Tag Archives: state

Kenna’s ‘Summit On The Summit’ Continues Fight For Clean Water

‘If we don’t take care of it across the world, we’ll certainly be facing the issue here at home,’ he says of lack of clean drinking water. By James Montgomery Kenna at the State Department Photo: U.S. State Department The stated goal of Kenna’s “Summit on the Summit: Kilimanjaro” was to raise awareness about the global clean-water crisis — more than 1 billion people do not have access to clean drinking water and water-related diseases claim the lives of nearly 4 million people each year — because, as he put it, “What’s more noticeable than climbing a mountain?” In January, along with a team of 300 that included fellow musicians Lupe Fiasco and Santigold, actors Jessica Biel, Emile Hirsch (not to mention scientists, United Nations ambassadors, a film crew and experienced guides), Kenna began his climb up Mount Kilimanjaro , battling freezing rain, gashing rocks and dizzying atmospheric conditions on his way to the peak, some 19,000 feet above sea level . Their trek was documented in “Summit” — which premiered Sunday on MTV — and followed by fans online and, accordingly, awareness was raised. But now that he’s back down from the mountain, Kenna says the real struggle has just begun. Because with no mountain left to climb, Kenna and company are tasked with keeping that awareness alive and, in the process, trying to keep the U.S. government from slashing funding for support of clean-water initiatives. It was actually a battle he began fighting before the ascent up Kilimanjaro even began. “In November, I went to the State Department and Congress, spent time with [Congresswoman] Nita Lowey. I went there to ask them if I was to climb a mountain to raise awareness, would it help raise awareness in Washington to get appropriations?” Kenna told MTV News. “The response was, ‘Well, good luck, because it would certainly be helpful.’ ” So he climbed. And then he went back to Washington, along with a team that included United Nations Foundation ambassador Elizabeth Gore, with the express purpose of securing appropriations for fighting water-borne diseases. “We went down and did a photo exhibition at the State Department to show just how serious this issue is. We sat down with Congressman [Earl] Blumenaur in [House Speaker] Nancy Pelosi’s conference room,” Kenna said. “He was one of the first to write [Senator] Paul Simon’s ‘Water for the World.’ We went there to ask hard questions, like, ‘Are we spending too much money on things that are interconnected with the water issue?’ Because water is the issue. “We spend billions of dollars on the prevention of HIV and AIDS, but only hundreds of millions on [preventing] water-borne diseases on other things? And the two issues are related,” he continued. “A woman or a child will walk six miles to get some water, outside of any kind of secure area, and what if one of those women and children gets raped and gets HIV? They will then be taking antiviral medications with compromised water. Or, more commonly, if a child is chasing water, he or she never went to school, never learned about HIV. That same kid will have to take antivirals with compromised water. Basically, how are the anitvirals going to benefit somebody when they’re going to die from water with water-borne diseases?” And while the goal was to secure necessary appropriations, Kenna and his team also prevented the government from cutting the level of funding from $300 million down to $200 million. For now, they’ll take that small victory, but the goal — according to Gore — is much, much higher. “We lose a child every 15 seconds to lack of water, so when we went to Washington, we asked Congress for $500 million in appropriations, because we believe we can end this crisis,” she said. “That took guts and teamwork to do and I could never have done it on my own — none of us could, which is why we went together, because if we could climb a mountain, we could certainly do anything.” Kenna said that the end results of his team’s visit to Washington will be seen on March 22 — World Water Day. He hopes that the State Department will consider what he and the team had to say and that appropriations will be secured. He’s optimistic, but at the same time cautions, “I’ll leave it to them to communicate.” And in the meantime, the fight to secure clean water continues. Both Kenna and Gore are championing a text-to-donate system — just texting the world “send” to 90999 will give $10 to the U.N. Foundation, which translates into 1,000 liters of water, enough to benefit a child for an entire year. And he hopes that long after the memories of his trip up Kilimanjaro fade, people will still remember the message behind that climb. Because at the end of the day, the clean-water crisis affects all of us, even if we don’t realize it just yet. “We as a human race tend to be short-sighted. We pay attention to things right in front of us and, frankly, we miss the plot. We mean well, but we miss the plot. For me, it’s less of an interesting thing to text and donate, than it is for people to educate themselves about the issue,” Kenna said. “It already affects a billion people. And if you turn on the news, you hear about states like California and Virginia not having enough water already. So it’s coming here. And if we don’t take care of it across the world, we’ll certainly be facing the issue here at home.” Find out what you can do to help solve the global water crisis now at the “Summit on the Summit” Web site. Related Videos Check Out A Preview Of ‘Summit On The Summit: Kilimanjaro’ Related Photos ‘Summit On The Summit: Kilimanjaro’ Red Carpet

