2009

How about cutting some no-bid contracts Mikey?

Not all of Mike Rounds cuts are a bad idea (though most of them are). The biggest disappointment is that he has cut only one FTE (and it was a good program). I broke down how I feel about them;

GOOD CUTS
– Catastrophic Correctional Health Care, $800,000.
Not sure how you budget for catastrophic health care. I feel this is a good cut because it should be paid for on a case by case basis.
– Archeological Research Center Program, $308,782.
Though I’m all for science funding, I think during a recession this is a reasonable cut.
– BOR new accounting staff, $213,141.
No new staff should be added during this time.
– DOC food service reduction, $200,000.
This one is confusing. My question is; we’re we paying too much for this service that now we can make a cut? I think this service is a contract. Maybe this should have been cut a long time ago.

ON THE FENCE
– State Fair, $774,643.
I do think we need to fund the fair, but we shouldn’t continue to give them money without accountability. I think the fair should rotate to different towns every year and have the cities hosting it help come up with funding.
– Division of Arts, $668,509.
If this money is coming out of public education arts programs, that’s bad. If this cut will affect grants, etc, it’s a good cut. One thing I have noticed about the SDAC is that they continue to give to same old people, year after year, who can’t make a living on their own as an artist. There is also a lot of favoritism. For instance, one year an individual performer got a grant, he was the husband of the former SDAC director and another year the SD Symphony received a $35,000 grant even though they were operating in the black without the assistance.
– HPV vaccination program, $276,995.
I think this vaccination is important, but I also think this could be paid for through federal funds. I also think this is something insurance companies should cover as preventative. It might also be a good will gesture if our monster hospital industrial complexes provided this vaccination for free to people who could not afford it.
– FTE for REED Data Center, $155,359.
This fiber optic network is needed, but this project can be put on hold.
– Adult Medicaid dental services, $1,485,987.
I would like to see the specifics on this.
– SDPB tower maintenance, $230,000.
This is similar to the REED project.
– Human Services base cuts, $800,000.
If this department can still survive after taking the cut, it’s a good idea. Unfortunately, there should have been cuts like this TO every bureaucratic department to make it fair and across the board.
– DSS Independent Living Services, $222,000.
Foster care in SD has often been a contentious subject. If this program works, keep the dough, if not, cut it.

BAD CUTS
State Workers
– State Employee Compensation, $6,728,980.
– Discretionary Provider Inflation, $5,510,508.
Not sure how the state can make these cuts? I guess the employees will have to pickup the slack.
Education
– Teacher Compensation Assistance Program, $4 million.
– Education Service Agencies, $2.2 million.
– South Dakota School for the Deaf, $2 million.
– Special education, $1,632,256.
– Career and Technical Education funding, $1.5 million.
– BOR Institutional Reductions, $500,000.
– Alternative Education Program, $450,000.
– State Aid to Technology Increase, $309,226.
– Birth to Three Connections, $2,130,170.
It’s no secret that Rounds is anti-education. Education should always be the LAST thing you cut during poor economic times. He just doesn’t get it, once again. Must of been his poor education.
Corrections
– DOC Adult Education Program, $210,789.
– DOC Community Transition Fee, $200,750.
Educating prisoners helps them become better adjusted when they get out of prison. By cutting these programs we are just setting them up to be repeat offenders costing us more in the long run in incarceration costs. This cut is just plain stupid.
Infrastructure
– Bureau of Administration Base Maintenance & Repair Funding, $2,451,444.
– Board of Regents base maintenance and repair funding, $1,632,999.
Rounds cries about needing money to repair roads and bridges than turns around and cuts infrastructure spending in other departments. Huh?
General
– Sales Tax on Food Refund Program, $2,353,302.
This cut is quite hypocritical of Rounds, but no surprise from Mr. Broken promises. If you remember a few years back when the food tax elimination was on the ballot one of Mike’s arguments to keep it was this program. Now with it being cut, the slack will have to be picked up by private nonprofit food pantries. Thanks Mike.
– Co-op Extension Service, $1 million.
We live in a time when people are being encouraged to grow their own gardens to help save on food costs, so what does out genius Governor do? Cuts the service that helps people plant their own gardens. Thank goodness we still have the googles to help us out (and flying tomato blog).
– DENR EPA federal funds swap, $230,000.
This should come as no surprise that Rounds would cut EPA spending when he trying to get more coal plants, a nuclear plant and a refinery built in SD. Go figure.
Public Health
– SCHIP shortfall (pending reauthorization), $752,959.
– Adult Medicaid Primary Care Case Management, $647,360.
– Nursing Home Client Cost Share, $429,678.
– Rehab Services Independent Living Services, $378,130.
– Mosquito control program, $300,000.
A healthy society is just as important as an educated one. Well we know how he feels about education, so these cuts are no surprise. The mosquito control cut is confusing though. This program is tried and true and has proven to keep the bugs at bay. This summer I noticed that the bugs were well controlled on the bike trails and in my yard. What a bonehead cut. West Nile – bring it on.

