Gulf Oil Spill Presents Stark Options for Alabama Environmental Leadership

August 4th, 2010

The Gulf Oil Spill of 2010, otherwise known as the British Petroleum-Transocean-Halliburton Gusher of Death to the Gulf, presents a stark reality to those who have been willing to outsource natural resources in this land to foreign profiteers.

The upcoming Alabama Governor’s race and the race for Attorney General also present stark contrasts to investigate on who possess the leadership necessary to bring this state back from one of the worst economic and environmental calamities in our short but storied history. We will have more to say about that in the months ahead.

Politics aside, a group of non-profit organizations in this state are united in new proactive agenda and evaluation plan for the Alabama Department of Environmental Management (ADEM) and its new director Lance LeFleur, who only recently came aboard after several tumultuous administrations.

We, as a new media news organization with an authoritative voice, are not sure this plan covers everything that needs to be done. We will have also have more to say about that in the months ahead.

But we run this statement in its entirety here today, for it represents a lot of hard work from some of the best minds thinking about the future of this state, and some of the best hearts in people who truly love this place.

Organizations Present Environmental Priorities to ADEM’s New Director

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Alabama Wins Stupidest State In America Contestant

June 12th, 2010

Real Time With Bill Maher

He ain’t far off … except for that misplaced Roll Tide! If he had said War Eagle, it would have been perfect. Well, except for getting the bit about the Ten Commandments monument wrong…

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Tough Times Demand Real Leadership

November 30th, 2009

Guest Editorial Column
by Ron Sparks

Alabama is facing the greatest financial crisis of modern history with the potential looming on the horizon of firing thousands of teachers and denying care to thousands of nursing home residents. While other candidates for governor, both Democrat and Republican, refuse to address this crisis, I have offered a means of providing additional funding for our state without taxing working families.

Just last week, we learned that Alabama has one of the ten highest unemployment rates in the nation. This news comes on the heels of months of catastrophic financial projections that the Education Trust Fund, Medicaid, and other vital state services are at great risk.

Recently, federal stimulus money helped fill the holes in the state budget. That much-needed money has now been spent and the chickens are coming home to roost.

What’s been missing from the political debate is any effort on the part of my fellow candidates to be honest about our state’s financial condition and plain talk about what we are up against.

Basic laws of economics tell us that we can’t spend what we don’t have. Considering the crisis we are facing and the many needs we have, we have very few choices. We must cut services, raise taxes on the working people of this state, or as I have proposed, identify new revenue streams to flow into our state budgets.

I have been clear that I will never raise taxes on the hard working men and women of Alabama. Our families are already strapped with all they can handle just trying to keep a roof over their heads and food in their children’s mouths. I will not support any plan that that will put teachers out of work and takes supplies and technology out of your child’s classroom. Whether you live in Wilcox County or Mountain Brook, every child deserves the same standard of educational opportunities.

The only option left is to find new money for our state budgets.

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Ron Sparks Blasts Davis, Riley on Charter School Idea

November 20th, 2009

by Glynn Wilson

Agricultural Commissioner Ron Sparks, the Fort Payne Democrat running for governor of Alabama, came out swinging against charter schools again today on the historic steps of the State Capitol Building in Montgomery.

“Today, at the foot of the seat of power in the State of Alabama, I stand alone in opposition to one of the most disastrous public policy initiatives in recent years,”: Sparks said. “In recent days, Artur Davis and Bob Riley have told the people of Alabama that the only way for Alabama to receive money for education reform from the federal government is through the implementation of charter schools. That is simply not true.”

There are federal programs in place now in Alabama that qualify for the stimulus funds, he said..

“We have innovative schools, magnet schools, and specialized programs of excellence in Alabama that would qualify us to receive some of the $4.3 billion of stimulus funding allocated for education,” Sparks said. “Since everybody wants to talk about charter schools, I’m going to tell you the truth about charter schools. Charter schools are only marginally effective. They are not innovative and visionary and have not produced results that justify this much discussion and debate. There is no guarantee that we will get a single penny of the stimulus money by implementing charter schools.”

Studies show that 85 percent of charter schools perform at the same level or below the level of standard schools, Sparks said. “Now, tell me what all the fuss is about? Where is the record of success to back up this demand for charter schools?”

Casino gambling has a better record of success than charter schools, Sparks said. He indicated that the statistics show there is nothing special about the performance of charter schools.

