Sunday, November 07, 2010

Pry my turnip from my cold, dead hand

[This post got way out of hand.  It's sort of a stream of research - reporting what I find as I find it - that you just have to follow along.  Toward the end I sum up a bit - here's what I say:
This is billed as a food safety bill.  It gives the FDA more power to set and enforce regulations  to promote food safety.  Its supporters include consumer groups.  But also organizations that normally oppose regulation because they or their members are regulated.  So what have they been given in exchange for their support?  That is the big question. 


The opponent organizations say the regulations will continue the destruction of small farms by including them in the regulations when the real food safety problems come from the large industrial farms.  And then there are those who see this as far more ominous - a large scale conspiracy to capture the rights to control food and drugs by large corporations.  

It's Sunday, and even with an extra hour, I have other things to do.  So consider this a heads up on this issue. ]




A letter to the editor that caused me to pause and google this week.  I'm still uncertain about this.  There are aspects that resonate with me and parts that don't square with things as well:

Pry my turnip from my cold, dead hand
It reminds me of "The Gulag Archepelago," by Aleksander Solzhenitsyn, when I hear about "The Food Safety Modernization Act of 2010," wherein it will become illegal to buy, sell and trade home-grown produce.
I don't know about you, but I like to garden. I'd think, that in the great country of the United States of America, we'd be free to grow our own sustenance.
Our country was founded by can-do people, who took life into their own hands, and didn't wait for permission by some king.
I'd like to see who's going to stop me from growing a turnip or two.
Lillian K. Staats
Wasilla

OK, I understand that there are huge food and huge pharmaceutical companies that are working to corner the market so they can improve their profits.   Martin Khor at Thirdworldnetwork summarizes this:
There is growing worldwide opposition to the granting of patents on biological materials such as genes, plants, animals and humans. Farmers and indigenous peoples are outraged that plants that they developed are being 'hijacked' by companies. Groups as diverse as religious leaders, parliamentarians and environment NGOs are intensifying their campaign against corporate patenting of living things. . .
In Alaska we know about the conflicts between subsistence, even recreational fishing, and huge corporate fishing. And the fight over labeling genetically modified salmon. 

So I looked up the Food Safety Modernization Act of 2010.  It turns out to be S510 and it's called "FDA Food Safety Modernization Act of 2010."

GovTrac.US keeps tabs on federal legislation and gives us an overview, a summary, and the whole bill.  Here they post the Congressional Research Agency's  summary of the FIRST TWO SECTIONS of the bill:

12/18/2009--Reported to Senate amended. FDA Food Safety Modernization Act -
Title I - Improving Capacity to Prevent Food Safety Problems
Section 101 -
Amends the Federal Food, Drug, and Cosmetic Act (FFDCA) to expand the authority of the Secretary of Health and Human Services (HHS) to inspect records related to food, including to: (1) allow the inspection of records of food that the Secretary reasonably believes is likely to be affected in a similar manner as an adulterated food; and (2) require that each person (excluding farms and restaurants) who manufactures, processes, packs, distributes, receives, holds, or imports an article of food permit inspection of his or her records if the Secretary believes that there is a reasonable probability that the use of or exposure to such food will cause serious adverse health consequences or death.
Section 102 -
Authorizes the Secretary to suspend the registration of a food facility if the food manufactured, processed, packed, or held by a facility has a reasonable probability of causing serious adverse health consequences or death to humans or animals.
Then they list the bill's supporters and opponents:

SupportOppose
Consumers Union
Center for Science in the Public Interest
Food Marketing Institute
Consumer Federation of America
National Restaurant Association
General Mills
National Association of Manufacturers
International Dairy Foods Association
American Public Health Association
Grocery Manufacturers Association
American Bakers Association
International Foodservice Distributors Association
National Consumers League
American Frozen Food Institute
National Confectioners Association
Snack Food Association
Trust for America's Health
Produce Marketing Association
United Fresh Produce Association
American Beverage Association
American Farm Bureau Federation
American Veterinary Medical Association
Kraft Foods North America
Safe Tables Our Priority (STOP)
Center for Foodborne Illness Research and Prevention
National Fisheries Institute
Pew Charitable Trust
International Bottled Water Association
National Coffee Association
American Grassfed Association
National Family Farm Coalition
Farm to Consumer Legal Defense Fund
Weston A. Price Foundation
The John Birch Society
Raw Milk Association of Colorado
Farm Family Defenders
Small Farms Conservancy
National Independent Consumers and Farmers Association
Carolina Farm Stewardship Association

OK, there are some names among the supporters that, at first blush, one might think have the interests of the American public in mind.  Doesn't Consumers Union put out Consumer Reports?  Yup.  Here's what they say about the bill:

A half-billion recalled eggs? Let’s fix this already!

