January 2010

Dr. Blake Curd has a case of Joel Dykstra syndrome

Uncle Fester

I think you need to change your idea bulb, Blake

If this is the kind of campaign Dr. Curd is gonna run, he might as well throw in the towel today;

PIERRE – Republican congressional candidate Blake Curd criticized U.S. Rep. Stephanie Herseth Sandlin on Wednesday for a direct-mail piece that Curd said is a blatant campaign flier mailed at taxpayer expense.

“We shouldn’t have taxpayer money going to somebody’s re-election campaign,” he said.

Huh? A sitting US congressperson asking and telling veterans about government services is a campaign flier?

The piece in question, mailed to veterans, touts Herseth Sandlin’s support of higher wages for military personnel, enhanced G.I. Bill benefits and a 10 percent increase in veterans’ health.

While I can see Curd’s point, it is a stretch at best. There is plenty other things to attack Herseth on besides postage fees. Trust me. Do a little more digging Curd, I’m sure you will find a couple of things.

Time to repeal Home Rule?

Oddly, the Gargoyle Leader had a story about Home Rule today;

“This would be a more efficient government because you had one guy to answer to. That was the argument at the time,” said Bob Jamison, who has served on both the City Commission and City Council. “The mayor was the one that ran the show because he was the elected leader of the city.”

Problem is that under the current administration (or whatever you wanna call the clusterf**k) the department heads tell the mayor what to do and the mayor sidesteps the council.

“It was a new form of government and not as much power as the commission form. Not everyone knew how it operated,” she said.

That is the major problem with it, no checks and balances. Who is keeping the mayor accountable? Who is keeping the department heads accountable?

“Our new strong mayor form of government required the not-so-glorious but extremely important and complex task of reorganizing and synchronizing the former City Commission government of five kingdoms into a coordinated mayoral council,” Hanson said.

But this could have been accomplished under the old form of government. You don’t have to change the entire structure of city government to get a couple of departments to consolidate, you just change a couple of ordinances, have the council approve it, and it’s done.

But some residents, Jamison said, prefer the old system.

“I think both systems work,” he said. “No question about that.”

No, the old system worked better because citizens were better represented.

King Rounds will continue to spread his BS all the way until the end

rounds

Pat, Pat, Pat myself on the back;

The governor said if lawmakers want to trim state spending, they must propose specific cuts to programs. He said he will not accept across-the-board cuts that call for agencies to provide the same level of services while reducing spending by a certain percentage.

The governor also chastised lawmakers who complain that the number of state employees has grown too much. He said many of those positions, the equivalent of 861 full-time employees, have been added at state universities to support increased student enrollment and research.

Define Many. I would be curious to know just what percentage of those 861 employees are working at the universities. Can anyone get me a link?

Oh, and the Republican and Democratic leadership are gearing up to make cuts (like they promise us every year);

Senate Republican Leader Dave Knudson of Sioux Falls said the governor proposed no new programs and is leaving it up to the Legislature to cut spending.

Senate Democratic Leader Scott Heidepriem of Sioux Falls criticized Rounds for not holding down spending in previous years and allowing the number of state employees to grow substantially. Democrats want across-the-board budget cuts.

Yeah, right. I’ll betcha my last dollar that both of these guys will vote for the 1 penny increase in sales taxes to build a new Events Center. Of course Dave has to vote for it, or he will be sleeping on the couch. “I can’t wait to increase the sales tax by one penny so we can build all kinds of things.” – Quen Be De Knudson

Is Sioux Falls Mayoral Candidate Mike ‘Premier’ Huether polling people and asking what would make a good mayor?

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You know how the old saying goes, “If you have to ask . . .”

A South DaCola foot soldier sent this to me, and it is of no surprise. I wonder if Mike realizes that being mayor of Sioux Falls isn’t a real prestigious job? It’s a job you would really want, really, really want. Not just to help your buddies (like King Dave has) but to help the regular folk. I wonder if Mike is getting caught up in winning instead of governing? Wanna know what the people of Sioux Falls want? Knock on some doors.

I just received a survey call that eventually revealed itself to be a Huether pollster. It started off sensible enough – I have to hand it to his campaign for that. They asked which candidate I plan to vote for, and the two most important issues. They then went through each candidate, and my feelings for each…along with that same question about the current mayor, council, and a couple of organizations.

I laughed at one point, though, and told the pollster they needed one more choice. The question was where I get my candidate information, and the choices included:

1. Candidate’s websites
2. Candidate’s commercials
3. Billboards
4. Local newspaper and TV news
5 – 7. Can’t recall but very similar press-release outlets.

I told the pollster they needed an eighth category for independent blogs.

It was after this point that it became clear that it was a Huether poll, as I was read a handful of statements from him and asked to rate them from 1 – 10. They concluded with whether these statement made me change my choice to him.

Whatever happened to good old fashioned knocking on doors? What does SF have? 60-70,000 registered voters? Oh, that’s right, one candidate has been doing that for over two years, and guess what, his name isn’t Mike, Pat, Bill or Vernon.

You think Excel Energy is jacking up fees, check this Sh*t out!

www.rapidcityjournal.com

By Barbara Soderlin Journal staff

Black Hills Power customers pressed the utility at a forum Monday night to invest in renewable energy, cut its reliance on coal-fired power plants and avoid the 26.6 percent rate hike the company has requested from state regulatory officials.

Rapid City is full of working families who make just enough where they don’t qualify for home heating assistance, but will struggle to pay higher heating bills, resident Jenny Robertson told utility officials.

“We’re just on the cusp,” Robertson said. “This is scary for us.”

The meeting on the issue sponsored by the South Dakota Peace and Justice Center drew about three dozen people to the Mother Butler Center and was less formal than the Public Utilities Commission hearing on the same topic Nov. 24 at The Journey Museum.

In a room with a picture of Pope John Paul II on the wall, people passed around paper cups of coffee, slices of cake and a hat to collect donations.

For nearly two hours, they challenged Black Hills Power’s vice president of regulatory and governmental affairs to defend the rate increase request and answer questions about the utility’s stock prices, lobbying costs, charitable donations, conservation programs and commitment to wind power.

Kyle White gamely took questions and engaged the audience in a discussion of the economics of electricity.

He said Black Hills Power needs to increase rates to pay for a new power plant in Wyoming that serves this area, and to add infrastructure to serve a growing population of residents who are using more electricity per capita than ever to heat their bigger homes and power computers, cell phones and flat-screen televisions.

About the new coal-fired plant, White said, “It’s our lowest-cost option for continuing to provide safe and reliable service.”

But several in the group said the decision to rely on fuel that produces greenhouse gases is irresponsible given the link to climate change.

“I truly believe that our earth is at a critical point,” Mary Jo Farrington of Rapid City said, urging the utility to add more renewable resources like wind power to its energy portfolio.

White said that would be possible, but expensive: “We’d need a bigger increase.” The same goes for adding programs that help low-income people with their electric bill. He encouraged residents who want to save to look for ways to better insulate their homes.

White said South Dakota is not one of the states that mandate a renewable energy standard, and people should bring public policy decisions like this to their elected officials.

Jim Petersen, chairman of the Peace and Justice Center’s West River operations, encouraged the group to contact their mayor for advocacy on the rate increase and the state Legislature to push for mandates on renewable energy resources.

“These aren’t the bad guys,” Petersen said. “Our problems by and large rest in Pierre.”