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Ghost of Walter Conkite makes an appearance on righty talk radio show

Monday, July 18th, 2011

EDITOR’S NOTE: When conservatives are cozying up to each other on talk radio, I find myself imagining what the radio interview might look like if a real journalist, or possibly a fact checker, magically appeared to liven things up. Here’s what such a person might add to a June 1st interview on Seng Center, hosted by Jimmy Sengenberger:

Sengenberger: How is life not in session?

The Ghost of Walter Cronkite: Yes, how is summer treating you two Representatives? Hello? Can you not hear me? Why are you ignoring me? Just to be safe, I’ll continue to ask my questions.

Conti: While I would say that we’re finally getting an opportunity to do the things that we did not have an opportunity to do before the last session. And that is do a lot of research, meet with proponents and opponents of bills that you are producing, get people on board and so forth and those are the kind of things that make you write more successful legislation that we had no opportunity to do prior to last session.

Sengenberger: Rep. Ramirez, what have you learned as a freshman member of the statehouse from that experience?

Ramirez: Coming into this we felt as though, alright we had a Republican majority in the House, the Democrats majority in the Senate and it was going to be just this battle of not getting anything done this whole session. What I did realize is that if you’re willing to do the work and you are willing to work with people you can come up with some very good legislation and get something done and the realization is that not everyone is willing to do that.

Sengenberger: What did you learn Rep. Conti?

Conti: The highs are great and the lows stink but you can find a lot of joy in the journey and it is fun to work with your other colleagues and collaborate and a great spirit and there were some genuine times of bipartisan spirit.

Sengenberger: Before we jumped into some of the more particular issues like redistricting and other measures that I want to talk about, I want to give both of you a chance to share with us the bills or couple of the bills that you submitted and pushed forth in the House and how they did up faring through the Legislature.

Conti: One of the bills that I was most excited about was a charter school bill. House Bill 1089 I believe it was. It allowed our charter schools to compete, to step into the arena and compete in the competitive grants at the federal level and competitive grants of the state level categories. Prior to that they had been excluded from those opportunities to step in and compete like about nine other states surrounding Colorado. So this finally allowed our charter schools to do that and that was pretty exciting.

Sengenberger: And that went through the Senate as well?

Conti: Yes, signed into law by the Governor.

Ramirez: That was a really good bill.

Conti: And I also had a bill…the other two were basically unintended consequences that we were fixing. One of the things that a lot of people don’t know is that in order to fix a bill or kill previous legislation you have to write more legislation to do it. And that’s what we were doing with the window tinting law. We had police officers out there who were having their undercover surveillance equipment, if there were in detective operations and that kind of thing, that undercover surveillance equipment was being discovered because of the limited window tint that they were legally allowed to put on their windows. So they asked for an exemption for those vehicles only that are in those detective operations so they could tint their windows darker and conceal some of that equipment that they might need to have in their cars. And so that also did pass through the House and Senate and the signed into law, as well as a disabled veterans bill. In our privacy requirements, one of the things that they have to do as soon as they verify the Social Security number when people are asking for property tax exemption, which our 100 percent disabled veterans are eligible for, that they have to strike all but the last four digits. The problem is the first people that were verifying that number were the veterans and then the county also needed to verify that. So the county was having to verify based on the last four digits and match the last name and go on a hunt and peck. When the economy was good they probably only had about 50 of those requests a year. But when the economy turned south, all of the sudden 50 turned into 3, 4, 500 of those requests per year and it was just bogging down their office and bogging those claims being processed. So we were able to go in and get that changed so they didn’t have to strike it until after the county had an opportunity to do their verifications.

The Ghost of Walter Cronkite: Rep. Conti, I believe you numbers might be a little off. According to the State Division of Property Taxation, 3,012 veterans took the exemption.

Sengenberger: Essentially boosting efficiency for them.

Conti: Exactly.

The Ghost of Walter Cronkite: Rep. Conti, one of your main talking points during the campaign was your desire to repeal the FASTER legislation. Early in the year you introduced SB11-095, which would have fulfilled that campaign promise. Was there a reason you chose not to include that bill in your summary just now? Is that because you are still upset with Speaker McNulty because he encouraged you and the other freshman to run on that issue and then he reneged on his support of the bill when he took power?

Sengenberger: Rep. Ramirez what were some of the things that you advocated?

Ramirez: I had six bills this year. The first one met an untimely death. It was to allow RTD to use more private entities in order to perform the services they want to perform; everything from drivers to mechanics and everything else. And it turned into a union bill and was really kind of a vicious battle and it in no way was intended to be against the unions. It was just trying to say, ok RTD, you have a certain amount of money. In order to continue the same rate of service, you’re going to have to use more private contracts or else you are going to have to cut some services. And what is going to end up happening is they are going to have to cut some services. So that one died. It was actually a jobs bill.

The Ghost of Walter Cronkite: Rep. Ramirez, if I can just ask for a clarification. You say your RTD bill a jobs bill? It’s my understanding that the bill replaced a 58% ceiling with a 50% floor of contract work. Interestingly, RTD was currently using 57% outside firms. It seems to me that RTD was already doing a pretty good job handling this issue by themselves. However, you did oppose an amendment that required the private companies doing contract work with RTD be domestic or have principal places of business in the U.S. Was your goal in passing this legislation to protect big international companies or American jobs? [HB11-1054, Second Reading Vote, 2/08/2011]

Ramirez: Another one that went away was a bill to make a two-thirds majority vote for any debt accumulation by the state. Sounds like a great idea but when you get the bills drafted, you pull them and look at them and what I realized is that it was going to end up costing the state anywhere $800 million to $2 billion a year in lost revenues because the buildings they could have purchased on a lease purchase, money they could have saved on rent, money that could have been made by renting out parts of the buildings they were purchasing. So I killed that bill…

The Ghost of Walter Cronkite: Wow, your legislation almost cost the state $2 billion? What type of research did you do before the bill was introduced?

Ramirez: And then last Friday, what I consider one of my larger accomplishments, were two bills that require schools not to hire people with very specific violent felonies. That is anything from murder, rape, felony domestic violence, most of your felony sexual type crimes. And it passed. Also felony drug abuse. Both of those passed. One of them was 54 to 9 out of the House and unanimous out of the Senate. And the other two were unanimous. And the reason why they went through, because two years in a row this bill has been killed, but it went through this time. Not because we had a majority in the House because if that were the case it wouldn’t have gone through the Senate. It was because we sat down with all the entities involved. All the school groups, everybody, and said look, this is what we have to do. With everything going on in the news, teachers having relationships with students they shouldn’t be having. Some of them we would have not even higher had this law been in place. We need to work on this and need to protect not just the kids under our care but the employees within our schools. So they are very good bills.

The Ghost of Walter Cronkite: Sorry, I believe SB11-266 passed the House 62-2 on 5/11/2011. You don’t want Becker and Sonnenberg getting mad for distorting their voting record.

Sengenberger: Very well. It seems like the two of you have really been moving and shaking already off in the beginning. And that is a good thing to have all these Republican successful bills looking at it from a political standpoint. Especially when they are good legislation. It seems like both of you Reps. Conti and Ramirez have been successful in pushing forth some good bills. One of the issues I was talking about earlier on the program with Republican National Committeemen Mark Hillman was the redistricting topic. Which in the requirements in the Colorado State Constitution that the State Legislature pass the redistricting bill. The House of Representatives passed a redistricting bill that was fairly similar to what we’ve got now is my understanding in terms of how you break up the lines. Because this follows after the Census you are supposed to rearrange congressional districts. Yet something different happened in the Senate. Want to talk a little about that?

Ramirez: In the House, our map, since 10 years ago it went to the courts, we decided we want to do like we are supposed to according to the statute in the Legislature. And the bill went round and around and around until it finally came to us in the House. It looked very similar to what the courts designed before. We went by the rules and statute set up for the judiciary so that it would be fair and balanced. Not competitive but fair. And the districts that needed to lose people because they had grown immensely like down in the Douglas County area, the area has grown immensely. Those could be scaled back. In the districts that needed to grow could be expanded because they have lost people. So we worked very hard to make sure that was the kind of map that we did. It was fair. It was actually more fair to the Democrats then the current map is and less fair to the Republicans.

