WHAT WE STAND FOR

BUSINESS

  • OBAMA STUFF
    The Cleveland County democratic Party has gone to the expense of having Some Obama sings printed up. They also have Bumper Stickers and Campaign Buttons. If you or any one you know would like to purchase one or more of these Items. Please contact David Perry Chair or leave a message at the Cleveland County HQ. Number is 405-447-3366. There are 2 styles of the signs. Signs--- $ 5.00 ea Bumper stickers---- $ 2.00 ea Buttons-- $ 1.00 ea. David did mention that he would possibly make a deal if signs were ordered by quantity. So if you are needing 1 or 25 or more please call. A reminder these signs would cost 8.00 dollars if you ordered them on line. I will see if David can send me a copy of the two signs so you will know what they look like. Thanks Troy green Chair CD 4
  • LL JAMES Union Printing
    405-780-9224 lljames@sbcglobal.net

O-Manland

« July 2006 | Main | September 2006 »

August 2006

SENIOR MOMENT - FAMILY FARMING

For over ten years there has been much made about estate taxes and how bad they needed to be repealed to save the familiy farms from being broken up. For the past several years we have been experiencing the worst drought conditions since 1932. There seems to be no place to turn to save a lot of family farms. Bankruptcy faces many of our farmers. When they start filing next winter, they face an unsympatetic and strict new code. The code includes having to go to meetings where they will be lectured on how they should have been better managers of their money and that they should budget their money better. The only problem is that there is no money to budget or manage.

Later, there will be no farm to claim estate tax exemptions on if some kind of assistance is available NOW. No bill in Congress assigned to committee is of help. No annoucement of future action is of any assistance. Help is needed NOW.

If action is not taken NOW there will be no family farm. I would think that a family farmer, and his heirs, would trade the estate tax exemption for some effective relief NOW.

SENIOR MOMENT - Sons

I am, in normal circumstances, by background and experience, a law and order sort of guy. We do something that we shouldn't, then we should have some kind of penalty apply or be put away for awhile so you don't harm other people or their property; 

I also understand:

  • that you cannot let felons out of custody everytime there is some event that is a milestone in the lives of those in his/her family
  • incarceration should be equally applied to all people.
  • that political considerations of being soft on crime come into play in election year
  • that some people, because of personality or behavior, should not be allowed amoung crowds of law abiding citizens

but, for just one time, couldn't a man be in the stadium to see his son play football?

NORMAN TRANSCRIPT - FORMER GOVERNORS HAVE LITTLE SUCCESS IN ELECTING FRIENDS AND FAMILY

Link: The Norman Transcript - Former governors have little success in electing friends, family.

This apply to Congressman coaching and sponsoring Oklahama House Candidates?

VOA NEWS - BARACK OBAMA CITES CORRUPTION AS GREATEST THREAT TO KENYA'S FUTURE

Link: VOA News - Barack Obama Cites Corruption as Greatest Threat to Kenya's Future.

HELP JARI ASKINS SEPTEMBER 2ND

Jariaskins_1

OU Football vs. UAB, Norman: Those interested in volunteering can meet Yancy York at the corner of Lindsey and Asp in Norman at 3:00 on Saturday. We’re trying to get the word out about Jari to the largest crowds possible, and it doesn’t get much bigger than gameday in Norman ! If you've already bought tickets, don't worry--this is a strictly pregame event, so you'll still be able to cheer on the Sooners!

OSU Football vs. Missouri State , Stillwater : Meet Grant Wilson at the Architecture Building on Athletic Avenue on the OSU Campus at 3:30. We need 20-25 volunteers to cover all the gates, and to hand out stickers and information. If you're also attending the game, you will be able to catch kickoff AND help out, so don't let that stop you!

Also, there are parades in both Tahlequah and Elk City on Saturday--if you are in the surrounding area and would like to help, please call our campaign office for more details: 606-3960

Contact Jari's office: 606-3960

Friends for Jari

416 SW 79th Ave.

Suite 203

Oklahoma City , Oklahoma 73139

jariaskins2006@gmail.com

DEVALUING LABOR

Devaluing Labor

 

Labor Day is almost upon us, and like some of my fellow graybeards, I can, if I concentrate, actually remember what it was that this holiday once celebrated. Something about America being the land of broadly shared prosperity. Something about America being the first nation in human history that had a middle-class majority, where parents had every reason to think their children would fare even better than they had.

The young may be understandably incredulous, but the Great Compression, as economists call it, was the single most important social fact in our country in the decades after World War II. From 1947 through 1973, American productivity rose by a whopping 104 percent, and median family income rose by the very same 104 percent. More Americans bought homes and new cars and sent their kids to college than ever before. In ways more difficult to quantify, the mass prosperity fostered a generosity of spirit: The civil rights revolution and the Marshall Plan both emanated from an America in which most people were imbued with a sense of economic security.

» Harold Meyerson Devaluing labor is the very essence of our economy during the age of the Great Upward Redistribution. Happy Labor Day.
OPINIONS SECTION: Toles, Editorials, More

That America is as dead as the dodo. Ours is the age of the Great Upward Redistribution. The median hourly wage for Americans has declined by 2 percent since 2003, though productivity has been rising handsomely. Last year, according to figures released just yesterday by the Census Bureau, wages for men declined by 1.8 percent and for women by 1.3 percent.

As a remarkable story by Steven Greenhouse and David Leonhardt in Monday's New York Times makes abundantly clear, wages and salaries now make up the lowest share of gross domestic product since 1947, when the government began measuring such things. Corporate profits, by contrast, have risen to their highest share of the GDP since the mid-'60s -- a gain that has come chiefly at the expense of American workers.

