Thursday, August 11, 2016

A harbinger for La Paz County?

8/11/16

A harbinger for La Paz County?

Jefferson County, Alabama: Screwed By Wall Street, Still Paying
by Matt Taibbi
Rolling Stone

My view on all of this is that the citizens of Jefferson County were defrauded by two groups of bad actors: the banks offering these deadly swap deals, and the politicians they bought off to accept them. Because criminal fraud has already been proven in court -- a number of defendants, including several county commissioners from the time period in question, have already been sentenced to many years of jail time for bribery and other charges -- I'm at a loss to understand how any court can justify continuing to enforce these toxic deals post factum.

http://www.rollingstone.com/politics/news/jefferson-county-alabama-screwed-by-wall-street-still-paying-20110407

Click here for full story

Thursday, July 28, 2016

La Paz County is running out of water and reckless Arizona officials are sending it to Saudi Arabia

7/27/16

To:
Thomas Buschatzke, Director
Arizona Department of Water Resources

From:
Editor, La Paz County Reckoning

Subject: La Paz County Community Center Meeting, 7/27/16

--Background--
Monday, April 11, 2016

We're running out of water, and the world's powers are very worried

Excerpt:

Thomas Buschatzke, Arizona's water director, defended the Saudi farm, saying it provides jobs and increases tax revenue. He added that "Arizona is part of the global economy; our agricultural industry generates billions of dollars annually to our state's economy."

After the meeting, the state approved another two new wells for the Saudi company, each capable of pumping more than a billion gallons of water a year.

Note: If the link above no longer works, click on Google's cache copy of the file!

--End Background--

Greetings, Director!

Now, that's just about the best article I've ever read about bureaucratic irresponsibility, ever in my lifetime.  Two-billion gallons equates to 200,000 gallons for every resident of La Paz County -- water lost forever, never to be replaced!

You don't have an argument with me that agriculture brings a lot of money into Arizona.  However, there are many, many other industries that do the same as well, industries that don't suck our aquifers dry.  Tourism and snowbirds are just two examples, and there are many more such as clean tech industries.

We're living in a desert here, for chrissake, in case you've forgotten.  A desest struck by draught for decades now.  Surely you must know that we shouldn't be pumping water out of Arizona, but rather that we should be pumping water into Arizona.  I mean, have you taken a look at Lake Powell or Lake Mead lately?  Are you all so disconnected from nature, the environment, and reality because you spend too much time, passing time, in ivory towers in Phoenix?

The United Kingdom recently voted to exit the EU.  The majority did this because they felt they were being screwed by self-seving bureaucrats in Brussels, bureaucrats who were never elected to office, who could never be held accountable, who were never making decisions favorable for the UK, who never knew anything, and who always behaved stubbornly, condescendingly and impetuously whenever their feet were held to fire.

The last time you guys were out here, you got an earful. Yet you went back to your ivory tower and ruled against common sense, just like the EU always has against the Brits. 

So why have you even bothered to come back?  Is it just to get another earful, go back home and rule irresponsibly again, and piss us all off some more?

If you guys lived out here, and knew that your decision would directly force you to drill a new well at a cost of $25,000, would you still vote to suck your aquifers dry -- just because it brought money into Arizona -- money that wouldn't even go into your own pocket? 

Your irresponsible decision to sell out La Paz County residents for its water, is no different than if a federal bureaucrat recklessly made a decision to divert Arizona's water from the CAP Canal to Los Angeles.

So just admit it!  You're just pawns of the money establishment, mere disciples, willing to genuflect daily so you can keep your jobs, no matter how much it harms children, families, and residents of this great state of Arizona. 

How about doing something constructive for La Paz County -- or for the state, for that matter?  Help us bring sensible industry to our county -- not industries that suck our aquifers dry, for no other reason but the benefit of short-term money at the expense of long-term Arizona!

Sunday, June 26, 2016

Old and poor: An especially bad combination in this Arizona county

Polly Thorpe of Salome, Ariz., is one of the many poor seniors who find life difficult in La Paz County.
Sun Jun 26 2016 08:15:43 GMT-0700 (MST)
Nigel Duara / Los Angeles Times

“We cannot offer them what they would get elsewhere because we just don’t have the money,” said the county administrator, Dan Field.

It's no wonder.  The County Supervisors are raping La Paz County citizens with unprecedented taxation.  So exactly where is all that money going?

For one, money isn't available for the poor and old because elected officials have mismanaged the county, wasting precious funds on legal fees, court judgments, helicopters, unnecessary job appointments, and contract letting based on "good old boys club" favortism.

Two: There's too much nepotism in LPC government.  One supervisor and the treasurer belong to the same family.  Another supervisor, in what had been a highly controversial appointment, has a spouse who was appointed to a lucrative position for no other reason than plain and simple nepotism.

How objective can officials be when, for example, there's a complaint against one official, but supervisors turn a blind eye and do nothing because there is a conflict of interest based on nothing but nepotism?

Read the whole story:

Old and poor: An especially bad combination in this Arizona county 
By Nigel Duara 
June 26, 2016, 3:00 a.m.

