Good Monday Morning,
My propane company (Burnwell) just delivered 85 gallons of propane and billed me $6.039 per gallon plus a $9.99 “admin fee”. Plus taxes, the total bill was $524.15. The bill says they made the delivery on December 23rd but they left no receipt of any kind, at least non that I saw.
Last summer I asked Burnwell to deliver only when I call for a delivery so I have a call in for them to come and take their latest 85 gallons out of the tank. Being that the tank is 250 gallons and I assume the meter on the truck stops when the tank registers as full, that should leave me 165 gallons which is plenty until I can afford to get more. Does anyone want to take bets on what they’ll do? Does Putnam County have a consumer service division or ombudsman?
Senator Vincent Leibell is hosting – at his taxpayer funded Senate website – a political effort to get you to sign a petition to create a state constitutionally enforced spending cap. Last week he sent a postcard directing you to the same place. Mine, I “Return(ed) to Sender” as I will each taxpayer funded political mailing that comes my way – and you should too.
He – and the rest of our state government – could readily resolve the problem by enduring the bravery to cut budgetary spending, but this petition thing gets you all enthused, makes you think “we’re in this together” and in the end leaves us exactly where we are today with a dysfunctional State government made up of men and women from whom none of us would ever buy a used car.
When the Senator becomes the County Executive imagine how free-spending he’ll be then!
At the end of 2009, 4371 American troops had died as part of Operation Enduring Freedom and another 4434 have been wounded. 20,638 additional troops have been diagnosed with PTSD according to the VA.
9351 Iraqi soldiers have been killed and more than 1 million Iraqi civilians have died.
Mideast member nations of Coalition Forces: 0.
Mideast member nations financial contribution: $0.
Blackwater Guards convicted of murdering 17 innocent people: 0.
As of March, 2009 Congress had appropriated $808 BILLION to the war. Scores of billions more have been allocated in other directly related DOD spending but due to shoddy record keeping we’ll never know just how much. These monies were dedicated *outside* the budget process so each dollar was borrowed against your children’s tax receipts.
Congressional Republicans keep voting against adequate VA funding increases to cover current costs but vote increasing amounts for the war to reward defense contractors in their districts and to look “tough” on terrorism all while telling us to “support the troops”.
The organization, Disabled American Veterans, (DAV) has rated 70.4% of congressional Republicans a “0%” when it comes to VA funding. DAV rated 154 congressional Democrats at 100% (with the lowest rating among the remainder at 60%). Representative John Hall scored 100% with the DAV.
2010 New Year’s Resolutions I’d Love To Hear:
The NY State Senate: We promise to stop using tax dollars for blatant political mailings and will, in 2010, stop our political grandstanding and do what we were sent to Albany to do.
TV Cameramen: We promise to stop shifting the view and will leave our cameras in one place so that there is continuity and flow to the event you’re viewing. We know you have an attention span of longer than 3.5 seconds and we’re sorry for the nausea we’ve been causing all these years.
Wall Street: That free trillion dollars you gave us? Heh. Well, um… we really didn’t need it but heck, Bush was one of us and rewarded us adequately. For 2010 we promise to pay it back with interest and adopt regulations that protect our end-customers (that’s you!) from the worst abuses we can dream up. And man, can we ever dream up some rotten stuff!
TV Sportscasters: We’ll shut up and stop with the constant barrage of useless observations. We know that you really don’t care who so and so’s third grade teacher was or what his/her favorite ice cream flavor is or that the Russian figure skater has just completed a triple-lutz. (We don’t even know what lutz’ are.) Starting today we’ll let the action on the field unfold without endlessly analyzing every motion.
Transportation Security Administration (TSA): For 2010 we promise to institute safety programs that are not invasive, genuinely protect passengers and that adhere to the Constitution of the United States. We’re sorry we’ve been, um, misleading air passengers all these years and we’ll make amends. We also understand that full-body scanners will not stop a determined terrorist and that there’s no need to take your shoes off nor look at you naked, even electronically.
Assemblyman Congressman Senator Greg Ball: I will come clean on the goat but I’ll make no promises beyond that.
The NY Journal News: Two words: Investigative Reporting. Heh, just kidding. Oh, and just like News That Matters credits us each time they mention one of our articles, we’ll do the same in return. If we read it here we’ll say so.
China: We promise – no more lead or mercury in our childrens toys.
