Just a decade ago, private prisons were a dying industry awash in corruption and mired in lawsuits, particularly Corrections CorporationWe’d already heard from Bloomberg that Continue readingof America (CCA), the nation’s largest private prison operator. Today, these companies are booming once again, yet the lawsuits and scandals continue to pile up. Meanwhile, more and more evidence shows that compared to publicly run prisons, private jails are filthier, more violent, less accountable, and contrary to what privatization advocates peddle as truth, do not save money. In fact, more recent findings suggest that private prisons could be more costly.
So why are they still in business?
In a recently published report, “Banking on Bondage: Mass Incarceration and Private Prisons,” the American Civil Liberties Union examines the history of prison privatization and finds that private prison companies owe their continued and prosperous existence to skyrocketing immigration detention post September 11 as well as the firm hold they have gained over elected and appointed officials.
December LAKE meeting: El búho al Cazador
The owl lights in Valdosta Tuesday evening.
What: Monthly LAKE Meeting
When: 5:30 PM, Tuesday 6 December 2011
Where: El Cazador
1600 North Ashley Street
Valdosta, GA 31602
(229) 333-0554
That’s the old Margarita’s at the corner of College Street. They’re open until 10PM.
If you follow the LAKE blog, On the LAKE Front, you know what we cover, from elections to gardening, connecting the dots. What else do you want to investigate?
If you’re on Facebook, please Like the LAKE facebook page. You can sign up for the facebook meeting event, Or just come as you are.
jsq
How to read Comprehensive Plan documents
The state of Georgia requires a Comprehensive Plan and collects and approves them through the Department of Community Affairs (DCA). The current plans for all of Georgia are available at the DCA Planning Site.
The current STWP documents that are being reviewed locally are the projects
that the local governments and agencies expect to actively work on in
the next five years.
The ROA documents report on what was done in the past five years:
what was completed, or will no longer be pursued.
Many municipalities and counties file separate reports.
Locally, because there is significant cooperation among the cities and Lowndes
County there is one document with all the projects included and a place that
indicates which agency is participating in the project.
However, their input documents are filed separately, and LAKE
has collected them
on the LAKE web pages.
Also, each local municipality holds its own public hearings.
Reading the STWP and ROA can be a bit tricky but once I understood the format, the process became much easier. The overall topics are prescribed by the state and are in general categories like “Population”, “Economic Development”, “Housing” and “Land Use”. There are sub-categories in each of the ten major categories, like “Secure High-Wage Jobs” and “Address Workforce Adequacy” in the “Economic Development” major category. Then, under each of these items are one or more specific projects that will be done in the next five years to help achieve each goal.
One reason the draft STWP is complex is that it redlines projects that were performed in the previous five years and are now being removed or modified for a variety of reasons. Many projects were completed, some moved from one stage (investigate) to another (implement or market), and still others simply lacked the staff or funding resources to continue being pursued.
The ROA document is in a similar format but the focus of it is to report the status of the STWP for the previous five years. An Explanation Column gives details on the status of each previous project. For example, it says that the “Feed the Elderly Senior Citizen Nutrition Program” has been discontinued because “Budgetary constraints have limited Lowndes County’s role in this supporting action.”.
The STWP and ROA documents are meant to be read as a pair, giving the reader an understanding of where we have been, where we are going and how we are going to get there as a community.
-gretchen
A renewable energy transparency law that enabled an industry
Power utilities don’t like to reveal data about their energy sources or sales any more than Internet organizations like to reveal security problems. The key to REPS is the reporting it requires:
This is called the Renewable Energy Certificate (REC) Tracking System. It provides the data to see which utilities are providing how much of which kind of energy.“Beginning in 2009, each power supplier is required to file a compliance report, detailing the actions it has taken to fulfill the requirements of the REPS.”
According to Ivan Urlaub of the North Carolina Sustainable Energy Association (NCSEA), REC reporting enabled the solar industry in North Carolina:
Not only is North Carolina now one of the national leaders in solar energy, but 91% of NC voters want more solar power, with wind second, and everything else far behind.“The passage of the REPS law in 2007 and resulting success of the North Carolina’s clean energy market has created the rapid start-ups and expansions of clean energy businesses from installers to developers to manufacturers and the associated service sectors over the last few years.”
REC enabled not only a renewable energy industry, but also selection within that industry for what works.
