In the past month or two since the election, I’ve been really busy. In the words of Calvin and Hobbes, the days are just packed!

I traveled to Dillon, Montana, with two of my compatriots and friends with whom I serve on the Greater Gallatin Watershed Council. It was a beautiful trip through southwest Montana, and great quality time with my pals. (I also contributed well to the economy of the Dillon area, at the Patagonia outlet store and Sparky’s Diner, and at the second-hand store and the quilt shop in downtown Whitehall.) Nice!

Next, on to Chicago, to see the Monsters of the Midway, the Bears, play against the Vikings (Bears win!) While in the Windy City, visited the Field Museum, the Adler Planetarium, and saw two Further shows (former members of the Grateful Dead) at the pavilion. Got some early Christmas shopping done, too, on the Magnificent Mile (Michigan Avenue)!


Enjoyed Thanksgiving with good friends, and the next weekend, kept statistics for the Mighty Bobcats of Montana State University in their playoff game against the Bison of North Dakota State University (Bison won, Rats! but what a glorious season for my beloved Cats.)


I’ve been really busy with policy, too, drafting language for legislation and state agencies for Western states water policy. This past weekend, just before Christmas (and two weeks before most legislatures call to order), I presented to legislators from five northwestern states on water law and water policy, with suggestions for changes to water law to bring all of us into better compliance with one another. We all share our water resources; our laws mesh well, but could be better, and I presented information and draft legislation on the commonalities and differences on water law, along with recent court decisions in our states.

An hour after the end of the conference and my presentation on water policy, the Seahawks played the Falcons in a bird-v-bird football game. The Seahawks fought valiantly, but the Falcons were victorious. A little time on the Seattle waterfront, then home again.

I’ll be serving in many ways, though not in the 62nd Montana Legislative Session. The days are just packed! Work well, everyone!

Well, rats. I’ve lost my race for re-election to the Montana House. Tally from the Gallatin County Elections Office is Burnett 2682, JP 2618. I’m down 64 votes. There are 68 provisional ballots that will be counted Monday, but for all intents and purposes, it appears this race is over. Thanks for your support, everyone! I’m really proud of my work as a representative. Now, a new chapter begins.

Here’s my latest ad, which ran in yesterday’s Bozeman Daily Chronicle!

You can see me and the mini-JPs in action in this internet ad, also starring Little Mo, the skateboarding bulldog: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vULzCC2zbYE

And visit me and the mini-JPs at the “What Women Want” Expo this coming Saturday, Oct 30, at the Brick Breeden Fieldhouse in Bozeman!

In my campaign for re-election, I also have strong canine support:

Vote JP!


I have support from all quarters, and from all kinds of wonderful people. Here’s a real peach: an internet “ad” for my re-election campaign, starring the Mini-JPs and Little Mo, the skateboarding bulldog!

Check it out! http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vULzCC2zbYE

And remember to Vote Pomnichowski, the longest name on the ballot!

I have mini-JPs with me on the campaign trail!

This past weekend, October 9, the Re-elect JP contingent marched in the MSU Homecoming Parade.

I had red, white, and blue cars, all decked out with balloons, signs, and ribbon.

Twins rode in the back of the white convertible, throwing JP mini-footballs to the crowd, while my fellow representatives Mike Phillips and Franke Wilmer threw footballs to onlookers from the red smart car and blue PT Cruiser convertible.

The good Senator Jon Tester drove a tractor, which we followed down Main Street Bozeman.

My dear friends Linda and Kathy threw footballs, too, and Kim, Becky, and Barb drove, while supporters cheered the JP parade entry all the way down the route.

THEN, my wonderful and creative friend Casey and I and the mini-JPs marched the parade route to wild acclaim! The mini-JPs did a cheer: Two, Four, Six, Eight! We Want JP to Legislate! Go, JP! Go, JP!

To cap it all off, the Bobcats won their Homecoming game against Portland State, with 41 unanswered points from the second quarter on. Great Homecoming action!

More photos of the MSU Homecoming Parade on my Facebook page (you don’t have to be “on” Facebook to see them):
http://www.facebook.com/album.php?aid=2079236&id=1002190929&l=03824a5fa4

Bozeman Daily Chronicle, Sunday, October 3, 2010

Daily Chronicle editorial board picks candidates

Voter dissatisfaction is as apparent here in Montana as it is elsewhere in the nation, and the Nov. 2 mid-term election offers state voters a chance to vent their frustrations.
Southwest Montanans go to the polls to decide on some critical local government and legislative races. The field of candidates offers some clear choices and, after interviewing most of the hopefuls, the Chronicle editorial board found that some offer clearly better options than the others.