When we can’t even trust the eggs in our refrigerators, there’s an obvious problem with our food safety system. Yet a bill that would help prevent deadly outbreaks and hold producers of unsafe food accountable – rather than wasting time and money tracking down problems after the fact – remains stuck in the Senate.

Help us move this bill now! The House passed its food safety bill more than a year ago, and since then there have been 60 recalls – including a half-billion eggs! A new report on the companies that produced the recalled eggs found chickens living among rodents, maggots and 8-foot-high piles of manure.

Unless consumers speak out and demand better inspections, testing and oversight of food producers, we will continue to face costly and deadly recalls. 
Tell your Senators to pass the food safety bill and to support an amendment that bans the chemical BPA in childrens' food and drink containers. Safer food can’t wait!
So, they see this as a consumer protection bill that will improve food safety by beefing up [no pun intended, really] food regulation and inspection.   So does the Center for Science in the Public Interest:
S. 510, FDA Food Safety Modernization Act.  Senator Richard Durbin.  S. 510 requires food companies to implement food safety plans.  Food companies would be required to register every two years.  Food companies would be required to conduct a hazard analysis and implement preventive measures on their production lines to ensure the food they produce is safe and meets performance standards set by FDA for controlling hazards.  FDA would be required to inspect high risk food processors at least annually and all other food processors at least once every four years.  Food importers would be required to ensure their foreign suppliers comply with U.S. food safety laws.  FDA may require high risk foods to be certified as complying with U.S. requirements for safety.  Certifications would be performed under a program for accrediting third-party certifiers to audit foreign food companies for compliance.  FDA would set standards for the safe production of fresh fruits and produce.  The bill strengthens enforcement authority by allowing FDA to:
  • Order recalls;
  • Detain unsafe food when inspectors find it; and,
  • Set traceability requirements.




But then there are the other groups like the National Association of Manufacturers (NAM), General Foods,


NAM is against more federal regulation. 

Official Policy Position

The National Association of Manufacturers recommends more emphasis on creating a favorable business climate through decreasing unnecessary manufacturing regulation by the government. The benefits of appropriate regulations are clear and supported by the public. The issue is how to enable the regulatory system in America to provide for these concerns without unreasonably impeding innovation, research, development and product deployment.
Click Here for the NAM's Complete Official Policy Position on Regulation »

Why would they support a bill that increases regulation?  One reason may be that a federal bill would preempt state regulations.  It's easier to deal with one set of federal regulations than 50 different sets of state regulations.  But what's in the bill that this normally anti-regulation group supports?  I don't know, but it's a question to pursue.

Then there's the National Fisheries Institute, which is another industry organization.  It has a "Truth Squad:"

About the NFI Truth Squad

When working on a news story about the seafood industry it is important to understand that many of the prepackaged, ready-made tools that some sources provide are not always what they appear to be. Those staggering statistics and that convenient sound bite science often appear to fit perfectly into a narrative but is it, proverbially, too good to be true?

Many stories about preserving fish stocks and pollution in seafood seem like harmless "responsible" reports when in reality they are tales based on misinformation peddled by an array of environmental activists and lobbyists who go to great pains to obscure their strategies and ultimate agenda.

Known as environmental non-governmental organizations or ENGOs, often they promote ocean conservancy or lobby for environmental protections—and some do a responsible job of it. But others distort facts, twist science and compromise public health with campaigns that confuse consumers and most importantly they rely on the press to tell "their" story.

Welcome to the NFI Truth Squad, where we will introduce you to how these environmental organizations and activists masquerading as independent doctors and researchers frequently offer contradictory and unproven ideas about eating fish that are alarmist and bankrupt.  

In the end we will ask the tough questions but it is up to you to find the answer.

The Featured Environmental Groups and Activists:

Consumers Union [there are eight more on their list]

So, the National Fisheries Institute is supporting the same "Food Safety" legislation as The Consumers Union. Even though the first group on the National Fisheries Institute "Truth Squad" hit list is the Consumers Union.

