Coyote Gulch

 



















































































Subscribe to "Coyote Gulch" in Radio UserLand.

Click to see the XML version of this web page.

e-mail John: Click here to send an email to the editor of this weblog.

 

 

  Thursday, June 29, 2006


Denver Election Commission reform

HeartBrokenTiger.com: "First, the good news. Councilwoman Johnson, Mayor Hickenlooper and Council Prez Rodriguez have put together a task force and series of public meetings to discuss reform of the Denver Election Commission.

"The second bit of good news is that City Auditor Dennis Gallagher is apparently talking to worker bees at the DEC and getting the real story about what's going on. Maybe he's talking to former bees like Bill Brennan who was officially canned last week. I don't know.

"The third goodnewsy thing is that I think I'm done with this story. Gallagher has taken the ball and is running with it, the Mayor and City Council are taking action and the papers are paying more attention than usual. All good."

"denver 2007"
9:49:40 PM     


Hamdan case

Wash Park Prophet: "The Hamdan case addressed the rights of people detained as enemy combatants at Guantanamo Bay when tried for crimes beyond merely being detained, a detention which was itself upheld. The U.S. Supreme Court ruled against many key parts of the Bush Adminisration's enemy combatant doctrine. The main ruling was 5-3 with Justice Roberts who ruled in favor of the government in the U.S. Court of Appeals before he was appointed, not participating. Justice Kennedy, part of the majority, concurred in only part of the primary opinion by Justice Stevens."

"2008 pres"
6:15:52 PM     


Oil and gas drilling
A picture named chiefmountain.jpg

New West: "A day after Sen. Conrad Burns made the first step in banning all new oil and gas leases on Montana's Rocky Mountain Front, Questar E&P, a natural gas company, decided to hand 1,691 acres of its leases in the Front's Blackleaf Canyon area over to Trout Unlimited. Trout Unlimited's Vice President for Conservation, Chris Wood, said TU had been in negotiations for some time on the Front leases, but the Burns language introduced yesterday in the Interior Appropriations Bill was a final piece of the puzzle...

"This deal is a first of its kind, Wood said, but hopefully not the last -- on the Front or West-wide...

"The Burns move is one of a few such surprises in the last two weeks on the issue of oil, gas and public lands. Last week, Republican congresswoman Heather Wilson (who is running for re-election) signed on with Democrat Tom Udall to support legislation to keep oil and gas development out of New Mexico's Valle Vidal. A few days earlier, Wyoming Republican Sen. Craig Thomas had a bombshell of his own, saying generally, national forests should be off limits to energy exploration."

"2008 pres"
6:01:45 PM     


DNC upsets New Hampshire

Union Leader: "Secretary of State William Gardner promised yesterday he will not allow the traditional key role of New Hampshire's first-in-the-nation Presidential primary to be diminished by a proposed Democratic National Committee rule change.

The DNC's Rules and Bylaws Committee voted 23-3 to push New Hampshire to third place in the 2008 Presidential nominating lineup. The vote recommended that the full DNC authorize an additional caucus between Iowa's leadoff caucus and the New Hampshire primary and an additional primary after New Hampshire's contest but before Feb. 5, 2008."

Thanks to the Daily Kos for the link.

"2008 pres"
6:30:34 AM     


Term limits for judges?

Term limits for judges will probably be on the fall ballot. Here's an article about the group working on the initiative from the Denver Post. They write, "Members of a campaign group, Limit the Judges, announced a petition drive Wednesday to get a measure on the November ballot setting term limits for Colorado Court of Appeals judges and state Supreme Court justices. Fewer than a dozen people rallied on the west steps of the state Capitol to announce plans to collect 100,000 signatures statewide...

"denver 2006"
6:18:42 AM     


Reinstate redistricting?

A couple of years ago the Republican controlled state legislature pushed through a midnight gerrymander that was eventually thrown out by the Supreme Court. A similar case from Texas was ruled constitutional yesterday by the U.S. Supremes. Will that bring back Colorado's re-districting? It depends on who you ask, according to the Denver Post.

From the article, "Colorado Republicans contend that a U.S. Supreme Court decision Wednesday upholding much of a highly criticized Texas redistricting map buoys their hopes of reinstating a similar redistricting effort in Colorado. But those who have contested the Colorado congressional redistricting plan, passed in the waning days of the 2003 state legislative session, say the legal issues in the cases differ significantly. David Fine, lawyer for the Colorado Democratic Party, said the Texas decision may not be helpful in predicting how the Colorado case will be resolved. That's because Colorado's Republican-led redrawing, which would have favored GOP candidates in five of Colorado's seven congressional districts, was ruled to be incompatible with Colorado's Constitution, which the court said allows redistricting only within a certain window after every new census. There was no such state constitutional issue in the Texas case."


6:14:55 AM     

Special session in store for Colorado

Governor Owens has called a special session on immigration as expected, according to the Rocky Mountain News. Coyote Gulch erred yesterday saying that the special session was to resurrect the Defend Colorado Now initiative that was recently thrown out by the courts. The special session is going to deal with some new topics and should result in a bill or two while putting the initiative on hold.