Don't take my word for it. According to a report by Goldman Sachs economists, "the most important contributor to higher profit margins over the past five years has been a decline in labor's share of national income."

As the Times story notes, the share of GDP going to profits is also at near-record highs in Western Europe and Japan.

Clearly, globalization has weakened the power of workers and begun to erode the egalitarian policies of the New Deal and social democracy that characterized the advanced industrial world in the second half of the 20th century.

For those who profit from this redistribution, there's something comforting in being able to attribute this shift to the vast, impersonal forces of globalization. The stagnant incomes of most Americans can be depicted as the inevitable outcome of events over which we have no control, like the shifting of tectonic plates.

Problem is, the declining power of the American workforce antedates the integration of China and India into the global labor pool by several decades. Since 1973 productivity gains have outpaced median family income by 3 to 1. Clearly, the war of American employers on unions, which began around that time, is also substantially responsible for the decoupling of increased corporate revenue from employees' paychecks.

But finger a corporation for exploiting its workers and you're trafficking in class warfare. Of late a number of my fellow pundits have charged that Democratic politicians concerned about the further expansion of Wal-Mart are simply pandering to unions. Wal-Mart offers low prices and jobs to economically depressed communities, they argue. What's wrong with that?

Were that all that Wal-Mart did, of course, the answer would be "nothing." But as business writer Barry Lynn demonstrated in a brilliant essay in the July issue of Harper's, Wal-Mart also exploits its position as the biggest retailer in human history -- 20 percent of all retail transactions in the United States take place at Wal-Marts, Lynn wrote -- to drive down wages and benefits all across the economy. The living standards of supermarket workers have been diminished in the process, but Wal-Mart's reach extends into manufacturing and shipping as well. Thousands of workers have been let go at Kraft, Lynn shows, due to the economies that Wal-Mart forced on the company. Of Wal-Mart's 10 top suppliers in 1994, four have filed bankruptcies.

For the bottom 90 percent of the American workforce, work just doesn't pay, or provide security, as it used to.

Devaluing labor is the very essence of our economy. I know that airlines are a particularly embattled industry, but my eye was recently caught by a story on Mesaba Airlines, an affiliate of Northwest, where the starting annual salary for pilots is $21,000 a year, and where the company is seeking a pay cut of 19 percent. Maybe Mesaba's plan is to have its pilots hit up passengers for tips.

Labor Day is almost upon us. What a joke.

meyersonh@washpost.com

Wednesday, August 30, 2006; Page A19

YOUR PRESIDENT AT WORK

"President Bush plays a guitar presented to him by Country Singer Mark Wills, right, backstage following his visit to Naval Base Coronado, Tuesday, Aug. 30, 2005." (AP Photo/ABC News)

Democratic National Committee

WASHINGTON, Aug. 30 /U.S. Newswire/ -- The following release was issued today by the Democratic National Committee:

A year ago today, despite warnings by New Orleans Mayor Ray Nagin about the severity of Hurricane Katrina and with images of chaos erupting in the streets and the worsening conditions in New Orleans filling the nation's television sets, President Bush chose instead to focus on his PR campaign to turn around lagging public support for the war in Iraq. Instead of returning to Washington to deal with the Katrina disaster, Bush decided to end his month-long vacation by playing guitar with country singer Mark Wills during a trip to California. The Bush Administration's inaction and incompetence in the days leading up to and following Katrina mirror the failed policies that the White House still clings to today. A year has passed and the White House is permanently committed to a disastrous policy in Iraq and has not fulfilled its promises to the people of the Gulf Coast to rebuild their communities and help them get back on their feet.

"President Bush's continued incompetence and the lack of progress in Iraq and the Gulf Coast are just two more examples of his failed leadership," said Democratic National Committee Press Secretary Stacie Paxton. "A year later, it is clear that the Bush White House continues to be more concerned with politics and PR campaigns than with governing and getting the job done. Democrats remain committed to a new direction for America's foreign policy that is tough and smart and a new direction in the Gulf Coast that honors our commitments."

Tuesday, August 30, 2005

One Year Ago, Bush Continued His PR Campaign On Iraq... Bush Continued PR Tour To Turn Around Lagging Support For Iraq At 12pm ET In Coronado, CA. "Concluding a monthlong vacation marked by antiwar protests outside his Texas home and a rising death toll in Iraq, President Bush on Tuesday invoked the anniversary of the Japanese surrender in World War II and the postwar rebirth of that country as a parallel to present-day U.S. efforts in the Middle East. Bush spoke against the dramatic backdrop of the Ronald Reagan, a 1,092-foot, nuclear-powered aircraft carrier docked at North Island Naval Air Station. The picturesque setting, enthusiastic crowd and historical references contrasted sharply with the political realities facing Bush as he returns today to Washington, where some lawmakers have begun comparing Iraq to Vietnam, a war with far more negative connotations than the Allied victory over Japan and Nazi Germany. Bush's speech Tuesday marked the latest of his several recent efforts to turn around public opinion on the war" (Los Angeles Times, 8/31/05; MSNBC, 8/30/05)

Meanwhile...

