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Fred ‘Earl’ Smith, Pearl Harbor vet, former Santa Rosa Junior College instructor, dies at 94 – Santa Rosa Press Democrat

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SRJC to cut hundreds of temporary jobs to close budget gap

Sebastopol looks warily at rent control after Santa Rosa defeat

Local cases of child abuse and neglect up 17 percent

Earl Smith, former SRJC instructor, Pearl Harbor vet, dies at 94

Attorney: Oakland warehouse fire defendant in near mental breakdown

State money available for cleaning pot grow sites in Sonoma County

CHRIS SMITH

THE PRESS DEMOCRAT | June 9, 2017, 5:01PM

| Updated 43 minutes ago.

The day before the Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor in 1941, an 18-year-old sailor named Fred Earl Smith, quite a baseball player, took the infield for two intra-Navy games.

Smith and his shipmates from the battleship USS Tennessee took on the team from the Arizona, then from the West Virginia.

The first game was close, the future Santa Rosa Junior College instructor recalled in an interview in 2015, until he hit a home run.

It won the game against the Arizona, Smith told Hawaii Public Radio. The West Virginia, we stomped em.

The Navy baseball players partied that Saturday night in Honolulu. Early the next morning, torrents of Japanese bombs, torpedoes and bullets turned Pearl Harbor awash in death and fire.

For the following 76 years, it pained Smith to read the names of the sailors who died that day.

Half of the West Virginias ballplayers were killed and all the Arizonas ballplayers were killed, he said two years ago.

The career Navy man and former 26-year resident of Sonoma County died May 21 at his retirement home in Rio Vista. He was 94.

Smith, who taught electronics at SRJC through much of the 1980s and 90s and for a short time ran a Texaco service station on Santa Rosa Avenue, returned many times to Oahu and to Pearl Harbor. He was there most recently for the 75th anniversary observances last December.

Smith recalled then to a Los Angeles Times reporter that after the attack he was sent into the burning harbor in a motor launch to recover injured and dead sailors.

I felt like I was trying to save lives, he said. And we did pull a few out who were injured. But most we just had to tie a rope to the leg and pull them out and stack them like cords of wood.

Smith remarked after the 75th anniversary ceremonies that he might not be physically or emotionally up to any more return visits to Pearl Harbor. The veteran also carried with him memories from the historically deadly Battle of Tarawa in November 1943. His role as crewman with the aircraft carrier USS Saratoga earned him a Presidential Citation.

Smith was born in 1923 in Tulsa, Okla., and upon graduating from high school went into the Navy. On the day of the attack by the Japanese Imperial Navy, his hands were badly burned as he fought fires and helped to remove injured and dead sailors from the oil-coated and burning harbor.

He was hospitalized for several weeks and then transferred from the damaged Tennessee to the aircraft carrier Saratoga.

After the war, Smith made a run at big-league baseball. He was signed onto a major league farm team and hadnt played long when a base-runner took him out at second base, injuring the shoulder of his throwing arm badly enough to put him out of the sport.

So he re-upped with the Navy. He was assigned to a mobile electronics unit and rose to the rank of chief warrant officer.

He was back on Oahu when, in 1950, his life changed when his eyes met those of Anna Marie Petersen, a tourist from San Francisco.

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He met my mom in the lobby of the Ala Moana Hotel, underneath the banya tree, said son Robert Smith of San Mateo. The couple married in 1956 and settled in San Mateo. Earl Smith worked at Naval Station Treasure Island.

He and his family spent many weekends on the Russian River. Earl Smith retired from the Navy in 1970 and six years later he and Ann moved their family to Monte Rio.

The combat veteran went to work teaching electronics at SRJC. He eventually grew tired of the commute and he and Ann moved to Windsor.

For a number of years, they flew each summer to Oahu, where he taught summer courses at the University of Hawaii.

Smith retired from the JC in 1994. In 2002, he and his wife moved to Rio Vista, in eastern Solano County. Ann died in 2006.

Her husband, a longtime member of the former Pearl Harbor Survivors Association, felt duty-bound to attend the Dec. 7 commemorations alongside the sunken remains of the USS Arizona, right up to and including last years.

