SI
SI
discoversearch

We've detected that you're using an ad content blocking browser plug-in or feature. Ads provide a critical source of revenue to the continued operation of Silicon Investor.  We ask that you disable ad blocking while on Silicon Investor in the best interests of our community.  If you are not using an ad blocker but are still receiving this message, make sure your browser's tracking protection is set to the 'standard' level.
Politics : Politics for Pros- moderated -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: FaultLine who wrote (12355)10/15/2003 6:33:55 PM
From: LindyBill  Respond to of 793656
 
You know, thinking like that can get you so paranoid you cannot trust anyone.

No, just Liberal Academics. We have had some so called "studies" out of Academia lately about right wing things that were silly. So I automatically look for the hook.



To: FaultLine who wrote (12355)10/16/2003 12:56:42 AM
From: D. Long  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 793656
 
The Scientific Method depends on an Academy willing to test hypotheses. When the personal biases of the members of the Academy prevent the proper application of scientific skepticism, as so often happens in the humanities, then the process has broken down. Then you have a jobs program for PhDs who release tripe and declare it truth, as if handed down from the Wise Man of the Mountain. Certainly not healthy for society.

Derek



To: FaultLine who wrote (12355)10/19/2003 2:54:26 PM
From: LindyBill  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 793656
 
The "Progressives" in Sacramento are going to be screaming.
_______________________________________

Budget auditor may target social services
By Andy Furillo -- Bee Staff Writer - (Published October 19, 2003)
California's $38 billion in health and social service spending is about to come in for a very hard look from the budget expert Gov.-elect Arnold Schwarzenegger has borrowed from Florida.

Friends and foes of the new auditor, Donna Arduin, describe her as a tough, smart fiscal conservative, totally loyal to her boss and more than ready to recommend budget cuts that anti-tax activists will love and the poor people's lobby will hate.

Arduin flew into Sacramento last week to begin work as Schwarzenegger's unpaid budget auditor. She's on loan from Florida after helping Republican Gov. Jeb Bush find ways to cut state taxes by $8.1 billion over the past five years. In the process, however, Florida eliminated money for eyeglasses, hearing aids and dentures for poor seniors and forced 55,000 low-income children onto health insurance waiting lists.

"In any state budget in this nation, when you have to start making cuts -- when you have to make big cuts -- you have to look at the percentage of revenues that are allocated to social services," said Jon L. Shebel, president of Associated Industries of Florida, the state's leading pro-business lobbying group. "You're in a major crisis there in California. There's no way to not take money out of social services, and that's what Donna does."

Shebel said Arduin was "very good at minimizing the negative impact" of Florida's social service budget shaving.

Advocates for that state's poor disagree. This year, they have railed against $26 million in state Medicaid cuts that eliminated the hearing, dentures and vision programs for 235,000 people. They also have sharply criticized the 4.3 percent reduction in state money for poor children's health insurance that resulted in the waiting lists in Florida.

"Her philosophy -- and it's at the direction of whoever her boss is -- was pretty strict along the lines of cut and slash on budget programs, particularly in the human services area," said Karen Woodall, one of Florida's leading social service lobbyists. "There have been lots of serious cuts proposed across the board in a lot of those programs, and that's going back several years. It was always done in the name of efficiency and streamlining, and the rhetoric always followed that it was not going to hurt the delivery of services, which in fact never was true."

People who've worked with her -- on both sides of the aisle -- describe the 40-year-old Arduin as a selfless workaholic with a good heart who takes her boss's policy prescriptions and finds a way to make them work.

In California, poor people's advocates see social service spending as square in Schwarzenegger's cross hairs. Given Schwarzenegger's campaign promises to balance the budget while protecting education, scrapping the state's $4 billion vehicle license fee and refraining from raising taxes, the advocates view social services as the leading programs exposed to the budget ax.

The state faces a shortfall in the next year's budget of between $8 billion and $10 billion, which could jump to $20 billion if courts rule against borrowing planned for balancing this year's budget.

Assemblywoman Lois Wolk, D-Davis, who chairs the Committee on Human Services, thinks Schwarzenegger will find it difficult to reduce the state's $9.3 billion social services budget. During this year's budget battles, neither Republican nor Democratic legislators were willing to go after social services in any dramatic way, Wolk said.

"I believe if he goes after the least among us, he won't have support," Wolk said of Schwarzenegger.

The new governor, however, will have plenty of backing when it comes to slicing perceived bloat from California's social services and health spending. Jon Coupal, president of the Howard Jarvis Taxpayers Association, said an improved fraud prevention program could trim $2.5 billion off the top of Medi-Cal's $29 billion budget.

