Press Releases and Newsletters
Senate Dems choose Nesbitt (News & Observer)
State Sen. Martin Nesbitt will be his chamber’s minority leader next session.
Senate Democrats, who will be in the minority for the first time in more than 100 years, chose the Asheville Democrat in a unanimous vote during a closed-door meeting this afternoon.
Nesbitt, who has been the majority leader for about a year, said he was the sole nominee. Sen. Linda Garrou of Winston-Salem had announced after last month’s election that she wanted the post, but Nesbitt ended up walking into the job without opposition Tuesday.
Being minority leader means acting as chief spokesman for the caucus, trying to build a united front on major questions, and, if recent history is any guide, filing a lot of bills that don’t get committee hearings. Republicans will hold a 31-19 majority in the chamber.
Nesbitt will also be expected to help Democrats win back the majority in two years through candidate recruitment and fund raising. Over the last decade, Senate leader Marc Basnight, former majority leader Tony Rand, and maybe a few others shouldered much of the fund raising duties.
Individual senators are going to have to take more responsibility for raising money, Nesbitt said. “We can no longer depend on one or two people to get it,” he said.
Sen. Josh Stein of Raleigh was elected minority whip.
Submitted by lbonner on 2010-12-14 14:22
No Special Session (NEWS & OBSERVER)
Gov. Beverly Perdue said Monday that she had considered calling lawmakers into a special session early next month to seek emergency budgetary powers, but decided against the move due to potential costs. Perdue said it was hard to justify the $1 million per day it costs to have the legislature in session. “Someone would have to convince me,” Perdue told reporters after a speech to the Southern Regional Education Board’s commission on middle grades meeting at the Marriott Hotel in downtown Raleigh. Perdue is the SREB chair.
The legislature is scheduled to convene January 26, but there had been talk that she might call the legislature into a special session earlier due to a projected $3.7 billion budget shortfall. Perdue expressed frustration that she did not have full authority to manage the state’s budget. Certain university spending as well as agencies with their own statewide elected officials – such as the Department of Public Instruction and Department of Agriculture – are off limits to her. As well, she said, the governor shouldn’t have to wait for the state to be actually broke before exercising some budget management. “Now we all know we’re in an emergency starting in June and why in the world I don’t have the power, the ability, the authority to claw back some empty positions across state government, to go into the university system, and to go into the other agencies of government that are independently supervised, I don’t understand that,” Perdue said.
The governor has already taken a number of steps to freeze hiring for the Cabinet agencies under her direct control. She has also urged other agency heads to voluntarily initiate hiring freeze. Perdue expressed satisfaction that the other agencies are taking steps to freeze hiring, singling out Labor Commissioner Cherie Berry, a Republican, and Superintendent of Public Instruction June Atkinson, a Democrat, for praise. Republican leaders such as Sen. Phil Berger and Rep. Thom Tillis have said they are open to giving the governor some more budget cutting powers.
(THE NEWS & OBSERVER; Mark Binker, THE NEWS & RECORD, 12/13/10).
House GOP Caucus begins staffing up ( News & Observer)
Former state Rep. Bill Daughtridge of Rocky Mount has been named interim chief of staff during the transition period for the House Republicans by incoming Speaker Thom Tillis.Daughtridge, a three-term lawmaker, and was the Republican nominee for state treasurer in 2008 losing to Democrat Janet Cowell.
“Bill has already hit the ground running by participating in meetings with Speaker (Joe) Hackney and House majority leaders,” Tillis said in an email to GOP lawmakers.Daughtridge is president of the Daughtridge Corp. of Rocky Mount, a family owned company started by his grandfather that delivers propane and fuel oil in Eastern North Carolina.
He has a BA and and MBA from the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, where he was a Morehead Scholar.
Dodie Renfer has also been hired as director of member services for the House transition team. Renfer had served as political director for the state Republican Party the past 15 months. The new spokesman for the transition is Jordan Shaw, who had been communications director for the state Republican Party. He will handle “talking points on key issues” for GOP lawmakers as well as handling press inquires.
Shaw had previously worked three years for the Virginia state legislature, before moving to North Carolina in 2008.
