We need a political revolution in Kansas against the Plutocrats and those determined to destroy our state government.
"I will tell the people what's going on at the statehouse. I'm going to treat the capitol as a borderline crime scene. ... If businesses don't have to pay taxes, the burden should not be on those trying to feed themselves." - The Valley Falls Vindicator & Oskaloosa Independent, March 3, 2016.
Across Kansas the top 1% are looting and on-the-loose, pitting us against each other. Communities in Jefferson County need to democratically prepare themselves for food and energy autonomy.
- MICHAEL CADDELL, Publisher, Producer Radio Free Kansas
Saturday, December 31, 2016
Thursday, December 29, 2016
Friday, December 23, 2016
HOLIDAY GREETINGS! #BROWNBACKISTAN
3,122 voters (NYT Nov. 11, 2016) 37.4% did not vote. |
How easy we forget how we arrived to this historical point in Kansas.
Financing campaigns on millionaire loans, gutting the state's treasury till it's national credit rating falls, not once, but twice while cheering on the shock troops over abortion, gay rights and guns. This is Gov. Sam Brownback's "deplorable" Know Nothing Party, not the Republican Party of Lincoln or trust busting T. Roosevelt, or "I Like Ike."
Let's look at the thieves who didn't get away, as provided by the Federal Bureau of Investigation.
Leavenworth woman sentenced after six year $500,000 bank embezzlement spree.
Shawnee man pleads to Overland Park bank robbery.
Kansas City Kansan sentenced in Stillwell bank robbery.
Great Bend, Ks. bank employee pleads to ATM robbery.
Former Wyandotte government engineer indicted on federal bribery charges.
Border War Commerce Counts Too!
Springfield, Mo. man sentenced for bank robbery, kidnapping.
Two Joplin, Mo. men indicted for bank robbery.
And let's not forget those western Kansans, the three who were ready to truck bomb an apartment complex full of Somali moslems in Garden City (courtesy USA Today)
Thursday, December 22, 2016
Tim Carpenter: CAPITOL RALLY PARTICIPANTS LOOK TO BITE BULLET ON TAX REFORM @ Topeka Capital Journal
The infamous campaign advertisement placed in Jefferson County newspapers last week before Election Day 2016. |
“There may be individual parts that some might object to, but on balance it’s fair. It will do the job of raising tax revenue. I love the third tax bracket. When they went to two brackets they destroyed the progressivity of the income tax and destroyed their ability to raise money,” Wagnon said. ...Omitting the extreme disparity of the 1% of the 1% that I provided during the telephone interview, Carpenter still reported an overview of my proposed remedy. The article was short, but I got the last four paragraphs of the 16 in the article.
"Nortonville resident Michael Caddell, who campaigned unsuccessfully for a Kansas House seat in an old Ford truck with signs calling for impeachment of Brownback, said the emphasis of tax reform ought to be on legislation significantly raising the income tax on the most wealthy of Kansans.
Campaign 2016 Truck War Banner
“I’m going to take the truck up there regularly. I’m going to park the truck so he can see it,” Caddell said.
Caddell said he would urge lawmakers dismiss talk of a gasoline tax increase and have the courage to apply to the richest 1 percent of Kansas residents a 13.5 percent income tax rate. In 2012, he said, the top 1 percent in Kansas earned an average of $1.09 million.
“A hard-and-fast taxation of the top 1 percent income is the immediate remedy,” said Caddell, who was featured in campaign ads holding a double-barrel musket and lost the November general election in the 47th District."
Read the complete article here.
Sunday, December 11, 2016
Friday, December 9, 2016
Thursday, December 1, 2016
Jonathan Shoreman: BROWNBACK NOT TALKING ABOUT BUDGET @ Topeka Capital Journal
|
Email me for details: bluebarnnewscentral@gmail.com
Only our elected lawmakers in the Topeka statehouse can send this powerful message and warning to the rest of the country about the #FailedExperiment in #Koch Libertarian economics.
Jonathan Shoreman writes from the Topeka Capital Journal, Nov. 29, 2016 after Sam's last press conference "Brownback not talking to lawmakers about budget, rules nothing in or out":
[Excerpt] ... Several hours after the news conference, Willoughby said that while Brownback is still in the decision-making process, the budget proposal won’t include layoffs, furloughs or major cuts. She said there are steps to building a balanced budget.