The Ghost of Walter Cronkite: Rep. Ramirez, you probably saw the story about Sen. Greg Brophy admitting that the Republicans on the redistricting panel were skewing the maps to give the GOP an advantage. Any comments?

Ramirez: So we went at it as an absolute. This is a great way to work together, come up with a map that we can pass. And you would not believe some of the things that were presented. Some of them presented Grand Junction and Boulder in the same district. Some had a big “C” like they had a big Colorado flag and laid it down on the map and drew a “C” from all the way up in Boulder all the way through Summit, Gilpin and all those and down to Park and around El Paso and Douglas County all the way around Denver. And I said this is the most ridiculous thing I have ever seen. And then the Senate maps, both Republican and Democrat maps, they were just all over the place.

Sengenberger: And was it Rolley Heath who put forth the final bill in the Senate that ended up being filibustered by the Democrats and then they filibustered their own bill.

Ramirez: They killed our bill and filibustered their own bill. It was absolutely absurd. We did what we were supposed to do by statute and they just fell short is the best way to put it. Not fell short, they intentionally killed it. They wanted it to go to the courts and that’s what they got. And hopefully the courts are smart enough to figure that out.

Sengenberger: Rep. Conti, what do you think might be the implications? Well, first off, what is your take on this and what do you think will be the implications of it now going to court. And I know the lawsuit date is set for October 17th that week. What do you think?

Conti: Frankly I am optimistic. The courts obviously were the ones who drew the maps 10 years ago and we have tried to be respectors of the lines that they drew and keeping it as close to what they drew is possible.

The Ghost of Walter Cronkite: Rep. Conti, did you just say respectors? Oh, you did. Well, if Sara Palin can make up words, so can all of us I guess. Treeambulist! That was fun.

Conti: And so frankly I am optimistic that they will see that. And if they liked the work they did 10 years ago, well, this is pretty darn close to it. I am hopeful that it will get settled as soon as possible because obviously there’s a lot of work that needs to be done after that. This is what begins the process where reapportionment with the State House and Senate races, those districts need to be set. And once those are set and of course there’s a very likely court battle over those and after that we have to turn it over to the counties so they can redraw precinct lines and get those out. And of course we have had a primary date that has been moved up. We are no longer in August, now we are in the last week of June. And so all of this has to happen in less time then what they have had in previous years and so it is going to be very…. caucus meetings instead of happening in March now are happening in February. So there is less time then ever to get it all together so I am just hopeful that they will move very quickly.

Sengenberger: Regards to redistricting in particular, I think they are in the Republicans favor is you have a stronger legal case to make for say keeping communities of interest together and so forth and the Democrats have saying some abstract competitiveness component which is what they have been saying they want to make these districts more competitive, whatever that means, yet there’s nothing in statute that says they have to be competitive.

Conti: Exactly. And repeatedly in the hearings the statute was read and the qualifications respecting county lines, respecting city lines, respecting community of interest and so forth. And we’ve really tried to do that. Take into account were people shop, what teams does that school play. For an example, my school and the schools in our area don’t really go into Denver to play the sports teams there. They largely play in Douglas County and around at Arapahoe County and so forth. And I commented in my testimony really nothing in my county in the city of Littleton, we really very seldom go beyond Bellevue. Everything that we need: we shop, we eat, our recreation, and everything that we do is pretty much is that South part of town. I really feel we did a very good job in respecting those communities of interest, county lines, city lines, and exactly what the statue asks us to respect.

Sengenberger: Which of course the Democrats don’t do. Shifting gears, with their proposal that’s what they didn’t do in this particular case. And I do want to say that gerrymandering or manipulating districts isn’t something that just a Democrats thing and Republicans have done the same thing. It is a party thing.

Ramirez: That is true. And we went at this time not to be a party thing. Most of us are sick and tired of party, party, party. We love our party but it is time that we start looking at what is important and that is getting Colorado back on track. And in order to do that we did things as fair and openly and balanced as we could to keep everyone working together. This map was a joke that Rep. Pabon proposed as an alternative map to the House map. They were talking about things like his communities of interests. He was so mad because the Republican map had four counties that had pieces of them cut up. Little sections of them had to be taken out to account for numbers. But yet when he showed his map there were nine counties that had been split up in different ways and cities that had been cut in half. You know they can have an argument but if you are going to argue something, stick to what you just argued about. If you are going to say that this map is black and this map is green, then don’t turn it around and say it’s pink and purple because it doesn’t work.

The Ghost of Walter Cronkite: Well put Yogi Berra.

Sengenberger: Well put. Before we have to take a quick break with our guests Reps. Robert Ramirez and Kathleen Conti, I want to ask you and I’ll start with Rep. Conti, about this lawsuit that was just filed last week dealing with TABOR saying this violates the Federal Constitution’s Guarantee Clause we talked about earlier Mark Hillman. What is your take on this lawsuit?

Conti: I can certainly understand how they say that it limits the legislature. Although in the past five or six years we haven’t even come close to TABOR limits. So it really has not been too much of an issue in the legislature at all.

The Ghost of Walter Cronkite: That’s correct Representative. But the reason we are not getting close to TABOR limits is because we are in a recession. The Center on Budget and Policy Priorities notes that in a recession, “revenues often stagnate or decline and thus fall short of the TABOR limit for that year. Under the TABOR formula, that lower revenue level becomes the base for calculating allowable revenue growth in all subsequent years. As a result, it could take a state several years just to return to the level of allowable revenue that existed in the year before the recession.” Do you think once our economy starts moving again that TABOR will hinder our recovery?

Conti: The fact of the matter is, if you want to talk about things that tie the hands of legislatures, we would also have to take a serious look at Amendments 23 and the Gallagher Amendments as well, because what that does, it is a long and drawn out thing, what that does is artificially hold individual property taxes low while business property taxes high. And what that does is limits the counties income. And so the more the counties income is limited, the more than that they have the inability to fund their own schools, which shifts that weight onto the state. It used to be that literally the counties were coming in and they would pay for two-thirds of the school budgets and the state had to backfill one-third. Today that has absolutely flipped. Now the counties are only paying for one-third of the school tab and they’re asking the state to backfill two-thirds.

Sengenberger: Rep. Ramirez?

Ramirez: She is absolutely right. Which is one of problems with our budget. 46 percent of our budget goes to schools. 46 percent. You got a state like Wyoming where it is like 3 percent and that is just discretionary because their schools and colleges for the citizens of Wyoming is almost completely fully paid for through the oil and gas industry. Ray Scott had a bill, 1223, which was probably the one bill that could have created massive job increases, huge revenues to the state and put our state back in order, which would reconstitute the Colorado Oil and Gas Conservation Commission. Had he done that, we could’ve started drilling for oil and gas on school trust lands. They would receive the severance taxes, the royalties, more money directly to the schools where they are not having to go to the legislature for it. It’s their money. And the legislature is not having to say what are we going to cut because we don’t have any money. And when you look at an $800 million increase in Medicaid in one year, what do you expect people to cut?

The Ghost of Walter Cronkite: To clarify for our listeners, the $800 million increase in Medicaid that the Representative is referring to was due to the passage of the hospital provider fee bill (HB09-1293). To clarify a point, no general fund money (besides a $2 million start up cost) was used to fund the Medicaid expansion that the Representative is referring to. Rep. Ramirez, does this mean you supported the repeal of the hospital provider fee (HB11-1025)?

Ramirez: Where do you expect it to happen? So that bill would’ve created between 50,000-100,000 jobs immediately.

The Ghost of Walter Cronkite: Wow! Colorado’s oil and gas industry currently employs 50,000 people. By signing the bill, you are claiming that we would have increased the oil and gas industry by 150%? The current number of unemployed people in Colorado is 233,157. So by putting two more industry people on the board, we would have cut unemployment by 43%? That could mean a new job for every working-age person in your city of Westminster (70,893). This seems hard to believe. What am I missing Representative?

