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	<title>News That Matters &#187; Southeast</title>
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		<title>Developer Camarda Wants Your Tax Dollars</title>
		<link>http://www.planputnam.org/ntm/2011/02/developer-camarda-wants-your-tax-dollars/</link>
		<comments>http://www.planputnam.org/ntm/2011/02/developer-camarda-wants-your-tax-dollars/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Sat, 19 Feb 2011 19:10:07 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Jeff Green</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Carmel]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Kent]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Patterson]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Putnam County]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Southeast]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Industrial Development Agency]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Patterson Crossing]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Paul Camarda]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Stateline]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.planputnam.org/ntm/?p=14121</guid>
		<description><![CDATA["P.L.I. LLC, (Camarda) a limited liability company with offices at 1699 Rte.6 has requested that the Industrial Development Agency provide financing for the Company in the form of tax-exemption/or taxable industrial development revenue bonds in an aggregate amount not to exceed Thirty-Three Million to be used to finance a certain project consisting of the following: [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><em>Thanks to Lori Kemp for first posting this at Facebook:</em></p>
<p>&#8220;P.L.I. LLC, (Camarda) a limited liability company with offices at  1699 Rte.6 has requested that the Industrial Development Agency provide  financing for the Company in the form of tax-exemption/or taxable  industrial development revenue bonds in an aggregate amount not to  exceed Thirty-Three Million to be used to finance a certain project  consisting of the following:</p>
<p>a. The construction of new buildings, comprised of approximat&#8230;ely  210,000 sq. ft on approximately 44 acres to be used as a retail center  and as community and office space and the installation of certain  equipment to be used by the Company to be used for commercial purposes  and to be located at 3741 Danbury Avenue in The Town of Southeast.  (Stateline)</p>
<p>b. Paying certain incidental expenses, including costs of issuance incurred in connection thereto.</p>
<p>c.  Granting of certain other financial assistance available pursuant to  Section 874 of N.Y. General Municipal Law, as amended including but not  limited to certain real property tax relief, sales and use tax  exemptions and mortgage recording tax exemptions.&#8221;</p>
<p>Patterson  Crossing Realty Company, LLC. (Camarda) has also requested the IDA to  finance in the form of tax-exempt and/or taxable industrial development  revenue bonds not to exceed Fifty-Five Million dollars.</p>
<p>There will be three hearings:</p>
<p>Southeast Town Hall on RT.22<br />
Feb. 23rd, 2011<br />
10:00 AM **</p>
<p>Patterson Town Hall<br />
Feb.23rd, 2011<br />
12:00 Noon**</p>
<p>Kent Town Hall<br />
Feb. 23rd 2011<br />
1:00 PM**</p>
<p>Carmel Town Hall<br />
Feb. 23rd 2011<br />
2:00 PM</p>
<p>** Conveniently timed so that the working stiffs can attend the Public Hearings</p>
<p>Other taxpayer-funded gifts for this developer have included:</p>
<p>Interest-free 450K loan given by the Town of Carmel on the sale of the 19 acres for the Hotel project.</p>
<p>Interest-free loans given by way of allowing Camarda to pay his building fees in installments.</p>
<p>Empire  Zone designation for the Carmel hotel &amp; Union Place which comes  with a tax abatement beginning at 50% of the nominal property tax for  town, school, county, and increases 5% per year for ten years until it  reaches 100%;</p>
<p>$1.5 million in multi-model grant to improve Rte 311 (Improvements that the developer promised to pay for);</p>
<p>&#8230;and  now 55 million in IDA Bonds for Patterson Crossing and $33 million in  IDA bonds for Stateline Crossing, and 110 million for Union Place in  Mahopac.</p>
<p>Now, can someone please explain how these projects will be bringing &#8220;tax relief?&#8221;</p>
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		<item>
		<title>What&#8217;s in YOUR Wallet?</title>
		<link>http://www.planputnam.org/ntm/2010/11/whats-in-your-wallet/</link>
		<comments>http://www.planputnam.org/ntm/2010/11/whats-in-your-wallet/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Sun, 21 Nov 2010 15:40:15 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Lynne Eckardt</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Southeast]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[budget]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Dwight Yess]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Michael Rights]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[town]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.planputnam.org/ntm/?p=10842</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Greg then asked Supervisor Rights if he was still planning to donate $10,000 to the Library. Rights f-i-n-a-l-l-y admitted that the cuts in his salary would be his $10,000 contribution. Oh really Supervisor? You honestly think you get to earmark where the non-voluntary cuts on your salary line are distributed? Really? By the way, don't even think about deducting this on your 2010 income taxes. [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<div><strong>Sadly, there&#8217;s not gonna be much&#8230;.</strong></div>
<div>Hi All,</div>
<div>Well, no one&#8217;s going to like this budget recap. And I mean no  one. It&#8217;s ridiculously long so curl up in front of your computer when  you&#8217;re really, really bored or perhaps angry with someone you shouldn&#8217;t  be. I guarantee this will redirect that ire.</div>
<div></div>
<div>It seems to me that we <em>all </em>(myself included) need an ice cold dip in the reality bucket.</div>
<div></div>
<div>For example, while I love the tried and true allusion Victor  Grossman used to describe Rights and Yee&#8217;s behavior (rearranging deck  chairs on the Titanic) I thought it far too kind. In fact, I think  they&#8217;re more like the sleazy Titanic guy who dresses up as an old woman  to take an undeserved place in the lifeboat. Because really, Rights and  Yee care about nothing other than self-preservation and  self-aggrandizement. They&#8217;re only to happy to shower us with lies,  selected passages from the Comptroller&#8217;s Report, giant checks, gold  domes, gavel bangs and whatever it takes to obscure the fact that  they&#8217;re lazy and incompetent. Or as Mr. Santo&#8217;s wrote after Dwight&#8217;s  delightfully gloating post: &#8221;Why do the words self-serving pieces of&#8230;&#8221;  oh, never mind&#8230;</div>
<div></div>
<div><strong>The Budget:</strong></div>
<div>All that was missing on Thursday night were the torches and  pitchforks. Scheesh, I haven&#8217;t seen people this angry since I  attended some of those &#8217;Health Care Forums&#8217; (mmmm, remember those&#8230;).  And the trouble with a room full of angry people is that they don&#8217;t  listen. Unfortunately Thursday night was no exception.</div>
<div></div>
<div>Of course when your taxes are going to be hiked over 9% there&#8217;s  good reason to be mad. And, no, no one wants to hear that the increase  is <em>only</em> $40 a year.</div>
<div></div>
<div><strong>The Audience:</strong></div>
<div>Rosemary Kelly from Reed Farm insisted that she knows budgets and  this one is reprehensible and needs cutting. Never mind that this is the  first meeting she&#8217;s attended, never mind that she couldn&#8217;t have had  time to review the budget voted on (by the way, this is a very real flaw  in our budget system), never mind that she didn&#8217;t seem to know about  our depleted fund balance. Ms. Kelly averred that there is always  &#8216;fluff&#8217; in the budget and that this &#8216;fluff&#8217; had to go. In this case Ms.  Kelly agreed that losing the &#8216;fluff&#8217; would mean closing the Library and  Museum- after all that would save the average property owner 20 bucks a  year and leave us with only a 5.5% property tax increase.</div>
<div></div>
<div>I must say that a highlight of the library discussion occurred when  Dwight (clearly a forward-thinking guy armed with props) giddily waved  his LIBRARY CARD!  Proof at last that Dwight can read&#8230;&#8230;  letters. Sadly, given the last three budget debacles you&#8217;ll never  convince me he can actually read numbers.</div>
<div></div>
<div>Many audience members spoke about fixed incomes and personal  financial plights that meant any raise in their taxes would  be devastating. Some spoke about how the town should be run like private  enterprise. Then there were pleas not to pass the budget without more  tweaking. It was suggested that the Board hold a Special Meeting on  Saturday (the deadline for budget passage is November 20th) and even  suggestions that &#8216;since Albany does it&#8217; the hell with budget deadlines! I  always love these arguments as they&#8217;re usually presented by those who  most despise the dysfunctional state New York has become.</div>
<div></div>
<div>There was also a suggestion that, in future, town residents be  allowed to vote on the Town Budget a la the school budget. It was  pointed out that this is not allowed under state law.</div>
<div></div>
<div>Mike Dyas from the Highway Department spoke out against the lay-off  of a fellow Highway employee.  The employee has worked diligently for  the town for over 22 years- there were many members from Highway there  in support.</div>
<div>June Offerman submitted a signed petition asking the Board to  reinstate Ray Knox as head of Recreation. Mr. Knox is also a casualty of  budget cuts.</div>
<div></div>
<div>Greg Azzaretti spoke about the importance of the depleted fund  balance in cutting the 2011 budget. Of course before Greg spoke Yee made  sure to verbally vet Greg. He announced with a flourish (befitting the  single handed discovery and capture of Osama Bin Laden) that Mr.  Azzaretti writes for a blog that&#8217;s critical of himself and the  Supervisor. Note to Dwight: The only positive ink you and the Supervisor  receive is the propaganda you guys write  yourselves. At least <a href="http://10509.org/" target="_blank">10509.org</a> is factual.</div>
<div></div>
<div>Greg then asked Supervisor Rights if he was still planning to  donate $10,000 to the Library. Rights f-i-n-a-l-l-y admitted that the <em>cuts</em> in his salary would be his $10,000 <em>contribution</em>. Oh really Supervisor? You honestly think <em>you</em> get to earmark where the non-voluntary cuts on your salary line are distributed? Really? By the way, don&#8217;t even<em> think</em> about deducting this on your 2010 income taxes.</div>
<div></div>
<div>I wanted to know if there were any unusual expenses anticipated in  2011. Rights immediately launched into a complete soliliquy that had  absolutely nothing to do with my question. When I pushed the envelope  Dwight (and this one&#8217;s for you Eric!) DMR&#8217;s chief &#8217;toady and sycophant&#8217;,  asked that I disclose who I was. Apparently, Lynne Eckardt, Maple  Road, disgruntled Southeast taxpayer and model (ha!) citizen was not the  answer Yee had in mind. Nah, as usual it was important to disclose my  exalted position as Putnam County Dem Chairwoman. Next time I think I&#8217;ll  just bring a resume.</div>
<div></div>
<div>I also asked if we could anticipate having a fund balance by the  end of 2011. I must have been speaking ancient Babylonian as this was  met with a barely concealed smirk.</div>
<div></div>
<div>In any case, DMR couldn&#8217;t really answer my first question. But I  think he finally settled on a luke warm &#8216;no&#8217;. By the way, judging from  this year&#8217;s expenses- I think he&#8217;s wrong.</div>
<div></div>