Looting And Chaos Take Over In New Orleans. "Law enforcement efforts to contain the emergency left by Katrina slipped into chaos in parts of New Orleans Tuesday -- with some police officers and firefighters even joining looters in picking stores clean.At the Wal-Mart on Tchoupitoulas Street, an initial effort to hand out provisions to stranded citizens quickly disintegrated into mass looting. Authorities at the scene said bedlam erupted after the giveaway was announced over the radio. 'We don't have enough cops to stop it,' an officer said. 'A mass riot would break out if you tried.'" (New Orleans Times Picayune, 8/31/05)

Mayor Of New Orleans Warned Flood Waters Will Continue To Rise Rapidly. The catastrophic flooding that filled the bowl that is New Orleans on Monday and Tuesday will only get worse over the next few days because rainfall from Hurricane Katrina continues to flow into Lake Pontchartrain from north shore rivers and streams, and east winds and a 17.5-foot storm crest on the Pearl River block the outflow water through the Rigolets and Chef Menteur Pass..New Orleans Mayor Ray Nagin warned Tuesday evening that an attempt to plug the holes in the 17th Street Canal had failed, and the floodwaters were expected to continue to rise rapidly throughout the night. Eventually, Nagin said, the water could reach as high as 3 feet above sea level, meaning it could rise to 12 to 15 feet high in some parts of the city." (New Orleans Times Picayune, 8/31/05)

Paid for and authorized by the Democratic National Committee, http://www.democratsorg. This communication is not authorized by any candidate or candidate's committee.

JIM IN HOTWATER BLOG

Yesterday the US Census Bureau report revealed a grim picture for Oklahomans – a jump in the poverty rate, and one of the highest percentages of uninsured people in the nation.  According to the Tulsa World, roughly 50,000 people in Oklahoma have fallen into poverty just in the last two years and one fifth of the population has no health insurance.  Despite this bleak outlook, Jim Inhofe, the senior senator from Oklahoma , continues to work for his corporate donors rather than his constituents, passing tax cuts for the wealthy while refusing to fund economic and health programs that benefit the average worker. 

Even as 457,000 Oklahomans live in poverty, Inhofe repeatedly refuses to raise the minimum wage, further exacerbating the problem. (Senate Roll Call Vote 179, 6/21/06; Senate Roll Call Vote 257, 10/19/05; Senate Roll Call Vote 26, 3/7/05)  In the past year alone, Inhofe has consistently voted against increasing or maintaining funding for the Community Development Block Grant Program, including one vote that would have eliminated certain tax breaks for top earners in America . (Senate Roll Call Vote 43, 3/15/06; Senate Roll Call Vote 348, 11/18/05; Senate Roll Call Vote 246, 9/30/05)  This federal program provides money to states for community development programs such as expanding economic opportunities for low income earners and providing decent housing. (US Department of Housing and Urban Development)

Jim Inhofe seems unaffected by the fact that the Oklahoma poverty rate has now surpassed the national rate, or that as the national median income rose, the Oklahoma median fell.  No, he’s more interested in helping out his rich friends that keep him in office.  Inhofe voted to permanently repeal the estate tax, which only benefits a small number of the nation’s top earners. (Senate Roll Call Vote 164, 6/8/06)  He also supported an extension of the dividends and capital gains tax cuts for the benefit of the  wealthiest Americans. (Senate Roll Call Vote 17, 2/14/06)

The Census report also showed that Oklahoma has the 4th highest number of residents without health insurance, behind only Florida , Texas , and New Mexico .  In Oklahoma , one in five are uninsured.  Yet Jim Inhofe has done nothing to ease this situation, on the contrary, he has made it worse.  Inhofe voted to extend the dividends and capital gains tax cuts for the rich over funding the State Children’s Health Insurance Program. (Senate Roll Call Vote 337, 11/17/05)  He also voted against increased funding for the military health care program, TRICARE, spending that would have been offset by eliminating certain tax breaks for the wealthy. (Senate Roll Call Vote 67, 3/17/06)

Perhaps worst of all, -   Inhofe was one of only two senators to oppose the Labor-HHS-Education Appropriations bill, which among other things, provides funding for certain Medicaid and Medicare programs, and for Social Security. (Senate Roll Call Vote 281, 10/27/05) 

This isn’t what Oklahomans deserve, a Senator who’s too busy calling environmental activists Nazis, holding up important security bills, and grossly mischaracterizing the situation in Iraq to respond to the needs of those he is most responsible for.  Inhofe’s record speaks for itself.  If you can cough up the money, he’ll do whatever you ask.  If not, you’re on your own…

Tori Wender

Senate Majority Project

202-204-9054

twender@senatemajority.com

www.senatemajority.com

EDITOR'S NOTE I wondered what the Hot Water tag had to do with the blog ...until I connected Hot Water with Inhofe.  Get it?

ENERGIZER BUNNY IN HOT WATER

http://jiminhotwater.blogspot.com/2006/08/jim-inhofes-back-to-school-lesson-dont.html

Click on this web address and it will take you to the article. Looks like good stuff. Will let you know when the next one is ready.

MEDICARE ADS PAID BY DRUG INDUSTRY

Link: Medicare ads paid by drug industry - Yahoo! News.

Reminds me several years ago when they ran ads for Congressman Lookinggood praising him to hight heaven for his marvelous work on Part D perscription drugs. Art Linkletter could not find enough words to describe what a good deal it was.

SENATE REVIEW by Senator Randy Bass

Bass_photo_3 In 2005,166 Oklahomans lost their lives in car wrecks in which alcohol or drugs were a factor. Another 4,066 people were injured. The largest percentage of these accidents involved drivers between the ages of 21 to 25. The next largest percentage is drivers between the ages of 16 to 20.

This past week, the State Attorney General kicked off a public-awareness campaign to try to keep alcohol out of the hands of those who are too young to drink. The AG pointed to a study that said 65 percent of the time, minors are getting alcohol from family and friends.

Maybe it's an older brother or sister or even a parent. It could be a friend who is just old enough to legally purchase alcohol. But the bottom line is, not only is it irresponsible to give alcohol to anyone younger than 21—it's also illegal.

