Wednesday, December 12, 2007

Immigration Study concludes with Jan. 17 meeting



The League concludes its study of immigration policy and issues with a Jan. 17 consensus meeting. The meeting is at 7 p.m. in the Berea City Hall Conference room. Although the meeting is open to the public, only LWV members may participate in the responses to the national League's consensus questions. For a preview of the questions and background articles on the issues, see the LWVUS Web site.


Background Basics.

Thursday, October 25, 2007

LWV presents immigration film Nov. 13


Join the LWV as we continue to explore the issue of immigration with Dinner and a Movie night!

We'll watch and discuss "Morristown," a documentary which chronicles the impacts of immigration and globalization on a Tennessee town and its immigrant population. A light Mexican meal, drinks and popcorn will be provided free of charge, though donations will be accepted.

Tuesday, November 13, 2007
7 PM
Woods-Pennimen Commons Room
Berea College
(see below for directions)

Parents: take your kids along for a supervised movie for elementary age kids in an adjoining room!
Contact Harriet "Jenny" Bromley at 623-5007 for more information, or visit the LWV website at http://lwvbmc.iclub.org.

This event is co-sponsored by LWV and the Berea College Political Communications class, through a Berea College CELTS Service Learning grant.


Directions: The Woods-Penn building is parallel to Chestnut St. in Berea, near the Boone Tavern corner of College Square, just west from the Alumni building. From I-75 take exit 76 toward Berea. Proceed straight into town, through campus on Chestnut St. Park in the parking lot behind the Boone Tavern. Walk across the street so you that you are diagonal from the Boone Tavern and go toward the Alumni building. The Woods-Pennimen building is just west of the Alumni building and a large fountain. The Commons is on the main/street level of the Woods-Pennimen building. Look for signs!

Thursday, October 11, 2007

Candidate Forum Replay Schedule

Candidates for District Judge in the 25th Judicial District, which covers Clark and Madison Counties, are:
Earl Ray Neal, and David G. Perdue.

Voters in Clark and Madison Counties have an opportunity to exercise their right to select a new district judge.  The two candidates in this election were the top vote-getters in the May primary election.  LWV reminds voters that this year's election day is on Tuesday, November 6th.  Candidate forums give a unique opportunity to hear from the candidates first hand.

TELEVISION SCHEDULE

Here are replay schedules for Ch. 5 - Time Warner - Richmond and Winchester:
• Mon. 6-7 pm Oct. 22,29, Nov.5
• Wed. 9-10 pm - Oct. 17, 24, 31
• Fri. 5-6 pm - Oct. 19, 26, Nov.2

Richmond and Berea ch.12 will also replay each Thursday from 7-8 pm.

Tuesday, August 21, 2007

Local LWV to study immigration issues


Following the lead of LWVUS, LWV of Berea and Madison County will study immigration issues and policy, emphasizing its impact on Berea, Richmond and Madison County.

LWV president Elizabeth Crowe and members Jeanne Nakazawa, Mary Bell, and Jenny Bromley developed an agenda for at least two local meetings to study the issues and the questions posed by LWV.

The second meeting is 7 p.m. Oct. 23 in the Trustees Room at the Seabury Center at Berea College. The topic is "U.S. Immigration: Exploring Myth, Fact and Values."

The national board adopted a three-year study beginning in 2006 and ending in 2008 structured along these content areas:

1) Underlying values and principles regarding immigration

2) Reasons for migration from other countries, including but not limited  to:
       Effects of global interdependence  on migration
       Motivation of refugees and  asylees
       Motivation of other immigrants

3) Current federal immigration policy, including but not limited to:
       Overview
       Effectiveness in uniting  families
       Effectiveness in meeting needs of  businesses
       Effectiveness of enforcement
       Human rights concerns

4) Impact of immigration, including but not limited to:
       Economic effects of authorized and  unauthorized immigration
       Diversity
       Inclusion of immigrants in American  society

LWVUS Immigration Study Committee members have researched background papers to help Leagues educate members and communities about immigration issues. The papers cover issues such as business and economic effects and impact, diversity, global interdependence, federal policy, and motivation of refugees, asylees and other immis, and will be posted on this web site during January and February.