<div><strong>Town Board Reaction: </strong></div>
<div>In a ballsy move Councilwoman Hudak kinda/sorta chastised the  audience for their delayed participation in the budget process. And  while she&#8217;s correct, never, ever tell the public (especially those who  have made their first ever effort to attend a <span style="font-family: comic sans ms,sans-serif;"><strong>Town Board Production</strong></span>- errrrrrr, meeting) that they missed the boat. That&#8217;s really like poking a sharp stick into a wounded bear&#8217;s butt.</div>
<div></div>
<div>Councilman Gross seemed completely fed up with the entire affair.  He repeated over and over how difficult and painful the budget  process had been- and especially the lay-offs.  Roger looked like he&#8217;d  rather be lounging in a cesspool sipping warm cod liver oil through a  straw than sitting behind the dais. And when you really think about how  the meeting played out, this <em>is </em>kind of a jump ball.</div>
<div></div>
<div>Councilman Cullen kept his cool as usual and stuck to the point  when answering questions. I think the rather hostile crowd (devoid of  all Library and Museum supporters) was a tad unnerving. And I believe  that the tenor of the evening would have changed considerably had more  (read:any) library and museum supporters been there.</div>
<div></div>
<div>Rights and Yee wisely spent their entire time on sound bites. &#8216;We  wanted to cut the Tax Receiver&#8217;, &#8216;We wanted to cut the Tax Assessor&#8217; ,  &#8221;We had a zero percent tax increase&#8217;, &#8216;We called the Comptroller&#8217;. As  usual they assiduously avoided any mention of the Library or Museum-  although with this crowd they needn&#8217;t have bothered.</div>
<div></div>
<div>I have to say, I think the budget could have used tweaking (I would  have been a proponent of across the board cuts in every department with  absolutely no sacred cows) and, discretion being the better part of  valour, it would have been wise to consider all comments made and hold  an emergency meeting on Saturday morning. People feel a whole lot less  angry when their suggestions have actually been considered.</div>
<div></div>
<div>Despite their late day call-to-arms I don&#8217;t believe that Rights and  Yee had any intention of incorporating suggestions into their  arguments, let alone the budget- they were simply working the crowd.  Amazing what a $250 robocall about a &#8217;10%&#8217; tax hike can do.</div>
<div></div>
<div><strong> </strong></div>
<div><strong>Later on the Agenda:</strong></div>
<div>Later in the meeting when  the September and October financials  were discussed Rights was as clueless as ever. When I asked why the  vouchers were so high in October Rights sputtered &#8216;What&#8217;s your point&#8217;.  Well, I guess I&#8217;d like to know where we stand financially. Now. Not six  months from now. And definitely not next September.</div>
<div></div>
<div>In any case, Rights had no idea why or even if the vouchers were  high- let alone what our major expenditures were. Dwight whipped out his  stock &#8217;attorney&#8217;s fees&#8217; answer but when I asked what the legal charges  were for I might as well asked him to explain the theory of relativity  in 25 words or less. While Councilwoman Hudak made the effort to get the  answer (landfill expenses followed by pensions) I also asked the  Supervisor if we would have a fund balance at the end of 2011. This  query was met with another blank stare. Anyhow, the entire episode makes  me think that we don&#8217;t have a prayer of any real financial correction  in 2011.</div>
<div></div>
<div>Even after all this Dwight still had time to rant about the  position of Deputy Supervisor.Yee is so obsessed by this position that  he must think the job comes with a badge.  I really wanted to scream  &#8216;just make him the Deputy Supervisor, already&#8217;. NO ONE CARES. Except in  hindsight I realized that there is a method to the Board&#8217;s madness. And  that is: Bestowing the royal deputy-ship on Dwight implies that the  Board thinks he&#8217;d make a great or even adequate second in command. This  would be a grave mistake.</div>
<div></div>
<div>But by now we were burning the midnight oil and the meeting had  dragged on for so long that even Rights&#8217; Aqua-Net was failing. The  meeting was closed quickly and with little fanfare.</div>
<div></div>
<div><strong>The Budget Redux:</strong></div>
<div>I know, I know&#8230; this was harsh. But honestly, in less than three  years how on earth do you go through well over $1.2 million that was  technically in a &#8216;savings account&#8217; AKA our fund balance? When the  economy went south why didn&#8217;t we put the brakes on spending? And I don&#8217;t  mean the &#8216;fake brakes&#8217; like cutting out full departments without a  workable plan in place. Or totally cutting out institutions that most  residents love. I mean thoughtful reductions that might have spared jobs  with planned-for retirements. Why not modest cuts across the board that  spared no one so that special interests simply understood that all  cuts were part of an austerity budget.</div>
<div></div>
<div>I wasn&#8217;t kidding when I asked the Board to look over expense sheets  every month yet I&#8217;m not sure this suggestion has been taken seriously.  Look, Rights isn&#8217;t going to do his job- and neither is Yee, so somebody,  anybody, please, please pick up the slack. At the very least invite Ron  Hund to every regular Board meeting so that he can give you an update.</div>
<div></div>
<div>Because here&#8217;s the reality check.</div>
<div></div>
<div>The formerly silent majority were out in droves Thursday evening.  And they&#8217;ll be only to happy to place a blunt little Sharpie mark in  front of Rights&#8217;, Yee&#8217;s and their running mate&#8217;s name on the ballot next  year. Really. I could see on Thursday night that there are plenty of  residents who buy into the Supervisor&#8217;s message because it&#8217;s repeated  endlessly. And I know a lot of really saavy people who feel that Rights  and Yee can&#8217;t possibly win again. But they can.</div>
<div>And if you think things are bad now, think long and hard about four  more years of Dwight and Dave. Minimally let&#8217;s get our financial house  in order.</div>
<div></div>
<div>With Best Regards,</div>
<div>Lynne Eckardt</div>
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		<item>
		<title>Neg Dec for Diversified Transport Warehouse in Southeast</title>
		<link>http://www.planputnam.org/ntm/2010/07/neg-dec-for-diversified-transport-warehouse-in-southeast/</link>
		<comments>http://www.planputnam.org/ntm/2010/07/neg-dec-for-diversified-transport-warehouse-in-southeast/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 21 Jul 2010 22:19:11 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Jeff Green</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Southeast]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.planputnam.org/ntm/?p=6714</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[<p>Putnam County</p> <p>Applicant:</p> <p>Quest Properties LLC</p> <p>53 Nelson Blvd</p> <p>Brewster, NY 10509</p> <p>Facility:</p> <p>Diversified Transport Warehouse</p> <p>25 Independent Way</p> <p>Southeast, NY</p> <p>Application ID:</p> <p>3-3730-00333/00001</p> <p>Permit(s) Applied for:</p> <p>Article 24 Freshwater Wetlands</p> <p>Project is Located:</p> <p>Southeast, Putnam County</p> <p>Project Description:</p> <p>The applicant proposes the construction of a 15,000 square foot warehouse facility necessitating the installation of two stone rip rap energy dissipators in the 100 foot adjacent area of NYS Freshwater Wetland BR-39 (Class 2) to accomodate stormwater discharge points. Installation of the discharge pipes and energy dissipators will result in the disturbance of approximately 3,030 square feet within the 100 foot adjacent area. One of the energy dissipators is proposed directly adjacent to the wetland proper and shall be surrounded by mitigative plantings.</p> <p>Availability of Application Documents:</p> <p>Filed application documents, and Department draft permits where applicable, are available for inspection during normal business hours at the address of the contact person. To ensure timely service at the time of inspection, it is recommended that an appointment be made with the contact person.</p> <p>State Environmental Quality Review (SEQR) Determination:</p> <p>Project is an Unlisted Action and will not have a significant impact on the environment. A Negative Declaration is on file. A [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Putnam County</p>
<p>Applicant:</p>
<p>Quest Properties LLC</p>
<p>53 Nelson Blvd</p>
<p>Brewster, NY 10509</p>
<p>Facility:</p>
<p>Diversified Transport Warehouse</p>
<p>25 Independent Way</p>
<p>Southeast, NY</p>
<p>Application ID:</p>
<p>3-3730-00333/00001</p>
<p>Permit(s) Applied for:</p>
<p>Article 24 Freshwater Wetlands</p>
<p>Project is Located:</p>
<p>Southeast, Putnam County</p>
<p>Project Description:</p>
<p>The applicant proposes the construction of a 15,000 square foot warehouse facility necessitating the installation of two stone rip rap energy dissipators in the 100 foot adjacent area of NYS Freshwater Wetland BR-39 (Class 2) to accomodate stormwater discharge points. Installation of the discharge pipes and energy dissipators will result in the disturbance of approximately 3,030 square feet within the 100 foot adjacent area. One of the energy dissipators is proposed directly adjacent to the wetland proper and shall be surrounded by mitigative plantings.</p>
<p>Availability of Application Documents:</p>
<p>Filed application documents, and Department draft permits where applicable, are available for inspection during normal business hours at the address of the contact person. To ensure timely service at the time of inspection, it is recommended that an appointment be made with the contact person.</p>
<p>State Environmental Quality Review (SEQR) Determination:</p>
<p>Project is an Unlisted Action and will not have a significant impact on the environment. A Negative Declaration is on file. A coordinated review was performed.</p>
<p>SEQR Lead Agency: Southeast Town Planning Board</p>
<p>State Historic Preservation Act (SHPA) Determination:</p>
<p>Cultural resource lists and map have been checked. No registered, eligible or inventoried archaeological sites or historic structures were identified at the project location. No further review in accordance with SHPA is required.</p>
<p>Coastal Management:</p>
<p>This project is not located in a Coastal Management area and is not subject to the Waterfront Revitalization and Coastal Resources Act.</p>
<p>Opportunity for Public Comment:</p>
<p>Comments on this project must be submitted in writing to the Contact Person no later than Aug 05, 2010.</p>
<p>Contact:</p>
<p>Adam L Peterson</p>
<p>NYSDEC Region 3 Headquarters</p>
<p>21 South Putt Corners Rd</p>
<p>New Paltz, NY 12561</p>
<p>(845)256-3054</p>
<p>r3dep@gw.dec.state.ny.us</p>
<p>via <a href="http://www.dec.ny.gov/enb/20100721_reg3.html#337300033300001">ENB Region 3 Completed Applications 07/21/2010 &#8211; NYS Dept. of Environmental Conservation</a>.</p>
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		</item>
		<item>
		<title>Bondi&#8217;s High Horse</title>
		<link>http://www.planputnam.org/ntm/2010/06/bondis-high-horse/</link>
		<comments>http://www.planputnam.org/ntm/2010/06/bondis-high-horse/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Thu, 10 Jun 2010 11:41:37 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Lynne Eckardt</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Carmel]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Commentary]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Putnam County]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Southeast]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Bob Bondi]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[events]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[government]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[landfill]]></category>

