Jan. 12, 2012

Veteran Legislator Seeks District 66

BOZEMAN Jennifer JP Pomnichowski of Bozeman has filed for election to the state legislature to represent House District 66, comprising downtown and the southcentral and west central parts of the city. A Democrat, she previously served in the House in 2007 and 2009 and currently is a member of the Montana Board of Labor Appeals.

A lifelong Montanan and Bozeman resident for 27 years, Pomnichowski has been a firefighter/EMT on the Bridger Canyon Volunteer Fire Dept. An MSU graduate, she has served on the Bozeman Board of Adjustment, Zoning Commission, Planning Board and Inter Neighborhood Council.

I have carried, co-sponsored or supported several bills of direct benefit to District 66, said Pomnichowski, who lived in the heart of the district when attending college. After the 2009 downtown explosion and fire, I carried a bill to shield city core property values from deterioration after disasters, and I fought for $1.2 million to clean up asbestos and other contaminants from the site of our showpiece new public library.

I also voted to freeze college tuition for the first time in 20 years, for all-day kindergartens and to provide $28 million for the renovation of Gaines Hall at MSU. I oppose any reduction in benefits or services to senior citizens, and I endorse educational, medical and housing aids for veterans.

I have a progressive outlook, but a conservative grip on taxpayers money, Pomnichowski, 44, declared at her filing announcement Thursday. I have voted for a balanced budget every time, with ample reserve for emergencies like wildfires, and I also have voted to retain full funding for public schools and law enforcement, plus services like Meals On Wheels and senior and disabled transportation. I have voted to create jobs and to develop business opportunities, and Ive encouraged small business with a measure to foster employee medical coverage and by voting to abolish the business equipment tax. I support unlimited stream access, alternative energy, and clean water and air guarantees.

Pomnichowski previously has been endorsed for election by Montana Education Association/Montana Federation of Teachers, Montana State AFL-CIO and the Montana Game Wardens Association.

JP and her husband own a home in south Bozeman patrolled by cat Fitz.

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I’m proud to accept an appointment from Governor Schweitzer to the Montana Board of Labor Appeals!

The board hears appeals of worker and employer disputes and hearings examiners’ decisions, and is administered by the Department of Labor and Industry’s Employment Relations Division.

Upon Senate confirmation of my nomination, I’ll immediately begin my service. The appointment is for a four-year term, and the board is just three members who act in a quasi-judicial fashion: decisions by the board are, for most intents and purposes, final. They can be appealed only to District Court.

The board is incredibly busy. Some of its agendas have 35-40 cases, and the board meets monthly.

I’m happy to bring my experience from serving on another quasi-judicial body, the Bozeman Board of Adjustment, to this role. The Bozeman BofA is one of just two decision-making bodies at the city level; the other is the city commission. I’ve served on city advisory boards (Bozeman Planning Board, Bozeman Zoning Commission), county task forces (Gallatin County Transfer of Development Rights), and the Board of Adjustment, as well as in other organizations. I serve on the board of directors of the Montana Business and Professional Women Foundation, Art Mobile of Montana, Greater Gallatin Watershed Council, and the Bozeman Cultural Council. I served two terms in our state legislature, too, in the Montana House of Representatives, 2006-2010.

In all these groups, I serve with talented, dedicated people. I’m increasingly convinced that the effort of everyone doing all that he or she can is the reason that our democracy not only succeeds, but thrives. For the opportunity to participate and to contribute, I am truly honored to serve on the Montana Board of Labor Appeals.

This week has been a helluva time at the Montana Legislature, so I offer this as a bit of a mental break.

The best thing in today’s mail was this month’s edition of Montana Tech M News. Montana Tech is in Butte, and for 24 years, Bob Green coached the Orediggers football team.

Bob is legendary.

So are his sayings.

From the time I worked in TV, some of my all-time favorite sports interviews were from Bob. His normal speaking voice is anyone else’s full-throated shout. And he’s downright creative with analogies, idioms, and the like, in the most humorous, original, honest way. In this month’s M News, there’s a page of the top Greenisms. Here are some of the classics:

“I’m a perfectionist. I expect Jennifer Lopez to know how to cook.”

“We gotta be like a homely girl on her honeymoon. Busy, busy, busy.”

“I hate to sound like an old coach, but I am an old coach. I was coaching when the Dead Sea was only sick.”

“Kind of a math thing. If we lost our last one, we lost 2 out of 3, but if we won our last one, we would have won 2 out of 3.”

After a close loss: “It’s kinda like watching your mother-in-law go off a cliff in your brand new Cadillac. You got mixed feelings.”

“There are no ugly wins. Kind of like marriage: there aren’t any ugly brides, and there aren’t any good-looking ex-wives.”

On a football opponent: “They’re gonna be very good. They’re rougher than a pine cone toilet seat.”

After a big win: “I feel like I just had a Viagra cocktail with a Cialis chaser.”

