9/28/09 Gary Richards (Mr Roadshow) - San Jose Mercury News
San Jose has some of the bumpiest roads in the nation, lined with cracks and potholes seemingly from end to end. Soon, to the relief of countless motorists, a few of the worst will be under repair.
The city will announce today the kickoff of work on 19 miles of roads as stimulus funds begin rolling into the state. Up first are major repaving efforts on streets in such bad shape that temporary fixes were long ago deemed useless and that otherwise might not have been repaired for another 10 years.
Across Northern California, plans are moving ahead to fix other rough roads. More than $2.22 billion in stimulus funds has so far been allocated to California for transportation, the highest figure for any state. But to meet Washington's demand that "shovel-ready" projects be up first, it's badly needed paving efforts that have risen to the top of the list. Paving is easier to get moving on quickly, as compared to huge construction projects.
"We will still be left to address a significant backlog of streets that are in (poor) condition," said Dale Dapp, pavement supervisor for San Jose's Department of Transportation, which got $15 million for street repairs. "But this federal funding is a welcome opportunity to address many streets that we would not have been able to do otherwise."
At the top of the list: Alma Avenue and Willow Street.
"Have you driven on them lately?" asked motorist Chris Riesenbeck. "It is more than pothole city. It's cracks, groves and gullies. Talk about bad road surfaces."
These streets will receive a pavement overlay, which will include removing two to three inches of existing pavement and replacing it with a new surface.
All the streets on San Jose's stimulus list have a pavement rating ranging from 25 to 45 on a 0-100 scale, with a rating of 100 being newly paved.
Work on the first phase covering 15 miles of roads will last into next summer; the remaining four miles will take until 2011 to finish.
While welcomed, the stimulus funds haven't gone for many major projects that will be remembered for decades, such as building the Hoover Dam during the Great Depression.
The emphasis is on projects that can be done immediately to get construction workers back on the job.
Randy Rentschler, a spokesman with the Metropolitan Transportation Commission in Oakland, said the money would go to needy — though not necessarily impressive — projects:
"When people look back at the 1930s, they see projects like courthouse, libraries, bridges and road tunnels of all sorts of very lasting value that you can look at today. This rehab work, while absolutely necessary, will not have that characteristic to it. It's deeply frustrating we have to spend this debt from our children on basic maintenance, but that is where we are."
While $50 million in stimulus money has been set aside to help rebuild Doyle Drive in San Francisco — a $1.1 billion effort to completely rebuild the 73-year-old structure — and $90 million for an extra bore in the Caldecott Tunnel, those megaprojects are the exception.
Efforts to rebuild the interchange at Interstate 880 and I-280 adjacent to the Westfield Valley Fair failed to land a single penny because work is at least a year away.
So the call went out for work that could begin quickly. Badly needed projects that have been shelved weren't considered even though with a little infusion of cash they could have moved closer to construction.
"There was this pretend concept of shovel-ready projects just waiting to go," said Dan Collen, deputy director of the Santa Clara County roads department. "Of course, if there's no money, local agencies don't bother getting projects shovel-ready because that has costs, too.
"So most local agencies just looked to their pavement management program since those projects are easier to throw together."
And the stimulus money needs to be put into perspective, said San Jose DOT deputy director Hans Larsen. The city has 2,300 miles of streets and a deferred maintenance backlog of $283 million.
"Annually we should be spending $37 million just to keep the backlog from getting worse," Larsen said. "On average, we have $17 million annually from ongoing revenue sources — leaving an annual $20 million shortfall that keeps the backlog growing."
The next step?
"Wouldn't it be nice," Collen said, "to have a Stimulus Part 2?"
I received an update from California Democratic Delegate Bob of the Silicon Valley 4 Obama regarding the Health Care Reform Conference Call held on 8/18. Here are some of feedback:
Mary: Thanked us for the great work we have done this last week at town halls all across state. We served as the soldiers of the truth in face of the misinformation being spit out by our opposition at town halls.. She noted that she has been in 3 meetings with White house staff in last two days. President Obama supports plan with Robust Public Option Period. He does not support Co-Op. What is true is in the 7 months Barack has been on the job 13 out of 13 major pieces of legislation have been put through. Barack was advised to put off the health care fight until later in his term. The President always listens to all positions. He believes this issue is on health care is to important to to wait. He needs us now to put on a full court pres to win # 14.
