Wednesday, March 24, 2010

Annexation reform is not complicated

by Brian Irving
The annexation reform bill passed by the N.C. House of Representatives is “insulting to those who have fought for annexation reform,” Daren Bakst, director of legal and regulatory studies for the John Locke Foundation said March 22 at the weekly Shaftesbury Society luncheon.

“When people say annexation reform is really complicated, it's completely not complicated. It's a very simple issue. It comes down to this: annexed property owners should have a real voice in the process and they should be provided just one service they actually need,” Bakst said.

“That's it. We can go home. That's annexation reform right there.”

Bakst said that the key to annexation reform is to focus on the core issues and ignore the tangents on unrelated issues that do nothing but confuse the matter.

“The legislature should pass a bill with the core reforms, like SB 494,” he said. “The legislature should even consider blowing up all the bills and just adding a vote, county approval, or real services protection to existing law.”

The legislation passed by the House, HB 524, uses “smoke and mirrors” to do just the opposite. It actually strengthens the power of municipalities to forcibly annex. Although the bill purports to allow people to vote on annexation, Bakst called this provision “a sham” that “means nothing.”

In order to get a vote Bakst said, “Annexation victims have to get the signatures of 15 percent of the registered voters living in the municipality and affected area.”

“Why would municipal residents want to sign the petition,” Bakst asked. Using the example of Raleigh, that would require just over 38,000 signatures from city residents for anyone opposing an annexation by the city.

“That doesn't include the fact that you are going to have signatures that are rejected, so you have to build in 10 to 15 percent more. There is no way anybody is going to do that,” Bakst said.

Instead of the city council deciding their fate, annexation victims will be subjected to the will of city residents who vastly outnumber them, Bakst noted. To make it even more difficult for annexation opponents, the vote would take place during a general election, when voter turnout is usually greatest.

Bakst said that the biggest problem with the bill is the language on providing meaningful services and benefits to annexed areas.

“HB 524 now makes it official: Municipalities can clearly annex areas without providing one necessary service,” he said. The bill includes specific language designed to preempt a possible court ruling clarifying the existing law.

“There is a real possibility that the N.C. Supreme Court will clarify that these games being played by municipalities are not legal and they can't continue to duplicate existing services,” Bakst said. HB 524 would expressly allow duplication of services. The bill complete ignores whether or not an area needs a service.

HB 524 also guts the requirement that municipalities provide newly annexed areas with water and sewer service within two years of annexation. Under existing law, municipalities can only get out of the requirement if the installation of sewer is not economically feasible due to the unique topography of the area.

Under the so-called reform bill, municipalities would have three years to provide the service and can get out of meeting this responsibility for any fiscal reason. Newly annexed homeowner who request sewer service must pay the total cost up front. They will no longer have the option to pay over time, as under existing law.

“Forced annexation exists to help local politicians. It's a way of them bailing themselves out for their mismanagement,” said Bakst. He compared forced annexation to the Federal government bailout of banks and GM, “except that they (municipalities) can get it every year.”

One of the strongest proponents of forced annexation is the North Carolina League of Municipalities. But as Bakst notes, the NCLM represents local politicians and municipal cities, not city residents or even the interests of municipalities.

“Their basic game plan is to whatever their members, city officials, tell them,” he said. “What's interesting is that there is no pretense about the fact that forced annexation has simply become a financial bailout,” he said. “You'd think they'd be embarrassed and not admit that.”

“Now there's no question. They just come out and say we going to have to raise property taxes unless we annex this area,” he said.

“Municipalities and the League are like drug addicts: they can’t help but need forced annexation to cover up for their mismanagement – not to mention why should they care about people living in unincorporated areas,” Bakst said.

County commissioners are the number one enemy to annexation reform, Bakst said. “For 50 years, counties have sat back and watched their constituents get abused by municipalities,” he said.

This article was originally published to the Raleigh Libertarian Examiner.

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Monday, March 22, 2010

First planning meeting of Beitler for US Senate volunteers

The first planning meeting of Beitler for US Senate volunteers is coming up this Wednesday, March 24. If you'd like to volunteer and haven't yet signed up for the Meetup group, please do so at http://www.meetup.com/Beitlervolunteers/. You can also volunteer for and donate to the Beitler campaign on his campaign website: http://www.beitlerforussenate.org/.

If you need a reason to volunteer, check out the NAACP campaign forum for US Senate candidates from North Carolina. Dr. Beitler is the only one speaking up for liberty while all the other candidates who attended called for more big government "solutions" that will just add to the national debt. While it's available, you can view a video of this forum on WRAL website here: http://www.wral.com/news/local/video/7230482/. Alternately, you can view this forum on YouTube. Michael Shanklin has provided a YouTube playlist: http://www.youtube.com/user/mikeshanklin#grid/user/28C3B3A2A73C4EA0.

