For any voters who are intimidated or blocked from voting by Trump’s brown shirts…er I mean election monitors:


The email below was sent to me Texas State Senator Rodney Ellis [SD-13]. I’ve reproduced it as best I can, but it’s missing significant graphics and some links. I feel that it is nonetheless worth reading ~ Mike
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October 17, 2014
Dear Friend,
Higher education is expensive. As a father with two children seeking degrees and two more who are on their way, I know this personally.
I also know that attending a public four year college or university in Texas has gotten much more expensive over the past decade. In fact, the statewide average academic charges for a student taking 15 credit hours at a public university increased 104 percent from 2003 to 2013 – more than doubling in just ten years!
At the same time, our state has some very real workforce needs that simply aren’t being met.
In an effort to address these two linked issues, Representative Sarah Davis and I passed legislation last session to carefully examine the possibility of authorizing an alternative pathway for students to obtain a four year degree.
This legislation was SB 414, and it directed the Texas Higher Education Coordinating Board to study workforce needs to determine the regions of the state that would benefit by allowing community colleges to offer baccalaureate degree programs (four year degrees) in nursing or applied sciences. The bill also required the Coordinating Board to examine appropriate metrics to determine whether a community college should even offer those degree programs in the first place.
The resulting study focused on nursing and four applied sciences: computer and information technology, management in fire sciences, management of production/operations technicians, and health information technology. It was completed in August, and as the author of SB 414, I truly appreciate the thoughtful and well-balanced study that was conducted by the RAND Corporation, the Texas Higher Education Policy Institute, and Coordinating Board staff.
The thoroughness of the study ultimately led the Coordinating Board to recommend that the legislature authorize community colleges that meet certain criteria to have opportunities for new baccalaureate degrees in applied science and nursing programs – provided there’s a demonstrated workforce need and the schools use a measured, phased-in approach. In addition, the Coordinating Board recommended that each biennium they be able to select 3 to 5 additional disciplines to study in applied sciences, thus allowing the Coordinating Board to consider adding additional degrees in this field in future years.
More than 20 states, including Texas, already allow at least some community colleges to offer four year degrees. In 2003, Texas authorized three community colleges – Brazosport College, Midland College, and South Texas College – to each offer as many as five baccalaureate programs.
By allowing additional community colleges to offer baccalaureate degrees, Texas will be in a better position to meet the workforce needs of employers and businesses across the state. This is especially true for nursing, as data suggests that there are not enough universities and colleges in Texas to meet the need for Bachelors of Science in Nursing (BSN) educated nurses.
This issue is particularly evident in urban areas, like my district, where a large number of hospitals are moving to Magnet Status, which requires 80 percent of all bedside nurses to hold a BSN by 2020. Community colleges are graduating registered nurses with associate degrees, but they’re having a hard time finding a job because most of the institutions are moving to Magnet Status.
This proposal would also provide another avenue for working adults and students that want a more affordable higher education experience to complete a four year degree. Community colleges offer lower costs relative to universities, and they often have more flexibility to offer courses in the evening and on weekends. Community college graduates are also more likely to remain and work in their community, ensuring that the same public that invests in their education also reaps the benefits.
Community colleges could and should be leveraged to provide limited, affordable four-year degrees in areas of the state where needs are the greatest.
Next session, I intend to file legislation to implement these recommendations, as they present a reasonable pathway for the state to address its workforce needs and an additional pathway for students to obtain an affordable four year degree.
Sincerely,
Rodney Ellis
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With the exception of the U.S. citizenship certificate, all of the forms of identification must be current or have expired no more than 60 days before being presented at the polling place. If you or a family member do not have one of the forms of photo identification listed above, there is a free option available. The change in law creates a new form of photo identification called an election identification certificate, which the Texas Department of Public Safety will issue for free at any driver’s license office. More information may be obtained by clicking here or calling the Texas Secretary of State’s office at 1-800-252-VOTE.
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District Office:440 Louisiana, Suite 575, Houston, TX 77002, 713.236.0306
District Office: 2440 Texas Parkway, Suite 110, Missouri City, TX 77489, 281.261.2360
District Office: 6100 Corporate Drive, Suite 288, Houston, TX 77036, 281.564.2228
Capitol Office: P.O. Box 12068, Capitol Station, Austin, TX 78711, 512.463.0113
| _______________________________________________________ Click here to watch this Monday’s Senate Higher Education Committee hearing on SB 414. Scroll to the 3h:08m mark. |
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| [Missing Image]Marisela Carcamo, RN, testified at the SB 414 hearing in support of community colleges being able to offer certain four year degrees. | |
| This email was sent by rodney.ellis@rodneyellis.com |Rodney Ellis | 440 Louisiana | Suite 575 | Houston | TX | 77002
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SHOW AUDIO: kpft_2014-10-10_1500, PARTISAN GRIDLOCK, with Mike Honig & Egberto Willies (subbing for Geoff Berg)
Link is usually posted within about 72 hours of show broadcast.