Mike: He talked how the process was going to go to get this bill for health care reform through. There will be moments of uncertainty where anything can go into bill or be taken out from now on. We are very early in the process. We have public option in 3 of 3 committees in House and 1 of 2 committees in Senate. The 2nd committee chaired by Mike Baucus has not voted yet and not expected to till mid September. Its up to us to make sure that public option and what we want and care for are in every bill coming out of every committee.CA has unique impact. Nancy Pelosi, George Miller, Henry Waxman, Pete Stark, Barbara Lee, Lynn Wolsey and Mike Honda all played key roles in HR 3200. In coming weeks we need to keep heat on Senator Diane Fienstien and the 7 blue dog CA congress persons.There will be some large group activities all across nation going on weekend of Sept 2. One in SF, LA, and a couple of other Metro areas in CA.
Emily: had two simple goals for CA OFA volunteers this coming week.1) Everyone write at least 1 letter to editor this week and submit to a local paper. She talked about how to write effective letters and such. She noted that CA OFA will be posting info on effective letter writing on facebook site.2) Grow our OFA California Facebook Group to 5000 by having everyone join the group themselves by becoming a fan in the group. Then invite to 10 Friends to become a fan of OFA California.
Americans' lives depend on whether we pass the right kind of health care reform. So why is NBC News airing an infomercial that will spread dangerous misinformation?
President Obama is committed to health care reform*, but some Democrats in Congress are already wavering on an extremely important provision - basically, without a public option, the health insurance industry gets to keep getting richer while Americans languish without the care they need.
We need to tell the truth about health care. But NBC is preparing to put lies on the air this Sunday.
Rick Scott is the Chairman of a group called Conservatives for Patients' Rights, and he has a history of disseminating lies and misinformation. According to the AP, Scott is "the former head of Columbia/HCA health care company who was ousted amid a fraud investigation that ultimately resulted in the firm pleading guilty to charges of overbilling." His "documentary" looks to be an extended version of videos he's been promoting over the last few weeks, which FactCheck.org characterized as "misleading" in part because they misrepresented the opinions of a doctor who actually favors the public option.
Send an e-mail to NBC News President Steve Capus today: Tell him not to air Rick Scott's shameful propaganda. The show is scheduled to air this Sunday, so please act today.
Please pass this on, far and wide. Here's the link:
http://act.credoaction.com/campaign/nbc_healthcare/?r_by=-158861-Lw1JRwx&rc=confemail
5/5/09 By Karen de Sá - San Jose Mercury News
An infusion of federal dollars from the Obama administration is expected to reduce some of the severe cuts to Santa Clara County social services that had been all but assured just weeks ago.
Painful cuts still loom. But in his spending plan for the 2010 fiscal year, the county's chief executive now proposes some new protection for emergency psychiatric care and drug and alcohol treatment. And with the vital role of public health nurses thrust suddenly into the spotlight amid the swine flu epidemic, fewer of those nurses may now be laid off.
Board of Supervisors President Liz Kniss said the federal support is unprecedented and without it, "our financial boat would barely be afloat." Supervisors will spend the coming weeks considering acting County Executive Gary Graves' plan to address an ever-burgeoning $273 million shortfall before voting on the final $3.9 billion budget in June.
By all measures, Graves' proposal is good news only in relative terms. Dramatic cuts to lifeline services for homebound elderly, the disabled and unemployed families remain the budget's driving theme despite the federal relief, which will provide $41.4 million in the upcoming fiscal year.
That money will go in part to softening the blow to the public health department, which had been planning on cutting the number of nurses by 40 out of 88. Graves now calls for reducing the work force by 32 positions, preserving some of the public health nurses who battle communicable diseases.
The county's Department of Alcohol and Drug Services will be able to save some adult outpatient and residential treatment programs that had been slated for elimination. And the hospital system's Barbara Arons Pavilion will continue providing 50 beds for acute psychiatric patients, instead of seeing the number of those beds cut in half.
Still, Graves described the county as "fatigued and struggling" after eight consecutive years of budget cuts. And he warned of "a future with little promise" amid the global economic meltdown. Noting his three-decade career, Graves said: "I can say with no hesitation that the financial circumstances facing Santa Clara County are unlike any I have seen."
