This 21-part retrospective series I'd promised will run with daily updates, ending prior to the Nov. 6 election. This is Part 12.
What's triply-unfair, wrong and plain larcenous is that the war on the environment which Walker and chief sidekick GOP AG Brad Schimel are carrying out for their special-interest donors and allies is being paid for by Wisconsin taxpayers. Again and again and again.
I should add this post to an earlier one about Walker taxes.
* The second billing hits when taxpayers have to hire their own lawyers (even before Foxconn!) to fight those taxpayer-paid state and local government officials who serve as GOP donors and special-interests' bellhops:
If courts weaken clean air standards as Walker and Schimel seek, for example, you go more frequently to your cardiovascular specialist, or your child's asthma doctor. If Schimel helps an out-of-state fossil fuel company, you pay for their cleanup in dollars and dirty water.
If he and Walker succeed in their joint efforts with the DNR and Natural Resources Board to defeat the people's private counsel and move public park land (photo above) to the Kohler project, some of the cost of that loss is deducted from each Wisconsinite's share of the public trust that's privatized.
Moreover, I point you to a stunning expose by Madison attorney Christa Westerberg about the ideological privatization of the Wisconsin Attorney General's operation which should be front-and-center in every mainstream media outlet in the state:
And let's lay responsibilities where they truly began - - at the feet of former Republican Governor Tommy Thompson.
Tommy began the dismantling of what was a nearly-three decades long Wisconsin Department of Justice effort to somewhat balance all the business sector's legal assets in the state with a small group of public sector attorneys.
That modest operation was called the Wisconsin Public Intervenor's Office. It was to the people's advocate on environmental cases in Wisconsin and expertly advised public officials on fair and transparent policy-making.
GOP Governor Warren Knowles and legislatures through the years supported the office, but Thompson bowed to demands of his special interest allies and stripped the agency of funding and independence. And was finally disbanded in 1995.
Milwaukee-based environmental lawyer Jodi Habush Sinykin has written an excellent history of the office, and the implications of its loss, here.
And here is the coda to this private, partisan conquest of the Wisconsin public trust that is supposed to guarantee clean air, fresh air and unspoiled land for the common good here:
Tom Dawson, one of the remaining public intervenors, remained on the Department of Justice staff as a career prosecutor after the angry was disbanded.
Some months ago, Schimel demoted and forced Dawson out in favor of a hand-picked right-wing ideologue from its national bullpen to help move Schimel's pro-business agendas forward.
Noted on my blog here, and again here, when Dawson's replacement, David Ross, was selected by Schimel ally Scott Pruitt to run a section of Trump's US EPA.
And just to make sure anyone else in state government didn't get the message, Schimel used other DOJ staff lawyers to investigate Schimel for having given an interview about a case. Dan Bice of the Journal Sentinel just told that story.
And since he had to hire his own lawyers to fend off Schimel's probe, you could say that Dawson has had to pay a 4th time for the Walker-inspired, Schimel-implemented attack on Wisconsin's environment.
Part 11 of the series ran Tuesday, October 23, 2018.
What's triply-unfair, wrong and plain larcenous is that the war on the environment which Walker and chief sidekick GOP AG Brad Schimel are carrying out for their special-interest donors and allies is being paid for by Wisconsin taxpayers. Again and again and again.
I should add this post to an earlier one about Walker taxes.
The many ways Walker is in your wallet* The first billing hits when state and local taxes are collected and used to pay the salaries of Walker's special-interest 'chamber of commerce mentality' managers, Schimel's lobbyist-and-ideologue-friendly staffers and other insiders who keep getting bigger and better positions at the public trough.
* The second billing hits when taxpayers have to hire their own lawyers (even before Foxconn!) to fight those taxpayer-paid state and local government officials who serve as GOP donors and special-interests' bellhops:
Such is life in Wisconsin - - whether it's to save the Bad River watershed in the Northwest from open-pit mining, destructive golf course construction along the Lake Michigan shoreline near Sheboygan, or drinking water supplies long-contaminated by feedlot runoff in Kewaunee County in the Northeast - - because right-wing GOP Gov. and corporate servant Scott Walker has installed "a chamber of commerce mentality" atop the Wisconsin Department of Natural Resources.