Ramirez: It would’ve created between $800 million and $1.2 billion in taxes to the state, not including income taxes, the money that people were spending in the community, the increase in other companies that would come here again and hiring more people. So that is a very conservative estimate.

The Ghost of Walter Cronkite: Rep. Ramirez, where did you get the $1.2 billion figure? I am assuming not the Colorado Legislative Council, which is tasked to analyze how much revenue will be affected by bills, which puts this bill at a $0 increase.

Ramirez: That bill alone would’ve turned Colorado around.

The Ghost of Walter Cronkite: Not to play devils advocate, but I read that the COGCC approved 5,996 drilling permits last year, the most since the recession began and the third highest in the commission’s history. It seems to me that the change in the COGCC membership, as well as recent oil and gas rules signed into law under Gov. Ritter, didn’t actually have a negative effect on the industry. Any thoughts Representatives? [Durango Herald, 4/05/2011]

Sengenberger: It’s really striking that you have such proposals. I’m not surprised that was unsuccessful. There is this idea out there that we need to be looking in a totally fundamentally different direction when it comes to energy and how we extract that.

Ramirez: I agree with that. I agree that we need to look at green energy. I agree we have to look at that. Wind, oh what a wonderful thing. But it takes one kilowatt of gas energy per hour for every kilowatt-hour of wind production. Because wind is not dependable. Second of all, there’s no way to store the energy to use it when you don’t need it. It’s just ridiculous. So until we come up with the storage plan for wind and the way to make solar energy cost effective, we can just destroy our economy and our livelihood based on just pie-in-the-sky.

The Ghost of Walter Cronkite: According to the International Energy Agency, wind is competitive in cases where local conditions are favorable. Studies also show that we do not need storage plans for energy for wind to be economically viable.

Sengenberger: I absolutely agree…I want to shift gears with you both to a few different topics that went on in this legislative session. The first one, this was music that came up out just this past Tuesday when Gov. Hickenlooper vetoed, his very first veto as governor, a bipartisan bill dealing with health-care premiums for people who are making below 250 percent of the poverty line, dealing with the Child Health Plan Plus Program. Rep. Ramirez, you want to talk a little bit about this?

Ramirez: Well first off, it is below 250 percent. Now 250 percent of poverty level is about $60,000 a year, $58,000. 205 percent is the bottom. So if you’re between 205 and 250 percent of the poverty level, which means if you are between about $47,000 and $58,000, then you are going to be required to make a small monthly payment for your insurance. Now my insurance, for me alone, is $120 a month. If we are taking about poverty levels in the state legislatures, let me tell you something, $30,000 a year, you take $115 -$120 a month, that adds up quickly.

The Ghost of Walter Cronkite: Sorry to interrupt. I agree that $30,000 is a lousy salary for legislators. Are you advocating for higher salaries?

Ramirez: Now what we were asking is to pay $20 for their first child, up to $10 per child until you hit the $50 maximum if you are within that. So if you’re making between $47,000 and $58,000 a year, almost $60,000, you have to pay $50 a month if you have four kids.

Sengenberger: Not a big deal.

Ramirez: For full coverage insurance. Better than anything you or I have. It was bipartisan. I didn’t think it was unreasonable. It was really a low cost. And if you’re below that $47,000 level, you don’t have to pay anything at all. You just have to pay the $25 or $50 annual fee. But I will let Kathleen talk.

The Ghost of Walter Cronkite (Channeled By Jason Salzman): What if families are required to pay more for their children’s health insurance, and they don’t pay? And what if, as a result of not ponying up, they don’t take their kids to the doctor for checkups and something goes wrong? And their kids, not their parents, ultimately pay the price? (Rep. Ramirez did answer these questions when I interviewed him, basically stating that if parents cannot afford health insurance for their children they should be turned over to social services)

Sengenberger: Rep. Conti, it seems to me that this bill, had it become law, would simply have had these people get some skin in the game so that they would just not be taking advantage of state run entitlement.

Conti: Absolutely. It’s my experience, especially as a parent, that if people don’t have any investment, they don’t appreciate what they have. Bottom line, I can point to numerous examples of that and I think we have all seen that. When someone is simply handed something and they have to pay nothing into it, they will have a tendency not to treat with respect that its do.

The Ghost of Walter Cronkite: OK, I will admit that some adults need a lesson in personal responsibility. But this bill specifically punished sick Colorado children for their parents’ mistakes. Is that the type of government we want in Colorado?

Sengenberger: Now Gov. Hickenlooper said in his veto statement that the focus of his administration in evaluating premiums and making changes will be to implement a change that is minimally disruptive, administratively efficient, effective and elegant, and supports the goal of insuring that kids have access to coverage. What you make a Gov. Hickenlooper statement and do you think that or why do you think that he vetoed a bipartisan bill like this?

Conti: I would also encourage him to look at the disruption that it’s going to be if this has an effect on maintaining a balanced budget. The budget was in a balanced status and I believe that is taking that bill into effect. If he is going to veto that, is it going to have a budget impact and what disruption is that going to have? So I would encourage him to really factor that in as well.

The Ghost of Walter Cronkite: Let me read something from Gov. Hickenlooper’s veto message: “Because the expected timeline of SB11-213 would have been sometime in 2012, the process we will follow will implement a cost-sharing structure on a similar or earlier timeline.” Well good, it seems like he already did what you were asking.

Sengenberger: Rep. Ramirez?

Ramirez: I don’t know. Does he want to pull another $360,000 out of K-12? Because that is what is going to happen.

The Ghost of Walter Cronkite: Rep. Ramirez, I’m not really sure where you are getting the $360,000 figure. “A fiscal analysis predicted the bill would save $5.9 million in 2012-13. However, only $1.2 million of that would be general-fund savings. The bulk of the remaining unspent money would come in the form of $3.9 million in lost federal matching funds for CHP+.” [Denver Post, 6/01/2011]”

Ramirez: Medicaid, which is what we are talking about here, its actually the child care program but it’s still Medicaid. Its government funded health insurance, which is 100 percent free to everyone, really, with the exemption of $25 a year. That’s free when one office visit is $150. It’s basically free. When we had an $800 million increases this year, which is why we had to cut money to schools, why we had to cut money to prisons…

The Ghost of Walter Cronkite: Wait, I’m going to have to stop you there Representative. Medicaid increase led to school cuts? That a little disingenuous because, once again, the $800 million increase in Medicaid was due to the passage of the hospital provider fee bill (HB09-1293). No general fund money (besides a $2 million start up cost) was used. Just to make sure we are on the same page now—the funding for the $800 million increase in Medicaid and Colorado school funding are not pulled from the same pot, correct?

Ramirez: [The $800 million increase in Medicaid was] why we had a cut so many different programs that are beneficial and productive, now we are going to have to cut more because he has taken the budget out of balance. And he has said he knows better. Well if he knows better, then he should better come up with a way to come up with another $360,000 to put back into the budget.

The Ghost of Walter Cronkite: Are you saying that CHP+ is not “beneficial and productive?”

Sengenberger: Now his administration is saying that this doesn’t change anything with the budget agreement that came up before. So essentially they are just spinning with this is, saying we’re going to deal with this in other ways.

Ramirez: That is exactly right.

Sengenberger: Now let’s just stay on this topic of the budget. Rep. Conti, what do you make of what was approved, what was done in regards to trying to bring down the shortfall that we face in the state addressing the these budgetary concerns? What were some of the things that were done and some of the stuff that you take away from it?

Conti: This year’s budget was called one of the most responsible that has been put forth in about a decade. And that is by some legislators that have been there longer than that time period. It spends less than the 2010-2011 budget and we felt that that was very important. State spending had been on a rapid increase for the past four years. I think we went from 17.1 to 19.6 over a four-year stint and during that time, every year they were cutting more and more from our K-12 school system. So if we were going to be cutting and we are not going to be fully funding K-12, we better be spending and cutting somewhere. We better not be spending and increasing yet cutting K-12.