And there's a good chance his proposal will be upended as soon as next month, given the economy's "extreme volatility."
County budget analysts are getting used to pencils with erasers. The size of the projected deficit here has grown 24 percent since December — and spiked again as recently as last month, when the county assessor revealed that plunging home values would cut $29 million in property taxes that were expected to fund core human services.
Meanwhile, state funding continues to be as unpredictable as ever, with vanishing resources for homeless shelters and food banks, family cash assistance programs and medical coverage for the uninsured.
But with the federal stimulus dollars, there is now some relief for the county's safety net programs that have seen client loads grow with the recession.
Directors of community agencies that rely on county funds cheered the latest budget proposal but remain worried that cuts that still loom will fill up jail cells, emergency rooms and riverbanks.
Nonetheless, "it's refreshing to have the county executive reexamine the budget," said Tim Rother, executive director of ARH Recovery Homes. "There is a glimmer of hope in an otherwise fairly dire situation."
VOTE NO No No on all propositons may 19th.
Please !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
http://ca.lwv.org/action/prop0905/flyer.pdf
Don't let the state raid the budgets/ cut services for other use!!!
ALREADY many OBAMA FEDERAL STIMULUS funds for adultS disabled are being diverted to other programs - huge cuts including to psychologists are planned !
PLEASE VOTE NO ON 1E BECAUSE THAT BILL IS THE DEFINITION OF INSANITY !
DON'T ALLOW MH SPECIFIC $ TO "DISAPPEAR" IN THE CA GENERAL FUND.!!!!!!!!!!
WARning: CA CUTTING CARE TO DISABLED ADULTS on ssi/ssp THROUGHOUT all PROGRAMS increasing disability and inability among Adults with mh and multiple disability!
Act Now To Defeat Proposition 1E
California's Special Election is less than two months away. We must act quickly and take the necessary steps to defeat Proposition 1E.
From NAMI California by Grace McAndrews, Executive Director, March 26, 2009
It's up to us to act now to defeat this harmful act.
HERE'S WHAT YOU CAN DO:
FINANCIALLY SUPPORT THE CAMPAIGN
Attached for your convenience is a Fact Sheet & Contribution Form and Endorsement Forms for Individuals and Organizations. Please be as generous as you can. We ask that you share this information with all of your contacts, including members of your affiliate, neighbors, co-workers and friends listed in your address book. Post information on your web site and in your newsletter. Write letters to your local newspaper. Hold parties to support the campaign. Do whatever else is necessary to get the word out.
GET OUT THE VOTE
Voters who are registered to vote must vote at their polling place or vote-by-mail. This is critical. People who are not registered to vote must register by the deadline and vote either at their polling place or use the vote-by-mail ballot. This is critical as well. Historically, voting is light in special elections. We believe there is a good chance that t hose who opt for the vote-by-mail ballot may very well dictate the results of the May 19th election.
Those who wish to vote-by-mail can use the application printed on their Sample Ballot which will be sent prior to the elections, or one can apply in writing to their county elections official. If choosing the latter, you will need to submit a completed application or letter to your county elections official between 29 days and 7 days before the election. You can find the telephone number and address of your county elections official by looking in the front of your telephone directory in the White Pages Government Listing section under County Offices. Look for “Elections”, Registrar of Voters”, “County Clerks”, or “Voting.” For complete “how to” information of Registering to Vote and vote-by-mail, visit the following web site: www.sos.ca.gov/elections/elections Go to Voter Reigstration, click on Vote by Mail.
Critical Downloads:
Click Here to download the Fact Sheet and Contribution Form
Click Here to download the Endorsement Forms for Individuals and Organizations
NOTE: 501©3 affiliates can participate in this process as well as donate money to the campaign. Your affiliate's non-profit status will not be affected.
Thanks for helping to defeat Proposition 1E!!
Source: NAMI California
Link: http://namialifornia.org
Dear darlene,
I have very sad news to report. Last evening we lost a great leader and Orange County legend, Richard J. O'Neill. Richard was larger than life and the Democratic Party of Orange County owes its existence and success to this great man.
For those who did not know Richard, let me tell you a little about him.