From the article, "Republican Gov. Bill Owens will convene a special session next week to consider a laundry list of illegal immigration proposals that has already served to irritate members of his own party. The legislative session begins July 6 and should last three to five days at costs of $15,000 a day. Among the issues: a package of measures modeled on Georgia immigration laws and another proposal similar to one tossed off the Colorado ballot by the state Supreme Court this month, denying illegal immigrants state services...

"The package of immigration measures embraced language backed by leaders of opposing groups Defend Colorado Now, which endorsed the ballot measure denying immigrants taxpayer-funded services, and Keep Colorado Safe, which takes the opposite stance. The two groups stunned state politicos with an announcement Tuesday that they had reached a truce. Their compromise included portions of Georgia's newly adopted immigration law, which discourages employers from hiring illegal immigrants and tightens eligibility checks for taxpayer-funded benefits. Owens, who said he has concerns with portions of the Georgia law, said if the legislature doesn't pass what he calls substantive legislation, it should send the issue back to voters in November. He wouldn't rule out a second special session if the Democrat-majority legislature fails to deliver...

"As expected, Owens expanded his special session agenda to include a number of Republican measures killed by the Democratic majority during the 2006 legislative session, including one that would require proof of citizenship to vote. But that didn't satisfy his fellow Republicans, who delivered a letter signed by 19 House members to Owens a few hours before a 2 p.m. news conference Wednesday. In it they urged him to stand his ground and insist the legislature put a measure on the ballot to deny state services to people here illegally...

"Former Gov. Dick Lamm, chair of Defend Colorado Now, said that if the legislature passed a bill modeled on Georgia's immigration law, a ballot initiative denying immigrants state services 'would be completely redundant.' Federico Peña, chairman of Keep Colorado Safe, said he welcomes the opportunity to present testimony to lawmakers on the "hidden pitfalls" of the proposal to deny services to illegal immigrants. Peña said the provisions of the new Georgia law are more practical and effective than the "shoddily crafted" initiative...

"Gov. Bill Owens' call for a special session gives legislators a chance to deal with recent controversial court decisions on immigration and common-law marriage. The governor's wish list includes: A ban on state services for illegal immigrants, except those mandated by federal law - emergency medical service, prenatal care and K-12 public education; Fines for employers hiring illegal workers; Tax disincentives for illegal workers. Employers could not use wages of illegal workers for tax deductions; A 6 percent state income tax would be imposed on illegal immigrants' wages; Proof of citizenship to vote; Strengthen the new human trafficking law; Restore to the November ballot a measure to deny some public services to illegal immigrants unless lawmakers pass 'substantive' illegal immigration crackdowns; A 30-day deadline for the state Supreme Court to rule on legal challenges to proposed citizen initiatives; Reconsider the state's common-law marriage practices to raise the minimum age for entering such a union, or do away with common-law marriages altogether."

Mike Littwin weighs in on the special session. He writes, "But Owens, remember, did the right thing by bucking his party on Ref C. And he had the chance, at minimum, to not do the wrong thing on this unnecessary, unwarranted, unspecial special session. It would have been his last important act as governor. But he passed on the chance and, instead, called a session that has nothing to do with policy or grand ideas. It's not even, really, about illegal immigration. It has turned, instead, into a weirdly bipartisan nod to the harsh reality of politics - and to nothing more. There's a legacy for you."

Here's the coverage from the Denver Post. They write, "The broad call disheartened some backers of Initiative 55, which would have limited state spending on nonemergency services to illegal immigrants. That proposal, while not addressing workforce issues, would have been locked into the state Constitution if approved by voters. State laws can be changed by the legislature."

The Denver Post caught up with Bob Beauprez and Bill Ritter to get their opinions on the special session. From the article, "Colorado's candidates for governor each found something to love in Gov. Bill Owens' call for a special legislative session on immigration reform. Republican U.S. Rep. Bob Beauprez and Democrat Bill Ritter agreed employers should be required to verify whether the workers they hire are legally in the United States.

"Ritter noted that business leaders are worried about the possibility of penalties for hiring an illegal immigrant. 'But at the same time, if there are verification tools out there that can be utilized, then we should require businesses to utilize them,' he said. The candidates continued to differ, however, on whether Initiative 55 - the citizen-sponsored ballot measure that would have restricted state spending on nonemergency services to illegal immigrants - was a good idea. Ritter said it was a 'symbolic' gesture that would have little impact. Ritter said he prefers passing state laws that would strengthen enforcement of laws that already prohibit spending on illegal immigrants."

"denver 2006"
5:52:37 AM     



Click here to visit the Radio UserLand website. © Copyright 2009 John Orr.
Last update: 3/14/09; 8:20:10 PM.

June 2006
Sun Mon Tue Wed Thu Fri Sat
        1 2 3
4 5 6 7 8 9 10
11 12 13 14 15 16 17
18 19 20 21 22 23 24
25 26 27 28 29 30  
May   Jul

Google


e-mail John: Click here to send an email to the editor of this weblog.