Submitted by robchristensen on 2010-12-02 13:34
Governor hears county’s concerns ( The Laurinburg Exchange)
Gov. Bev Perdue held a “no holds barred” roundtable discussion Tuesday at the Richmond Community College Diane Honeycutt Center with county leaders and merchants about state issues ranging from jobs to taxes.
John Cooley, a county commissioner and the owner of Cooley’s Nursery, spoke to Perdue in both capacities as he called on the governor to not to force counties to carry more financial obligations.
“In taking about skinning the rabbit and getting that budget in line, I hope you are not going to send a lot of it to the county because we have no one to send it to but the taxpayers,” Cooley said. “As a taxpayer, I listened to one state employee who was concerned about loosing a half of a percent of his income. I didn’t say anything, I just thought that I wish I’d lost a half of a percent instead of half of 100 percent or more. We’ve cut back employees, and unless we sell something, we’re going to have to cut back on hours.”
There are no extra resources for new costs, he said.
“At the county level and the personal level, we can’t stand any more,” Cooley said. “I hope you’ll skin that rabbit somewhere else besides the county level.”
Perdue said she understood Cooley’s concerns, but said she could make no promises. She is expected to unveil a plan Thursday that she says will “remake government.” Perdue said the plan will include “lots of downsizing and the elimination of middle management” as well as eliminating layers of duplication. But she also said that she would “talk in generalities” on Thursday.
“Since I’ve been governor, the state has faced the hardest economic times since the Great Depression,” she told Scotland leaders. “This is the third consecutive years of huge budget shortfalls. We’ve cut about $2.5 billion out of the state’s spending. We’ve cut about 3,000 employees, but this year we are going to have a $3.6 billion hole.”
The state will try not to shoulder the costs on the counties, Perdue said, but was uncertain what her final budget will look like or what the newly elected Republican legislature will do.
Commissioner Bob Davis mirrored Cooley’s concern, asking Perdue about maintaining secondary roads. Davis said passing the responsibility to the county would force Scotland to raise taxes 25 to 30 cents per $100 of property valuation.
Perdue says the issue comes up periodically and that she has “killed it every time.” She asked Scotland commissioners to pass a resolution asking the state to fund county roads.
After the meeting, Cooley said he was heartened by Perdue’s visit.
“I was encouraged with the whole meeting,” he said. “I am impressed that she would come and talk with us. I am glad that she came here to scotland county.”
He reiterated his concerns that the state would stick the county with the bill in next year’s budget.
“If the state passes down fiscal responsibilities or taxes that we haven’t already got and increases that for us when we are already on the ropes, it is going to push us down,” he said. “Hopefully she’ll keep us in mind as legislation is being passed.”
Job creation
Commissioner Guy McCook, the owner of Hasty Realty, asked Perdue to “look at tax credits for job creation in small businesses.”
McCook asked for help to reduce unemployment.
“We need jobs in our communities… and we need help creating them,” McCook said. “Our resources are extremely limited. As a county, we have no resources left. Our taxes are as high as we can have them. We can’t increase our taxes and we have cut our budget.”
Laurinburg City Councilman Tommy Parker later agreed with McCook, asking Perdue to consider creating incentives for small businesses to grow jobs. He pointed to help his store, Parker Furniture, received to hire someone who was unemployed for six months, saying it would help businesses and create jobs.
“It’s a great suggestion,” Perdue said. “Especially for Tier I counties.”
She said after the meeting that she would take that idea Raleigh and see if it’s feasible for the 2011-2012 budget.
Afterwards, Perdue said she’d keep Scotland officials in mind when crafting next year’s spending proposal.
“These are hard times for people all over the state and the country,” she said. “And for Scotland County the message is loud and clear: tell us how we can grow our economy.”
The governor says she’s been working to create jobs.
“We try to invest in good business things and good business investments that bring jobs,” she said. “I try to work with any company in the area – in Scotland County and Laurinburg – to try and bring jobs here.”
The state is currently working to ease some unemployment issues, Perdue said, doling out federal unemployment dollars through the Employment Security Commission and proving job training and retraining at community colleges
“It’s all about education and investment.”
Perdue called the discussion in Scotland County “impressive” and “helpful” as so many other such events have turned into an hour or more of the governor and other state officials fielding complaints from irate business owners and local officials.