Wow, this just gets weirder and weirder. Their "truth" about the Consumers Union is that a biologist who used to work for them and wrote unflattering reports about NFI turned around and asked NFI for a consulting job. That's it.  I thought a key tactic for dealing with people who oppose you was cooptation - to hire them yourselves for five times their current salary.

They even publish his letter to them, which you can judge for yourself. I think it's an attempt to get them to be less doctrinaire in denying the dangers of mercury and other fisheries problems so that, in fact, more people will eat fish. Why is NFI backing this? What carrot do they get? That genetically modified salmon won't be labeled as such?

And then there's the International Bottled Water Association.   If you want to know about them, one, not very flattering, place to start is the movie Tapped,  which played at the Anchorage International Film Festival last year.  Water is seen by many to be the biggest world-wide resource issue of the future, making oil seem minor.  And large corporations are already trying to lock up the world's water supplies so people have to buy this critical to life commodity from only them.  What are they getting from this bill?

The list of those opposed are the people you might expect - groups for local farming, small farms, etc.  In a letter to Senators, the National Family Farm Coalition tries to distinguish factory farms from small family farms:
All of the well-publicized incidents of contamination in recent years – whether in spinach, peppers, or peanuts – occurred in industrialized food supply chains that span national and even international boundaries. The food safety problems in this system can and should be addressed without harming the local food systems that provide an alternative for consumers.
The growing trend toward healthy, fresh, locally sourced vegetables, fruit, dairy, and value- added products improves food safety by providing the opportunity for consumers to know their farmers and processors, to choose products on the basis of that relationship, and to readily trace any problems should they occur. ]

The National Independent Consumers and Farmers Association emphasizes that the bill will speed the demise of small farms and increase industrial farming where the main food safety issues arise:
S-510 will have the unintended destructive consequence of eliminating small farms and consumer access to local food. The main threats to food safety – by the government’s own admission – are centralized production, centralized processing and long distance transportation. The food safety bills will increase these risk factors by further consolidating agriculture into fewer, larger industrial farms through enormous regulatory burdens that small farms cannot endure. Small farms and farmers markets are an important economic engine, environmental safeguard and national security asset. There is not a history of food borne illness from farmers’ markets or small farms.

Then there's the Weston A. Price Foundation.  Who?  I'd never hear of the them. But when I saw their mission statement, it makes sense they are opposed:
The Weston A. Price Foundation is a nonprofit, tax-exempt charity founded in 1999 to disseminate the research of nutrition pioneer Dr. Weston Price, whose studies of isolated nonindustrialized peoples established the parameters of human health and determined the optimum characteristics of human diets. Dr. Price's research demonstrated that humans achieve perfect physical form and perfect health generation after generation only when they consume nutrient-dense whole foods and the vital fat-soluble activators found exclusively in animal fats.

The Foundation is dedicated to restoring nutrient-dense foods to the human diet through education, research and activism. It supports a number of movements that contribute to this objective including accurate nutrition instruction, organic and biodynamic farming, pasture-feeding of livestock, community-supported farms, honest and informative labeling, prepared parenting and nurturing therapies. Specific goals include establishment of universal access to clean, certified raw milk and a ban on the use of soy formula for infants.


One glaring anomaly amongst this group that wouldn't normally be thought to associate with progressives is the John Birch Society - the far right group that was prominent in the 1960's but that doesn't not mean much to most people today.  It would make sense that they are against this because they are against government regulation.  Here's part of what the John Birch Society says on S 510:

Senate Bill 510 has already passed committee and is on the Senate calendar. It calls for enhanced expansion of FDA authority over small farms, ranches, and other food producers, establishes burdensome administrative requirements for large and small operations, and arbitrary legal authority to recall “unsafe medications,” the definition of which is not clearly established; if in line with the global standard set by Codex Alimentarius, “unsafe medications” could extend to dietary supplements and herbal products. There is language that currently exempts from heavy regulation dietary supplement manufacturers and packagers. However, the FDA and its agents are notorious for interpreting regulations their own way.
Okay, the basics are there.  This is billed as a food safety bill.  It gives the FDA more power to set and enforce regulations  to promote food safety.  Its supporters include consumer groups.  But also organizations that normally oppose regulation because they or their members are regulated.  So what have they been given in exchange for their support?  That is the big question.

The opponent organizations say the regulations will continue the destruction of small farms by including them in the regulations when the real food safety problems come from the large industrial farms.  And then there are those who see this is far more ominous - a large scale conspiracy to capture the rights to control food and drugs by large corporations. The opponents are those who are trying to be mainstream alternatives to what we have today.  Sort of like the solar energy and electric car folks 30 years ago.  