Congress: Beginning in 2010 we will no longer attach non-germane amendments to spending bills. In other words, it will be against our new rules to bury education funding inside a bill that gives us raises so that we can vote against the raise but still get you your funding! Oh, and while we’re at it, we’re going to stop spending hours each day voting for “commemorative” bills such as honoring National Underwear day even though the Underwear PAC has given us millions in campaign donations and we crave the Fruit of the Loom vote. Did we mention National Cherry Pit Day which memorializes the contribution cherry pits have made to American History?
Credit Card Companies: Seeing that we’ve pretty much bankrupted the personal wealth of the nation, for 2010 we will lower interest rates on current and past balances to 6% and stop charging usurious fees if you’re a few days late with your payments.
Barack Obama: For 2010 I will grow a pair.
News That Matters Readers: We promise to get active and engaged with real, meaningful political and social action.
Pulte Homes: You know, we’re genuinely sorry about all that blasting and harassment and will adequately compensate those we’ve hurt the most over the past year and a half or so.
Saudi Arabia: Yeah, well… we’ll start taking care of ourselves rather than let US taxpayers continue to foot the bill for our security. But really, thanks for the free ride these past 60 years.
FOXNews: We’re shutting down our news operations for we truly understand the damage we’ve caused the nation through our misinformation campaigns. It’s our fault and we’re sorry.
Local TV Weathermen: Before we announce the next [fill in weather event] of the Century we’ll actually look at the computer models and honestly assess the odds of your eminent demise. And yes, we understand a foot of snow in the northeast is not the end of the world as we know it and so we’ll no longer make believe that it is.
Teabaggers: Okay, we admit that 98% of our noise is based on a philosophy of racism. And yeah, we really have no clue what the differences between fascism and socialism are. We just thought, you know, we could get a rise out of people. We’re dreadfully sorry we’ve embarrassed everyone.
Putnam Valley Supervisor Bob Tendy claims that man made global warming is probably a hoax and that in the end it amounts to nothing more than a transfer of wealth from rich nations to poor ones. On that I have two things to say:
For a hundred and more years the United States has been systematically raping the Third World of its natural resources at the lowest possible price and if they should complain we shut them up at the point of a gun. (Like Hawaii, as just one example.) This transfer of wealth from the poor to the rich, I must assume, has not bothered the Supervisor all that much.
Likewise, I’m wondering how he feels about the trillion dollar transfer of wealth from the working classes to the rich the Bush administration pushed through in its last months of office combined with the Republican sponsored portions of our health reform bill which amounts to (drum roll please…) another trillion dollar transfer of wealth from the working classes to the rich.
But what I really want to know is how many times we can repeat this pattern before you, dear readers, figure out which political party is responsible for these massive, nation-breaking wealth transfers. I’ll tell you this, it’s not the Democrats! They couldn’t find their asses in a chair, leaving us with only one other plausible option…
Actual CNN Headline: “Tests: “Nothing wrong” with Limbaugh’s heart”. I didn’t even know he had one.
While we’re on Rush, did you know that last year he stated that Obama wanted to mandate circumcision in the health care bill? And that Glenn Beck said the bill included health insurance for your family pet? Neither did I. But Politifact, who has been keeping track of such things, has this to report on that and so much more. It’s worth a read.
Take 5:48 seconds out of your day and watch this video. Then tell me if you think the anti-intellectual movement in the US over the past 20 years has been a good thing or a bad thing.
“Obama Chills Out With Shaved Ice” is the headline for a Honolulu Advertiser article about the President out and about with his family on vacation:
At least 100 people crowded around barricades yesterday afternoon outside the Kailua Island Snow shop to catch a glimpse of a casual President Obama, wearing sunglasses and dressed in shorts and a white T-shirt, enjoying shave ice with his daughters and about 16 friends.
Obama ordered shave ice for the group, going up to the counter with a long list of orders on lined notebook paper folded in half.
Maybe we should start following reporters around when they’re on vacation? Fair is fair.
Leonardo DiCaprio spent the New Year’s weekend with Israeli super-model Bar Rafaeli in Cabo San Lucas.
I could not care less but just for once I wanted to report on mainstream American culture. If you care about Leonardo and his girlfriend please raise your hand… Seeing none, we’re done with that experiment.
And now, The News:
- Southeast garbage contract still in court
- Dutchess County executive vetoes environmental laws
- Dutchess College offers session on green jobs
- Community farming proposed on town-owned land in Orangeburg
- Yummy! Ammonia-Treated Pink Slime Now in Most U.S. Ground Beef
- Natural Gas Drilling: What We Don’t Know
- Environmental issues unfold over decades, not years
- E.P.A., Concerned Over Gas Drilling, Questions New York State’s Plans
- Jim Hightower | Six Things to Do in 2010
Southeast garbage contract still in court
By Michael Risinit • mrisinit@lohud.com
SOUTHEAST — The ongoing legal battle about which company will pick up Southeast residents’ trash in 2010 has left one carter with a bit of agita and a battle over his large, metal trash containers.
