Posts Tagged ‘ obama ’

Bill Moyers Has a Problem With Obama’s SEC Nominee – Truthdig

March 13, 2013

Bill Moyers Has a Problem With Obama’s SEC Nominee – Truthdig

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Obamajam, First Lady Edition? Michelle Obama in Town Today and Tomorrow

January 31, 2012
Obamajam, First Lady Edition? Michelle Obama in Town Today and Tomorrow

Normally, when the President arrives in town, we cluck about it for days beforehand because we’re all so terrified that we’ll be the unlucky bastards stuck on Pico Blvd. for three hours. But we haven’t heard much about traffic delays leading up to the arrival of Michelle Obama today, and we’re hoping that it stays that way. more › Read more here: Obamajam, First Lady Edition? Michelle Obama in Town Today and Tomorrow

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Extra, Extra: Election Drama, Adult Diapers and Obamajam IV

January 5, 2012
Extra, Extra: Election Drama, Adult Diapers and Obamajam IV

In tonight’s Extra, Extra, art imitates life with a 2012 presidential election TV show, someone is tossing their adult diapers on the street, and Obama may be planning to woo Hollywood once more. Plus: Keep up with us on Facebook , and follow us on Twitter: @LAist @LAistFood @LAistSports . more › Excerpt from: Extra, Extra: Election Drama, Adult Diapers and Obamajam IV

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Costs Of No Child Left Behind Waivers ‘Jaw Dropping"

November 11, 2011

This story comes to us courtesy of Silicon Valley Education Foundation’s Thoughts On Public Education blog, TopEd.org . An ambivalent State Board of Education discussed but took no action Wednesday on pursuing a temporary waiver from strictures of the No Child Left Behind law. The state will pass up the two application deadlines as a result. California could still apply in June for a two-year relief from the law. Los Angeles Unified is among the districts favoring a waiver, and several Board members indicated interest as well – if the state can negotiate terms more to its liking. However, the Obama administration has given no public indication yet that it’s willing to bend on its terms. Because Congress has been unable to agree on how to fix a flawed NCLB, President Obama has offered states a deal: For two years, they’d no longer be bound by many of NCLB’s disliked provisions, which have led to labeling most schools as failing. They also would gain flexibility in using a portion of Title I money for poor kids, in exchange for agreeing to several requirements. States would have to move ahead with Common Core or rigorous college and career standards, to focus on fixing 15 percent of schools (the worst performers and those with the biggest achievement gaps), and to adopt teacher and administrator evaluations based partly on test scores – a demand staunchly opposed by the California Teachers Association as an intrusion on local collective bargaining. CTA lobbyist Ken Burt called the waiver “money down a rat hole,” and said the state should focus on working on Congress to pass a better law. But drawn to the prospect of getting out from under NCLB’s thumb, 39 states and the District of Columbia have expressed interest in a waiver. Some of those are Race to the Top winners that already are complying with the requirements. State Superintendent of Public Instruction Tom Torlakson, however, has called for a waiver without conditions and criticized Obama for overstepping his authority in requiring test-based teacher evaluations. The state Department of Education’s cost-benefit analysis of the waivers found what State Board member James Aschwanden called “jaw-dropping numbers.” The Department put the net price tag to California of between $2 billion and $2.7 billion. Broken down, the costs would include: $600 million to implement Common Core, through: teacher training,237.5 million; buying textbooks and materials,237.5 million; and adopting English learner standards,118 million; $410 million to fix the 15 percent low-performing schools; $76 million to train principals and conduct evaluations for all teachers. Torlakson called the Obama plan “not so much a waiver as a substitution for a new set of requirements and a new set of challenges.” And he said California would run the risk of moving in one direction with the waivers, only to have Congress head in another direction by passing a new Elementary and Secondary Education Act (the formal name for NCLB). COST ESTIMATES DISPUTED The state Department of Education offered no corroborating cost estimates from other states, and those favoring the waiver said the Department undervalued the financial benefits and overestimated the costs of transitioning to Common Core, which the state will have to do anyway. Rick Miller, a former deputy state superintendent who’s now executive director of the nonprofit California Office to Reform Education (CORE), said the seven districts comprising CORE could redirect $84 million to rehire teachers and counselors by redirecting dollars that had to have been spent on tutoring services in Program Improvement schools. “Do the waiver as soon as possible for needed flexibility,” he said. One of the CORE districts is Los Angeles Unified. Superintendent John Deasy’s deputy chief of staff, Tommy Chang, testified that the district is already attempting to do what the waiver calls for by shifting dollars within its existing budget: preparing for Common Core and shifting to new teacher evaluations that incorporate measures of student progress. Brad Strong, senior policy director with Children Now, acknowledged that the waiver’s demand that the state expedite its spending on evaluations and Common Core would be “a huge lift.” But it’s far from certain whether Congress will reauthorize NCLB anytime soon, he said, and California needs the will to develop a quality plan for Common Core and an evaluation system that improves learning for all kids. Adopting a wait-and-see middle ground, the Association of California School Administrators called for putting off a waiver for six months while pressing Congress to pass a new NCLB as proposed in the bipartisan Senate bill sponsored by Democratic Sen. Tom Harkin of Iowa and Republican Mike Enzi of Wyoming. Failing that, ACSA said in a letter to the State Board, the state should apply for a waiver “based on what California believes is in the best interest of our students and schools and not based on prescriptive conditions.” State Board member Trish Williams said she was interested in having California submit a “customized” waiver application. Saying she was frustrated that California has missed out on a number of education grants and programs she said, “Would Washington like to work with California? I would like to find a way that would benefit us, and we could live with.” Chang, Miller and others also expressed the hope that Secretary of Education Arne Duncan would eventually permit large districts like Los Angeles Unified and groups of districts like CORE to apply for waivers on their own, if California refused to. John Fensterwald is the editor and co-writer of TOPed.org, a blog on California education policy. Follow him on Twitter ( @jfenster ) and at www.toped.org . Excerpt from:

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State Issues Prove Tricky For GOP Presidential Field

October 27, 2011

CINCINNATI — Mitt Romney had gingerly distanced himself from a labor issue on the Ohio ballot one day. The next, he embraced the initiative “110 percent.” The reversal highlighted his record of equivocations and underscores the local political minefields national candidates often confront in their state-by-state path to the presidency. Candidates visiting Nevada often wade into the debate about where nuclear waste should go. They’re pressed in South Carolina to stake out a stance on an aircraft maker’s labor dispute. In New Hampshire, they face questions about right-to-work issues. And then there are the perennials, such as ethanol subsidies in Iowa and flying the Confederate battle flag in South Carolina. Such local issues aren’t of concern to most voters across the nation, but these topics can matter greatly to voters wanting to hear the thoughts of candidates soliciting support ahead of presidential primaries. Candidates often work to strike a balance between addressing issues local voters care about without staking out hardline positions that could hurt them elsewhere. “They’ve got to be careful about not weighing in on issues that are exclusively local. That could backfire,” said Kevin Smith, a conservative activist and likely Republican gubernatorial candidate in New Hampshire. “It’s something that could easily be blown up into something bigger than it ought to be.” As Romney proved this week, such local issues can trip up even the most cautious candidate, causing headaches for their national campaigns while hurting their standings in important states for both the primary and general elections. “Fully support that,” Romney backtracked on the Ohio ballot initiative while visiting a local Republican Party office Wednesday in Fairfax, Va. The former Massachusetts governor was trying to fix a problem he created a day earlier during a trip to Terrace Park near Cincinnati. Romney visited a site where volunteers were making hundreds of phone calls to help Republicans defeat the Issue Two ballot effort to repeal Ohio Gov. John Kasich’s restrictions on public sector employee bargaining. Romney took a pass on supporting the measure just as a newly released Quinnipiac University poll indicated Ohio voters opposed the GOP-backed restrictions 57 percent to 32 percent. But Romney already had weighed in, supporting Kasich’s efforts in a June Facebook post. Republican and Democratic critics alike were quick to point out Romney’s waffling. His campaign rivals Rick Perry and Jon Huntsman fired off statements supporting the union restrictions, and Obama’s Ohio state campaign director, Greg Schultz, sent out emails Tuesday night to supporters that noting Romney’s “sidestep.” Roughly 24 hours later, Romney clarified his support for Kasich. Even so, Huntsman, the former Utah governor languishing in polls, sought to gain ground by arguing that the episode showed that Romney failed to show leadership. “This is a time when if you are going to be president of the United States, you show a little presidential leadership. That’s by taking a position and leading out – sometimes there is a risk associated with taking a position, but that’s all part of leadership,” Huntsman told ABC News. And some observers questioned whether Romney’s response had less to do with the GOP primary, which Ohio will hold well after the early voting states, and more to do with the general election and the need to woo independent voters. On the other hand Romney may lose the party loyalists he needs to get the GOP nomination by waffling on the matter. “The people who would be paying the most attention to this are probably the base of the Republican Party, and that’s why it has the potential to be most damaging to him,” said veteran Ohio political scientist Gene Beaupre of Xavier University. At one time presidential candidates visiting Iowa would stumble over that state’s pet issue: support for subsidizing ethanol, the fuel additive the state leads in producing. But the issue has faded as a litmus test in the years since Bob Dole, a strong advocate, won the Iowa caucuses while opponent Phil Gramm of Texas finished a disappointing fifth. That hasn’t stopped Romney this year from noting his support for – and Perry’s opposition to – the federal renewable fuel standard as Romney seeks Iowa agribusiness’ support. In South Carolina, candidates always are asked about flying the Confederate battle flag on Statehouse grounds. Supporters say it honors heritage and valiant native sons, opponents led by the NAACP say it is a divisive reminder of slavery. Republicans usually say the flag is a state matter, but Arizona Sen. John McCain said after losing the 2000 primary that he should have spoken out on the issue and admitted that he feared opposing the flag would scuttle his chances in the state. This year, candidates campaigning in South Carolina have been all but forced to weigh in on the Boeing efforts to build a plant in the state. And in South Carolina and Nevada, opening Yucca Mountain as a nuclear waste depository is a sensitive issue. South Carolina’s congressional delegation wants the site in Nevada opened to relieve the Savannah River site, which has been storing nuclear weapons waste. That made recent debate pronouncements by Romney, Perry and Texas Rep. Ron Paul against using the Nevada site hard to swallow for some South Carolina Republicans “It’s got to go somewhere, and we can’t wait for them to figure out where it’s going to go,” Republican Gov. Nikki Haley said. Voters “are going to want to know what their answers are to that.” In New Hampshire, candidates have had to weigh in on a right-to-work drive aimed at unions. Romney has already voiced support, saying in an August stop in Claremont, N.H., that “people should have the choice of deciding whether or not they want to join a union and have union dues.” ___ Associated Press writers Steve Peoples in Concord, N.H., Jim Davenport in Columbia, S.C., Tom Beaumont in Des Moines, Iowa, and Philip Elliott in Fairfax, Va., contributed to this report. ___ Link: State Issues Prove Tricky For GOP Presidential Field