Once again, Rounds has proven he is not a competent or effective leader. He also doesn’t represent the public very well. You’ll notice he proposed only ONE cut to FTE’s and NO cuts in some of his lucrative no-bid contracts to his buddies. Mike has proven once again that his campaign contributors are more important than the hardworking taxpayers of SD. Thanks for nothing, Mike.

My suggestion would have been a 5-10% across the board cut to EVERY department and program, to be fair. Secondly I would have suggested we charge a 4.5% retail tax on ALL non-essential goods and services. No exceptions. Then we eliminate taxes on food and utilities.

That’s why I could never serve in the legislature, my ideas make sense.

The Boston Globe has series on photos from 2008

See all of them here.

(ABOVE) A rescue helicopter prepares to hoist aboard surviving Japanese climber Hideaki Nara near the summit of Aoraki Mount Cook in New Zealand on December 5, 2008. A Japanese climber stranded for six days just below the summit had died just hours before rescuers reached him and a compatriot, local media reported. The two Japanese climbers were forced to huddle in a tent 50 meters below the 3,754-meter (12,349 feet) peak, as poor weather and high winds foiled attempts to rescue the men by helicopter. (REUTERS/The Christchurch Press/John Kirk-Anderson)

South Dacola Music Club with The Flaming Lips

If you’re into weird, eclectic music, then the Flaming Lips are your perfect musical companion.

From their biography on Rolling Stone.com:

Rock has produced few stranger or more daring bands in the last 20 years than Oklahoma City’s Flaming Lips, who embrace everything from merry prankster psychedelia to orchestral pop. At the outset, the Lips tried to bridge the seemingly insurmountable gap between Butthole Surfers-style dementia and bubblegum pop, with mixed results. Their early albums are jumbles of ideas, the weirdness genuine, the songs expansive and sometimes giddily incoherent. They’re as much a response to hardcore punk’s inflexible pithiness as to mainstream rock’s polish.

With In a Priest Driven Ambulance, a coherent vision starts to peek through the chaos. It comes courtesy of an irony-free cover of the standard “(What a) Wonderful World,” sung with wobbly conviction by Wayne Coyne. For all its disorienting ugliness and alienating strangeness, the world really is a wonderful place, the Lips insist — an unfashionable stance that the band would continue to explore with increasingly plangent results.

 

 

Lead singer Wayne Coyne goes crowd surfing in a big plastic ball
Lead singer Wayne Coyne goes crowd surfing in a big plastic ball

 

 

 

Another interesting article about them from Rolling Stone called “Okies From Outer Space“:

Wayne Coyne has not taken any drugs since his early twenties. This fact often comes as a shock to fans of his band, the Flaming Lips. The group has been making increasingly trippy and, to the surprise of even the band, increasingly popular psychedelic-rock albums since 1984, and its music, coupled with Coyne’s surreal cover paintings and bent lyrical aesthetic — song titles include “Jesus Shootin’ Heroin,” “My Cosmic Autumn Rebellion,” “Pilot Can at the Queer of God,” “Talkin’ ‘Bout the Smiling Deathporn Immortality Blues (Everyone Wants to Live Forever)” and, my personal favorite, “They Punctured My Yolk” — have led reasonable people to make certain assumptions.

If you haven’t heard them yet, check ’em out.

A word of advice from Detroit Lewis

I keep an internet printout of how to tie a tie in my bedroom whenever I need to remember how to tie my only retro 60’s tie I own I got at a Goodwill years ago.

My point? If you are a politician (Mike Rounds) and you are going to come on the TV to tell me about the recession and cutbacks, I suggest you do not do it in your mahogany office in a freshly pressed suit and tie.

Your appearance speaks volumes – but I doubt you understand that, do you?

Apparently not.