“Today, the people, who I think were so representative of Scotland County, thought that it was much more valuable to talk about job creation and issues that are really important to Scotland County,” Perdue said. “That was impressive to me that rather than complain about the system. They really voiced what they thought would make the system work better. That’s helpful.”
She said the discussion on small businesses “exemplifies” her upcoming budget proposal as so many entrepreneurs have been forced to slash jobs and tighten budgets to stay in the black.
“With a state the size of North Carolina with a limited revenue base, you really have to decide what your priorities are, what the state’s core priorities are, and make sure you have the revenue to fund them,” she said.
Perdue says “the most nerve-racking” part of making a proposal as governor is sending her requests to the General Assembly
“I am in a different branch of government,” she said. “I am the executive.”
This can make it difficult in pushing through an agenda, she said.
Perdue says she will be using “the bully pulpit” to garner support for her budget, persuading legislators to back her proposal by convincing their constituents of her plan’s merits.
State Sen. Bill Purcell, who introduced the governor, also thought the meeting went well.
“There was a lot of good discussion and everything went well”
He added that the venue was appropriate for a discussion on jobs as Scotland County has the highest unemployment rate in that state at 15.6 percent.
“I think that coming to Scotland County to talk about jobs was extremely important for the community,” he said. “I want to thank the Richmond Community College satellite (campus) for hosting us.”
Taxes
Purcell made a plea to Perdue at the end of the roundtable to continue the temporary one cent sales tax that was enacted in 2009 to ward off future budget cuts until the economy improves.
Purcell, a Laurinburg pediatrician, told Perdue that many of those at the meeting likely didn’t even know how much sales tax they were paying and suggested it would be unwise to end the tax without a new source of revenue.
Purcell said after the meeting that the tax garners $1.3 bullion in revenue that can’t be replaced until the economy has fully recovered.
“If we don’t keep the sales tax, those who are doing the budget will have to cut an additional $1.3 billion from the budget, which will have to come from education and health and human services because that is where the real money is in state government,” Purcell said. “If we could continue that a little bit longer, it would probably be a good idea rather than firing state employees and teachers, increasing class sizes and cutting medicaid reimbursement rates.”
Purcell would not say how long the tax might be needed.
“The sales tax was put in as a temporary tax for two years,” he said. “It will be up to whoever is making the decisions of how long to extend it.”
Perdue thanked Purcell for the suggestion, but said nothing else of the tax proposal.
by Matthew Hensley, Staff Reporter The Laurinburg Exchange
12.07.10 – 09:31 pm
© laurinburgexchange.com 2010
House Extends Transportation Reauthorization, But Debate Far From Over (School Transportation News)
The House of Representatives narrowly passed a sweeping $1.2 trillion continuing resolution that keeps federal transportation funding afloat through September of 2011.
The current surface transportation extension for SAFETEA-LU, one of several since the act officially ran its course in September of 2009, is set to expire at the end of this year. Next, the Senate must vote on what to do with funding levels for transportation and all other programs. In the House version passed on Dec. 8, transportation is part of a $64.9 billion appropriation that also includes Housing and Urban Development. In addition to extending all current transportation funding, the House also voted to allow Federal Motor Carrier Safety Administration funding to be used for additional audits of new interstate carriers and grants to improve the commercial driver’s license program. Rep. James Oberstar, the outgoing Democratic representative from Minnesota and chair of the House Transportation and Infrastructure Committee, favors another one-year extension while incoming Chair John Mica (R-FL) wants a shorter extension. Congress must act by Dec. 18, when the federal government shuts down for Christmas. Becky Weber, managing director at Washington, D.C.-based lobbyist Prime Policy Group, said SAFETEA-LU would likely be extended until spring of 2011. She added the Senate is unlikely to follow suit on the continuing resolution, especially as the House version only passed by a 212-206 margin. Instead, Weber said it appears the Senate will seek an omnibus bill to keep transportation and other programs afloat. But that will need 60 votes, which is unlikely as Republicans and many Democrats want to see cuts as well as have a say on what programs are funded. And many bills passed in the House, such as immigration reform and tax bills, can’t get through the Senate. “It’s far from over,” Weber added. “Everything is very fluid and dynamic right now.” |
Written by Ryan Gray |
Thursday, 09 December 2010 10:09 |
Budget gap pegged at closer to $4 billion (News and Observer)
Is it $3.2 billion? $3.5 billion?