It was important to him, said son Robert Smith. He was telling me it was probably his last one.

Earl Smith is survived also by son Michael Smith of Orinda and two grandchildren.

You can reach Staff Writer Chris Smith at 707-521-5211 and chris.smith@pressdemocrat.com.

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Fred 'Earl' Smith, Pearl Harbor vet, former Santa Rosa Junior College instructor, dies at 94 - Santa Rosa Press Democrat

News-Democrat takes 18 awards at state editorial contest – Belleville News-Democrat


Belleville News-Democrat
News-Democrat takes 18 awards at state editorial contest
Belleville News-Democrat
The Belleville News-Democrat was honored Friday with five first-place awards and 13 other awards for its journalism during 2016 by the Illinois Press Association. The News-Democrat's top awards included first place for best website, BND.com, as well as ...

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News-Democrat takes 18 awards at state editorial contest - Belleville News-Democrat

Beaverton Democrat, Speaker of House propose ‘breakthrough’ plan for revenue reform – Pamplin Media Group

Sen. Mark Hass: 'Two-step dance' of tax reform, plus cost containment and a reduction in PERS benefits.

In the waning weeks of the legislative session, two leading Democrats have come up with a tax reform plan to address the state's $1.4 billion revenue shortfall.

The plan by Sen. Mark Hass of Beaverton and House Speaker Tina Kotek of Portland would raise an estimated $900 million in the next two years.

"Momentum is building to go forward with revenue reform this session. ... Now, we finally have a breakthrough," Kotek said Wednesday. "This plan, along with long-term cost containment, is our best chance to increase investments in education while also providing significant tax relief for small businesses and personal tax relief for middle- and low-income families."

Hass emphasized that the plan is a package that includes tax reform, containment of state government costs and reductions in state employees' pension benefits.

"These are hard votes for Democrats in the House, but I think they will vote for those, if they know there also is a revenue tax reform package. Without a revenue package, those won't pass, so this is a two-step dance. We have to have both."

If revenue reform fails this session, union leaders say they are poised to petition for a ballot measure to make corporations pay more taxes.

Hass and Kotek have yet to seek official approval from the Joint Committee on Tax Reform, which has to vote on the proposal before it can move to the House floor.

The plan would temporarily hike corporate income taxes in 2017 and 2018 from 6.6 percent and 7.6 percent to 8 percent and 9 percent, in order to help raise the $900 million.

The corporate income tax then would be repealed in 2019 and replaced with a commercial activity tax on businesses with annual sales of $3 million or greater. The change would effectively mean small businesses no longer would have to pay corporate taxes, only a $250 filing fee, Hass said.

The commercial activity tax would yield an estimated $1.1 billion in 2019-21.

Other states have pursued similar tax reforms to help stabilize their corporate income revenue, he said.

The five-tier rate is proposed at 0.75 percent for services, 0.35 percent for retail trade, 0.25 percent for wholesale, 0.15 percent for agriculture, forestry and fishing, and 0.48 percent for all other industries.

The new tax would come in tandem with a reduction in the personal income tax to account for any nominal price increases resulting from the commercial activity tax, Hass said.

Paris Achen Portland Tribune Capital Bureau 503-385-4899 email: This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it. Follow us on Twitter Visit Us on Facebook

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Beaverton Democrat, Speaker of House propose 'breakthrough' plan for revenue reform - Pamplin Media Group

Some Republican lawmakers urge Trump not to reverse Cuba opening – Reuters

By Matt Spetalnick | WASHINGTON

WASHINGTON A group of Republican lawmakers sent a letter to President Donald Trump on Friday urging him not to reverse former President Barack Obamas opening to Cuba even as White House aides moved closer to completing a plan that could tighten rules on trade and travel to the island.

With the Cuba policy review approaching its final stages, both sides of the issue have stepped up lobbying to sway Trumps decision on how far to go in rolling back measures that Obama implemented after a 2015 breakthrough with Americas former Cold War foe.

In the letter, seven of Trumps fellow Republicans expressed deep concern that he is considering rescinding Obamas policies and said that such a move would incentivize Cuba to once again become dependent on countries like Russia and China.

