Tag Archives: Utah

Utah’s $400 million surplus: Some Legislators want to reward the rich

Of course!  And wouldn’t ya know, it’s an election year next year – how conVENient!  Excerpts from the article,

Utah state government could have an extra $400 million next year, again fueling a tax-cut debate when lawmakers convene in mid-January.

“Tax cuts will absolutely be part of the debate” during budget-setting in the 2008 Legislature, which starts in three months, said House Majority Whip Gordon Snow, R-Roosevelt, following a meeting Tuesday afternoon of the Legislature’s Executive Appropriations Committee. The 2007 Legislature gave a $220 million tax cut.

According to the Legislature’s Fiscal Analyst Office, which projects state revenues in consultation with other state agencies, the state’s two main tax funds are running surpluses that could result in extra revenues of between $246 million and $406 million by the end of the current fiscal year — June 30, 2008.

Next year is an election year for Huntsman, all of the 75 House members and half of the 29-member Senate. Lawmakers and Huntsman have given hundreds of millions of dollars in tax cuts the past three years — including cutting the much-hated sales tax on unprepared food in half.

The state’s personal income tax has been reformed, lowering the new single tax rate to 5 percent from slightly less than 7 percent.

However, many Utahns are now complaining about their property taxes, which are going up across the state by an average 11.6 percent, the first double-digit increase since 1999.

The state does not levy a property tax. But through the Uniform School Fund, lawmakers require local school districts to levy a basic property tax to support public schools.

And a cut in their property taxes would certainly be welcomed among some taxpayers.

That may be so, but lowering property taxes hurts much needed services, like schools, roads, police and fire.  I wish people would take their heads out of the sand and look around them.  Everyone has their own needs.  But many Utahns have needs far greater than those of us who have roofs over our heads, money to buy food and utitilies and ways to get around – you know, basic services.

Surpluses should be used towards those needs not cutting taxes AGAIN which are used for services to address those needs.

Imagine Peacefest yesterday

I have been involved in planning this year’s Imagine Peacefest in Salt Lake City.  Here is the article that appeared in today’s Deseret News:

Panelists discuss forming U.S. Department of Peace

Published: Sept. 23, 2007 12:21 a.m. MDT

Community members gathered at the downtown Salt Lake City Library on Saturday to discuss the establishment of a U.S. Department of Peace.

In conjunction with the U.N.-sanctioned International Day of Peace and the city’s second annual “Imagine Peacefest,” three university professors, a Hindu priest and a Moab Realtor debated the validity and timing of the proposal, currently being considered by Congress. They loosely defined what they believe the department’s role should be in domestic and international spheres.

“There is a great need for creative nonviolence,” said Bonnie Tyler, a University of Utah professor and member of Mormons for Equality and Social Justice. “We can’t just pull the troops out (of Iraq) ? it has to go beyond that.”

Panel members agreed that in order to establish lasting worldwide peace, the process should begin with the most basic building block of society ? public education.

“We need to be a peaceable culture,” said Michael Minch, a professor of peace and conflict studies at Utah Valley State College. “The ways peace is waged can be taught. None of this is a mystery ? it can be done and it should be done.”

The panel discussed the need for the proposed department to remain autonomous and nonpartisan. The group also considered how to establish relationships between existing domestic peace programs, such as gang-prevention groups. And the panel weighed in on the abolishment of nuclear weapons and the potential department’s role in international affairs.

The panel discussion was only a portion of the day’s activities. A tree was decorated with ornaments, symbolizing peace, created by local schoolchildren. Live music, face painting, films and a children’s choir also were featured at the daylong festival.

Deanna Taylor, one of the founders and organizers of the event, was thrilled at the amount of community support it received. Despite its infancy, she said, the yearly festival has received much community support and planning for next year’s activities is already under way.

“We want it to be a fun, family-oriented, artful event that expresses their ideas of a more peaceful world,” Taylor said.

When asked how international peace can be achieved, Taylor said the answer is found on an individual level.

“It starts with yourself ? first of all, you have to feel deep down inside yourself that peace is possible,” Taylor said. “It branches out from there.”

For information on next year’s “Imagine Peacefest,” e-mail: info@blueskyinstitute.org. For additional information about the establishment of a U.S. Department of Peace, visit: www.thepeacealliance.org.


E-mail: nhale@desnews.com


The One Voice Children’s Choir sings Saturday at the Main Salt Lake City Library as part of the city’s “Imagine Peacefest.” (Jeffrey D. Allred, Deseret Morning News)

Utah’s new and “improved” bus routes and schedules

Yesterday was the first time I experienced the impact of Utah Transit Authority’s “new and improved” bus system, which took effect August 26th.

After walking around West Jordan to run errands (there is no bus route available to do this), I needed to take a bus to the TRAX station from my neighborhood in West Jordan so I could travel the 12 miles north to Salt Lake City.  What I discovered is that there is NO east west running bus in my area to take riders to the train.  The only bus I found was one that runs north south and into  Salt Lake City in a part that is far from my destination.

