BartBlog

August 4, 2010

Afghanistan, Pakistan, Israel & Iraq: America’s favorite money pits

Filed under: Uncategorized — Tags: , , — Jane Stillwater @ 2:16 pm

Yesterday my two-year-old granddaughter Mena and I were completely at logger-heads. She’d already stubbornly refused to make nice at the library, a restaurant and an olive-tasting party — and now she was refusing to take a bath. Ah, two-year-olds. I’m too old for this!

“But Jane,” someone advised me, “she’s obviously rebelling against you because she is bored. She’s tired of doing little-kid things and now she wants to do big-kid things.” I’ll just bet that she does. And what kind of big-kid things does she have in mind? Declare wars, get drunk, pollute the air and/or lobby to corrupt our politicians?

“What that kid needs is to go to a pre-school.” Hey, you might be right. So I trudged off to look at pre-schools for Mena.

There’s a neighborhood pre-school right down the block from me, the Martin Luther King Child Development Center, that is run by our school district and serves as an inexpensive daycare provider for working parents who might otherwise not be able to afford safe and decent daycare. My son Joe went there 30 years ago — and the place is still going strong. So I went over to see if I could enroll Mena there too. No luck. “There’s a really good chance that we will be permanently closing our doors forever on August 31,” said one of the school’s teachers. “The State is cutting our funding.” What?

Let me get this straight. California is going to cut its funding for daycare for working parents and then said working parents are going to get fired because they can’t show up for work without daycare — and then all these working parents will be forced to go on unemployment? And this saves the state money how? That’s totally stupid.

“But government shouldn’t be paying for people’s daycare,” you might say. Well why not? We already pay for billionaires’ tax breaks — even though statistics prove that for every corporatist billionaire created by outsourcing or subsidized weapons manufacturing or Wall Street bailouts or tax breaks for the uber-rich, approximately 100,000 working-class Americans sink below our country’s poverty line. If we are going to flat-out subsidize billionaires, why can’t we also subsidize daycare for people who actually do pay taxes?

And speaking of layoffs and things that our government should or should not be spending money on, apparently it’s not okay for our government to spend money on police and fire protection either. Oakland just laid off80 cops and San Jose just laid off 53 firefighters. But if spending money on that stuff is also a no-no, then what exactly SHOULD our government spend money on? Apparently nothing — except for corporate welfare and wars.

I remember back in the day when the United States used to have all kinds of surplus money — more than enough to fund education, infrastructure improvement, libraries, firefighters, cops and even daycare. But what happened to all that surplus money? Where did it all disappear to? Hmmm. As far as I can tell, an awful lot of it has been vacuumed off into America’s all-time four favorite money pits — Afghanistan, Pakistan, Israel and Iraq.

Little did we know when the Twin Towers were destroyed back in 2001 that what we were watching on the television screen was not just two buildings being destroyed but also the United States economy’s destruction. It took mere hours for the World Trade Center to fall. And it took almost a decade for our economy to fall after it. But the causes were the same — and the results were the same. We were sold a bill of goods and conned into spending our money on guns instead of butter. And now there are guns everywhere but there’s no butter — and no pre-schools either.

Sorry, Mena. You are just going to have to be bored. And if we don’t stop shoveling trillions of dollars into America’s favorite money pits in the Middle East, by the time you’re an adult, one of the big-kid things you’re gonna be doing is standing in an unemployment line.

August 1, 2010

There goes the Judge: CA’s scary court-closing epidemic

Filed under: Uncategorized — Tags: , , , — Jane Stillwater @ 4:33 pm

Next Friday I’m going to be the plaintiff in a small claims court trial — at least that’s the plan. But according to a judge who recently spoke before the Berkeley-Albany Bar Association, there’s a rather good chance that I might show up for the trial but there might not be a courtroom left to hold it in.

Over a delicious luncheon menu of pan-seared salmon, sauteed asparagus, fruit tarts and Peet’s coffee at La Rose Bistro on Shattuck Avenue, a judge from the Alameda County court system spent an hour and a half laying out a series of hard facts and cold realities with regard to courtroom availability in California in general and in Alameda County in particular. “Currently,” said the judge, “we are even considering holding trials in broom closets.” I think she was joking, er, at least I’m hoping that she was.

