Snake Oil

Birth of a License Plate

Wrap-up of the The 2012 Texas Observer Rabble Rouser Round-Up

The 11th annual Texas Observer Rabble Rouser Round-Up and Fat Cat Schmoozefest shook the Continental Club this past Monday, February 27. It was a great party to celebrate the Observer and our wonderful community of supporters and friends!

We’d like to thank a few of those who made it all possible:

OUR DEDICATED SPONSORS
The Texas Observer would like to thank the following people for their generous support of the 2012 Rabble Rouser & Fat Cat Schmoozefest:

$5,000 Community Leader
Lisa Baron Blue

$2,500 Agitator
Sharron Rush
Dale & Libby Linebarger

$1,000 Rabble Rouser
Gilberto Ocañas & Cha Guzman
AFL-CIO and Becky Moeller
Kathleen Clark
James Marston & Annette LoVoi

$500 Legislative Supporter
Nancy Alliegro
American Printing & Mailing
Becky Beaver
State Rep. Lon Burnam
Carlton Carl
Randy Chapman
James Davis & Jan Demetri
Congressman Lloyd and Libby Doggett
Susan Longley
Melissa Jones
Elisabeth Piedmont-Marton and Bruce Marton
Mary Nell & Phillip Mathis
Catherine & John Paul Moore
James Phillips
Robert Shivers into Robert & Nancy Shivers
Travis County Legislative Caucus (Reps Strama, Howard, Dukes, Rodriguez & Naishtat)
State Senator Kirk Watson
Nancy Williams
Marc & Suzanne Winkelman

Our fabulous auction donors

Our Silent Auction raised over $6,700, all of which will go to benefit the work of the Observer. We thank those that donated items big and small to the Silent Auction this year, including:

Phillip Mathis; The Texas ACLU; Alan Pogue; Alison Eden Photography; Allan and Louise Hirst; All Things Considered and Robert Segal; Amie Rodnick; Ann Herbage; Barbara Morgan and the Austin Film Festival; Barbara Schlief; Ben Sargent; Carlton Carl; CBS Morning News and Bob Schieffer; CinnaMan and Michael Hurd; D’ann Johnson; the Davis McLarty Agency; Dick Lavine; Dick Leverich; Ellen Gibbs; Ellen Sweets; Gordon Fowler; Inn Above Onion Creek; Jim Hightower; Malcolm Greenstein; Math for Keeps; Miles of Chocolate; Monkey Wrench Books; Nan Sawyer; Paul Stekler; Relaxing Therapeutics by Jeanne Arquel; Sarah Stevens; Sarah Bird; Texas Healing Arts Spa & Wellness Center; Ty Fain; Robin Jackson Photography; UT Press.

Program participants

Genevieve Van Cleve was an outstanding emcee who delivered a program that was lively, insightful, and fun! Texas State Representative Jessica Farrar struck a high note to start the evening with her keynote speech!

The People’s Friend Recognition and Award

At the event, The Texas Observer announced the 2011 Tyrant’s Foes and presented the 2012 $1000 People’s Friend award to Suzie Canales. The 2011 Tyrant’s Foes included Brian Carr; John Folks; Scott Nicol; Shailey Gupta-Brietzke; Chuck Luther; Zita Telkamp and Therese Cunningham; Wally and Peggy Van Wyk; Allen Weeks; Suzie Canales; and Walter Reaves.
(more at www.texasobserver.org/tyrants-foe)

The 2012 Texas Democracy Foundation Next Generation Leaders

The Rabble Rouser introduced the second class of Next Gen Leaders, including: Joshunda Sanders; Cristina Tzintzun; Phoebe Moore; Matthew Gossage; Brandon Dudley; Andrew Cates; Cliff Walker; Roger Garza; Jaclyn Uresti; Kelly Wilson; Vincent Aguirre; Dan Buda; Melissa Cubria; and Robert Longoria
(more at www.texasobserver.org/next-gen)

Rabble Rouser Committee

These outstanding volunteers and supporters were tireless and we are tremendously grateful for their extraordinary effort. Hats off to a great group of dedicated organizers for throwing such a fabulous party! Thank you so much to: Peter Ravella; Sharron Rush; Jen Cooper; Robert Behrendt; Kate Fain; Eric Scott; Nancy Alliegro; Sean Chitty; Vanessa Fuentes; Belinda Acosta; Diana Claitor; Ellen Sweets; Deliana Garcia; Susan Longley; Shelley Smith; Carlton Carl; Jamie Connatser; Charlotte McCann; and Susan Morris.