The budget hole state politicians will try to fill next year may be bigger than commonly reported.
A new report from the National Conference of State Legislatures on budget conditions in the 50 states and Puerto Rico puts the hole North Carolina is facing at more than $3.8 billion, or 20.3 percent of current budget. NCSL collected information for its report from legislative fiscal offices.
In North Carolina, you start at $3.2 billion, which comes from the loss of federal stimulus money and the expiration of temporary state sales taxes and income tax surcharges. Here’s the rest:
In addition to the previously reported gap estimate of $3.2 billion is an increase of $300 million for the state retirement system, $181.6 million for the health plan for state employees and retirees and $164 million of education enrollment growth ($34 million for community colleges, $55 million for the UNC system and $75 million for K-12 education). Medicaid enrollment growth in FY 2012 is unknown at this time. It should be noted that the general fund base is FY 2011 and does not include American Recovery and Reinvestment Act funds.
Gov. Bev Perdue is going to talk about government reorganization today, offering a nonspecific preview to the budget she’ll present early next year.
Published Thu, Dec 09, 2010 02:00 AM
Modified Thu, Dec 09, 2010 05:39 AM
Foxx on Charlotte: We’re hanging on (Charlotte Post )
Charlotte Mayor Anthony Foxx’s first State of the City address was part pep talk, part lobbying.
Foxx said Charlotte has faced many challenges, but has shown its ability to push forward and thrive in the face of economic adversity.
“In fact, I cannot think of another city in the United States that has had such success over the past year,” he said Tuesday.
When Foxx took office, the area’s unemployment rate was nearing 13 percent. “We said we would work as hard as ever to grow jobs in Charlotte, and we have done so, bringing 8,500 new jobs to Charlotte in areas as diverse as energy, financial services, manufacturing, and healthcare,” he said.
Foxx said that with a better business climate, an improved quality of living and stronger relationships with federal and state governments, Charlotte is in a better state than it was a year ago.
“Our collective response so far has been to use the current economic crisis as an opportunity to pick up the pace,” he said.
Accomplishments in the area of transportation include a third parallel runway being added to Charlotte/Douglas International Airport.
Governor Beverly Perdue also signed a construction contract that will complete I-485 by 2015, a year before construction was initially slated to begin.
On the business end, Electrolux moving to Charlotte marked the largest corporate headquarters relocation since 1984. “Clearly, we are working hard to bring jobs to this city,” Foxx said.
“While we are working with $200 million less than last fiscal year, we have stayed within our means. We have not raised property taxes, and through our dedicating funding stream for capitol projects we still managed to put our second largest bond package in this city’s history on the ballot this fall. We are gratified that voters responded so positively to it and supported it overwhelmingly.”
The city is taking steps to address its need for more affordable housing, which includes increasing the budgeted allocation for affordable housing from $10 million to $15 million and supporting the creation of Moore Place, which will provide shelter and assistance to the chronically homeless.
“As long as we have men women and children sleeping on our streets, we will have more work to do. But I am pleased that we are moving the dial forward on this issue,” said Foxx.
Foxx said that although the city has made some great moves in the right direction, there is still a lot more work to do. He said keeping the positive momentum going will take pursuing what he called the three C’s – consolidate, collaborate and children.
Foxx said he plans to pursue candid conversations with county and city officials about government consolidation.
He said the process will be long and challenging, but the end result will be worthwhile and one that he believes the community will support. “We’ve got a number of things to think about, but it doesn’t start unless there is a conversation,” he said.
In meantime, he is exploring partial consolidation and ways local governments can work closer together.
This year, in an unprecedented move, City Council assisted Mecklenburg County to limit the number of libraries that were closed.
“If things would have gone as they were slated to go, this community would have gone from 24 libraries to eight. Because if the actions of city council and other surrounding municipalities, and the county commission, we were able to keep 21 libraries open and doing business,” said Foxx. “That’s a victory for this community.”
Foxx said in the future, he wants council members to be prepared to step up for Charlotte-Mecklenburg Schools as well.
“Education is one of the top issues, if not the top issue, for this community going forward. We need to be engaged in that conversation,” he said.