Richard graduated from Cal Poly San Luis Obispo where he met and married Donna Newman, with whom he later established the Rancho Mission Viejo Land Conservancy. After Donna died in 2002 the Conservancy was re-named in her honor.
The presidential campaign of Harry Truman was Richard's first foray into politics. He continued to work in Democratic politics, becoming a member of the Central Committee of the Democratic Party of Orange County in 1964 and serving three terms as our Chair. In 1974 he was elected Southern Chair of the California Democratic Party and became State Party Chair in 1979. For his many contributions the Democratic Party of Orange County created the Richard J. O'Neill Lifetime Achievement Award in 2007 and made him our first honoree.
In spite of his success and influence in Democratic politics, Richard considered himself primarily a restaurant owner. His flagship restaurant, El Adobe de Capistrano, was frequented by President Richard Nixon. The two Richards, Nixon and O'Neill, were quite the political odd couple when they met at El Adobe.
Richard was always there for his friends. To the end his mind was as sharp as ever. His body just failed him.
We will all miss him, his advice, and his friendship, but most of all his presence.
Services are tentatively scheduled for Monday, April 13. We will send details in a later email.
In sadness,
Updated: Database of California lay offs
as of Wednesday, March 18 2009. Click here for a current list.
Saturday Mar 21
Sunday Mar 22
Monday Apr 6
San Diego college students, Al Shams and Kaelan Housewright, have started framing a constitutional amendment initiative to replace the word "marriage" with "domestic partnership" under California state law. 3/9/09 Secretary of State Debra Bowen authorized the initiative # 09-0003 to gather 700,000 signatures by early August to get the initiative on the ballot.
Here is the San Jose Mercury news story: http://www.mercurynews.com/politics/ci_11890793?source=rss
Here is their DOMESTIC PARTNERSHIP INITIATIVE website that has an Adobe petition for you to fill out and mail in: http://www.dompar.org/
(The price of a first-class stamp will go up by 2 cents to 44 cents on May 11, 2009)
**********************************************************************
Date: March 9, 2009
Initiative No.: 09-0003
The Attorney General of California has prepared the following title and summary of the chief purpose and points of the proposed measure: SUBSTITUTES DOMESTIC PARTNERSHIP FOR MARRIAGE IN CALIFORNIA LAW. INITIATIVE CONSTITUTIONAL AMENDMENT AND STATUTE. Replaces the term “marriage” with the term “domestic partnership” throughout California law, but preserves the rights provided in marriage. Applies equally to all couples, regardless of sexual orientation. Repeals the provision in California’s Constitution that states only marriage between a man and a woman is valid or recognized in California. Summary of estimate by Legislative Analyst and Director of Finance of fiscal impact on state and local government: This measure would have an unknown fiscal effect on state and local governments. (09-0003.)
I'm looking for good news around the Bay. If you find some, please Comment and link. - Thanks; Leo
Creative Entrepreneurship in a DownturnHarvard Business Review, February 23, 2009by Martha LagaceEntrepreneurs, take heart. True, the global economic malaise removes opportunities and precious resources—but also adds them in new and interesting ways, argues HBS senior lecturer Bhaskar Chakravorti. In this Q&A he identifies reasons for optimism, and shows how entrepreneurs can think differently about bad news. Key concepts include:
Obama's plan to stem foreclosures is key to economic recoveryContra Costa TimesPosted: 02/22/2009 12:01:00 AM PST
THE OBAMA administration has launched a promising $275 billion effort to substantially slow down the rate of housing foreclosures. It is designed to keep more families in their homes by helping them and lenders with restructured mortgages and to stem the decline in housing prices
President Barack Obama correctly emphasized that using taxpayer money to stem foreclosures is not just in the interest of those who are struggling and failing to make mortgage payments.
The massive number of foreclosures and plummeting real estate values affects everyone. It is the folding of the housing market that is at the root of the current economic crisis and what makes this recession different from previous ones.
Housing plan must help the undeservingSunday, February 22, 2009, San Francisco Chronicle
President Obama's new housing plan is as elegant a solution as we're going to see to end the foreclosure crisis. That doesn't mean it's perfect.
