Local Legislative Municipal Relief Package

After a series of meetings between the Merrimack Valley Mayors and Managers coalition and local lawmakers a legislative package of items that would bring non-monetary relief to municipalities has been agreed to and will be submitted by our legislative partners. The Tribune offered some coverage of this package today. Some elements of the package were cited by the Tribune.

Allow cities and towns to conduct so-called “reverse auctions,” with contractors bidding for jobs online. It is an auction in reverse, Tarr said, because rather than bidding up the price, contractors bid it down. Cities and towns would also be allowed to issue contracts worth less than $5,000 without bids.

r Make it harder for unions to block cities and towns from joining the state Group Insurance Commission. Last year, the Legislature allowed municipalities to join GIS to save money on health care, but local leaders say it is too easy for unions to veto the move.

r Strip school committees of their ability to veto cost-saving consolidations of city or town departments.

r Give city and town leaders the right to reach agreements to share the cost of services or purchases they can’t afford alone without Town Meeting or city council approval.

r Allow the state to obtain more Medicaid money from the federal government for caring for special education students. Tarr said the state currently is shortchanged by $50 million a year.

r Give cities and towns grants totaling $1 million a year to hire consultants or acquire software that would help them find ways to squeeze savings out of the way they currently do business. Tucker said many communities “don’t have the resources or the time to think of these long-term management practices.”

While the GIC legislation would only study the possibility of removing the union 70 percent threshold I believe the failure of so many cities to sign up for the GIC has pushed the legislature to the point where it will eliminate the union veto. House Speaker Dimasi has indicated support for that removal, although the governor has not. The other components of this agreement do not provide additional money, but do provide a starting point for additional management rights for strapped municipalities. The agreement was described as a “marginal effort” by Mayor Kirk of Gloucester.

But Gloucester Mayor Carolyn Kirk, who was not involved in developing the plan, called the proposals “small gestures.”

Gloucester, she said, needs more money from the state.

“Help me close my (budget) gap,” Kirk said. “This is marginal stuff and it’s interesting, but I have to balance my budget.”

I am hard pressed to disagree with Mayor Kirk on the need for more money, but my sense is that whatever financial relief may come will be very limited due to the difficult problems facing the State of Massachusetts. Our goal in this effort was to immediately open a dialogue with our legislators, and find out what we agree on. We have done that, and while it is true that there are still areas of disagreement our ability to work cooperatively has been enhanced through this process.

Methuen Mayor William Manzi said the legislation would make a difference.

Manzi, whose city faces a $2 million deficit in the fiscal year that starts in July, said if Beacon Hill lawmakers won’t send more money to cities and towns, they should at least help them save money.

“Give us more management rights and reduce our costs so we don’t have to ask (lawmakers) for more money,” said Manzi, who worked with Tarr and Tucker on the proposal.

We will continue to work with our delegation to find areas of agreement. My thanks to Dennis DiZoglio, who as the E.D. of the Merrimack Valley Planning Agency has been a driving force in regional cooperation. Senator Bruce Tarr really pulled things together legislatively, and we owe him a debt of gratitude. Senators Sue Tucker of Andover and Steve Baddour of Methuen have worked very hard to find consensus and build solutions. On the House side Reps Dempsey and Campbell, L’Italien and Torrisi, as well as Rep Costello of Amesbury and Reps Finegold, Stanley, Verga and Lantigua worked with us on this effort. Read the Tribune article at this link.

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New Accessible Doorways at Methuen’s Timony School

Methuen’s Disabilities Commission, using monies derived from its own revolving fund, have financed the installation of pushbutton openers on the entrance doors to the Timony School as well as the other Grammar schools. I would like to thank the School Department, Sid Harris, Jeanne Molloy and the Members of the Disabilities Commission for their cooperation in making these new doors possible. They have provided a great service to the children of our community. Timony School Principal Judy Scannell hosted a very nice ceremony for the unveiling of the newly accessible doorway.

Timony Disabilities

Timony 2

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Rep. Linda Campbell Starts Strong

With some talk of a primary challenge to her in the air Rep. Linda Dean Campbell started the campaign season strongly, getting the highest vote total of any candidate on the straw poll ballot at today’s Methuen Democratic Committee Town Breakfast. Rep. Campbell was uncontested on this ballot, and appears to be cruising towards re-election. The straw poll ballot also included John Kerry defeating challenger Ed O’Reilly 54-39, and Hillary Clinton defeating Barack Obama 65-28. Congrats to the Democratic Committee for their hard work, and congrats to honoree Jim Jajuga.

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The Top Ten Reasons Romney Dropped Out

Mitt Romney gave his top ten reasons for withdrawal at the Correspondents Dinner in Washington. Not bad for a cardboard cutout.

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We Campaign Kicks off With Pelosi and Gingrich

The WE campaign of Al Gore has unveiled a new ad featuring former House Speaker Newt Gingrich and current Speaker Nancy Pelosi. It certainly is interesting to see Newt pitching for solutions to the global warming crisis. Link to the WE website here

http://www.miclients.com/alliance/we_website/embed_player/we_embed_player.swf?flv=http://blip.tv/file/get/Acp-PelosiGingrichAd423.flv

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World Food Crisis

Both the Wall Street Journal and todays New York Times have run stories highlighting the severe problems being created by the inflation of food prices worldwide. From the Times:

Haiti’s hunger, that burn in the belly that so many here feel, has become fiercer than ever in recent days as global food prices spiral out of reach, spiking as much as 45 percent since the end of 2006 and turning Haitian staples like beans, corn and rice into closely guarded treasures.

