Wednesday, February 24, 2010

Lunch with the Chief Justice Today

This looks like one of the most promising options today.  For people in Juneau, it's at noon.  For people out side, it's being teleconferenced.

(H)EDUCATIONSTANDING COMMITTEE *
Feb 24 Wednesday 12:00 PMCAPITOL 106

-- Please Note Time Change --
+ Lunch and Educational Interaction with TELECONFERENCED

Alaska Supreme Court Justice Carpeneti

Presentation: "Legislative Intent: What

Does it Mean to the Courts, and How Do

We Make it Clear?"

A light lunch will be served


The Gavel to Gavel Schedules still baffle me. I think partly it's because they can't have a link until it's time to watch or listen. You can click to the schedule here. This is what it says now:

12:00 pm
House Education Committee
Capitol 106
Audio stream will be available when the meeting starts.
-- Please Note Time Change -- Lunch and Educational Interaction with Alaska Supreme Court Justice Carpeneti Presentation: "Legislative Intent: What Does it Mean to the Courts, and How Do We Make it Clear?"
(TV coverage is planned)

Cloudy, Icy, Sunny - Juneau has weather for everyone

Our gate goes out to a very steep sidewalk.  Once I hit the sidewalk this morning I started sliding down.  Fortunately, there's a picket fence all the way down to the corner.  (We're on the top corner.)  So I skateboarded (without a skateboard) down the street.  I met our neighbor who was coming out and said, "I'll let you slide by" as I passed her keeping my balance with the picket fence.  It was grey and slightly drizzly.

I went to the State Affairs committee meeting at 8am - I'll try to get something up on that - first new bonding for Veteran Housing Loans and second a bill to put into law what the AG had written in regulation about ethics complaint reimbursements and travel for the Governor's family members - though with changes to plug loopholes and make it clearer (at least that was the intent.)
 
 Someone lent me a car - the first time I've driven since we got here Jan. 13 - and I took J out to the airport where the sun was shining.  She'll be in Anchorage for a week.  This post is just an excuse to put up more pictures of Juneau.  It's also first time since our first weekend here, that I've been out of the downtown area in the daylight when I could see things.  And I realize we need to go exploring a bit.  As nice as downtown is, there's a whole spectacular bunch of worlds down the road too. 


This one I took almost without looking as I slowed down before getting on the highway from the airport road. I think the dark in front is mudflats. 

Tuesday, February 23, 2010

Bring Our Kids Home - Maybe Not

Here's a part of a story I found sticking out somewhere. That's to say, parts of the story were visible and parts still aren't.  I'm going to write about it, but take this as a 'present fiction.' Sort of like historical fiction, present fiction is based on bits and pieces of 'truth' but the rest of the 'truth' isn't known. What I'm going to do here is take some the fragments of 'truth' I found and try to make sense out of them. I'll try to let you know what is 'real' and what I'm sketching on my own.

I know a little about budget processes in government. Agencies in the executive branch have programs they want funded by the legislative branch. So each agency makes a list of their programs and how much each is going to cost. If they do it really well, they can link the money they are requesting with the outputs that money will 'buy.' 

"This $400,000 will buy one public transit buse that will carry 500 passengers a day, taking 40 cars off the road and emptying 40 parking spaces, and carrying 300 people who can't afford a car to work, who otherwise would be unemployed."  Of course, we can't know the outcomes so precisely, but it gives you the idea.     

[double click to enlarge photos]

First these budgets are (or should be) scrutinized inside of the executive branch. Then those programs that survive that process are sent to the legislature for approval. The legislators' job is to review these and find inefficient, ineffective, or unnecessary programs and cut them out. Legislators look good when they axe wasteful programs. Assuming, of course, that anyone notices and knows enough to understand what they have done.

Earlier, when I first got here, I started reading the budget documents for Health and Social Services. Some are written reasonably well with clear descriptions of outcomes. But it's pretty hard for outsiders to understand a program from pieces of paper. The programs that tend to get funded are the ones that have the best advocates - their descriptions get written well and/or people speaking for them are convincing to the funders. Selling programs isn't the same as operating them. The sales people could be much better than the programs they sell. And good programs may not have great salespersons.