He called on his colleagues to support the school district’s legislative agenda. “They are looking to loosen some of the reins on spending on dollars that they are given by the state, and we ought to support that,” he said.
Foxx said council should be willing to promote longer school days and longer school years, if necessary.
“Whatever it takes to get our kids to be competitive in the future,” he said.
Published Wednesday, December 8, 2010 10:10 am |
by Michaela L. Duckett, For The Charlotte Post
Perdue to outline her plan on budget ( News & Observer)
RALEIGH Democratic Gov. Bev Perdue plans to introduce her plans for revamping state government this week, getting a jump on the Republican legislature that will take office in January.
After talking for several months about remaking state government to deal with the projected $3.5 billion shortfall, Perdue will announce her plans before a regional Chamber of Commerce meeting in Pinehurst on Thursday.
But on Tuesday she played down expectations, saying she would only talk about the broad outlines of her vision, leaving the details to her budget proposal, which she will submit to the legislature next year.
“It will be very abbreviated …. a philosophical statement about the organization of government,” Perdue told reporters Tuesday. “My budget document will have all the details. But it will give you a glimpse of the overall restructuring.”
The governor said she had been meeting with her advisers for the past two or three months about the budget and was getting a good sense of what she would propose in her budget to the legislature – probably sometime in February.
She said it would include “lots of downsizing and the eliminating of middle management.”
Perdue already has on the table major budget cuts, after asking state agencies to come up with proposals for cuts of 5 percent, 10 percent and 15 percent. If enacted, the cuts would likely result in the layoff of thousands of teachers and other state employees.
But Perdue said she was determined to protect education, viewing it as crucial to the state’s growth.
“Education is the bedrock of any kind of economic development,” Perdue said.
Perdue did not seem inclined to battle the new Republican legislature on tax cuts. In 2009, Perdue backed $1.3 billion in temporary tax increases – along with even larger budget cuts – to deal with a budget shortfall.
The newly elected Republican legislative leaders have said they plan to allow the tax increases to expire next year, and Perdue suggested Tuesday she would go along. “It is my intent right now not to do any taxes,” she said.
She also said she would fight to keep the state’s incentives program, which offers tax credits and grants to businesses that agree to move to North Carolina and to existing state businesses that expand. She said that 49 other states offer such incentives and that North Carolina must compete for jobs.
In a sign of unease about the continuing budget crisis, the Council of State on Tuesday delayed approval of $175 million in building and repair projects.
The council action came as elected leaders voiced concern about taking on added debt at a time when the state faced a projected $3.5 billion shortfall.
The projects had been approved by the legislature, but the council, which is a body of statewide elected officials, has to give approval before bonds can be sold.
“I do not want to issue these bonds at this time,” Republican Agriculture Commissioner Steve Troxler said.
Democratic State Auditor Beth Wood and Republican Labor Commissioner Cheri Berry also voiced concern.
The delayed projects included $55 million in capital and improvements to the University of North Carolina system and the state community college system. It also included $120 million in repairs and renovations projects in state government.
The delayed projects included a $1 million fire suppression sprinkler system and fire alarm upgrade at Polk Hall at N.C. State University, a $2.1 million exterior building restoration and roof replacement at Fetzer Gymnasium at UNC-Chapel Hill, a $455,000 roof replacement at Atkins Library at UNC Charlotte, and a $150,000 roof replacement and exterior building repair to the Criminal Justice Building at N.C. Central University.
Other projects delayed include $439,000 to replace the air-handling unit in the Labor Building, and $658,000 to replace to replace the air-handling units in the old Revenue Building.
Published Wed, Dec 08, 2010 06:09 AM
Modified Wed, Dec 08, 2010 02:48 PM
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A Whole New Name Game: Parks, Transit, Schools Consider Corporate Monikers in Bid to Plug Budget Gaps (Wall Street Journal)
Astronaut M. Scott Carpenter flew into orbit nearly 50 years ago. Now, he could be grounded in his native Boulder, Colo.
Scott Carpenter Park could be renamed if a company or wealthy donor makes a good offer, as Boulder prepares to follow other municipalities that are selling naming rights to bridge budget gaps.
Sports complexes, hospitals and the like long have been renamed after big sponsors. Now, the name game is hitting more public places.