“It’s a genuine lack of leadership on his part,” said Senate Minority Leader Anthony Hensley, D-Topeka. “Not only legislators, but the people of Kansas, should be very concerned this governor is not leading at a time when our state is in desperate trouble financially, and it’s all on account of his failed tax policies that he’s led our state down a road of ruination.”
Brownback’s waiting has fueled speculation that the unpopular second-term governor hopes to secure a job in the administration of President-elect Donald Trump and would then resign. The governor brushed away a question about whether he has spoken with Trump or his transition team. ... [End of Excerpt]
Saturday, November 26, 2016
Wednesday, October 26, 2016
Monday, October 17, 2016
Wednesday, October 12, 2016
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Sunday, October 9, 2016
Monday, September 26, 2016
Liz Miller: FAILED REPUBLICAN GOVERNOR CANCELS QUARTERLY ECONOMIC REPORT @ Santa Monica Observer
The "Lion of the Senate" in opposition. |
Yes, it helps to read what others elsewhere write about Gov. Sam
Own up to it fellow Kansans and clean out the Topeka statehouse this November 8th.
Reporter Liz Miller hits the mark, but misses the timing of Sam's economic blackout, nearly a month before Election Day, 2016.
She writes:
"Now that his vision has failed miserably, the Council of Economic Advisors, chaired by Brownback himself, has determined that they will no longer compile and distribute the report, which was based on a comparison with economic markers from six neighboring states.
Their excuse: it confuses people."
Read more.
Saturday, September 17, 2016
Tim Carpenter: Topeka Capital Journal Questionnaire Voter Guide
Aug. 31, 2016
Greetings from The Topeka Capital-Journal.
The Capital-Journal is requesting your assistance with our general election Voter Guide. The objective is to be a conduit of information to your prospective voters.
In advance of the November vote, The Capital-Journal is asking candidates to answer six essay questions and six yes-or-no questions. In addition, we're requesting basic biographical information. The same inquiries will be posed to all Senate and House candidates for the Kansas Legislature.
We recommend essay answers run from 100 words to 300 words. These responses will be published online as submitted, but may be edited for length in print.
The deadline for submitting answers is Sept. 15.
Please send replies to reporter Tim Carpenter at the following email: timothy.carpenter@cjonline.com.
Here are the essay questions: (No more than 300 words for each.)
Explain why you are the best candidate for the office you seek and highlight a position held by your opponent that you admire.
I admire and respect my opponent, Ronald Ellis for his position within the 47th District communities; he is widely respected both as a livestock breeder and a retired Oskaloosa high school teacher.
I’ve studied and reported on local, state and national issues for 30 years and never witnessed such a suffocating atmosphere of extreme cynicism against the poor, sick and elderly. Reactionary policies favoring the robber baron period of the early 20th century is dangerously stupid.
I am proud the statewide organization of Women for Kansas graded me “A” with 100% for my positions on the issues facing all Kansans.
I have been a lifelong political independent until March 2016. When filing as a candidate for this office I became a reluctant member of the Democratic Party. I am not beholden to any interest group and at odds with the current Brownback administration on virtually every item.
My opponent, a long-time leader of the Jefferson County Republican Party lays forth a blanket record of support for state-wide party leadership.
I strongly suspect based on his lack of any published policy statements, he is another shadow candidate for the retrograde Brownback agenda. Today he and many candidates declare themselves as “moderate” and “independent” without offering any debate for credible solutions.
Too many elected state-level officials seem to consider privileged communications and insider relationships as more important than a public record of considered positions.
Relying on empty allegiances to party membership for votes, rather than rigorous public issue-centered debate, is a horrible hallmark of contemporary governance.
My opponent, Ron Ellis, hasn’t published any positions that I can find other than being anti-abortion, which I consider inherently biased against women and obsessed with one public health care issue.
This questionnaire may change that, but will he debate?
Outline revenue and spending changes you support to eliminate the state's structural deficit. Be specific in setting out your tax and budget reforms.
Kansas paycheck taxpayers are unfairly now the muscle of the general revenue funding of the state. The abominable state sales tax on food must be abolished.
I am on record in both newspaper and new media describing as "borderline criminal behavior" what the majority of lawmakers have engaged in with their tax structure “reforms”.
I will advocate and coalesce with those who take a “hard and fast” rule to the 1% at the top who have been benefiting the most from the regressive tax “reform.”
An increased income tax on the top 1% to 13.5% will immediately right the ship of state and provide a launch pad to not only restore funding deficits, but enhance economic growth.
A January 2015 study by the Economic Policy Institute determined that the average 2012 income for the top 1% in Kansas was $1,093,986 alongside that of the 99% at $48,312.