Here's the bigger picture.
This time the familiar pattern repeats itself because the DNR hurriedly approved a big sand mine where there are wetlands and rare stands of timber, and environmental groups are going to court to force the DNR to do its job on behalf of taxpayers and the environment spelled out here by the DNR itself.* And the third hit takes place when Walker goes to court with his government-paid lawyers on behalf of his special-interest agendas, or when Schimel joins the self-serving, self-perpetuating tag team, and taxpayers face new policy expenses or social costs transferred from the rich to the middle and working classes.
If courts weaken clean air standards as Walker and Schimel seek, for example, you go more frequently to your cardiovascular specialist, or your child's asthma doctor. If Schimel helps an out-of-state fossil fuel company, you pay for their cleanup in dollars and dirty water.
If he and Walker succeed in their joint efforts with the DNR and Natural Resources Board to defeat the people's private counsel and move public park land (photo above) to the Kohler project, some of the cost of that loss is deducted from each Wisconsinite's share of the public trust that's privatized.
Moreover, I point you to a stunning expose by Madison attorney Christa Westerberg about the ideological privatization of the Wisconsin Attorney General's operation which should be front-and-center in every mainstream media outlet in the state:
Christa Westerberg: AG Schimel's office working nationwide for private interests
Recently, 45 former Wisconsin assistant attorneys general signed a letter criticizing Schimel for “blatantly politicizing” the office of attorney general and failing to discharge its duties. Schimel’s campaign spokesperson dismissed the letter as written by “activists,” though the attorneys who signed it had served under both Republican and Democratic attorneys general. Is it really “activist” to ask your attorney general to spend tax dollars fighting for Wisconsin citizens, instead of defending private businesses and interest groups that can afford their own attorneys?This was not always the case. What Schimel is doing with the state's power and public attorneys is a departure from a bi-partisan norm.
And let's lay responsibilities where they truly began - - at the feet of former Republican Governor Tommy Thompson.
Tommy began the dismantling of what was a nearly-three decades long Wisconsin Department of Justice effort to somewhat balance all the business sector's legal assets in the state with a small group of public sector attorneys.
That modest operation was called the Wisconsin Public Intervenor's Office. It was to the people's advocate on environmental cases in Wisconsin and expertly advised public officials on fair and transparent policy-making.
GOP Governor Warren Knowles and legislatures through the years supported the office, but Thompson bowed to demands of his special interest allies and stripped the agency of funding and independence. And was finally disbanded in 1995.
Milwaukee-based environmental lawyer Jodi Habush Sinykin has written an excellent history of the office, and the implications of its loss, here.
And here is the coda to this private, partisan conquest of the Wisconsin public trust that is supposed to guarantee clean air, fresh air and unspoiled land for the common good here:
Tom Dawson, one of the remaining public intervenors, remained on the Department of Justice staff as a career prosecutor after the angry was disbanded.
Some months ago, Schimel demoted and forced Dawson out in favor of a hand-picked right-wing ideologue from its national bullpen to help move Schimel's pro-business agendas forward.
Noted on my blog here, and again here, when Dawson's replacement, David Ross, was selected by Schimel ally Scott Pruitt to run a section of Trump's US EPA.
And just to make sure anyone else in state government didn't get the message, Schimel used other DOJ staff lawyers to investigate Schimel for having given an interview about a case. Dan Bice of the Journal Sentinel just told that story.
And since he had to hire his own lawyers to fend off Schimel's probe, you could say that Dawson has had to pay a 4th time for the Walker-inspired, Schimel-implemented attack on Wisconsin's environment.
Part 11 of the series ran Tuesday, October 23, 2018.
from The Political Environment https://ift.tt/2CznmaI
Breaking News: Walker's 8-year war on Wisconsin's environment. Part 12. Taxpayers pay kleptocracy thrice. - News Paper
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