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		<description><![CDATA[Mr. Bondi's High Horse Posted by: "Lynne Eckardt" <a href="mailto:lynne.eckardt@gmail.com">lynne.eckardt@gmail.com</a> Date: Wed Jun 9, 2010 12:25 pm ((PDT)) Hi All, After reading Mike Risinit's article regarding County Executive Bondi's take on the County/Town landfill closures I decided it was time to do a little more research. After all, these landfill closures seem to have been dragging on ad infinitum. Besides Mr. Bondi was really on his high horse when he wrote a four page opus to the County Legislature and the Southeast Town Board which could kinda, sorta be described as a full blown hissy-fit complete with several over-the-top rhetorical questions. *Landfill History:* Anyhow, the first article I located re the county dump was from September 3rd, 2008. NB the *bolding* is mine. In this piece the county was fined $55,000 for various and sundry *'longstanding environmental' violations at county facilities. Included in these violations was the county landfill which, according to the article and a 1991 DEC report, was leaching a "reddish,- brown liquid containing, among other things, toluene and phenol- toxic solvents that are potent cancer causing organic compounds."* Yeah, I had to read it twice as well: 'potent cancer-causing organic compounds'. Yum. Also keep in mind that [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<pre>Mr. Bondi's High Horse
    Posted by: "Lynne Eckardt" <a href="mailto:lynne.eckardt@gmail.com">lynne.eckardt@gmail.com</a>
    Date: Wed Jun 9, 2010 12:25 pm ((PDT))