The warning reflected growing unease on Capitol Hill over returning to a more contentious approach to communist-ruled Cuba, even within a Republican party that has traditionally hewed to a harder line against Havana.

Senior officials at the National Security Council were meeting on Friday to craft recommendations that will be sent to the principals committee - Trumps top foreign policy advisers - and then to the president, people familiar with the matter said.

Though divisions remain within the administration, Trump could make an announcement within weeks, possibly as early as mid- to late June in a speech in Miami, U.S. officials have said, speaking on condition of anonymity.

Trump's changes are expected to stop short of breaking diplomatic relations restored two years ago after more than five decades of hostility, administration officials say.

Among the options under consideration are banning U.S. companies from doing business with Cuban enterprises tied to the military and tightening rules on Americans traveling there, according to people familiar with the discussions.

A White House official, asked about the latest meeting, said the Cuba review is still under way and not final.

The U.S. airline and travel industries have made clear they do not want to see reinstatement of Cuba restrictions.

But Trump has come under heavy pressure from Cuban-American lawmakers, including Senator Marco Rubio and Representative Mario Diaz-Balart, to roll back Obamas rapprochement.

My hope is that when the administration is done with their review, they dont let one or two voices overwhelm what is in the interest of the United States, Representative Tom Emmer, a signatory to the letter, told Reuters.

One of four pro-engagement Republicans who met with White House officials on Thursday, Emmer said they urged the administration not to go too far in rolling back Obamas measures.

Trump threatened shortly after his election in November to terminate Obamas approach unless Cuba made concessions, something it is unlikely to do.

Obama implemented his normalization measures through executive actions, and Trump has the power to undo much of it.

(Reporting by Matt Spetalnick; Editing by Leslie Adler)

In September 2014, Gilberto Velasquez, a 38-year-old house painter from El Salvador, received life-changing news: The U.S. government had decided to shelve its deportation action against him.

WASHINGTON President Donald Trump's social media director Dan Scavino broke the law in April in calling for Trump supporters to defeat a Republican congressman at the polls, according to a letter from the U.S. Office of Special Counsel.

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Some Republican lawmakers urge Trump not to reverse Cuba opening - Reuters

What if more public participation can’t save American democracy? – Vox

This post is part of Polyarchy, an independent blog produced by the political reform program at New America, a Washington think tank devoted to developing new ideas and new voices.

American democracy is in a downward spiral. Well, really two downward spirals.

The first is the downward spiral of bipolar partisanship, in which both sides increasingly demonize each other as the enemy, and refuse to compromise and cooperate an escalating arms race that is now going beyond mere gridlock and threatening basic democratic norms.

The second is the downward spiral of distrust between citizens and elites, in which citizens treat corrupt and establishment as interchangeable terms. The public consensus is that politicians are self-serving, not to be trusted. In this logic, only more public participation can make politicians serve the people.

These two downward spirals are related. The less we trust politicians, the more we try to hold them accountable. But the more we try to hold them accountable the more we get intractable partisanship, because the we who are trying to hold politicians accountable are the same we who always do the most participating. The most engaged citizens, political scientists have known for years, are almost always the most partisan citizens, and/or those who have the most narrow and high-stakes interests in policy outcomes.

But to say we should participate less, and give politicians more freedom to operate without constant public input, seems off. It cuts against our well-developed, pro-democracy reflexes.

It also cuts against the conventional wisdom narrative weve heard for years: The reason that politics has gone batty is because the average citizen has no say. The average citizen is moderate, reasonable, civic-minded. The average citizen wants politicians to stop fighting with each other, and stop serving the interests of wealthy elites, and do whats right. If only the average citizen got better informed, participated more, and had more power, politicians would stop fighting, and start serving the people instead of the interests. Therefore, we need to find more ways to empower this average citizen.

Weve been waiting for this mythical average citizen to show up and claim her rightful place in our politics for quite a long time now. But like Godot, she never seems to arrive. As our politics drowns in a flood of bipolar partisan passion, it makes us all look like the proverbial statistician who drowned in a river that was, on average, 3 feet deep.