The economic disparity between the disaffected in Kansas; being those paycheck taxpayers and the .01% becomes grotesque in that their threshold income average for 2012 was $7,985,550 while averaging $25,879,120.
It can be safely assumed that Gov. Brownback and other state functionaries approach a threshold income of $358,000 annually making them part of the 1% problem. I consider significant number of lawmakers in Topeka as tax avoiding looters after passing the regressive tax schedules of 2012-13.
We should immediately review the LLC tax cuts to ensure it doesn’t provide windfalls to large corporations.
How would you modify the Kansas Open Records Act and the Kansas Open Meetings Act to improve the public's access to work of government officials in Kansas?
Creation of an inspector general office empowered with a whistleblowers protection statute; including remuneration and severance allowances for any public employee granted such protections.
· Facilitate and make available public applications for records and meeting minutes at all government offices
· Implement a mandatory electronic document transfer option thereby drastically reducing the cost of reproduction of government documents.
· State government committee hearings held with audio live stream available free to all internet users
If you were writing a bill to enhance public safety across the state, what would be three features of that legislation?
· Mandatory KBI fingerprinting, licensed lethal force trainers, liability insurance of all CDW bearers, computer flag and require a CDW insignia on any state mandated identification
· mandatory background checks for ANY and ALL gun transactions
· prohibit CDW from all state funded educational and government facilities
Articulate your strategy for folding citizens without adequate access to health care into a system in Kansas that provides for their physical and mental well-being.
· Expand Medicaid to the federal mandate and initiate restoration of all previous programs for the disabled, elderly and low-income.
· Require all licensed Kansas physicians to take a mandatory percentage number of Medicaid and Medicare patients.
Chronicle what you believe ought to be the central elements of a new school-finance formula for public schools in Kansas.
· Adequate and equitable funding for rural school districts are not the current standards under the clumsy and slapped together policy of the majority in the legislature.
· I will oppose the underhanded motives of many in the legislature toward privatization; i.e. vouchers for charter and private schools, so-called “virtual” homeschooling schemes (operated by vulture corporate speculators) that defund and further undermine rural public schools.
· I will advocate the hard and fast tax policy of 13.5% income tax on the top 1% which will more than adequately fund our state funded public schools.
Here are the yes-or-no questions:
Do you support a state requirement that all Kansas law enforcement officers wear body cameras?
YES
Will you vote to modify or repeal the 2012 state tax law providing an income tax exemption to owners of businesses formed as an LLC?
YES, but more interested in personal income tax changes than the LLC small business owner tax exemptions. I strongly feel that the top 1% should receive a hard and fast punitive personal income tax rate of 13.5% till Gov. Sam Brownback’s term ends.
Are you a supporter of government requirements that children be vaccinated for preventable diseases?
YES
Have you ever voted for a candidate for public office who represents a political party other than your own?
YES
Do you believe the state should adopt an increase in the minimum wage?
YES
Do you favor ouster of more than one member of the Kansas Supreme Court subject to retention vote on the November ballot?
NO
In terms of biographical information, please provide an outline highlighting your personal employment, public service, volunteerism, education, family, age and a hobby.
I am 61 years old semi-retired having lived in Jefferson County for the last 16 years. I am the executive producer and part-time host of the podcast call in show Radio Free Kansas, 7 years and over 2000 daily shows from the New York based BlogTalkRadio network. I was a state licensed private detective from 1995-2005 my duties included; counter-industrial espionage, installation and training in surveillance techniques, process services for domestic abuse victims, close protection and security chief for four Kansas women clinics providing abortions. I was publisher and editor of three country weekly newspapers based in north central Kansas for three years and the Alternative Index, “the only weekly voice of dissent” in the state.
My companion in life for over 30 years has been fellow native Kansan, Ann Kristin Neuhaus, M.D., M.P.H., and we share our love with son Tristan, aged 19 years, who is attending Highland Community College.
Thank you for sharing your insights with voters in Shawnee County and your willingness to serve the state. It's a hard job.
Brownback is a 1%er too! |
Greetings from The Topeka Capital-Journal.
The Capital-Journal is requesting your assistance with our general election Voter Guide. The objective is to be a conduit of information to your prospective voters.
In advance of the November vote, The Capital-Journal is asking candidates to answer six essay questions and six yes-or-no questions. In addition, we're requesting basic biographical information. The same inquiries will be posed to all Senate and House candidates for the Kansas Legislature.