Food Freedom makes that last point somewhat dramatically:
S 510, the Food Safety Modernization Act,  may be the most dangerous bill in the history of the US.  It is to our food what the bailout was to our economy, only we can live without money. 
“If accepted [S 510] would preclude the public’s right to grow, own, trade, transport, share, feed and eat each and every food that nature makes.  It will become the most offensive authority against the cultivation, trade and consumption of food and agricultural products of one’s choice. It will be unconstitutional and contrary to natural law or, if you like, the will of God.”  ~Dr. Shiv Chopra, Canada Health whistleblower

The Sponsor - Sen. Richard Durbin

So, who is the sponsor and how did he get this coalition of supporters?  Sen. Richard Durbin, Democrat of Illinois is billed by Wikipedia as one of the most liberal Senators.    I know that Illinois is a farm state with lots of corn.  Presumably his big donors are industrial farm interests, right?  GovTrack says, in its Money and Donors section on Durbin,
The top campaign contribution to Durbin in 2007-2008 was $94,035 from employees of Simmons Cooper LLC.
 OK, we're getting close to figuring this all out.  We just have to look up Simmons Cooper.  And they are . . . no wait, the pieces don't fit neatly into the puzzle, look:
Today, the Simmons firm continues to work on the front lines of several groundbreaking pharmaceutical trials, including several on a national stage. We have represented thousands of pharmaceutical clients and recovered nearly $200 million in verdicts and settlements.*
The Simmons firm has experience in litigating complex medical matters. We have taken a leadership role in standing up for individuals who have been injured by dangerous or defective drugs
They go after the drug companies for consumers.  In the liberal ideology, they should be representing large pharmaceuticals.  What's in this for them?  Influenceexplorer says they gave $4.27 million to politicians from 2001-2010, all of it to Democrats, most at the federal level.   Another specialty area of theirs is Intellectual Property, which is a concern of some of the opponents of S510 who believe large food and pharmaceutical companies will have more freedom to patent foods products such as genetically modified foods.  But that's just speculation.


What I see at this stage:

1.  There's a bill that nominally strengthens the government's ability to regulate and implement food safety in the US.

2.  There may be negative side effects that hurt small farmers and others trying to offer healthy options to industrialized farming.  Such groups oppose the bill as it now stands. 

3.  Consumer protection groups are supporting this bill, presumably because they see those aspects of the bill and discount the negative aspects.

4.  Large industrial food corporations and their organizations (such as Kraft, Food Marketing Institute, General Mills, International Dairy Foods Association. Grocery Manufacturer) are supporting the bill along with the National Association of Manufacturers, which as part of its policy opposes government regulation.  Obviously, these folks are getting something in exchange for their support.  I think this is the key to understanding this bill and which gives credibility to those organizations which oppose the bill in such strong language.  

One last note.  Charles Lindblom, in his  classic "Science of Muddling Through," argued that rather than agree on goals, members of Congress, agree on ends.  If they had to agree on the goals first, nothing would get done.  Each player sticks his own interest onto a piece of legislation.  That's why legislation seems so disjointed and unfocused.  This legislation may be an example of that.  There's something in it for Consumers Union and for the National Fisheries Institute who it appears are usually adversaries.  Just a thought.  The question is which of the supporters is getting the better deal and who is buying into short term gains in exchange for long term losses?  And who is left out of the deal altogether? 

This was meant to be a short post, just calling attention to the original letter and saying I don't know much about it, but here's just a bit to peak your interest.  Consider it a rough first look.

Saturday, November 06, 2010

Walking Conditions - Dicey to Good





When you live in Anchorage you live in at least two different worlds:  the green one and the white one.  But also the light one and the dark one.  Right now we are shifting from green to white and light to dark.  It's a time when my running schedule gets shredded as the streets and paths go from smooth to crusty to snow covered, the temperatures drop, and it's dark more.  I have to slowly get into a new rhythm.





We've just had snow and rain mixed this week with temperatures above freezing in the day and below at night.  So the ground - especially where cars go - is pretty challenging.  You walk differently when the ground has ice and snow - more carefully, lest you hit an icy spot and need to catch your balance.  It's not a conscious thing, your body just adjusts. 




The bikes are still out.  I walked today so I could see what the conditions were like.