Monday, April 11, 2016

We’re running out of water, and the world’s powers are very worried

Thomas Buschatzke, Arizona’s water director, defended the Saudi farm, saying it provides jobs and increases tax revenue. He added that “Arizona is part of the global economy; our agricultural industry generates billions of dollars annually to our state’s economy.”

After the meeting, the state approved another two new wells for the Saudi company, each capable of pumping more than a billion gallons of water a year.

https://www.revealnews.org/article/were-running-out-of-water-and-the-worlds-powers-are-very-worried/

Tuesday, March 8, 2016

The Presidential Preference Election is Tuesday, March 22nd

Our Presidential Preference Election is Tuesday, March 22nd.

**
You must be registered with the Republican, Democratic or Green Party in order to be eligible to participate in the upcoming March 22nd Presidential Preference Election.
**

For more information call 602-506-1511

And it’s easy to do online!  

- For Maricopa County residents - Click here to update your registration! 
http://recorder.maricopa.gov/elections/registrationform.aspx

- And for anyone living outside of Maricopa County - Click here
https://servicearizona.com/webapp/evoter/selectLanguage

Saturday, February 6, 2016

La Paz County and Internet Security

If you just woke up from a Rip Van Winkle slumber, then you might not already know or have not head of attorney-client privilege, that it means anything you share with your attorney is private, and that it is something so sacred that not even the highest court in the land can pierce.

And you also might not already know that your medical record, for example, is also a matter of privacy between you and your doctor, equally as sacred as the attorney-client privilege, if not more so in some cases.

In fact, for an attorney or doctor there is no quicker route to the unemployment line than if he or she were to violate your right to privacy, which is not only statutorily protected but is also a constitutional guarantee.

So, if a doctor or attorney can't disclose your privacy, what about a county official?  Can s/he behave with reckless abandon, carelessly or willfully placing you at risk of disclosing your social security number, bank account number, date of birth, and other vital information about you, such as the names and ages of your children, for example? 

And if an official does violate your privacy, is he or she headed for the soup kitchen line as quickly as a doctor or attorney would?

You would think so, but not so fast.

As editor I'm aware of a recent case where a La Paz County taxpayer had requested a copy of a check used to pay 2015 property taxes.  When a copy of the check arrived via email, sent by none other than the La Paz County Treasurer, herself, the taxpayer was shocked to discover that the treasurer had actually attached a facsimile of the check to an unsecured, open email message. In other words, the taxpayer's checking account number, nevermind the actual signature, is now on hard drives at the county, at the email provider, and who knows where else in between, completely at risk for hacking by anyone with a little bit of technical knowledge about unsecured networks.

Note:  The La Paz County Reckoning won't disclose the taxpayer's name, out of respect for one's right to privacy.

In the taxpayer's own words: "If her [the treasurer's] outrageous outburst was not shocking enough for me as an already stunned taxpayer, what followed was about on the order of shooting the messenger for bringing bad news."

Without belaboring you with all the nitty-gritty details, the bottom line is this: when the taxpayer finally pointed out  the egregious violation of internet security, the treasurer would have nothing of it, and eventually told the taxpayer that if further emails would be forthcoming, then she, the treasurer, would file a harassment report with the La Paz County Sheriff's Office.

In fact, the taxpayer had lots more to ruminate about:

"Who, today, can believe such outrageous, impetuous, irresponsible behavior on behalf of any elected official?" wrote the taxpayer.

"If my reaction, alone, is not enough to shock the conscience of any normally aspirated individual, what does it say about other elected officials and county personnel that have been made aware of the violation of internet security but yet have made no effort to contact me or even notify a correction of this violation to privacy?

"Like me, you are probably now wondering about the training and qualifications of our public officials, and have as many questions as I do.

"For example:

"Does La Paz County have encryption software to secure and transmit sensitive data, such as PGP or TrueCrypt?  If not, is it even qualified as a custodian of vital statistics and sensitive data of taxpayers and residents?

"Why is the county even in possession of cancelled checks?

"Are all canceled checks held in a secure safe, or does the treaurer store them in a box in some corner or closet of her office?

"And when cancelled checks are finally disposed of, does the treasurer just toss them into a dumpster?

"Is the county using a third-party contractor or software to process checks online? If so, what amount of due diligence has her office and the county performed to qualify such contractor?

"Is it too much trouble for the county to simply deposit the checks into its bank account, so that checks can be processed in a manner that facilitates our banks from becoming the eventual custodian?

"Shouldn't the county refrain from doing online banking of any nature, as everyone well should by now, to help thwart the epidemic of cybercrime?

"Given so many county officials have already been made aware of this egregious violation of privacy, not to mention members of the press as well, you're probably wondering if a special meeting of all county officials has yet taken place, the purpose for which would be to review county and department policy, as it relates to reckless behavior when it comes to internet privacy and security in today's insane world where everyone, openly and without shame, digitizes our lives and then places it online.

"Oh, yeah, and when there should be accountability for screw-ups, public officials throw reverses and threaten taxpayers, instead.

What do you think about this taxpayer's experience with La Paz County? 

Post your comments or questions below!