We recommend essay answers run from 100 words to 300 words. These responses will be published online as submitted, but may be edited for length in print.
The deadline for submitting answers is Sept. 15.
Please send replies to reporter Tim Carpenter at the following email: timothy.carpenter@cjonline.com.
Here are the essay questions: (No more than 300 words for each.)
*********************************
Explain why you are the best candidate for the office you seek and highlight a position held by your opponent that you admire.
I admire and respect my opponent, Ronald Ellis for his position within the 47th District communities; he is widely respected both as a livestock breeder and a retired Oskaloosa high school teacher.
I’ve studied and reported on local, state and national issues for 30 years and never witnessed such a suffocating atmosphere of extreme cynicism against the poor, sick and elderly. Reactionary policies favoring the robber baron period of the early 20th century is dangerously stupid.
I am proud the statewide organization of Women for Kansas graded me “A” with 100% for my positions on the issues facing all Kansans.
I have been a lifelong political independent until March 2016. When filing as a candidate for this office I became a reluctant member of the Democratic Party. I am not beholden to any interest group and at odds with the current Brownback administration on virtually every item.
My opponent, a long-time leader of the Jefferson County Republican Party lays forth a blanket record of support for state-wide party leadership.
I strongly suspect based on his lack of any published policy statements, he is another shadow candidate for the retrograde Brownback agenda. Today he and many candidates declare themselves as “moderate” and “independent” without offering any debate for credible solutions.
Too many elected state-level officials seem to consider privileged communications and insider relationships as more important than a public record of considered positions.
Relying on empty allegiances to party membership for votes, rather than rigorous public issue-centered debate, is a horrible hallmark of contemporary governance.
My opponent, Ron Ellis, hasn’t published any positions that I can find other than being anti-abortion, which I consider inherently biased against women and obsessed with one public health care issue.
This questionnaire may change that, but will he debate?
Click image to enlarge. |
Outline revenue and spending changes you support to eliminate the state's structural deficit. Be specific in setting out your tax and budget reforms.
Kansas paycheck taxpayers are unfairly now the muscle of the general revenue funding of the state. The abominable state sales tax on food must be abolished.
I am on record in both newspaper and new media describing as "borderline criminal behavior" what the majority of lawmakers have engaged in with their tax structure “reforms”.
I will advocate and coalesce with those who take a “hard and fast” rule to the 1% at the top who have been benefiting the most from the regressive tax “reform.”
An increased income tax on the top 1% to 13.5% will immediately right the ship of state and provide a launch pad to not only restore funding deficits, but enhance economic growth.
A January 2015 study by the Economic Policy Institute determined that the average 2012 income for the top 1% in Kansas was $1,093,986 alongside that of the 99% at $48,312.
The economic disparity between the disaffected in Kansas; being those paycheck taxpayers and the .01% becomes grotesque in that their threshold income average for 2012 was $7,985,550 while averaging $25,879,120.
It can be safely assumed that Gov. Brownback and other state functionaries approach a threshold income of $358,000 annually making them part of the 1% problem. I consider significant number of lawmakers in Topeka as tax avoiding looters after passing the regressive tax schedules of 2012-13.
We should immediately review the LLC tax cuts to ensure it doesn’t provide windfalls to large corporations.
How would you modify the Kansas Open Records Act and the Kansas Open Meetings Act to improve the public's access to work of government officials in Kansas?
Click image to enlarge. |
Creation of an inspector general office empowered with a whistleblowers protection statute; including remuneration and severance allowances for any public employee granted such protections.
· Facilitate and make available public applications for records and meeting minutes at all government offices
· Implement a mandatory electronic document transfer option thereby drastically reducing the cost of reproduction of government documents.
· State government committee hearings held with audio live stream available free to all internet users
If you were writing a bill to enhance public safety across the state, what would be three features of that legislation?
· Mandatory KBI fingerprinting, licensed lethal force trainers, liability insurance of all CDW bearers, computer flag and require a CDW insignia on any state mandated identification
· mandatory background checks for ANY and ALL gun transactions
· prohibit CDW from all state funded educational and government facilities
Articulate your strategy for folding citizens without adequate access to health care into a system in Kansas that provides for their physical and mental well-being.
· Expand Medicaid to the federal mandate and initiate restoration of all previous programs for the disabled, elderly and low-income.
· Require all licensed Kansas physicians to take a mandatory percentage number of Medicaid and Medicare patients.
