Building Boone County’s Technological Workforce


J Scott Christianson is a Democratic candidate for the office of Boone County Presiding Commissioner. He was the former vice-chair and then chair of the Boone County Democratic Central Committee. Since 2008, Scott has been part of the Boone County Citizen’s Task Force for Postsecondary Adult and Technical Education and Training, which just received a grant of $47,935 from the Central Workforce Investment Board to conduct a Workforce Development Study in Boone County.

BCDP: Why is this study important  for economic development efforts in Boone County ?

J. Scott Christianson: Economic development requires a well-trained, highly skilled workforce and the capacity for “just-in-time” training. In Boone County we have an excellent higher education system that produce world-class professionals. We also have local unions that do a great job training those individuals entering skilled trades.  There are a large number of skilled technical jobs, however, currently in life sciences and in health care professions for which we currently do not have sufficient training capacity. This study will help us determine what particular gaps exist in Boone County regarding technical training, and how we can fill those gaps without duplicating existing programs. If we can’t train people to do these new, high paying next-generation jobs, we will not be able to attract and retain companies that might otherwise plan to move into Boone County and offer these types of opportunities.

BCDP: What is the next step after this study?

J.S.C: Actually, the next step starts today with the formation of the “Tech 100 Committee,” a committee of 100 community leaders who will use the information gathered from this study to advance a coordinated vision for technical training in Boone County. As a group, they will help find funding sources to make the training a reality. The Workforce Development Study will specify the gaps in local technical education, and the Tech 100 group—with the support of the community—will address those gaps.

BCDP: How will this impact the job of the next Presiding Commissioner?

J.S.C.: It is important to realize that we are no longer just competing with other counties or cities in Missouri for jobs. Boone County is now competing with regions all around the United States and the rest of the world. When the next Presiding Commissioner courts potential employers who require highly skilled lab technicians in order to locate in Boone County, we must be able to show these companies we have the capacity to provide them with the skilled technicians they need.

You can find out more about the Workforce Development Study and Scott’s campaign on his website: www.Scott4Presiding.com.

 

Ed Robb: Still Wrong for Boone County

Ed Robb – who was beat by Chris Kelly in November 2008 after spending more money than has ever been spent on a State House Race – has filed as the lone Republican for Boone County Presiding Commissioner.

Simply put,  it would be disastrous to the prosperity of our county to allow Ed Robb a seat at the County Commission.   This is, after all, a man who voted to keep his taxpayer funded healthcare while taking healthcare away from 24,000 Missouri children.   And the same Ed Robb who sent a campaign mailer from his official office a month out of election day.   The same Ed Robb who voted to eliminate Gay/Straight Alliances in Missouri’s high schools.

And the same one who proposed funding our schools with an income tax he supports scrapping, and would’ve cost Columbia Public Schools $30 million.

Ed Robb, rather than jumping in for this race,  waited to clear the primary field in a series of back room conversations before putting his name in the hat.  It seems like Ed Robb’s definition of leadership is to do the right thing,  as long as it won’t hurt.

Ed Robb – Wrong for the 24th District, Wrong for Boone County.

 

St. Patrick’s Day Party!

Today, March 17th, come to the home of Boone County Commissioner Karen Miller to join us in celebrating St. Patrick’s day!

There will be food, refreshments and friends starting at 5:30 PM.

Karen’s home is at 300 W. Broadway, Columbia, MO 65201.

We are hosting this party to raise funds to keep our permanent, year round Headquarters in downtown Columbia humming along straight through the fall campaign season.

Every dollar raised now is one less dollar we have to worry about looking for to pay for our rent, internet, phone, postage or paper. It means that we can truly focus on fulfilling our mission: to protect Democratic incumbents and support Democratic challengers to electoral victory.

Hope to see you there!

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Earlier this month, Virginia Governor Bob McDonnell (R) signed an executive order on February 5th , 2010, removing language prohibiting discrimination by sexual orientation from Virginia law.  Coming immediately after President Obama’s declaration that he will repeal Don’t Ask Don’t Tell, Gov. McDonnell’s  order is an affront to the honor of every citizen who chooses to serve.

McDonnell chose to repeal the provision claiming that it overstepped the bounds of his office to grant protections the VA General Assembly had not yet granted.  This act of cowardice is nothing more than a naked political move to appease his Evangelical Christian base.   Its ironic that a 21 year veteran of the United States Army would shy away from the opportunity to exercise leadership, and move his administration,  his state, and his party to the right side of history.

Enacting protections for people fearing discrimination on the grounds of sexual orientation does not create any ‘new rights’ or overstep the limits of his authority.  Instead, it is a basic recognition of our equality before the law.  That’s why Virginia’s previous governors, Democrats Tim Kaine and Mark Warner, explicitly included that language to signal that Virginia has come a long way from the days of out- and-out de facto and de jure discrimination.