The Ghost of Walter Cronkite: As a parent I know you are worried about school funding. But how do you justify voting against suspending the vendor fee, which would have transferred $85 million into the education fund. [SB11- 223; House 2nd Reading COW on April 13, 2011; Colorado Statesman]

Conti: So I thought it was a responsible thing that we were able to cut the budget by hundreds of millions of dollars. It also contained 750 fewer full-time employees than what had previously been there. That’s because our Joint Budget Committee went on a good research stint and were able to find 750 of them that were unstaffed and they were able to eliminate. If you figure an average, I think its $62,000 a year salary, you can start to do the math on that. And again, that wasn’t cutting anyone’s job. It was unstaffed positions that money was still being allocated to those departments for. So great research work on behalf of our Joint Budget Committee.

The Ghost of Walter Cronkite: First off, I think the average salary for a state worker is $51,527 a year. Second, I have a story from the Denver Post that says, “While Republicans say the budget “contains 750 fewer full- time positions,” as many as 676 were “phantom” posts that departments had been authorized for in recent years but had not filled, usually because there wasn’t funding. The elimination of the positions from the state list of total full-time positions was essentially a cleanup action. In other words, no one lost their job, nor was money saved as a result of those positions being eliminated.” The Post is saying no money was saved by the “job cuts.” Do you disagree with the Post’s findings?

Sengenberger: Rep. Ramirez, what do you make of the budget actions that were taken?

Ramirez: I lost track there, I know we cut 750 FTEs, full-time equivalent positions. There were a couple of those that actually had people in them. Not very many. But a lot of people say we actually didn’t cut anything. You heard about the 5,000 increase in jobs during the recession that the Ritter administration and Democrats hired. That’s because those full-time equivalent positions were out there and they said hey they are out there, lets just hire somebody and put them in there. Then they have a permanent job, they’re good. We get rid of 750 of those that we found. In the different entities they are actually hiding these positions when they go to their budget review. So our JBC did a phenomenal job at finding these and cutting them. We cut the budget like Rep. Conti said, by over $250 million less than what it was last year. I had one gentleman, I’m not going to bring up his name, but he ran for offices last time and he’s listing he will know who I’m talking about, he confronted me at CRBC and asked where’s this $1.1 billion your talking about? It’s a myth number. You’re still going to spend about the same amount. There is not $1 billion you have to cut the budget. Well, when you look at $800 million increase in Medicaid, there you go. Now I got to come up with $200 million more. I got to cut the budget because we are not going to spend as much because that’s what we promised we would do. We would be responsible in what we were spending and be responsible with the taxpayers’ money. It’s not my money. It’s not your money. It’s not the state’s money. It’s the taxpayers’ money and we were responsible. We cut another $250 million. There is your $1 billion right there. So I think we did a phenomenal job.

The Ghost of Walter Cronkite: Really, that’s how you think you cut the budget? I thought we already clarified this Representative. The $800 million increase in Medicaid was due to the passage of the hospital provider fee bill (HB09-1293). No general fund money (besides a $2 million start up cost) was used.

Ramirez: And it’s really strange because the Republicans in the House voted for it, the Democrats in the Senate voted for it and the opposite in each house didn’t.

The Ghost of Walter Cronkite: What? It passed the Senate 30-5 and the House 50-14. I think it’s really strange you wouldn’t remember what happened on one of the biggest votes of the session.

Ramirez: So we worked very hard to make things happen. We actually found an extra $90 million for K-12. So it wasn’t such a horrible cut. And going into next year with possibly a $700 million shortfall for K-12 because of the federal funding that we are going to lose. I’m actually petrified of what we are doing. So I think we went the right way in cutting the debt…

Sengenberger: Well I want to shift gears before we let our guests Rep. Kathleen Conti and Robert Ramirez go, Senate Bill 200, which has spurred controversy in conservative circles. This has been pejoratively named AmyCare for those of you listeners out there who want to put two and two together. I’ve stated on this program that I have serious issues with that legislation. I oppose it personally. But I want to get your take. I’ll start first with Rep. Conti as to why you voted, I understand you both voted in favor of it, and why you voted in favor of it?

Conti: Thank you Jimmy. I can certainly understand people’s angst over it after all that we have heard about healthcare exchanges and the likes of the federal act commonly called ObamaCare. However, not all healthcare exchanges are created equal and there was a very definite… the business community work very hard in the off-season to ensure that they were very tight guidelines that the board that is going to be put together as a stay within as they created this healthcare exchange. Some of those requirements: it had to be competitive; they could not disallow any insurance company to get into it; they could not set rates or dictate any rates that they would choose to set; it had to increase competition; it had to reduced cost; it had to increase availability. And so with these and then we have legislative oversight so if it does not accomplish these goals the legislature can go in and abolish it if it does not meet these goals. And then we have the simultaneous knowledge that if the legislature failed to pass something that Gov. Hickenlooper was well on record saying that he would do it by executive order and he would take either the federal plan or some type of more morph of it.

The Ghost of Walter Cronkite: On CPR, Mike Whitney reported, “Governor Hickenlooper has been trying to get the House and Senate to come to agreement on an exchange bill, but if they can’t, he has the power to set up an exchange on his own by executive order. The governor says he doesn’t want to do that. HICKENLOOPER: If I create it, it’s not going to have the same strength as if it’s created through legislation.” I guess we are looking at different records?

Conti: So you had your choices; you either had legislative control or the governor was going to do the federal plan or some kind of morph of it, which would most assuredly left us single-payer.

The Ghost of Walter Cronkite: Assuredly left us single-payer? How do you figure Representative?

Sengenberger: So essentially the idea that Republicans would have at least had their footprint on whatever would end up happening.

Conti: And we had some type of oversight over it and our bill mandated that there would not be any single-payer option that would go into it.

Sengenberger: Rep. Ramirez, what is your take?

Ramirez: There are a lot of people that are up in the air about this. It was actually a very difficult vote but when I looked at it and you look at what the governor was going to do, he was going to put it under the Department of Health. Which means that the Department of Health was going to work directly with the insurance companies. Which means that the government now knows why you are going to the doctor, who you are going to the doctor to see, what’s going on with you, all your problems and that is precisely what the liberty groups and myself and most conservatives don’t like. That is what ObamaCare is. The healthcare exchanges it not…

The Ghost of Walter Cronkite: That is a pretty crazy conspiracy theory. Do you and Dan Maes ever go bike riding together?

Ramirez: Exactly. And had we not done it, would’ve had a bigger bureaucracy created that is actually under a department within the government and that is hugely expensive.

Conti: Exactly this bill expressly prohibits the board from creating rules, mandates, regulating insurance, soliciting bids, price-fixing, purchasing insurance or using state funds to do it. It establishes an oversight board and there is also a five-year review process allowing for the repeal if the model fails to meet the strict guidelines established by the bill.

Ramirez: Every way this bill couldn’t possibly been put together and still pass, to both follow what we have to do by federal mandate which I don’t like any more than you do, I can tell you I like it worse, we did. Because regardless of whether the lawsuit passes this is not going to make a difference. We still have to follow by the law. I hope the lawsuit…what is the right word…I hope we win the lawsuit because, to be honest with you, I think it is a bunch of nonsense…

The Ghost of Walter Cronkite: The Affordable Care Act is a “bunch of nonsense?” I’m assuming you don’t mean the protecting children with pre-existing conditions part. Or the banning lifetime on most annual limits. Or reducing the national debt. Would you mind clarifying the nonsense?

Ramirez: In this case, what we set forth was the most positive bill we could get out there that keeps us in compliance with federal law. And what most people don’t understand is there are strings that are attached to the federal government. Over the past five years we have taken so much money that we have no choice on where we are spending our money or how we’re spending it on a lot of things. This was the best way to do it, to where when the federal government, if they win and God forbid that they do, I am praying every day that they don’t, then the government has said you have to have an exchange and we will let you do your exchange.

Conti: It is proactively defensive and that is about the best summary you can give it.

Ramirez: I would rather not have one at all. I would rather not have Obamacare. Lets just say that, I would rather have Ferrari. But I’m driving a Suzuki…

The Ghost of Walter Cronkite: I have driven a Ferrari and it was awesome. But I still think I would prefer to have most Americans covered by health insurance then to own an Italian sports car.