Vendors

We greatly appreciate our vendors for the event, including American Printing; CinnaMan; Creative Creations Catering; Hoover’s Restaurant; Satay Restaurant; and, of course, the Continental Club. Plus Chocolate samples courtesy of Miles of Chocolate.

And special thanks to our fabulous band, The White Ghost Shivers!

Staff

We also thank the amazing staff of The Texas Observer, who not only throw a good party but also work hard everyday to bring you the stories not carried by the mainstream press: Candace Carpenter; Krissi Trumeter; Jen Reel; Jonathan McNamara; Dave Mann; Piper Stege Nelson; Forrest Wilder; Susan Smith-Richardson; Patrick Michels; Emily DePrang; and Melissa del Bosque.

Until next year, keep Rabble Rousing and fighting to fix the world!

Grand Prairie ISD Sells Parents on ‘Choice’ Beyond Charters

One cash-strapped district seeks salvation in the language of school reform.
Courtesy Grand Prairie ISD
Kids and parents shop around at the

At Grand Prairie ISD headquarters today, administrators are prepping for an overnight occupation, clearing room in the parking lot for at least a few die-hard parents who’ll show up tonight and brave the cold to be first in line by 8 a.m. Friday.

That’s when the district throws open its doors and starts accepting applications for next year’s “programs of choice” in sports medicine, cosmetology and other enticing specialties. There’s a fifth-grade program focused on the STEM (that’s science, technology, engineering, and math) concentration that’s in such high demand today, and another in culinary arts.

Many of the parents in line will have already been through last weekend’s “GPISD Experience” open house, where parents were invited to “Experience the power of choice in GPISD.” That’s usually the sort of deal school reformers offer to coax parents away from traditional schools they try to paint as outmoded and clunky. Now, Grand Prairie hopes to turn the tables and use the promise of “choice” to reel parents in from private schools, charters, and even traditional public schools nearby.

The district passed out 2,000 applications to its new specialized programs on Saturday, according to district spokesman Sam Buchmeyer. They even mailed out postcards to parents outside their usual enrollment boundaries.

That marketing campaign aimed at parents outside GPISD won them a little free press early this month, when one of their mailers reached the Dallas Observer’s Robert Wilonsky at home, inviting his family to leave Dallas ISD for greener pastures to the west.

“GPISD is an open enrollment district,” the postcard read. “You don’t have to live in Grand Prairie to choose GPISD!”

Buchmeyer told Wilonsky the “choice” programs were growing this year because they’d had had such a good reception for the district’s first experiment last year at Garner Fine Arts Academy. The school’s sagging enrollment put it on the verge of being shut down, so parents came up with the idea of rebranding and marketing the school to help lure new kids. Now Buchmeyer says he’s heard of parents in McKinney commuting an hour each way to bring their kids to Garner.

“The game has changed for public schools,” Buchmeyer told the Observer. “Before you didn’t say words like ‘marketing’ a district.”

Today in Grand Prairie, that’s exactly what you do, Buchmeyer told me on the phone. Charters have, of course, been playing the PR game for years, so all they’re doing is leveling the scales. “Our main competition that we see right now is from those private and charter schools, because they’ve been doing this overt marketing for years now,” he said.

Of course, smooth P.R. isn’t the same as good instruction, and it can be dangerous when it drowns out more even-handed measures of a school’s quality. Commenters on the Observer story were quick to allege it’s all just a scam to help fill the schools and shore up the district’s finances. They said the district was overselling its product.

The district was rated “acceptable” each of the last eight years, apart from a one-year climb to “recognized” in 2010. As they expand, Buchmeyer said they’ll continue marketing to the district’s strong points, and areas, like STEM programs, with the most demand.

GPISD_ChoiceExpo

The “choice” campaign at Garner Elementary did start with money troubles. “We knew that things were going to get dire. Not only for us but for districts all over the state,” he said. “As these budgets are getting tighter and tighter, [some districts] want to lop off programs. We didn’t want to go down that road.”

