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Fri Jul 15, 2011 at 00:45:48 AM EDT
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From Max Page of PHENOM (Public Higher Education Network of Massachusetts):
The Massachusetts Budget - A Work of Shame
Democrats all - the Speaker, Senate President, and Governor - are patting themselves on the back for passing a budget that had three main features: crushing cuts to virtually every aspect of state government that services regular people, a major attack on public employee unions and their collective bargaining rights, and - best for last - not a dime of "shared sacrifice" from the wealthiest in our state.
Yes, those "crazy liberals" from Massachusetts have for the third year of this recession failed to ask for a single dime of "share sacrifice" - the favorite phrase of the political class who seek to undermine government and its duty to enrich our public life and lift up the neediest in our society - from those who have the most in our society. The last time the state raised taxes, what did it do? It raised the wrong tax - the sales tax - the one that is most regressive, affecting the poor more than the wealthy. And before the budget debate even began this year, those good Democratic leaders decided that no amount of cuts to libraries, schools, parks, services for the mentally ill would be painful enough to get them to violate the sacred commitment to the wealthy - no tax increases.
We have a bill to raise $1.4 billion a year, mainly from the wealthiest in our state. See ourcommunities.org. Now we just need the movement to get our "representatives" to see the light.
-Max Page
P.S. Public higher education was cut by $60 million, and financial aid by another $2 million. The catalogue of shame is detailed at our reliable friend, the Massachusetts Budget and Policy Center. |
| eli_beckerman :: The Massachusetts Budget - brought to you by the Democratic Party |
| The praise from Patrick's supporters is nauseating, and the breakdown of what he's actually accomplished for vulnerable workers and retirees is quite weak.
From Gatehouse News Service:
According to the Mass. Municipal Association, the amendments will:
· Tweak how mitigation funds for retirees, employees with major health care needs and low-income workers are calculated. Towns and cities that opt into the new plan would set aside up to 25 percent of the insurance savings they see in the first year after changing copays and deductibles and use that money to help offset the impact on vulnerable workers.
· Require communities that want to switch employees to the state's Group Insurance Commission to demonstrate that the move would save 5 percent more than possible by making the maximum changes to local insurance plans.
· Freezes any increases to the percentage that retirees contribute toward their health care plans until mid-2014.
· A change in language meant to clarify that municipalities cannot unilaterally change basic coverage, such as mental health or chiropractic services, under the new plan. Such changes would still be subject to bargaining with unions.
And now this move is being used against the Democrats by the Republican Governors Association. From the Boston Herald:
"Deval Patrick has done, in some ways, more radical things than I've done in Ohio," Kasich said, as he described his efforts to stabilize his state's budget, in part by curbing collective bargaining rights for public employees.
Republicans in Washington and across the country are betting that Gov. Deval Patrick's recent move to restrict some collective bargaining power for municipal employees - no matter how nuanced, limited or supported by unions - will neutralize a 2012 campaign issue for President Obama, who has used it as a bludgeon against Republicans as he ramps up his reelection bid.
"There is no doubt that the White House took a special interest in Gov. Patrick's efforts to reform collective bargaining powers, and the Obama campaign hopes that the national media overlooks what has happened in Massachusetts," said Michael Schrimpf, spokesman for the Republican Governors Association. |
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Green Mass Group is an online forum for Green thought and collective action in Massachusetts. It is a community forum for justice, sustainability, democracy and health in the Commonwealth and beyond.
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| Quotes |
"Now, is this the deal I would have preferred? No. I believe that we could have made the tough choices required - on entitlement reform and tax reform - right now, rather than through a special congressional committee process. But this compromise does make a serious down payment on the deficit reduction we need and gives each party a strong incentive to get a balanced plan done before the end of the year. Most importantly, it will allow us to avoid default and end the crisis that Washington imposed on the rest of America."
--President Barack Obama on the debt ceiling "deal"
"Despite Democratic control over the White House, despite Democratic control over the Senate, despite overwhelming opposition from the American people, a small minority of the members of the Republican-controlled House have successfully pushed an extreme right-wing agenda onto the American political landscape. It is an ideology which believes that despite the fact that the rich are getting richer, the middle class is shrinking, and poverty is increasing, all - all of the burden for deficit reduction should rest on working people."
--Independent Senator Bernie Sanders on the debt ceiling "deal"
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Then and Now
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Then...
"Last year Evergreen, a Massachusetts company, agreed to establish their first-ever United States based manufacturing facility here in Massachusetts. They did so, or are doing so, at Devens. They have now agreed and chosen to triple their size at Devens. Their next phase of expansion, right here in Massachusetts, a signature company in a signature sector, and we congratulate all of the folks at Evergreen and look forward to continuing to work with you...
We made a personal commitment to Evergreen for the sake of Evergreen, but also because we wanted to show that there are ways in which state government, in working together with private industry and with the utility companies, could begin to create a different kind of environment, a different kind of business climate here, to grow that sector, and it is happening. It's happening. Evergreen is one of the most prominent examples, but there are a whole host of examples."
--Governor Deval Patrick, April 7, 2008, boasting about state investment in Evergreen.
and Now...
"Evergreen Solar Inc. filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection yesterday, completing a stunning reversal of fortune for a high-flying alternative-energy company that once seemed to herald a new era for the Massachusetts economy... At its peak, Evergreen employed roughly 900 people locally and attracted more than $50 million in state support, as its stock price soared above $100 a share.
Yesterday, Evergreen's stock closed at 18 cents. The company shuttered its manufacturing plant in Devens earlier this year and now has only 85 employees left. Massachusetts is one of its top creditors, owed $1.5 million in rent."
--Erin Ailworth, Boston Globe, August 16, 2011
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