Daylight Savings Time - Alaska's Failed Legislation to End It

Anchorage sunrise 11/5/10 at 9:41am - this shot 10:15am
Daylight savings time was initially introduced to save energy.  But studies today raise questions about how much energy is actually saved (seems to depend on where you live) and have raised new questions about the negative impact on health.  This National Geographic article summarizes these arguments.  From that article, here's a bit of history:

It wasn't until World War I that daylight savings were realized on a grand scale. Germany was the first state to adopt the time changes, to reduce artificial lighting and thereby save coal for the war effort. Friends and foes soon followed suit.
In the U.S. a federal law standardized the yearly start and end of daylight saving time in 1918—for the states that chose to observe it.
During World War II the U.S. made daylight saving time mandatory for the whole country, as a way to save wartime resources

Here in Alaska, House Bill (HB) 19 was introduced in the first session of the 26th Alaska Legislature by Eagle River representative Anna Fairclough.  But it died.

[Translation:  Each legislature meets for two years - the term of a representative (senators have four years).  So each Legislature has a first session - year one - and a second session - year two.  Alaska became a state in 1959, so by 2009 there had been 25 legislatures of two years for that fifty year span.  In 2009, the 26th Legislature began.  In 2011, the 27th Legislature will begin its two year run. ]

HB 19 wasn't a very long bill:


CS FOR HOUSE BILL NO. 19(L&C)
01 "An Act exempting the state and its political subdivisions from daylight saving time;
02 and providing for an effective date."

03 BE IT ENACTED BY THE LEGISLATURE OF THE STATE OF ALASKA:
04 * Section 1. AS 44.12 is amended by adding a new section to read:
05 Article 5. Standard Time.
06 Sec. 44.12.400. Exemption from daylight saving time. Under 15 U.S.C.
07 260a, this state exempts itself and all of its political subdivisions from observation of
08 advanced time, also known as daylight saving time, between 2:00 a.m. on the second
09 Sunday in March and 2:00 a.m. on the first Sunday in November in each calendar
10 year, and the entire state and all of its political subdivisions shall observe the standard
11 time that is otherwise applicable during that time period.
12 * Sec. 2. This Act takes effect January 1, 2011
[Translation: CS=Committee Substitute, meaning that the original bill has had changes made by one or more of the committees that review the bill and that now stands as the substitute for the original bill.   L&C = Labor and Commerce Committee]


I got to one hearing of this bill on March 18, 2010 where the Senators Menard and Olson took phone testimony on this bill and sponsor Fairclough also testified.  There was a stack of emails and letters that came in on this bill.  At the time I went through them and counted.  There were 62 for HB 19, 18 against, and four had other options, like get the US to change, but not just Alaska.]

From my post at that time:
Rep. Fairclough testifying to Sens. Menard and Olson
Rep. Anna Fairclough, the bill sponsor, responded to the comments received through the mail, email, and by phone today.  She said there were two reasons that have real justification for not changing:

1.  People in Southeast Alaska have a real issue because they are basically in Pacific time, so they get less light in the evening while the sun comes up 3am at solstice.
2.  The difficulty in coordinating with people outside of Alaska.  (I think this was the second one)

 If you have strong feelings about daylight savings time let your legislator know. (That link doesn't reflect this week's election, but most of the incumbents stayed on.)

My personal feelings are that in Alaska it probably doesn't matter one way or the other except in Southeast, which is the result of having the state in one time zone.  In the winter it's going to be dark and in the summer it's going to be light.  And I don't mind getting an extra hour this weekend in the fall.  But I hate losing an hour of weekend in the spring. 

My tweak to daylight savings would be, in the spring, to make the change (skip ahead one hour) at 4pm on Friday afternoon.  Then people at work would get to go home one hour early.  Yes, I know there are all sorts of potential economic impacts, but not much work gets done in the last hour of Friday afternoon anyway and people would feel happy to get a free hour and would spend more on entertainment that weekend to offset the loss.  (Gross generalization based on gut feeling but absolutely no evidence.) 

So remember tomorrow, you've got an extra hour this weekend.  Spend it with your kid(s) or parents. 

Friday, November 05, 2010

Frozen Drops Are Not Fractals, But They're Nice Too






I got an email about a fractal show in the new planetarium in the new science building at UAA, and given the sunshine, but icy streets and walkways, I decided to walk rather than bike over.  That probably was a mistake.