Other areas also are ripe for some rigorous review, Coupal said, citing recent news reports detailing $200 million in food stamp overpayments, $127 million in unemployment fraud and eye-popping state expenditures on individual items such as $3,000 wheelchairs.

"The other interesting thing is that since the election, I've gotten calls from public employees saying, 'You want to know where they can really cut some spending?' " Coupal said. "I think they are going to be some of the best resources for identifying waste, fraud and abuse."

Despite Schwarzenegger's campaign trail commitments, a spokesman for the governor-elect's transition team said it is far from certain that social service and health programs are in for inordinate cuts.

For one thing, more tax revenues are coming in than previously anticipated. More to the point, Arduin just began her auditing duties last week and nobody knows what she's going to find before she finishes her job and returns to Florida by the first of the year.

"It is extremely premature," transition team spokesman H.D. Palmer said.

Others say she can be judged by her track record in finding soft spots in state spending.

As Florida's budget director, Arduin has been one of Gov. Bush's top advisers since she joined him at the beginning of his administration in January 1999. Her biography says that her efforts helped Bush maintain $2.7 billion in state reserves while cutting taxes by $8.1 billion.

Arduin, who declined interview requests placed through the transition team, had previously served for four years as acting budget director and first deputy director under Republican New York Gov. George Pataki. With Arduin playing a leading role, New York cut taxes by $10 billion while turning a $5 billion budget deficit into a $1 billion surplus, according to her biography. Arduin also presided over the trimming of 21,000 employees from state payrolls.

Before her post in New York, Arduin worked for three years as chief deputy budget director in Michigan, where the state cut taxes by $1 billion, wiped out a $700 million deficit and cut the work force 5 percent, her biography said.

The 1985 Duke University graduate also did stints in the private sector, working for Credit Bank of Japan, Bankers Trust Co. of New York and Morgan Stanley. She also worked as an intern with the federal Office of Management and Budget during the Reagan administration.

In Florida, Bush calls Arduin "a great asset." Arduin and the governor "are strong advocates of limiting government to the people's ability to pay for it," Bush spokesman Jacob DiPietre said.

"The nation has experienced some difficult economic times lately, but Florida has bucked that trend in large part due to Gov. Bush's and Donna Arduin's leadership," DiPietre said.

Florida Rep. Ron Greenstein, as House Democratic leader in budget negotiations with Gov. Bush's administration, has seen Arduin work up close.

Greenstein predicted Arduin will try to eliminate any state job that hasn't been filled for 120 days, attack administrative overhead and recommend privatizing as many programs as she can, especially in social services. He said Arduin will recommend tax cuts for business and less workers' compensation for people hurt on the job.

Greenstein said she will put in "endless" hours during her stay in California and that she will never say or do anything to upstage or undermine Schwarzenegger.

Arduin, he said, "is a good person" with "a good heart."

When it comes to the budget, however, Greenstein said his Democratic counterparts in Sacramento will find she's no pushover.

"Donna's a tough cookie," Greenstein said. "People are going to have to get used to hearing the word 'No.'"

sacbee.com



To: FaultLine who wrote (12355)10/20/2003 3:43:32 AM
From: LindyBill  Respond to of 793656
 
Get ready to meet your new leaders, FL. Pretty Liberal crowd. The would have all fit in at Hickory Hill.
__________________________________________
California Insider
A Weblog by
Sacramento Bee Columnist Daniel Weintraub
October 19, 2003
How Arnold will decide
Gov.-elect Schwarzenegger is scheduled to return to the limelight this week with his first visit to the Capitol since the election, including a series of meetings with legislative leaders Wednesday and a sit-down with recalled Gov. Gray Davis on Thursday. Schwarzenegger has kept a fairly low profile since Oct. 7. After two press conferences in two days to bask in the victory and introduce his transition team, he jetted off to his Sun Valley, Idaho vacation home, where the ski slope named "Arnold's Run" suddenly has taken on a whole new meaning. There he relaxed for the weekend with his family, recharging his batteries after the draining, 62-day campaign while keeping in touch by phone with his transition staff back in California. Last week’s only public appearance was his meeting with President Bush in Riverside and the new governor’s introduction of the prez in San Bernardino, followed by a short solo press conference to talk up “mutual trust” and state/federal relations.

