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Showing posts with label Mark Dayton. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Mark Dayton. Show all posts

Saturday, November 12, 2011

Report: Gov. Dayton may call vote for child care union

By Joe Kimball | Published Fri, Nov 11 2011 1:27 pm
The conservative Freedom Foundation of Minnesota is reporting that Gov. Mark Dayton is close to calling a vote of child care providers in the state to determine if they want to join a union.
The governor met with opponents of the plan Thursday night, and the foundation, quoting some of those who attended the meeting, says the word is that Dayton "is on the verge of issuing an executive order calling for a vote on the controversial plan."
The opponents said they are worried that the vote will involve only the 25 percent of providers who care for children who receive public subsidies, but the issues involved could affect all of the state's 11,000 licensed providers.
Supporters, backed by AFSCME and the SEIU unions, say unionization will provide health care providers with "better access to training, more say on rules and regulations, system improvements for fairness and consistency across the state, access to affordable health care, business services, improving subsidy reimbursement programs, increasing overall professionalism for our field and supporting our ability to provide high quality child care."
In some other states, governors have issued executive orders recognizing unions as bargaining agents; Dayton has said he won't do that,  but has said he would consider authorizing the vote, the Star Tribune said.

Thursday, August 18, 2011

Poll: Majority of Minnesotans Not Happy with Budget Deal

Posted at 12:02 AM on August 18, 2011 by Tom Scheck (0 Comments)
Filed under: MN Legislature, Mark Dayton
 
A new poll, commissioned by the Bush Foundation, found that two thirds of those surveyed are not happy with the budget agreement that ended a 21 day state government shutdown. The poll also found that a majority of those polled think the state is headed in the wrong direction.

Governor Dayton and the GOP-controlled Legislature shut down state government for three weeks because they were at odds over the best way to balance the state's two year budget. The two sides agreed to cut spending, borrow against future tobacco payments and delay payments to K12 schools to erase the deficit. The poll found that a majority of Minnesotans weren't happy with that deal.

"The poll made it very clear that people were unhappy about any sort of shift or borrowing against the future," The Bush Foundation's C. Scott Cooper said. "People much preferred to deal with the problem now, face it head on and tackle it."

Cooper, with the Bush Foundation, says the polling is consistent with the results the group gathered from a number of focus groups conducted by the Bush Foundation on the state budget. He said they held town hall meetings in Grand Rapids, Rochester and Bloomington to gauge how the state's budget problems should be addressed.

The poll also found that 54 percent of those surveyed think a mix of spending cuts and revenue increases are needed if the state faces another deficit. At the same time, 80 percent of those polled think making government services more efficient should be "the most central piece" or "a major part" of the solution.

The findings are consistent with other polling that shows the public wants to see lawmakers rein in government spending but balk when the focus of those cuts turns to popular and expensive programs. Cooper said the results from the focus groups were more nuanced. For example, he said some were willing to make sacrifices in order to see things get better.

"People want the reform and they're willing to pay the price in the short-term if they think we can get the reforms in the long-term," Cooper said.

The most striking result from the poll is the dissatisfaction that the general public has about their quality of life. 40 percent of those polled said they believed the quality of their lives was getting worse. Nicole Martin Rogers, a researcher with polling group Wilder Research, said that was a 17 percentage point increase from a similar poll done in December.

Both Governor Dayton and GOP legislative leaders are working to show that they understand the frustration. Dayton is scheduled to launch a statewide jobs tour to discuss ways to improve the state's economy.

Republicans in the Minnesota House are scheduled to hold a news conference on Thursday morning to discuss what they have characterized as "the start of the "Reform 2.0" agenda for the 2012 legislative session."
The two sides disagree on the best way to tackle some of the key issues facing the state.

Dayton has been pushing for a mix of spending cuts and income tax increases on Minnesota's top earners to solve the state's budget problems over the long-term. Republicans have rejected tax hikes of any kind and say the focus needs to be on cutting government spending.

The poll was conducted between August 1 and August 4. It has a margin of error of plus or minus four percentage points.

Here's the poll.
Here's the report from The Bush Foundation.