“We’re kinda like a woodpecker in a petrified forest. We just keep busy.”

“I really feel like our team is ready to go hit individuals from another institution of higher learning.”

“We got to practice a little bit. I want these guys to be bouncing around like a pogo stick on Viagra.”

“We had an interception chance, and we caught the ball. An interception chance is like a date with the homecoming queen: close the deal. Don’t waste an opportunity.”

“It’s like you’re trying to sell bubble gum in a lockjaw ward. You just can’t get much done.”

“I don’t like bottled water. I like that Butte water. You can eat and drink at the same time.”

“We played two games that were very winnable. Unfortunately, they were very loseable.”

“We were lower than a snake’s vest button.”

“It was a team effort. Everyone contributed with poor play.”

“What a difference a week makes. This week I feel like a football coach. Last week I felt like Britney Spears’ choreographer.”

“I’m not a big Yankee fan. It’s kinda like living in ancient Rome and rootin’ for the lions.” [This one reminds me of a favorite saying from Chicago, where my mighty Southside White Sox play, and, oh, so does another team: “What can you tell me about the guy? Is he a fan of the great game of baseball, or is he a Cubby-lover?”]

“We’re like the kid that plays second French horn in the school band. We gotta play better.”

“The game is going to come down to playing football. We’ve got to play football. We’re not trying to split the atom.”

I was interviewed Monday by our local CBS affiliate, KBZK in Bozeman, on the vote-by-mail bill that failed in the House last week. I mentioned this in my previous blog post: in Gallatin Valley alone, an overwhelming majority of ballots were cast by mail–sixty-eight percent–in the last primary election, and 55% in the last general election. The number of permanent absentee voters–mail-in ballot voters–increases all the time.

After second reading on the bill, when the bill is debated and explained on the floor of the House, 57 representatives voted for the bill. But overnight, the Republican majority in the House wood-shedded (strong-armed their Republican representatives) to vote against the Republican-sponsored bill, and the next day, on third reading (the vote that determines the fate of a bill), 57 representatives votes against it and it died in the House. It will not move forward.

The story is posted online here: http://www.ktvq.com/news/montana-legislature-debates-voter-issues/

and here it is in text.

Montana Legislature debates voter issues
Posted: Feb 1, 2011 7:54 AM by Associated Press

BOZEMAN – The mail-in ballot bill was killed in the Montana House last week, so we decided to take a look at all sides of the debate.

The mail-in ballot is just one of many voter issues being discussed in the legislative session. We spoke with three Montanans who have strong opinions on voting to get their take on the happenings in Helena.

Bozeman Democrat JP Pomnichowski told us that voting isn’t something you need to earn, it’s a natural born right. And this is why she thinks mail-in ballots are a good thing. She said they give people more time to consider the issues and make informed decisions.

But, Conservative Carl Graham disagreed, saying that voting isn’t about sitting on the couch and checking a box.

“Rights come with responsibilities. If you’re going to exercise your rights you take on certain responsibilities and that responsibility is to inform yourself and be a responsible part in our Democratic process,” he added.

The mail-in ballot bill would have made all the state’s main elections mandatory mail-in only. Similar bills were introduced to the legislature in 2007 and 2009, but they did not pass.

Election administrator Charlotte Mills worked on the committee for the 2011 bill and said their goal was to simply increase voter turn-out. Some 5,000 more people are voting by mail this year in Gallatin County alone.

Mills explained why she thinks the bill didn’t make it through.

“I think there is a lot of mistrust from both sides of the fence if we did a mail-in ballot for 2012 that we might mess up or some sort of fraud might happen.”

A bill which would limit the time period in which someone could register to vote is still up for debate in Helena. The current law allows someone to register up until 8:00 pm on the day of the election and the proposed measure would limit this to 30 days prior.

Pomnichowski told us why she is against it.

“Just because someone moves here and doesn’t remember to register to vote along with buying a house, starting a job, getting electricity on, that doesn’t mean they lose their civil right to participate in a Democracy.”

Since the 62nd Montana Legislature convened, there have been many opportunities to blog, but I hadn’t waded in…until today. Although the session is just four weeks along, it’s been weird for weeks.

Let’s start from today and work backwards…which is what the Republican-controlled House seems to be doing. (Important reminder, going forward: Republicans hold a 68-32 majority in the House of Representatives, and a 28-22 majority in the Senate.)

Today, on a vote of 60-40, the House passed on second reading a bill that removes the requirement that our State Superintendent of Public Instruction have a college degree. Currently, Denise Juneau, our State Superintendent, is the first Native American woman elected to state office. She’s HARVARD EDUCATED, and pursued her undergrad degree at Montana State University. I am so proud that someone who’s passionately pursued a career and public service in education serves our state as supertintendent. And I do NOT expect that vetting a candidate to hold that office means that I have to review his or her curriculum vitae to find out if he or she has earned a college degree in education, has taught, or has even a passing interest in schools!