Hundreds of naming rights are up for sale nationwide at schools, parks, government buildings and boat launches, as money problems among cities and states create monuments such as Chicago’s BP Bridge and AT&T Plaza.
Such deals don’t offer corporations the high profile they get at stadiums in front of national television cameras —or bring in the same level of cash for naming rights—but they boost local presence.
Mass-transit stations are a hot spot. Chicago, a pioneer of the idea of naming public spaces after corporate sponsors with its Millennium Park, is soliciting bids for naming rights to bus routes and train lines. The city has already cut a marketing deal with Apple Inc. for a station the computer giant renovated near one of its stores.
In New York, Barclays PLC bought naming rights to the Atlantic Avenue-Pacific Street subway stop in Brooklyn, and will tag its name to the end of that stop, which is near an arena under construction that will also bear the bank’s name.
Philadelphia recently did away with the name of a station altogether, after AT&T Corp. paid about $3 million. Pattison Avenue terminus—the street was named for a 19th-century Pennsylvania governor—is now AT&T Station.
Critics say splattering a station with a corporate name dishonors historic citizens and causes geographic confusion.
“The whole situation raises the frightening prospect in the near future that, instead of riding the Broad Street Subway from City Hall to Pattison, people will take the Coca-Cola Trolley from Pizza Hut to AT&T,” Yonah Freemark, a transportation writer, groused in a blog.
AT&T spokeswoman Alexa Kaufman said the renaming connects the community with its teams, because the stop is at the city’s major sports complex where other companies have their names on various facilities, and “helps underscore our presence in the Philadelphia region.”
Similar brouhahas are spilling into recreation areas. More than 20 states now are mulling corporate park sponsorships, said Philip McKnelly, executive director of the National Association of State Parks Directors. Some have cut deals.
In Virginia and Maryland, the “North Face” logo adorns some trail markers in public parks. After forests were devastated by wildfires this year in California, Coca-Cola Co. planted trees and was allowed to erect a logo at Cuyamaca Rancho State Park. Nestle SA is building playgrounds in several New York state parks and emblazoning the name of its Juicy Juice brand on signs. Not to be outdone, juice rival Odwalla made a deal that would give it a presence in all 50 states through a tree-planting program.
“How pure can we be at a time like this?” asked Dewey Potter, a spokeswoman for Seattle Parks and Recreation.
The department is turning to corporations for help compensating for $10.2 million in budget cuts for next year. But the effort is off to a rough start.
“BizKid$,” a national television show that teaches children about money, recently backed out of a deal to pay the department $75,000 a year to rent a gym at the Queen Anne Community Center, bowing to public backlash. BizKid$ was to use the space for production and education services. But residents bombarded the mayor with letters, launched a Facebook page and swept the town for signatures petitioning against the plan.
Schools also are getting in on the action. When school opened in Sun Prairie, Wis., this fall, students met in the “Fenske” courtyard, then filed into the “Tubbs” classroom—both named after families—and played in a gym where the scoreboards trumpet “Hallman Lindsay Paints Inc.”
In Camp Hill, Pa., officials are offering to name two gyms for $250,000 each, the library for $150,000, and the high-school counseling office for $15,000. Similar moves are afoot in Harrisburg, the near-bankrupt state capital, along with many other districts around the country.
The Frank Gehry designed BP Bridge, left, is one of several parts of Chicago’s Millennium Park named after corporate sponsors
In Newtonville, Mass., residents wrote to the school protesting a plan to sell the very name of the school.
“Let them sell the lockers, the pool, the restrooms—but not the name of the school,” said William Huddleston, a retired clinical psychologist in Newtonville. “The notion that one would sell their name for money reinforces to children that everything is for sale.”
The brouhaha hit Boulder in November, when officials sent a memo to the city council outlining a new policy.
Nobody’s marketing naming rights, said Carl Castillo, a policy adviser to the city. But officials are now ready if a corporation wants to buy naming rights to, say, Scott Carpenter Park, with its rocket-themed playground, or the Dairy Center for the Arts.
Richard Polk, Dairy Center chairman, said the city was trying to balance purism with pragmatism. “Let’s say someone walked up to us and said: ‘Here’s $4 million; we want to rename it Pepsi Center,’ ” he said. “That would be very hard for us to turn away in this economy.”
December 7, 2011