You can read these papers online at the LWVUS's Web site at Background Papers and link to downloadable PDF versions.

Link to
LWVUS Immigration Study
.

LWV brings voter registration to Fall Festivals

LWV of Berea and Madison County will sponsor informational and voter registration booths and two festivals in Madison County this September. The November election will decide who will be governor of Kentucky for the next four years and locally will include the judicial election between Dave Perdue and Earl Ray Neal for 25th District Judge.

LWV Voter Registration and Informational Booths
Sept. 7-8 Pottery Festival, Irvine McDowell Park, Richmond
Sept. 14, 15, 16 — Spoonbread Festival, Berea.

The last day to register to vote in the upcoming Nov. 6 election is Oct. 8.

For more information, contact lwvbmc@yahoo.com.

Thursday, June 21, 2007

Net metering victory in Berea!

After many months of strategy meetings, emails and face-to-face time with local government, LWV Elizabeth Crowe reports that the Berea City Council unanimously supported net metering at its June 19 meeting, without further limiting the customer base, without discrimination to net metering customers, and without a deadline or requirement for renewal.

We all learned a lot about air pollution, health and the effects of global warming in the process, and that means a lot. The show of support from the community will also make it more difficult for any future local government officials to dismantle or weaken the agreement.

Steve Boyce and Robert Ukeiley deserve special recognition for doing the heavy lifting on this: by poring over city documents, compiling technical and policy data, and by taking the time to speak one-on-one with so many of the city council members. We appreciate the time and energy you devoted to this important issue!

It's important to thank and even send a note to city council members and to Berea Utilities Director Donald Blackburn, thanking them for the time they took to get more informed on the importance of net metering. We are hopeful that the city and utility will continue to be open to additional positive steps toward clean energy.

For more information about net metering, see our
Web site:

Tuesday, May 08, 2007

Candidate forum for District Judge

All seven candidates for district judge participated in the May 7 forum, including Thomas J. Smith III, Jud Patterson, and Elizabeth Elkins Bond.

A District Judge Primary candidate forum was held Monday, May 7 at Richmond City Hall featuring the seven candidates for district judge. Kentucky has a new judicial district for Clark and Madison County, in order to address an increasing case load. Voters will vote for one of the seven candidates during the May 22 primary election. The top two vote-getters will run again in the November 2007 election for the position.

If you missed the live forum, watch the replays on Richmond Cable Channel 12 at 2 p.m. and at 8 p.m.on these dates:
Friday May 11, Saturday May 12, Sunday May 13
Friday May 18, Saturday May 19, Sunday May 20

The forum will be replayed on these dates on Berea Cable Channel 12 at 5 p.m.
Wednesday May 9, Friday May 11, Monday May 14
Wednesday May 16, Monday May 21

The forum was organized by the LWV of Berea and Madison County and co-sponsored with EKU's Center for Kentucky History and Politics. Guest panelists for this forum were Professor William Fortune, of the UK College of Law and a member of the Judicial Campaign Conduct Committee, and Professor Lynnette Noblitt, director of EKU's paralegal studies program. 

Candidates participating in the forum were  Thomas J. Smith III, Jud Patterson, Elizabeth E. Bond, John F. Lackey, Wes Browne, David G. Perdue and Earl Ray Neal.


Professors William Fortune of UK School of Law and Lynette Noblitt of EKU's paralegal studies program presented the seven candidates with questions about being a district judge. Candidates Wes Browne, David Perdue and Earl Ray Neal are in the background.

Monday, May 07, 2007

Leaving town before May 22 election?

Voters who will be out of town on election day can go to the Madison County Courthouse and use the voting machine set up in the county clerk's offce. The machine is now available from 8 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. every day and on Thursdays from 8 until 6:30.

Bring a photo identification with you when you go to vote. If you have a question, call the Madison County Clerk's office at 624-4703.