House District 63
Incumbent Democrat JP Pomnichowski faces Republican Tom Burnett in this race, and Pomnichowski deserves a return trip to Helena. Her reasonableness and experience is needed, and she was successful in her last two terms in carrying legislation that has done good things for southwest Montana, particularly downtown Bozeman. Burnett is a sincere candidate, but we believe he is too ideologically rigid to be effective in the Legislature.


In the past week, we’ve celebrated some landmark achievements for education in Bozeman, with dedications of new buildings at our learning institutions and new leadership for our university!

Last Friday, Waded Cruzado was inaugurated the 12th president of Montana State University. I am so proud that she now leads my alma mater! She embodies academic achievement, a vision for the university’s future, and diversity. Cruzado was born in Puerto Rico, graduated magna cum laude from the University of Puerto Rico and earned her master’s and doctorate degrees at the University of Texas–Arlington. She is a product of the land-grant university system. Most recently, she was interim president of New Mexico State University.

Cruzado says that one of the most important missions of a land-grant university like Montana State University is to provide students with at least a few tools to cope with adversity and appreciate the world and their place in it. Another important land-grant mission? Education for a career. Cruzado said, “When you put education in the hands of the sons and daughters of the working class, you give them the power to pursue their aspirations and to participate more fully in their families, their careers, their communities, and their nation.”

I’m a proud graduate of a land-grant university, too, our own Montana State University. I earned a Bachelor of Science degree in technical communications and a minor in English. I studied architecture and physics at MSU, too, and was a student senator. With my fellow architecture students, I fought to keep the states and regions only accredited architecture program, now a top architecture school. (One of my fellow architecture students, Scott Bechtle, now an architect here in Bozeman, worked on the Bozeman High School renovation and build. That dedication was this week, too. Nice!)

I was proud to vote in my first legislative session to freeze tuition for Montana university students for the first time in twenty years. I voted for $28 million to renovate Gaines Hall on the MSU campus, the building which houses chemistry and natural science labs, and in which nearly every MSU student attends classes sometime in his or her college career. Gaines Hall was just dedicated in a ceremony yesterday!

The new Gaines Hall retains the structural bones of the original building, but now houses the College of Letters and Science, as well as the labs for chemistry classes, classrooms, beautiful new auditorium rooms, and workspaces where students can get help with chemistry classwork anytime. Nearly every MSU student takes classes in Gaines Hall, and now it’s updated, safe, and technologically renewed. The dedication ceremony featured Commissioner of Higher Education Sheila Stearns, Governor Schweitzer, MSU President Cruzado, members of the Gaines family (Gaines, after whom the building was named, was a prominent chemistry professor at MSU for forty years), and the Dean of the College of Letters and Science.

Keeping a world-class university and research institution is key in offering students success. Montanans support higher education. In my first session, I carried the bill to place on the ballot the six-mill levy for university funding, a levy that voters have approved since 1947, and passed again in 2008. Bozeman’s own Senator Bob Hawks was the senate sponsor of that bill, too.

Thursday afternoon I attended the dedication and official opening of the newly-renovated Bozeman High School. It was a wonderful event! School board members past and present, honored alumni (some of whom designed and helped to build the new BHS), students and faculty, elected officials, and proud Bozemanites all attended the ceremony.

The project was nine years in the making, a $36 million effort that included improvement to the existing high school and middle school as well as more than 270,000 added square feet of space.

With the new high school, every teacher has a classroom. Students have a more easily accessible campus, with much better circulation and added programs, including the Bridger Alternative High School, moved to the BHS campus last year. Students contributed to the new school design, too; in the courtyard is a raised cement feature that will be painted so that, when viewed from above (as from Google Earth), the Bozeman Hawks logo will be visible!

On the way home from the dedication ceremony at the new high school, I passed a wonderful sight: a BILLBOARD advocating my re-election by the Montana Education Association/Montana Federation of Teachers! It is FANTASTIC! Thank you so much, MEA-MFT! The teachers’ groups have endorsed me in this campaign and in my two previous campaigns, and their support is vital and very much appreciated. As I’ve received a stellar public education, I’ll fight to keep quality education a foundation for all Montana kids, and for ample, not minimal, funding for education.

Education is a cornerstone of our society, and the key to success and advancement, both personally and societally. I hope my record of strong support for education, schools, teachers, and students speaks for itself.

