This article I wrote appears on The Catholic Thing web site on December 12, 2012.
The Emerging Hispanic Catholic Vote – By George J. Marlin
Posted December 12, 2012 by streetcornerconservativeCategories: The Catholic Thing
LIPA: Symbol of government failure – By George J. Marlin
Posted December 8, 2012 by streetcornerconservativeCategories: Articles/Essays/Op-Ed
The following appears in the December 7-13, 2012 issue of the Long Island Business News:
In the aftermath of Hurricane Sandy, New Yorkers learned a lot about the nature of their fellow citizens and of their governments.
As for people, the crisis brought out the best in them. Tens of thousands of volunteers traveled to ravaged areas to help feed, clothe and comfort the victims of the storm. These unsung heroes were not looking for awards or overtime pay; they were simply living by the golden rule, “Love thy neighbor as thyself.”
As for federal and state government agencies, they, by and large, failed. Sometimes they appeared to get in the way of progress. The sign posted on a local Federal Emergency Management Agency office door the day after the Nov. 7 nor’easter, “Closed Due to Weather Conditions,” says it all.
The poster child of failed government for residents of Nassau and Suffolk counties, who spent days and weeks without electricity (my power was out for 14 days, two hours and 30 minutes) is the Long Island Power Authority, a New York state public benefit corporation.
LIPA was created by the state in 1986 so Gov. Mario Cuomo could pursue his ill-conceived plan to stop the LILCO-owned Shoreham nuclear plant from ever opening.
In 1998, Gov. George Pataki used LIPA – despite a campaign pledge to the contrary – to acquire LILCO with $7 billion of tax-exempt debt. Having served on the LIPA transition team in 1994-95, I know that LIPA was intended to be a holding company with 25 staffers to oversee the financing and National Grid’s operation of the electric system going forward.
Instead, under the ego-driven leadership of the former, longtime CEO, LIPA ballooned to over 100 staffers, ravenously consumed tens of millions of dollars on ad campaigns for a monopoly public-sector utility, morphed into activities inappropriate for a public utility and became another unresponsive level of government.
LIPA was in the past chastised by the state comptroller and elected officials of both parties for its misdeeds and skated close to the ethical edge. LIPA improperly authorized spending of public monies for polling regarding elected officials, awarded no-bid contracts worth tens of millions of dollars and was well-known for hiring the sons and daughters of the politically connected and members of the political class seeking high-paying employment. In short, LIPA became a refuge for hacks of both parties.
Most critically, LIPA’s performance in communicating with its customers and restoring service after Hurricane Irene last year was profoundly deficient. That’s not my opinion; that’s what Gov. Andrew Cuomo said at the time. Not surprisingly, LIPA’s customer satisfaction ratings are the lowest in the United States.
LIPA’s dismal response after Hurricane Sandy revealed that the agency learned nothing from last year’s disaster. In fact, LIPA failed to implement common sense recommendations intended to prevent blackouts, such as trimming tree limbs, replacing damaged electrical poles and updating ground workers technology equipment and customer communication systems.
LIPA’s fundamental problem has been the absence of competent leadership. And the state doesn’t need to spend money on investigative commissions and panels to confirm that.
The governor must first fill LIPA board spots he has left vacant for too long and replace holdovers with smart public-spirited members, not stone-deaf hacks. Then he must order the reorganized board to find a utilities expert to fill the CEO job, which has been vacant for over two years. This will mean offering a competitive salary. No well-paid potential CEO is going to leave a smooth-running power agency to take over the LIPA mess for $200,000 a year.
LIPA staff and overhead must be significantly shrunk. LIPA’s wasteful advertising campaigns must be halted and the “LIPA brand” must be phased out. LIPA’s expensive environmental “investments” should be pursued by the New York State Energy and Research Development Authority, a state agency with relevant experience.
The state created the LIPA monster and now it is time for Albany officials to focus on downsizing and reforming it. Long-suffering and overburdened customers deserve no less.
The Disappearing White Catholic Voter – By George J. Marlin
Posted November 28, 2012 by streetcornerconservativeCategories: The Catholic Thing
This article I wrote appears on The Catholic Thing web site on November 28, 2012.
The 2012 Catholic Vote – An Early Assessment – By George J. Marlin
Posted November 20, 2012 by streetcornerconservativeCategories: The Catholic Thing
This article I wrote appeared on The Catholic Thing web site on November19, 2012.
President Obama: Promise vs. Performance – By George J. Marlin
Posted October 20, 2012 by streetcornerconservativeCategories: Articles/Essays/Op-Ed
The following appears in the October 19-25, 2012 issue of the Long Island Business News:
Shortly after Barack Obama took office in 2009, he promised the American people his $860 million stimulus program would jumpstart the economy, be spent on shovel-ready infrastructure construction projects and bring down unemployment to 5.8 percent by the end of his first term. He also pledged to cut the budget deficit in half by 2012.
Well, here we are four years later, and we now know that Obama’s promises were hollow ones and his much touted 2010 “summer of recovery” never materialized. The stimulus failed to move the economy into top gear and failed to put millions of people back to work.
The president’s economic analysis, titled “Job Impact of the American Recovery and Reinvestment Plan,” which predicted the unemployment rate would peak at just under 8 percent in 2009, was wrong. The actual annual unemployment rate hit 9.3 percent in 2009, 9.6 percent in 2010 and 8.95 percent in 2011.
Explaining this phenomenon, the president, in a candid moment, admitted that the shovel-ready construction projects were never really shovel-ready.
The fact is, the bulk of the stimulus money was spent to pay back public employee unions for their 2008 support. Hundreds of billions of one-shot dollars were allotted to state governments to plug their operating deficits and to avoid bureaucrats’ layoffs. And when the stimulus money ran out in 2011, many governors had no alternative but to lay off workers to balance their budgets. New York had to eliminate a $10 billion deficit with major across-the-board cuts.
As for the federal government’s operating deficit, Obama has not only failed to cut it in half, he has permitted it to spin out of control. The national debt, which Obama said was “irresponsible” and “unpatriotic” when it hit $9 trillion in 2008, has grown to $16 trillion on his watch.
Obama supporters jumped for joy in early October when the unemployment rate, which was 8.1 percent in August, suddenly dropped to 7.8 percent in September. Their celebrations, however, may have been a little premature. That’s because the drop was primarily caused by more people giving up looking for work. Over 8 million unemployed who have thrown in the towel are not counted in the Labor Department’s unemployment figures.
Three years after the Great Recession officially ended, 12 million Americans are still looking for work. Five million have been out of work for six months, 3.5 million for over a year. If the number of underemployed (i.e. part-time workers) and those who have stopped looking are added in, the number jumps to 23 million, putting real unemployment at 15 percent.
While our nation’s population has grown by 31 million since 2000, fewer people are working because only 2 million of the 8 million jobs lost in the recession have been recovered. As a result, 15 percent of the population is below the poverty line, 48 million receive food stamps, 9 million are on disability, half of 2012’s college graduates are unable to find work and 60 percent of Americans believe the nation is on the wrong track.
The failed economic and fiscal policies of the president of hope have driven many people to give up hope.
Shortly after Obama signed into law his stimulus legislation in 2009, he said, “You know, a year from now, I think people are going to see that we’re starting to make some progress, but there’s still going to be some pain out there. If I don’t have this done in three years, then there’s going to be a one-term proposition.”
Since it hasn’t been “done” in four years, voters should take Obama at his word and deny him a new four-year lease on the White House.