Hi All,

After reading Mike Risinit's article regarding County Executive Bondi's take
on the County/Town landfill closures I decided it was time to do a little
more research. After all, these landfill closures seem to have been dragging
on ad infinitum. Besides Mr. Bondi was really on his high horse when he
wrote a four page opus to the County Legislature and the Southeast Town
Board which could kinda, sorta be described as a full blown hissy-fit
complete with several over-the-top rhetorical questions.

*Landfill History:*
Anyhow, the first article I located re the county dump was from September
3rd, 2008. NB the <strong>*bolding*</strong> is mine.

In this piece the county was fined $55,000 for various and sundry
*'longstanding
environmental' violations at county facilities. Included in these violations
was the county landfill which, according to the article and a 1991 DEC
report, was leaching a "reddish,- brown liquid containing, among other
things, toluene and phenol- toxic solvents that are potent cancer causing
organic compounds."* Yeah, I had to read it twice as well: 'potent
cancer-causing organic compounds'. Yum.

Also keep in mind that Mahopac resident (and 10509 reader), Jerry Ravnitzky
had alerted the county* "with concerns about the former landfill in 2000.
His concerns were dismissed."* But then Paul Camarda was interested in
developing the land next door and had even 'promised' a YMCA as part of the
package. Yup. The very same Mr. Camarda who no longer wants to honor his
DEIS pledge to pay for road improvements at 'Patterson Crossing'. Hey,
whatever happened to that 'Y'? Are you beginning to see a pattern here?

We then jump to an article from January 26, 2009. One of the most important
points of this article was expressed,*"Until now, county officials have
discussed the landfill matter in private."* Well, good heavens, you wouldn't
want public input on a proposal that may drag toxic, carcinogenic waste
through your town to your landfill, would you?

This article is also great because, the always charming Mr. Camarda actually
throws in his two cents. And why not ?(Pattern Alert!) Reclaimed land next
to his approved  'Gateway Summit' project certainly increases his land
value. In any case charming Paul said this about the easement through his
project,*"We knew there would be a cleanup one day so we made arrangements."
* Of course little did we know that these 'arrangements' would include a
retention basin installed within the access route. Well, Planning Board
Chair and County Highway Superintendent, Harold Gary should have known...
but then that's a different story.

Three weeks later another article was written. This piece brings up the
potential risks,* "...including the presence of hazardous wastes in the
county's material."* And $$$.

