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May 26, 2009

Weekend stories: lawsuit reforms, play grounds, local bills and Republicans

From this weekend's paper, in no particular order:

May 5, 2009

Lottery may be prohibited from selling at check cashing businesses

Back in March, I wrote about the lottery brokering a deal to sell lottery tickets at check cashing businesses.

After that story ran, Rep. Pricey Harrison filed H 1289: No Lottery at Check Cashing Sites.

It passed the J-I committee today with bipartisan support and no objection from the lottery.

According to a list of lottery retailers I laid my mitts on earlier this year, there are eight ticket sellers who have "check cashing" or some variant as part of their name.

An amendment to the bill was offered that would have prevented those who work for businesses that sell tickets from playing lottery games. It was withdrawn due to objections from the lottery.

"The amendment, I guarantee you, will severely impact our return to education," said Lottery Director Tom Shaheen. He called reports (here and here) about retailers playing the lottery in a fraudulent way over-blown.

September 5, 2008

Dole moving in on Easley's turf?

Every year when Hurricanes start rolling into the state, Gov. Mike Easley goes through a predictable series of steps. He gets his emergency response guys together and holds press conferences telling folks to stockpile water and food and generally stay safe. As the storm gets closer, he switches from business suits to what we scruffy media types call "disaster casual," kaki pants and opened collared shirts with logos. After the storm, he goes riding about in a helicopter to survey the damage, declares disasters, etc... You know, governor stuff.

So a couple of news releases from Sen. Dole's office had us confused. Here's the latest:

Friday, September 5, 2008 6:15 p.m. MEDIA AVAILABILITY

Dole will meet with the North Carolina State Emergency Response Team (SERT) to discuss preparations for Tropical Storm Hanna and Hurricane Ike. Yesterday, Dole spoke with North Carolina Governor Mike Easley, Department of Homeland Security Undersecretary for Federal Emergency Management R. David Paulison, who heads the Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA), and officials at the American Red Cross to help coordinate an effective response to the severe weather.

North Carolina Emergency Operations Center
Administration Building
116 West Jones Street
Raleigh, N.C.

It's not just that senators don't have a whole lot to do in disaster given that whole lack of executive authority thing. Honestly, I can't remember her ever doing this before for any previous hurricane.

You don't think this could have something to do with it being an election year, do you?

Update: I had ask Dole's office this afternoon if she had ever done anything like this. I got a response back saying that she had and listing all the times. The problem with the list is most (if not all) are touring damage after the fact, not getting ready for it. But by way of full disclosure, I'll post the list after the jump. My point remains that there's not much for a federal (or state-level) legislator to do in preparation for a hurricane.

Update 2:And by way of fuller disclosure, Dole spokesman Wes Climer takes issue with my characterization, saying that Senators have a role in marshaling the resources of the federal government and "encourage and advise" on the placement of public resources.

"Senators work with state officials and federal officials to ensure a smooth response," he said.

Even after hearing that, I'm still am a bit dubious. But here's the jump, and you can look through this list yourself and decide.

Continue reading "Dole moving in on Easley's turf?" »

June 11, 2008

Realtors rattle sabers

The North Carolina Association of Realtors sent out this press release today, which reads in part:

The North Carolina Association of Realtors®, with more than 43,000 members statewide, has made a $10 million commitment to continue its statewide efforts to protect private property rights and housing affordability.

The Association’s 160-member board of directors today approved a longterm plan to direct association dollars into a special advocacy fund designed to educate the public on key issues. An immediate infusion of $2 million will be made, and monies from future budgets also will be directed into the fund.

[snip]

The NC Association of Realtors® has been a leader in educating the public about state and local government efforts to impose a real estate transfer tax, also known as the home tax. Since November 2007, 19 counties have overwhelmingly voted against a tax on homeownership. In one county - Gates - voters have said no in two separate elections.

Translation: We're happy no local government has passed this thing but would much rather it not be an option and we're willing to spend a lot of money to make your constituents think you're a bad, bad, bad person if you don't vote to repeal.