“Charter schools are at best, a mediocre experimental program,” he said. “So, if it’s not about performance then what is it all about? Why is there such a rush to get on board the charter school express?”

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Ron Sparks Says 'No' to Charter Schools

November 2nd, 2009

Davis Supports Ineffective, Unfair Experiment for Children

Democratic candidate for governor Ron Sparks again voiced his firm opposition to charter schools in Alabama today, while his primary opponent, Artur Davis, continues to be emphatic in his support for this “ineffective and unfair” initiative, according to a press release from the Sparks campaign.

In August, speaking to a candidate forum hosted by the Christian Coalition of Alabama, and again last week, at a forum hosted by the NAACP, Davis stated that he is firmly in support of a charter school initiative.

Unfortunately for the school children of Alabama, charter schools are far from being innovative or visionary. The record shows that charter schools are not working. They prevent Alabama children from having equal access to education and perhaps violate federal law regarding discrimination.

Sparks says his vision for education is all about equal access, while Congressman Davis and charter schools fail that test.

“Whether you live in Wilcox County or in Mountain Brook, I want every child in Alabama to have the same quality of education,” Sparks said. “That’s not happening today.”

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Arrington Endorses Sparks for Governor of Alabama

October 21st, 2009
Sparks_Arrington1.jpg
Glynn Wilson

by Glynn Wilson

KELLY INGRAM PARK, Ala. — Sending a clear message that Rep. Artur Davis will not garner all the African-American vote in Alabama’s upcoming Democratic primary next June, former Birmingham Mayor Richard Arrington endorsed the candidacy for governor of Agricultural Commissioner Ron Sparks on Wednesday on a sunny fall day in downtown Birmingham in front of the historic statue of Martin Luther King, Jr.

Both Sparks and Arrington said it was not about race, but about “leadership.”

Arrington said he was “proud” to stand in that historic spot and endorse Sparks, calling him one of the strongest leaders in the Alabama Democratic Party today.

“I feel we must support a candidate with the ability to win the election. After all, if we don’t win, how can we change anything?” Arrington said. “I honestly believe he will be the next governor of Alabama.”

Sparks also said he was proud to stand across the street from the Birmingham Civil Rights Institute and the historic 16th Street Baptist Church and be recommended for governor by Arrington, Birmingham’s first African-American mayor, who he called one of the most important leaders in Alabama political history.

“This man is one of Alabama’s greatest leaders and has been for over 30 years and it’s an honor for my campaign to receive his endorsement,” Sparks said.

Arrington, who made history in 1979 by becoming Birmingham’s first black mayor, said it is his belief that Ron Sparks is the only candidate in the race for governor with a plan to deal with Alabama’s economic crisis.

“Our nation, state, and communities are facing one of the most difficult economic crisis of our lifetimes,” Arrington said. “People are simply looking for help — looking for leadership. All Alabamians face these problems — not just some. We need a governor that can bring people together — urban and rural, black and white, rich and poor. Ron Sparks is the only candidate for governor that can do that.”

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Baxley People’s Rally Counters Riley’s Big Money Event

September 28th, 2006

by Glynn Wilson

BIRMINGHAM, Ala., Sept. 28 – As president George W. Bush made a closed, big money only campaign fund-raising appearance for Republican Gov. Bob Riley at the Birmingham-Jefferson Convention Complex, Lt Gov. Lucy Baxley held a free, public rally just up the street in Lynn Park between City Hall and the Jefferson County Courthouse, where she took on the president and the governor as big time corporate politicians who ignore the needs of normal, working people.

“The contrast in this campaign is obvious here today. It is the stark contrast between big dollars verses the people,” Ms. Baxley said. “Access to the government is not supposed to be up for sale to the highest bidder.”

lucy21b.jpg
Photo by Glynn Wilson
New Orleans musician Ricky Castrillo entertains the crowd at Lynn Park during Lt. Gov. Lucy Baxley’s campaign stop.

To obtain entry into the Bush-Riley fund raiser, the estimated 2,000 guests had to pay a minimum of $250 to get in the room. And they had the option of paying $500 or even $1,000 to get closer to the president, plus an undisclosed sum to have a snap shot taken with Bush. In the past the amount has been reported in a range of from $15,000 to as much as $50,000.

Ms. Baxley’s campaign offered free hotdogs to the public in the park, and she shared the stage with sailor Damien Moore and his new bride Mandy Moore. The couple chose the day to get married outside the courthouse, and said they supported the Democrat over the Republican in the Alabama governor’s race.