Besides the Republican and Democratic primary elections, voters will also cast their ballot for one of the seven candidates for the 25th District Judge position for Clark and Madison counties.

For more information about voting in Madison County, visit League of Women Voters of Berea and Madison County.

Tuesday, May 01, 2007

Precinct Poll Workers Needed

Madison County needs precinct workers for the May 22 primary election. Call County Clerk's office if you are interested: 624-4703 and sign up at the County Clerk's office. To serve as a precinct election officer, you must be a qualified voter, have not changed your party affiliation one year prior to the appointment, and not be a candidate or the spouse, parent, brother, sister, or child of a candidate who is to be voted for in this election. Voters who will be 18 on or before November 6, 2007 are eligible to serve in the upcoming primary election.

There is a required training session to be a poll worker. Those are scheduled for Wednesday, May 16 at three different times: 1 p.m., 3:30 p.m. and 6 p.m. at the County Extension Center on Duncannon Lane. If you can't make one of those sessions, there may be a makeup on Monday night at the court house.

Each precinct in the state is required to have four precinct officers serving on the day of the election. Each election officer is paid a minimum of sixty dollars per election, as well as additional payment for mileage and mandatory training.

Wednesday, March 28, 2007

Your Right to Know



Assistant Attorney General Amye Bensenhaver shared her expertise on Kentucky's open meetings and open records laws at the Sunshine Meeting in Richmond March 26


Sixteen years ago Amye Bensenhaver was the first and only full-time attorney hired by the Attorney General's office to review and issue opinions regarding Kentucky's open meetings and open records law. It now takes three attorneys to review appeals about the state's open meetings and open records laws. The number of appeals has risen from about 50 in the 1980s to about 300 per year today.

Still the spirit behind the "sunshine" laws remains the same — public records belong to the public, not the recordkeepers and public business should be discussed before the public, not behind closed doors.

Assistant Attorney General Bensenhaver joined three other panelists March 26 at EKU's Business Technology Center for an information packed presentation on "What you need need to know about your right to know."

The meeting, sponsored by the League of Women Voters of Berea and Madison County and the student chapter of Society of Professional Journalists, was well attended by citizens and EKU students from the journalism and business areas.

One of the newest changes to the state's open records law has generated quite a bit of litigation, Bensenhaver pointed out.

In response to 9/ll issues, the state legislature added a new homeland security exemption to the list of records deemed unavailable to the public. The statute was amended to exempt "public records the disclosure of which would have a reasonable likelihood of threatening the public safety by exposing a vulnerability in preventing, protecting against, mitigating, or responding to a terrorist act."

Bensenhaver noted that the amendment was very narrowly written and requires a three-part test before it can be invoked.

One of the first challenges to the new exemption was filed by the Associated Press relating to Vice President Dick Cheney's fundraising visit to southern Indiana in 2005. After the fact, the AP was trying to determine the cost of the trip and had requested fuel receipts signed by members of the governor's executive staff to pay for the trip and the escort by Kentucky State Police from the Louisville airport.

Governor Fletcher's office and the KSP denied the request on the basis of the new homeland security exemption.

The AP’s lawsuit claimed the denial was improper and the records should be disclosed. Franklin County Circuit Court Judge Roger Crittenden ruled that homeland security exemptions to the state Open Records Act do not apply to the records from Cheney's visit and ruled that the administration had shown no such likelihood for a terrorist act.

Bensenhaver's fellow panelists welcomed that decision, but stressed that saying no is a common response to those who request records.

Bill Estep, veteran investigative reporter for the Lexington Herald-Leader, noted that one part of the law boldly states the openness position: the basic policy of KRS 61.870 to 61.884 is that free and open examination of public records is in the public interest and the exceptions ... shall be strictly construed, even though such examination may cause inconvenience or embarrassment to public officials or others.

Nevertheless Estep read from March 2007 articles in the Corbin (KY) Time Tribune where a reporter had not been able to get a 24-hour jail log from the Knox County Correctional Facility. See Corbin Times Tribune article.