Thursday, July 28, 2011

Man, 29, charged with arson in fire at former Dayton home in Minneapolis; crime was random

MINNEAPOLIS — A 29-year-old man is charged with setting fire to a Minneapolis home once owned by Gov. Mark Dayton — a crime the Hennepin County Attorney's office says was random.
Jeron Latiff (juh-RAHN' luh-TEEF') Patterson of Minneapolis is charged with first-degree arson.
According to the complaint, investigators traced back to Patterson a new rolling suitcase, plastic gas cans, lighter fluid bottles and grill lighters that were found outside the home. The complaint also says Patterson is seen in security video filling a gas can at a SuperAmerica station.
The current homeowner found three fires early on July 2 and put them out. Dayton had not lived at the home for 20 years.
Patterson remains in jail with bail set at $60,000. His attorney did not immediately return a phone call Wednesday.

Wednesday, July 20, 2011

Attorney: Constitutional challenge to shutdown spending will proceed

by Jake Grovum
Published: July 20,2011
Time posted: 10:09 am
Tags: Erick Kaardalgovernment shutdownLori SwansonMark DaytonWarren Limmer
Erick Kaardal says government funding during a shutdown is unconstitutional; he filed a similar case in the 2005 shutdown that was dismissed. (Staff photo: Peter Bartz-Gallagher)
The constitutional challenge over state spending during this year’s historic government shutdown is expected to proceed before the state Supreme Court, the lead attorney bringing the lawsuit said Wednesday.
Despite language in the budget bills that retroactively approved the court-ordered spending during the shutdown and vacated the series of court orders that approved it all, attorney Erick Kaardal says the core separation of powers and constitutional questions remain and deserve a resolution.
“We think the issue is still open,” Kaardal told PIM. “One might say, ‘strange times, you get strange remedies.’ They can be strange, but they can’t be unconstitutional.”
The suit argues that any state spending without proper legislative approval is unconstitutional, even if that means a complete government shutdown. A similar case was brought before the Supreme Court in 2005 but was ultimately dismissed, leaving the underlying constitutional questions unresolved. That order, however, welcomed petitioners to bring the suit again if the situation arose.
In Kaardal’s telling, that’s exactly why it’s important to pursue a resolution this time.
“It’s about all the people who think we need a good process,” Kaardal said. “In my view, we clean up this process, we’ll never have a impasse go beyond June 30.”
A hearing is scheduled for next Wednesday, July 27, before the Supreme Court. Kaardal has until Friday to file his final paperwork in the case, while Gov. Mark Dayton and Attorney General Lori Swanson have already made their positions known in separate filings posted earlier this week. See Dayton’s here (pdf) and Swanson’s here (pdf). The League of Minnesota Cities, Coalition of Greater Minnesota Cities and Association of Minnesota Counties are also involved in the suit.
Six Republican senators and two GOP representatives have joined Kaardal in bringing the challenge, including Senate Judiciary Chairman Warren Limmer.Despite a resolution to the shutdown and budget impasse at the Capitol, Kaardal says the lawmakers remain interested in the case and are “in it for the long run.”
Kaardal expects to gain even more backers from the Legislature now that the political implications of a complete government shutdown have been relieved, he said, and will be seeking additional clients in coming days.
“It’s about 2013, it’s about 2015,” Kaardal said. “Everyone would agree, if not now when?”

Monday, July 18, 2011

Mark Dayton orders Capitol to reopen tomorrow @ 9 am

About bloody time.

Common Cause was gonna sue.

Think my bitching about it worked?  Probably not, but hey!  I tried ..

Friday, July 15, 2011

Citizens for Tax Justice on Minnesota Tax Surrender

Minnesota Governor Dayton Surrenders on Tax Issue to End State's Shutdown


“Relieved, but not celebrating” is one 
of the headlines in Friday’s StarTribune. Governor Dayton and the state legislature finally reached a compromise that would balance the budget and reopen the state by delaying payments to schools and issuing bonds against future tobacco settlement monies.

In his statement to lawmakers Governor Dayton said, “despite my serious reservations about your plan, I have concluded that continuing the state government shutdown would be even more destructive for too many Minnesotans. Therefore, I am willing to agree to something I do not agree with -- your proposal -- in order to spare our citizens and our state from further damage.”  In his statement the Governor listed three conditions:
1) The removal of social policy issues from further consideration this year (like requiring voters to bring identification to the polls or ending taxpayer funding for abortions).
2) Dropping a provision which would have required a 15 percent across the board reduction in the number of state employees.
3) Support for a $500 million bonding bill to “put people back to work throughout Minnesota.”
    The details of the budget are still being worked out, but the state will likely be up and running in just a few days.
    Obviously this compromise is a huge blow to tax fairness advocates. Dayton had previously campaigned on and proposed raising taxes in a progressive way to avoid making radical cuts. Delaying payments and issuing bonds is not a fiscally responsible way to solve Minnesota’s budget problems over the long term.
    Dayton closed his statement this way: “I urge the members of both of your caucuses to consider carefully the advisability of supporting alternative sources of revenue, which would provide better, long-term financial stability for Minnesota than the two sources in your offer.” It’s a real shame that his words are falling on deaf ears; by all accounts, substantial, beneficial tax reform is going to be shelved for the time being.
    Photo via Governor Dayton Creative Commons Attribution License 2.0