It will help some people who don't "deserve" to be helped, just as the bank bailouts have helped Wall Street executives - none of whom deserved to be helped. But no effective solution to the economic crisis facing this country is going to feel fair to the vast majority of Americans who played by the rules. What would be even less fair would be for Americans to refuse to support this quite good solution out of spite. Stopping the cycle of foreclosures is the only thing that will slow our country's downward economic spiral.
Some residents see opportunity as gold spikes upBy Jondi Gumz, Santa Cruz SentinelPosted: 02/21/2009 01:30:26 AM PST
Some were curious, some were downsizing and some had bills to pay.
That's why they brought gold rings, lockets and necklaces to the Capitola Mall Friday to be evaluated by Gold Buyers. The company, based in Appleton, Wis., visits malls across the country offering to turn gold into cash.
As the line formed a few minutes before 10 a.m., the spot price for gold topped $1,000 an ounce in New York trading before dropping back. Analysts said investors sought a safe haven from a wild ride in the global markets.
Funding for Sacramento region road rehabilitation authorizedBy Bill Lindelof, Sacramento BeePublished: Friday, Feb. 20, 2009 - 8:23 am
Even before the federal stimulus money is in hand, the transportation board responsible for funding projects in the Sacramento region has authorized $32 million for road rehabilitation.
The Sacramento Area Council of Governments authorized release of the money Thursday for projects in Sacramento, Sutter, Yolo and Yuba counties. Transportation funds from the Economic Recovery Act first pass through the state Department of Transportation with a portion based on a formula going to SACOG.
Will Obama's mortgage plan help Silicon Valley homeowners?By Pete Carey and Sue McAllister, Mercury NewsPosted: 02/19/2009 12:25:46 AM PST
The Obama administration unveiled a three-pronged plan to stop the nationwide slide in real estate values, saying it offers potential relief for struggling homeowners and a possible shot in the arm for an ailing economy.
The package could help up to 9 million homeowners, many of whom could face foreclosure, the administration said.
But it's unclear how many in Silicon Valley will benefit since so many homeowners have big mortgages that may not qualify for one of the programs announced Wednesday.
Overall, the plan was greeted warmly by the housing industry and economists, who said it provides a way for homeowners to reduce their loan payments while helping ease the gridlock in the nation's home lending sector.
Foreclosure wave, stocks' slide sink Silicon Valley home pricesBy Sue McAllister, Mercury NewsPosted: 02/19/2009 10:50:21 AM PST
Bargain-minded buyers snapped up deals on foreclosed properties in Santa Clara County in January, even as some high-priced Silicon Valley cities saw a record-low number of sales during the same period.
The number of homes sold in the county rose by more than one-third last month compared with January 2008. But with home values still generally sliding and foreclosure properties accounting for about half of all sales, the median price fell precipitously from last year.
The median price of resale, single-family homes sold last month in the county was $420,000, down 39 percent from January 2008 and down 8 percent from December 2008, according to a report MDA DataQuick released Thursday. The last time the county's median price was lower was in February 2000, when the figure was $417,500. The median price of condos sold in January was $262,000, down 43 percent from a year earlier, and 13 percent from December.
Obama's mortgage relief not designed for high-cost areas February 19, by Broderick Perkins, Examiner
Struggling homeowners in California and other high-cost housing markets will benefit less from the Obama administration's "Homeowner Affordability and Stability Plan (HASP)" than those in lower-cost housing markets.
The $275 Billion Plan, with a planned March 4 rollout, includes a refinancing program for "responsible" borrowers who haven't missed payments and whose loans are larger than the value of their homes, and a loan modification provision with incentives for lenders to modify certain mortgages.
Many Californians and others in high cost areas may not see much immediate relief but federal aid earmarked for those areas could follow.
Questions and answers about Obama's plan to avert foreclosuresBy the Mercury NewsPosted: 02/18/2009 09:00:00 PM PST
Who will be helped? Those who may be at risk of foreclosure as well as some homeowners who are "underwater" on their loans.
What are the broad outlines of the plan? A refinancing option for those who are making payments but are paying high interest rates and would otherwise not be able to refinance, either because they do not have enough equity or because their houses are worth less than they borrowed.
Groups back remedy for Silicon Valley downturnSan Jose Business JournalTuesday, February 17, 2009
More green energy development and better job training are being called for in a report that details the sudden drop in the Silicon Valley economy last fall.