“We love Lucy,” Ms. Moore said.

Ms. Baxley described Bush’s visit as bad timing at the height of the campaign season and a rip off for taxpayers, since all the taxpayers pick up the tab every time the president flies Air Force One.

“This costs all the taxpayers all over the state,” Ms. Baxley said. “It’s an extravagant show, but a show that proves Riley is about big money. Government is supposed to be the servant of the people, not just for those who can afford it most.”

She urged the people in attendance to go out and work to recruit people to vote for her. If she is elected, she said, she will prove that “big dollars cannot buy the government.”

While Bush was dropping all kinds of interesting bombs that will never be reported in the local press or the mainstream media anywhere, Ms. Baxley’s event drew an interesting local celebrity supporter.

Former Libertarian and Birmingham City Councilman Jimmy Blake showed up in support of Baxley, and said he did so because Bush and Riley have allowed big corporations and insurance companies to take over the Republican Party and the government.

“I do not support this government (of Bush and Riley),” Blake said. “It’s the big corporate coalition.”

To prove it, he said, just look at what the Birmingham News supports. Former Gov. “Big Jim” Folsom called it the paper of the “Big Mules,” meaning the large corporations, and not much has changed in Birmingham since the 1950s in that respect. The paper endorsed Bush in 2000 and 2004, and endorsed Riley in 2002 and during the Republican Party primary this spring.

Baxley just laughed when a local reporter asked about the Riley campaign’s comment that her inclusion of a cardboard cutout of Bush was a joke.

“Of course it was a joke. But look, no one here wants to have their picture taken with Bush. No one is doing it,” she said, and walked off toward her next campaign stop.

The Associated Press is now leading their local reporting on the Baxley event by underestimating the size of the crowd, and by interviewing anti-Bush activists for not even bothering to protest Bush’s visit. Between 150 and 200 people gathered in Lynn Park for the event. The Montgomery Advertiser reporter, formerly with the Birmingham Post-Herald, thought it was more like 250.

Many Anti-Bush Activists Skip Protests During President’s Visit

Meanwhile Back At The Bush Ranch

Did anyone else see what the president said during his visit to Hoover about using wood chips to make biofuel? Switchgrass is one thing. Is there a secret plan by the paper companies, which own most of Alabama’s forests already, to plow down all the woods in America so Bush’s corporate friends can make piles of money on alternative fuels?

I asked Ms. Baxley about her stand on the environment since she was in the real estate business before going into public service in state government. We are planning a trip to the Gulf Coast Oct. 7-12 for the bird migration, to check up on the overdevelopment of Alabama’s coast and to do our own private hunt for the ivory-billed woodpecker recently heard in the Florida panhandle.

But Ms. Baxley’s response was vague and general, which may explain why none of the people from the Black Warrior Riverkeepers party Wednesday night were in attendance.

“We need to let the people of Alabama enjoy the coastal area,” Ms. Baxley said. “And we need to protect our environmental needs at the same time.”

Perhaps a more concerted effort to let the tens of thousands of people in Alabama who are concerned about the state’s environment know that she really cares might help her campaign in the final month.

For staters, what’s this plan to turn wood chips into biofuel?

(Note: Blake also had some interesting things to say about Riley’s grassroots campaign manager Bill Johnson, but we are saving that for a larger story in the works to come out before the November election).

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Lucy Baxley Campaigns Against Riley, Bush in Birmingham

September 28th, 2006
lucy80.jpg
Photo by Glynn Wilson
Lucy Baxley, the Alabama Democratic Party’s candidate for governor, campaigned against Gov. Bob Riley and visitng President George W. Bush today in Birmingham, and was joined on the stage by sailor Damien Moore and his new bride Mandy Moore, who said they supported the Democrat over the Republican in this year’s governor’s race.
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Baxley to Hold Free Rally While Bush Raises Money for Riley

September 25th, 2006

In response to George Bush’s $1000 a plate lunch for Bob Riley scheduled for Thursday, Sept. 28, the campaign of Lucy Baxley, the Democratic Party’s nominee for governor, will hold a free rally on the same day at Lynn Park in downtown Birmingham from 4 p.m. to 6 p.m.

For more info, call 334-244-218. To help notify people about this rally, contact Janis Martens, who will be coordinating a phone tree, at jmartens01@aol.com or (205) 492-1976.

Details Emerge for Bush’s Little Visit to Hoover

Bush to Stop in Hoover to Discuss Energy Policy?

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