“The status of Alameda County’s courtrooms is abysmal,” stated the judge. “The search for courtrooms has become desperate here. They are currently using the grand jury room, which has posts running down the middle of it. They’ve also been looking at hallways, a library and the probate examiner’s office since the Broussard building has been mostly shut down. They are even moving people from Oakland courthouses down to Fremont and Hayward. There have been 23 moves in all.” Fremont is a long freaking distance away from Oakland. It’s closer to San Jose than it is Berkeley.

And courtrooms aren’t the only thing now being 86ed in the CA court system. People are disappearing too. “As for money, 72 people have been laid off. Statewide, court personnel funding has just taken a 100 million dollar hit. There was a 2.6 million dollar budget hit for Alameda County alone. Courts are now being closed on the third Wednesday of every month. That’s twelve days a year that we can never make up.”

Then there’s the mandatory furlough days. “In order to avoid more lay-offs, we’ve had to cut down people’s hours. And next year’s state and county budgets will be worse that this year’s. Judges are considering voluntary salary cuts.”

And California’s court security needs are being effected as well. “We are trying to get enough sheriff’s deputies to cover the courts. By consolidating courts, we have managed to free up two deputies however. But the Sheriff’s office has also been financially hit. And then there was the cost of the Oscar Grant trial. And that has taken up a lot of sheriff’s deputies as well.”

So far, the number of judges has not been effected by the budget cuts, but who knows how long that will last. “And we need more self-help centers, not less. As the economy goes down, there will be a much greater need for self-help centers,” and that need will not be met either. “California’s unemployment is currently the highest in the nation.”

By this time in the presentation, I had finished my salmon and was starting to hanker for dessert — while the judge continued her sad litany of judicial wants and needs that were not going to get met. “We need more courtrooms. We’re not going to get them. And we’re not going to get any more judges either. And small claims court commissioners are being reduced for 16 to ten. Plus filing fees are going to be increased because we can’t increase taxes.”

As I finished up my berry tart and was vaguely considering the etiquette-related pros and cons of licking my plate, the judge continued. “This county’s judicial system is definitely economy-driven. We want a courthouse out in the Pleasanton-Dublin area but realistically we don’t have the money. We need more judges and more support staff. We are looking at every single dime being spent. Alameda County saw this coming and prepared for it but we are still running tight.” Then the waiter served coffee. Yummers!

“We may be forced to move toward having regional courts instead of county courts,” the judge concluded. “We’ve already consolidated the municipal courts with the superior courts. And court administration has already been centralized — even its janitorial services.”

So. What will be the answer to this immense problem? I wanted to suggest to the speaker that we might be able to use Judge Judy’s courtroom when her court wasn’t in session, but that probably wouldn’t work out so well for her.

It appears that a goodly amount of taxpayer money that used to fund Alameda County’s court and prison systems is being used to fund cool new court and prison systems in places like Baghdad, Kabul and Tel Aviv instead of here in Berkeley. Does this mean that the Middle East has all the money they want for their courtrooms — whereas California courtrooms have become neglected and derelict? Yeah.

You cannot fund a trillion dollars worth of war in the Middle East and expect that money to come out of nowhere. And as a result of short-sighted congressional decisions to spend our taxes on the luxury of war in the Middle East instead of here in America for the last ten years, we no longer can afford to buy basic necessities here at home — such as courtrooms.

It appears that the criminals of Baghdad, Kabul and Tel Aviv have a pretty good ride — while the criminals of Oakland and Berkeley, due to our sad lack of courtrooms and judiciary personnel, are either having to wait for their trials in overcrowded jails that taxpayers must pay for or else are running around free in the streets.

I’d much rather spend our hard-earned money here at home and have criminals running free in the streets of Iraq, Afghanistan and Israel-Palestine — instead of having criminals running free in the streets of Oakland and Berkeley.

It just seems such a shame to spend a trillion dollars to tinker around with the Rule of Law in the Middle East — at the risk of losing the Rule of Law here at home.

But enough about lamenting the loss of our courtrooms into the money pit of the Middle East. Let’s think about other places where all our court-funding money has been drained off to in the last ten years — into the pockets of bankers, Wall Street gamblers, global out-sourcers who have systematically destroyed America’s manufacturing base, and, of course, those ever-present and greedy weapons manufacturers who trick us into paying them to kill strangers by the millions. Isn’t it time to plug up those money sink-holes as well?

PS: Regarding my upcoming small claims court case this Friday, I may or may not be able to tell you what its outcome will be — depending on whether or not there is still a courtroom available to hear my case in. Who knows? We may end up having to try my case in Kabul.

Powered by WordPress