Slowly though, a new understanding is starting to emerge, that no matter how much we put our faith in public participation, this average citizen will not save us, and worse, that all our attempts to give power to the people may have distracted us from doing the things that might have made our democracy function better paying attention to the rules of our institutions and the role of political leadership.

The latest salvo in this reckoning is a new Brookings Institution paper from Jonathan Rauch and Benjamin Wittes, More professionalism, less populism: How voting makes us stupid, and what to do about it.

Rauch and Wittes bemoan that, for decades, the overwhelming trend has been disintermediation reducing the role of parties, professionals, and experts. For the authors, the movement to push aside intermediaries, such as the smoke-filled rooms where party elders brokered nominations and the closed committee meetings where members of Congress dickered, has not produced greater public confidence in the governments effectiveness or representativeness. Instead, it has made it harder for government institutions to function.

Efforts to open up the political process may come from a good place. But those who take advantage are almost always the wealthier, better organized, and most partisan not exactly the mythical average citizen reformers always envision taking advantage. As voters, we all make irrational, emotional choices (based on the groups which we belong to). We are myopic. We dont do trade-off well. We are all flawed humans.

Rauch and Wittes are building on some important recent political science work. Most prominently, they draw on Christopher Achen and Larry Bartelss widely discussed 2016 book Democracy for Realists, which marshaled impressive and almost irrefutable evidence that the folk theory of democracy that citizens hold politicians accountable through elections was based on a set of feel-good fantasies about citizen competence that just dont hold up under extensive scrutiny.

They also build on Bruce Cains equally important but less widely discussed 2015 book, Democracy More or Less, which thinks harder about what to do about the fact that average citizens are not and never will be either motivated or equipped to do all the things we expect of them. So whereas Achen and Bartelss concluding point is mostly to shrug their shoulders and say well, maybe we just need to accept that all politics is identity and group politics and build new normative theories of democracy, Cain moves much closer toward actual framework for doing just that what he calls the pluralist approach.

In Cains telling, this pluralist approach accepts the reality that there are empirical limits to citizen interest and knowledge and that interested individuals and organizations must inevitably carry out some representation. It prioritizes aggregation, consensus, and fluid coalitions as means of good democratic governance. It recognizes that good political design incorporates the informal patterns of governance as well as the formal processes of government. Moreover, it relies on democratic contestation between interest groups and political parties to foster accountability. (I advocate a similar approach in my 2016 paper, Political Dynamism.)

Rauch and Wittes also lean in this direction. They do not want to cut citizens out entirely. Participation, they write is a vital good to the political system that is not replaceable by other means: It provides the consent of the governed and the renewal of that consent on a regular basis Voters are not policymakers, but they are the force that gives authority to policymakers. Persistently low rates of voter turnout erode that authority.

Id also call forth here an important and related 2016 Brookings Institution paper from Philip Wallach, The administrative states legitimacy crisis. It makes eloquent points about the need to balance public legitimacy with institutional expertise, advocating a middle ground that is neither populist nor technocratic.

Like Wallach, Rauch and Wittes also are also not willing to put complete faith in an insulated technocracy or political expert class. They note that better decisions come when specialist and professional judgment occurs in combination with public judgment (their italics).

This leads to the following conclusion: Who, then, should be in charge: the voters, or the professionals? The answer, of course, is both. In a hybrid system, they are forced to consult each other, providing distinct but complimentary screens.

But this poses an obvious problem: How can both be in charge? Rauch and Wittes, along with Cain and Wallach, point us toward the right direction: better intermediaries. But where are the models of better intermediaries?

In theory, better intermediaries (politicians, parties, interest groups) are capable of helping citizens collectively realize their interests in ways that they wouldnt be able to do individually.

But in practice, intermediaries may be just as likely to manipulate individuals for their own power, without necessarily helping them to realize their interests any better. In particular, Rauch and Wittess assertion that the leaders of political parties and congressional committees worry about the long-term health of their institutions, and so they often take a longer view seems at odds with considerable recent evidence. Certainly, in an ideal world, they would. But they havent for a long time.

