NCGA: Common Core, coal ash commissions (and their price tags) | Eastern North Carolina Now

I’ve never been a big fan of study commissions organized by politicians. They are almost always easy ways out for politicians looking to avoid having to take a tough stand on a controversial issue.

ENCNow
    Publisher's note: Brant Clifton keeps in perspective the NC General Assembly in his "bare knuckles" Conservative online publication known as The Daily Haymaker.centers.

    I've never been a big fan of study commissions organized by politicians. They are almost always easy ways out for politicians looking to avoid having to take a tough stand on a controversial issue. They are great opportunities to appoint cronies, and allow them to make a little money off of the state or federal governments. But they rarely provide any substantial benefits to the taxpayers.

    The convoluted bureaucratic maze that is North Carolina's public education management system is getting even more expensive. The state Senate recently approved legislation setting aside $100,000 from the state board of education's budget for legal fees to fight a lawsuit pitting the state vs. the state board of education. (One arm of the state suing another branch? Nice.)

    The Senate legislation also mandates that June Atkinson's Department of Public Instruction will fork over $275,000 to the Department of Administration to help cover the costs of the commission established by the legislature to study Common Core. The bill also forbids ANY of this money to be used for conducting a survey about Common Core or hiring someone to do the survey. What WILL this money be covering?:

    [...] From these funds, an amount equal to the total of all costs incurred by the Department of Administration prior to the enactment of this act to support the operations of the Commission shall be credited to the Department. Expenditure of the remainder of these funds shall be made upon authorization by the Commission, only for the following: (1) Administrative assistance, including professional and clerical staff and any contracts for professional, clerical, and consultant services. Consultant services may include contracts with qualified experts on academic standards that may be used as an alternative to the Common Core Standards, including other state academic standards. (2) Technical assistance, including meeting rooms, telephones, office space, equipment, and supplies provided by the Department of Administration in accordance with Section 2(f) of S.L. 2014-78. (3) Per diem, subsistence, and travel allowances provided to Commission members in accordance with G.S. 138-5, 138-6, or 120-3.1, as appropriate..

    Legislation approved on Jones Street in 2014 established a Coal Combustion Residuals Management Fund. This is a special fund managed by the state treasurer that will be made up of $2.35 million worth of fees paid by Duke Progress for coal ash clean up. This year's Senate legislation says the special coal ash commission - itself the subject of a legal spat between the governor and legislature - -will get 26.5 percent of that money, while the rest will go to the Department of Environment and Natural Resources.

    The Senate legislations calls for the creation of up to 25 new positions within DENR - budgeted $1.75 million - to handle coal ash cleanup. Five new positions will be created within the Department of Public Safety to deal with the coal ash issue - at a price tag of $630,000.

    It's amazing. We elect governors and legislators to go to Raleigh and make tough decisions. We pay for all of these agencies to execute those tough decisions. And we STILL get these commissions that cost more money and ADD to the government payroll.

    And to think that they're going to make us pay MORE for gasoline because they have NO MONEY to pay for roads.
Go Back


Leave a Guest Comment

Your Name or Alias
Your Email Address ( your email address will not be published)
Enter Your Comment ( no code or urls allowed, text only please )




The Beginning Of The End For The Map Act? Related to State, The Daily Haymaker Guest Editorial, Editorials, Op-Ed & Politics Charlotte aims for rock bottom.


HbAD0

Latest Op-Ed & Politics

Vice President Kamala Harris’ husband, Doug Emhoff, admitted that he cheated on his first wife with the couple’s babysitter after a report was published on Saturday that said the marriage ended after he got the babysitter pregnant.
A black Georgia activist became the center of attention at a rally for former president Donald Trump on Saturday when she riled the crowd in support of Trump and how his policies benefit black Americans.
Former President has been indicted by a federal judge in Pennsylvania for inciting an assassination attempt that nearly killed him.
A federal judge ruled on Monday that Google has a monopoly over general search engine services, siding with the Justice Department and more than two dozen states that sued the tech company, alleging antitrust violations.
3 debates and Twitter interview
If we vote the way we have always voted we will get the kind of government we have always gotten
Check it out and see if you think this is an exhibit of Open Government

HbAD1

Acting U.S. Secret Service Director Ronald Rowe told reporters on Friday that his agency was fully responsible for the assassination attempt on former President Donald Trump last month and that the agency “should have had eyes” on the roof where 20-year-old Thomas Matthew Crooks.
Smartmatic was at center of voting machine controversy in US 2020 election
If we vote the way we have always voted we will get the kind of government we have always gotten
Shooter was identified on the roof with a weapon with enough time to stop him...but, officers were not prepared to access the roof

HbAD2

 
Back to Top