ThinkSouth -- a weblog of the Center for a Better South

9.08.2010

Center issues report of big ideas for Gulf restoration

SEPT. 8, 2010 – The Center for a Better South today called for a new $10 billion development and recovery trust fund to help people along the Gulf coast leapfrog forward educationally and economically following the April oil disaster.

Development of a new long-term trust fund is one of a dozen major ideas highlighted in the Center’s new report, “Ideas for a Better Gulf,” released today to help to generate transformational change in a region hit hard this year by the oil disaster and throughout recent years by Hurricane Katrina and other storms.

“For an area of our country with a history of poverty, health adversities and educational challenges, we as a nation need to take this opportunity to do better by the people of the Gulf – to make strategic investments to promote its long-term economic health,” said Andy Brack, president of the nonprofit Center.

“Let’s not miss this transformational chance to stimulate economic and educational successes for the region,” he said. “We hope these ideas can generate discussions that will lead to concrete action to help people get their lives turned around so they can move forward in dynamic ways.”

A new $10 billion trust fund, for example, could be used for strategic investments in projects that could have major systemic educational, health and economic impacts throughout the Gulf coast and serve as a source to pay for unexpected health and environmental costs caused by the oil spill, the report said.

Seed money for the fund could come from an initial infusion of $5 billion from BP, followed by a continuing funding mechanism based on a percentage of royalties already paid by all oil companies for leases and similar agreements, according to the report.

Among other ideas in the report:

  • Creation of a short-term presidential commission to oversee the trust and develop a long-term plan to administer it. The commission could be tasked to steer development and long-term recovery funds quickly to investments to make a difference in people’s lives.
  • Investment of significant resources to support a higher education economic cluster in the Gulf to serve as a platform for tens of thousands of high-paying, knowledge-based jobs for the future.
  • Development of a free wireless Internet platform along the Gulf coast to allow residents to tie into economic and educational opportunities associated with the knowledge-based economy.
  • Distribution of free educational laptops to elementary students across the Gulf to seed the region’s future workers so they can start developing the economic tools for success they’ll need in the future.
  • Establishment of a way of using technology to mobilize and link America’s volunteers to respond to needs along the Gulf coast.

To learn more about these and other ideas, view the Center’s report online at this Web site:

www.BetterSouth.org

Background

The Center for a Better South was asked in early June by U.S. Navy Secretary Ray Mabus to “think big” about ways that could help people along the Gulf coast recover from the Deepwater Horizon disaster and move forward in dynamic new ways to get past historic economic, educational, health, environmental and other challenges.

Throughout the summer of 2010, the Center convened periodic conference calls with thinkers across the South to consider big ideas to share.

Another site, FYI

Since June, the Center also has offered a daily photo blog to tell stories about the Gulf catastrophe and recovery through moving images. Check out the site by going to:

www.BetterGulf.org

9.01.2010

Suspending ThinkSouth

Greetings,

The Center for a Better South is suspending the daily ThinkSouth headlines blog. Periodically, we'll put news here about the Center.

If you really want it to continue, please send me an email. (brack@bettersouth.org)

In the meantime, let me suggest that you go to www.GulfSpillClips.com to keep up with the latest news related to the Gulf oil disaster.

Best,

Andy Brack
President

8.31.2010

8/31: VA group opposes immigration powers for state troopers

Richmond Times-Dispatch: Virginia group opposes immigration powers for state troopers

Members of VA-SCOPE say they think that expanding state and local enforcement to include the enforcement of civil violations of federal immigration law is bad public policy that would undermine immigrants' trust of law enforcement. The group is urging Gov. Bob McDonnell not to pursue civil immigration-enforcement powers for Virginia State Police.

"It remains our fundamental and firmly held belief that state and local law enforcement of civil violations of federal immigration law is bad public policy under any circumstance," the group wrote, urging Gov. McDonnell not to negotiate or sign a statewide agreement.

Also in the South:

GULF OIL SPILL: Millions of birds at risk as fall migration to Gulf Coast nears

ALABAMA: Only six of 18 Southern governors attend convention

ARKANSAS: State lawmakers rescind recommendation to boost school funding

FLORIDA: More public schools in Florida are requiring uniforms

GEORGIA: Audit of Georgia sex offender registry shows many errors

KENTUCKY: State to get grant to increase computer access at libraries

LOUISIANA: Bashing oil industry is tricky politics in Gulf states

MISSISSIPPI: Editorial: Could Mississippi be biomass headquarters?

NORTH CAROLINA: New NC regulations OK dogs and cats (?) on restaurant patios

SOUTH CAROLINA: "Southern Fried Fuel" program to recycle used cooking oil into biodiesel

TENNESSEE: State lottery scholarship program prepares for cuts


If you have a news story about public policy to suggest, send an email to info@bettersouth.org. And remember to check out our new photo blog: www.BetterGulf.org

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8.30.2010

8/30: Southern governors talk trade with China

Montgomery Advertiser: Southern governors talk trade with China

The governors of Alabama, Mississippi, Tennessee, North Carolina, Missouri and Virginia met with Chinese business offi­cials as part of the annual meet­ing of the Southern Governors' Association. A key goal of the conference is expanding trade between two of the largest economies in the world -- China and the Ameri­can South.