Unfortunately, this is not the first affront, nor will it be the last, to sound processes which Montanans have built for years. Last week, a popular vote-by-mail bill in the making for years (and introduced, and failed, in at least the past two legislative sessions) was defeated. One day, 57 representatives voted for it. The next, after some Republican wood-shedding (strong-arming to change peoples’ votes) 57 representatives voted against it. The County Clerks and Recorders supported it, and helped over the past two years to draft the bill. A former elections official and Republican representative, Pat Ingraham, carried the legislation. In Gallatin County alone, 68% of voters cast their ballots by mail in the last primary election. In the general election, 55% voted by mail. And the numbers of people voting by mail (permanent absentee ballot) have risen each election.

There are also bills to restrict voter registration. Let’s back up just a second: on Day 1 of the legislature, all 100 representatives and all 50 senators swore an oath to uphold the U.S. Constitution and the Montana State Constitution, both documents that guarantee voting rights. The 19th Amendment to the U.S. Constitution reads in part, “a citizen’s right to vote shall not be denied or abridged,” yet Champ Edmunds, R-Missoula, proposes to end voter registration 30 days before an election, and not to allow same-day voter registration on Election Day. Ted Washburn, R-Bozeman, proposes limiting the types of identification voters can present at polling places or the elections office to be only Montana driver’s licenses. Are these efforts upholding the constitutional right that voting shall not be denied or abridged?

For the first gauntlet-throwing this session, we can go back to the House Bill 1, otherwise known as the “Feed Bill”, because it’s the bill that pays legislators their salaries and per diem, legislative staff for the session, etc. On January 12, morning committees convened and Republicans slashed state agency budgets an additional five percent. (State agencies were directed last year by Governor Schweitzer to decrease their budgets 7-10%, and in time for the legislative session, agencies submit a proposed budget, and, pursuant to state statute, a five percent decreased budget, too.) Then, AN HOUR LATER in the floor session, Republicans INCREASED their own per diem payments, passed themselves a laptop computer allowance of $1000, and increased their mileage reimbursement by…five percent. House Bill 1 passed on a party-line vote, all Republicans voting for their own increased monies, all Democrats voting against.

When the legislature convened Monday, January 3, Secretary of State Linda McCulloch opened the session and in her speech, gave sage advice to legislators: “Just because you have the right to do something doesn’t mean it’s the right thing to do.”

Senate Minority Leader Carol Williams cautioned her fellow senators in her opening speech that (I’m paraphrasing) “the voters didn’t elect us to rewrite the constitution.”

That’s right. In fact, that very question was ON the November ballot. Shall we have a Constitutional Convention? Voters said no. Yet, there are bills that propose changing our state constitution. One from Senator Dan Kennedy proposes adding a phrase to Article II, Section 3: “Inalienable rights. All persons are born free and have certain inalienable rights. They include the right to a clean, and healthful, [and economically productive] environment…” Really? Economically productive? How would that be defined? If a gold mine were next to a blue-ribbon trout stream, who’d figure out the “economically productive” value of each? Would one trump the other?

Montanans expect progress on issues from legislators. If legislative policy and laws cannot improve our systems or processes or livelihoods, we certainly don’t want to lose any ground. To use a football analogy, if you can’t move the ball down the field, at least hold the line. Montanans also do not expect that the year-long campaign that Republicans ran focusing on jobs and economic development suddenly changes into morality-based legislating. But that’s what’s happening.

In one of the more depressing and defeating actions thus far, Republicans voted against providing some meager funds for the counseling of children living in homes where crimes of domestic violence had been committed.

My former opponent, now the representative for House District 63, Tom Burnett, joined 44 House Republicans who voted against paying for the caskets of impoverished murder victims and mental health counseling for kids who witness domestic violence. The bill, HB 114, was recommended by the Department of Justice. It was not going to cost the State any money; the funds are paid by criminal restitution and federal match dollars.

A fellow legislator said, “Apparently they agreed with Rep. Krayton Kerns, who said that such children should not become dependent on or place themselves under the grip of oppressive government, but instead should turn to “their God, family, and friends.” So apparently an 8 year old girl who has repeatedly witnessed her father beating her mother should simply pray, or ask a family member (who? her abusive father? her traumatized mother?) or a friend (who? the little girl next door?) to somehow help her through this nightmare?”

A staffer friend at the capitol said, “They [Republicans] voted no because they don’t want government programs, at all costs.”

This is the party that ran on the economy and family values.

And this has been just Month 1.

Today, our dear kitty Frodie went to Cat Heaven. She was 18 1/2 years old, and tonight’s the first time in all that time that we haven’t had a cat in the house.

She and other wonderful cats through the years (many of whom lived really long kitty lives–Growl was 18 1/2 when she went to Kitty Heaven last year) have been such good company for us. If it hadn’t been for failing health, her little kitty spirit would have continued unquenchably.

Here’s a remembrance to our wonderful companion, and best wishes for good care to and good company from your pets always.

We miss you, Frode.