How did this happen? Continue reading
Solar is coming —Michael Noll
In line with comments made by Steven Chu:I added the blockquotes and the Moore’s Law link. Seems to me physicist Sec. Chu must be looking only at the sticker price, while economist Krugman is also looking at other costs and at externalities not currently included in the sticker price, yet still costing us in other ways. Add in the costs of wars for oil and I wonder how long ago solar already became cheaper than oil….
Solar cheaper than fossil fuels in a decade, says Steven Chu, by Christopher Mims, 3 November 2011.
Solar power will be cheaper than fossil fuels at some point between the end of this decade and 2026*, said U.S. Secretary of Energy Steven Chuas well as a recent Op-Ed piece by Paul Krugman:
Here Comes Solar by Paul Krugman, 6 November 2011.
…progress in solar panels has been so dramatic and sustained that, as a blog post at Scientific American put it, “there’s now frequent talk of a ‘Moore’s law’ in solar energy,” with prices adjusted for inflation falling around 7 percent a year.
This has already led to rapid growth in solar installations, but even more change may be just around the corner. If the downward trend continues — and if anything it seems to be accelerating — we’re just a few years from the point at which electricity from solar panels becomes cheaper than electricity generated by burning coal.
And if we priced coal-fired power right, taking into account the huge health and other costs it imposes, it’s likely that we would already have passed that tipping point.
-Michael Noll
-jsq
Jerome Tucker honored at Civic Roundtable
Dawn Castro wrote for the VDT yesterday:
He also said:“We do have one of the best communities,” Tucker said. “The toughest part of me standing before you is knowing how much better we could be if all the little groups would work together.”
“I am still blessed to have my dad with me,” Tucker began. “He always asks me, ‘Where have you been?’ and ‘Did you do any good?’Here are a few good things Jerome Tucker has done recently: Continue reading
Port St. Joe biomass developer gives up
Tim Croft wrote for the Star Thursday, Developer pulls out of energy center project
What project? Down at the fourth paragraph the article finally says:Citing an inability to secure financing Rentech, Inc., the developer of the Northwest Florida Renewable Energy Center has pulled out of the project.
…a 55 megawatt energy plant to be built in Port St. Joe.The article blames the economy, but that wasn’t all that did in Continue readingThe plant, as proposed, would produce steam to drive generators to produce electricity, the fuel source woody biomass, or forest residue. Progress Energy had an agreement in place to purchase electricity from the plant.
Marijuana prohibition had nothing to do with smoking it
Kathleen Murphy wrote for the Washington Free Press 3 June 2009 about How Marijuana Became Illegal,
As the methods for processing hemp into paper and plastics were becomingAnslinger and Hearst made up whatever propaganda they thought might scare the public into supporting prohibiting hemp: Continue readingmore readily available and affordable, business leaders including William Randolph Hearst and DuPont stood to lose fortunes. They did everything in their power to have it outlawed. Luckily for Hearst, he was the owner of a chain of newspapers. DuPont’s chief financial backer Andrew Mellon (also the Secretary of the Treasury during President Hoover) was responsible for appointing Harry J. Anslinger, in 1931 as the head of the Federal Bureau of Narcotics and Dangerous Drugs.
Video playlist, GLPC 28 November 2011
Here’s a video playlist for the entire Greater Lowndes Planning Commission
(GLPC) Regular Session of 28 November 2011.
We’ve already blogged a couple of them separately:
- Don’t we still need farmers to feed us? —Gretchen Quarterman
- We’re not done working on this —Jason Davenport
Here’s the playlist:
Video playlist, GLPC 28 November 2011
Comprehensive Plan,
Regular Session, Greater Lowndes Planning Commission (GLPC),
Valdosta, Lowndes County, Georgia, 28 November 2011.
Videos by Gretchen Quarterman for LAKE, the Lowndes Area Knowledge Exchange.
-jsq
ZBOA: Zoning Board of Appeals 6 December 2011
This is a reminder that your next meeting for the Zoning Board of Appeals (ZBOA)ZBOA does not explicitly post its agendas, but the above appears to be the entire agenda for next week’s meeting.is this coming Tuesday, December 6, 2011 at 2:30pm. Attached is a copy of the meeting agenda and also the draft minutes from both the October and November meetings.
Just like the November meeting, there are again NO public hearing items for December. However, we still need to meet (& have a quorum) to approve the Minutes and also elect officers for 2012.
Here are backgrounders on Who is ZBOA? and On What Basis Does ZBOA Decide?
-jsq







is this coming Tuesday, December 6, 2011 at 2:30pm. Attached is
a copy of the meeting agenda and also the draft minutes from both the
October and November meetings.