Michigan Oil Spill: Oil Halfway To Lake Michigan, Mayor Daley Responds

Oil from a pipeline spill in Michigan early this week has been on the move through area waterways in recent days–and some fear that it could enter Lake Michigan.

The trouble began about 9 p.m. Sunday, when an oil pipeline owned by Enbridge Liquids Pipelines sprung a leak in Marshall Township. The pipeline was shut down–but not before it leaked an estimated one million gallons of oil that began flowing down the Kalamazoo River.

The oil is now about 80 miles from Lake Michigan and moving toward the lake, the Chicago Tribune reports. During a Thursday press conference, Mayor Daley said the oil spill threatens the Midwest’s drinking water. The Tribune reports:

Mayor Richard Daley today went on the offensive in his battle with Michigan, saying a Kalamazoo River oil spill trumps Asian carp when it comes to threats to Lake Michigan.

Daley said Michigan officials have been quick to take legal action against Illinois in a bid to stop Asian carp from reaching Lake Michigan, so they should be especially keen to get to the bottom of what he said is a much more serious threat to the lake.

Michigan is taking the spill very seriously, and U.S. Rep. Mark Schauer called the spill the “largest oil spill in the history of the Midwest.”

He also introduced legislation Thursday to improve response times to pipeline disasters, according to the Detroit Free Press. The Michigan spill was not reported until Monday morning, even though it was noticed Sunday night. The National Transportation Safety Board is also investigating the cause of the leak.

Michigan Governor Jennifer Granholm has publicly criticized both the EPA and Enbridge Inc., calling their cleanup effort “wholly inadequate,” the Kalamazoo Gazette reports.

While Michigan struggles with containing and cleaning up the oil spill (Click here for PHOTOS), Chicago’s Mayor Daley made the issue personal Thursday. The city has been in a battle with Michigan for months over Asian Carp. Michigan wants Chicago to close its operating locks in the Chicago River, claiming that gates and other infrastructure will allow the invasive species to enter Lake Michigan.

Industries that rely on shipping say closing the locks would injure the regional economy.

“Oil is worse than carp,” Daley said Thursday. “Michigan better do something about the investigation, the criminal and civil investigation. Who’s paying for it, and who had the oil spill in the Kalamazoo River, because it’s flowing into Lake Michigan.”

The Tribune reports that Daley’s discussion of the spill was not prompted by reporters, who attended a budget meeting for city colleges.



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California State Of Emergency Declared By Schwarzenegger Over $19 Billion Budget Gap

California Governor Arnold Schwarzenegger declared a state of emergency over the state’s finances on Wednesday, raising pressure on lawmakers to negotiate a state budget that is more than a month overdue and will need to close a $19 billion shortfall.



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Arizona Immigration Ruling: Reactions From Politicians (VIDEO)

After Wednesday’s ruling that parts of the Arizona immigration law were blocked, politicians quickly reacted to the news.

The law’s supporters generally decried the ruling and promised to appeal. While President Obama has been silent on the issue, opponents such as Governor Bill Richardson (D- N.M.) considered the ruling a victory, albeit temporary.

The Huffington Post has accumulated some notable reactions to the ruling. What was your reaction?

The unblocked parts of the law go into effect today.

More on Arizona Immigration Law



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In Oklahoma Governor Primary, Voters Reject Anti-Establishment Sentiment

OKLAHOMA CITY — Oklahoma Republicans rejected anti-Washington sentiment on Tuesday, selecting a two-term congresswoman as their nominee for governor rather than a tea party-backed conservative who once called for the creation of a new state militia to protect state sovereignty.

U.S. Rep. Mary Fallin of Oklahoma City defeated state Sen. Randy Brogdon and two other candidates and would be the state’s first female governor if elected Nov. 2. Democrats chose between Attorney General Drew Edmondson and Lt. Gov. Jari Askins.

Fallin gave up her congressional seat to seek an office being vacated by Democratic Gov. Brad Henry, who cannot run for re-election because of term limits. Brogdon put up a pesky fight and accused Fallin of making a “liberal compromise” by voting in 2008 for President George W. Bush’s plan to bail out the nation’s financial industry.

With two-thirds of the state’s precincts reporting unofficial returns, Fallin had 58 percent of the vote and Brogdon had 36 percent.

Voters also decided nominees in races for U.S. Senate and Congress, state House and Senate, and eight statewide posts, including five open seats.

Fallin was unable to vote for herself after being called back to Washington for a vote on a supplemental funding bill for the war in Afghanistan. She planned to return to Oklahoma City on Tuesday night to address supporters.

“She never fought this primary with both fists out,” said University of Oklahoma political science professor Keith Gaddie. “She’s absorbed some blows from a primary opponent, but it has not endangered her nomination.”

