Thanks to all who helped —Jerry Jennett @ VLCIA 19 July 2011
Regular Meeting, Valdosta-Lowndes County Industrial Authority (VLCIA),
Norman Bennett, Tom Call, Roy Copeland chairman, Mary Gooding, Jerry Jennett,
Andrea Schruijer Executive Director, J. Stephen Gupton attorney, Allan Ricketts Project Manager,
Valdosta, Lowndes County, Georgia, 19 July 2011.
Videos by John S. Quarterman for LAKE, the Lowndes Area Knowledge Exchange.
Dr. Noll, president of WACE, welcomed VLCIA’s new executive director Andrea Schruijer, and
then reminded the board that the honking cars outside
indicated an ongoing community assessment of biomass,
and he encouraged them to consider previously presented
materials and to prevent the biomass plant from
finding a back door to come back in.
He remarked that he had visited his mother in Germany:
One and half years ago she was in the intensive care unit for about three weeks
because she had severe lung issues.
She moved away after that
to an area where there isn’t the kind of air pollution she was
exposed to before hand,
and every single day she wakes up she feels like she’s on vacation.
Because of my mother —Dr. Noll @ VLCIA 19 July 2011
Regular Meeting, Valdosta-Lowndes County Industrial Authority (VLCIA),
Norman Bennett, Tom Call, Roy Copeland chairman, Mary Gooding, Jerry Jennett,
Andrea Schruijer Executive Director, J. Stephen Gupton attorney, Allan Ricketts Project Manager,
Valdosta, Lowndes County, Georgia, 19 July 2011.
Videos by John S. Quarterman for LAKE, the Lowndes Area Knowledge Exchange.
These videos are not all labeled, which is unfortunate,
since some of them reflect quite well on some things the
Industrial Authority is doing.
But after all, they have paid staff who could be taking,
labelling, and posting their own videos, and
their new executive director says she wants transparency,
so who knows? Maybe VLCIA will do this kind of thing themselves.
They meet again tonight. You could go ask them.
Irregular Meeting, Valdosta-Lowndes County Industrial Authority (VLCIA),
Norman Bennett, Roy Copeland, Tom Call, Mary Gooding, Jerry Jennett chairman,
J. Stephen Gupton attorney, Allan Ricketts Acting Executive Director,
Valdosta, Lowndes County, Georgia, 14 June 2011.
Videos by John S. Quarterman for LAKE, the Lowndes Area Knowledge Exchange.
When it comes to the proposed biomass facility and maintaining a healthy
relationship with the Georgia Department of Economic Development,
which assisted the Industrial Authority in attracting the project,
Schruijer believes staff and board members will be able to work through
the situation.
“With economic development, it can be difficult to juggle a lot of
different items,” said Schruijer. “It’s a balancing act to make sure
you have all the parties involved and educated on the situation. The
Department of Economic Development was there to help us recruit the
project and they did just what they were supposed to do. In fact, they
went above and beyond their duties by brushing over this project with a
fine tooth comb. We worked with them and they worked with us. It seemed
like a good project, and I think we’ll be able to work through this,
maintain a good relationship with them as long as we keep the avenues
for communication open.”
That sounds like Industrial-speak for they’re going to
“move on to” things that do work.
However she chooses to phrase it, it’s about time.
The Arizona Department of Corrections has given a green light to
four private, for-profit correctional management corporations for the
construction and management of an additional 5,000 state prison beds.
The American Friends Service Committee condemns this action as unnecessary
and deeply irresponsible given the state’s economic crisis and the
dismal safety records of all four of the corporations involved.
Arizona’s Auditor General estimates this expansion will cost us over
$640 million by 2017. Yet our prison population only grew by only 65
inmates in 2010.
This year, our corrections budget is over $1 billion, consuming 11%
of the state general fund. The Department of Corrections was the only
state agency whose budget saw an increase this year.
People ask me why I oppose CUEE.
It’s because I’d rather actually improve education instead.
It seems to me the burden of proof is on the people proposing
to make massive changes in the local education system.
And CUEE has not provided any evidence for their position.
Sam Allen of Friends of Valdosta City Schools (FVCS)
pithily sums up CUEE:
“It’s not about the children. It’s about somebody’s ego.”
I don’t think the children should have to suffer for somebody’s ego.
CUEE’s unification push isn’t about education.
It’s about
a “unified platform” to attract industry.
That alone is enough reason to oppose “unification”.
It’s not about education!