The Bring the Kids Home program, it seems does not have good salespeople. This is a program, as I understand it - and I'm getting on shaky ground here - that is intended to set up networks around the state to provide community services for kids who have been institutionalized Outside (of Alaska, for non-Alaskan readers). The agencies that got money to implement this last year have been busy putting together programs and requests for proposals (RFP's) for agencies and businesses outside of government to run these programs. Apparently they are just about at the implementation stage and the money has been committed to the organizations that won various contracts to provide services.

The FY11 DHSS Budget (That's Fiscal Year 2011 Department of Health and Social Services) page 103 [I have a hard copy, couldn't find a matching link on line] has a section that mentions Bring the Kids Home:
Funding will assist in establishing serious emotional disturbance (SED) children's services in rural areas.  Almost 40% of youth experiencing SED in Residential Psychiatric Treatment Centers (RPTCs) out of state are Alaska Native.  This funding will develop services and strategies specific to tribal systems and improve funding mechanisms, such as Medicaid at 100% FMAP.  The funding will support tribes to expand health service delivery, as reommended by Senate Bill 61 (Ch 10, SLA 2007) (Medicaid Reform report).  Funding may support technical assistance and training from state staff or from contractors and/or adding additional staff functions to DHSS tribabl programs. . .
Another project in the budget (p. 105) includes:
...funding expands multiple grants to community behavioral health centers, to enhance outpatient services with innovative programs/training so as to reduce the need for residental level services for youth experiencing serious emotional disturbance (SED).  It will also emphasize special populations, such as Fetal Alchohol Syndrome, birth to six years, etc.  This increase in outpatient care assists in treating youth at the home and community-based level, and aoids utilizing costly residenatal care...


So, this is where the legislators and the sales pitches collide. Apparently, members of the House Finance Health and Social Services subcommittee, the committee that looks at the HSS budget, have found money that was allocated last year (or the year before) that hasn't been spent yet. This probably deserves them some kudos for looking closely enough to find these funds. Or perhaps there were people in the agency that tipped them off. I have no idea. I'm just listing possible ways this kind of thing could happen. And so, fulfilling their role as vigilant legislators cutting the fat out of the budget, so I'm told, consideration is being given to cutting that unspent money out of the budget. Not an insignificant amount I've been told. I've heard different numbers but one figure was about $750,000.

But, finding such unspent money is one thing. Understanding why it is there is another.  From what was explained to me, the money is unspent at the moment because of the planning and grant requesting and awarding process which has now taken place.  So the kinds of things outlined in those two quotes from the budget above, which were approved of last year and budgeted, have been worked on and the money has been promised to various contractors to provide services to keep kids with mental health issues in their communities where their family can visit them.  It just hasn't been spent yet.

So, because it hasn't actually been spent, it looks to people combing the budget for extra funds like an unnecessary expenditure.


At least that is the scenario that I understood.  The people who explained to to me might not recognize this version, so don't get too worked up.  The reason I'm not waiting until tomorrow to pass it by them is because at 8:00 am, there is a committee meeting where all this will be hashed out. 


We have reality television that is REAL and the stories directly affect our lives.  It's called Gavel to Gavel and you can see it live an unedited.  This post is the backstory for tomorrow's show.

Gavel to Gavel comes to you in different ways.  Try this link.
.  But these pages keep changing.  The live audio link won't be there until tomorrow and then this page will change.  But try it and see what you can find.

Here's the main Gavel to Gavel page.   Right now it says the House Finance - Health and Social Services Subcommittee will be live audio streamed tomorrow. But this page changes all the time as time passes. 

Here's the page that tells you where you can watch on television in your area.

Here's where you can get live feeds of the broadcasts on your computer.


I've given you one version of what may be happening with the Bring Home the Kids budget. 

I'm told there could be real drama at this meeting tomorrow as the Department of Health and Social Services works to get the committee members to understand that this is not unused money.  That this money is still there because it takes a certain amount of time to spend it well.  (And I'm not saying they are or are not going to spend it well because I can't judge that.  I can only convey what others have told me.) 

You can watch or listen to it live at 8am or you can listen to the archived audio after the meeting.  I've found they are usually pretty quick about getting that up. 

Tax on Moist Snuff

For those of you who want to cut to the chase, go to the bottom of the post to see the highlights I caught before I left.  