Instead, beginning with Garner Fine Arts academy, they’re rebranding schools to highlight their strengths. With a new name, and a new focus developed by fine arts faculty and curriculum directors, Garner went from around 300 students to more than 500 this year.

“The academic rigor stays the same. They just add this other emphasis,” Buchmeyer said. Not that a school whose mascot is a red, white and blue “All Star” needs an ego boost, but the state rated Garner “exemplary” in its first year as a fine arts academy.

They’re like magnet schools in many ways, but some of Grand Prairie’s “schools of choice” automatically enroll neighborhood kids first, then fill remaining spots with outsiders in the order they apply. “We’re trying to take care of our Grand Prairie kids first,” he says. Between 50 and 55 students from outside Grand Prairie are enrolled at Garner today, he said.

“It may be such that parents are not aware of what we’re doing, maybe they’ve seen stories in the media,” he said—all that gloom and doom about the budgets. This way, parents can get excited about traditional public schools. Choice won’t have to mean leaving the local ISD.

Unless they don’t already live in Grand Prairie, of course.

“We’re not encouraging anybody to just up and leave their current districts,” Buchmeyer says. “If they’re happy with their school and their district that’s fantastic.”

But they did send out those mailers.

Even if it’s a rare arrangement today, Texas Education Agency spokesperson Debbie Ratcliffe said any district can accept students from other districts if they like.

If a student leaves, say, Dallas ISD, and enrolls in Grand Prairie, DISD would lose funding at its per-student rate, and the state would boost GPISD’s funding for that student, at its per-student rate.

”If we’ve got empty seats, we’re not getting the state funding for those empty seats. It actually benefits our taxpayers if we put [more] kids in.” The scale is too small to register much across the system, but if it’s good news for Grand Prairie, it’s probably not great news for public schools losing kids to the suburb next door.

Ultimately, Buchmeyer hopes he can sell the point that it’s a good arrangement for students.

 

An earlier version of this story misstated the financial implications of a student transferring between districts. Districts would not split the funding for a student who transferred from one to the other.

Pharmacists Ask Lege for Cover from New Medicaid Privatization

Last year, Perry pals secured a new layer of privatization in Texas' Medicaid payments. Now independent pharmacists warn it's putting them out of business.

Late last year in our story on the many ways Gov. Rick Perry’s pals have had their way in Texas (“The V.I.P. Room,” December 2011), Abby Rapoport made an example of a fight between big health care corporations and independent pharmacists, and how lobbyists close to the governor helped tip the scales.

In the latest step in Texas’ march to public health care privatization, some lawmakers wanted to insert a private-sector middle man into the system for reimbursing pharmacists serving customers on Medicaid. As they wrote in our December issue:

That would mean handing over Medicaid prescription drug negotiations to a for-profit company that would ostensibly save money for the Medicaid program by negotiating lower payments to pharmacies. Advocates argued the state could save as much as $100 million. Independent pharmacists would likely bear the brunt of such savings, losing the money they made serving Medicaid clients.

With a little help from former Perry staffers Ann-Marie Price, Victoria Ford and Mike Toomey too, of course, those prescription benefit managers got the measure pushed through. It wasn’t long before the pharmacists got a taste of just how rough the new system would be. By October, many independents got a contract offer from one of those pharmacy benefit managers, Wisconsin-based Navitus, offering a dispensing fee of just $1.35—an 80 percent cut from the $6.50 fee Texas had been paying.

On Tuesday, a handful of those pharmacists waited out a long hearing at the Capitol to warn the House Public Health Committee that managed Medicaid looks just as dangerous as they’d warned it would be last summer. 
Ronald Louis Rumsey, who runs Elam Road Pharmacy in Dallas, told the committee that 75 percent of his business is Medicaid. He said he’s carved out a niche selling meds and equipment for kids with asthma.

“To be blunt, I will not be able to take care of these asthmatic children unless something is done about the plan.” Under the contracts offered by Navitus and CVS Caremark, he said, “Applying the reimbursement formula from Navitus, and applying the proposed formula from CVS Caremark, I’ve determined that I will literally go broke trying to keep my pharmacy open.”
“In my heart, I don’t believe that the Legislature intended this to happen,” Rumsey said.