Chronicle what you believe ought to be the central elements of a new school-finance formula for public schools in Kansas.
· Adequate and equitable funding for rural school districts are not the current standards under the clumsy and slapped together policy of the majority in the legislature.
· I will oppose the underhanded motives of many in the legislature toward privatization; i.e. vouchers for charter and private schools, so-called “virtual” homeschooling schemes (operated by vulture corporate speculators) that defund and further undermine rural public schools.
· I will advocate the hard and fast tax policy of 13.5% income tax on the top 1% which will more than adequately fund our state funded public schools.
Here are the yes-or-no questions:
Do you support a state requirement that all Kansas law enforcement officers wear body cameras?
YES
Will you vote to modify or repeal the 2012 state tax law providing an income tax exemption to owners of businesses formed as an LLC?
The 1%ers return Kansas to the "Gilded Age." |
YES, but more interested in personal income tax changes than the LLC small business owner tax exemptions. I strongly feel that the top 1% should receive a hard and fast punitive personal income tax rate of 13.5% till Gov. Sam Brownback’s term ends.
Are you a supporter of government requirements that children be vaccinated for preventable diseases?
YES
Have you ever voted for a candidate for public office who represents a political party other than your own?
YES
Do you believe the state should adopt an increase in the minimum wage?
YES
Do you favor ouster of more than one member of the Kansas Supreme Court subject to retention vote on the November ballot?
NO
In terms of biographical information, please provide an outline highlighting your personal employment, public service, volunteerism, education, family, age and a hobby.
I am 61 years old semi-retired having lived in Jefferson County for the last 16 years. I am the executive producer and part-time host of the podcast call in show Radio Free Kansas, 7 years and over 2000 daily shows from the New York based BlogTalkRadio network. I was a state licensed private detective from 1995-2005 my duties included; counter-industrial espionage, installation and training in surveillance techniques, process services for domestic abuse victims, close protection and security chief for four Kansas women clinics providing abortions. I was publisher and editor of three country weekly newspapers based in north central Kansas for three years and the Alternative Index, “the only weekly voice of dissent” in the state.
My companion in life for over 30 years has been fellow native Kansan, Ann Kristin Neuhaus, M.D., M.P.H., and we share our love with son Tristan, aged 19 years, who is attending Highland Community College.
Thank you for sharing your insights with voters in Shawnee County and your willingness to serve the state. It's a hard job.
Monday, September 5, 2016
Sunday, September 4, 2016
WILL THE SEPT. 3rd EARTHQUAKE AWAKEN "RED STATERS" TO THE FOLLY OF INDUSTRY SELF-REGULATION?
I was writing early Saturday morning at my printer's pulpit on the first floor of our ramshackle farmhouse when it started to creak and slightly wobble. The pulpit weighs when loaded with paper, supplies and an old typewriter at least a couple hundred pounds. At first I thought one of our dogs was banging against it, then the hanging plant above the window started swinging. It was the second earthquake felt in the 18 years since living here. The first one happened just before dawn years ago while I was upstairs in my office. Then the room swayed north and south, but this time on ground level the hanging plant swung east and west.
The pulpit creaked for about 15 seconds, but the hanging plant kept swinging for nearly a minute.
Muse the cat jumped off the clothes dryer across the room and my big dog Remus woke up and came over and leaned his full weight against my legs. He looked up at me with terror in his chocolate eyes.
My first thought was, "those damn wildcat oilmen down South. They're going to get away with it, again."
There were few news reports immediately created for television, after all, the beginning of the Labor Day holiday had just started. Who would be working in the newsrooms on a Saturday morning? I wondered how long it would take to find the reports?
I next wondered what was happening at Wolf Creek, a place I spent over a year building with thousands of others so long ago. The antiquated 30+ year old Wolf Creek Nuclear electric generation plant located in Coffey County, Ks. is just 140 miles from Pawnee, OK where the epicenter was located. I found out later the plant had been shutdown the day before due to a leak in the cooling system. It remains closed at the time of this post. How far from the comfort zone was the 5.6 earthquake that struck the next day at 7:02 Saturday morning? Reports of feeling the quake came in from North Dakota to Houston, Texas a distance of 1255 miles.
During it's construction the huge reinforced concrete pad the reactor rested on had created a sensation among us. It had a long crack in it running up and down and visibly deep after the mud had cured. It was a massive pour that took days and nights to do, and even longer to patch after the federal nuclear regulators examined it.