In private, meanwhile, Schwarzenegger has been meeting to shape his governing team with a close circle of advisers, the most important of whom are his wife, Maria, and longtime friends Paul Wachter and Bonnie Reiss. Wachter, who is Schwarzenegger’s personal financial adviser, has known him since 1981, when they met through Maria’s brother Bobby. Wachter began managing the actor’s financial portfolio in the mid-1990s and served as his spokesman on personal financial issues during the campaign. But his influence now extends beyond money. Reiss, a former entertainment industry lawyer and environmental activist, also came to Schwarzenegger more than 20 years ago through her friendship with Maria. She later emerged as the key person in the growth of Schwarzenegger’s favorite charity, the Inner-City Games, for which she has served as CEO and as a member of the board of directors.

Maria Shriver, Bonnie Reiss and Paul Wachter are Schwarzenegger’s anchors, the people who were with him before politics and will be with him after. When they speak, he knows they have his interests at heart. Outside that very close personal circle, the most influential adviser is surely Bob White, the longtime alter ego of former Gov. Pete Wilson and a political mentor to Schwarzenegger since the early 1990s. Rep. David Dreier, the head of the transition committee and a key campaign adviser, serves as something of a balance to White’s Wilsonian instincts, with Republican Senate leader Jim Brulte, a recent addition to the team, an increasingly important part of the mix. Campaign message men Mike Murphy and Don Sipple, neither of whom will enter the government, remain on good terms with Schwarzenegger and will keep him appraised of how he’s doing politically.

While the 65-member transition committee was thrown together hastily and had the unmistakable mark of the Wilson team that helped run the campaign, Schwarzenegger made at least one interesting mid-course adjustment, personally calling Fresno Mayor Alan Autry and asking him to “Join Arnold” after criticism that the list was heavy on Sacramento insiders and light on Central Valley representation. But the transition committee, as everyone knows, is mostly symbolic anyway, with its only real function being to funnel potential appointees the governor's way and, in this case, assess the condition of the various state agencies that the governor-elect will soon direct. Schwarzenegger's real focus the past 12 days has been on the first and perhaps most important decision he will make as governor: naming his chief of staff.

The position is crucial in any government, because the chief-of-staff sets the tone for everything that happens inside the administration. He or she generally serves as the gatekeeper, deciding who sees the governor and who does not. The chief also oversees hiring of the lesser positions on the governor’s personal staff and screens those whose selection requires the governor’s involvement. And this is the person who will help Schwarzenegger decide how much of his ambitious agenda he can tackle, and when.

The governor-elect will want someone who is loyal and long known to him, knows the Capitol and California politics, can manage a huge operation with good people skills and is not afraid to take chances and be bold in implementing Schwarzenegger’s vision. But there is probably no single person who meets all those needs. So he is going to have to choose between someone he knows and trusts implicitly and someone who knows their way around the Capitol but is not as personally familiar with Schwarzenegger's inner thinking.

Some around Schwarzenegger have thought that Reiss would make an inspired choice. Probably no one other than Maria knows Schwarzenegger's professional side as well as Reiss does. Like White did for Wilson, she probably knows Arnold well enough to guess, accurately, what he would do on countless decisions too small to bring to his attention. But her lack of government experience or a big-time management background would make her a risky choice. As would her recent appointment as a director of a major Las Vegas casino company -- a sore point with the Indian gaming tribes with which Schwarzenegger tangled during the campaign. And it's not even known if she would want the job.

An early candidate from outside the inner circle, recommended by White, was Russell Gould, a former finance director and health and welfare secretary for Wilson who since the mid-1990s has been a director with the Los Angeles-based investment firm MetWest, where he has been heavily involved in managing the assets of the Getty Trust. But Gould, friends say, is reluctant to leave his high-paying post and relatively sedate lifestyle for a return to the intense, 24-7 environment of Capitol politics.

Another top candidate, lately emerging as the favorite, is Patricia Clarey, a make-the-trains-run-on-time White deputy during the Wilson years who filled the same job on the Schwarzenegger campaign, which she joined after taking a leave of absence from her post as government relations VP at the health insurer HealthNet. Clarey would be a safe choice: smart, qualified, experienced, a known quantity. She worked for Reagan and the first Bush in Washington before moving west to join the Wilson team. Her selection would raise few eyebrows, other than for the Wilson connection, and perhaps her long ago role as a Chevron Corp. lobbyist. Which is probably just the way she’d like it. Clarey's relative anonymity is something that no doubt makes her an attractive candidate for the job.

But -- and this has to be the caveat in every Schwarzenegger item -- the world learned on Aug. 6 that Arnold loves head-fakes. So I wouldn’t be shocked if he switched gears at the last minute and went with some kind of eye-popping, out-of-the-box selection that caused everybody to stop and say “Wow!” He did name Willie Brown to his transition team, after all.
sacbee.com