Committee chair Lois Kolkhorst sounded sympathetic to their concerns. At the very least, she said, the new system makes it harder for the state to follow Medicaid spending through the system, because the PBMs are basically a “black box.”
“They can buy in bulk and they can do possibly a good job,” she said, but who knows? And if pharmacies go out of business, or won’t take a loss to serve Medicaid patients, then mailing prescriptions to rural and inner-city patients is the only way to reach them, Kolkhorst warned, and “we’re headed down not a cost-saving path” at all.

Pharmaceutical managed care backers helped sell the state on “modernizing the Texas Medicaid pharmacy program” by promising $1.2 billion savings over the next decade, backed by numbers from the National Center for Policy Analysis, a Dallas-based free-market advocate.

Texas Health and Human Services Commission spokesperson Stephanie Goodman has said there are plenty of safeguards built in to protect patients while the state’s busy saving money with managed care. “Any company that sets the rates too low to ensure our clients have that access will end up losing its contract with the state.”

But pharmacists say there’s no protection for them. One after another, they pled with the committee, using as many magic buzzwords as they could. They’re small business owners, they reminded. Job creators. Once they start having to lay off employees, what happens to them? Unemployment and Medicaid for those folks too.

One group that represents them, the Texas Pharmacy Business Council, wants HHSC to guarantee a minimum rate for reimbursing pharmacies or give small pharmacies an exemption from the managed care system. President Richard Beck, told the Observer yesterday the group is asking the Legislature to move fast and ask HHSC to protect independents from the pharmaceutical benefit managers’ harsh terms.

“They’re all scared to death, I’ll tell you this. And they should be,” Beck said. “If we wait till the next Legislature, we’re gonna have pharmacies gone. And they don’t come back.”

Scott Walker Trolls for Texas Dollars

Wisconsin's controversial governor romances Texas conservatives' pocketbooks, promising to carry their banner nationwide
Patrick Michels
Protesters from Occupy Austin, Texas AFL-CIO and other workers' groups met Wisconsin Gov. Scott Walker in downtown Austin last week.

Late last week, the Texas Public Policy Foundation’s annual policy orientation drew a few hundred lawmakers, staffers and lobbyists together with pro-business and small-government champions from around the country for inspiration. The conservative research group—the “brains behind the curtain” of Rick Perry’s policies as governor—has seen its profile rise in Austin over the past few years, and the two-day affair at the downtown Austin Hilton reflected as much. This year, they even drew a protest.

At one panel on eliminating unnecessary white-collar offenses from the books, the Texas District & County Attorney Association’s Shannon Edmonds warmed up the crowd with a joke about his new beard. He’d hoped it would help him blend in when he went to visit the Occupy Austin camp, he said, “But they don’t wear too much deodorant there, so that didn’t last long.”

Within an hour or so, though, the unwashed masses of Occupy were in a park across the street—not to defend their odor, but to join the Texas AFL-CIO and a handful of other labor groups in welcoming TPPF’s lunchtime speaker: Scott Walker, the polarizing governor of Wisconsin.

Walker’s first year in office has been a blitz of new policies meant to break the unions’ power in his state, and while he’s loved by pro-business conservatives—an heir to Perry, perhaps, as a favorite governor in Middle America—he’s also sparked bitter resentment and an effort to recall him this summer. Earlier today, the Wisconsin Democratic Party announced they’d turned in more than one million signatures on petitions to recall the governor, well more than the 540,000 they needed.

The most common signs in the crowd outside the hotel last week read, “Recall Walker!” over a blue Wisconsin-shaped fist. Members of the group shouted out their affiliated union groups—AFSCME, the American Postal Workers’ Union, the Screen Actors’ Guild and others—and joined together to repeat a few chants: “What’s disgusting? Union busting!”

At lunch upstairs, TPPF’s president and Chief Executive Officer Brooke Rollins welcomed her audience into the packed ballroom. “I’m glad everyone made it safely into the building,” Rollins said, then individually thanked all the elected officials in the audience—a long list. She invited Texas Railroad Commissioner David Porter onstage to bless the hotel lunch.

20120112_TPPFScottWalker_09.jpg

After a series of glowing introductions—one called Walker “a hero”—the stage belonged to the 44-year-old governor and his folksy, nasal Wisconsin accent.

Walker preached to the choir about freeing his state from “big government union bosses,” declaring his state “open for business” and doing away with labor organizations’ most powerful tool. “Collective bargaining is not a right. Collective bargaining is an expensive entitlement, and it’s time we put the power back in the hands of the people,” Walker told the crowd.