Fallin was the state’s first woman and first Republican to serve as lieutenant governor, a post she held for 12 years before being elected to Congress from the Oklahoma City area in 2006. She previously served two terms in the state House.

Retired Department of Defense worker James Sieber, 65, said he was most concerned about the economy as he voted for Fallin in the Oklahoma City suburb of Moore.

“It is the economy and the direction this economy is going and the need to change that direction,” Sieber said.

Donnie Andrews, 49, a Moore police officer, expressed a similar sentiment and also voted for Fallin.

“I was planning on retiring, but not with the economy the way it is,” he said.

Brogdon told The Associated Press in April that he backed the creation of a new state militia to address what he called an “overreaching federal government.” He retreated after a public backlash and said he was speaking only about a National Guard-style militia to aid the state during civil emergencies.

Also in the Republican race Tuesday were Oklahoma City-area businessmen Robert Hubbard and Roger Jackson.

Edmondson and Askins gave up relatively safe seats to try and keep the governor’s mansion in Democratic hands.

Edmondson is a Vietnam veteran who served four terms as attorney general. His father is a former U.S. congressman, his uncle was elected governor in 1958, and his brother is chief justice of the Oklahoma Supreme Court.

Edmondson has raised the most money among all the candidates, amassing nearly $2.6 million in contributions through July 12, according to the most recent campaign finance reports.

Askins served as a special district judge in Stephens County, as a member of the pardon and parole board and for 12 years in the Statehouse before defeating then-House Speaker Todd Hiett for lieutenant governor in 2006. Askins enjoyed a last-minute endorsement from former University of Oklahoma football coach Barry Switzer, a state icon who backed Henry in 2002.

In the U.S. Senate primary, incumbent Republican Tom Coburn defeated primary challengers Evelyn Rogers of Tulsa and retired teacher Lewis Kelly Spring of Hugo. Coburn will face Democratic nominee Jim Rogers of Midwest City, who beat political newcomer Mark Myles. Two independents also await Coburn in the Nov. 2 general election.



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California Budget: Schwarzenegger Could Leave Office Without Resolution

LOS ANGELES — Without a budget resolution in sight, Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger hinted Monday that he might not sign a budget before he leaves office next January unless he gets the reforms he wants.

California faces a $19 billion deficit for the fiscal year that began July 1, and Schwarzenegger is demanding pension, tax and spending reforms in the new budget. He said that if the Legislature doesn’t give him a budget that meets his expectations, he won’t act on it.

“If I don’t get all of the things that we need in order to be fiscally responsible … I will not sign a budget and it could actually drag out until the next governor gets into office,” Schwarzenegger told reporters after meeting with the Los Angeles Area Chamber of Commerce on Monday.

Schwarzenegger also told the chamber that he opposes a ballot initiative in November to pass a budget with a simple majority vote of the state Legislature, rather than the current two-thirds majority.

Earlier this month, the Field Poll found that 65 percent of voters favor Proposition 25, which backers say would make it easier for lawmakers to pass a budget.

According to the National Conference of State Legislatures, only California and Rhode Island have a two-thirds vote requirement for passing a budget, while nearly all other states require a majority budget vote. Arkansas has the toughest requirement with a three-quarters budget vote.

The governor, a moderate Republican, said allowing passage of a budget by simple majority vote would give too much power to the dominant party in the Legislature.

“One party will make all the decisions,” Schwarzenegger said.

California isn’t facing a cash crisis as severe in the past, but without a budget the state will start to have trouble meeting its obligations.

According to the state controller’s office, California will have enough cash for the month of August. After that, the state has to delay payments to schools and local governments and possibly issue IOUs again.

The governor on Monday tried to stress the severity of the state’s financial problems as California entered its fourth week of the new fiscal year without a balanced budget. For weeks, there have been no signs of progress.

“I don’t want to hand this problem and this burden over to the next governor, so I am absolutely committed that I will not sign a budget if we don’t have all of those reforms in place,” Schwarzenegger said.

In recent years, the Democratic leaders who control the Assembly and Senate have agreed to one budget plan, which is then negotiated with Republicans and the governor. This year, however, the two leaders released separate plans and have agreed only in principle to protect funding for schools and social programs for the poor.

The two Democratic leaders – Assembly Speaker John Perez of Los Angeles and Senate President Pro Tem Darrell Steinberg of Sacramento – said Monday they won’t accept a cuts-only budget as proposed by Schwarzenegger and backed by Republican lawmakers.

Instead, Democrats are calling for a delay in corporate tax breaks and adoption of a new oil tax.

“If the governor continues to insist on granting billions in corporate tax cuts financed by drastic cuts to public education and programs for working mothers and their children, I am prepared to grant his wish by waiting for the next governor,” Steinberg said in a statement.

___

Associated Press Writer Judy Lin in Sacramento contributed to this report.