    Thursday, July 14, 2011

    Universally 'disappointing' deal reached to resolve Minnesota government shutdown

    Good article to go to and paste a comment, folks!
    Let them HEAR how pissed off and sad we actually are .. 



    Neither Gov. Mark Dayton, nor House Speaker Kurt Zellers nor Senate Majority Leader Amy Koch looked triumphant as they came out of Dayton's office and declared they had reached agreement.
    MinnPost photo by Terry GydesenNeither Gov. Mark Dayton, nor House Speaker Kurt Zellers nor Senate Majority Leader Amy Koch looked triumphant as they came out of Dayton's office and declared they had reached agreement.


    By Doug Grow and James Nord | Thursday, July 14, 2011
    Gov. Mark Dayton had to disappoint some of his strongest political supporters to come up with the deal Thursday that will end Minnesota’s government shutdown.
    Supporters urged Dayton not to move away from the “tax the rich” slogan that had carried him into the governor’s office.
     “People will say you caved in,” allies of the governor told Dayton. 
    Dayton, according to sources, had a singular answer to all those who wanted him to hold the line: “I don’t care what people say — we’ve got to get government working again.”



    And so on Thursday morning Dayton, after a 14-day state government shutdown, unveiled his offer in a two-page letter to Republican legislative leaders.
    Late Thursday afternoon, following a meeting that last for more than three hours, Republican legislative leaders and the governor came out of Dayton’s office saying they have a deal.
    But neither Dayton, nor House Speaker Kurt Zellers nor Senate Majority Leader Amy Koch looked triumphant.
    In fact, Koch looked a little angry. Zellers was quiet and wore a look of disappointment on his face. Dayton, as always, was subdued.
    Little joy, despite a settlement
    There was good reason for the lack of joy on any of the faces of the major players. Critics from across the political spectrum were using that phrase that’s been around Minnesota politics for years to describe the deal:.
    Facing a budget problem, the principals agreed to “kick the can down the road.”
    Dayton will get new revenue that would raise the budget to about $35.3 billion, which he said will be enough to “protect critical services.’’ But he’s getting the agreement in one-time money.
    Republicans get to walk away saying there are no tax increases in the deal. But they did budge from their original bottom line.
    Now, both sides have a whole lot of selling to do. Zellers and Koch must sell Republican caucus members, and. Dayton must get a significant number of DFL legislators to sign on to a deal that most say they oppose.  
    Even as the day was evolving, criticism of the deal was pouring in from the Dayton’s base.
    The president of the union SEIU, Julie Schnell, issued a statement even before the political leaders announced their agreement.
    “The only compromise this achieves is the compromising of our state’s working families,” Schnell said in a statement.
    Other union leaders, usually so quick to praise Dayton, were silent as the day went on.
    Details of the settlement must still be ironed out before Dayton calls a special session. But he and the legislative leaders promised to work “around the clock” to do that.
    Dayton’s critics say the governor could have had this deal on June 30. Indeed, Republicans did offer the revenue sources – actually, borrowing – that is the financial basis of the deal in the last hours of negotiations on June 30.  
    In his settlement offer, Dayton wants $700 million from K-12 school shifts and another $700 million from revenues received for selling bonds based on tobacco settlement money that comes into the general fund each year.
    Dayton got something for ‘waiting’
    But Dayton did extract things from Republicans that they hadn’t been willing to yield at shutdown time. 
    The Republican “policy issues’’ that run throughout the Republican budget bills will disappear. Those include such things as a law requiring photo ID, restrictions on stem cell research, new restrictions on abortion and proposed curtailment of school funding for purposes of integration.
    Republicans also will have to give up their language that would require a 15 percent reduction in the state workforce.
    Dayton would get a $500 million bonding bill, which has been opposed by Republicans from the beginning of the session.