While the Attorney General announced they were trying to raise awareness about this problem, the Oklahoma Highway Patrol also announced the start of a national program to discourage people from drinking and driving. As part of the "Over the Limit, Under Arrest? program which runs through September 4, troopers will be setting up check points and increasing patrols.

The timing for this is two-fold. Labor Day is coming up and for many people, it is a last chance to go to the lake or have summer parties, and often these celebrations involve alcohol. It's also the end of summer break for college and high school students and often those kids want to celebrate with alcohol. Whether you are a minor or an adult—it is illegal to drink and drive and the consequences can literally destroy lives.

This past session, we approved legislation to crack down on underage drinking and driving, and on those who enable it. But the best thing anyone can do is ensure they aren't a part of the problem to begin with. It's pretty simple. Don't drink and drive, and don't ever give alcohol taminors. If you do, one way or another, you'll probably end up paying a heavy price.

As always if you have a question about a legislative matter, please do not hesitate to contact my office at (405) 521-5567 or by email at bass@,oksenate. gov.

SENIOR MOMENT

HE THAT SLINGS MUD SHALL SURELY LOSE GROUND

INHOF IN HOTWATER

The Cheese Stands Alone: Jim Inhofe's Donors Turn on Him; Oil Execs Agree to Reduce Greenhouse Gas Emissions

It’s a good day for believers of catastrophic global warming, or those with any logic whatsoever, and a bad day for Sen. Jim Inhofe…

After years of fighting off any and all efforts to limit greenhouse gas emissions, energy companies are finally starting to come around, according to today’s San Francisco Chronicle. As the article notes, “with growing public anxiety about climate change, major corporations are increasingly preparing for – and, in some cases, lobbying for – Congress to regulate emissions of heat-trapping gases.”

"The scientific evidence is real," said Betsy Moler, vice president for government and environmental affairs at Exelon Corp. of Chicago , an energy firm that supports a mandatory cap on carbon dioxide emissions. "When you have the likes of Sen. Ted Stevens of Alaska , a conservative Republican, and he says he has seen the changes in his lifetime in the Arctic , there is just no doubt that something has to happen."

This is a huge turn-around from an industry that traditionally supported the Bush administration and other allies (Jim Inhofe) in their staunch opposition to limits on carbon dioxide. You know it’s serious when the nation’s largest emitters of greenhouse gases join the effort to reduce their presence in the atmosphere.

The Boston Globe also noted this morning that “the movement to tackle climate change is finally growing large in this country, and at least part of it is beginning to get a little more outspoken.” And just a few days ago, as mentioned in the previous post, a new Zogby poll showed that nearly three out of four Americans are more convinced that global warming is in fact a reality than they were two years ago.

Yet, despite the overwhelming evidence that Americans want at least some progress on this issue, it has had no effect whatsoever on our favorite environment-hater Sen. James Inhofe. Yesterday, in a speech to Norman , OK businesses and government leaders, Inhofe hated on, well, everyone, but saved his best, as always, for global warming. Inhofe began with an assault on the Kyoto Treaty, a UN agreement that mandates cutbacks in emissions of greenhouse gases, arguing that it would lead to worldwide governance. He also added this gem: “Since 1999, science has refuted the concept” that greenhouse gases are causing global warming.

Really Senator? That’s probably why the leading industries that actually benefit from releasing these gases are agreeing to cap them, in an effort to reduce the effects of global warming. In fact, one of Inhofe’s top campaign contributors, BP, has been the industry leader in this effort, cutting its carbon emissions by 10 percent, according to the Chronicle article.

Will Inhofe call them Nazi propagandists too or is their money more important to him than that?

YOUNG PROFESSIONAL DEMOCRATS MEET

Young Professional Democrats Meet

A Message from Kathy North, Young Professional Democrats:

The next Young Professionals meeting will be on Thursday, September 14th from 5:30 to 6:30 at the ODP (41st and Lincoln), then at Cock O’ the Walk.  This meeting we will elect our officers which will be Chair, Co-Chair, Secretary and Treasurer.  If you are interested in running for one of these positions please notify me by Tuesday, September 12th so I can let everyone know who is running for what a day ahead of time.

Hope to see everyone there!

Kathy

596-3291


INDN Message - Submitted by Tim Mauldin, Phd.

Message from President Kalyn Free

The Indigenous Democratic Network (INDN)

INDN’s List Candidate John Sparks Wins Runoff

Completing OK Sweep

John Sparks, a member of the Cherokee Nation, won his bid yesterday for the Democratic nomination in the state’s 16th Senate District, moving all four INDN candidates of Oklahoma into the victory column. Scott BigHorse and Chuck Hoskin will join John Sparks in vying for seats in the Oklahoma House and Senate. Al McAffrey, a member of the Choctaw Nation, is uncontested in the general election and will be seated as District 88’s representative.

“This is yet another big day in a huge year for INDN’s List,” remarked President Kalyn Free. “Our success is in our candidates and their vision. They are proving that voters recognize and affirm the bold, positive vision that Indian candidates and the Democratic Party have put forward in states across the nation.”

Sparks, a married father of two, is the founder of a small business that widens healthcare access to children, the elderly, and those living with mental illness. He works tirelessly to serve the residents of Cleveland County , and his victory Tuesday moves Sparks a step closer to gaining a voice for Oklahomans across the state, from the panhandle to Green Country.

The voters of his district have spoken, but Sparks ’ vision and campaign must continue to be heard as he works his way to the general election. Please contribute to INDN’s List so that we can continue to help Democratic nominee John Sparks and all our candidates across the country win victories for their constituents and continue to move America forward. To learn more about the forward vision of each of our candidates, read their profiles by clicking here.

INDN's List - 406 S Boulder , Mezzanine Ste 200 , Tulsa , OK 74103

Contributions to INDN's List are not deductible as charitable contributions for federal income tax purposes.