Of course, Texas crossed that bridge long ago, when it became a right-to-work state. He might as well have suggested Texas abolish its state income tax.

But Walker wasn’t there to suggest policy for Texas. He’d taken some cues from the Texas model already, he said. Now he hoped to make Wisconsin’s pro-business, tough-on-unions approach a model for other states. And for that, he’d need help.

Tea party groups around the country have lined to help challenge individual signatures on the recall petitions, and Walker’s already raised upwards of $5 million to fight the recall effort. More than half of that has come from donors outside Wisconsin—including 10 percent from Texas. Bob Perry chipped in with a cool quarter million.

With the momentum of a big Republican win this summer (his), Walker told the crowd his state might go Republican in the presidential election, too. It would break a 28-year Democratic streak.

“I’m not gonna make a direct solicitation here today,” Walker said midway through his speech, “but the reality is that those who care, you can make an impact.”

As the target of a recall, Walker can raise unlimited cash until there’s a date set for the vote. But Walker played the part of the optimist underdog, one man up against a rabble like the crowd outside the hotel, that well-organized union network that can mobilize resistance wherever he travels.

“They’ve got the money and they’ve got the energy behind them,” Walker said. “We can counter with the truth.”

20120112_TPPFScottWalker_04

The headline reads like a dream for voter ID backers here in Texas: “Dead man voting: Texas man tries to cast posthumous ballot.”

The Boston Herald‘s dispatch from last night at the New Hampshire primary is cooked-to-order perfect for King Street Patriots and other “voter integrity” operations around the country:

A man asks for a ballot, gives election workers a bogus name and disappears into the night when the election judge recognizes the alias as a man who’s recently passed on.

From the Boston Herald:

The man, dressed in a suit and tie, did not say why he was trying to vote as the recently deceased person and would not identify any group he was representing.

“He said, ‘You’ll soon find out,’” Pilotte said.

The man, who admitted being from Texas, almost got away with the fraud. He came in to the polling place and gave election officials the name of a man who was still on the voter list. Voters here don’t have to present ID if they are registered.

All the hard evidence you need that the voter fraud threat is real, that our elections will only be safe when voting requires a photo ID. Nevermind that election judges testifying about vote fraud consistently say voter impersonation is the least likely kind of trouble they encounter.

Austin attorney Buck Wood, who’s spent decades checking elections for fraud, says there’s a simple reason why: “It doesn’t make any difference,” he says. “Garden variety election fraud just doesn’t have any impact on elections in Texas, and nobody would organize such a thing.”

It’s an inefficient strategy for anyone serious about swinging an election. Faking mail-in ballots might still get you caught, but they’re easier to fudge—and voter ID laws don’t change that.

“It’s pretty easy to catch this stuff,” Wood says. ”The only thing voter ID would do is frighten those people away from the polls who don’t have ID’s, but are perfectly eligible to vote.”

Tea party groups like Houston’s King Street Patriots, though, are rushing to inflame fears about the voter integrity threat—and stories like this from New Hampshire certainly help.

After all, this wasn’t some crackpot YouTube special last night, right? This is hard evidence, and in the mainstream press, too, that Texans are impersonating dead voters across the country. Even CNN’s got the story.

Manchester City Clerk Matt Normand told them it’s the first time he’s seen this sort of thing. But the whole thing sounds pretty strange.

First, of all, nobody “admits” to being from Texas, especially when they’re breaking the law and riding off into the night like the Hamburglar.

It sounds so cartoonish. Asked who he’s working for, this guy says, “You’ll soon find out?” It could almost be some kind of James O’Keefe/ACORN sting operation.

Wait. What about the YouTubes?

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9-uVhhIlPk0

Project Veritas is, in fact, an O’Keefe operation, the nonprofit he started in 2010, and it looks like they and their cameras had quite a time Tuesday in New Hampshire. Here’s The Daily Caller’s report on the “exclusive” video footage from O’Keefe’s group.

I can’t pick this mystery Texan’s footage out of the video, if he’s in there, but it sure seems like a fair bet they’re connected. Project Vertas’ video closes with an ominous “To Be Continued…” so there could be even more of these sting operations on the way in the name of election “integrity.”