    “They will present this as mostly their proposal,” said Sen. Ron Latz, DFL-St. Louis Park, of the Republicans. “But that’s not true. There are major caveats they have to give up on.”
    Ultimately, this deal is one with no real winners.
    Republican hardliners will say their side “caved in” on their “not a penny more” than their $34.2 billion bottom line.
    DFLers will be displeased for a variety of reasons.
    “The hesitation you’ll find on my part, and I believe many others, is that it kicks the can down the road,” said Latz. “The budget problem we’ll face in the next biennium will be $1.4 billion worse.’’
    Rep. Mindy Greiling, DFL-Roseville, was using much stronger language to describe her view of the governor’s proposal.
    “I don’t call it compromise,” she said, “I call it capitulation.”
    But she also was quick to offer words of praise for Dayton.
    “I think he thought there wasn’t a prayer for compromise,” she said, calling current Republicans “dogmatic and intractable.”
    School funding shift irks many
    Greiling was especially upset by the school shifts, which she said that might take 50 years to repay.
    But Republicans shared in the concern about the shift.
    Sen. Dave Senjem, R-Rochester, said the shift would be the hardest thing for many in his caucus to swallow.
    Rep. King Banaian, R-St. Cloud, also cited the shift as a great area of concern, especially since the shift and tobacco money is one-time funding, meaning a fundamental problem with the budget has merely been pushed forward. 
     Others agreed with concerns about the deal Dayton held out.
     Former Gov. Arne Carlson, who helped to form a “third way committee,’’ bemoaned on Minnesota Public Radio that this settlement offer does nothing to make Minnesota’s future financial picture more stable. (The work of that “third way committee’’ was quickly rejected by both the governor and Republicans.)
    The seldom-heard Independence Party even chimed in on this deal. The party’s new chairman, Mark Jenkins, denounced the deal, saying it just continues to leave Minnesota government on the same unsteady budget path it’s been on for years.
    Jenkins said he and Tom Horner, the IP’s gubernatorial nominee from last November, will hold a news conference at the Capitol Friday.
     No one understands the problem with this proposed settlement more than Dayton. He was holding his nose on the deal even as he wrote the letter to Zellers and Koch. In that letter, by the way, he called the deal “your plan,” meaning the Republican plan.
    “However, despite my serious reservations about your plan, I have concluded that continuing the state government shutdown would be even more destructive for too many Minnesotans. Therefore, I am willing to agree to something I do not agree with – your proposal – in order to spare our citizens and our state from further damage.”
    Understand, that concern about what might happen to some unfortunate Minnesotans because of the shutdown is genuine. To Dayton, this was never a game about who could hold their breath the longest.
    On the night of the shutdown, Ken Martin, the chairman of the DFL, said he was concerned for the governor “because the shutdown will cause him such pain. He truly fears somebody will die because they did not get a service they need.”
    Since then, others have noticed how the shutdown was troubling the governor.
    “I have received calls from members of the press who have been trying to get me to say that the governor is giving away too much,” said Rep. Alice Hausman, DFL-St. Paul. “I support him because you just look at him and you can see that no one feels the shutdown more than he does. He knows he’s one of three people who can end this and that the other two [Koch and Zellers] will not do anything. He knows this shutdown is hurting people.
    “I think there will be confusion and disappointment among some of his supporters,” Hausman continued. “They were so appreciative of the clear way he was standing for their principles. But the way I see it, he had to make something happen because they weren’t going to. I have told everyone, I have nothing but compassion for the governor.”
    No doubt, this offer he doesn’t like did come from his fundamental beliefs that too many were being hurt by the shutdown.
    Smart politics?
    But the offer isn’t just about Dayton’s heart. It’s also smart politics.