Update: On a related note, our friends at the Associated Press just moved this little nugget:

RALEIGH, N.C. (AP) _ The Senate Finance Committee wants to repeal a local tax option that has been shot down by voters in every county where it was considered.

The committee recommended Wednesday to expunge a law approved last year that allows counties to triple land transfer taxes if approved by local voters.

Since last fall, 19 counties have asked voters to approve the tax hike. None was successful. Democratic Sen. David Hoyle of Gaston County told the committee that county commissioners shouldn't have the option to include the request on the ballot. He said voters have already shown they're not interested.

The bill now goes to the full Senate.

Democratic leaders in the House don't seem interested in repealing the law. They rejected efforts to discuss the issue during last week's state budget bill debate.

January 31, 2008

Miller files legal defense paperwork

From the good folks at CQ Politics:

Although Jan. 30 was the deadline for House lawmakers with legal expense funds to file quarterly reports with the Clerk of the House, disclosure reports for some of the active funds had not yet been made public as of Wednesday afternoon.

Among those beating the deadline was Democrat Brad Miller of North Carolina, who disclosed collecting $30,500 in legal expense fund donations during the last quarter of 2007 - roughly enough to cover $30,000 in legal bills that came due during the fall.

Miller established his fund in 2004 to help defray the costs of a defamation lawsuit brought against him by his 2002 election opponent, Carolyn Grant.

October 16, 2007

Wood back in the political game

An alert reader who wishes to remain nameless pointed me to this item:

Former Rep. Steve Wood, formerly of High Point, is running for the Tobaccoville village council. Yes, the Steve Wood who was close enough to the Speaker Black scandal to be called to testify but not so close as to face prosecution himself. From this story in the Winston-Salem Journal:

Wood, 59, a singer, songwriter, minister and actor, is a newcomer to Tobaccoville government, but served for 16 years as a member of the N.C. House of Representatives.

Wood said he is running for a council seat because he and his family have a history with the village.

"I played Little League and Pony League baseball here as a kid, and the heritage of this community, with its strong family ties, vigorous work ethic, and vibrant faith culture, is a tradition and small-town culture I want to help maintain," he said.

Wood said he plans to support keeping property taxes low, oppose changes to the village charter that would force annexation and work to maintain and establish good relationships with neighboring towns and communities.

This is not Steve Wood's first run for municipal office since serving in the state legislature. In 2005, he ran against High Point Mayor Becky Smothers. Smothers took 72 percent of the vote in that election.

Those in the Raleigh orbit will remember that Wood, a Republican, was one of two GOP legislators for whom former Democratic Speaker Jim Black gathered some campaign donations following the 2002 election. Wood never got those checks. The other legislator, Republican Mike Decker, did. But four years later, Decker said he ended up having an attack of guilt and helped prosecutors to bring down the former Speaker.

According to his testimony before the State Board of Elections in 2006, Wood said that he and Black discussed some sort of power-sharing arrangement following the 2002 election but it never came to fruition.

From a story I wrote during that hearing:

Wood, who served eight terms off and on from the mid-1980s until 2005, was called to testify.

"Were you aware that there was any fund-raising activity or efforts going on on your behalf by Speaker Black or any individuals associated with him in January 2003?" Leake asked.

"No sir, I did not," Wood said.

"Did you have any idea that same (fund-raising activity) had occurred prior to being contacted by our staff and myself in recent weeks," Leake asked.

"No sir, I did not," Wood said.

Wood said he had talked with Black after the November 2002 election in an effort to craft a cooperative agreement to run the closely divided House. He said those talks broke off when Decker made his switch. But Wood said Black never made an offer of a fund-raising support if he would switch parties.

After his testimony, Wood pointed out to a group of reporters that he voted against the power-sharing arrangement between Black and Morgan in 2003. Other than that, he only offered that he had come to answer the board's questions and had done so.