At 3pm I looked in to see why there were so many people in Room 106 where the State Affairs meeting met at 8 am with maybe 10 people in the audience. People were at this meeting to hear about taxes on Moist Snuff. I didn't stay, but I do want readers to learn how to find these hearings themselves. You can listen to this session. Go to the gavel to gavel website.

Here's the specific page.

http://www.ktoo.org/gavel/stream.cfm 

You'll get this page:


 (If you want to see the right side, click on the picture to enlarge it or go to the link.)  Then on the left (I put a red box around the key links) you can get the day's scheduled teleconferenced sessions, you can get audio archive of the day's session, or you can get the legislature's calendar of meetings and which ones are being broadcast or shown online.  Play with these.

If you've read this far, you probaby consider yourself an active citizen.  Be a little more active and try out this page and those links so you can look up any day's schedule and identify sessions you might want to listen to.

To hear this one, I would click on today's audio files (after the meeting) and scroll down to the Health and Social Services Standing Subcommittee.(That particular session isn't up yet.is working now.)


Here's for that committee from the schedule on the Legislature's website.
The schedule changes daily so you won't get this meeting if you try it after today. 


(H)HEALTH & SOCIAL SERVICESSTANDING COMMITTEE *
Feb 23 Tuesday 3:00 PMCAPITOL 106
=+HB 188 TAX ON MOIST SNUFF TELECONFERENCED
*+HB 309 DENTAL CARE INSURANCE TELECONFERENCED
*+HB 265 MEDICAID COVERAGE FOR DENTURES TELECONFERENCED
+ Bills Previously Heard/Scheduled TELECONFERENCED


Here's a little of the definition of tobacco from the bill.  (Click on the link above to see it.  I know when you click there you still have to click again on FULL TEXT button.)

(4) "tobacco product" means
16 (A) a cigar;
17 (B) a cheroot;
18 (C) a stogie;
19 (D) a perique;
20 (E) snuff tobacco, including moist snuff tobacco, and snuff
21 flour;
22 (F) smoking tobacco, including granulated, plug-cut, crimp-cut,
23 ready-rubbed, and any form of tobacco suitable for smoking in a pipe or
24 cigarette;
25 (G) chewing tobacco, including cavendish, twist, plug, scrap,
26 and tobacco suitable for chewing; or
27 (H) an article or product made of tobacco or a tobacco
28 substitute, but not including a cigarette as defined in AS 43.50.170;
29 * Sec. 5. AS 43.50.390 is amended by adding a new paragraph to read:
30 (6) "moist snuff tobacco" means any finely cut, ground, or powdered
31 tobacco that is not intended to be
01 (A) smoked; or
02 (B) placed in the nasal cavity. 


About the tax proposals. Before I left a staffer said:

1.  Spitless moist tobacco would go from 75% ad valorem to 100%
2.  Other tobacco products in a tin would be taxed $1.18 per ounce which would raise the prices of the cheaper products significantly and that that they know kids are very price sensitive.
3.  Cigars will have to be sold in packages of 5.
4.  25% of the ad valorem tax would go to the Tobacco Education and Cessation Fund
5.  This corrects a loop-hole in tobacco centered taxes because over-the-counter products hadn't had a tax before.

The Observatory Books Juneau

There are a few unwritten posts waiting to eventually go up.  This one is a must.  Observatory Books begs to be entered.  So I did one evening.

 

 
And once inside, it's like being in someone's long lost attic.  Well, it is organized by topics and all, but there are books and maps and portfolios that you won't find at Barnes and Noble.










The specialty is Alaska.  You can double click any picture to see it bigger.  Here is the General Arctic section:









Around here you can find gems like these:

 

  



Or this classic Alaska anthropologists' work.


  
All this is watched over by Dee Longebaugh who started the first 
Observatory Books in Sitka in  1977 and moved it to Juneau in 1992.
She'll find what you need and tell you tales about the books
and about the authors, many of whom she knows.  And she'll 
share her stories. 






This is a place where it's easy to get lost in other worlds.










A place where you wonder whose fingers touched the books you're holding in your hands.  People you'll only know because your fingerprints overlapped on the pages of this book. 










Maps are a big part of this collection.  Did I say collection?  It's more like the back room of a museum than a bookstore. 





Fortunately, all these treasures are well protected by the charming guard dog.