    The governor understands that most Minnesotans simply expect their governor and their legislators to get their fundamental job done. Most Minnesotans are nonpartisan in their disgust of the shutdown. 
    This offer put Republicans in a very tight corner. To reject this deal would have been the final piece of evidence showing the utter inability of Republicans to compromise, even in a clearly divided government.
    Throughout the day, there  were Republicans bemoaning aspects of the deal, or even the idea that the governor should get any credit for even coming forward with a deal to end the stalemate that’s affected everything from road repair to tourism to beer sales.
    Sen. Dave Thompson, R-Lakeville, tweeted:“Let’s be clear. Governor did NOT accept the June 30 offer. He has simply attached new conditions to the June 30 framework.”
    The last thing a fed-up public wants to hear, however, is that sort of braying.
    With a little laugh, Banaian said the great political/economic lesson out of this is that you can’t mess with people’s alcohol.
    He noted that the proposal comes at the point when it appeared that popular brands of beer were going to be removed from the shelves of state liquor stores. As a professor at St. Cloud State University, Banaian said he teaches courses in the economics of the old Soviet Union.
    “Even in the Soviet Union, there was one thing political leaders could not do,” said Banaian. “If you dared touch the state’s price support of vodka, you were in big trouble.”  
    The key now will be if cool heads in the House and Senate can prevail.
    And the key player in all of this may turn out to be Sen. Amy Koch, the Senate majority leader.
     Koch’s on the spot for two reasons.  First, her caucus contains more of the young, extreme firebrands. Second, although Koch doesn’t always sound extreme, many of her Senate colleagues say she’s a true believer in the most conservative ideology of the party.
    Can she — is she willing to? — lead the caucus to drop the social agenda?  Can she — is she willing to? — accept a large bonding bill?
    Understand, this deal is going to require the caucus leaders of both parties to take their members where they don’t necessarily want to go.
    Rep. Paul Thissen, the House minority leader, has been clear in his support of the Dayton plan. Early in the day, he called the governor “a statesman.”
    According to a caucus member, in a phone conference with the DFL House caucus, Thissen said he would support the governor’s proposal, but he wasn’t going to pressure fellow members to join him.
    GOP may have to carry the load
    It is, DFLers in both the House and Senate believe, Republicans who will have to do the heavy lifting in getting a deal done.
    Even as Republican leaders met with Dayton this afternoon, the proposal was giving voice to some of the few remaining moderates in the party.
    Like Rep. Larry Howes, R-Walker, Senjem, on Wednesday, had a one-on-one lunch meeting with Dayton. (Like Howes, who lunched with Dayton on Tuesday and ended up paying for the grilled cheese sandwiches, Senjem paid for the cheeseburgers and fruit he and the governor had for lunch on Thursday.)
    The two talked over the basic framework of a plan that Dayton proposed.
    “The devil’s always in the details,” said Senjem, who was the Senate minority leader before being dumped in favor of Koch. “But this seems like a pretty positive initiative.”
    Senjem was hopeful of trying to sell racinos to members of his caucus as a trade-off for some of the school shifting in the proposal.
    In his proposal, Dayton left open the door for Republicans to come up with forms of revenue more reasonable than the patchwork budget’s borrowing fixes from school and tobacco money.
    Wrote Dayton:
    “I urge the members of both of your caucuses to consider carefully the advisability of supporting alternative sources of revenue, which would provide better, long term financial stability for Minnesota than the two sources in your offer. If so, we could certainly discuss a substitution.” 
    It’s unclear whether such substitutions still would be viable.
    As he addressed the media, Dayton, the man who once had stated “tax the rich” with such clarity, let it be known that his idea of creating more revenue with what he considers a more progressive income tax didn’t end Thursday.
    “I have three and a half years left on my term to make my case to the people of Minnesota,” he said.