Pat Cartalemi Sr. of AAA Carting of Cortlandt said that on New Year’s Eve afternoon he was given until New Year’s Day to remove his containers at Southeast’s townhome and condominium complexes. In anticipation of picking up residents’ garbage throughout town in 2010, AAA bought the containers from the outgoing hauler.
But an appeal of a justice’s order giving AAA the contract has left his company at least temporarily without the job, and led Sani-Pro Disposal Services of Briarcliff Manor to place its own containers at the complexes.
Dutchess County executive vetoes environmental laws
Laws that would have banned baby bottles with toxic chemicals and required neighbor notification of pesticide use were vetoed Thursday by County Executive William Steinhaus.
Environment Committee Chairman Joel Tyner said the bills had bipartisan support and took years to pass.
“It’s a shame that the county executive spent a lot of tax dollars over the years that ‘Dutchess Goes Green’ and these are two simple common-sense ways to protect the public health,” he said.
“Unfortunately, they are not happening,” Tyner said.
One bill would have banned Bisphenol A, a chemical used to manufacture plastics. Some think it is hazardous to human health.
Dutchess College offers session on green jobs
By Kelly Barclay
In the business world, going green has become a trend. This focus on sustainability, energy efficiency and durability has resulted in a growing demand for workers who are trained in various “green” fields, and Dutchess Community College is responding. The college will be offering a Green Careers Information Session from 6 to 8 p.m. Thursday in room 122 of Bowne Hall on the main campus. The object of the session is to provide people with a pathway into green education and careers. The program is free.
“This is a way for people in parallel industries to expand their knowledge and for others to join the industry and learn about going green,” said Virginia Stoeffel, assistant dean of the Office of Community Services and Special Programs at the college.
The information session will include a more general industry overview of green jobs in the area, as well as green technology opportunities specific to Dutchess County. Breakout sessions will follow, discussing the different courses, both credit and noncredit, that will be offered at DCC focusing on green careers. “Not only will people learn from a business perspective, but an educational one as well,” said Carol Stevens, dean of the college’s Community Services and Special Programs. “They will get to meet instructors one-on-one and ask any questions that they may have.”
Community farming proposed on town-owned land in Orangeburg
By Akiko Matsuda • amatsuda@lohud.com
ORANGEBURG — John McDowell wants to transform a piece of town-owned property into a farm where residents can grow vegetables and children can learn about plants.
This month, McDowell, founder of the Rockland Farm Alliance, made a presentation before the Orangetown Town Board, proposing the town lease a portion of the former Rockland Psychiatric Center property to the alliance for community farming.
The fate of the proposal remains uncertain as the Orangetown administration is in the middle of a transition from the Democratic-majority board under outgoing Supervisor Thom Kleiner to the Republican-majority board under Supervisor-elect Paul Whalen.
Yummy! Ammonia-Treated Pink Slime Now in Most U.S. Ground Beef
By Jennifer Poole, Daily Kos
http://www.alternet.org/story/144904/
You’re not going to believe what you’ve been eating the last few years (thanks, Bush! thanks meat industry lobbyists!) when you eat a McDonald’s burger (or the hamburger patties in kids’ school lunches) or buy conventional ground meat at your supermarket:
According to today’s New York Times, The “majority of hamburger” now sold in the U.S. now contains fatty slaughterhouse trimmings “the industry once relegated to pet food and cooking oil,” “typically including most of the material from the outer surfaces of the carcass” that contains “larger microbiological populations.”
This “nasty pink slime,” as one FDA microbiologist called it, is now wrung in a centrifuge to remove the fat, and then treated with AMMONIA to “retard spoilage,” and turned into “a mashlike substance frozen into blocks or chips”.
Thus saving THREE CENTS a pound off production costs. And making the company, Beef Products Inc., a fortune. $440 million/year in revenue. Ain’t that something?
Natural Gas Drilling: What We Don’t Know
by Abrahm Lustgarten, ProPublica
It takes brute force to wrest natural gas from the earth. Millions of gallons of chemical-laden water mixed with sand — under enough pressure to peel paint from a car — are pumped into the ground, pulverizing a layer of rock that holds billions of small bubbles of gas.
The chemicals transform the fluid into a frictionless mass that works its way deep into the earth, prying open tiny cracks that can extend thousands of feet. The particles of sand or silicon wedge inside those cracks, holding the earth open just enough to allow the gas to slip by.