When pressed outside the hearing room as to why Black might have thought he was a potential ally, Wood repeated that he had answered the board's questions. He was then ushered into an elevator by someone who described himself as a "family friend" and advised Wood to say nothing more.

Wood and Black do have a history.

In 1999, Wood angered his fellow Republicans by backing Black for speaker. Black won the post, the first of a record-tying four-term run. That year, Wood was appointed to several powerful committees, including the House Rules Committee.

In 2000, Republicans recruited John Blust of Guilford County, then a former state senator, to run against Wood in the hotly contested primary.

Wood's campaign finance reports show he was an inconsistent fund-raiser, in some years gathering no money for his election bids.

But as the primary campaign heated up, Wood did receive several larger-than-typical donations, including $1,450 from chiropractors and their association's political action committee. Among those chiropractors who gave in 2001, was Willen, who testified Wednesday that he did not know Wood or even know if he lived in Wood's district.

Blust went on to win that election, but not before facing Wood a second time. The High Point legislator switched his party affiliation to the Reform Party and ran against Blust in the general election.

One would imagine there is much less potential for intrigue on the Tobaccoville Town Council.

January 4, 2007

How Taylor Hicks won a Congressional seat?

A year or two back, there was a big hubbub over how American Idol’s voting system couldn’t handle the call volume and some contestants got fewer votes than they may have expected.

While the singing contest seems to have for the most part gotten itself together, stories like this one don’t inspire confidence in how we choose our honorables:

A laboratory that has tested most of the nation’s electronic voting systems has been temporarily barred from approving new machines after federal officials found that it was not following its quality-control procedures and could not document that it was conducting all the required tests.

The company, Ciber Inc. of Greenwood Village, Colo., has also come under fire from analysts hired by New York State over its plans to test new voting machines for the state. New York could eventually spend $200 million to replace its aging lever devices.

(Snip)

“What’s scary is that we’ve been using systems in elections that Ciber had certified, and this calls into question those systems that they tested,” said Aviel D. Rubin, a computer science professor at Johns Hopkins.

Oh, and there was this report that made it into my e-mail box today:

A report prepared by civic watchdog groups VoteTrustUSA, VotersUnite.org, and Voter Action found the 2006 mid-term elections were marred by persistent and widespread voting machine malfunctions ... In all, 1022 accounts of machine related problems from more than 300 counties in 36 states were examined and categorized.

All of which should keep these folks in business for a while longer.

November 9, 2006

2008

Stop already. I’m still working off the caffeine buzz from Tuesday night and already people are talking 2008.

Oh, fine, if we must. Anyone want to talk about local lawyer Bob Crumley running for Attorney General? Or should we save that for another day?

Yes, Mr. Thigpen? You have something for us?

Mike Easley vs. Elizabeth Dole.

You heard it here first....

Sorry, Jeff, that one has been going around for a while. (I kid Jeff, I kid.)

Easley started the chattering class to chattering by coming out and playing nice with the state party this campaign season, something he’s been disinclined to do for much of his term in office. And columnist Scott Mooneyham writes:

Easley, though, has never served in a legislature. People who know him well question whether, given his independent, quirky personality, he'd really enjoy life in Washington as a U.S. senator.

Yeah, “quirky,” that’s a word for it.

And there was his December 2005 sit-down with reporters in which he said, essentially, he had no interest in serving in any legislature of any kind. Of course, the man could change his mind, but he sounded pretty darned emphatic last year.

So why the buzz?

Well, for one, Easley is going to need a new gig after the 2008 elections. He’s constitutionally prohibited from running for governor again until 2012.

And there’s the fact that the Democrats don’t seem to have anyone else handy for the job. In a way, it’s similar to the Republicans’ problem in the 2008 race for governor. (Yes, there are couple GOP candidates out there, just no one west of Carry or as far east as Fayetteville has heard of either of them.)

Easley is well known, has won even in years when Republican President Bush won the state handily, is a business-friendly moderate and has show the ability to raise truck loads of money when needed.