Sengenberger: What I do want to asked though, and I will throw this to Rep. Conti, is you had every Republican in the Senate vote against it, every Democrat in the Senate vote for it, you had only 13 Republicans in the State House, still a majority, not vote for it and you even had one Democrat vote against it. What are we to make of the fact that it has got Majority Democrat support?

Conti: In the Senate?

Sengenberger: In both.

Conti: Ehh…

Sengenberger: In both the Senate and the House.

Ramirez: Ha ha, we tricked them.

Conti: I would say that I think they were making a statement at the time. There were some amendments that they tried to put on that were consistently shot down, shot down, shot down, and I think that they were more making a statement about that then really looking at it. When I talked to some senators and asked them specifically and pointedly why did you not support it? Why did you vote no? The answer was because we could.

Ramirez: And I will give you an example. The budget. It’s not bad. What do you think?

Sengenberger: Decent. It could be a lot better.

Ramirez: I agree. But it is heading in the right direction. But when you’re fighting with things, trying to get things past and you realize you have a job to do, sometimes you’re not going to get perfect but it’s heading in the right direction. Do I have your agreement on that?

Sengenberger: With the budget?

Ramirez: Yes, the budget.

Sengenberger: Yes, ok.

Ramirez: OK, no Democrats in the House voted for it. No Republicans in the Senate voted for it. So similar thing here. What it is, that is a game of majority minority and that is a political game that I absolutely despise and I will tell you right now you’ll not find many votes at all…any votes that I played that game on. But what you will find it is it was used just immensely by the minority parties in both houses.

Sengenberger: So just to repeat what you just said, no Democrats voted for it in the House, no Republicans voted for it in the Senate, it was just the majority parties in each.

The Ghost of Walter Cronkite: Yes, lets repeat what he just said. I’m pretty sure it passed the Senate 30-5 and the House 50-14.

Sengenberger: Well that is not the case though with this bill.

Ramirez: Well, no it’s not. But you asked why did all the Republicans in the House vote for it, because it is a majority party thing. Now in the House, the Democrats, they’re thinking Obamacare. Obamacare- great. But I asked a lot of them and a lot of them did not read it. Didn’t read it at all. I read through it and I sat through meetings on it. I had individual meetings about it. I talked to many people about this bill. It is what we needed to do and hopefully, if Obamacare fails, legislation is legislation and we can change things.

Sengenberger: I just find it interesting though that the Democrats would vote for this bill when they could’ve then…using this argument chosen the alternative, which is Gov. Hickenlooper or President Obama coming in and doing it.

Ramirez: I can’t answer that for you. I can tell you what they think it is. When I heard a lot of people, they were shocked when they found out that agents and brokers were allowed to be involved. They were shocked that wasn’t single-payer. After they voted for it they started talking, we need single-payer and I said it wasn’t in there. What? I think that is really a…what do you call it…a shell game. And the Republicans were playing it and so were the Democrats.

Conti: And I know that there were some Democrats who did read it who didn’t like it. As a matter-of-fact, we heard a lot of Sen. Boyd, who was the Senate sponsor, was taking a lot of heat from her party that it was too free market. So there was anger on both sides of the fence but there’s a reason that NFIB, the National Federation of Independent Businesses, did endorse the Colorado health care plan but is not endorsing the California health care exchange.

Ramirez: So did CACI, basically the state chamber of commerce for large companies, they did it. CRBC, the Colorado Republican Business Coalition endorsed it. These are small one-owner companies and they did a lot of research on it and they were late to the party. But they said you know what, this is the best bill that I have seen. It’s a good bill and a whole lot better than what we’re going to get stuck with and we have to something, so please do it.

Sengenberger: What I would like to see would’ve been an effort to repeal the legislation which prevented these coming up naturally and attempts to…I think the legislature would be able to try to do something when Gov. Hickenlooper would implement whatever he implements that there would be some check or something along those lines that down the road the legislature would be able to have.

Ramirez: An executive order is an executive order. You get no choice in the matter. You cannot do anything with it. That is why all Obama loves them so much.

Conti: That is why we have state employee unions-executive order.

The Ghost of Walter Cronkite: Which I assume you oppose, correct?

Ramirez: I’ll give an example. Colorado Oil and Gas Conservation Commission. Ridder changed it by executive order two years ago to include almost nothing but environmentalists and a couple of engineers. They used to have business industry experts, oil experts, engineers, and environmentalists. It was equal. The new proposal just added a couple of industry experts and a couple of oil and gas experts to it. It didn’t even take away from what was and yet he wants that power by executive order to say I’ll do whatever I want to do.

The Ghost of Walter Cronkite: Rep. Ramirez, I seem to remember the COGCC was changed due to the passage of HB07-1341, not executive order. That bill decreased the number of oil folks from 5 to 3 (not 0) and only added two environmental people to the commission. Can we have someone check on that?

Sengenberger: I just want to say that I respect you both Reps. Robert Ramirez and Kathleen Conti for coming in here to talk about these different issues and standing by your vote. Like I have said in the past this is one issue where we disagree. Reagan said that you are 80 percent allies is not your 20 percent enemy. So there maybe a lot of conservatives who say that the 13 in the legislature who voted for it should not be supported in the future. We should have primaries against them and so on and so forth. I think that his is something that I firmly disagree with but I would not go that far to say they you’re now an enemy of our movement.

Ramirez: Hey, I was number 12 on the liberty watch list. I’m good.

Sengenberger: Well that is a plus. Well thank you so much for joining us.

The Ghost of Walter Cronkite: Yes, thank you very much. I enjoyed this. Even though no one answered my questions, it’s nice to be out and about for a change.

Talk-radio host doesn’t ask Lamborn why a corporate-jet tax break is a “drop in the bucket” when he thinks similar spending on CPB is unaffordable

Saturday, July 2nd, 2011

Rep. Doug Lamborn was invited on the Richard Randall Show on June 30 to discuss President Obama’s recent remarks on the debt ceiling. Rep. Lamborn took issue with the President’s plan to cut tax breaks for corporate jets:

Lamborn: [President Obama] keeps bringing up class warfare things. For instance, he talks about the corporate jet tax breaks. And by the way that was put into law as part of the stimulus package because it was thought of at the time, just two years ago, that if aircraft manufactures were making more private planes, that would create jobs. So it wasn’t an evil thing just two years ago but now all of the sudden it’s evil. And it’s only $300 million a year. Now I don’t have any particular affection or allegiance to corporate jet owners, but that’s a drop in the bucket Richard. That’s one third of a billion dollars per year when we have a deficit this year of $1.6 trillion. And he mentioned that in his speech six times yesterday. He is obsessed with it.

Rep. Lamborn seems to keep a fairly low profile and rarely makes national news, so it makes sense that a talk-radio host wouldn’t be up to date on Lamborn trivia.

But it’s hard to believe that Randall didn’t remember the barrage of press coverage Lamborn received when the Representative spearheaded a call to remove all governmental funding for the Corporation for Public Broadcasting (CPB).

One particular statement he made was:

“We have to start somewhere to get our fiscal house in order,” said Lamborn. “And public broadcasting, as good as it might be with some of their programs, is a luxury we can no longer afford.”

To clarify, CPB currently receives $430 million from the government to help fund stuff like National Public Radio, Sesame Street and PBS News Hour. According to Lamborn, this is a luxury we cannot afford.

However removing $300 million in tax breaks for luxury jets is a “drop in the bucket.”

Randall should have asked Lamborn why a drop in the CPB bucket is different from a drop in the corporate jet bucket.

He also let Lamborn off easy by not challenging his statement that he had no affection or allegiance to the corporate jet industry. Have no fear media consumers, I took the liberty to check out the statement, and it seems not to hold up to scrutiny.

According to FEC documents, Lamborn received $7,000 from the Boeing ‘s PAC in the 2010 election cycle and $1,000 in the 2008 election. I have yet to find any CPB PACs or associated individuals writing checks to Lamborn’s campaign coffers.