The tremors from the quake, with it's epicenter pictured above, according to Tyler Durden at Zero Hedge who produced the earliest and most informed report laid it squarely on the desks of the poorly regulated petroleum industry engaged in widespread fracking and deep disposal wells in the Oklahoma and Kansas areas.
Here's a few of the tweets Durden captured from the United States Geological Survey (USGS) center:
Not that any of the millions of typically conservative climate change deniers in Oklahoma, Kansas or the Red State Belt or for that matter, even the states' lawmakers and governors would ever study it, . They routinely make derisive jokes about climate change and the Environmental Protective Agency, and are quick to equate regulation to "big government" over-reach. I have heard none supporting rigorous regular on-site field inspections by government overseers.
It's not like the problem hasn't been studied for a number of years and both states' governors have initiated blue ribbon studies which as far as I can determine had some pretty lame results.
The press coverage of the disposal of the toxic sludge from fracking is as clear as the dangerous stuff it purports to report on.
As an example go to the local Oklahoma newspaper site the Guthrie News Leader from Logan County and a report by Mark Schlachtenhaufen, Wednesday, January 20, 2016. He wrote:
So the Kansas Corporation Commission limited disposal in two counties, but what of the other counties where fracking continues across southern and western Kansas and Oklahoma? In their order the KCC call it "saltwater" but the content of the toxic sludge like the frackers are under protection of patent laws and don't have to release the exact ingredients. Consider these fantastic numbers listed below for the two counties in that KCC order.
Saturday, the afternoon of the quake, Mary Fallin, governor of Oklahoma, declared several dozen disposal wells closed within 500 miles of the epicenter, but that doesn't mean Kansas petroleum lobbyists, politicians and industry wonks will change their positions. Large numbers of Kansans blame Oklahoma for this, but this calamity like the industry running loose in collusion with many state lawmakers, considers state borders a nuisance.
The industry can and do haul by tankers the fracking fluids to be disposed and can cross state borders with little if any notice of the governments.
We'll see if Gov. Brownback and the Kansas authorities will do anything of substance or wait till after the holiday.
I'll finish with posting this from the on-going protests just north of us a few hundred miles. Happening the same day as the quake it connects us, whether we like it or not.
The pulpit creaked for about 15 seconds, but the hanging plant kept swinging for nearly a minute.
Click image to enlarge. |
Facebook meme from Kansas City |
Muse the cat jumped off the clothes dryer across the room and my big dog Remus woke up and came over and leaned his full weight against my legs. He looked up at me with terror in his chocolate eyes.
My first thought was, "those damn wildcat oilmen down South. They're going to get away with it, again."
There were few news reports immediately created for television, after all, the beginning of the Labor Day holiday had just started. Who would be working in the newsrooms on a Saturday morning? I wondered how long it would take to find the reports?
I next wondered what was happening at Wolf Creek, a place I spent over a year building with thousands of others so long ago. The antiquated 30+ year old Wolf Creek Nuclear electric generation plant located in Coffey County, Ks. is just 140 miles from Pawnee, OK where the epicenter was located. I found out later the plant had been shutdown the day before due to a leak in the cooling system. It remains closed at the time of this post. How far from the comfort zone was the 5.6 earthquake that struck the next day at 7:02 Saturday morning? Reports of feeling the quake came in from North Dakota to Houston, Texas a distance of 1255 miles.
During it's construction the huge reinforced concrete pad the reactor rested on had created a sensation among us. It had a long crack in it running up and down and visibly deep after the mud had cured. It was a massive pour that took days and nights to do, and even longer to patch after the federal nuclear regulators examined it.
The tremors from the quake, with it's epicenter pictured above, according to Tyler Durden at Zero Hedge who produced the earliest and most informed report laid it squarely on the desks of the poorly regulated petroleum industry engaged in widespread fracking and deep disposal wells in the Oklahoma and Kansas areas.
Here's a few of the tweets Durden captured from the United States Geological Survey (USGS) center:
According to the USGS the quake was particularly powerful due to its shallow nature:
The depth of the quake's focus was 6.6 Km or 4.1 miles, which is fairly shallow. #okquake— USGS in Oklahoma (@USGS_Oklahoma) September 3, 2016
Earthquakes w/shallow focus depths convey more energy to the land surface. For comparison, the recent quakes in Italy started @ 10 Km depth.— USGS in Oklahoma (@USGS_Oklahoma) September 3, 2016
The USGS has said on its twitter account that it hopes the M5.6 quake is not a foreshock of a similar or larger quake.