I’m proud to support alternative and expanded educational opportunities, too. I serve on the Gallatin College of Technology advisory board. The Gallatin COT offers two-year education tracts in Bozeman in aviation/aeronautics, welding, interior design, and design drafting, as well as developmental instruction in math and writing, and will offer expanded courses in the immediate future. I also voted for the Montana Virtual Academy, to make distance learning opportunities available to all school-age children through public school districts in Montana.

Dedication to quality public education runs deep in my family; my aunt taught 26 years in Great Falls public schools before serving as a principal in two elementary schools there. I was the second person in my family to earn a college degree.

Pursue your lifelong education, and support Montana public schools. I’m proud to!

In the July edition of The Interim, the legislative newsletter, there’s an article on the first annual Teachers Institute. I participated with other legislators in some panel discussions, and got, as the article says, rave reviews!

Here’s the story from The Interim (online at http://leg.mt.gov/content/Publications/Interim-Newsletter/2009-Interim-Newsletter/7-10-interim-newsletter.pdf)

First Teachers Institute on Rep. Democracy Draws 28 Participants, Gets Rave Reviews

Twenty-eight teachers from every corner of Montana came to the state Capitol June 14 for the first Teachers Institute on Representative Democracy and the Legislative Process. They went home two days later raving about the experience and the knowledge they gained.

Photo: Rep. Dennis Himmelberger, at right, discusses the role of the citizen legislator during a panel discussion at the Teachers Institute on Representative Democracy and the Legislative Process. Other panelists were, from left to right, Rep. Diane Sands (just outside photo frame), Sen. Bob Story, Rep. Jesse OHara, Sen. Trudi Schmidt, and Rep. JP Pomnichowski.

It was excellent in every way, said one participant. It was well organized, all of the speakers, legislators, and presenters were wonderful, the keynote speaker was excellent. There was literally nothing that was not done well.

The Legislative Council was one of the primary sponsors of the event, which attracted mostly middle school and high school teachers of government, history, and social studies. The educators attended presentations by legislative staff on redistricting and budgeting, as well as a session on voting and elections by Secretary of State Linda McCulloch. They also participated in a realistic mock committee hearing with legislative staff after being assigned roles as senators, lobbyists, and citizen opponents and proponents.

McCulloch introduced the keynote speaker, Dr. Alan Rosenthal, at a dinner June 14. Rosenthal is a professor of public policy and political science at Rutgers University. His visit was sponsored by the National Conference of State
Legislatures.

Photo: Dr. Alan Rosenthal, professor of public policy and political science at Rutgers University, impresses teachers with the importance of teaching their students about representative democracy.

Rosenthal discussed efforts by NCSL and partnering civic education organizations to improve the teaching of civic education in the schools. He provided the teachers with a set of lesson plans he has developed to teach an appreciation of representative democracy, how legislators make decisions, and what makes lawmakers tick.

Members of the Legislative Finance Committee, in town for an interim meeting, also attended the dinner and got a chance to visit with the teachers.

Perhaps the highlight of the legislative portion of the institute was a pair of panel discussions with Montana legislators that offered a glimpse into their motivations and perspectives. The panelists, who volunteered their time, were Sen. Bob Story, Sen. Trudi Schmidt, Rep. Dennis Himmelberger, Rep. Jesse OHara, Rep. JP Pomnichowski, and Rep. Diane Sands. They discussed their views on the topics What Does It Mean to Be a Citizen Legislature? and How Does a Legislator Represent Constituents?

Rosenthal, who attended the first discussion, said he thought it was the best legislator panel he has seen in his 40-year career of working with state legislatures.

The legislative panel discussions and other aspects of the institute are being broadcast periodically on TVMT, the state government public-access television network. You can find your local TVMT channel at leg.mt.gov/tvmt.

Other sponsors of the event were Humanities Montana, Project Citizen, Teaching Representative Democracy in America, and the Secretary of States Office. For more information, contact Gayle Shirley, legislative information officer, at 406-444-2957 or gshirley@mt.gov.


Happy Independence Day, everyone! Best wishes for a happy and safe Fourth of July!

I extended my best holiday wishes in this ad in today’s Bozeman Daily Chronicle. I hope you and yours have a great Fourth.



Yesterday, I went whitewater rafting on the Gallatin River, south of Bozeman. It was a rollicking good time, with great water levels for this time of year, and an enthusiastic group of rafters!

Some pictures of the raft, and rafters. The first is our raft going around House Rock, on the Mad Mile of Class 3 and 4 rapids on the Gallatin. Many thanks to Montana Whitewater for a great trip, and especially to Alejandro, our guide. Ale was great!