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Kenna’s ‘Summit On The Summit’ Continues Fight For Clean Water

Arts hold promise as jobs engine in California economy

California lost thousands of manufacturing jobs when the economy soured in the early 1990s. The recession has drained away thousands of construction jobs. What the state could use is a new source of well-paying jobs — and it might have found it in the arts. The Joint Legislative Committee on the Arts held a hearing last week in Culver City to find ways to help the arts heal the ailing economy. It was standing room only last week at the Museum of Design, Art and Architecture as State Senator Curren Price gaveled the hearing to order. The L.A. Democrat chairs the Joint Committee on the Arts. “As manufacturing continues to leave the state, our creative sector continues to grow and holds the greatest promise, I think, for our future jobs engine,” said Price. In Price's mind, that creative sector sprawls from TV show sets in Tinseltown to start-ups in the Silicon Valley. It's the Hollywood blockbuster and the nonprofit children's arts group. In Los Angeles and Orange counties, the creative sector is responsible for nearly a million jobs. That's the finding of a study by L.A.'s Otis College of Art and Design. “Unlike cheap manual labor, creative jobs that involve individual artistic creation, innovative design thinking and other high level problem-solving cannot be outsourced easily,” said Samuel Hoi, president of Otis College. Hoi says policymakers should try to keep manufacturing jobs in California. But he says it's also important to prepare young people for jobs in the creative sector — jobs that will stay here. “We need to support more K-12 arts and design education,” he said to thunderous applause from the public, “as well as students' pathways to work and college.” The committee heard from film and TV industry representatives about the success of a recent tax incentive to keep film productions from running out of state. A recording industry rep talked about the threat of piracy. And leaders of hard-hit local arts nonprofits and theatre groups lined up to speak. Elizabeth Doran is the managing director of the Actor's Gang in Culver City. She says arts groups should be exempt from the state sales tax when they buy needed materials. “We are spending our budgets and we are paying sales tax on that and I could instead take that money and build a classroom that I could use to teach the students who are not learning in our schools, K-12, in my new arts center that I'm building,” Doran said. State lawmakers are considering a bill that would send 20 percent of the revenue from sales taxes on art supplies to a fund for arts organizations. The bill could be a jobs boon for California's economy, supporters say. added by: emarston

NBA Star Al Jefferson Busted for DWI

Filed under: TMZ Sports Al Jefferson of the Minnesota Timberwolves was arrested this morning on a charge of fourth degree driving while impaired.Jefferson was arrested at 1:08 AM by the State Patrol and booked into Hennepin County Jail shorty around an hour later. He was … Permalink

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NBA Star Al Jefferson Busted for DWI

Britney Spears — The Blonde Is Back

Filed under: Britney Spears Britney Spears emerged from a salon in West Hollywood yesterday … re-blonded and better than ever. Some people look better when they hit the bottle. More Britney Spears Britney Spears’ Ex — Enemy of the State Britney’s Lawyers: Stay Out of … Permalink

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Britney Spears — The Blonde Is Back

Paterson Quits Campaign, Will Remain Governor: ‘I Am Being Realistic About Politics’ [Breaking]

David Paterson press conference time! Watch it here. He is going to stop campaigning, but keep being governor. Update: It went by so quickly! Some quotes from the governor are attached. Paterson is talking about all the wonderful things he has done as a legislator and accidental governor. “We have eradicated the Rockefeller drug laws,” he says, which is not quite true. But he did do more about this than any of his predecessors! Finally, the announcement: “Today I am announcing that I am ending my campaign for Governor of the State of New York .” Because he can’t run for office and manage the state’s finances at the same time, not because of any of that other stuff. AND: “I have never abused my office. Not now, not ever.” AND: “Let me make this clear: there are 308 days left in my term and I will serve every one of them” The governor took a few questions, but not many. He looks forward to a full investigation of the thing about abusing his office, with the state police and the phone calls. Disappointingly non-crazy!