Alabama Gov. Bob Riley has made his mission as chairman to reach out to emerging markets, especially China, to sell a unified South that offers low taxes, less regulation, generally lower energy costs, quality of life, a low cost of living, and states where labor unions are not as prominent or powerful.

Also in the South:

GULF OIL SPILL: President Obama defends response to Gulf oil spill

ALABAMA: BP exec says state's lawsuit complicates process for evaluating $148 million claim

ARKANSAS: Aquifer providing drinking water in SE Arkansas is unaffected by industry, study says

FLORIDA: Opinion: Florida needs tough immigration law to protect its citizens

GEORGIA: Some Georgia communities left out of immigration program

KENTUCKY: Kentucky Employees Retirement System's pension fund in distress

LOUISIANA: State hit hard by moratorium on oil drilling

MISSISSIPPI: Redistricting can create havoc for some lawmakers

NORTH CAROLINA: Hurricane Earl could cause problems of Outer Banks

SOUTH CAROLINA: State officials worried about growing doctor shortage

TENNESSEE: State involved in embryonic stem cell fight

VIRGINIA:
New program helps foster children consider higher education

If you have a news story about public policy to suggest, send an email to info@bettersouth.org. And remember to check out our new photo blog: www.BetterGulf.org

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8.27.2010

8/27: Did 'Race for the Top' benefit Blue states?

Southern Political Report: John Tures: Did 'Race to the Top' benefit Blue states?

"As the US Department of Education's "Race to the Top" grants were being awarded to the competing states in August, speculation was rampant that they were a political payoff to places that voted for President Barack Obama. I investigate whether blue states really did get the money.

"In the first round of voting, Delaware and Tennessee won the grants, finishing at the top. The former voted for Obama, and latter didn't, though the Volunteer State did have a Democratic Party governor. In the second round of voting, the following states won: Massachusetts, New York, Hawaii, Florida, Rhode Island, District of Columbia, Maryland, Georgia, North Carolina and Ohio. All but Georgia voted for Obama.

"So the case is closed, right? No, this won't be my shortest column ever. Because 15 states that applied for the money that lost, and also voted for Obama, as well as 15 that didn't vote for him that lost out. Running a chi-square test, I find that the relationship between a state's 2008 vote and getting a Race to the Top grant is statistically significant, but not as strong a relationship as I expected (depending on whether or not you use the Pearson scores or Fisher's Exact Test, as some recommend for small samples). " MORE

Also in the South:

GULF OIL SPILL: Four-state coastal alliance formed to help Gulf region

ALABAMA: Federal education money to help bail out state's schools

ARKANSAS: State's weatherization program for low-income residents gets federal boost

FLORIDA: State's growth management plan tossed out by circuit judge

GEORGIA: Special group formed by legislature to look at reforming Georgia's tax code

KENTUCKY: State court rules Christian-only health plan is insurance

LOUISIANA: Gov. Jindal talks about five years of progress since Hurricane Katrina

MISSISSIPPI: State could become first place in the world to turn woodchips into fuel oil

NORTH CAROLINA: State revenue falls even as more money comes in from taxes

SOUTH CAROLINA: "Virtual One-Stop" employment system set to launch in state

TENNESSEE: Unemployment picture improves in most of Tennessee

VIRGINIA: Massive computer failure is hurting state's government


If you have a news story about public policy to suggest, send an email to info@bettersouth.org. And remember to check out our new photo blog: www.BetterGulf.org

8.26.2010

8/26: FL hospitality industry hires three legal firms

Press-Register: Florida's hospitality industry hires three legal firms to go after BP

The hospitality industry in Florida has hired three legal firms as it works to get compensation from BP PLC for revenue lost due to the Gulf oil spill. Industry officials say the claims process is too complicated for individual businesses to go through alone.

"As the BP claims process denied requests for emergency payments and/or paid merely pennies on the dollar in interim payments to our members, we realized we had to seek legal counsel now to protect our membership and the future of Florida’s tourism," Carol Dover, the association's president and CEO, said in a statement.

Also in the South:

GULF OIL SPILL: Investigator says BP isn't learning from disasters

ALABAMA: Mercedes-Benz factory helps 2,800 employees get fit

ARKANSAS: Home sales in state rise slightly

GEORGIA: Solar energy adoption lags in state

KENTUCKY: Jobless rates go down in 111 Kentucky counties

LOUISIANA: State to get $1.8 billion for schools lost during Hurricane Katrina

MISSISSIPPI: Experts say Mississippi oysters are safe to eat

NORTH CAROLINA: Gov. Perdue to pay $30,000 fine for unreported private flights

SOUTH CAROLINA: State's real estate market is down 16% in July

TENNESSEE: State launches program to help businesses improve energy efficiency

VIRGINIA:
Lobbyists spent $15 million on Virginia legislature this year

If you have a news story about public policy to suggest, send an email to info@bettersouth.org. And remember to check out our new photo blog: www.BetterGulf.org

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