Blog’s source for Hancock Story was a “chain of people”

Sunday, June 26th, 2011

Here’s something for your Sunday amusement: Complete Colorado’s Todd Shepherd telling Jon Caldara about his sources for the allegation that “Michael Handcock’s” name and cell-phone number were listed on the client list of Denver Players, a prostitution ring.

You don’t need to be an journalism professor to know that Shepherd had nothing close to credible sources. No surprise there. But, it’s worse, as you can see below. You’d like to think an intelligent guy like Shepherd would have checked his conscience before dropping this kind of junk on his blog.

Shepherd is talking to Caldara on KBDI, Channel 12, June 17, on “Devil’s Advocate,” a show is hosted by Caldara and underwritten mostly by  the Caldara’s Independence Institute.

Caldara: Where did you get this story?….

Shepherd: You know, the way the story came to me is really, it’s something I can’t disclose because it’s part of what corroborated what, again, I had a source that showed me documents of this prostitution ring, essentially the customer log and appointment sheets. But, the way, the chain of people as it worked its way to me, is part of, I can’t disclose those names, because in essence they were able to disclose other key points of information that essentially corroborated everything that my source was ultimately going to tell me.

Hancock’s phone in use during alleged prostitution appointments

Wednesday, June 15th, 2011

The Denver Post buried a key paragraph in its front-page story today showing that Michael Hancock apparently did not use his cell phone to call a prostitution ring. The Post reported toward the end of the story:

Additionally, Hancock’s cellphone was frequently in use at times when the appointment logs alleged he was engaged with a prostitute. Of the nine possible times over the three years most likely covered by log books, Hancock’s cellphone was in use during five.

If you’re Peter Boyles, you’d probably say the cell phone was part of the sex.

Then Boyles could talk about phone sex in the pre-Twitter days, and experts like Scottie Ewing could be summoned for their opinions on what Hancock and the prostitute could have been doing with the cell phone.

And Rep. Anthony Weiner’s view could be solicited.

Or better yet, the carnival barkers could fill an hour speculating on what Weiner or a prostitute might say about this.

Maybe that’s joke, and maybe it’s not, but it gets at the problem with this story. You can’t kill it, unless you’re a responsible journalist and you say, enough is enough.

Boyles won’t say this. That’s why he’s still looking for Obama’s Social Security number, education records, etc., etc., etc. And he’ll keep looking and talking as long as people listen.

But the mainstream media, like The Denver Post, which hyped this rotten story unfairly, should back off of this drama now and stop the strange front-page play that it’s been giving it.

You can imagine more developments coming, like interviews with prostitutes who of course should be asked what Hancock was doing with his cell phone during sex.

And you can imagine others coming forward with who knows what.

But with the alleged crime itself being such a petty matter, and the issue of lying about it now as resolved as it will ever be, it’s time to refrain from giving future developments more legitimacy than they deserve, as the Denver media has been doing so far.

Transcript of Rep. Scott Tipton’s interview on the Cari and Rob Show May 31

Monday, June 6th, 2011

As I pointed out last week, Scott Tipton’s May 31 interview on the Cari and Rob radio show raises a number of questions that reporters should put to Tiption. Here’s a transcript of the interview:

Douglas: On April 7th, the following exchange took place between our program and Congressman Scott Tipton.

Douglas: Congressman, I sent to a note this morning and I said in a note that I wanted to give you an opportunity to address an issue that has come before our attention. And that is that your daughter took a job at Broadnet as a government relations specialist in Washington D.C., the same month that you were sworn in as United States Congressman. Can you give us a little background on how your daughter got that job as a government relations specialist.

Scott: What that is, it’s a private company by the way. It does not work for the government. Everybody out here working for private company has government relations specialists that’s on there. She had an internship a year or two years ago with this company. Did a good job. They were opening up the office and offered it to her before the election and she’d accepted it.

Douglas: SO the job offer was made to her prior to the outcome of the election last year?

Scott: Right.

Douglas: Alright, very good.

Douglas: Then last week at the end of the week Allison Sherry and the Denver Post reported in a piece entitled “Colorado Rep. Tipton Apologizes to House Ethics Panel for Improper Emails.” The piece begins like this:

Rep. Scott Tipton may have run afoul of House ethics rules after his 22-year-old daughter dropped his name to land congressional business for her employer, a company that is run by his nephew. Tipton sent a letter late Thursday to the House Ethics Committee apologizing for multiple e-mails his daughter sent to members of Congress. She works as a government relations specialist for Colorado-based Broadnet.

Douglas: Given what took place on our program last April 7th, where we were the first to ask questions asked about the employment of Congressman Tipton’s daughter with Broadnet, and given the further reports given by the Denver Post, Politico, the Associative Press, and a number of other news organizations, both around the state of Colorado and nationally, we thought it only fair to allow Congressman Scott Tipton, someone who’s been a frequent guest on this program, we talk about him being our canary in the coal mines when it comes to following freshman congressman to Washington this term, to allow him to come on our program and address this in some more specificity. Congressman Tipton joins us right now where he is on standby to board a plane back to Washington. Congressman, thank you for joining us on the Cari and Rob program this morning.

Tipton: You bet. Glad to be with you Rob and Cari.

Douglas: Let me focus you on a specific portion of our discussion on April 7th. Please listen to this and I have some follow-up questions for you:

Douglas: Can you give us a little background on how your daughter got that job as a government relations specialist.

Scott: What that is, it’s a private company by the way. It does not work for the government.

Douglas: Congressman, you said there that Broadnet does not work for the government. Did you stand by that statement today?

Tipton: I sure do.

Douglas: How you defining “does not work for the government?”

Tipton: They do not sell directly to the government. They do not sell directly to congressional offices.

Douglas: Okay, so Broadnet has a series of subsidiaries…

Tipton: No, not subsidiaries. Actually I have learned more about this after you broadsided me with that question on the previous one. For a point of clarity when you mentioned Rob out of the open that you had sent me an e-mail as a heads up, I did not receive that. But nevertheless they do not sell to subsidiaries. These are privately held companies that Broadnet, as I have learned, are basically labeled as a technology company. Privately held companies they have no part in lease that technology.

Hermacinski: Congressman, Politico reports that Broadnet provides more than 100 congressional offices with tele-townhall services via various vendors. So I would just have to say to the common person out here, we would say that Broadnet provides services to over 100 congressional offices in return for taxpayer dollars. So I am having a hard time understanding the statement that Broadnet does not work for the government.

Tipton: I am trying to drive correlation there for you can get a sense that you license yours out to privately held radio stations and do they pay you something for that? They probably do. But you have no connection with those privately held radio stations that carry your program. So that’s probably maybe not the best example but it is that same sort of thing where licensed technology that people use that you have no control over these companies or who they sell to and that’s it.

Douglas: Then why would your daughter be writing letters on behalf of Broadnet to your fellow congress people?

Tipton: That is something that Broadnet probably better can answer than I can. But the bottom line is that their job was just to make people aware of the technology company. You know, when we talk about transparency, I think one of the good things that has been coming out are these telephone townhall meetings were people can call in and visit with me directly and ask questions directly. It was creating awareness of that and there are a multiple of these vendors up there. The vendor we use is the same one that John Salazar used and it was the most cost effective.

Douglas: And that vendor works via Broadnet.

Tipton: No that is inaccurate Rob. What that vendor does not work via, they license the technology. That is an important distinction.

Douglas: Alright. Broadnet is owned by your nephew, correct?

Tipton: Correct.

Douglas: OK. You and your daughter share an apartment on Capitol Hill, correct?

Tipton: Mm-mmh.

Douglas: Your daughter went to work for Broadnet officially when?

Tipton: I think she started right after the Christmas [unintelligible]

Douglas: When was she offered that job in relation?

Tipton: It was my understanding, and I can be in error, but it was my understanding, after she had done her internship a year or so ago, that when she was getting ready to graduate from college that they had a job for her.

Douglas: Was there an official offer made to her from Broadnet?

Tipton: I can’t tell you. You know we are getting into the weeds of family business and in her personal business as well. I can’t give you the date because I don’t monitor it that closely.