* * * * * *

INDN's List, is the only grassroots political organization devoted to recruiting and electing Native American candidates and mobilizing the Indian Vote throughout America on behalf of those candidates.  Kalyn Free is a member of the Choctaw Nation.

CONGRESSMAN TOM COLE TO HOLD TOWN HALL AUGUST 28

4th District Congressman Tom Cole announced that he will be holding Town Hall meetings in Lawton and Frederick on August 28th.  He will be at the Cameron University Sciences Complex Room 101 at 5:30 p.m.. In Frederick he will be at the Banc-First Conference Center, 201 S. Main at noon.

We encourage you attend and discuss with him the following talking points:

  • What progress is being made on the ILOS cannon project? Has the one demonstration cannon fired another 1000 rounds? Where is it in the Defense appropriation bill for last year and this year?
  • Where are the funds for the BRAC improvements in last years budget or this years budget? When will the first troops be directly arriveing from Ft. Bliss and not returned troops from Europe and a unit activation ceremony?
  • Will he concede things are not going well Iraq or is he still in his "going well" mode?
  • Where can a farmer go to get some relief NOW from the ravages of the drought hitting Southwest Oklahoma?
  • Where can grandma and grandpa go to get help with their prescription drug bills NOW after they have hit the doughnut hole.....or are they on their own?
  • Would he please have his big contributors take some kind of action NOW to get gas prices down?
  • Will Congress take action NOW is some fashion on the immigration issue?

Usually his responses go something like this:

  1. That is a problem that we really need to look at.....or are continuing to look at.
  2. The background and history on the issue is.........blah blah blah for fifteen minutes.
  3. Congress is doing research and investigating and we will have discussion, hearings and debate before any further action can be taken.
  4. See you at the next recess.

For goodness sakes don't ask him about fixing Social Security. We'll be there all night.

TYNER CORNBREAD AND BEANS IS READY - Regan Speaks

Link: The Norman Transcript - Regan: Cleveland County the key to winning election.

SENATE REVIEW by Senator Randy Bass

Bass_photo_2 Until 1989, legislative sessions began in January and then usually concluded in June. That year, a Constitutional amendment was approved which shortened the session by almost two months, requiring the Legislature to convene in February and adjourn sine die by 5 p.m. on the last Friday in May.

While the aim of this amendment was to create a more efficient time-table for settling everything from substantive issues to the state budget, losing those two months made it extremely difficult to tackle some of the more complex issues that came before us.

That's why interim studies have become an increasingly important tool to help us thoroughly examine an issue before the committee process even begins in February. Through interim studies, lawmakers can hold a series of hearings, bringing in experts to testify on an issue and have public input as well, in order to give lawmakers the most comprehensive view possible.

One of the most important issues facing our state is strengthening the actuarial soundness of the Oklahoma Teachers Retirement System. In the past few years we have passed legislation that has helped, yet the system still needs further examination to determine the best method for developing a long-term and lasting solution. This is one of the many interim studies that has been approved for 2006. Along with decreasing the unfunded liability of the teacher's retirement system, the study will also examine a proposal to raise the annually assumed cost of living increase for retired teachers by 2 percent.

Several other topics have been approved for interim studies as well. For example, with more miles of shoreline than any state, boating and other water sports are an important activity and tourist attraction for Oklahoma. One study will look at boating safety issues and how we can ensure safety while encouraging people to enjoy our many lakes and waterways.

Another study will examine the current accounting system for both Higher and Common Education, while another will consider potential ways to enhance municipal revenue streams. Other panels will examine issues related to corrections, county roads, worker training programs and more.

During the course of these studies, lawmakers may identify possible statutory changes that could help address some of the concerns raised by these panels. That legislation will then be considered with the Legislature convenes for the 2007 session.

As always if you have a question about a legislative matter, please do not hesitate to contact my office at (405) 521-5567 or by email at bass@oksenate.gov.

ECONOMIC POLICY WEEKLY

COMMENTARY ON TODAY'S ECONOMIC ISSUES
MICKEY A. HEPNER, PH.D.

Number 2006-32
August 20, 2006

The Economic Argument For the Minimum Wage

This is the second in a series of columns on the minimum wage. Next week: “The Politics of the Minimum Wage”, or “If the Minimum Wage is Bad, Why Do So Many People Support It?”

“If all economists were laid end-to-end, they would not reach a conclusion.”—George Bernard Shaw

We economists are notorious for our disagreements. There are liberal economists. There are conservative economists. And then there are economists like me in the middle. Yet when it comes to the minimum wage, most economists are in agreement—raising the minimum wage reduces employment opportunities for those minimum wage workers.

Of course in any profession there are always those who disagree with the conventional wisdom. It is no different with economists and the minimum wage. In the 1990’s, two well-regarded economists, David Card and Alan Kreuger, authored a book in which they argued that small minimum wage increases generate no employment reductions.

They justified their views by claiming that labor markets suffer from a problem known as monopsony power. (If you are like my students your eyebrows just furrowed while you wondered if “monopsony” is a real word). This monopsony power is really just the opposite of monopoly power. For example, OG&E (like most electric utilities) has monopoly power—relatively few competitors selling electricity to the same market. Since OG&E faces relatively little competition from other sellers, it is able to charge inefficiently high prices for their service. As a result, economists admit that government can intervene and force OG&E to charge a more-efficient, lower price. This is why the Oklahoma Corporation Commission regulates the prices that OG&E charges their customers.

