Friday, November 13, 2015

Nominee to Oversee Wall Street Works at Think Tank Dedicated to Blocking Regulation

 

President Barack Obama recently nominated Hester Maria Peirce to fill a Republican seat on the Securities and Exchange Commission.

His announcement included her formal title — senior research fellow and director of the Financial Markets Working Group at the Mercatus Center at George Mason University — which sounds a lot like an academic post.

But Peirce, new disclosures show, received 98 percent of her salary directly from the Mercatus Center, a “think tank” that provides an academic façade to a radical anti-regulatory agenda. The Center’s so-called research reflects the lobbying priorities of its corporate funders — chief among them, Koch Industries.

UNITED STATES - FEBRUARY 3: Hester Peirce is a senior research fellow at the Mercatus Center at George Mason University. (Photo By Chris Maddaloni/CQ Roll Call) (CQ Roll Call via AP Images)

Hester Peirce

Photo: Chris Maddalini/CQ Roll/AP

Asked about any potential conflicts of interest given her work for the Mercatus Center, Peirce told The Intercept, “I appreciate you reaching out but I cannot comment at this point.”

The Mercatus Center has been described by the Wall Street Journal “as a coordinating center for lobbyists trying to block a flurry of regulations.” Congressional records show the think tank routinely cited in over a dozen hearings over the last two years by lawmakers seeking to roll back regulations on business interests.

Financial reporters say the nomination of Peirce to fill a Republican vacancy on the commission comes as no surprise, especially given the nominee’s close ties to congressional Republicans, who now control the U.S. Senate confirmation process. Peirce has appeared on Capitol Hill as an expert witness on financial reform issues, and is a former staff member to Sen. Richard Shelby, R-Ala., the chair of the Senate Banking Committee.

Although Peirce has been referred to in media reports and government websites by her George Mason University affiliation, forms recently disclosed through the Office of Government Ethics reveal that over the last year, Peirce earned $203,114 from the Mercatus Center and only $3,847 from George Mason University for her work as an adjunct professor.

Through the Mercatus Center, Peirce has penned a number of pieces arguing against regulations concerning Wall Street banks, including the Volcker Rule, which is designed to limit risk by forcing investment banks to spin off proprietary trading.

The Mercatus Center is one of the first think tanks formed by the right-wing billionaire Koch brothers to influence government policy. Richard Fink, a close adviser to Charles Koch and an executive with Koch Industries’ lobbying division, is a founding board member. Charles Koch himself still occupies a board seat. Foundation documents show that entities controlled by the Koch family have provided over $35 million to the Mercatus Center over the years.

Known primarily for its petrochemical, pipeline, and manufacturing facilities, Koch Industries also deals in a range of financial products, including derivatives. Lobby registration forms show the firm is deeply involved in implementation efforts of the Dodd-Frank reform law.

In addition to Koch, the Mercatus Center has in previous years received funding from ExxonMobil, Morgan Stanley, Fannie Mae, Freddie Mac, and the U.S. Chamber of Commerce. Frank Atkinson, the chair of McGuireWoods Consulting LLC, a lobbying firm that represents clients on financial regulation issues, also oversees the Mercatus Center as a member of the board.

Nominee to Oversee Wall Street Works at Think Tank Dedicated to Blocking Regulation

Canadian pension funds buy Chicago Skyway for $2.8 billion - Chicago Tribune

 

Bloomberg

Three of Canada's largest pension plans have agreed to buy Chicago toll-road operator Skyway Concession Co. for $2.8 billion from a group led by Spain's Ferrovial SA.

Canada Pension Plan Investment Board, Ontario Municipal Employees Retirement System, and Ontario Teachers' Pension Plan said they will each own a third of Skyway under the terms of the deal, contributing $512 million each.

"Skyway represents a rare opportunity for us to invest in a mature and significant toll road of this size in the U.S.," Cressida Hogg, Canada Pension's head of infrastructure, said in a statement Friday. "This investment fits well with CPPIB's strategy to invest in core infrastructure assets with long-term, stable cash flows in key global markets."

The Canadian pension funds, which collectively have about C$499 billion ($374 billion) in assets under management, have been acquiring alternative assets, such as toll roads, ports, and other infrastructure, for the long-term, stable returns they offer.