Douglas: Can you get us that date when you get to Washington?

Tipton: You know, I can probably ask her if she chooses. This has been very difficult on her because she didn’t do anything wrong.

Douglas: Were you aware that Broadnet, through licenses it’s product to subsidiaries that do work was Congress.

Douglas: Was I aware that? Sure.

Douglas: When your daughter accepted the job with Broadnet, a company that is co-founded and run by your nephew, did you ever have discussion with your nephew about the appropriate relationship between Broadnet’s employees and Congress now that you were an elective congressman?

Tipton: No, it’s not my business and they do not sell directly to members of Congress period.

Hermacinski: Congressman, when did you first learn your daughter was using her relationship with you in introductory emails when she was contacting congressional offices? When did you first become aware of that?

Tipton: When a reporter came out. If you really want to get into that. In Washington they have flashcards when you get there to memorize all new freshman’s name and their faces. And when she went in people asked about the relationship and so it was a point of clarity rather than trying to hide something.

Hermacinski: and so how did you first learn about your daughter was using…

Tipton: It was actually through the press. I do not know it.

Douglas: So the press approached you and said are you aware that your daughter has sent e-mails to other offices?

Tipton: And again to underscore that was done innocently as a point of clarity. You know there’s know they are there.

Douglas: In those press contacts, there are a number of the news reports that suggests that there were rumors around Washington that an ethics complaint was going to be filed against you concerning these contacts. Did you learn of those rumors? First of all, did you hear of any of those rumors? Did you learn of those rumors prior to your letter to the ethics committee?

Tipton: Actually, we were proactive. Because when I found out I said it is in your interest not to use my name. And secondly then I was the one who went to the ethics committee, explained it and talked to Congressman Bonner. He said you have no connection to this, there is not an ethics issue, so if you want to send a letter we can get a letter back to you. So I was the one that was proactive on that.

Hermacinski: Congressman Tipton, Politico is also reporting that your spokesperson Josh Green, when asked for a statement on this matter, blamed this on Nancy Pelosi sending her top lap dog to Colorado to engage in some sleazy political attacks on you. So when did you become aware of the fact that Nancy Pelosi and her lap dogs were trying to dig up dirt on you?

Tipton: Well I think anyone with clear vision on it can see this is just politics and its Washington politics and this is the way they do business. Honestly we are going to happen competitive race in the third.
Douglas: What evidence do you have that the Democrats did anything on this?

Tipton: Where did it come from? You were the ones that first raised the question. Maybe you can answer that for me.

Douglas: Well we don’t know. We raised with you Scott on April 7. And the other part of the question that I asked you on April 7th. Let me play that for you as well:

Douglas: okay so the job offer was made her prior to the outcome of the election last year?

Tipton: Right.

Douglas: Alright, very good.

Douglas: That is something would like to get for your office is when she specifically got the job offer. The other question I had Scott is I asked, and I will take you at your word that you did not see my e-mail earlier in the day, but I asked you at the beginning of that what was the relationship between Broadnet and you never mentioned that Broadnet is a family-owned company. Why did not you not mention that?

Tipton: First of all, like I say it was a question that hadn’t even across my mind and I didn’t receive your e-mail to give me a head-up on it to give it some thought. Real honestly Rob, if you want full disclosure, I have got one other nephew that is going to be starting a landscaping business. I didn’t know where all you wanted to go on it and wasn’t aware that I needed to point out every family relationship.

Douglas: Scott, I’m sorry, maybe you think that’s funny but you don’t think that it’s relevant…

Tipton: Given that I didn’t know where your question was going at the very beginning of it which you can probably gather that from my answer. I didn’t realize that I needed to try and connect all of the different dots on it.

Hermacinski: Do think the landscaping business of your other nephew will be provided landscaping services to 100 congressional offices?

Tipton: I don’t know. Cari, we can go on that direction. This is privately held company that does not sell directly to Congress. You can’t you can get away from that very important point. This is licensed out. We have a whole host of vendors that every congressional office has. They do not promote individual vendors. It is just the technology. I think it’s an important role for members of Congress to stay in contact with their office.

Hermacinski: And I want to ask you again. Josh Green, your spokesman, did tell Politico that Nancy Pelosi has sent her top lap dog to Colorado to try to dig up sleazy political attacks on you. What evidence do you have that Nancy Pelosi and the Democrats are behind this and when did you first become aware of it?

Tipton: Maybe an assumption from the standpoint that I had no personal connection with this issue at all nor did my office. But we have had Steny Hoyer in Colorado soliciting candidates to run in the third. So that was the assumption that Josh made.

Douglas: Okay. It has been announced this morning that Sal Pace is going to challenge you for the third congressional district. What is your reaction?

Tipton: You know, we may have a number of Democratic candidates and that is fine. That is our process works.

Douglas: Alright. Final question Scott. In light of all that has transpired, do think that you were transparent with this show and our audience on April the 7th. When we asked you questions relating to the relationship between Broadnet, your daughter, and her job as a government relations specialist and you said that Broadnet does not work for the government at that time. Do you feel that that was forthcoming and that there was no need to get back to us at some point and let us know that you learned more about how this developed or let our audience know more about how this developed?

Tipton: We’re obviously maybe going to disagree on that. But I think, given that I was broadsided with that question and it is something that we have had nothing to do with, I gave you the information that seemed reasonable as a time. I will underscore again that Broadnet does not sell directly to, they only license out to private companies who then market their product to members. So that was forthcoming.

Douglas: Did you know at that time that their licensees did work with more than 100 congressional offices on the hill?

Tipton: I had no idea. They have been in business for a long time. Long before I got here.

Douglas: When did you start using one of their licensees?

Tipton: Actually we picked up the same vendor that John Salazar used. We have had one townhall meeting.

Douglas: And you did not know that licensee was licensed through Broadnet.

Tipton: You know, we look strictly a price and I found out that they do license it. But that was not a consideration. We were trying to the most cost-effective way of reaching our constituents.

Douglas: Okay, you do live with your daughter on Capitol Hill. Did she ever raised the issue of the letter with you and/or the fact that she was going to mention in the letters that she was your daughter.

Tipton; Yea. I would like to underscore again, it was a point of reference because people queried her about whether or not she was my daughter and she used it as a point of reference. That was her stand on it and when I found out about I said don’t do that and she readily agreed.
Douglas: Okay, final question. Congress will vote tonight on a up or down bill on the debt ceiling. Your vote will be…

Tipton: No.

Douglas: Okay, very good. Scott we know you are just about to board plane at DIA for Washington. Thank you so much for joining us on the program today and look forward talking to you again.

Got questions for Denver mayoral candidates?

Monday, May 23rd, 2011

I’ll be on a panel asking Denver mayoral candidates Michael Hancock and Chris Romer questions Tuesday, May 24, at a debate at the Denver Museum of Nature and Science, Ricketson Auditorium (enter on Museum’s west side), 6:45 p.m. to 9 p.m.

Help me out by sending suggestions for questions to me at jason@bigmedia.org.

Other “media panelists” asking qustions will be Denver Post Columnist Susan Barnes-Gelt, FOX31 Reporter Jon Bowman, Former Denver City Councilwoman Sue Casey, ColoradoBiz Magazine Editor Mike Cote, and The Denver Daily News Reporter Peter Marcus.

Aaron Harbor, host of the Aaron Harbor Show, will moderate the debate, to be aired on “Colorado Now with Aaron Harbor.”

Click here to make your (free) general-admission reservation to attend the event, which will be broadcast at 7 p.m. on K3 Colorado (KCDO-TV Channels 3 & 28.3 broadcast) and Channel 3 on COMCAST, DirecTV & DISH Network

Potter series promotes healthy skepticism of journalism, local author writes.

Wednesday, May 18th, 2011

In an “expanded edition” of his book of essays on the “Values of Harry Potter,”  local libertarian gadfly Ari Armstrong slams a 2008 article in the American Communication Journal, by Amanda Sturgill and others, which argued that the Harry Potter series portrayed journalism in dark and destructive manner.