The annual Silicon Valley Index from Joint Venture: Silicon Valley Network and the Silicon Valley Community Foundation show a region that abruptly shifted from its long recovery from the tech bust at the turn of the century.
The report compiles many previously released statistics from 2008 that show three quarters of growth and a sudden downturn that began in the fourth quarter and continues this year.
Thanks for your post Arielle, good to have met you yesterday. Since you're wanting to learn the craft, a good place to start would be to talk to them what's done it. Looks like there are 20 something community gardens within 10-20 mins of west sj. I've made you a map, so you can see where they are in relation to you. Some other things I learned while browsing:
Seems that the biggest problem is finding/converting a site, which is why Larry's idea is so appealing. I think you're on the right track, trying to connect through meetup.com's list of people interested in community gardens in san jose. Maybe you can start a meetup, and invite a leader from among the local community gardens to speak.
Let us know how things work out for you. If you can blog about your adventure, that would be great.
2/16 Update - A note from Larry: "I think the next step would be to contact the Second Harvest Food Bank to get information on individuals or groups who have donated fresh produce. The Charles Street Garden folks would be next and the Village Harvest people too. The Village Harvest people have experience in working with homeowners who have allowed people to go tromping through their property to harvest fruit trees. Maybe a craigslist [garden forum?] ad asking for people who want to offer up their backyards?"
Catherine Le Ruyet graciously hosted a Economic Recovery Meeting this evening that went very well. The nine of us introduced our selves, we watched the video of DNC Chair/Governor Kaine and of President Obama speak about the Economic Recovery meetings. Our group consisted of people from all political parties and from a variety of vocations coming together to voice options and discuss ideas. The results of our meeting will be forwarded toeconrecoverymeetings@gmail.comBy meeting, sharing ideas and spearing the word to others in our communities and our families WE CAN find common middle ground and voice that we want and need bipartisan results for things to start to change. We learned that as promised there will be transparency in government spending and they can be monitored onhttp://www.recovery.gov
************* Update ***************
Questions/Suggestions/Comments1. I think that there should be an incentive to companies who outsourced jobs out like tax breaks etc. to bring jobs back to America.2. Would it be possible to fund a teacher training corp to go out to schools and educate the teachers on recent research on major health issues such as obesity, diabetes, sexually transmitted diseases, recent dietary findings etc. (many of the issues stifled by the previous administration). A similar corp could be funded to update science issues such as global climate change and stimulate interest in science and math careers. Parent volunteers could also be trained at the same time in order to extend the outreach of these programs. We have a large retired population now with expertise in various areas that can be made good use of. In our little group that met last night we had two engineers, at least one scientist, some teachers and many other obviously capable people. My husband suggests a possible tax credit for community volunteers.3. Is it be possible to keep some of our military personnel that will be coming home from assignments oversees working on jobs here at home so that they don't add to the unemployment problem. The worst thing for them to come home to is unemployment. Emotionally they will be much better off if they can earn money for their families and continue to feel like they are making a valuable contribution, perhaps even overlay some of the horrors of war with the knowledge that they are capable of making positive contributions at home. Ideally this could be accomplished without a period of insecurity and sense of abandonment.4. Removing the health care insecurity would be the single most stimulating act that the government could do. A clean across the board single payer system would allow sharp young people who feel they have to stay glued to "safe" jobs that offer health care would be freer to start their own companies, manufacture and invent things at home ( If they can be sure their children have health care.). Our auto industry and other large companies could compete more equally with companies from other countries that do not carry the burden of health care. State and local government in danger of bankruptsy would have the burden of health care off their backs, be able to retain jobs.5. Thoughts about the bill, as I understand it to be.a. The Governor was correct in his statement about need to have Jobs as the first priority.b. Looking at past history of the House and Senate, I am concerned about “PORK".
c. 800 + Billion dollars is a shockingly high figure, but it will undoubtedly take a lot to dig our way out of the hole we find ourselves in.I am pleased to hear that there will be an individual (with staff) responsible to oversee the use of these funds, I hope this includes VISIBILITY and ACCOUNTABILITY (terms that seemed foreign to the previous administration).6. All transactions should be open to public scrutiny, but to make it work, the responsible individual must have a charter that allows him (or her) to exercise a line item veto to be used when basic criteria are not being met. Such action should be based on at least two overriding criteria: How Many Jobs, how soon, and at what Cost!! There must also be an fast, easy, and visible way to make necessary changes.7. As many programs as possible should be established to provide immediate relief while other undergo the planning, engineering, and reviews necessary to assure their effective implementation.8. These requirements seem be a logical extension of President Obama’s promise to review all Government programs; and determine how well they serve the public need and how efficient and effective they are. Followed by programs to fix those that are not effective or efficient, and drop those that are unnecessary. THIS LONG OVERDUE.