It will take some work to learn how to use the filters and locate the wells but this interactive map provided by the University of Kansas is very handy in understanding just how pervasive this industry is in the state.
The Prague earthquake of 2011 was preceded by a strong 4.5 M quake. Hopefully this 5.6 was not a foreshock of a similar or larger quake.— USGS in Oklahoma (@USGS_Oklahoma) September 3, 2016
Owing to Oklahoma’s dramatic rise in earthquakes and a now-undisputed link between the seismic events and oil-and-gas disposal wells, the issue has gained political prominence that it didn’t have in 2011.
Pawnee, OK @boberrylll twitter |
Not that any of the millions of typically conservative climate change deniers in Oklahoma, Kansas or the Red State Belt or for that matter, even the states' lawmakers and governors would ever study it, . They routinely make derisive jokes about climate change and the Environmental Protective Agency, and are quick to equate regulation to "big government" over-reach. I have heard none supporting rigorous regular on-site field inspections by government overseers.
KSN.com Stillwater, OK. courtesy @ntifft Nathan Tifft twitter. |
It's not like the problem hasn't been studied for a number of years and both states' governors have initiated blue ribbon studies which as far as I can determine had some pretty lame results.
The press coverage of the disposal of the toxic sludge from fracking is as clear as the dangerous stuff it purports to report on.
As an example go to the local Oklahoma newspaper site the Guthrie News Leader from Logan County and a report by Mark Schlachtenhaufen, Wednesday, January 20, 2016. He wrote:
When fluids are pumped into a rock formation under pressure, the added pressure may lower the frictional resistance between rocks along an existing fault system, allowing the rocks to slide.
Through July 1, 2015, southern Kansas has experienced a slight reduction in seismicity attributed to state restrictions in disposal rates and volumes and the effects of lower oil prices.
On March 19, 2015, the Kansas Corporation Commission ordered a reduction of disposal volumes in portions of Harper and Sumner counties. The order targeted five areas of seismic concern by applying the Kansas Induced Seismicity Task Force's seismic action score recorded to seismicity in the areas from January 2014-February 2015. The score is part of the Seismic Action Plan initiated by Kansas Gov. Sam Brownback, the Kansas Geological Survey, the Kansas Corporation Commission and the Kansas Department of Health and Environment.
The order called for a gradual increased limit on disposal volume for a total reduction of up to 60 percent on specified wells during a 100-day period. It directed Kansas Corporation Commission staff to work with the Kansas Geological Survey to review the data, with recommendations to the commission for further action if necessary.
A complete copy of the order (Docket N. 15-CONS-770-CMSC) can be found at kcc.ks.gov. The Kansas Geological Survey's working hypothesis for induced seismicity is exceeded limited storage and transmissivity in the Arbuckle saline aquifer leads to far-field pressurization and leakage into the basement where faults can be critically stressed. The agency suspects the northward migration of earthquakes in south central Kansas and north central Oklahoma indicates regional fluid or pressure movement along basement faults.
So the Kansas Corporation Commission limited disposal in two counties, but what of the other counties where fracking continues across southern and western Kansas and Oklahoma? In their order the KCC call it "saltwater" but the content of the toxic sludge like the frackers are under protection of patent laws and don't have to release the exact ingredients. Consider these fantastic numbers listed below for the two counties in that KCC order.
The increased number of recorded earthquakes in Kansas coincides with an increase in the number of injection wells and the amounts of injected saltwater in Harper and Sumner Counties. In Harper County, the number of injection wells increased from 44 in 2010 to 71 in 2013, with 18 new permit applications received in 2014. The number of barrels of saltwater injected in Harper County increased from 9,671,655 in 2010 to 51,827,349 in 2013.
The number of injection wells in Sumner County increased from 53 in 2010 to 79 in 2013, with 17 new permit applications received in 2014. The number of barrels injected in Sumner County increased from 9,763,265 in 2010 to 10,722,360 in 2013.
Saturday, the afternoon of the quake, Mary Fallin, governor of Oklahoma, declared several dozen disposal wells closed within 500 miles of the epicenter, but that doesn't mean Kansas petroleum lobbyists, politicians and industry wonks will change their positions. Large numbers of Kansans blame Oklahoma for this, but this calamity like the industry running loose in collusion with many state lawmakers, considers state borders a nuisance.
The industry can and do haul by tankers the fracking fluids to be disposed and can cross state borders with little if any notice of the governments.
We'll see if Gov. Brownback and the Kansas authorities will do anything of substance or wait till after the holiday.