Gas drilling is often portrayed as the ultimate win-win in an era of hard choices: a new, 100-year supply of cleaner-burning fuel, a risk-free solution to the nation’s dependence on foreign energy. In the next 10 years, the United States will use the fracturing technology to drill hundreds of thousands of new wells astride cities, rivers and watersheds. Cash-strapped state governments are pining for the revenue and the much-needed jobs that drilling is expected to bring to poor, rural areas.
Environmental issues unfold over decades, not years
Greg Clary – The Journal News
Most everybody likes those look-back stories at the end of the year.
Remembering who died, what events happened and when, and how things look after time has passed seem to encapsulate a year in a keepsake of sorts.
For the record, I’d just as soon throw 2009 in the trash can, but that’s just one man’s opinion.
When it comes to the environment, however, a year is the veritable drop in the bucket.
Even decades seem too insignificant when things like the Hudson River have been around for thousands of years.
And the Hudson’s as good a place to start as any.
E.P.A., Concerned Over Gas Drilling, Questions New York State’s Plans
By MIREYA NAVARRO
The federal Environmental Protection Agency told New York State on Wednesday that it had major concerns about how proposed hydraulic drilling for natural gas would affect public health and the environment, and urged it to undertake a broader study of the potential impact.
In formal comments on the state’s proposed regulations governing new natural gas drilling, the E.P.A. said it was particularly concerned about the regional water supply, air quality, wastewater treatment and radioactive materials that could be disturbed during drilling.
It recommended that “essential environmental protection measures” be taken before the state begins to review permit applications for the drilling, which is envisaged in the Marcellus Shale region.
The region includes New York City’s watershed in the Catskills. The Chesapeake Energy Corporation, which owns the lease to drill in the watershed, has backed off from plans to drill there specifically, but opponents of drilling have argued that the promise means little and could be reversed.
Jim Hightower | Six Things to Do in 2010
by: Jim Hightower, t r u t h o u t | Op-Ed
In my travels, I’ve heard many cries of despair from you good folks about the timorous Obama presidency. On issue after issue, it’s been go-slow and don’t-rock-the-corporate boat. “Where’s the ‘audacity of hope?’” people are asking. “Where’s the ‘change you can believe in?’”
The answer is that in our country’s democracy, audacity and change are where they’ve always resided: out there with you and me, at the grassroots level. For some reason, the guy who was elected by running from the outside is now trying to govern from the inside — which is where change is taken to die.
The good news is that the American majority is with us on nearly every issue, so the chance for change remains strong — if we can push it. Now is the time for us to be more aggressive, more demanding, more active than ever. Many of you have asked, “Fine — but how?” Here are some suggestions:
Related posts:

The Supervisor, like many of those with their heads in the sand, miss some important items. For one, and I’m only going to tackle one, the rise in global temperature in the last several decades far outstrips those from previous times as measured through scientific records and before that, tree rings, ice cores and other methods of doing the same.
It’s one thing to say that humans have played a role, even if a small one. It’s another to say they’ve played no role at all. The former, one can discuss. The latter says that the speaker has a closed mind and that no further discussion is warranted or would even be successful.
But let’s assume the former: If science can show us that there is a large likely hood of weather disruption and flooding from the warming of the lower atmosphere and also that we can alter, slow or even eliminate that, shouldn’t we be doing it anyway? If the scientists are wrong and we spend all this time, money and effort combating something that doesn’t exist then, in the end, we’ll have weaned ourselves off fossil fuels and cleaned the atmosphere we breath.
However, if we do nothing and allow the climate to continue heating – knowing that the disruption to civilization will be dramatic – then what? Does the Supervisor then think humans and the human condition end at his front door?
Re: your comments on Tendy and global warming, this is his March 2008 letter to the NCN on the subject. I thought your readers might find it entertaining.
To the editor:
I just read your [Andy Bazzo's] article on Global Warming [Feb. 27, p10.] How did the brain washers miss you? Every sentence is 100% dead on target–and it was very courageous of you to say it.
Glaciers covering entire continents have formed—and melted–throughout the history of our earth. Massive–and small–temperature fluctuations have been the norm over the past hundreds of millions of years. Human activity was responsible for none of it.
Solar activity and geological changes are powerful on a scale which the average person simply does not understand. Man made “Global warming” has become one of the biggest scams in world history. Suddenly we have to pay money to some group or some country because of our “carbon footprint,” etc. It could be right out of a Monty Python skit, it’s that laughable; but it isn’t funny.
Bob Tendy
Supervisor Putnam Valley