9. We would like to see on your website every person behind/backing/pushing each item in your recovery plan. Transparency is key!10. Right now there is no such thing as clean coal. Who in congress is backing this? 11. Nuclear Power is NOT clean energy! We should be decreasing our usage NOT increasing it!!! The disposal of nuclear waste is extremely hazardous to people and the environment! NO NEW Nuclear Power PLANTS!!!12. What companies will have the new job openings mentioned in your plan? How can we find out the who, what, where and when?
13. I think that since the arts and sports will likely get the axe in schools that maybe people could hold community events and volunteer their music, artistic, athletic abilities to children during the weekends, after school to fill in the void.
Southbay 4 Obama Inaugural FestDate: Jan 20th
Location: Moorpark Hotel4241 Moorpark Ave. (Saratoga Ave. and HWY 280)San Jose, CA 95129Cost: $25 includes 2 well/draft drinks, appetizers, desserts and party favors Proceeds to go to the local veteran's Fisher House
*****
Update:
My husband and I attended the Southbay 4 Obama Inaugural Fest at the Moorepark Hotel last night.
Mari Houssni, team leader of San Jose/Democratic Delegate/Caravan leader to Nevada, with her San Jose team were the hostesses of the party (She is pictured with her husband, Abdel). Mari's group got everyone fired up and ready to go with Obama raffle items, Obama posters and buttons for sale.
There was about 250 people there. Galen Swain, team leader of San Jose/Caravan leader to Nevada, was getting everyone fired up with his DJ system, Elaine Coombs and Martin O'Leary from West Valley 4 Obama were there. John's co-worker, Malcom and his wife were there.
John's Oklahoma (RED Republican state) customers Mandi and Josh were there. They voted for Obama and thought that since they were traveling on business that they would miss celebrating Obama's presidency. They were very happy to hear that we were selling tickets to an Inaugural party. They had a good time and even took a photo with the Obama cut-out.
There was Obama Karaoke, a photo slideshow of the voter registration drives, canvassing, caravans to the swing states during the Primaries and the General election. The Ethical Approach Car Sales featured it's Zap Electric Vehicle and people could take it for a test drive!
People ate, drank, danced to music and took their photos with the Barack cut-out. We watched as the Obamas had their first offcial presidential dance together. FINALLY we have President Barack Obama!!!!!
Pat Gallagher has three more pages of pictures! Scroll ALL the way down (past the ads) to see all 48 pics:
http://forums.delphiforums.com/AmericaRocks/messages?msg=2956.1
The 'Obama Way': Seven steps to success
What his distinctive approach reveals about his possible administration
ANALYSIS By Howard Fineman msnbc.com updated 2 hours, 45 minutes ago NEW YORK
I was sitting in David Plouffe’s spartan office at Barack Obama’s campaign headquarters in Chicago. This horserace has been an interesting one, but that’s not what I wanted to talk about. Instead, I asked the campaign manager about decision-making.
A lot of the campaign's choices have been better than good. Cautious politically and bold organizationally, the decisions made amount to the best planned, executed and essentially mistake-free political effort I’ve ever covered. So, I paid close attention when Plouffe told me there was an “Obama Way.”It sounded vaguely mystical, but if there is one thing we need to know to help assess an Obama presidency, this could be it.
Having said that, you have to be cautious about seeing a White House foreshadowed in a candidate’s campaign. Take for example George W. Bush. Some characteristics of his presidency — loyalty, insularity and reliance on a small core of advisors — could be noted in his 2000 effort. But unlike his presidency, that campaign proved adaptable to changing circumstances and more attuned to realities on the ground. The differences proved catastrophic.