I guess it's too small to read, but it says "doors remain locked until show is over."  Some things you have to be on time for.   At 12:34, they were already started.  Two more disappointed souls showed up just after I did.


The day was beautiful and not too cold (around 0˚ C), so I thought I'd just go out looking for real life fractals. 



So I wandered back out of the building to see what I could find.






I sort of knew what fractals were, but I couldn't have given you a strict definition.  I checked when I got home.  This is from a website on fractals for kids.  Just about my level.  You can click on the links to see more explanation of what each of these three properties means. 
Fractal Properties
    Self-similarity
    Fractional dimension
    Formation by iteration
I thought I might find some fractals in the snow and ice all around, but it wasn't to be.  But what I saw was still nice.   I think this birch came closest to having fractal properties.



 But these frozen drops really got my attention.


There's a whole other world inside this drop, frozen on the end of the spruce needles.  I apologize for these pictures not being better.  I really needed a tripod so I could hold still enough.  But this is a large magnification from my pocket sized Canon Powershot.  It's like having a little microscope in your pocket, because you can take a picture and then enlarge it on the screen to see this world you couldn't see with the naked eye.

If you look closely you can see these are two different drops.














As you can see, it doesn't take much to keep me entertained.  It wasn't that long ago that most of humanity's entertainment came from observing nature.  

This was the ice that formed on the water in the gutter.

How Big is Africa? Readjusting Your Brain

This blog's underlying theme - though it might not always be obvious - is how do we know what we know? This image surely must challenge how you know the world.


From Information is Beautiful via ConBon Thanks!

Great New York Times Election Results Map

Click here (not on map) for interactive version
While checking on the results for the black candidates for Congress, I found this  New York Times interactive map where the cursor highlights individual districts and numbers and percentages.  It was the easiest way to check different races around the country. 

In some places it was hard to find a specific district until I realized I could click on the map and enlarge it.

Also, knowing your geography helps a lot.  And putting Alaska and Hawaii in Mexico doesn't help.  They could have approximated the real locations by moving the map legends around a bit.  But they live in New York so even if they knew, they wouldn't care.  (Do I sound bitter?  Sorry.  Maybe if New York showed up regularly in the Gulf of Mexico on maps, they'd understand how we feel.)



Election trivia I picked up along the way:

Democrat Adam Smith won a seat from Washington State.


And a lesson from Minnesota on the importance of where you put the district lines:

  • In Minnesota District 4, Democrat Betty McCullum beat her Republican opponent by 56,000 votes.
  • In Minnesota District 5, Democrat Keith Ellison beat his Republican opponent by 99,000 votes.
  • In Minnesota District 6, Republican Michele Bachman beat her Democratic opponent by 39,000 votes.

    The Democrats' left over votes were 4,000 less than Bachman's 159,000.

Thursday, November 04, 2010

How Many Blacks in Congress? - Post Election Update

[UPDATE Oct. 17, 2013:  See more recent post with updates.]

A couple of years ago I tried to find out how many African-American Congress members there were and discovered it wasn't easy.  I ended up posting my own chart.  So I figured I needed to do some updating to include changes after the November 2010 election.

I've checked each representative on the list to see how they did in the election.  And I've googled to see if I could discover any new black representatives who may have shown up.  Below is a summary of the changes I could find.  This may not be complete.  I will update the chart and put together a new one later. 

The new total, as best as I can tell, is 40, not counting two non-voting members. 


Basically, most members of the Congressional black caucus were reelected, but there are some changes.

All the seats held by black Democrats were retained by black Democrats.  One previously black Democratic seat was recovered (Louisiana). One black Republican won in a district (South Carolina) of a retiring white Republican and one black Republican won a previously Democratic (and white) seat (Florida.)

If this covers all the Congressional victories by black candidates, there would be a gain of three black members of Congress, from 39  to 42.  The one black Senator, Roland Burris, did not run for reelection, so there will be no black Senators.



Two ran for other offices (and lost)

Artur Davis, gave up his seat in Alabama's 7th district to run for governor.  He lost in the primary to another Democrat.  Terri Sewell won the seat.

Kendrick Meek gave up Florida's 17th district house seat to run for US Senator.  He lost.  His house seat was won by Frederica Wilson


One lost the primary election:

Carolyn Cheeks  Kilpatrick  lost her Michigan's 13th district seat in the primary to Hanson Clark, who went on to win the general election.

One did not seek reelection:

Diane Watson in California's 33rd district announced last January she would not run and was replaced by Karen Bass.  