With monopsony power, though, it is the buyers and not the sellers that face relatively little competition. In this case, the buyers face little competition from other buyers wanting to buy the same item. This allows buyers to pay inefficiently low prices. As with the case of monopoly power, economists recognize that with monopsony power there is a potential role for government. In this case, the government can intervene to force buyers to pay a more-efficient, higher price. In labor markets this higher price is the minimum wage.

Economists have long accepted the monopsony power argument for policies like the minimum wage, and we know that many labor markets suffer from monopsony power problems. For example, the market for Major League Baseball players suffered from monopsony power prior the onset of free-agency in the mid-1970’s. Until that time, players were only allowed to negotiate future contracts with the team for which they most recently played. Thus, there was only one team that was able to buy their labor. These teams did not have to worry about other teams luring players away with larger salaries. With the onset of free-agency, however, players were free to negotiate with all of the teams. This additional competition among the buyers of baseball labor has led to a dramatic increase in baseball salaries.

However, most economists simply do not agree with the argument that the market for minimum wage labor suffers from this same monopsony power problem. Notice that for monopsony power to exist, there needs to be a lack of competition among the buyers of minimum wage labor. However, there are clearly many firms that hire minimum wage workers (retail shops, hotels, fast-food restaurants, etc.). As a result, if one firm tries to pay less than the market wage rate they will have difficulty attracting the employees they need. In other words, these firms face competition from other firms wanting to hire the same labor. Consequently, these firms do not have monopsony power.

In the absence of monopsony power economists—even Card and Kreuger—agree that minimum wage laws reduce employment opportunities for the very workers they are trying to help. While economists like to disagree on many issues, the effects of the minimum wage is not one of them.

 

Feel free to submit your comments to mhepner@ucok.edu.

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Back to Economic Policy Weekly

The views and opinions expressed on this page are strictly those of the author.

 

WEST WING REVISITED

Remember the episode were the candidate had to publicly embrace ethanol?

Link: DesMoinesRegister.com.

OPEN DOOR POLICY by Rep. Joe Dorman

Dorman_1 It was an eventful week around District 65 as the Rush Springs Watermelon Festival ran for the 62nd year, local officials met with the School Land Commission regarding the purchase of lands in Elgin to build an industrial park, Lawton held the Rangers Rodeo, Anadarko held the Indian Expo and Apache finished up their local fair.

You can tell it's almost time for school to start back up for a new year. This week I had the opportunity to attend the annual meeting of the National Conference of State Legislatures. This group gets legislators and staff members from around the country together to share ideas and discuss federal policies and outcomes to states. This year, I was selected to serve on the Education Committee for NCSL.

We discussed classroom policies, mandates from the federal government on teachers and overall school issues that have worked in other states and could possibly be applied here in Oklahoma. There was also a display for classrooms of the 21st century that showed innovations and technology we might see in the very near future. One very interesting idea was college professors recording lectures so students can download them on the Internet should they miss a class. This was brought up to me last year at the coffee shop in Sterling and it was good to see it actually applied in some schools.

With the school year starting, I will be visiting each of the schools in the area to discuss the impact of new laws in Oklahoma with the teachers and make sure these laws are working as expected. Many times there are ideas that sound good, but prove to be too burdensome to actually apply. Several ideas last year were also killed that could have severely impacted rural schools.

My football schedules are currently at the printer and should be out in stores sometime next week. I'm trying to get them completed before the last scrimmage at each of the schools. I hope these schedules are beneficial to you in that if you can't travel to see your home team, you will make it to a neighboring school to watch their team play. Good luck to all the athletes this season and be careful. My old sports injuries are starting to pop and crack as the years pass by. Make sure you report something to the coach if you injure yourself and drink plenty of water in this heat. It is an honor to represent your views at the State Capitol. If you wish to contact me and discuss one of these or another issue, I can be reached at my office in Oklahoma City toll-free at 1-800-522-8502, or directly at 1-405-557-7305. I can be reached locally at (580) 476-2626, my e-mail address is joedorman@okhouse.gov at work.

MICKEY HEPNER'S COLUMN

Disclaimer. The opinions expressed in this column are those of the writer. It does not necessarily represent the opinions of many local party members or the editor of ccdem.

nk: The Edmond Sun, Edmond, OK - Economics of minimum wage.

DAVID BRODER COLUMN

Link: Star-Telegram | 08/13/2006 | 'All they do is hit each other with their paddles'.

TYNER CORNBREAD AND BEANS HEATS UP

Link: The Norman Transcript - Gloves coming off in Democrats' District 16 Senate runoff.

SENATE IN REVIEW by Senator Randy Bass

Bass_bio_5 If you have a child who is interested in attending college, I hope you are aware of one of the most important programs available to help thousands of Oklahoma teens go to college. It's called OHLAP, which stands for Oklahoma Higher Learning Access Program. It's also called "Oklahoma's Promise."

This scholarship program was created by the State Legislature in an effort to increase the number of college graduates we have in Oklahoma crucial to helping attracting the high tech business and jobs that pay the best salaries.

As of this month, Oklahoma students who will be in the 8th, 9th or 10th grade this school year can begin applying to the OHLAP scholarship program. Interested students must be Oklahoma residents, and their parents, custodians or legal guardians must earn less than $50,000 a year at the time the application is made. OHLAP students must then complete a rigorous slate of required courses in the areas of English, science, math, history and citizenship, foreign language or computer technology and fine arts.

Students must also attend school regularly, do their homework achive a GPA of at least 2.5, avoid drugs and alcohol, stay out of trouble with the law and apply for other financial aid during the senior year of highs school. Students graduating from a high school not accredited by the Oklahoma State Board of Education or a recognized accrediting agency must also earn a composite ACT score of 22 or higher.