    NEXT STEP: Call Kiffmeyer - build a STRATEGY

    The gate to the barn is being shut AFTER the horse bolted.

    The scam is DONE.

    We need to STRATEGIZE together and stop the insanity in OUR ranks.

    Keep plugging away about ALEC. That hit the news, finally, yesterday and we should be calling all ALEC members, NOT Dayton.  It's just wasted time.

    Chair of MN Alec  - Mary Kiffmeyer, 1-800-920-5875.

    Check her out in you MN leg book .. It took me six months of working w/Anonymous to get this info - and I believe we will get more in days to come.

    Virginia
    See PFAW.org and multiple sites, including PR WATCH, etc.

    BEER IS NOT MORE IMPORTANT THAN DISABLD CITIZENS AND CHILDREN !!


    "Do it now" dossier: Your comments on Shutdown compromise wanted

    http://minnesota.publicradio.org/collections/special/columns/todays-question/archive/2011/07/what-do-you-think-of-daytons-offer-to-end-the-shutdown.shtml

    Monday, July 11, 2011

    Debunk early and often: Albert Lea Republican shoots down bogus MNGOP budget numbers


    Monopoly_money
    Dan Dorman's current guest column in the Albert Lea Tribune isn't the first time that Republicans currently serving in the legislature have been called out on bogus accounting.
    It's only one of the most recent examples.
    Update 7/10: For an example published just after this post went up, check out the comparison at the Pioneer Press in Bill Salisbury's The numbers at the heart of the state budget standoff. [end update]
    How did these budget figures get here?
    Dorman, who caucused with the Republican Party during his eight years as House District 27A representative, writes in How did Minnesota get to this point?:
    Since the start of the legislative session, there has been an array of numbers coming from St. Paul that don’t seem to add. There have been ads ran in our area, for example, that claim the budget bills passed by the Republicans increase spending by 6 percent. Wow, that sounds like a lot! If this were true, why would there have to be so many cuts to programs like local government aid? The reality is that the 6 percent increase claim ignores the federal stimulus dollars and borrows dollars from K-12 education used to balance the last budget.
    What are the real numbers? The last state budget signed by Gov. Pawlenty totaled $34.4 billion. The budget passed by the Legislature for 2012-2013 totaled $34 billion – hardly a 6 percent increase. In his original budget Gov. Mark Dayton called for spending $37.1 billion. Gov. Dayton has since revised his budget number to $35.8 billion. . . .
    Go read the rest. Dorman isn't suggesting any easy answers. But he's lookin for policy  based on real numbers.
    Back to May: Carla Nelson's "actual budget numbers"
    Dorman's not the first to call attention to this eccentric accounting, and he's far more kind than others. Perhaps the most scathing review of Republican bookkeeping came at the end of May when the Rochester Post Bulletin editorial board nailed freshman Carla Nelsonfor using the same set of figures as the ad Dorman mentions.
    In May. It's July now, and the MNGOP still trots out the same bank of Monopoly money.
    The Post Bulletin editorial is now archived behind the paper's subscription firewall, but the full editorial has been reposted here by the Invest in Minnesota Coalition. Here's what the PB wrote:
    Sen. Carla Nelson, a Republican from Rochester, handed out an interesting and enlightening document during Thursday's Eggs and Issues event sponsored by the Rochester Area Chamber of Commerce.
    Under the headline "Here are the actual budget numbers for your consideration," she provided the following figures:
    • $30.2 billion — current budget for this biennium (fiscal year 2010-11)
    • $34.5 billion spent — includes onetime federal stimulus money and shifts (fiscal year 2010-11)
    • $34 billion of revenue projected for next biennium (fiscal year 2012-13)
    • $34 billion — Legislature's budget sent to Gov. Dayton for the next biennium
    • $37 billion —  Dayton's budget for next biennnium.
    • $39 billion in projected spending for next biennium.
    Let's, as the saying goes, "unpack" some of those numbers.
    Start with the last figure. That $39 billion is a pipe dream, the "government-growth-on-autopilot" budget that everyone knows won't happen. Minnesota needs to become more efficient, and spending can't expand at this rate when the economy is struggling.
    Working our way down, consider the $37 billion Dayton budget. That figure was accurate for much of the session, but during the last week the governor adjusted his proposal. It now stands at about $35.8 billion in spending over the next two-year cycle.
    Keep that in mind as we jump to the top two figures on Nelson's list. Minnesota used $30.2 billion of its own money in the current two-year cycle, but we actually spent $34.5 billion. To make the books balance, we didn't pay schools $1.9 billion that they're owed, and we used $2.3 billion in federal stimulus funds.
    As far as we know, Minnesota didn't spend those federal dollars on a statewide pizza party. We spent them on education, transportation and health care, and without that money, we would have been in a world of hurt.
    Yet, when some Republicans talk about the size of Dayton's proposed budget increase, they use $30.2 billion as the baseline of "current state spending," and compare it to Dayton's outdated $37 billion proposal.
    By doing so, the GOP can claim that Dayton seeks a 22 percent spending increase. That's the figure that was cited by Rep. Mike Benson during Thursday's Eggs and Issues meeting. Nelson reported the same figure on her handout.
    But if we compare what Minnesota actually spent in the past two years to the latest offer that Dayton has put on the table, spending would increase by 3.7 percent. Or, put another way, the annual increase would be less than 2 percent
    If we can’t agree on how to do the math, we’re going to have a hard time reaching a deal. . . .
    No kidding.
    Go read the rest. The editors concluded:
    Could those needs [of Minnesotas] be met with the GOP's budget, which would spend $500 million less in the next two years than we spent in the previous two? On paper, it's almost certainly possible — almost anything is when you're just crunching numbers, trying to hit a certain figure.
    But we're deeply afraid that when such a "solution" trickles down to our classrooms, our grandparents, our college students and our unemployed or disabled neighbor, Minnesota will cease to be recognizable as the state which once was known for innovation, education and compassion.
    Poligraph's April fact check
    For a graphic illustration of the math, check out How much we spent last budget. Ask MN GOP to stop lying. at the Minnesota Progressive Project:
    Whenever someone brings up that Republicans increased spending by 6%, please point out they are lying. Either reference this chart, or PoliGraph.
    Maybe the old bon mot by the late Duchess of Windsor can be revised for today's Republican Party of Minnesota: It can't be too rich or too debunked ---and certainly not often enough. The Republicans will continue to use these figures to avoid fair taxation, and the figures will continue to be exposed for what they are.