"It's not Guantanamo Bay," Estep pointed out. "We can't know who is in the Knox County jail?"

John Nelson, managing editor of the Danville Advocate-Messenger and former president of the Kentucky Press Association, said the battle is constant to educate new officials about the law.

Nelson oversaw an information audit in 2005 that tested access to common public records in all 120 counties. The results printed as a 12-page newspaper edition are available at Yours for the Asking.

Nelson reminds citizens that it is not just the media who need access to records. On behalf of the KPA, he has opposed proposed bills that would expunge or delete records of Class D felonies, for example. Once a crime becomes a public record, it should remain one, he says.

Nelson and KPA also fought unsuccessfully to overturn the precedent of closed juvenile court proceedings and records on the grounds that the public has an interest in how the state handles its juvenile crime.

Estep, who often writes as many as 25 open records requests for a story at one time, also recounted his difficulties in obtaining maps about the lowering of Lake Cumberland. "I asked Corps of Engineers for maps that will show if Wolfe Creek Dam breaks, where will it be flooded," he said. "I knew they had them because they had a series of public meetings where they took the maps and taped them to the wall."

Yet, the Corps initially denied Estep's request using the homeland security exemption saying that the release of the previously public maps might aid a terrorist act.




Richmond Register editor Jim Todd discussed a point about accessing records with Leigh Jones, a LWV member from Berea.Read Ronica Shannon's story about the March 26 meeting.


BE PERSISTENT

Persistence in pursuit of public records is important, the panelists insisted.

Richmond Register editor Jim Todd is currently trying to obtain records from Eastern Kentucky University concerning circumstances surrounding the resignation of an employee over six months ago. The university won't release records using the exemption that the investigation into the employee's behavior is still ongoing, he complained.

Todd uses more of a "stick" approach when he writes open records requests, especially for what he feels are obviously open documents such as the payroll records for city policeman.

He reminds the custodians of the records of parts of the statutes that require a reply no later than three days and the $25 per day fine for improperly denying public records.

DUTY UNDER THE LAW

The 2005 legislature increased the visibility of Kentucky's open government statutes by passing a bill proposed by state Rep. Derrick Graham. A former local official, Graham followed through on his commendable idea to promote awareness among county and city officials, school superintendents and boards, presidents of public universities and their boards of regents so that they would be more responsive to their duties under the state's open meetings and open records laws.

These individuals are now required to make sure all their employees and appointed committees are educated about their fundamental duties under the statues as well as records management.

"If records are improperly destroyed they are not accessible, and you have defeated the purpose of openness and transparency," Bensenhaver said.

The Attorney General's office has provided educational materials on its Web site. Your Duty Under the Law spells out the open meetings and open records laws to new officials and those appointed to serve in the public sector.

Any person who knowingly attends a meeting of any public agency not held in accordance with the open meetings law can be punished by a fine of up to $100.


LAWMAKERS EXEMPT THEMSELVES

Ironically, the lawmakers who crafted Kentucky's open meetings and open records laws and have done a reasonably commendable job of keeping them strong are not subject to its provisions.

"One of the other interesting developments is the General Assembly exempting itself from the open records and open meetings law." Bensenhaver noted.

"I don't understand the rationale of the General Assembly taking itself out of the reach of the open records law. They have their own mechanism for adjudicating disputes that arise, but it's kind of an interesting twist of fate that they make the laws but don't' have to adhere to them."

To find out more about how to use public records and open meeting laws in Kentucky, see our list of links and advice about Open Transparent Government. You'll see links to the statutes, the exemptions and samples of how to write open records requests.

This is the third year LWVUS has joined with other groups to promote national recognition of the importance of transparency and freedom of information in government.

For more information LWV Project Sunshine

Tuesday, February 27, 2007

Local LWV members lobby for felons' right to vote


Photo ID left to right) Joan Peoples, Gail Waldeck, Joy Frasier, Carla Gilbert, Wes Wright (team leader from Ky. Fair Tax Coalition), Elise Andre.