Saint Louis Meriska’s children ate two spoonfuls of rice apiece as their only meal recently and then went without any food the following day. His eyes downcast, his own stomach empty, the unemployed father said forlornly, “They look at me and say, ‘Papa, I’m hungry,’ and I have to look away. It’s humiliating and it makes you angry.”

The rise in commodity prices have placed normal food staples out of the reach of many of the world’s poorest people. This hunger, beyond the human toll, is begining to shake the political foundations of many countries.

Down Cairo’s Hafziyah Street, peddlers selling food from behind wood carts bark out their prices. But few customers can afford their fish or chicken, which bake in the hot sun. Food prices have doubled in two months.

Ahmed Abul Gheit, 25, sat on a cheap, stained wooden chair by his own pile of rotting tomatoes. “We can’t even find food,” he said, looking over at his friend Sobhy Abdullah, 50. Then raising his hands toward the sky, as if in prayer, he said, “May God take the guy I have in mind.”

Mr. Abdullah nodded, knowing full well that the “guy” was President Hosni Mubarak.

The explosion in food pricing has also brought criticism of the bio-fuels program, which some see as a catalyst for higher grain prices. The world economic situation continues to deteriorate, and the changes to come may bring us to unchartered territory. Read the Times story here.

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You don’t need a weatherman

Although I did not have a chance to see all of the Democratic debate I was struck by the subject matter of the portions I did see. Worried about paying for college for your kids? Lets talk about Reverend Wright. Concerned about the effects of our trade policy on manufacturing? Lets talk about the Weather Undergound. Keith Olbermann called it the “tabloid debate”. I guess the rationale is that these will be the things that the Republicans will want to talk about in the general election, so we better gird the nominee by talking about them now. I could not disagree more on that, although I realize that the Republican hits will be many and below the belt line. These are serious times with real dangers for our country. We need to be talking real solutions, not nonsense. It does not appear that we are heading in that direction by the subject matter covered last night. What is that old Dylan refrain, “You don’t need a weatherman to know which way the wind blows”?

http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/22425001/vp/24172484#24172484

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Bush Surrenders on Columbia Free Trade Pact

President Bush indicated that the Columbia Free Trade Treaty is now “dead” and blamed House Speaker Nancy Pelosi for its demise. From the Washington Post:

President Bush said yesterday that a trade agreement with Colombia is “dead” unless House Democrats agree to hold a vote on the pact, effectively admitting defeat on a White House priority.

The President and Speaker engaged in a verbal volley over the free trade agreement:

After meeting with his Cabinet, Bush lashed out at House Speaker Nancy Pelosi (D-Calif.) for putting off a vote on the free-trade pact, which the administration views as important for U.S. national security and the economy. “This free-trade agreement is in our national interests,” Bush said. “Yet that bill is dead unless the speaker schedules a definite vote.”

The Speaker returned the favor:

Pelosi fired back by accusing Bush of being “out of touch” with the “concerns of America’s working families.” She said the House will take no action on the Colombia pact until it considers other legislation aimed at aiding the U.S. economy

I do not remember a free trade agreement ever being defeated. Will the trade agenda of this country now change permanently, or is this simply election posturing by the Congress. Does a Democratic victory in November spell the end of NAFTA? Although the Columbia agreement is not a major pact financially it signals a huge change in perspective by the United States over trade, and has ramifications much larger than its financial impact. The displacement of unfettered free trade has become to difficult to politically just dismiss out of hand. Maybe those “embittered” folks are having some sway.

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Methuen Ranger Band Parent Association Yard Sale

Giant Yard Sale

After a long, cold, winter…
The SUN has returned and it’s time to get outside !

The Methuen Ranger Band Parents Association will be hosting a Giant Yard Sale to help raise money for the Methuen Ranger Band and their trip to Washington DC.

Baked goods will also be sold !

Saturday April 26, 2008
9:00 am – 12:00 noon
RAIN OR SHINE
Nicholson Stadium parking lot
Pleasant View Street in Methuen
(next to the Timony Grammar School)

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Obama Trips

Senator Barack Obama continues to take heavy incoming fire for his remarks on small town voters, and has attempted to clarify those remarks in light of the political criticism. From the Washington Post:

“I didn’t say it as well as I could have,” Obama (D-Ill.) told a crowd in Muncie. Later, in an interview with a North Carolina newspaper, he said, “Obviously, if I worded things in a way that made people offended, I deeply regret that.”

Obama’s comments were obviously not well thought out, and give some political cover to the notion that these voters will not make a connection with him in the general election. The Clinton team, (as well as John McCain) have pounced.

“I was taken aback by the demeaning remarks Senator Obama made about people in small-town America,” Clinton (D-N.Y.) told several hundred voters at a factory here. “Senator Obama’s remarks are elitist and out of touch. They are not reflective of the values and beliefs of Americans, certainly not the Americans that I know. . . . Americans who believe in the Second Amendment believe it’s a matter of a constitutional right, Americans who believe in God believe it’s a matter of personal faith.”

Obama has managed to take the focus away from the remarks of President Clinton on Hillary’s trip to Bosnia, and refocus attention on his own poorly worded statement. The Clinton folks get a two-fer. No video is yet available of the specific remarks, although the event was taped. I have posted the available video here. The audio is at the Huffington Post website. Did Obama trip and fall, or did he just trip? The Clinton’s are great at the attack, and with the PA primary coming they will drive this ruthlessly. Read the Washington Post story here.

http://services.brightcove.com/services/viewer/federated_f8/271543887

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