The financial concerns include,*"... 30 years of maintenance and monitoring
of the land* [Editor's note: at the county landfill site]* that would cost
$540,000, Cowen said. In turn maintenance and monitoring of the landfill
after relocation would only be necessary for about three years at $56,000 he
said."* Sweet.

Hmmmm. Of course, I don't recall the county offering to aid us financially
when we have to monitor their waste once it's dumped in Southeast. Oh, and
it's mentioned in this article that the estimated value of the reclaimed
land is $1.6 million...Well, at least someone bothered to get an estimate.

Of course there's also the usual caveat the county has to make a decision
quickly... we all know that the word 'quickly' doesn't exist in the
government lexicon.

*Bondi's Letter:*
In any case after rereading the long, dismal history of the county dump I
found Mr. Bondi's letter completely disingenuous. In Mr. Bondi's four page
epistle he also has the nerve to question whether the outside construction
company will *"...commit to long-term responsibility if these contaminants
result in future impacts."* A tad hypocritical when you consider the county
was unwilling to accept <strong>*any*</strong> liability once their waste was conveniently
dumped in Southeast. Bondi then* "implore[s] the Town to carefully
scrutinize these materials in order to protect our watershed."*

J'adore his eleventh hour concern, considering the county landfill operated
from 1975 to 1976, the county was asked to remediate back in 1991 and now
he's worried about us protecting 'our watershed'. That's rich.

In his letter Bondi goes on to whine* "... the county invested a significant
effort during the period of 2007 to 2009 to further characterize the waste
materials at the county landfill site and the existing contaminants at the
County site."*

Gee, the 'reddish-brown' ooze with cancer causing compounds wasn't a big
enough hint?

Bondi also states that the Town's decision not to partner with the
County *"...was
ultimately based on unfounded accusations and fabricated
information."*Really? Which part did anyone make-up?

In short, we shouldn't even be discussing this.  Both dumps should have been
capped years ago- for a whole lot less money and no threat of penalties.
That said, I think that the current Southeast Town Board did what they
needed to do to protect their constituents. Overwrought parental-like
letters expressing hand-wringing disappointment from elected county
officials who haven't come close to keeping their own house in order are
completely out of line and insult our intelligence. And sometimes you have
to wonder... what's really the motivating factor?