Obama’s campaign has been so distinctive, disciplined and cutting edge that it’s nearly impossible not to look at it for clues as to what his White House would be like. Businessmen and politicians will reverently study the campaign for years to come as a model of innovative branding and an example for digital sales strategies. Politically, Obama’s ability to finesse tough issues — to anticipate criticism and play off of it — is a model of tactical skill. In terms of public character, his vaunted coolness is state-of-the-art.
Altogether, this strategy is seven-pronged — and it's a veritable play book for political success:
Be decisive: This is what Plouffe meant by the “Obama Way.” “Everybody speaks his or her mind,” he told me, “and then Barack makes the decision. After that, there is absolutely no second-guessing or looking back.” The trick is to stick with it. Outside the campaign there was considerable hand-wringing a few months ago about the wisdom of pursuing an “expanded map” Electoral College strategy. Obama didn’t budge. “It’s better to have one strategy and stick to it,” Plouffe told me, “than to try ten in pursuit of the perfect answer. The point is that there is no perfect answer.”
Have a tight circle: Obama has a very small circle, although it’s not the circle of one (Karl Rove) that Bush had. Obama’s core group consists of four people besides the candidate himself: the “two Davids,” Plouffe and David Axelrod, the reporter-turned-consultant and the keeper of the Obama message and the mythology; Valerie B. Jarrett, a Chicago lawyer, fundraiser, and former city hall official; and Obama’s wife, Michelle. “It’s the two Davids and those two women,” said a top party official. The result is an ability to keep a secret. The choice of Sen. Joe Biden for Obama's running mate, for example, wasn’t leaked to the press.
Stick with the plan: Obama's game plan was devised by that inner circle, plus maybe a ring or two beyond it, and has been in place since the moment Obama announced his candidacy in 2007. It’s remained mostly intact. The plan was carefully back-timed with the general election in mind. Except for his commitment to a specific timetable for withdrawal of American combat forces from Iraq, the overall platform has remained substantively centrist in tone and content. I’ve never seen another campaign so willing and able to stick to the script.
Sweat the details: Planning strategy is one thing, but executing it with almost obsessive precision is another. All winning campaigns must be able to do that, even ones that have benefitted, like Obama’s, from historical trends, including Bush’s travail and a near-collapse of the Republican Party. But the Obama campaign has not missed a single detail — including, as a recent example, an unprecedented effort to win one stray Electoral College vote in Nebraska.
Understand your brand: Obama lacks a background in business, but you could never tell by looking at his campaign. It has adapted and improved upon key techniques of modern, international marketing. One of them is branding through iconography. His campaign is literally centered on a symbol. The Obama camp created that road-meets-the-rising-sun logo two years ago. And that’s just one part of a larger focus on visual sales.
Remember the stage for his speech at the Democratic National Convention? The vast set, covered in faux Greek columns and video monitors, was designed to embody the idea of a mass movement or a crusade for change. And at a recent rally in Cleveland, the entire Obama family wore matching outfits, representing a united familial front by smiling and rocking out with Bruce Springsteen to “The Rising.”
Go digital: Obama’s campaign devotion to semiotics is matched by and married to an innovative, envelope-pushing use of web-based and digital communications. One example, demonstrated to me by Chris Stern of Bloomberg: an Obama applet for the iPhone, developed by a supporter in London. Among other things, it organizes all contacts according to key swing states, allows users to distinguish friends as Obama supporters, and lists (for those with GPS-enabled phones) local Obama meetings and events (complete with maps and directions). The campaign’s texting efforts are perhaps better known. Enticed by contests, supporters sent in their phone numbers at major rallies. Electronic participation continued and hit new highs in August when the Obama camp promised to reveal their veep choice first via e-mail and text message.
Use caution: Speaking of vice presidential selections, Obama’s selection of Biden speaks volumes. Given the range of choice, Obama made the safest pick — and one that he had reason to believe would yield a specific, tangible benefit: help in Pennsylvania (specifically, northeast, where Democratic turnout is essential).
So what's the bottom line? Pretty simple. If past is prologue, Obama and his circle are already very hard at work — and very far along — planning the details of his presidency. The game plan will be comprehensive, detailed, clever and cautious. That's good news, whether you’re for him or not. As Plouffe says, it's always better to have a plan. It's the Obama Way.