Of course, there’s nothing to stop him from going into private law and lobbying practice, cashing in his connections and making gobs of money like any other self-respecting former politician.

Speaking of gobs of money, Easley hasn’t been out raking in the dough for his campaign committee. His 3Q report for this year shows no donations. However, he has $666,151.26 in the bank still, more than enough to build on for some sort of run in 2008.

And if you want to really start a buzz, take a look at that campaign report and tell me what all those media buys are about.

October 25, 2006

Reading between the lines

The N.C. Coalition for Lobbying and Government Reform (they’ve changed their name, if not their web site) has a new mission: make the process of redrawing the state’s legislative boundaries a little more sane. These are the same group of folks (from the left and right) who pushed for and got some of the lobbying and ethics reforms during the last General Assembly session.

Legislative lines are redrawn every 10 years after the census is taken. The constitutional idea is that you redraw the lines so that everyone has roughly the same representation and no one district becomes way more populous than another.

The problem, of course, is that we leave the redrawing in the hands of the politicians who stand to gain or loose from the lines being redrawn. So the final product is wacky looking lines like the skinny N.C. 12th Congressional District that meanders from Charlotte to Greensboro or the equally weird (although not quite as obvious) 13th District which wanders from Raleigh to Greensboro and just happened to have been drawn by the guy who now occupies it.

Continue reading "Reading between the lines" »

September 21, 2006

Counting to 527

The North Carolina Association of Realtors have been actively involved in campaigns for years. Their PAC regularly spreads the love to candidates of both parties.

New this year, the realtors have launched a 527 group, called the N.C. Homeowners Alliance.

So far, the group has done mailings in two places:

In both district, they sent out an 8.5x11 flier lauding the candidate of their choice and urging voters to call and thank the candidate for their hard work. According to Tim Kent, executive vice president of the realtors, those are the only two races where the group will intervene this year. So no, you won’t be hearing from them in Greensboro…yet.

“We intend to be very active in the ’07-’08 election cycle,” Kent said.

Something to look forward to, I guess.

In the mean time, Kent said that this would be one of the most active years for direct giving by the realtors’ pac. By the time the final reports are filed, he said, the realtors will have give more than $500,000 to candidates during this campaign cycle.

September 20, 2006

Y’all vote

If y’all are planning on voting, you might want to check out Y'all Vote, a link-heavy website run by Charlotte lawyer and former reporter Jon Goldberg.

Continue reading "Y’all vote" »

More fundraising

I got word today that Sen. Kay Hagan is doing a fundraising event tonight featuring Sen. Pres. Pro Tempore Marc Basnight and Majority Leader Tony Rand.

All this to raise money for Hagan’s big race against ... absolutely no one. No Republican filed to run against her this year and there is no write-in effort that I know of.

Now, as of her July report, Hagan had nearly six figures in the ol’ campaign account. So why raise money?

"There’s a continuous need to raise money," Hagan told me when I asked that question today.

Sure. Maybe she's just getting a jump start on '08. Or she could be stockpiling campaign cash for, oh, some race for higher office that comes up in 2008? Hagan gets mentioned from time-to-time by folks in various circles as a potential candidate for statewide office like Lt. Governor or Congress.

So, I asked her if she might be building a campaign account for some other office in 2008?

"Right now, at this point in time, I am running for the North Carolina state Senate," Hagan said.

September 15, 2006

Bracing

This USA Today story that ran Thursday on voting machine glitches got my attention because we have some of the same gear here in North Carolina, and specifically Guilford County. (A similar story was in NPR’s rotation Thursday as well.)

From the USA Today story:

Eight weeks before elections that will decide control of Congress, a rush by state and local governments to prepare new voting machines and train poll workers is raising the possibility of trouble reminiscent of the 2000 presidential election standoff.


Problems range from delayed delivery of new equipment to an insufficient supply of trained technicians to fix anticipated problems, voting experts say.

North Carolina, as you might have noticed, just went through a big voting machine replacement binge in the past couple years.