In all the cases above, the individuals changed, but the seats remained Democratic and black.

(The focus here is on the House, but Senator Roland Burris did not run for reelection from Illinois and there will be no new black Senators.)

 

Black Democrat retakes

In 2008, Joseph Cao took advantage of Rep. Jefferson's indictment for bribery to defeat him in Louisiana's heavily black and Democratic 1st district.   He also became the first Vietnamese-American member of Congress.  But in 2010, he lost the seat went back to a black Democrat, Cedric Richmond. 



Two black Republicans elected.

AP reports that 14 black Republicans ran for Congress in 2010 and two were elected. 

Tim Scott won in South Carolina's 1st district.  He defeated Strom Thurmond's son in the primary. He was endorsed by Sarah Palin. 


Allen West ousted a two term Democrat in Florida's 22nd district, which supported Gore, Kerry, and Obama in the last three presidential races. 


An AP report, here from the Cleveland Plain Dealer, reports on the election of other non-white candidates in general. such as Nikki Haley, the new Indian-American Governor of South Carolina and also their first female governor.  They also report on Hispanic candidates and voters.

Black Members of House of Representatives 112th Congress

Please
email me
with corrections and additions. Thanks.

Short Term, Fun, Hectic Volunteer Job Openings - AIFF 2010

The economy is bad and jobs are hard to get.  People with great qualifications are not working.  If that's you, rather than sitting home being depressed as winter comes along, show your stuff as a volunteer at the Anchorage International Film Festival.  There's lots to do during the festival and there are a few key jobs that being filled right now.

You'll get to see how an international film festival works and you'll meet lots and lots of people - some of whom may be looking for permanent employees.




Current Openings

AIFF is recruiting for the following volunteer positions. To apply, please email a resume and cover letter to aiffvolunteer@gmail.com along with the title of the position you are applying for.


Assistant to the Volunteer Coordinator
Pre-festival: 3-5 hrs/wk / During festival: 15-20 hrs/wk
Responsibilities: Work closely with the Volunteer Coordinator to recruit, train, schedule, and supervise volunteers. An ideal candidate is someone who is interested in learning the role and responsibilities of the Volunteer Coordinator in order to be eligible to be promoted to this role for AIFF 2010. This position will begin immediately. Special application instructions: Please submit a current resume and cover letter describing any relevant experience. Please also describe your organizational and interpersonal communication skills.


Box Office/Merchandise Sales
Pre-festival: 5-7 hours / During festival: 12-15 hrs/wk
Responsibilities: Selling tickets and AIFF merchandise. This position requires excellent customer service and cash handling skills.
Special application instructions: Please submit a current resume and cover letter describing any relevant experience.


Lead Usher
Pre-festival: 5-10 hours / During festival: 12-15 hrs/wk
Responsibilities: Oversee volunteers and venue operations, coordinate with other volunteer teams, complete attendance reporting, assist with box office and merchandise sales as needed. This position requires excellent organization, communication, and customer service skills.
Special application instructions: Please submit a current resume and cover letter describing any relevant experience.




Projectionist
Pre-festival: 0 hours / During festival: 10-15 hrs/wk
Responsibilities: Operate A/V equipment used in presenting festival films. Applicants must have experience with LCD projectors and DVD players as well as general A/V knowledge.
Special application instructions: Please submit a current resume and cover letter describing relevant experience.

For more information click here.

Beth Varner is the volunteer coordinator again this year.  She's great.  Here's a video of her I made at last year's festival.  The phone number is still good, but I'm not sure about the rules for free vouchers.



This is my way of saying that the Anchorage International Film Festival has its 2010 Festival Website up and running - earlier than in previous years, though they are obviously still adding links and content. Actually, it's already too late to get discounts on passes - I got distracted by the elections.  Having blogged this festival for the last three years, I can tell you that what's up already shows that they are making improvements on how things are presented and thus, how easy you can find things. It will make my job of highlighting some of the key films beforehand much easier.

So, get your calendars and mark the dates: DECEMBER 3 - 16.

Wednesday, November 03, 2010

WTF Explained in One Sentence - Post Election Stress Reduction

A site called "One Sentence" has stories told . . . yeah you're way ahead of me . . . in one sentence.  It's a good break after the election.  Here are two examples from their most popular page. 

What are the odds?