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Sunday, March 21, 2010

Libertarians say state employee records should be made public

by Brian Irving
Two Libertarian candidates for General Assembly unequivocally believe that the records, salary and employment history of state employees should be public information. They were responding to the same questions asked of Democratic and Republican elected officials by the News & Observer for a series of articles highlighting Sunshine Week.

Sunshine Week is a national initiative, led by the American Society of Newspaper Editors, to open a dialogue about the importance of open government and freedom of information.

"I worked under such an assumption when I was a state employee from 1997 to 1999," said Stephanie Watson, Libertarian candidate for N.C. House District 16. "Personnel records for state employees should be available for review at the request of any citizen of North Carolina," she said.

"After all, the citizens employ them through the agency of government. Each state employee should accept that he or she is subject to public inquiries about his performance in that job," she said.

Richard Evey, Libertarian candidate for N.C. Senate District 44 agreed, saying that it was part of the concept of transparency in government. "This is a part of the job," he said.

Watson said that state employees should accept the fact that they are subject to public inquiries about job performance. Applications, recommendations and hiring reports should also be public.

"Like personnel records, all applications, recommendations, and hiring reports for state employees should be available for review at the request of any citizen of North Carolina," she said.

Watson and Evey agreed, however, that personal data which could leave the individual vulnerable to identity theft should not be available to the public except by subpoena.

While the libertarians gave a straight yes or no answer to all three questions, the major party politicians were a bit more nuanced in their responses.

The first question asked if the personal records of a state employee convicted of a crime or disciplined for misconduct should be made public. Senate leader Marc Basnight, a Democrat, said, "I don't know." House Speaker Joe Hackney, a Democrat, said, "It's a line-drawing exercise, and whether the line is drawn in exactly the right place, I don't know the answer to that."

House Minority Leader Paul Stam, a Republican, said the release of complete personnel records "must be only under specific circumstances." Only Senate Minority Leader Phil Berger, a Republican, said yes.

The second question asked if employee applications, hiring panel reports, job candidate recommendations and other information that helps explain why someone won a public job should be made public information.

Basnight said, "As it pertains to the search for (UNC) chancellors, absolutely not." Hackney said he was opposed to it and Stam also said no. Only Berger agreed such records should be public.

Finally, when asked if a worker's state employment history, including job changes, disciplinary action or commendations, and salary adjustments be made public, Basnight responded with a question. "The law today is the current salary, but not what they made previously," he asked. "I do not understand why that would not be public."

Hackney said he wasn't prepared to argue it either way, adding, "I understand it's been that way since 1975."

Berger said this information should be made public, provided the distinction between employment and personal information in the current law be maintained. Stam said, "No. Public employees deserve the same measure of privacy as employees in the private sector."

This article was originally published to the Raleigh Libertarian Examiner.

Saturday, March 20, 2010

Posts Organized by Topic

Recommended Posts and Links from 2008, 2009 and early 2010

Mike Beitler for US SenateStephanie Watson for NC SenateVideo from EconStories.tvRecent Videos from LibertyTube TVTea Party Videos from 2009
Legislative Agenda 2009 Libertarian Party Convention Video from 2008 Continue to the full list...Post-election 2008
Videos still available from Election 2008
Election-related Posts from 2008
Bailouts, Buyouts, Corporate Welfare
Ballot Access
Forced Annexation

Friday, March 12, 2010

Libertarian Party of Wake County Annual Convention

Please join us for our annual convention on Saturday, March 13, at 1 pm at Edward Mckay Used Books in Raleigh. The address is 3514 Capital Blvd. Cathy Heath, the driving force behind Stop NC Annexation, will be our guest speaker.

Google map to Edward MaKay Used Books: http://maps.google.com/maps?hl=en&q=3514+Capital+Blvd+Raleigh&sourceid=navclient-ff&rlz=1B3GGGL_enUS355US355&ie=UTF-8

Stop NC Annexation: http://www.stopncannexation.com/

Saturday, March 06, 2010

Join Dr. Mike Beitler at the Wake County LP meetup

Mike Beitler will be attending the Wake County LP meetup this Thursday at 6:30 pm at Edward Mckay Used Books in Raleigh, NC. Come on out to meet this Libertarian candidate that wants to be known as Dr. Abolish in the US Senate!

There's also a new meetup group for volunteers for the Beitler for US Senate campaign. Organized by Amanda Owens, the first planning meeting is coming up on March 24. You can sign up for this meetup group at http://www.meetup.com/Beitlervolunteers/.

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