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Paterson Quits Campaign, Will Remain Governor: ‘I Am Being Realistic About Politics’ [Breaking]

Third Time’s The Charm: Latest NYT Patterson Bombshell Really Explodes [Bombshells]

Well! New York Times exposes on Gov. David Paterson are like Godfather movies: They come in threes. But unlike Copolla, The New York Times saved the best for last. Hypocrisy? violence against women? Abuse of power? It’s all here. Damn. Where to begin? How about with the brutal Halloween beating David W. Johnson , Paterson’s 6-foot-7 driver and closest confidant , allegedly gave an ex-girlfriend last year. From the Times article : According to the woman’s account, Mr. Johnson confronted her in their bedroom, choked her, tore her Halloween costume off, pushed her into the dresser and then continued to choke her with one hand. In her account, she screamed for Mr. Johnson to stop and then screamed for the help of a friend who was visiting. The woman said Mr. Johnson first took one telephone from her to prevent her from calling the police, and then chased her into another room when she went to find a second phone. Mr. Johnson then turned to the woman’s friend and told her to leave, “if you know what’s good for you,” according to the woman’s account. After this altercation, the woman says she was pressured by the State Police into not pressing charges. The State Police confirm contacting her. Oh, and not just any State Police: A member of the special detail which protects the governor—and David W. Johnson. The head of the state police told the Times “We never pressured her… we just gave her options.” Still, according to the Times the woman pressed forward with her charges against her high-profile ex. Until this February, when she got a call from Paterson himself. (Paterson claims the woman initiated the call.) She didn’t show up for her next hearing, and the case was dropped. What to make of this episode? The Times will not tell you, since they are a serious newspaper and print “just the facts.” But the article leaves exactly the right blanks to fill in with a clear case of Paterson using the State Police as his own private Statsi to make a violent problem go away for his sketchy best friend. For example, the Times notes the fact that the timing of Paterson’s call puts it right as the paper was preparing their earlier, less incriminating profile of Johnson and his past trouble with women and drugs. Hmmm… And the article repeatedly mentions that the State Police—Paterson’s police—visited the woman despite the assault being under NYPD’s jurisdiction. Hmmmmm…. Oh, and after the Times visited the woman’s house, Paterson got upset about it during a meeting with the editorial board. Uh huh… Whether it was intentional or not, we have to admire the way the three Times Paterson scoops build on each other to create the perfect Portrait of the Governor as a Real Asshole: In the first installment , we learn of Paterson’s girlfriend-beating trouble magnet aide, David W. Johnson. Maybe Paterson doesn’t have the best character judgment, we think with a shrug. The second article reveals that Paterson pays for his vacations with campaign cash and gives his friend’s ex-girlfriend a job. OK, so he has a little thing with using the power of his office to make things happen for himself and his buddies—paying for vacations with campaign cash and giving his friend’s ex-girlfriend a job in his administration. Small things, but still… Uh oh… Then: Boom. Three articles full of interesting facts. Three is also the number of sides of a triangle. Let’s triangulate.

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Third Time’s The Charm: Latest NYT Patterson Bombshell Really Explodes [Bombshells]

Let’s Not Forget About David Paterson’s Other Sketchy Aide

The New York Times ‘ David Paterson story centered on his drug-dealing, allegedly abusive staffer David Johnson . But Paterson also employs Clemmie Harris , an adviser who collects $30,000 a year on disability and doesn’t appear to live in New York. Adrian has heard that the Times is working on another story that’s going to be the actual bombshell . But today’s story, which is eliciting yawns from Albany’s chattering class, was focused on Johnson’s troubled past and aired concerns that he has accumulated an inordinate amount of power in Albany: [M]ore than four current or former officials expressed concern that Mr. Johnson and another aide, a former state trooper, had become the governor’s innermost circle and were simply not best equipped to help him tackle the multiple challenges facing him. That “former state trooper” is Harris—whose full, and awesome, first name is Clementine—whom people familiar with Paterson’s office describe as Johnson’s equal in terms of power over policy and control over access to Paterson (that’s Harris in the middle above). And like Johnson, Harris had a nontraditional rise to power—he spent 14 years as a New York state trooper before attending the University of Albany as an adult, and was Paterson’s roommate in the early 1990s. Harris and Johnson’s special relationship with Paterson—they both frequently spend nights at the governor’s mansion—has inspired suspicion and jealousy among the rest of his staff. According to an Albany Times-Union story in September , Harris left the state police force in 1997 due to an “undisclosed medical issue,” and still receives annual disability payments totaling $29,500. Given the fact that he works full-time for the state of New York, and is well enough to rack up travel bills totaling $29,000 in 2008 and 2009, it’s unclear what his disability is. The Times-Union also reported that Harris doesn’t seem to live in New York, despite a state law requiring that powerful officials live in the state. As of September, Harris was registered to vote in Pennsylvania, where he is pursuing a PhD at the University of Pennsylvania, and didn’t have a car registered in New York. And Harris had listed a Philadelphia address on his University of Albany alumni profile as recently as August of 2009. All of which may have explained the $15,500 in hotel bills—mostly at a Westchester hotel—that Harris paid with a state credit card in 2008 and 2009. When he’s in Albany, he frequently stays at the governor’s mansion. Sure, it’s not drug-dealing and wife-beating, but we hope the attention focused on Johnson doesn’t overshadow the guy who appears to be running disability scams and living in hotels on the state dime because he refuses to rent or buy a place of his own.