With Best Regards,
Lynne Eckardt
</pre>
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		<title>News That Matters &#8211; April 19, 2010</title>
		<link>http://www.planputnam.org/ntm/2010/04/news-that-matters-april-19-2010/</link>
		<comments>http://www.planputnam.org/ntm/2010/04/news-that-matters-april-19-2010/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Mon, 19 Apr 2010 12:51:41 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Jeff Green</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Commentary]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[General News]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Kent]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[News That Matters]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Southeast]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[gardening]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Greg Ball]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Jeff Green]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[John Hall]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[leibell]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[sprawl]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[taxes]]></category>
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		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.planputnam.org/ntm/?p=3122</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[I've given up trying to be a Republican. No matter how hard I tried I could not convince myself that corporate greed was a good thing, that war is necessary and that it's not the responsibility of common citizens to take care of each other.  [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Good Monday Morning.</p>
<p>Tomorrow is Yom Ha&#8217;atzmaut, Israel&#8217;s Independence Day.</p>
<blockquote><p>From &#8220;Hatikvah&#8221; by Naftali Herz Imber</p>
<p>As long as in the heart within,<br />
The Jewish soul yearns,<br />
And toward the eastern edges, onward,<br />
An eye gazes toward Zion.</p>
<p>Our hope is not yet lost,<br />
The hope that is two-thousand years old,<br />
To be a free nation in our land,<br />
The Land of Zion, Jerusalem.</p></blockquote>
<hr size="1" noshade="noshade" /><strong>The National Weather Service has issued a <span style="color: #990000;">Red Flag Warning</span></strong> for today, especially this afternoon. Very low humidity coupled with strong winds and dry ground will create an environment for fires to spread rapidly.</p>
<p>The <a href="http://www.pclt.net/"><strong>Putnam County Land Trust</strong></a> held their 41<sup>st</sup> Annual Dinner on Saturday night at the Sheetmetal Workers Hall in Brewster. The banquet room was packed with well wishers and more politicians than you could shake a stick at. In fact if you did shake a stick you&#8217;d be certain to smack a politician or two or three. Even the Assemblyman who-shall-not-be-named swung through for a moment, generally making everyone uncomfortable.</p>
<blockquote><p>But the night was a smashing success and thanks go out to their Dinner Committee: <strong>Cheyanne Alberti</strong>, <strong>Lorna &amp; Jim Cook</strong>, <strong>Karen Correll</strong>, <strong>Jill Eisenstein</strong>, <strong>Jeff Green</strong>, <strong>Jude Jones</strong>, <strong>Edie Keasbey</strong>, <strong>Linda &amp; Bob Lund</strong>, <strong>Sharon Lund</strong>, <strong>Joanna Maddock</strong>, <strong>Irene Mele</strong> and their Presidentm Lake Carmel resident <strong>Judy Terlizzi</strong>.</p></blockquote>
<p><strong>I&#8217;ve given up trying to be a Republican</strong>. No matter how hard I tried I could not convince myself that corporate greed was a good thing, that war is necessary and that it&#8217;s not the responsibility of common citizens to take care of each other.</p>
<p>Look for an <strong>official announcement this morning from Senator Leibell </strong>which will finally clear the political air around here. Oh, not about my future as a Republican, but his.</p>
<blockquote><p>It seems the Senator <a href="http://www.midhudsonnews.com/News/2010/April/19/Kaplowitz_Leibell_run-19Apr10.html">dropped a note</a> this past weekend at a breakfast for County Clerk Dennis Sant saying he&#8217;ll be running for Putnam County Executive. I heard he same from three different people at the Land Trust Dinner on Saturday night. This will leave <strong>Bob Bondi&#8217;s</strong> political future up in the air until we hear from him and as of last week he wasn&#8217;t talking.</p>
<p>The 40th state Senate district matchup between you-know-who and <strong>Mike Kaplowitz</strong> isn&#8217;t yet a sure bet as Somers Supervisor Mary Beth Murphy intends to primary you-know-who for the Republican line. This could get tasty!</p></blockquote>
<p><strong>Nan Hayworth</strong>, the wealthy Westchester clone of <strong>Sue Kelly</strong> is most definitely in the race for Congress in the 19th District seeking to replace moderate Democrat <strong>John Hall</strong>. And while mainstream Republicans seem quite happy with her, across the river another story emerges: This past weekend the Town of Windsor Republican Committee endorsed Tuxedo native <strong>Kristia Cavere</strong> for that position. Ms. Cavere has been touted and supported by tea bagger groups who refer to Ms. Hayworth as a RINO (Republican In Name Only) and one can only hope that <span style="color: #999999;"><span style="text-decoration: line-through;">it&#8217;s going to be one heck of a catfight between them</span></span> the Republican primary race will be spirited and informative.</p>
<p>Something interesting is going on over at <strong>FOX News</strong> network. Over the weekend the network refused to allow <strong>Glenn Beck</strong> to capitalize on his notoriety as a FOX employee by being the headlining speaker at a tea bagger rally in the midwest saying that the network should not be seen as supporting a political movement.</p>
<blockquote><p>FOX is a year and a half late getting there and the damage has <em>already been done</em>.</p>
<p>My guess is that since the health insurance industry has gained everything they&#8217;ve wanted from the new health care bill (namely a trillion dollar taxpayer funded handout) they&#8217;re now done using FOX and its viewers as their cooperative shills and is freeing them to prepare to focus on whatever corporate desire will come around next&#8230; like the 2011 Congressional elections.</p>
<p>Here&#8217;s a bet: watch the candidates FOX News touts as winners and look at where their money is coming from.</p></blockquote>
<p><strong>International airline travelers </strong>are queuing up their lawyers in preparation of their suing carriers for not flying them home to, or from, Europe. The culprit? A volcano in Iceland that is spewing pumice and ash into the atmosphere, particles that can destroy a jet engine in flight. Leave it up to the lawyers to sue a volcano.</p>
<hr size="1" noshade="noshade" />
<strong>The Tea Bagger Rally. A Postscript.</strong></p>
<p>During Greg Ball&#8217;s Senate campaign rally last Thursday evening at the courthouse in Carmel, he spoke about how &#8220;America made a promise&#8230;&#8221; It was at that point that the crowd, already half its peak strength, really began to fade away. Maybe it was just the hour. Maybe it was his disjointed and unprepared remarks. But maybe it was because there never was a &#8220;promise&#8221; made by something called &#8220;America&#8221; to its people and Greg knew that. But by descending into the realm of hyperbole, he desires to imbue his core followers into the belief that they are <em>owed something</em>, something as intangible as a promise. His rhetoric requires those he has caught under his sway to forever grasp for a dream that under our current system can never be had. Maybe those who left knew the truth and those who stayed behind are lost in the gray-smoke of myth chasing. Maybe.</p>
<blockquote><p>And though there has never been a promise of due success and wealth we have been told that if we <em>work hard </em>enough we can each attain the &#8220;American Dream&#8221;. That we can own a home and a decent car, feed and clothe ourselves and our family and take care of our health, all leading to a comfortable life after our working years are behind us. But what we find is that for most of us it&#8217;s a day to day struggle just to pay the bills regardless of how hard we work.</p>
<p><img src="http://dl.dropbox.com/u/1183723/tb_personal_freedom1.jpg" border="1" alt="Tea Baggers in Carmel" hspace="7" vspace="7" width="415" height="117" align="right" />To be sure, some get &#8211; or are &#8211; lucky and do achieve a level of success but there are others of us for whom no matter how hard we grind our noses into that proverbial stone it&#8217;s always a fight just to stay above water, a place that most Americans find themselves. And when life isn&#8217;t easy and when the American Dream fails to reach our grasp we look for someone to blame. After all, we&#8217;re working hard and we&#8217;re not getting anywhere. If it&#8217;s not us it must be someone else to blame.</p>