(This version CORRECTS Corrects governor’s quotes. This story is part of AP’s general news and financial services.)



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US Soldiers Kidnapped In Afghanistan: Report

KABUL, Afghanistan – Two U.S. Navy service members disappeared in a dangerous area of eastern Afghanistan, prompting a massive air and ground search and appeals on local radio stations for their safe return, NATO and Afghan officials said Saturday.

The New York Times reports that, according to local residents and officials, the two soldiers have been kidnapped by the Taliban:

The Taliban have reportedly claimed responsibility for abducting the two Americans, but Mr. Darwish said local officials knew little more. “We don’t know what their demands are,” he said.

The two left their compound in the Afghan capital, Kabul, in a vehicle Friday afternoon, but never returned, NATO said in a statement. Vehicles and helicopters were dispatched to search for the two, who may have been killed or captured by the Taliban in Charkh district of southern Logar province — about a two-hour drive south of Kabul, said district chief Samer Gul.

Elsewhere, five U.S. troops died in separate bombings in the south, setting July on course to become the deadliest month of the nearly 9-year war for Americans.

Rising casualties are eroding support for the war even as President Barack Obama has sent thousands of reinforcements to try to turn back the Taliban, who would have a leg up in the propaganda war with the capture of two U.S. troops.

A NATO official, speaking on condition of anonymity because of the sensitivity of search operations, confirmed the two were Navy personnel, but would not identify their unit to avoid jeopardizing search operations. The official said it was unclear what the two were doing or what would lead them to leave their compound. The official would not say whether the two were on official business.

The Taliban have not contacted the coalition force to claim responsibility or make any demands for their release, the official said.

Gul, the district chief in Charkh, said that a four-wheel drive armored sports utility vehicle was seen Friday night by a guard working for the district chief’s office. The guard tried to flag down the vehicle, carrying a driver and a passenger, but it kept going, Gul said.

“They stopped in the main bazaar of Charkh district. The Taliban saw them in the bazaar,” Gul said. “They didn’t touch them in the bazaar, but notified other Taliban that a four-wheel vehicle was coming their way.”

The second group of Taliban tried to stop the vehicle, but when it didn’t, insurgents opened fire and the occupants in the vehicle shot back, he said.

NATO said a search is under way for the missing service members. According to Gul, one may have been killed and the other taken hostage by the Taliban.

“Maybe they wanted to go to Paktia province or to the American base, but they came down the wrong road toward Charkh,” Gul said. “They didn’t pay any attention to the police. Otherwise we could have kept them from going into an insecure area and now this unfortunate incident has happened.”

The only U.S. service member known to be in Taliban captivity is Spc. Bowe Bergdahl of Hailey, Idaho, who disappeared June 30, 2009 in neighboring Paktika province, an area heavily infiltrated by the Haqqani network, which has deep links to al-Qaida. He has since appeared on videos posted on Taliban websites confirming his captivity.

New York Times reporter David Rhode was also kidnapped in Logar province while trying to make contact with a Taliban commander. He and an Afghan colleague escaped in June 2009 after seven months in captivity, most of it spent in Taliban sanctuaries in Pakistan.

Mohammad Nasir Medaruz, director of a radio station in Logar called Meli Pegham, or “National Message,” said he had received a phone call from coalition officials asking that he broadcast a message offering $10,000 for information about the whereabouts of each missing service member.

“I told them that Logar is not a safe area and if I broadcast that, I could get attacked,” Medaruz said.

He said that if the military officials paid him, he would broadcast the information and say that it was an “advertisement.”

He said he did not broadcast the information, but another radio station, sponsored by the military in Logar, did air the message.

On Saturday in the same district in Logar, the manager of an Afghan construction company and his driver were kidnapped, according to Din Mohammad Darwesh, spokesman for the governor of Logar province. The two Afghans captured worked with Afghan Korean Construction Co., he said.

The five American troops died in roadside bombings in the south — four in a single blast. A fifth service member was killed in a separate attack in the south where international forces are stepping up the fight against the insurgents.

The latest deaths brought to 75 the number of international troops killed in Afghanistan this month, including 56 Americans. Many of the deaths have occurred in the south where Afghan and NATO forces are ramping up operations against the Taliban in their southern strongholds, hoping to enable the Afghan government to expand its control in the volatile region.

On Tuesday, an international conference in Kabul endorsed President Hamid Karzai’s plan for Afghan security forces to assume responsibility for protecting the country by the end of 2014. Obama has pledged to begin removing U.S. troops starting in July 2011, although he has linked the drawdown to security conditions on the ground.



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NYC Vacation Apartments BANNED By Patterson

Really? Among everything else this state is handling, Patterson decides to ban this? NY Governor David Patterson has signed a bill that makes short-term, vacation apartment rentals illegal in New York City, a defeat for those who think it will limit choices for Big Apple budget travelers, according to USA Today.