Once all of those requirements are fulfilled, OHLAP will pay that student's tuition at an Oklahoma public two-year college or four-year university. The program will also cover at least a part of the tuition at an Oklahoma accredited private college or university or for courses offered at a career tech center that qualify for credit from a public two-year college. The program does not cover other costs, such as books, supplies, room and board or other fees that's why students need to apply for other financial aid in their senior year.

It may seem like a lot of work but in every way, it is worth it. Students who meet the OHLAP requirements be better prepared for collegeand of course they'll have the resources they might not have otherwise had to earn a college degree.

The earning potential over a lifetime for someone with a college degree versus someone who simply graduated from high school is estimated to be a million dollars. As you can see, having that degree can make a huge difference in the kind of lifestyle and financial security a person may have. But more than that, it can enable an individual to fulfill their potential and make their dreams come true, whether it is to become a teacher, an engineer, an artist or a doctor.

To find out more about helping your child apply for Oklahoma's Promise the OHLAP programcall student information hotline at 1-800-585-1840, or e-mail okpromise(g),osrhe.edu or you can right to: Oklahoma's Promise OHLAP, Oklahoma State Regents for Higher Education, PO Box 108850, Oklahoma City, OK 73101.

As always if you have a question about a legislative matter, please do not hesitate to contact my office at (405) 521-5567 or by email at bass@oksenate.gov.

EDMOND SUN EDITORIAL - HISPANICS ARE VITAL TO LOCAL ECONOMY

Link: The Edmond Sun, Edmond, OK - Hispanics are vital to local economy.

THIS IS AN EDITORIAL

OBAMA MUSSED FOR SUCCESS

Link: Mussed for Success: Barack Obama's Smooth Wrinkles.

GIVE SOME TIME FOR PETE THIS SATURDAY

Peteregan_masthead_sml_2

We need volunteers to go with us to the Rush Springs Watermelon Festival this Saturday, August 12, 2006.  We plan to caravan to the festival from our OKC headquarters.  We will meet at 9:45 am and leave together at 10:00 am.  Show your Regan spirit by donning your Regan T-shirt and bringing your friends.

Please RSVP with Kyle Dean at (405) 848-7383 if you plan to go.  If you need a T-shirt, just let Kyle know. We need each and every one of you to make this election count for Pete.

Thank you, and we hope to see you Saturday!

Team Regan

PS: If you can't make it Saturday, but you still want to help us out, we have plenty of need for volunteers at campaign headquarters between now and the 22nd!  We also will need lots of help all over the state on Election Day (not to mention your vote).  Please call Kyle Dean and let him know when you're available!

Pete Regan for Lt. Governor
PO Box 60928
Oklahoma City, OK 73146

HOWARD AND BILL SAY LISTEN UP - DNC Roll Out the Issue Items For The 2006 Campaign Cycle

Donkey4_8 The DNC has come out with a list of the issue items they will be pushing this election cycle. Looks pretty good to Howard and Bill. DNC suggests that local orgs go to its web page, copy the printer ready layouts and have copies printed locally. Howard and Bill suggest ccdem have a thousand post card size printed for use locally. This link will take you to layout pdf. Permanent link is on this blog.

http://www.democrats.org/agenda.html

OPEN DOOR POLICY - Rep. Joe Dorman

Dorman_3 I want to start off by apologizing to anyone that has tried to email my office or call in the last week.  The network system at the House of Representatives has been down and it has been rejecting emails.  If you have tried to email either my work email or my joedorman.com account, things have been returned to the sender.  That has increased the amount of calls and Kelly has been trying to get them to me and get them sorted out.  It's amazing how people have become so addicted to the technology that they have forgotten how it was before computers and the internet.  Nonetheless, things should be fixed by the time this is printed in the papers.

     The big news around the Capitol this past week was the party change of Senator Nancy Riley from Tulsa.  Nancy was a Republican and ran for Lt. Governor this past primary election.  She did very well in the race but did not make the runoff.  Her views were much more moderate than her two opponents and she wasn't able to raise the money to spread her message.  She and I visited and she had told me how unhappy she was with the policies and views within her caucus and felt that she would fit in better with the Democratic Caucus.  Nancy is a good legislator and will do the job right no matter what party she registers. 
     Many times people will get involved in politics and realize that everything they read is not really the case in real life.  National political parties are far different than the political parties here in Oklahoma, where both parties are much more conservative than their national counterparts.  Many of my friends tend to split tickets between state and national races.  It's important to question views and not just believe a candidate goes along lock-step with their political party and their issues.  Be sure to research the individual and their ideals rather than simply voting on party policy or what their opponent might say about them.
     The interim studies will be starting up in the month of September.  Most of mine have been approved and are slated for hearings.  I will try to keep everyone apprised of the hearing dates if anyone should want to attend.  This is an opportunity for legislators to review issues outside the legislative session and prepare bills in advance.
     It is an honor to represent your views at the State Capitol. If you wish to contact me and discuss one of these or another issue, I can be reached at my office in Oklahoma City toll-free at 1-800-522-8502, or directly at 1-405-557-7305. I can be reached locally at (580) 476-2626, my e-mail address is joedorman@okhouse.gov at work.

SENATOR RILEY'S BIOGRAPHICAL SKETCH

Riley State Senator Nancy Riley brings her experience as an elementary school teacher in Tulsa to the table when it comes to making decisions about the state's future. Until recently she was a member and building delegate for the Tulsa Classroom Teacher's Association. As such, Nancy was able to be an avenue of information and resources for the teachers in her building and provided a conduit for conflict resolution between administrators and teachers. She was also a member of Delta Kappa Gamma for four years and served as the organization's secretary.