So I walked.  And walked.  And walked.

It took me one hour from where I was after doing errands to get to a train.  I love to walk, so it wasn’t too much of an imposition, however I was lucky that I was not on a strict time schedule.  What I discovered on my 5 mile walk was that as I meandered through affluent neighborhoods, near big box stores and golf courses, there were plenty of bus stops (for weekday travelers).   But what I then found as I wound myself through less affluent neighborhoods – trailer parks and small bungalows in more low income areas – was that bus stops had been completely eliminated (there were signs on former bus stop signs announcing the elimination of them).

Wow. 

It is even more apparent to me now who the UDOT bus system caters to.  And it ain’t the working folks who work trades or minimum wage jobs and it ain’t those among them who work to keep businesses open on the weekends.

There’s a LOT wrong with this picture.

I’m leaving now on this Sunday to walk to the TRAX station.  This time I have a shorter walk – only about 2 miles since I’m leaving directly from my home.  There is no bus available for me today.

Good thing it’s not raining.  And good thing my legs and feet still work.

Endings and Beginnings

Last weekend we helped my friend Raphael move everything out of her shop in Sugarhouse, Free Speech Zone, to her new location closer to uptown Salt Lake.  The new shop will not be open for a couple of months while we work to get the property into compliance with current commercial zoning laws.

It was sad to be taking down all the stuff from the walls and having to tell folks that stopped by about the closing.  The entire block is nearly all boarded up now in preparation for the building’s demolition and gentrification of the area.  All of the locally owned businesses were displaced due to this.

Nonetheless, FSZ is moving forward and will open when the building is approved for business.  The new address will be
411 South 800 East.



 

Experts now admit the potential devastating danger of Divine Strake

Thank goodness we got it stopped.  The people do have the power.  Sometimes Davey wins.

——————————
Friday, June 29, 2007
Experts: Divine Strake ‘Mushroom Cloud’ Could Have Sickened Many
By KEN RITTER
Associated Press Writer
June 28th, 2007

LAS VEGAS (AP) – A non-nuclear explosive test planned by the government could have spread  lethal radioactive particles across the Nevada desert and beyond had it not been  canceled, experts testified Wednesday.

“A new generation of ‘downwinders’ would have been created, with cancers and birth  defects,” said Robert Hager, a Reno lawyer who summoned witnesses to try to drive a stake  through any future plans for the “Divine Strake” test at the Nevada Test Site 85 miles  northwest of Las Vegas.

The explosion of a 700-ton fuel oil and fertilizer bomb was proposed to gather data about  penetrating underground bunkers that produce and store weapons of mass destruction. But  the prospect of a mushroom cloud in the desert prompted a lawsuit and intense opposition  in Utah and Nevada, where critics feared it would scatter decades-old radioactive  material from previous Cold War-era tests.

The Defense Threat Reduction Agency canceled the test in February.

Justice Department lawyers urged U.S. District Judge Lloyd George not to hold Wednesday’s  hearing, arguing the cancellation made the issue moot.

“DTRA has no plans to conduct either the Divine Strake experiment or any tests using  open-air explosive detonations at the (Nevada Test Site),” government lawyers Caroline  Blanco and Sara Culley declared in documents filed in the case.

“We think it should be completely over,” Blanco said Wednesday.

But Hager pleaded with the judge to order the government to provide notice and an  opportunity for public hearings if a similar test is resurrected.

Hager also sought the recovery from the government of $400,000 in attorney and legal fees  he claims were racked up forcing DTRA to pull the plug on the Divine Strake experiment.

He said the government first postponed the test and later canceled it only after his  clients, the Western Shoshone tribe members and others in Nevada and Utah, filed a  lawsuit and found fatal flaws in the environmental impact reports.

The judge, who has heard months of arguments since the blast was initially scheduled for  June 2006, did not make immediate rulings on those requests. He gave both sides several  weeks to file briefs before he decides.

But he agreed to hear the experts Hager brought to Las Vegas to testify that the  government failed to adequately study possible health effects of the blast.

Plutonium expert Michael Ketterer, a chemistry and biochemistry professor at Northern  Arizona University in Flagstaff, testified that government soil samples found “no doubt”  there was radioactive contamination at the blast site.

Diane Stearns, a Northern Arizona University biochemist and uranium expert, faulted a  December 2006 draft environmental report on the proposed blast for failing to answer what  she called the “obvious” question.

“The public wants to know: What are the health risks from the fallout?” she said on the  witness stand. “We know this radioactivity is carcinogenic. We know it can cause cancer.”

Government officials a year ago downplayed surface contamination, and then said they  didn’t expect the blast would disturb fallout left from the 100 aboveground and 828  underground nuclear weapons tests conducted at the test site from 1951 to 1992.

Thousands of people who lived near the test site – called downwinders – were exposed to  cancer-causing radiation from the weapons tests.