As former Industrial Authority Chair Jerome Tucker has been
heard to remark on numerous occassions, “nobody ever asked me how
many school systems we had!”
The only example in Georgia CUEE points to for this is the Kia
plant that came to Troup County, Georgia.
It’s funny how
none of the locals seem to have mentioned any such connection in the numerous articles published about the Kia plant.
Instead, the mayor of the town with the Kia plant complains that his town
doesn’t have a high school.
That’s right: he’s complaining that the school system is too
consolidated!
The only actual education between Kia and education in Troup County
is
with West Georgia Tech, the local technical college.
The governor of Ohio created a budget shortfall, and wants to solve it
by selling off private prisons in “a yard sale” in a recession,
like “a junkie” for “his next fix.”
“The biggest source of Ohio’s budget problem is not overspending or
compenstation for public employees. It is a reduction in revenue.
…
The tax changes also were weighted to high-income Ohioans. More than 40
percent of the income-tax cuts are going to the five percent of families
with income of $135,000 or more a year. Meanwhile, the bottom three-fifths
of Ohio families will receive just 13 percent of the total tax cut.
According to a recent poll,
the people of Ohio think this is unfair and don’t believe the governor
can fix the budget without raising taxes.
There are other reasons selling off prisons to private prison
companies such as CCA is a bad idea.
Still, Democratic lawmakers, including Representative Matt Lundy of
Elyria, question whether Ohio is making a wise move.
“The buyer wins and the taxpayers lose when we sell in the middle of
a recession,” Lundy said during press conference last month, calling
the move “a yard sale.”
Selling assets for “one-time” money is a mistake, Louisiana Treasurer
John Kennedy said. He opposed a plan by Republican Governor Bobby Jindal
to sell three prisons to raise $90 million, a proposal the Legislature
didn’t approve.
“A junkie can sell his TV or his stereo or his iPod and generate money
for his next fix,” Kennedy, also a Republican, said in a telephone
interview from Baton Rouge, Louisiana. “But if he’s going to ever
get well, he needs to face his addiction.”
An even better quote in that story comes from CCA’s own Steve Owen:
Continue reading →
On the occasion of the scheduled implementation of Arizona’s racial
profiling law, SB 1070, veterans of the civil rights movement and
representatives of social justice and faith-based community organizations
in Georgia today issued a letter to the Department of Homeland Security
Secretary Napolitano, calling on her to put an end to 287(g) and
other ICE-local police collaborations which lead to racial profiling
and separation of families, and halt the expansion of the inhumane,
profit-driven immigration detention system.
“As veterans of the civil rights movement and representatives of
social-justice and faith-based organizations in Georgia, we urge
you to take the bold steps necessary to end this unjust system that
creates divided families and improbable prisoners,” says the letter.
Signatories of the letter include: Constance Curry, a veteran of the
civil rights movement and Atlanta-based writer and activist; Edward
Dubose, President of the Georgia State Conference NAACP; Ajamu Baraka,
Executive Director of the U.S. Human Rights Network; Jerome Scott, Founder
and Board Chair of Project South; Reverend Gregory Williams, President
of Atlantans Building Leadership for Empowerment (ABLE); and many others.
The only way to stop drug lords from reaping billions from the drug trade is to end drug prohibition,
says a former leader of the drug war.
The same applies to private prison companies reaping millions.
For decades, police were convinced that total prohibition was the only
way to end America’s deadly drug wars. Now thousands of cops are not
only having second thoughts but actually taking to the streets in protest.
“I was pro-prohibition: that’s what my training was about!” says
Major Neill Franklin, Executive Director of
Law Enforcement Against Prohibition (LEAP),
who previously served for 33 years with the Maryland
State Police and the Baltimore police forces on the front line of
America’s longest running war. “Even though I grew up in Baltimore
and saw what was going on, we were taught and trained to believe that if
we push hard enough, if we lock up the people involved, then this will
eventually dissipate, or at least be reduced to a manageable level.”
He gives a long, world-weary sigh. “Of course back then I had no
clue…You just can’t tell somebody not to use and they’re gonna
stop using! As long as there are people willing to buy, and as long as
people don’t have employment, then you’re going to have an illicit
drug trade. I saw that we made these arrests—we locked up dealers and
users alike—and it might get quiet for a few days, or even a couple
of weeks, but give it time and it all starts up again.”
The War on Drugs has failed.
Like alcohol prohibition before it, it breeds more violence.
Law enforcement against it just makes it worse:
Continue reading →