ELECTION DAY IS COMING! Register AND Vote!: VOTER & Political Info And Resources
“If your vote didn’t matter, they wouldn’t try so hard to suppress it!”
I was flattered to be asked to guest co-host, with Egberto Willies, Geoff Berg’s show, Partisan Gridlock. Geoff does a great show, and it obviously took two of us to try to replace him. Egberto and I had a great time, and we hope we’ll be invited back when needed.
You can listen to almost any show I’ve ever done (going back to May 2010) by going to the archive tab.
I also do Thinkwing Radio with Mike Honig (@ThinkwingRadio), a listener call-in show (every Wednesday night from 10-11PM CT) on KPFT-FM 90.1 (Houston). My engineer and discussion partner is Egberto Willies (@EgbertoWillies). Listen live on the radio or on the internet from anywhere in the world! When the show is live, we take calls at 713-526-5738. (Long distance charges may apply.) For the purposes of this show, I operate on two mottoes:
POSSIBLE TOPICS: Voting, Hong Kong Occupy, Ebola in the US, ISIS
GUEST(S): (See Event Announcement with links below the break)
NOTE: This post is subject to update before and after the show. ______________________________________________________________________ Some of the links used for this show are BELOW the break: SOURCES (Below the break) Not all topics discussed on tonight’s show: Continue reading
I have the exciting privilege of hosting election night coverage tonight on KPFT 90.1 FM from 7PM to 10 (or maybe 11) PM CT. I’ll be joined by some smart and knowledgeable panelists (Charles Kuffner, Leo Gold and Geoff Berg). There will be race updates, interviews with some notable political personalities, and we will be taking some phone calls at 713-526-5738 to discuss people’s voting experiences whether you voted early, absentee, or on “the Day”.
You can also listen live on-line from anywhere in the country by clicking here: http://www.kpft.org/streamkpft_64.m3u
This is by far the most ambitious thing I’ve done on radio up to this point, so if you want to listen to a guy on a high wire without a net for 3-4 hours, tune in and give me a listen! Continue reading
I’m excited to announce that I will be hosting election night coverage on KPFT (Houston) 90.1 FM from 7 PM to (at least) 10 PM CST. I will be joined by a panel of knowledgable and entertaining Houston personalities, and guests will include interesting and noteworthy personages.
You can listen and participate live from anywhere around the country by going to KPFT.org and clicking on “Listen Live“.
Tentatively scheduled panelists include Geoff Berg (blogger, and host of KPFT’s Partisan Gridlock) and Houston-based political blogger Charles Kuffner (OffTheKuff.com).
Currently scheduled guests tentatively include:
One of the aspects of this show to which I am most looking forward is taking calls from listeners in Houston and around the country in order to hear about their election experiences. Whether you voted in Houston or Hastings-on-Hudson. Whether you voted on election day, or early voted, or absentee voted, we’ll want to hear from you. Was it easy or hard? Was the ballot easily understandable or almost unintelligible? Did you feel welcome at the polls, or were you bothered by poll watchers?
I hope you’ll be listening and participating.
I don’t trust digital voting without a paper trail. I don’t trust touchscreens, having been frustrated by them too often.
With that advance disclaimer, I offer Homer Simpson’s argument against touchscreen voting:
“The Simpsons“: Where brilliant humor meets spot-on satire.
One of the things on this site of which I’m most proud are my links to various counties’ voting information. If you live anywhere near Houston, TX, you may be able to find your info at one of the links here: https://thinkwingradio.com/political-information-and-resources/. If you don’t live near Houston, but are in Texas, you can go to the Secretary of State by clicking here: https://thinkwingradio.com/political-information-and-resources/texas-state-of/. Voting information is also available here: votexas.org.
I received this from the Texas Democratic Party, but it applies to all Texans, regardless of party affiliation:
Dear fellow Democrat,
Early Voting for the November 8, 2011 elections begins on Monday, October 24th and runs through Friday, November 4th. There are a few things we thought you should know before heading to the polls.
If you have additional questions about voting in this year’s election, check out votexas.org.
Thank you,
Sondra Haltom
Political Director, on behalf of Your Texas Democratic Party
[Update, April 2, 2012: Another embarrassing and inexcusable election scandal in Florida. Palm Beach Elections Overturned After Hand-Count Reveals Op-Scans Mistallied Results. As Brad Friedman’s article further suggests, we MUST have a verifiable paper trail for all election tallies have a physical count of ballots by humans before an election is certified. ]
[Update, June 13, 2011: This piece is made even more relevant by the recount discoveries and legal challenges surrounding the Wisconsin Supreme Court elections – Mike]
In 2000, the United States experienced a very close and heavily contested presidential election between Al Gore and George W. Bush. Bush won a minority of popular votes, but after legal challenges were exhausted, he had a majority of the Electoral College, giving him the election. Enough serious questions were left forever unanswered to shake Americans’ confidence in the honesty of the election outcome. The result was Continue reading