I'll finish with posting this from the on-going protests just north of us a few hundred miles. Happening the same day as the quake it connects us, whether we like it or not.
Friday, September 2, 2016
Ann Mah's "Neighborhood News" Sept. 1, 2016
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Monday, August 29, 2016
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Sunday, August 28, 2016
Kansas Center for Economic Growth, Aug. 25, 2016
Posted: 25 Aug 2016 09:33 AM PDT
Let’s briefly review the extraordinary budget actions of FY 2016, actions allowed by state law during times when the budget is in crisis:
Spending in the FY 2016 budget was constrained from the start, repeatedly cut during the fiscal year, and lowered further by delaying the fourth quarter KPERS payment, but in the end, expenses were still $506 million above recurring revenue, and that’s recurring revenue which included a big sales tax increase. To bridge the structural gap, $277 million was transferred from the highway fund and $99 million from a series of other funds, and the small beginning bank balance was depleted. (The highway fund is also being used to directly pay expenses for things like school transportation.) Without all of those transfers the general fund would have been deeply in the red, but even with them, the general fund did not balance. To finish, the state pushed FY 2016 school finance bills into FY 2017 and then paid them with borrowed money in order to keep FY 2016 in the black on paper. The $506 million structural gap, the lack of any cash reserves, the extraordinary use of one-time transfers, the delay of bill payments, and no plan in place to fix any of it caused Standard and Poor’s to again downgrade Kansas’ credit rating—our financial report card. Unaffordable income tax cuts produced all this! Next up for trouble: FY 2017. —This post originally appeared on the Kansas Center for Economic Growth website. |
Posted: 25 Aug 2016 09:21 AM PDT
It’s a ditch of serious financial trouble. Kansas simply does not have enough revenue to pay bills. For more than 3 years running, expenses have outpaced tax revenue by hundreds of millions a year. How has Kansas survived financially? By blowing through every dollar held in reserve, borrowing, and moving money from kids’ programs and the highway fund. The state only escaped the last fiscal year by leaving approximately $175 million in bills unpaid, promising to make payment sometime in the future. Kansas cannot do that anymore. All those use-up-the-savings, pay-later maneuvers made the state poorer and poorer, garnered yet another credit downgrade, and took us into the ditch. We are left with a stark directional choice: impose more spending cuts, or raise revenue. Deciding how to respond constitutes the most critical job lawmakers will have when they arrive at the 2017 legislative session in January. Many current lawmakers acknowledge the financial ditch, but say it’s a spending problem. “Clearly we’re here because we haven’t cut expenses enough,” Senate President Wagle said in June. Certainly there have been cuts—to road projects, universities, hospitals, classrooms—just not “enough.” Yet supporters of the cut-more direction often speak abstractly, rarely specifying what “more” means. In July Gov. Brownback signaled his willingness to make even deeper budget cuts, but would not name them, saying he wants the Legislature to lead the way. In theory at least, cuts could go a lot deeper. Cut school funding in half! Withdraw all state support from universities! Put fewer highway patrol officers on the road! Dramatic, service-ending cuts can resolve the financial imbalance, and may be what some lawmakers have intended all along. Easy reductions were implemented long ago. Even a $3 million “efficiency study” commissioned by the Legislature yielded little to alter the current dynamic. The other route open to Kansas adds revenue back. The 2012 income tax cuts—lowered rates and “business income” exemption—caused a huge swath of receipts to disappear. Income tax collections dropped $700 million the first year and cumulatively the revenue loss now exceeds $2 billion. Lawmakers did raise sales and cigarette tax rates in 2015 to compensate, but the new revenue only dented the amount needed to make up the income tax revenue loss. So far, lawmakers have not been willing to revisit the income tax cuts that caused the state’s financial problems in the first place. The business income exemption has elicited the most criticism. It’s unfair. People who receive paychecks, pay taxes. People who receive self-employment income, rental income, LLC income, or farm income, don’t pay. No other state sets up its tax system in such manner, so rescinding the exemption seems an obvious first step to financial health for Kansas, although that alone will not fix everything. Which way? That’s the question at the heart of this year’s election cycle. A choice between deeper cuts to services or raising revenue has become unavoidable. Primary election voters expressed dissatisfaction with the current state of affairs by voting out many incumbent legislators. General election voters may well choose to fire some more. Election outcomes cannot remove the unpleasant choice ahead, but what happens in November will determine the path that Kansas takes. —This post originally appeared in a variety of Kansas newspapers. |
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