    Tuesday, July 5, 2011

    Minnesota Shutdown 2011: Budget Dispute Continues, Negotiations Resume (LATEST UPDATES)


    Resume (LATEST UPDATES)

    Minnesota Shutdown 2011
    Posted: 07/ 5/11 10:43 AM ET



    The post and live blog below are a collaboration between Patch and HuffPost reporters.
    On the fifth day of the Minnesota state government shutdown, Governor Mark Dayton (D) said that he's prepared to resume budget negotiations with Republican lawmakers to close the state's $5 billion budget gap.
    "This is a terrible situation," Dayton told Minnesota Public Radio on Tuesday. Over the weekend, he saidto local station Fox 9 that the day of the shutdown was one of the worst days of his life and certainly the worst of his political career.
    No talks were held to resolve the budget dispute over the holiday weekend.
    The Star Tribune reports:
    Minnesota stands to lose millions of dollars in revenue and get saddled with millions more in new expenses for every week that the widespread shutdown of state government persists.
    In both subtle and stark ways, the shutdown that began Friday will bring new financial pain to the state treasury. Closing many operations will save the state some money, but an array of revenue sources as diverse as the lottery and highway toll lanes have been cut off.
    Reuters and the Associated Press report that Minnesotans are expressing anger and frustration over the shutdown situation.
    Over the weekend, Dayton faulted lawmakers on both sides of the aisle for failing to reach a deal to avert a shutdown of the state government.
    Below, a live blog of the latest developments to unfold in Minnesota.


    MinnPost.com reports:
    An all-star group of Minnesota politicians has put together a bipartisan committee that has been charged with rapidly coming up with “a third way” to solve the state’s budget crisis and end the government shutdown.
    Former Gov. Arne Carlson, former Vice President Walter Mondale and former U.S. Sen. Dave Durenberger are the movers and shakers behind the committee, which clearly is being formed with the blessing of Gov. Mark Dayton.



    Minnesota Shutdown 2011: Budget Dispute Continues, Negotiations Resume (LATEST UPDATES)

    Minnesota Shutdown 2011
    Posted: 07/ 5/11 10:43 AM ET
    The post and live blog below are a collaboration between Patch and HuffPost reporters.
    On the fifth day of the Minnesota state government shutdown, Governor Mark Dayton (D) said that he's prepared to resume budget negotiations with Republican lawmakers to close the state's $5 billion budget gap.
    "This is a terrible situation," Dayton told Minnesota Public Radio on Tuesday. Over the weekend, he saidto local station Fox 9 that the day of the shutdown was one of the worst days of his life and certainly the worst of his political career.
    No talks were held to resolve the budget dispute over the holiday weekend.
    The Star Tribune reports:
    Minnesota stands to lose millions of dollars in revenue and get saddled with millions more in new expenses for every week that the widespread shutdown of state government persists.
    In both subtle and stark ways, the shutdown that began Friday will bring new financial pain to the state treasury. Closing many operations will save the state some money, but an array of revenue sources as diverse as the lottery and highway toll lanes have been cut off.
    Reuters and the Associated Press report that Minnesotans are expressing anger and frustration over the shutdown situation.
    Over the weekend, Dayton faulted lawmakers on both sides of the aisle for failing to reach a deal to avert a shutdown of the state government.
    Below, a live blog of the latest developments to unfold in Minnesota.