Would the Republican Party be more moderate and problem-solving if only Mitch McConnell and Paul Ryan had more freedom to wheel and deal behind the scenes, and more money to lord over more extreme members of their party, and more earmarks to win their complicity? I have a hard time imagining this. All I see is them pushing an extreme agenda themselves, while finding new and creative ways to defend a president who is blatantly unfit for office, and then attacking Democrats.

Perhaps we have a particularly pusillanimous and cynical set of leaders now because politics became too participatory and too transparent. But Id challenge Rauch and Wittes to offer a counter-factual political history, in which the parties dont polarize to their current extremes because there were fewer opportunities for citizen participation (while also accounting for the same underlying demographics and economic conditions, and the same campaign finance laws). Moreover, given the rise of post-materialist values that put a premium on self-expression everywhere in advanced industrial democracies West, I wonder if this would have even been possible.

Perhaps parties should take greater control of their nominating processes (a common argument these days). But keep in mind that in 1964, it was Republican delegates, not Republican primary voters, who chose Barry Goldwater, an extremist candidate. That was before parties made their public primaries binding, starting in 1972. Had Republican delegates, not primary voters, been in charge in 2016, its not clear who they would have chosen, since the party itself was quite internally split.

Most of the major American democratizing reforms happened in the early 20th century, not the late 20th century. Yet it wasnt until recent decades, when polarization and inequality both started to increase, that American politics went steadily downhill. And the past several decades have not exactly been a time of civic flourishing in America.

In short, while I agree that expanding citizen participation will not save American democracy, for many of the reasons Rauch and Wittes (and others) discuss, Im equally skeptical that previous efforts to expand citizen participation somehow caused American politics to go insane, as Rauch argued in a widely discussed Atlantic article.

Where do we go from here? Especially at a time when a new wave of citizen energy and participation are getting many excited.

First, its important to acknowledge the new citizen engagement for what it is: the familiar response of out-party partisans feeling threatened after losing an election. As left-leaning opponents of Trump, we might welcome this because finally, our side is getting energized. But lets not pretend this is the solution to our democracy in decline. This is still not the long-awaited coming of independent, rational, average citizens exercising independent, rational, judgment to save our democracy, nor will it ever be.

Second, lets come to terms with what political science has known for decades, some of which my colleague Chayenne Polimdio has written about here. Citizens as individuals have limited capacity. For democracy to work, they need intermediaries politicians, parties, interest groups to help them achieve power and representation. All politics is group politics, because we are all by nature group animals. It would be weird and unnatural if politics were otherwise. The idea of the individual, rational citizen is a myth.

Third, and this is the key point: We need to think harder about what good intermediation looks like. What are the conditions under which intermediaries help citizens collectively achieve meaningful representation? And what are the conditions under which intermediaries just exploit citizens for their own power? What are the conditions under which intermediaries work together to achieve compromise and consensus and legitimacy? And what are the conditions under which intermediaries tear each other apart and take down institutions with them? History is replete with examples across these spectra.

Absent good answers to the intermediation dilemma, the current downward spiral will continue. Politicians are not going to get along with each other and do the right thing when everything in the political system pushes them into zero-sum, bipolar competition for power. And making it easier for citizens to participate in their democracy as an end in itself is not going to do any good without more thought given to the all-important question of How?

My current view is that nature of the two-party system, which is quite unique to America among advanced industrial democracies, deserves much more blame than it has received. American parties have always been institutionally weak by comparative standards, because the two-party system forces parties to be large big-tent coalitions.

In our current politics, party leaders have compensated for this by turning up the negative partisanship, tearing down the other side to just be the lesser of two evils. Multi-party systems generally produce stronger parties, because parties are freer to more directly represent different groups in society. In a multi-party system, parties cant survive simply by being the lesser of two evils.

But heres the bottom line: Weve collectively spent decades trying to call forth this mythical average citizen and empower her to save our democracy. Weve made no Plan B for the possibility that she is indeed a myth. Were now realizing she is indeed a myth. Its now time to come up with that Plan B, and fast.

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What if more public participation can't save American democracy? - Vox