 

Just before we left Anchorage, there was a story on NPR about the closing of the last bookstore in Laredo, Texas.
B. Dalton is set to close its store in Laredo, Texas, and that has ignited a debate in the border town. Kids have written letters to keep the store open. Groups have held rallies to pressure the company. Laredo could soon become the largest U.S. city without a bookstore. But with libraries, online stores and overnight delivery, is a bookstore really necessary?
Wikipedia reports:http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Laredo,_Texas
According to the 2007 census estimate, the city population was 233,152.[5] Laredo is part of the Laredo-Nuevo Laredo Metropolitan Area with an estimate population of 718,073.[6]
If that's right, the city is a little smaller than Anchorage, but the metropolitan area has more people than the state of Alaska.  At the time, as I was counting the bookstores in Anchorage - Barnes and Noble, Metro books, Title Wave, Borders, and probably a couple more - and thinking that we're pretty lucky. 

But Juneau, with a population of about 30,000, has three book stores I know of just in the tiny downtown.  There's so much to like here.  And this is probably a good time to post this because tonight my Anchorage book club is gathering to discuss The Story of Edgar Sawtelle.  I'm embarrassed to say that I haven't read enough of it it to write about it here. 

Monday, February 22, 2010

Where's Senate Judiciary?




This was my view from our 'kitchen' table at lunch today.  Spruce trees, the white tip of Mr. Roberts, and wires.  But it makes you think it's really warm out.  And in the sun it is.  But in the shade the sidewalks are icy.



I went through the list of committees meeting this afternoon and decided on the Senate Judiciary because it they were discussing HJR (House Joint Resolution) 21, the Constitutional Amendment to increase the size of the legislature.  I'd heard the discussion in House State Affairs, and since this is a resolution (it's a resolution, not a bill, because it's a Constitutional Amendment)  that would have a major impact on the state, I thought it worth following. 

(S)JUDICIARYSTANDING COMMITTEE *
Feb 22 Monday 1:30 PMBELTZ 105 (TSBldg)

-- MEETING CANCELED --
+SJR 21 CONST. AM: INCREASE NUMBER OF LEGISLATORS TELECONFERENCED
+SB 265 2010 REVISOR'S BILL TELECONFERENCED
=+SB 252 FAILURE TO APPEAR; RELEASE PROCEDURES TELECONFERENCED
*+SB 241 POST-CONVICTION DNA TESTING; EVIDENCE TELECONFERENCED
+ Bills Previously Heard/Scheduled TELECONFERENCED


I got into the committee room, but I was the only one there. It took a while for me to see the 'cancelled' notice on the computer. The guard wasn't sure, but did say the airport had been closed. And this being Monday, some legislators were gone for the weekend.


And despite the blue skies higher up, along the Gastineau Channel, the fog gathers at night and closes the airport.  That could have a bigger impact on me tomorrow when I drop J off at the airport for her week trip to Anchorage to help her friend C who had surgery recently.  She has an afternoon flight, maybe it will be clear by then.


Update 3:30:  This one didn't meet either.  The Senate Floor session, I'm told, did meet, but not the House Floor session.  It's sunny and beautiful up here in the Capitol, but the fog looks thick down in the Channel. 


(H)LABOR & COMMERCESTANDING COMMITTEE *
Feb 22 Monday 3:15 PMBARNES 124

-- Meeting Postponed to 02/24/10 --
*+ HB 346 WORKERS' COMPENSATION ADVISORY BOARD TELECONFERENCED
*+ HCR 19 AIDEA REPORT ON IN-STATE FUEL STORAGE

Left Over Shots From the Capitol - Ethics, Transit, Cell Phones

Here are some shots that didn't make it into the blog last week of legislators.


The Legislative Ethics Committee met last week.  This is a joint Senate and House committee plus there are some public members.  From their website,  

The Select Committee on Legislative Ethics is responsible for:

· Helping people understand and comply with the Alaska Legislative Ethics Code,
· Issuing formal advisory opinions interpreting the ethics code,
· Considering complaints alleging violations of the code and
· Maintaining public files of disclosure statements
A couple of issues they discussed were:

  1.   An attorney in the legislative legal office had interpreted the laws to mean that when legislators travel on state money for state business, they are NOT allowed to do anything that could be construed as campaigning.  The case that brought about this ruling was, if I have my facts straight, about someone who went to a fundraiser or some such overt campaign activity on such a trip.  This apparently wasn't a big part of the trip, but it was ruled as a violation of the rules.