Ketterer said Wednesday that plastic shovel sampling for a December 2006 environmental  study was so “abbreviated and hasty” he could not tell how much plutonium there was on  the surface around the Divine Strake site.

“They didn’t test enough so that a report could be provided to represent the danger?” the  judge asked.

“Yes, your honor,” Ketterer replied.

“The report as far as you’re concerned was inadequate?”

“Yes.”

Over the image of a huge crater left from a July 1962 nuclear test dubbed “Sedan,”  Richard Miller, a researcher, author and former federal Occupational Safety and Health  Administration compliance agent, testified that for many years radioactive fallout from
Nevada traveled across the U.S.

Miller compared the 10,000-foot dust plume that officials said would have been generated  by the Divine Strake blast with a dust cloud kicked up by the 104-kiloton Sedan test,  which was detonated at a shallow 600 feet below ground.

Miller also offered charts showing widespread and random radioactivity deposits around  the nation after nuclear tests in the past, and called it impossible to predict where  microscopic particles cast so high in the atmosphere would settle.

“A debris cloud can be scavenged by a thunderstorm and 99 percent of the material can  come to Earth within an hour,” Miller said. But he said measurements also found  radioactive clouds wafted north to Canada, west to California or east as far as Maine.

Hager noted that the government had predicted dust churned up by the Divine Strake test  would settle within about 50 miles – or near the boundary of the Nevada Test Site.

The blast was to have been 280 times larger than the bomb that destroyed the Alfred P.  Murrah Federal Building in Oklahoma City in 1995.

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Poverty in Utah – It ain’t pretty and it ain’t improving

A report on poverty in Utah recently released publishes this information:

  • 14% of Utahns have no net worth
  • People are working more than one job and those jobs aren’t paying enough for families to make ends meet
  • Utah’s poverty rate has gone from 9.4% to 10.2% in the last five years
  • The uninsured rate among low-income Utah children grew by more than 90% in the last five years
  • Utah renters earn an average of less than $10 per hour while the average one-bedroom apartment requires a wage of nearly $11 per hour

The legislature recently announced a budget surplus.  While the governor and others would like to see that money go to teachers – and no doubt some of that money should – it is clear that there are other areas that are in dire need of attention.   Human services need top priority.

Are you living beyond your ecological footprint? If you live in Utah, you ARE

In today’s news:

Utahns are living beyond ecological means

The group Utah Vital Signs,  a project of the Utah Population and Environment Coalition,  has released the results of a study they conducted – “Utah Vital Signs 2007: The Ecological Footprint of Utah”.

The bottom line: 
            Utahns use 11 percent more than the state’s land can provided on a renewable basis.
“Utah is using more of nature’s resources than nature provides,” said
[Helen] Peters. “We are drawing down resources that future generations make take advantage of.”
      “The state has gone into ecological default,” said Sandra McIntyre, project director. “We are in an overshoot situation as of 2003.”
      Figures from 1990 show the state was living within its ecological means, the group said. But by 2003, the population of Utah grew from 1.7 million to 2.4 million. Members pointed to the 40-percent population increase as involved in the change of the state’s ecological footprint.

What could be the reason for this increase in UTAH?  Hmmmm…..
Part of the increase was because Utahns had the highest reproduction rate in the country, the group said.

How can this be addressed?  According to the group that conducted the study:
….it’s better to have denser housing, like a close-living community with common green grounds, than a subdivision with large lots.

PFS plant is dead – for now

I was glad to read that the U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals will not even entertain acknowledgment of the plan by Private Fuel Storage to build a high level nuclear waste plant in Utah

PFS has been trying for years to get the go ahead to build a nuclear waste site in Utah.  Each obstacle, like this one, makes it increasingly difficult for this to happen, much to the advantage of not only Utahns, but people across the country since waste would be transported from various sites.

An activist colleague of mine offers this information:
The tricky part here, that may not have been known Monday, is that there is a provision in the Defense Authorization Act to eliminate the requirement that the Air Force conduct a study to see how storing nuclear waste on the reservation could affect operations at the Utah Test and Training Range.  Sen Hansen had put this in in 1999, and it was cited in the BLM refusal to grant the right-of-way that the study was required and had not been completed.  If the requirement is removed, it removes an impediment to the right-of-way, and PFS’s plan.  No one seems to know who inserted this provision, and Hatch says they are working with the Senate Armed Forces Committee to “rectify the situation.”  I wouldn’t put it past Hatch to have inserted it himself.  Here’s a link to an article on this provision. http://www.sltrib.com/news/ci_6211056

Rocky III?

The Salt Lake Tribune has an article today about the possibility of Rocky Anderson seeking a third term as Salt Lake City Mayor.

Read the details:  Rocky could go for a third.  Rocky has some interesting reasons for thinking about running again.

There is also a poll you can take asking if you think Rocky should run again.

How Much Do Teachers Make?