<p>The usual first scapegoat is immigrants. We&#8217;re already here and we&#8217;re working as hard as we can and we&#8217;re not reaching that dream and it&#8217;s because we have to share it with them! Or so we tell ourselves. Our distrust and anger at immigration is certainly not new and goes back to the beginning of the nation. In the 1840s we targeted immigrants from Poland. Later on it was the Irish. Then the Italians. Then the Chinese, whom we invited to our shores to help build the infrastructure necessary for a new nation. Now it&#8217;s Mexicans. Tomorrow it will be someone else. They&#8217;re taking our jobs! They&#8217;re mooching off the government! Why they can&#8217;t they speak English!? No [<em>fill in your least favored immigrant group here</em>] Need Apply!</p>
<p>When all the vitriol we pour onto our hatred of immigrants has been expended and we still don&#8217;t see the dream getting any closer we go after someone else. In our most recent times the Muslim community provided a convenient scapegoat. When we&#8217;re done with them and our lot has still not improved and we&#8217;ve exhausted ourselves fishing for phantoms we go after the next available group: politicians. It must be them! After all, they&#8217;re the ones that keep telling us that our labors should be rewarded but the fountain only fills enough for us to drown but never enough to comfortably float.</p>
<p>Thus against a background of finger-pointing and national denial the Tea Baggers were born.</p>
<p>While their intent is well meant and many of their more intellectual ideas require a necessary closer look, their solutions, if any, will never hit the mark for the one sure mark for which they refuse to target their slings and arrows is the 2 ton elephant in the room: American Style Capitalism.</p>
<p>Tea Baggers have drunk the cool aid that US industrialists, bankers and national manufacturers have given them, conning them into believing that less government interference will end up making the nation wealthier and allow the common man to earn a piece of that wealth. That a laissez-faire government will allow the creation of the high paying jobs which will be the avenue towards the American Dream and that &#8220;the market&#8221; will set fair wages for labor, wages high enough to allow each of us the achieve the Dream.</p>
<p>But for those of us who have not savored the propaganda sweetly flowing from the capitalist tap we know, and are sure, that not a word of it is true. That without some form of governmental control over the affairs of US Corporations that all kinds of horrible things can happen. We refused to learn the lessons from 1928 and repeated the process almost exactly 60 years later. Under one recent phase of corporate deregulation virtually the entire manufacturing base of this nation was shipped &#8211; with government tax assistance &#8211; to nations across the ocean. US corporations reaped massive profits while millions of Americans found themselves out of work. Do we blame immigrants for that? We did and we still do using logic that defies description. Why aren&#8217;t we blaming the corporations themselves and the form of government which allows them to write the laws?</p>
<p>If you&#8217;re having trouble paying the bills you&#8217;ll find that most Americans can no longer file for bankruptcy protection to help them get back on their feet because US industrialists and bankers wrote the laws that prevent you from doing so while excusing themselves from the same rules. They can fail and float softly into the arms of corporate welfare while you and I will spend the rest of our lives transferring our hard-earned wealth to their overflowing coffers. And when that&#8217;s not enough they turn to their quislings in government and extract a trillion dollar transfer of wealth from the working classes to the super-rich and then reward themselves with personal bonuses for successfully raping the national till.</p>
<p>But the &#8220;promise&#8221; is retold to us like the Passover story, never varying. You turn on the TV and there&#8217;s a new car zipping by that really would be an improvement over the serviceable clunker you&#8217;re driving now. You go to the mall and the 54&#8243; flat screen television begs to be on your living room wall. Work harder and all of it is yours. But it never is.</p>
<p>They give us just enough to be able to feel as if we&#8217;re making progress towards the dream which encourages us to elbow others out of the way in our scramble for wealth and its assumed comfort. But with more than 95% of the wealth of our nation in the hands of 1% of the population&#8230; well, you just know they&#8217;re not going to part with it until and unless they are forced to.</p>
<p>We break unions to lower the expense of wages thus increasing profits. We target educators for earning &#8220;too much&#8221; and vote down school budgets. We claim immigrants are taking over the nation, stealing jobs. We complain about the cost of providing even the most basic government services. But we never target our disdain and action in the one direction where we can do the most good: the form of capitalism that keeps the rich, rich and the rest of us grasping at straws. The total merger of government and business that has become the government of the United States. And when business runs the government it&#8217;s not going to be your comfort that comes first, but profits. Most will have just enough to keep the corporations earning profits but never really enough to become comfortable.</p>
<p>My message to the Tea Baggers is this: There is no promise made to you that anyone with the power to grant will keep. You are being lied to by the corporatists and their government lackeys. You can un-elect any politician you want and you can lay mine-fields across our borders but the system will never change in your favor until you are willing to take on the abuses of American capitalism and yes, that means a degree of social libertarianism.</p>
<p>Our nation is falling apart. Our once-global Empire is in ruins. Our infrastructure is crumbling. We&#8217;re fat and sick and drunk and at each others&#8217; throats and that&#8217;s just the way they want it. It keeps us divided and fighting amongst ourselves while they sip martinis in their Astin Martin&#8217;s on their way to the taxpayer supported bank.</p>
<p>Stand up to the corporations that run our government and when you take their power away you&#8217;ll finally be able to earn what you are worth, save a little money without the banks raping you for fees and then maybe, just maybe, that dream, the promise, will come a tiny little bit closer to reality.</p></blockquote>
<hr size="1" noshade="noshade" />And now, The News:</p>
<ul id="mozToc"><!--mozToc h2 1 h3 2 h3 3 h4 4 h5 5 h6 6--></p>
<li><a href="#mozTocId828936">The Way to Healthy Soil</a></li>
<li><a href="#mozTocId744412">Supermarkets pay for pricing violations</a></li>
<li><a href="#mozTocId478036">A French Sidewalk Lets You Power the Streetlights With Your Feet</a></li>
<li><a href="#mozTocId926490">Urban Core Growing Faster Than Outer &#8216;Burbs</a></li>
<li><a href="#mozTocId283555">10 Ways to Force the Stinking Rich to Share Their Wealth</a></li>
<li><a href="#mozTocId28574">White supremacist rally at L.A. City Hall draws violent counter-protest</a></li>
</ul>
<h2><a name="mozTocId828936"></a>The Way to Healthy Soil</h2>
<p>From the &#8220;<a href="http://www.nybg.org/wordpress/">Plant Talk</a>&#8221; blog of the NY Botanical Garden</p>
<p>The care of your garden depends on your cultivation practices, how you are using the space, what you are growing (trees, shrubs, perennials, vegetables, annuals), and how intensively you are gardening. It is also influenced by soil conditions and your microclimate.</p>
<p>One of the latest trends in gardening (although not new) is that the soil is a dynamic, living system that needs to be managed, not by pouring harmful chemicals and salts into it, but by supplying it with its nutritional and cultural needs. Healthy soil means healthy plants—plants grown in fertile soil are less prone to pest and disease problems.</p>
<p><img src="http://www.nybg.org/wordpress/wp-content/uploads/2010/04/soiled-300x200.jpg" border="1" alt="dirt" hspace="7" vspace="7" width="300" height="200" align="left" />Soil plays a critical role in the life of a plant. It anchors a plant and supplies nutrients, water, and oxygen. Soil is an aggregate of sand, silt, and clay each with different properties; the larger particles of sand provide good drainage while the fine particles of clay retain moisture.</p>