LWV of Kentucky joined a coalition of groups to lobby for automatic restoration of voting rights for ex-felons Feb. 27, 2007, in Frankfort. They met with a number of legislators including Sen. Ed Worley, D-Richmond. For a full report, see our March 2007 Newsletter .

On Nov 2, 2006, state LWV held a news conference with NAACP in Frankfort to urge changes in the current method by which felons can regain the right to vote. State LWV President Teena Halbig said LWV is lobbying for a constitutional amendment to restore the voting rights of felons who have completed their sentence. The report is available at the LWKY Web site.

The LWV of Berea and Madison County held a public forum on the issue in Berea in February, reported in our March 2006 Voter. Members agreed to support a stronger state LWV position.

For information about LWV Lobby Day, contact Joan Peoples, LWVKY treasurer and a member of LWV of Berea and Madison County.

Monday, February 19, 2007

Tips on Saving Energy presented at Feb. 19 LWV meeting






Photo far left) LWV president Elizabeth Crowe showed a map that illustrates states in red whose residents have the highest death rates from air pollution blamed on power plant pollution. Kentucky and West Virginia have among the highest.

Next photo) Local physician Dr. George Schloemer presented pictures of the energy efficient measures that went into his medical building at 305 Estill Ave. in Berea. They included using "solar light tubes" to bring light into inside rooms and a solar hot water heater.

An attentive audience in Berea learned simple tips on how to lower their energy bills, breathe easier and save the world at the same time at the Feb. 19 meeting of the League of Women Voters of Berea and Madison County. In fact we all can, by taking simple steps toward energy efficiency, four panelists said.

The meeting included some tips from Richmond CPA Danny Parker for taxpayers seeking to take advantage of energy efficiency tax credits. "This is a way to encourage homeowners and businesses to use more energy-efficient items such as skylights, solar water heaters and storm doors," Parker said.

When making these changes to the home, all receipts for materials should be kept in order to verify them during tax refund preparation, he said. "These are things that are not only good for the environment, but they also are good for your pocketbook."

National and State LWV has for years promoted clean air policies. In recent years, LWV has joined numerous other organizations, scientific groups and agencies in promoting solutions to our country’s energy use and pollution problems.

These include supporting greater energy efficiency and use of clean renewable energy. In November 2006 LWVUS and 21 other national organizations signed a Citizens Climate Policy statement of principles which, in part, calls on us all to promote clean and efficient sources of energy.

For more information, see Richmond Register reporter Ronica Shannon's story in the Feb. 13 newspaper. Help the planet, save some money

Wednesday, January 31, 2007

LWV resolutions on energy to local government

Our suggestions for energy efficiency stem from the national LWV position on Clean Air and Concern for Global Warming.

We provided these suggestions to the Madison County Fiscal Court, the Berea City Council, Richmond City Commission, and local school boards and planning commissions at their January 2007 meetings.

  • setting an annual goal to lower electricity usage, then work to meet that goal. City departments, county agencies or school districts could promote efficiency in all of its buildings and offices, replacing traditional light bulbs with compact, fluorescent bulbs, using power switches for “energy vampires” like computers, televisions, and other office equipment which typically use a lot of electricity when on ‘standby’, and replacing aging appliances with more efficient Energy Star appliances. Choosing energy efficient appliances

  • urging Berea and Richmond to join more than 200 cities across the nation, including Lexington and Louisville, in promoting efficiency by signing on to the US Mayors Climate Protection Agreement.

  • all agencies were urged to spread the word about federal tax credits for energy efficiency, among local residents, government agencies and businesses.

  • expanding household and commercial recycling service – as recycling is another form of efficiency.

  • promoting fuel efficiency and conservation by keeping city automobiles and trucks well-tuned, choosing fuel efficient vehicles when older vehicles need to be replaced.

  • promoting non-motorized transportation options throughout the city such as biking and walking by developing safe sidewalks, greenways and bikeways.