Where McDonnell’s action is particularly insidious is that it removes protections against discrimination that have been in place for years.  That is a declaration that LGBTQ citizens are second-class and not worthy of the respect and commitment that a government should display toward its citizens.

Rep. Stephen Webber Speaks on The Floor of the Missouri House

In Missouri, fortunately, we have leaders who will stand up and do the right thing.  One of those is Stephen Webber, (D-23 Columbia), himself an Iraq War veteran, and his bill, HB 1850. Despite having 52 Co-Sponsors,  including another Columbia Rep., Mary Still, the bill has not been scheduled for a hearing yet.  The Republican majority is blocking this every step of the way.

It is because I believe that every citizen has the right to be fairly represented and protected by their government that I ask you to call or write your state Representative or Senator in support of State Representative Stephen Webber’s (D-MO 23) bill in the Missouri house prohibiting discrimination based upon a person’s sexual orientation.  The bill is HB 1850 and with your help,  we can advance this most important cause and lead our state to a better tomorrow.

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The Stimulus: 1 Year Later

President Obama commemorates 1yr anniversary of signing the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act with Vice President Biden and Blake Jones, a businessman.

One year ago today,  President Obama signed into law the $787 billion dollar American Recovery and Reinvestment Act.  The bill was designed to do 3 things.

  1. Give Tax Cuts to 95% of working Americans and Small Businesses to encourage growth
  2. Fully fund aid programs like unemployment insurance, food stamps, and Medicaid for the less fortunate.  Most of this money was given directly to the states to administer as they saw best.
  3. Last, The American Recovery and Reinvestment Act began a medium term transformation of American Industry toward the 21st century, by including strong and competitive measures to fund the development of Cleaner Energy, Transportation and Infrastructure jobs.  This includes measures to make all of our country’s systems – from our electrical  grids to how we store medical records to our school’s emphasis on student achievement in math and science – smarter.

Without a doubt, the highly controversial bill has done an incredible job of preventing a second Great Depression.   The Stimulus has created or saved over 2 million jobs across the country – from public jobs like teachers, police, and firefighters; to private jobs like engineers and construction contractors – and over the next year is expected to save or create an additional 1.5 million jobs.

Not only has the effect from the Stimulus been immediate and substantial, but no other government program of any size has been done faster or with more transparency.  Every dime of spent or awarded in the Stimulus can be tracked on Recovery.gov

Using the figures available there,  Missouri’s 9th District has received over $341 million dollars so far and in the last quarter of 2009 added 313 jobs.

But, as we all remember, not everyone thought that the stimulus would work. The GOP,  the party of Gridlock,  Obstruction,  and Paralysis, fought hard for a bill laden down with tax cuts that aren’t as effective in creating jobs.   Not only did they demand more of the same policies that helped cause this, but not a single Republican voted for the Stimulus.

That hasn’t stopped hypocrites like Blaine Luetkemeyer from taking the credit for how well it’s worked.  From a Think Progress’ report:

Congressman Blaine Luetkemeyer (R-MO) Hailed Education Benefits Of Recovery Package As “What The Economy Needs.” According to KTVO-TV, “Luetkemeyer said the project is considered ‘shovel ready’ and that’s what the economy needs. President Darrell Krueger and Luetkemeyer discussed the educational benefits of the economic recovery package.” [KTVO-TV, 2/17/09]

-Congressman Luetkemeyer Voted Against The Recovery Package Twice [Roll Call Vote #46; Roll Call Vote #70]

You can tell Congressman Luetkemeyer how you feel about him being for the Stimulus, after he was against it right here.

He’s one of 110 GOP Congressmen who voted no on the Stimulus but have taken credit for it in their districts.

The larger issue is this – The American Recovery and Reinvestment Act has been and continues to be a great success story.  It’s staved off economic depression, created and saved millions of jobs,  and begun to make the nation more competitive for the next decade of growth.  We’ve gone from  contracting at 6% GDP to growing at 6% GDP.  And the party of “No” has decried it every step of the way.

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Update on Payday Loan Reform

Mary Still works on Regulating Pay Day Lenders (photo credit: Anne Shifley)

State Rep. Mary Still, D-Columbia, has filed a new payday reform bill (HB 2116) with 71 sponsors. I previously covered a hearing sponsored by Representative Still here in Columbia on the issue, noting that there are some benefits to the existence of unsecured loan providers, though abuses remain common.