    Now other legislators are concerned that they cannot do anything - even talk to anyone - in a way that remotely relates to campaigning.  Legislative members pointed out that being a legislator was inherently political and with the financial realities of modern day politics, as soon as they take office, they have to start campaigning for the next election.  When they speak to constituents,  someone could consider that campaigning.  Another legislator said that she was not even allowed (they can ask for advisory opinions from the ethics committee if they have doubts) to stop by campaign headquarters on a trip to Anchorage to check on potential candidates for an upcoming election. 

    Concerns were raised at another committee meeting and before the ethics committee was a proposal to get a second opinion on this.  Someone questioned the expense of a second opinion, someone else said for political reasons, it would be advisable.  The original attorney said that their office would welcome a second opinion.  They voted to get a second opinion. 


  2. Staff from the Information Technology (IT) office were at the meeting because the committee had questions about the feasibility of having executive sessions via teleconferencing.  A couple of the rural public members said that getting to meetings could take them three days of travel, which cut into their normal work lives.  Another member thought a meeting which might take 20 minutes could cost $50 or $60 in travel costs for all the members.  If they could do this by phone or video conference it would speed up the process and save a lot of money. 

    The IT staff couldn't guarantee complete confidentiality.  Using audio conferencing was more likely than video, but even then there were some ways that people could, at least for a short time, could breach security.  Plus, you can't tell if the people on the other end of the line have someone else in the room with them.  I'm leaving out a lot of the details, but the committee did feel that siince some of the issues they discuss were extremely sensitive, a breach of security was not acceptable.  This was put on hold.



 
I happened to stop in Rep. Max Gruenberg's office when Anchorage Transit Director Jody Karcz stopped in to discuss their budget and proposal they are working on.   Ms. Karcz is on the far left and Rep. Gruenberg on the right.  The Rep's staff were sitting in on the discussion.  Serious cuts have had major impacts on transit in Anchorage including the cancelling of local bus service in the Eagle River area.  (Park and Ride busses still operate.)  They will experiment, beginning March 1 I believe, with allowing regular passengers to use the Anchor Ride buses (these are normally only for the disabled).  This will only be done in the Eagle River area. 


  
 Rep. Mike Doogan testified before the House Transportation Committee in support of his bill (HB 257) to ban the use of cell phones - including hands free devices - while driving a car.  Here he was in an animated discussion with Rep. Tammie Wilson of Fairbanks who asked questions about other distractions, about pulling over to the side, and other such questions.  Rep. Kyle Johansson is looking on in the background.  Transportation Committee Chair Peggy Wilson is co-sponsor.  She mentioned that her 85 year old mother was hit by a driver using a cell phone and she had to crawl out through the passenger seat and walk over to the other driver who was still talking on her cell phone.


 
And here's a shot I couldn't resist of Rep. Jay Ramras of Fairbanks on the phone in his office about 6pm one night.

I'm a Broken Record - Juneau is Beautiful!

Third day of nothing but blue sky and sunshine.  It's comfortably warm in the sun, chilly in the shade.  And as we got higher up the trail, we got into snow.  But even though we're still exploring the same trail - Basin Road and Perseverance Trail, I'm seeing new sights and it's simply spectacular. 




 
Remember you can double click on any picture to enlarge it. 
And yes I know you've seen this sign before, but it's bigger here.
  
A man paused while I was taking this picture and asked if 
I was a  geologist. He was and he said he didn't see many people 
taking pictures of rock formations.  



 


  


  
Note the two rocks covered with a thin clear coating of ice.


 
The snow at this point was covered with hoar frost.

  



  

  

This is a frosted nut.


  





 



 
 

This is Silver Bow Basin.

Sunday, February 21, 2010

"I Can" is Contagious

A friend in Pakistan sent me a link to this video.   I found it very uplifting.  While some may want more details, I do know personally that most people have far more capability than they ever use.  Finding ways to release that capability is the most powerful tool humans can ever find.  And the most hopeful.  Enjoy the video.



Saturday, February 20, 2010

Juneau Keeps Being Beautiful

Each time I go up Basin Road, I go a little further. Here are some pictures from yesterday.

 

  

  


  

  

 
And in front of our place, along the south facing wall, we have tulip leaves showing already.