New Posts

Feb 8, 2016

Top 400 Taxpayers See Tax Rates Rise, But There’s More to the Story

As Americans were gathering party supplies to greet the New Year, the Internal Revenue Service released their annual report of cumulative tax data reported on the 400 tax r...

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Feb 4, 2016

Chlorine Bleach Plants Needlessly Endanger 63 Million Americans

Chlorine bleach plants across the U.S. put millions of Americans in danger of a chlorine gas release, a substance so toxic it has been used as a chemical weapon. Greenpeace’s new repo...

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Jan 25, 2016

U.S. Industrial Facilities Reported Fewer Toxic Releases in 2014

The Toxics Release Inventory (TRI) data for 2014 is now available. The good news: total toxic releases by reporting facilities decreased by nearly six percent from 2013 levels. Howe...

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Jan 22, 2016

Methane Causes Climate Change. Here's How the President Plans to Cut Emissions by 40-45 Percent.

  UPDATE (Jan. 22, 2016): Today, the Bureau of Land Management (BLM) released its proposed rule to reduce methane emissions...

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Blackwater Shows That The Market Works!

In the Guardian, Greg Anrig has a comprehensive look at rightist ideology and how its been neither efficient nor effective in practice.

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Jackson: Stretching the Truth at HUD

Secretary of Housing and Urban Development Alphonso Jackson was back in the news this week, and the story wasn't good. Here's an passage from the AP artice: WASHINGTON - During an investigation of his conduct last year, President Bush's housing secretary defiantly defended his dealings with federal contractors doing business with the department. Alphonso Jackson survived that investigation, but now faces a new one stemming from the same forceful style that got him in trouble the first time. The FBI and the department's internal watchdog are examining Jackson's ties to a friend who was paid at least $392,000 in federal money after Jackson passed along the man's name for a job as post-Katrina construction manager at the Housing Authority of New Orleans. Saying Jackson "survived" the last investigation is putting it lightly. The internal HUD investigation by the Inspector General's office (the report of which has not been made public according to the AP) found that Jackson lied about his dealings with contractors, boasting inaccurately that he canceled a contract to one contractor after they expressed views different from President Bush. In fact, Jackson freely admitted he had lied about canceling the contract. Yet later in the IG's report, Jackson claimed not to have interfered with a grant for $4 million to Abt Associates, despite his staff testifying that he did. Apparently Jackson didn't like that Abt Associates associates only gave money to Democrats. The report conclude the award was "blocked for a significant period of time due to Jackson's involvement and opposition." Jackson said he never held it up. I suppose we're just supposed to believe him this time, despite evidence to the contrary and his track record for stretching the truth.

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Government Is...Good?

A cool new site called governmentisgood.com. Next time that uncle you and everyone else has goes off about "big government," tell him to visit it.

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Latest Analyses from OMB Watch

Every two weeks, in OMB Watch's e-newsletter The Watcher, we analyze a few recent issues in regulatory policy. Here are the articles from the October 23 issue: While Feds Dither, States Move to Regulate Greenhouse Gases Kansas has rejected an air permit for proposed power plants due to the threat of the resulting greenhouse gas emissions. The decision makes Kansas the latest state to take proactive steps to stem greenhouse gas emissions while federal agencies and Congress delay action. Read more... Bush Administration Tries to Reverse Old-Growth Forest Protection Plan

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Conflabbin' Gov'mint!

The federal government wastes a tremendous amount of money. I'm talking hundreds of billions of dollars every year. But no, it's not on mob-infested unions, lazy bureaucrats or degenerate poor people. Most of it is spent on everyday people. For more, check out this testimony by CBO director Peter Orszag on performance budgeting for Medicare, Medicaid, and tax expenditures- the biggest money wasters of them all.

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Supercaptialism

Via, Lawrence Lessig, Robert Reich's new book, Supercapitalism, makes a point regarding the place of corporations in civil society well worth highlighting: This is a critically important point for people to get -- and one that many good thinking souls don't yet agree with. [...] Corporations are not more efficient governments. They are instead increasingly efficient money making machines. And while there's nothing at all wrong with money making machines -- indeed, wealth and growth depends upon them -- there is something fundamentally wrong with trusting these machines to restrain the drive for profits in the name of doing the right thing. Lessig's whole post is worth a read. However, below the fold is a fuller excerpt from his review.

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Report Finds Extensive Noncompliance with Clean Water Act Rules

A new report has found thousands of facilities are out of compliance with the requirements of the Clean Water Act. The report blames declining support for environmental enforcement during the Bush administration as a major cause of the regulatory violations. The U.S. Public Interest Research Group (U.S. PIRG), a nonprofit organization working on environmental policy and public outreach, published the report titled Troubled Waters: An Analysis of 2005 Clean Water Act Compliance.

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Allard PART Amendment Hammered By Senate

The Allard amendment that would automatically cut programs in the Labor-HHS appropriations bill should OMB hand down an "ineffective" PART rating was hammered back by the Senate this evening by a vote of 68-21. Thanks to everyone who contacted Senators to urge them to vote against this dangerous policy.

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Was It Bush or Conservatism?

Michael Tomasky asks a vital question in The Guardian: That is, Americans have now experienced a conservative government failing them. But what lesson will they take? That conservatism itself is exhausted and without answers to the problems that confront American and the world today? Or will they conclude that the problem hasn't been conservatism per se, just Bush, and that a conservatism that is competent and comparatively honest will suit them just fine?

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Vote No on Sen. Allard's PART Amendment

The Senate is debating the Labor-HHS-Education appropriations bill today (and probably tomorrow), and Sen. Wayne Allard has introduced a disturbing amendment that would automatically cut the budget of any program that was given an "ineffective" PART rating by the Office of Management and Budget. Under Allard's amendment, any program that is listed as "ineffective" under the PART would be automatically cut by 10 percent, with the amount cut used to pay down the national debt. To see which programs would be cut, see this list of "ineffective" programs on the ExpectMore.gov website: programs rated ineffective. The list includes Even Start, the Perkins loan program, vocational education grants, Upward Bound, the Workforce Investment Act programs for Migrant and Seasonal Farmworkers and Youth, the Substance Abuse Prevention and Treatment Block Grant, and the Healthy Community Access program, among others. But there is a larger issue at play here than where you come down on these programs or the PART itself (and you should come down against it). Congress is granted the authority to appropriate public funds under the Constitution, not the executive branch. Enacting this amendment would transfer that authority to the executive branch, and more specifically to a number of unelected public employees whose sole job is to carry out the policy preferences of the president. Why would any Senator want to vote to give him or herself less power? What's more, imagine the degree or manipulation of future PART scores for programs covered under this bill if this administration (or any future one) knew a rating of "ineffective" would bring an automatic 10 percent cut. Something tells me we would start to see a whole lot more "ineffective" ratings for programs in the Departments of Education, Labor, and Health and Human Services. A vote on the amendment is likely later today or tomorrow morning. Please take 5 minutes to call your Senators offices to tell them to vote no on the Allard amendment to the Labor-HHS-Education bill.

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Resources & Research

Living in the Shadow of Danger: Poverty, Race, and Unequal Chemical Facility Hazards

People of color and people living in poverty, especially poor children of color, are significantly more likely...

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A Tale of Two Retirements: One for CEOs and One for the Rest of Us

The 100 largest CEO retirement funds are worth a combined $4.9 billion, equal to the entire retirement account savings of 41 percent of American fam...

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