It seems that Representative Still’s bill provides some of the architecture necessary to provide legal protections for consumers. Key parts:

  • Lenders may not charge interest in excess of the simple rate of 36% nor may they charge any fees greater than $25 per loan
  • Caps the number of unsecured loans lenders may make to people to 1; lenders are also prohibited from making loans to customers who have paid off an unsecured loan in the last two weeks
  • Changes the term structure of unsecured loans from a minimum period of 2 weeks and a maximum period of a month (RsMo 408.505) to allowing borrowers a minimum of 90 days to repay the loan. Lenders are obligated to amortize payments for a 90 day schedule.

The arguments against regulating payday lenders are fairly simple and worth addressing: people are sufficiently rational in obtaining emergency financing and that regulation of the payday loan business inevitably crushes the industry. However, these arguments neglect an important nuance: poor people and minorities are typically politically weak, meaning that they have great difficulty accessing legal remedies that are available to otherwise average consumers. Under that premise, even rational consumers can be victimized by unscrupulous lenders. The problems poor people are likely to face (lack of education, access to transportation, health problems, etc) are also often likely to exacerbate financial distress particularly when people are locked in on a revolving cycle of high-interest loans.

More importantly, claims about tinkering with the free market and the knee-jerk conservative arguments against regulation do not address a more fundamental issue of market failure: most banking institutions do not offer banking services in areas where there are high numbers of poor people and minorities. This means that under-regulated payday loan providers currently fill a gap that should be filled by traditional banking providers, who are more efficient because of the greater range of services they provide.

Hence I urge your support on this issue and ask that you contact your state representative or senator to show your support on this issue.

There are some deeper issues here and hopefully Representative Still’s efforts to regulate the payday loan industry will provide a focal point for continued reform of our financial system. Some specifics include the failure of ordinary banking institutions to provide financial services for poor people and minorities, the tendency of large banks like Bank of America to gouge consumers with overdraft fees, and how we ought to empower groups that are politically weak.

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MARDI GRAS 2010 Celebration

Please join Tim and Linda Harlan as they cook up another great party for Missouri’s next United States Senator Robin Carnahan!

Saturday, February 6th

5 pm to 8 pm

Patriot Hall 1509 Ashley Road Columbia MO 65201

Menu Featuring – 2x award winning “Gumbo Ya Ya” and Creole Bread Pudding

Live Music from the band “Swamp Weed”

Tickets are $250 – $100 – $40

For more information: www.robincarnahan.com/harlan

 

Help for Haiti is Still Needed

The sheer scope of human suffering in Haiti is staggering and still in an acute need of your help.

Find out how you can help below:

Help for Haiti: Learn What You Can Do

 

The 2010 Legislative Session is Here!

Last week, the Missouri General Assembly reconvened for their annual legislative session, and several big issues are on the docket.

State Rep. Chris Kelly, D-Columbia, is charging forward with his Columbia Daily Tribune endorsed, bipartisan bond issue.  The $700 million bond will allocate money for higher education capital projects and other public works.  The Tribune’s editor, Hank Waters, says the bond is “The only idea that makes sense to stimulate the economy and move forward.”  Hopefully both parties will work quickly to pass this bill.

Another bipartisan bill sponsored by Rep. Jason Kander, D-Kansas City, and Tim Flook, R-Liberty, will deal with ethics reform.  Recently there have been a number of pay-to-play scandals and ethical questions surrounding the issue of members politically consulting other members while the General Assembly is in session.  There is also a movement to again set donation limits on political contributions.  Hopefully this legislation will set clear guidelines for political consulting and also curb the exorbitant amount of money spent on elections.  Read more about the bill in this Columbia Daily Tribune article.

DWI laws will also be tightened this session as Governor Jay Nixon has proposed “requiring repeat DWI offenders, drivers with a blood-alcohol level of 0.15 or more, and drivers who refuse to submit to a blood-alcohol test, to be charged in a state court; cracking down on first-time offenders with a BAC of 0.15 or more; and expanding ignition interlock system use,” as reported by stjoenews.net.

Stay tuned to this website for more updates throughout the legislative session as we will be posting more frequently in the coming months!

 

Vice President Biden Back in MO

<p>VP Joe Biden</p>

VP Joe Biden

Vice President Joe Biden will be back in Missouri Thursday and Friday for the first time this year.  The Vice President visited both Columbia and Jefferson City during the 2008 campaign.

Biden will land at Whitman Air Force Base and have lunch with troops there before traveling to Jefferson City to discuss the stimulus package and what it means for companies like the ABB Transformer Factory.

Gov. Jay Nixon and Commerce Secretary Gary Locke will also be  joining Biden for the event in Jefferson City.  Those holding tea bags will be asked to leave them at the door.

Biden will conclude his visit to Missouri on Friday by visiting the University of Missouri-St. Louis to discuss college affordability. We are proud to have several of our local Democrats meet and participate in this educational forum and the other events closer to our area.

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