

We do not have enough people in public life willing to tell the truth regardless of the consequences. With Fisher's departure, those spare ranks shrink by one.

Update: We hear that Fisher is staying with the Post in a different capacity but he will no longer write a column.

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Thursday, May 28, 2009

MCDCC Seeking New District 18 Member

Following is the press release from MCDCC.

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Leggett Sticks Up for Auto Dealers

County Executive Ike Leggett wrote the following two letters to Governor O'Malley and the U.S. Treasury Department on the impending closures of auto dealerships.

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Get Behind Universal Health Care NOW

By Sharon Dooley.

Soon Senator Max Baucus from Montana will re-open the long dialogue on health care in the United States. He is known to be averse to continued in-depth discussions on a single payer National Health Plan. He has claimed to be interested in providing a bipartisan solution to this problem of the uninsured and ever more expensive health care costs. However he had protesting physicians thrown out of recent hearings where current industry lobbyists were the featured presenters.


More at The Real News

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Wednesday, May 27, 2009

Twenty Stories the MSM Missed in the Special Election

The mainstream media (MSM) did a sparse job in covering the District 4 special election, a swing-vote race with implications for next year. Here are twenty stories they missed ranked in order of ascending importance.

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Tuesday, May 26, 2009

Maryland Blogosphere: Up, Up and Away

The 35 Maryland state and local blogs that release their site statistics set a combined record visit count in March. Then they set another record in April.

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Montgomery County's Desperate Budget Gamble

Montgomery County’s budget crisis, exacerbated by a State Board of Education decision at the very end, is over for the moment. Or is it?

10. This resolution appropriates $79,537,322 for the payment of debt service due in FY10 for the construction of Montgomery County Public Schools facilities.

a) Montgomery County Public Schools must make payment for the debt service through the Montgomery County Government as provided in subparagraph 1O(c). These funds must not be spent for any other purpose.

b) The inclusion of this amount for debt service will be part ofthe County's Local Appropriation and part of the calculation of the FY11 Local Appropriation required to comply with the State maintenance of effort requirement.

c) Reimbursement must occur no less than five days before each applicable debt service payment.
In plain English, the county gave the money to the schools as required by the Board of Education decision. And then they took it back as a special “debt service” charge on school construction. So the county’s position is that we are meeting the state’s MOE requirement. Even though in terms of net real dollars we clearly are not.

So why is this a desperate gamble? The State Board of Education’s decision affirmed that local government financing of schools was a “cornerstone” of state education policy. It was a rigid statement of principle. Will they now sit back, ignore the county’s action and allow Montgomery to collect its state aid? The consequences of pushback from the Board are potentially immense. No one yet knows if they will take on that fight with the county government. Montgomery’s leaders are praying they do not.

There was another approach available, but it would have generated its own problems. The County Executive’s proposed budget added $119.6 million to the revenue stabilization fund, defined as “a special revenue fund that accounts for the accumulation of resources during periods of economic growth and prosperity when revenue collections exceed estimates. These funds may then be drawn upon during periods of economic slowdown when collections fall short of revenue estimates.” It’s true that drawing on this fund would have required some explaining to the county’s credit rating agencies. But it would not involve risking the wrath of a clearly hostile state agency that has already demonstrated its indifference to the county’s financial plight and controls hundreds of millions of dollars of aid.

The county rolled the dice and gambled that the State Board of Education would be less likely to twist a dagger into its back than Wall Street. For all our sakes, we hope they are right.

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Monday, May 25, 2009

Gas Taxes by State

From MSN Money and the Tax Foundation, here's how Maryland's gas tax stacks up against other states.

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Saturday, May 23, 2009

County Report: May 15


Friday, May 22, 2009

Adam Pagnucco on "Political Pulse" on 5/26 & 5/28 on Ch. 16 TV‏

Adam Pagnucco, a blogger on the Maryland Politics Watch Blog, which covers Maryland State and Montgomery County politics will be on the "Political Pulse" TV Show on Tuesday, May 26th at 9:30 p.m. and Thursday, May 28th at 9 p.m. Many topics will be discussed including the County budget, blogs versus newspapers, and some of the 2010 races that will be interesting to watch.

Political Pulse is on Channel 16 TV in Montgomery County.

Free State GOP Fades to Black, Part Five

In Part Four, we discussed how the Democrats have made major gains in voter registrations throughout the state over the last two years. Today, we look at five counties where they have done especially well.

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Thursday, May 21, 2009

The Infamous "PIA" Video

This discussion by Board of Education members about parents who are "PIAs" (pain-in-the-a$$es) has led to a most entertaining feud with the Parents Coalition. Enjoy!


Congressman Offers Preemptive Apology for Extramarital Affair

From Onion TV:


Congressman Offers Preemptive Apology For Extramarital Affair

County Council Approves Operating Budget

Following is the press release from the County Council.

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Free State GOP Fades to Black, Part Four

The Washington Post, the Baltimore Sun and Gazette columnist Blair Lee have all looked at Democratic gains in voter registrations since 2004. But all of them are missing the point. Since 1992, Maryland has voted Democratic in Presidential elections by double digits and probably will continue to do so. The real impact of Democratic registration increases may be felt on state and local elections. And since the last round of those elections in 2006, Democratic gains have been eye-opening.

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Wednesday, May 20, 2009

The View Ladies Annihilate Glenn Beck