<p>Organic matter breaks down into humic acid, a black gelatinous liquid that holds the soil particles together, leaving spaces for water and oxygen. Organic matter improves drainage, soil aeration, and the soil’s ability to hold nutrients.</p>
<p>Organic matter and soil are full of life. Bacterial and fungal microorganisms cycle nutrients and make them available to plants. Larger soil organisms such as earthworms work the soil by providing nutrients through their excrement and good drainage as they tunnel beneath the surface.</p>
<p>Compost—the breaking down and recycling of organic material—acts like a steam engine that energizes and drives this dynamic system. While compost is sometimes referred to as “black gold” because of the wealth of benefits it provides, incorporating compost into your garden replicates a process that nature does on its own.</p>
<p>This is important to remember when tending your garden. In naturalistic areas, leaving leaf litter to decay on its own is a healthy and natural way of composting. In highly cultivated or ornamental areas, add compost or mulch.</p>
<p>Next week, we’ll look at the best way to add compost to your garden.</p>
<p><a href="http://www.nybg.org/wordpress/?p=5746">Read More</a></p>
<h2><a name="mozTocId744412"></a>Supermarkets pay for pricing violations</h2>
<p>Local supermarkets racked up about $111,225 in fines last year for violating county laws that ensure consumers aren&#8217;t overcharged for most groceries, a Poughkeepsie Journal analysis of inspection reports shows.</p>
<p>Of 29 grocery stores annually inspected in Dutchess, only one has not received fines in the past five years — Adams Fairacre Farms.</p>
<p>In 2009, Dutchess County collected $104,475 in fines, slightly down from $112,000 in 2008. Last year, 11 out of 19 violations were maximum penalties, on par with 2008&#8242;s 12 maximum penalties out of 19 total violations.</p>
<p>Ulster County charged its stores $6,750 for violations during 2009. Its 25 inspections resulted in 11 fines for large overcharges, an improvement from 2008, when fines totaled $11,500.</p>
<p>Consumer research has found that price is a major cue for purchasing decisions and most shoppers rely on the accuracy of the store labeling and scanning instead of policing their receipts themselves.</p>
<p><a href="http://www.poughkeepsiejournal.com/article/20100419/BUSINESS/4190323/Supermarkets-pay-for-pricing-violations">Read More</a></p>
<h2><a name="mozTocId478036"></a>A French Sidewalk Lets You Power the Streetlights With Your Feet</h2>
<p>Piezoelectric power technology&#8211;using pressure generated by people walking to produce electricity&#8211;has been used in small applications before. Rotterdam has a human-powered dance club, English supermarket Sainsbury&#8217;s features people-powered checkout lines, and a Tokyo subway station runs turnstiles and displays with piezoelectric power. But Toulouse, France, recently became the first city to stick the pressure-sensitive modules on the sidewalk so that residents can generate power just by walking down the street.</p>
<p>The city is using the same modules found at Rotterdam&#8217;s people-powered Club Watt. The technology, developed by Dutch company Sustainable Dance Club, features embedded microsensors that generate electricity when pressure is exerted by passersby. According to the UK Guardian, Toulouse&#8217;s experiment marks the first time that the SDC modules have been used on the street.</p>
<p>So far, Toulouse has installed a trial section of eight modules that produce 50 to 60 watts, or enough to power a street lamp. The city hasn&#8217;t decided whether to expand the sidewalk program, but Rotterdam is plowing ahead with a pilot scheme to stick SDC modules in a soccer stadium. Soon enough, we might all produce energy just by power-walking to work.</p>
<p><a href="http://www.fastcompany.com/1617178/toulouse-france-tests-out-piezoelectric-pavement-power">Read More</a></p>
<h2><a name="mozTocId926490"></a>Urban Core Growing Faster Than Outer &#8216;Burbs</h2>
<p>Smart growth proponents have long predicted that the ever-greater expansion of suburbia would one day reach its limit, prompting a renewed interest in central city living. “Residential Construction Trends in America’s Metropolitan Regions,&#8221; a new report from the EPA, suggests that this trend is well underway, with residential permits in downtown areas and close-in suburbs more than doubling since 2000 in 26 of the nation&#8217;s largest metro regions.</p>
<p>The shift has been especially pronounced in some big cities, such as New York, which saw its share of regional permits increase from 15% in the early 1990s to 48% by 2008. In Chicago, housing permits inside city limits rose from 7% to 27% over the same time period.</p>
<p>Rapid revitalization is sweeping many smaller cities as well. In Portland’s downtown neighborhoods and close-in &#8216;burbs, permit activity jumped from 9% to 26% over the last two decades. Home building in Atlanta’s core neighborhoods grew similarly, from 4% to 14%, according to the analysis, which examined Census residential permit data for the nation’s 50 largest metro regions over 19 years. In this examination, researchers compared the number of permits issued by central cities and core suburban communities with the number issued in suburban and exurban communities.</p>
<p><a href="http://www.builderonline.com/housing-trends/urban-core-growing-faster-than-outer-burbs.aspx">Read More</a></p>
<h2><a name="mozTocId283555"></a>10 Ways to Force the Stinking Rich to Share Their Wealth</h2>
<p>April 15, 2010</p>
<p><img src="http://www.alternet.org/images/managed/storyimages_picture16_1271287593.jpg_310x220" alt="" hspace="7" vspace="7" width="310" height="220" align="right" />For all the moaning from deficit hawks, the U.S. budget is simply not in crisis. If investors were losing confidence in our nation&#8217;s ability to pay off its debts, we&#8217;d see a major reduction in demand for U.S. Treasury bonds. And we do not, in fact, see any such reduction. Last week the Treasury sold $21 billion in 10-year bonds, and investors were clamoring for them in such droves that the government had to turn away nearly 80 percent of them. If investors were really worried about the U.S. paying back its debt, they&#8217;d demand a very high interest rate from the government to compensate them for the risk they were taking. But in fact, interest rates are remarkably low. That 10-year bond currently fetches a yield of around 3.9 percent. For entire years of President George H. W. Bush&#8217;s reign, the yield was above 8 percent, often eclipsing 9 percent.</p>
<p>Deficit hawks aren&#8217;t interested in the deficit, they just don&#8217;t like the idea that the government spends money on social projects that help poor people. To close the deficit, we could either raise taxes or cut expenditures, and you never hear deficit haws begging to raise taxes. Here are 10 ways a deficit hawk who didn&#8217;t hate poor people could ease his anxiety:</p>
<p><a href="http://www.alternet.org/economy/146460/10_ways_to_force_the_stinking_rich_to_share_their_wealth?page=1">Read More</a></p>
<h2><a name="mozTocId28574"></a><img src="http://www.latimes.com/media/photo/2010-04/53365274.jpg" border="1" alt="" hspace="7" vspace="7" width="356" height="234" align="right" />White supremacist rally at L.A. City Hall draws violent counter-protest</h2>
<p>A rally of about 40 white supremacists Saturday on the lawn of Los Angeles City Hall drew hundreds of counter-protesters, sparked brawls in which two people were severely beaten and ended with crowds of demonstrators hurling rocks and bottles at police and departing supremacists.</p>
<p>The rally, conducted by the National Socialist Movement, prompted the Los Angeles Police Department to go on tactical alert as counter-protesters from throughout the region flooded into downtown L.A. They included a wide assortment of African American, Jewish, Latino, immigrants-rights and anarchist groups.</p>
<p>While some counter-protesters said they had heard about the event through social media such as Twitter and had come to urge peace in the face of the group&#8217;s hateful message, others had clearly come for a fight. At least five of them were arrested by the end of the demonstration for throwing eggs and rocks.</p>
<p>Before members of the white supremacist group had arrived, a bare-chested middle-aged man with Nazi insignias tattooed on his chest and back walked into a crowd of hundreds of counter-protesters gathered near 1st and Spring streets.</p>
<p><a href="http://www.latimes.com/news/local/la-me-white-supremacist18-2010apr18,0,4043821.story?track=rss">Read More</a></p>
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