I knew God had a sense of humor when I hesitantly answered the ringing K-Mart payphone, only to hear my best friend, who had misdialed my home phone number, on the other end.
2008-06-10 10:39:09 / Rating: 4189.25 /

Reno Reading

My 8-year-old sister proudly declared that she knows that "WTF" means "Wow, That's Funny" and has been using it all over the internet.
2008-10-23 13:39:41 / Rating: 3290.75 /

 To see more go One Sentence. 

Images from Election Night Anchorage





I gave a neighbor a ride downtown tonight and she was headed first to the Denaina Center for the Lisa Murkowski reception.



Father Frank arrived first and greeted friends.





Then Lisa arrived with lots of hugs while the crowd chanted, "Lisa, Lisa, Lisa. . ."





Then I headed over to  Election Central  a couple blocks away at the Egan Center.


It was still relatively empty at 9:15pm.  The media were getting set up to interview the winners and losers later on. 


Radio reporter Johanna Eurich was telling former Senator Arliss Sturgulewski about her month in New Mexico digitizing historic tapes.








Sturgulewski also talked with former Senator Al Adams and others. 











House district 31 challenger Lupe Marroquin had a cordial talk with incumbent and winner Bob Lynn. 












APRN reporter Steve Heimel with reelected Congressman Don Young.
















McAdams fans were upbeat, despite the numbers showing the former mayor of Sitka running third, well behind front-runner "write-in" and Joe Miller.  As I write this at 1:00 am, the state unofficial election results had the numbers this way with 87% of the precincts counted:

McAdams, Scott T. DEM 46444 24.05%
Miller, Joe REP 67087 34.74%
Write-in Votes
77587 40.18%

The next step will be to go through all the write in candidates, get rid of the ones that are clearly for someone other than Lisa Murkowski and then I imagine Joe Miller will fight over every ballot that isn't spelled exactly right.



Democrat Pete Petersen retained his east Anchorage seat against former Kodiak representative Gabrielle Ledoux who moved into his district earlier this year and put on an hard campaign.  Pete is the only Returned Peace Corps Volunteer in the legislature, that I know of.








Don Young's fans came into the room.













Democratic Rep. Les Gara (left) had an uncontested race and Rep. Chris Tuck defeated his Republican opponent.













Matsu Republican Rep. Carl Gatto also ran uncontested.










Anchorage Daily News reporters Lisa Demer and Sean Cockerham.


















Republican Cathy Giessel defeated Democrat Janet Reiser and Independent Phil Dziubinski to replace Sen. Con Bunde in Senate District P.





Watching the results being updated on the screen.  



Lisa Murkowski's crowd entering the Egan Center.  

And by then, I'd had my fill and left the Egan Center to go home.  
As I look over the state races, the significant ones seem to be:

Interior District 6, Democratic incumbent Woodie Salmon lost to Republican Alan Dick.
Anchorage, District 27 Democratic incumbent Bob Buch lost to Republican Mia Costello.

Fairbanks, District 7 Republican incumbent Mike Kelly lost to Democrat Bob Miller.

So, the Republicans picked up one seat.  

In the Senate, things stay 10 Democrats and 10 Republicans and the coalition appears to be the likely result again.  

Also significant, Supreme Court Justice Dana Fabe defeated a last minute right wing campaign to unseat her but voters took the advice of the Judicial Council and ousted District Judge Postma.  

The two bond issues passed, but the Constitutional Amendment to enlarge the legislature failed.  

All the results are available on the State Division of Elections website and after the jump.


State of Alaska 2010 General Election
November 2, 2010
Unofficial Results

11/03/10
00:38:00

Registered Voters 494876 - Cards Cast 194937 39.39%Num. Report Precinct 438 - Num. Reporting 384 87.67%

US SENATOR



Total
Number of Precincts
438
Precincts Reporting
384 87.7 %
Times Counted
194937/494876 39.4 %
Total Votes
193101

Carter, Tim NA 654 0.34%
Gianoutsos, Ted NA 307 0.16%
Haase, Fredrick LIB 1022 0.53%
McAdams, Scott T. DEM 46444 24.05%
Miller, Joe REP 67087 34.74%
Write-in Votes
77587 40.18%

US REPRESENTATIVE



Total
Number of Precincts
438
Precincts Reporting
384 87.7 %
Times Counted
194937/494876 39.4 %
Total Votes
191829

Crawford, Harry T. DEM 59865 31.21%
Young, Don REP 131047 68.31%
Write-in Votes
917 0.48%