The new law, which outlaws New York apartment rentals for less than 30 days, “fixes problems caused by illegal hotels and improves quality of life in traditional residential apartment buildings, while also meeting the needs of visitors. By removing a legal gray area and replacing it with a clear definition of permanent occupancy, the law will allow enforcement efforts that help New Yorkers who live in SRO units and other types of affordable housing preserve their homes,” said Paterson in a prepared statement. “By making the effective date of this law May 1, 2011, property holders, business owners and not-for-profit corporations will be able to adjust the uses of their properties to the provisions of this law, or to dispose of the properties at issue so that they may find alternate sites for their current uses.”

“When housing designated for permanent occupancy is illegally converted into a hotel, unsafe conditions are created, the residential character of City neighborhoods is harmed and the supply of much-needed units of housing is depleted,” added New York Mayor Michael A. Bloomberg. “The bill provides a clear definition of what constitutes transient and permanent occupancy, which will allow City agencies to issue summonses and initiate other enforcement actions against illegal hotels.”

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kenny guinn

Washington PostFormer Gov. Kenny Guinn remembered as 'Education Governor,' passionate fighterReno Gazette JournalUpdate at 3:04 pm: Kenny Guinn, a popular two-term Nevada governor, educator and business leader, died today at a Las Vegas hospital after falling off the …Former Nev. Gov. Kenny Guinn dies in Las VegasThe Associated PressReaction to Guinn's death crosses party linesLahontan [...]

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Sarah Palin, Newt Gingrich Endorsements Could Help Determine Outcome Of Georgia Governor’s Race

ATLANTA — Dueling endorsements from Sarah Palin and Newt Gingrich could help decide a crowded Republican primary for Georgia governor Tuesday.

Palin’s nod to former Secretary of State Karen Handel has helped her surge to the top of the polls in recent days, while ex-congressman Nathan Deal could benefit from the backing of Gingrich. The two served together in the U.S. House.

On the Democratic side, one-term former Gov. Roy Barnes is facing the first electoral test in his comeback bid. Barnes was ousted in 2002 by Republican Sonny Perdue, his defeat fueled by teachers angry with his education reforms and others upset over his successful push to remove the Confederate battle symbol from the state’s flag.

Seven Democrats and seven Republicans are vying for the open seat. Perdue is prevented by term limits from running again after two terms.

Palin’s endorsement of Handel – the lone woman in the race who could become the state’s first female governor – swiftly helped change the dynamic. Handel had been attacked throughout the campaign as too liberal. Palin’s backing – she called the former secretary of state a “pro-life, pro-Constitutionalist with a can-do attitude” – was seen as a conservative seal of approval. Handel had the lead in a new poll released Sunday.

Handel is just one of several candidates around the country recently endorsed by Palin, John McCain’s running mate during the 2008 presidential campaign. Palin is largely credited with helping South Carolina Rep. Nikki Haley, once little-known in her state, surge to popularity and ultimately a runoff win for the GOP nomination for governor.

The day after Palin posted her Handel endorsement on Facebook and Twitter, Gingrich threw his support behind Deal.

State Insurance Commissioner John Oxendine is also in the running for the GOP nod and has been the Republican money leader throughout the campaign.

The Republican race is widely expected to head to an Aug. 10 runoff, which would be required if none of the candidates wins more than 50 percent of the vote.

Barnes is the front-runner in the Democratic contest. His most formidable challenger is Attorney General Thurbert Baker, who has the backing of former President Bill Clinton and is seeking to become Georgia’s first black governor.

Barnes announced last spring that he would make another bid for the governor’s mansion. He ran a folksy but focused primary campaign attacking ruling Republicans in the state for neglecting big problems, like education and transportation, amid the crippling recession.

Georgia voters will also select a Democrat to run against Republican U.S. Sen. Johnny Isakson, who doesn’t have a GOP opponent in his bid for a second term and has $5 million on hand for his campaign.

In north Georgia, Republican U.S. Rep. Tom Graves could face yet another runoff after winning a special election runoff in June for the seat once held by Deal. Deal left Congress to run for governor, and now Graves is seeking a full two-year term.

His leading opponent is former state Sen. Lee Hawkins, whom he defeated in June’s runoff. There are five Republicans in the race, which could make a runoff necessary.

Elsewhere, three Democratic congressmen are facing opposition in the primary – U.S. Reps. Hank Johnson, David Scott and John Barrow.

Eight GOP contenders are vying to replace Republican Rep. John Linder, who is retiring after nine terms.

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Manchin names Goodwin to fill Byrd’s seat  – News – The Charleston Gazette – West Virginia News and Sports -

CHARLESTON, W.Va. — Gov. Joe Manchin on Friday appointed his former chief counsel, Charleston lawyer Carte Goodwin, to temporarily fill the U.S.

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