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Extra, Extra: Hearses for Halloween, Student Loan Relief, and Jews in DTLA

October 27, 2011
Extra, Extra: Hearses for Halloween, Student Loan Relief, and Jews in DTLA

In tonight’s Extra, Extra, Obama announces relief for students, one man preps for Halloween in a very unique way, and a writer takes a look at Persian Jewish life in downtown. Plus: Keep up with us on Facebook , and follow us on Twitter: @LAist @LAistFood @LAistSports . more › Here is the original post: Extra, Extra: Hearses for Halloween, Student Loan Relief, and Jews in DTLA

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President Obama Tells Crowd He’s Done 60% of What He Wants to Do

October 25, 2011
President Obama Tells Crowd He’s Done 60% of What He Wants to Do

President Obama has had a busy 24 hours in Los Angeles. So far, he’s spoken at two fundraising dinners in Hancock Park, eaten some classic SoCal fare , and is now heading to NBC studios to tape a segment with Jay Leno. We won’t know what he says to Leno until later, but CBS News reports that during his dinners, the President laid out what he’s accomplished so far during his tenure in the Oval Office. more › View post: President Obama Tells Crowd He’s Done 60% of What He Wants to Do

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Actor Jonah Hill brings animated series to Fox

October 24, 2011

BEVERLY HILLS, Calif. — It’s not enough to be a sizzling commodity in movie comedies. Read more: Actor Jonah Hill brings animated series to Fox

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Dr. Glenn Vallecillos Now Offers Gynecomastia

October 24, 2011

Gynecomastia is a condition faced by young and old men where their breasts seem enlarged. See the original post here: Dr. Glenn Vallecillos Now Offers Gynecomastia

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Obama Jobs Plan Pitch Takes President Out West

October 24, 2011

WASHINGTON — President Barack Obama is heading west Monday morning to pitch his American Jobs Act in Las Vegas and speak at campaign events there and in California. While in Las Vegas, he will speak at a campaign event and will then meet with homeowners at a private residence to talk about his jobs proposal now before Congress. Then, the president will travel to Los Angeles, where he will talk at two campaign events at private homes. He will spend the night in Los Angeles. Read the original here: Obama Jobs Plan Pitch Takes President Out West

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