Armstrong’s basic point is that, sure, journalism in the Potter books, embodied in character Rita Skeeter, was flawed at times, but that’s how journalism is in real life as well. So the book teaches young readers to look at the news media with a critical eye.

“Consumers of journalism will do well to adopt the thoughtful skepticism promoted by the Potter series,” Armstrong writes.

He provides a few examples to illustrate his point that journalists can make mistakes without undermining the value of the news media. One of his examples, unfortunately, is New York Times columnist Paul Krugman’s opinion, written after the Gabrielle Giffords shooting, that “We don’t have proof yet that this was political, but the odds are that it was.” Yes, that was a dumb opinion, but Krugman is not a reporter; he’s paid to opine. You’d think Armstrong could have come up with better examples from the spectacular archive of journalistic foibles.

Still, Armstrong’s critique about the Sturgill article is on target for the most part, as he points to examples, even if they’re brief, of the beneficial role journalism plays in the books, as well its destructive use as propaganda when the news is taken over by Voldemort. There seems to be an obvious lesson in the dangers of state control of the press here, and you wonder why Sturgill ignored this and the other material Armstrong cites.

Armstrong writes:

“The Potter novels teach that, even in the faceof shoddy reporting or outright censorship, the truth can prevail if its advocates keep fighting for it.”

I noticed that Armstrong did not say the truth “will” prevail without quality journalism, and he’s right. You have to wonder today, with serious journalism struggling, whether enough of the truth will get out there for our experiment in democracy to have a happy ending.

So maybe the lesson in the Potter series that Armstrong lauds isn’t the one we really need.  We need more books showing how the truth doesn’t prevail in the end  when journalism is forsaken or corrupt. That’s where things look to be heading to me.

Former CO supporters of Romney have differing views on whether to support him now

Tuesday, April 12th, 2011

Massachusetts Gov. Mitt Romney, who launched his presidential exploratory committee yesterday, would be President now, if the Colorado GOP had its way in 2008.

You recall, Romney won big here in the GOP’s caucuses over Sen. John McCain, with major Republican support from people like Sen. Wayne Allard, Rep. Bob Beauprez, Sen. Hank Brown, Gov. Bill Owens, and Colorado Attorney General John Suthers. GOP State Senators Andy McElhany, Shawn Mitchell, and Nancy Spence all supported him. As did, among others, CO State Rep. Kenneth Summers, Weld Country District Attorney Ken Buck, executives Bruce Benson and Alex Cranberg, and Colorado GOP chair Ryan Call.

Not to be left out, The Denver Post selected Romney in the GOP primary.

Reporters haven’t asked what these folks think of Romney now, about three years later. So I checked in with some of them.

“I’m inclined to think we need a fresh face,” McElhany told me. “I was a strong early supporter of Mitt Romney in 2008, and I think he had his chance at that time, but I’m encouraged to look other places.”

I asked McElhany about the health care law Romney signed into law in Massachusetts, mandating that state residents purchase insurance.

“I don’t think the health care thing helps him,” McElhany said. “Certainly it’s a huge issue, and his support of the Massachusetts law will weigh on him heavily.”

Attorney General Suthers and Colorado Sen. Spence are both still supportive of Romney.

Through his spokesman, Suthers said:

“America is in need of an economic turnaround. No one has the credentials he does in terms of producing an economic turnaround.”

“Of the names in the race so far, I’d still support him,” Spence told me. “Now that doesn’t mean if Superman jumped in, I wouldn’t change my mind. But that’s where I am right now.”

Asked whether the health care issue affects her view of Romney, Spence said, “I supported him last time—and there was the health-insurance and right-to-life stuff then. He did what he had to do in Massachusetts.”

Colorado Rep. Ken Summers hasn’t made up his mind. “Maybe it will be like in 2008 when it was easier to keep track of who wasn’t running than who was,” Summers told me.

Romney’s support of the Massachusetts health care law is not a deal breaker for Summers, who added that he (Summers) was “fully supportive of the health-care exchanges here in Colorado, and he told Rep. Amy Stephens that his “name would have been on that bill if it was introduced.”

“As Republicans go, Romney was doing what he had to do in Massachusetts,” Summers said. “It’s baggage that he’ll have to overcome, just like Tom Tancredo had to do with immigration. But Tom didn’t want to.”

Weld County District Attorney Ken Buck is remaining neutral.

“I am staying neutral in the presidential race for a while,” Buck told me. “I am the national co-chair for the Pass the Balanced Budget Amendment. We are trying to get candidates together for a presidential debate sometime this fall, and the leadership is staying neutral until we can get that accomplished.”

Pestiferous Independence Institute President Jon Caldara, who was not listed among Romney’s supporters in 2008, gave me his opinion on Romney:

“My guess is, it’s going to be very, very difficult for him to win support in a GOP primary given his support for what is essentially Obamacare,” said Caldara. I don’t know how he dislodges himself for that. On the bright side, he’s got great hair, and for that I am most envious.”

 Caldara cohort Dave Kopel of the Independence Institute added:

“I would say that Romney’s chances of winning would be much, much higher if Romneycare did not exist, especially because Obamacare will certainly be one of the biggest issues in the 2012 Presidential election, and perhaps the biggest issue,” Kopel emailed me. “The Sunday that the U.S. House voted for Obamacare, the biggest political loser in the nation was Mitt Romney.”

President Barack Obama has been praising Romney’s health care law of late, reportedly saying in a Feb. speech at the National Governors Association:

“I know that many of you have asked for flexibility for your states under this law. In fact, I agree with Mitt Romney, who recently said he’s proud of what he accomplished on health care in Massachusetts and supports giving states the power to determine their own health care solutions. He’s right. Alabama is not going to have exactly the same needs as Massachusetts or California or North Dakota. We believe in that flexibility.”

Yesterday the DNC distributed a photo of Romney signing the health care law—with Sen. Ted Kennedy in the photo looking on approvingly. Democrats have also been eating birthday cake and pointing out that today is the five-year anniversary of the enactment of the Mass health-care bill.

Romney did not mention his health care law yesterday, when he announced the formation of his presidential exploratory committee, but he’s said previously that he supports the rights of states to craft their own health care laws.

Internship available

Monday, March 14th, 2011

Please help me find an intern to help monitor local media outlets.

Tasks include:

… Monitoring local TV and radio shows.
… Researching facts and issues presented in the news.
… Editing and recording video and audio.
… Proofreading and fact-checking reports and documents.
… Administrative tasks.
… Updating websites and social media sites

The successful applicant would probably have:

… Some proven research experience.
… The ability to update websites.
… A familiarity with local media.

A small monthly stipend is available.

The position lasts six months, with a possible six-month extension.

Please send resume and 1-page cover letter to:

Jason Salzman
jason@bigmedia.org

No Phone calls, please.

The internship will be filled as soon as possible.

Harsanyi leaving Post for career and personal reasons

Friday, March 4th, 2011

I asked Denver Post columnist David Harsanyi why he’s leaving the newspaper to become editorial manager at Glenn Beck’s publishing company.

He replied:

I’m leaving for a few reasons: To begin with, I was offered an exciting opportunity — by some very talented people — to do something new, to reach a large national audience and to keep my syndicate column. I couldn’t pass it up.

Also, though we love living in Denver, our family is on the East Coast and I wanted my children to be closer to them. That’s not to say it wasn’t a difficult decision. My time at the Post …• both as a metro columnist and on the editorial board …• was unbelievably rewarding both personally and professionally. More people read the Post’s content today than ever, and despite all the outside naysaying, I know it’s going to continue succeeding. So it’s bittersweet leaving.

I’m sorry Harsanyi is leaving. I’m not sure you could find a better conservative combo than him and Vince Carroll. I mostly disagree with both of them, but they’re usually fun and interesting.

My advice to Post Editorial Page Editor Dan Haley: do not fill Harsanyi’s conservative void with more Mike Rosen columns, which we may have read before anyway.

The Post’s opinion page is clearly trying to be fresh, like Carroll and Harsanyi try to be, not pedantic and recycled.