TheTimesTribune.com, Corbin, KY

Editorials

March 6, 2009

Promise breakers and Kool-Aid drinkers

Jim Waters

This week’s column makes history.

It celebrates two years – 104 consecutive weeks – of ensuring that the Constitution’s mandate that Congress makes no law “prohibiting the free exercise … of the press” wasn’t for naught.

Journalists who dig and ask tough questions of the powerful are an endangered species. So when they do their job the right way, it’s so exceptional, it becomes the news.

Rick Santelli of CNBC News serves as a great example. While reporting among traders on the floor of the Chicago Mercantile Exchange, Santelli described the federal government’s bailout plan as “promoting bad behavior.”

Stuffy anchors pooh-poohed him. But traders cheered when Santelli challenged the White House to “put up a Web site to have people vote on the Internet as a referendum to see if we really want to subsidize the losers’ mortgages, or would we like to at least buy cars and buy houses in foreclosure and give ‘em to people that might have a chance to actually prosper down the road, and reward people that could carry the water instead of drink the water.”

Perhaps Kool-Aid would have been a more appropriate term. No matter, Santelli isn’t drinking. For that, he and every other journalist in the nation, including those in Kentucky willing to ask the tough questions of congressmen in Washington, governors in Frankfort and mayors at city hall – are liberty lovers.

Liberty Lover: Kentucky Chief Justice John Minton Jr. ordered an independent audit of the commonwealth’s massive decade-long courthouse-construction program. He also wants the results of the audit “made public upon completion.”

This should prove interesting, especially with the increased scrutiny given to Garlan VanHook, former general manager of the facilities for the Administrative Office of the Courts. VanHook resigned Feb. 25.

Since 2000, 65 projects – a majority of the state’s $880 million in courthouse contracts overseen by VanHook – have gone to Codell Construction Co. Inc. in Winchester. The company hired VanHook’s brother in November. The firm also was bonded for only 5 percent of the value of its work on public projects, rather than the 100 percent required by law.

“Bonding” with the right people in Frankfort can do wonders for business.

While the state builds Taj Mahals in small Kentucky counties to administer “justice,” taxpayers struggle to pay their mortgages. Thanks to Minton, some justice may finally come to taxpayers.

Liberty Lover: Momentum is building to eliminate prevailing-wage requirements on school construction projects.

A news release from the Kentucky Opportunity Coalition reported research by the Department of Education’s Facilities Management Division showing that prevailing-wage requirements “unnecessarily inflated the cost of school construction by more than $480 million” between 1999 and 2004 – almost precisely the amount needed to repair crumbling school facilities.

Imagine what Kentucky schools could have done with that money. If prevailing-wage requirements had not been forced on school districts all these years, schools could have been repaired and Kentucky’s students could have received a better education.

Liberty Losers: While the economy is tanking, House Minority Floor Leader Jeff Hoover and Senate Majority Floor Leader Dan Kelly smiled and signaled “thumbs up” to raising taxes during the current legislative session.

Joining them were fellow Senate Republicans Charlie Borders, Carroll Gibson, Ernie Harris, Vernie McGaha and Robert Stivers. Senate Democrat Walter Blevins also broke his “No New Taxes” pledge.

House Republicans Bob DeWeese, Danny Ford, Lonnie Napier and Jim Stewart shamefully joined with Democrats Royce Adams, Robert Damron, Jim Gooch, Keith Hall and Melvin Henley to increase our tax burden.

These 17 could have held the line. They didn’t, and Kentuckians lost.

A big, putrid “thanks for nothing” to these promise-breakers.

Jim Waters is the director of policy and communications for the Bluegrass Institute, Kentucky’s free-market think tank. You can reach him at jwaters@freedomkentucky.com. You can read previously published columns at www.bipps.org.

Text Only
Promise breakers and Kool-Aid drinkers
by Anonymous , , Fri Mar 06, 2009, 08:53 AM EST
Editorials
  • Carl Keith Greene Perhaps peace is on the way

    “Brent Scowcroft this afternoon brought me the report that two Marines had been lost, so I felt we should convene the National Security Council to discuss the situation in Saigon. Who can bring us up-to-date?” Pres. Gerald R. Ford, April 28, 1975.

    September 2, 2010 1 Photo

  • Don McNay.jpg America’s Hangover From the Bailout Party

    In the decade before 2008, the financial world was like a presidential inauguration ball. On Inauguration Day, there is a ball where only the closest insiders and Washington power players get invited.

    August 31, 2010 1 Photo

  • Ronnie Ellis.jpg Williams-Farmer ticket could be announced soon

    Signs point to an announcement soon that David Williams and Richie Farmer will form a Republican ticket for governor and lieutenant governor. Williams badly wants to run and openly covets Farmer as his running mate.

    August 30, 2010 1 Photo

  • Better test scores ‘Easier’ done than said

    During the past week, Kentucky’s education report card took more hits.

    August 27, 2010

  • Carl Keith Greene Oh, how things have changed

    It was September. I was in fifth grade. It was the second year of Little League football in London.

    August 26, 2010 1 Photo

  • Don McNay.jpg Manifest Destiny and the Art of the Political Thriller

    One of my favorite writers is Fletcher Knebel. Knebel was a writer in the 1960s who mastered the art of political fiction.

    August 24, 2010 1 Photo

  • Ronnie Ellis.jpg Even the founding fathers had an agenda

    Perhaps the greatest collection of genius in one place at one time took place in Philadelphia in 1787 — the Constitutional Convention. We too often fail to appreciate how revolutionary, subversive and radical their ideas are.

    August 23, 2010 1 Photo

  • jim waters Superintendent ‘molds’ his legacy by ignoring a school’s success

    Madisonville’s Hanson Elementary School ranks as one of Kentucky’s top performers among all elementary, middle and high schools. It never fails to meet all “No Child Left Behind Act” targets. Never.

    August 20, 2010 1 Photo

  • Carl Keith Greene When women couldn’t vote, they could still be elected

    “No Person shall be a Representative who shall not have attained to the age of twenty-five Years, and been seven Years a Citizen of the United States, and who shall not, when elected, be an Inhabitant of that State in which he shall be chosen.” —The Constitution of the United States of America

    August 19, 2010 1 Photo

  • Don McNay.jpg Is Main Street Ready for the Second Wave of the Recession?

    I‘ve been driving through small towns in Kentucky and I keep seeing the same thing. Businesses that have suddenly closed or are holding “going out of business” sales.

    August 17, 2010 1 Photo

Front page
Featured Ads
AP Video
Hyperlocal Search
Premier Guide
Find a business

Walking Fingers
Maps, Menus, Store hours, Coupons, and more...
Premier Guide
Popular Searches
Powered by Local.com
Poll