    LIVE BLOG

    OldestNewest
    Today 12:48 PM 'All-Star' Politicians Look For 'Third Way' To Resolve Dispute
    MinnPost.com reports:
    An all-star group of Minnesota politicians has put together a bipartisan committee that has been charged with rapidly coming up with “a third way” to solve the state’s budget crisis and end the government shutdown.
    Former Gov. Arne Carlson, former Vice President Walter Mondale and former U.S. Sen. Dave Durenberger are the movers and shakers behind the committee, which clearly is being formed with the blessing of Gov. Mark Dayton.
    Click here to read more.
    Today 11:20 AM Back To The Bargaining Table
    The AP reports:
    Democratic Gov. Mark Dayton and Republican legislative leaders return to the bargaining table at 2:30 p.m. [CST] Tuesday.
    Today 9:22 AM Dayton Prepared To Resume Budget Talks
    Governor Mark Dayton (D) told Minnesota Public Radio that he's prepared to resume budget negotiations with Republican lawmakers amid a shutdown of the state government.
    "I intend to call them this morning and see if they're available to meet this afternoon, or as soon as possible thereafter so we can start putting this back together," he said on Tuesday.
    Click here to read more.
    Today 9:08 AM Pawlenty Touts 2005 Shutdown In New Ad
    Former Minnesota governor and Republican presidential candidate Tim Pawlenty is hitting the airwaves in Iowa with a new ad touting the state government shutdown in 2005 that occurred during his tenure.
    "Minnesota gripped by one of the longest transit strikes in history, why?" a narrator says in the spot. "Because governor Tim Pawlenty refused to cave in to government unions. Result? Pawlenty won. Minnesota government shutdown, why? Because Tim Pawlenty would not accept Democrats' massive tax-and-spending demands. Result? Pawlenty won. Tim Pawlenty, results not rhetoric."
    Politico reports:
    The most valuable asset Pawlenty has left is his reputation as a solidly conservative governor who balanced budgets without raising taxes. Now, that reputation is drawing new scrutiny amid the spending showdown in St. Paul.
    Pawlenty advisers contend that the shutdown will allow Pawlenty to highlight his record of holding the line on spending in a liberal state, contrasting that with the approach of his successor, Democratic Gov. Mark Dayton, as well as President Barack Obama.
    WATCH:
    Today 8:57 AM Republicans Gets Earful Over Shutdown
    The AP reports:
    As Republican Sen. Ted Daley hustled up Yankee Doodle Road in the lineup for Eagan's Fourth of July parade, some of his constituents wondered loudly why he wasn't at the state Capitol 10 miles to the north trying to end the state government shutdown that was in its fourth day.
    "Go get your job done!" shouted Bill Egan, a 52-year-old salesman who said he's disgusted by the standoff between Democratic Gov. Mark Dayton and the Republicans who control the Legislature.
    The two have been at odds over the state budget since they were sworn in early this year. Republicans want to limit state spending to $34 billion, the amount the state is expected to bring in over the next two years, while Dayton wants to raise income taxes on the state's top earners to provide $1.8 billion more to keep up with growing demand for state services and prevent cuts to social programs and public colleges.
    Click here to read more.
    07/03/2011 7:03 PM Report: Arsonist Strikes Dayton’s Former Home
    Police in Minnesota say they have reason to believe a fire at Dayton's former home on Saturday may have been the product of anger over the state government shutdown, according to local station Fox 9.
    MPR News reported earlier in the day that a spokeswoman for Dayton declined to comment on the possible arson attempt, but said that the governor hasn't lived in the home since 1985.
    According to Fox 9:
    The fire did little damage, but Minneapolis Police Sgt. Steve McCarty said it may have been politically motivated by someone who thought the governor stilled owned the house.
    WATCH:
    07/03/2011 6:51 PM Dayton On Shutdown: One Of The Worst Days Of My Life
    Governor Mark Dayton (D) says the day the Minnesota government shut down was one of the worst days of his life and was certainly the worst of his political career.
    Dayton faulted lawmakers on both sides of the aisle in discussing the ongoing budget dispute in his state with local news outlet Fox 9's Jeff Goldberg.
    WATCH:
    07/03/2011 3:23 PM Metro Transit Still Rolling During Shutdown
    Mendota Heights Patch's Danielle Cabot and Fridley Patch's Chris Steller report:
    Riders of Metro Transit, the Hiawatha light rail line and the Northstar commuter rail can expect service to continue uninterrupted—though not indefinitely—during the current state government shutdown. Other contracted services operated by the Metropolitan Council, including Metro Mobility, could also run without interruption for at least several weeks during the shutdown. The Met Council operates most transit systems in the metro, including several bus routes servicing Edina.
    "All transit service will continue operating as normal beyond the potential shutdown date,” said Metro Transit spokesman John Siqveland.