So, with less than 60 days to go before Nov. 7, should we be worried?

There are some problems that were mentioned in the above stories that seem less likely to crop up here. Counties have their equipment now and ran it during the primary, so they’re not going to be waiting on machines to ship in right before an election. And we’ve already been through one primary on the new machines, so it might be safe to think that most poll workers will know there way about the new gear.

There was one issue that kept cropping up in those and other stories that got me curious though. In counties such as Guilford, where they use DRE machines (small computers with touch screens) the machines are required to produce a voter verifiable paper back up. The thing looks like a grocery store receipt.

In the stories mentioned above, problems with those paper records included printer jams and some ballots not recording. The stories seemed to chalk this up to a combination of poll worker error and the occasional bad machine.

In the aftermath of the May primary, we got reports from most quarters that voting machines had worked well. But I wanted to double check. When we examined paper records here, did we find any glitches?

“The experience that we had was much better than I expected,” said Guilford County Elections Director George Gilbert. He said that audit counts of two precincts went as they should have and there were few reports during the primaries of printers getting gummed up.

Gilbert, it should be noted, is no fan of the paper back up system. He says the electronic machines are reliable and that if there is to be a backup, it ought to be an automated one. There are (a lot of folks who disagree with that view.)

At any rate, Gilbert seemed to think the printers on Guilford County’s machines were working with a minimum of fuss, but added the following caveat:

“Ask me the same question after the November 2008 election, and we’ll see,” he said. “A presidential election is a whole different animal.”

Translation: a higher turnout election equals more work for the machines equals more chances for something to go wrong.

So, no, we didn't see problems locally in May. But because more folks will be showing up to vote in November, it might be reasonable to assume there is a somewhate elevated (if not necessarily huge) chance of something going haywire that we didn't see earlier this year.

As furniture executives used to tell me back in my business reporting days, I'd say we can be cautiously optimistic.

May 28, 2006

Yikes

Oh dear goodness, some folks have mistaken me for some sort of pundit.

Original post here.

December 11, 2005

Weekend update: Lottery and campaign finance edition

Good Sunday morning. Here are a few updates from the world of state government. First from me:

But wait there's more from our friends at the state's other newspapers:

  • Raleigh's N+O had this story about retired pols using their left over campaign accounts for, um, non-political expenses.(Registration required if you haven't already.) It leads with former Guilford County legislator Joanne Bowie who bought herself a new car and new computer with the proceeds. Find the actual campaign finance report by clicking here.(PDF) (She also paid some taxes and invested some in a retirement account.)
  • Okay, it's not from this weekend, but this Charlotte Observer story about a planned protest against Black in Ashville by former Democrats is interesting anyway.(Yeah, registration required there too.)

And finally, if you're a fan of our Inside Scoop column that runs in the newspaper, you'll want to know it's moving.

See you back here on Monday.

July 17, 2005

Weekend Update

If you remember from last week, the governor came out of his office for a bill signing ceremony and saw his shadow. According to local superstition up Cap City way, that means at least two more weeks of budget negotiations.

If you're burned out on prognostications from the oracles of Jones Street, here are some stories from this weekend:

  • Once the budget is done, the honorables can go ahead with fixing our somewhat out-of-whack voting systems.
  • I helped out my colleague Eric Collins with this story on whether the General Assembly should weigh in on the Quran in the courtroom debate. Most legislators say "no," including Speaker Jim Black, who barely stifled a laugh when I asked him about it. But there are some, including Greensboro Rep. Earl Jones, who thinks that the legislature could solve the problem. A special discussion forum on the broader topic can be found here: http://www.gotriad.com/go/quran
  • Update, from Monday:

  • And it seems effort to raise the state's minimum wage seems to have some life left in it, despite a defeat earlier this year.
  • Update: This next had been coming Monday, but apparently you get it Tuesday:

  • A story on a bill that would let used car dealers and banks charge big interest and fees (even higher than they can now) for used car loans (Not posted yet);

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