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Let’s Not Forget About David Paterson’s Other Sketchy Aide

NPR: Will legalizing Pot solve California’s budget woes?

Listen to the story at link – 4:14 By at least one estimate, California's largest cash crop is not milk, cheese, or oranges, it's marijuana. Some advocates say legalizing pot — and taxing it — could be a way out of the state's financial woes, and they recently secured enough signatures for a ballot initiative to do just that. But how much revenue a legal pot industry generates would depend on how prices are set. Transcript: Heres NPRs David Kestenbaum with our Planet Money team. DAVID KESTENBAUM: Right now, the price of marijuana varies a lot. The government actually studies these things. Researchers go into holding cells or if people have been arrested and asked questions like what do you pay for marijuana? According to a report published in 2004, pot in some parts of the country can cost two or three times as much as in another. Ms. ROSALIE LICCARDO PACULA (Acting Director, RAND Health; Co-Director, RAND Drug Policy Research Center): If youre close to the Canadian border and can get, you know, Canadian bud thats higher quality than ditch weed from Mexico. KESTENBAUM: Rosalie Liccardo Pacula is co-director of RANDs Drug Policy Research Center. She says some of the differences in price are just differences in quality. Ms. PACULA: Its just like wine. Theres really, really good wine and theres mediocre wine. KESTENBAUM: According to that report, hydroponically grown weed in New York can go for $1,000 an ounce. The marijuana market is a real challenge for economists to understand. Its not a black market anymore, and its not quite an open market either. Ms. PACULA: Yeah, we call it a gray market. (Soundbite of laughter) KESTENBAUM: Over a dozen states now allow marijuana for medical purposes. But federal laws still ban it. And strange things can happen when a commodity crosses that border from illegal to legal. For instance, when states began passing medical marijuana laws, Pacula assumed the price for pot would drop because now if youre growing the stuff, you didnt have to worry so much about being busted, you wouldnt need lawyers, guns, cars with secret compartments for smuggling. But this question has been studied and it looks like the opposite happened. The price of marijuana actually went up. Pacula thinks the big reason is that when pot became legal for medical purposes, more people started using it. Increased demand, more people wanting something, tends to push prices up. Kevin Johnson is the general manager of a medical marijuana dispensary in San Francisco called, Grassroots. The place is decorated like a turn-of-the-century saloon. And it does seem like more people are using marijuana these days to treat all kinds of things like insomnia. Mr. KEVIN JOHNSON (General Manager, Grassroots): Insomnia, I recommend something heavier. Any of the purple varietals tend to work very well for that, something like Purple Urkle or Granddaddy Purple or a Purple Kush. Those tend to be much dopier and sleepier. KESTENBAUM: Now, in a normal economic market, when demand goes up, suppliers -in this case pot growers – would just grow more Purple Kush, and prices would come back down. But Johnson says the marijuana market is still quirky. Before running the marijuana club, he used to run a bar, which he says was completely different. Mr. JOHNSON: When you, you know, make an order for your suppliers, for you booze, you know, its going to be delivered on time and you can get whatever Budweiser or Jameson that you need for that week. Whereas in this industry, youd never know when people are going to harvest, sometimes theyll just disappear. You dont know if they just gave up growing or they went on vacation. KESTENBAUM: If marijuana were completely legal, big corporations might start growing pot super efficiently. And people think the price could come down by at least half. After all, pot is just a plant not that different from growing tomatoes. And price is important because the cheaper pot is, the more people will use it. And whenever you think about more people smoking pot, that could mean more potential revenue from the tax. California has estimated that the tax could bring in $1.4 billion in revenue a year, though some economists think that number is high. A few weeks ago, supporters have legalization and taxation in California turned in enough signatures to put the question on the state ballot in November. http://media.2news.tv/images/0802027_marijuana.jpg added by: samantha420

Moonlightin’ with NBC’s Thursday Night Comedies

Paying off romantic pairings too early is an easy way to sack a sitcom.

The Crunkest Holocaust Remembrance Ever

A student group at Middle Tennessee State University try to put a funky fresh spin on genocide. View