In her local community, Nancy was a co-pastor of Stonewood Park Christian Church and member of the Hoover Elementary Parent Teacher Association. She remains active in the Berryhill Parent Teacher Organization, the After Five Republican Women's Club, the Tulsa County Republican Women's Club, the Oklahoma First Ladies’ Club, and is an associate member of the Tulsa County Republican Men’s Club. She is also a member of the Southwest Tulsa, Sand Springs and Bixby Chambers of Commerce. She further contributes to educational issues as an Education Task Force member of ALEC and is a member of NCSL. She is a member of the Interagency Council on Early Childhood Intervention and sits on the Minority Teacher Recruitment Committee. She is a Green Country Council of Camp Fire Advisory Board member, a member of Leadership Oklahoma, Class XVII, an advisory member of The Heartland Institute of Chicago, and a member of the Sand Springs Civitan Club. 

CHANNEL FLIPPER - Flashpoint

Caught Pete and Jari on Flashpoint this morning. We have got two good candidates. Thought that Jari had a good response to the court/tort reform question by Burns. Did you notice the cross?

MICKEY HEPNER WEEKLY COLUMN

Link: The Edmond Sun, Edmond, OK - Too much nothingness in politics.

Mickey is a Professor of Economics at Central Oklahoma University. He is a Democrat that has some opinions. Thought I would post his work and we'll see what he has to say each week.

SENATE REVIEW - by Randy Bass

Bass_bio_4 August 9-12 marks the 68th annual Lawton Ranger Rodeo. If you don't know anything about this rodeo and this organization, you should. They represent the very best of Oklahoma values and ideals with their public service and their promotion of an All-American event that keeps Oklahoma's history alive.

Their story began in 1945 when ten Lawton citizens sold shares at $1,000 each to form a riding club to promote horsemanship by holding rodeos in Comanche County. They started out on a little ten acre spread, but as Lawton grew, they sold that acreage and then the Lawton Rangers bought forty acres four miles east of town and named it the Lawton LO Ranch.

By last year this rodeo was ranked 37th in the nation and brings in some exciting talent. But what's really fantastic is that the Lawton Rangers annually give two to four scholarships to Comanche County graduating high school seniors and a $500 scholarship each semester for agriculture students, as well as $1,000 to $2,500 each year to the Comanche County Spring Livestock Show.

The Lawton Rangers ride in many of our local parades, including the Christmas Parade, the Fort Sill Armed Forces Day Parade. They also ride in the largest rodeo parade in all of Oklahoma—

the Guthrie '89ers Parade.

The Rangers, have represented Lawton and our state in the Fort Worth Livestock Show Parade and have also ridden in the Grand Entries of the Wichita Falls, Fort Worth and Vernon, rodeos in Texas.

Back in 2001, the Lawton Rangers organized a cross-state Pony Express to officially deliver Lawton's Centennial Proclamation and in 2000,2001, and 2002 they were shown national television and were first riding club broadcast worldwide for our state.

This past session I had honor of authoring a concurrent resolution, along Representatives Don Armes, Abe Deutchendorf and Dorman, to bring attention to this outstanding organization and I congratulate them for their many accomplishments. Lawton Rangers do a lot to support our area and especially our young people. I hope you make the time this year to  support them by attending world-class rodeo.

As always if you have a question about a legislative matter, please do not hesitate to contact my office at (405) 5567 or by email bass@.oksenate.go

NORMAN TRANSCRIPT - CANDIDATES FOCUS ON FOREIGN POLICY

Link: The Norman Transcript - Candidates focus on foreign policy.

EDWARDS SPEECH SUMMARY BY GRINER

Link: NewsOK.com | Powered by The Oklahoman and NEWS 9.

SENATOR RILEY JOINS DEMOCRATIC CAUCUS

Oklahoma City, OK - Aug 03, 2006 - Senator Nancy Rileys decision to leave the Republican Party is yet another indication of the growing dissatisfaction with the failed policies and leadership of the Republicans from the White House to the Oklahoma State House. Their extreme right wing agenda is increasingly out of step with regular Oklahomans. Right wing Republican politicians are proving time and time again they cannot be trusted to govern, said Lisa Pryor, Oklahoma Democratic Party Chairman. Two years ago, the people of Tulsa gave Senator Riley 66% of the vote as she won re-election. Last week she surprised political observers with an unexpectedly strong showing by getting more that 23% of the votes in the Republican primary for Lieutenant Governor. Clearly, her message of promoting Oklahoma and providing positive leadership resonated with Oklahoma voters.

As a young, widowed mother with two small children, Nancy Riley saw first-hand how good government can lift people up and give them a chance to succeed. And, as a teacher for thirteen years, she recognized the value of a good education. As a Democratic State Senator we believe Nancy Riley will be a strong advocate for the core Democratic principals of community, accountability, responsibility and equality.

The Democratic Party is truly the party of the people. Democrats can be trusted to provide strong, steady, honest leadership and competent, effective government that works for all Oklahomans, not just the privileged few.

On behalf of the Oklahoma Democratic Party I welcome Senator Riley to the Democratic family. We applaud Senator Riley for showing the courage to voice her convictions and urge other Republicans to join her in switching to the Democratic Party, Pryor said.

Republicans who have had enough of extremist right wing politics and no longer feel that the Republican Party speaks for them can officially change their registration from September 1 to October 13. Voter registration applications may be submitted at any time. However, valid application must be received at a motor license agency or a designated voter registration agency, or postmarked (if submitted by mail), more that 24 days prior to an election in order for the applicant to participate.

Oklahoma Democratic Party
Jason McCarty
phone: 405.427.3366

MUST READ - Democrats Scrambling To Organize Voter Turnout

Link: Democrats Scrambling To Organize Voter Turnout.