Midday Scan: Tim Eyman's oil-fueled initiatives of the people
Despite oil-fueled donations to the contrary, Tim Eyman explains how his initiatives are really a service to the people of Washington state. Meanwhile, Snohomish parents raise a ruckus about testing and a Washington state teacher is a living example of Obama's legislative success.
KCTS-TV
Tim Eyman is a complex man, to say the least (to say more, he is utterly confusing). A man of the people, pushing initiatives funded by ... big oil. After two $100,000 donations from oil refiners were disclosed last night, Eyman himself revealed that he had another "Big Oil" $150,000 paycheck for putting Initiative 1185 on the ballot — which would extend the infamous 2/3 requirement to pass any and all tax increases in State legislature, reports Seattlepi.com columnist Joel Connelly. Of course, everything Eyman does is just and right and for the people, as he explains in his justification of the contributions:
“There is no limit on how much a person, company or association can contribute to an initiative campaign because the voters will have the final say.”
Occupy folks could learn a lesson or two from parents. In Snohomish County, in order to make a point about the cost and questioned effectiveness of state exams, many parents withdrew their children from taking the Measure of Student Progress test, according to Herald writer Alejandro Dominguez. This coup resulted in 550 students abstaining, and receiving zeroes, which will ultimately drag down the schools' test scores and could mean the schools will have to be put on a "track to improvement." Last year, only 12 students abstained.
"We are not against testing. We want student assessment, but we want smarter, more effective, and more cost-efficient testing," said We Support Schools Snohomish member Michelle Purcell in an interview with Dominguez. "We feel we have been heard."
President Obama's visits to Seattle always cause a somewhat embarrassing giggly ruckus, but it's heartening to see someone so dearly affected by legislation he helped pass. Namely, the controversial health care bill, which is the only reason that Inglemoor High School teacher Suzanne Black, who had the honor of introducing the President at the Paramount Theatre yesterday, is able to pay for chemotherapy and ward off cancer, according to Seattle Times reporter Lynda Mapes. In the midst of a political tug-a'-war, we forget the very real, and sometimes downright wonderful, effects legislation has.
"Black was 47 when she was diagnosed in March 2005 with stage IV ovarian cancer," Mapes writes. "Five years later, she received a four-sentence letter from her insurance company informing her she had exhausted three-quarters of her lifetime benefit limit ... but the legislation passed by Congress banned insurers from imposing such lifetime limits on coverage."
Sunday is Mother's Day, so show your appreciation for your mom. Seattle writer and New York Times columnist Tim Egan has a beautiful and heartbreaking story today about the last Mother's Day with his mother, who died of brain cancer. It's rare to have such a direct window into a writer's personal life, especially when it involves tragedy, so take a moment to soak it in and respect it, and be grateful for what you have.
Speaking of appreciating moms, and in case you have been taking refuge under a rock, this weekend is going to be beautiful. Like, over 70 degrees beautiful. So take your mom for a picnic, because, as Cliff Mass writes in his thorough explanation of the event, "Clearly, the mothers in the NW are particularly deserving this year.
Seattlepi.com, "More big oil bucks for Eyman: it's a gusher"
Herald, "Snohomish parents keep 550 students from test"
Seattle Times, "Teacher's 'freakishly fantastic' moment: introducing Obama"
New York Times, "The Last Mother's Day"
Cliff Mass Weather Blog, "Summer in May"
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Comments:
Posted Fri, May 11, 1:11 p.m. Inappropriate
Dear Big Oil Companies.
I am just a consumer. I buy your products. You buy legislation, PACs and donate to causes. You pass the cost of all this.
I am tired of paying for it. Please give me a discount on your products so I do not have to pay for your activities I do not approve of.
Dan Bentler
Posted Fri, May 11, 5:21 p.m. Inappropriate
Other political figures in Washington abstain from taking money from anyone at all. They will, as a rule, decline money from big oil or big software or even aerospace companies. I understand that labor unions are frustrated by the unwillingness of lobbyists and other public figures to accept their freely offered, no strings attached, money. So thank you, Zachariah, for pointing out this anomaly.
Posted Fri, May 11, 5:59 p.m. Inappropriate
This non-testing of students has been coming up for awhile here in Seattle. Good to see Snohomish(!) said no. This is a great and useful tactic as there are immediate outcomes to districts and states.
Seattle parents DID succeed in pushing back on an ill-formed new transportation plan that had zero parent input and almost slipped by parents.
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