Canada Pension, for example, is currently part of a group led by Qube Holdings that is trying to acquire Australian rail and port operator Asciano.

Madrid-based Ferrovial is selling its 55 percent stake alongside its partners Macquarie Atlas Roads Group and Macquarie Infrastructure Partners, which own the remaining stake. The transaction is expected to close after it receives the necessary approvals from the City of Chicago, Ferrovial said in a statement. Ferrovial said the sale will return roughly $269 million to the company.

Skyway is a 7.8-mile (12.6-kilometer) toll road that forms a link between downtown Chicago and its south-eastern suburb. The Chicago Skyway Concession was awarded to Ferrovial and its partners for $1.83 billion in 2005. The concession was the first privatization of a highway in the U.S. and the sale process began in June, Ferrovial said.

Ferrovial, through its subsidiary Cintra, manages 1,300 miles of highway across 28 concession in Canada, the U.S., Europe, Australia and Colombia, including the 407 ETR concession, which it owns in partnership with Canada Pension and SNC-Lavalin Group

Canadian pension funds buy Chicago Skyway for $2.8 billion - Chicago Tribune

MIG/DeWane Landfill finally being fixed

 

Here is a letter regarding the project from Illinois EPA

Go to Facebook to see the project progress:  https://www.facebook.com/MIGDeWaneLandfill?fref=photo

MIG/DeWane Landfill

6 hrs ·

As part of the planned improvements to the site’s final top cover, a top layer of soil has been applied to the west side of the landfill and seed will be applied later to control erosion.

MIG/DeWane Landfill's photo.

MIG/DeWane Landfill

November 11 at 4:26pm ·

We are thickening the top cover on the south side and readying the area to apply grass seed.

MIG/DeWane Landfill's photo.

Porn scandal: Pennsylvania Attorney General Kathleen Kane keeps releasing raunchy emails | Local News - WTAE Home

If you want a cleaner state government, what about PA?

HARRISBURG, Pa. —Facing criminal charges, relieved of her law license and threatened with removal by the Legislature, Pennsylvania's attorney general seems to have decided that if she has to go, she's going to take others down with her.

Since all three branches of state government began moving against her over the past year, Kathleen Kane has released hundreds of sexually explicit or otherwise crude emails that had been sent or received by current or former public officials on their government accounts.
The tangled scandal has led to the downfall of a state environmental secretary and shamed a state police commissioner, a Pennsylvania Supreme Court justice and several former top officials in the attorney general's office. Another high-court justice resigned after newspapers disclosed his involvement.
Kane has threatened to release more, and the state Capitol is ablaze with speculation about whose emails may be next in the drip-drip-drip of disclosures.
"It's a mess. It's just a freaking mess," said John Morganelli, the Northampton County district attorney and a Democrat who at one time supported Kane. "Accusations and counter-accusations. And it gets worse every day. It's like going into a war zone."
Timeline: Major developments in the Kathleen Kane investigation

Last week, Kane's hometown newspaper, the Times-Tribune of Scranton, ran a Halloween-theme cartoon of her as a witch saying: "I'll get you my pretties ... and your filthy emails too."
Kane finds herself increasingly isolated as she awaits trial on what she says are trumped-up misconduct charges. She has rejected calls to resign from members of both parties, including Gov. Tom Wolf, a fellow Democrat, and said it is important for the public to know about the emails.
"They raise the specter of impropriety, even if none exists, and that in itself is a problem for the judicial system," said her office spokesman Chuck Ardo.
Kane, 49, was a little-known former assistant county prosecutor when she was elected attorney general in a landslide in 2012, becoming the first woman and first Democrat to win the office. Democrats embraced her as a rising star.
On the campaign trail, she promised to investigate why it took her Republican predecessors three years to charge Jerry Sandusky, the former Penn State assistant football coach convicted of sexually abusing boys, and whether politics played a role.
After Kane took office, a special appointee concluded that the Sandusky case had not been dragged out for political reasons. But the inquiry unearthed a trove of office emails containing porn and jokes about women and minorities that many found offensive.
Kane's criticism of the Sandusky prosecution also triggered a bitter feud with investigators who handled the case, and in 2014, authorities say, she leaked confidential grand jury information to the Philadelphia Daily News in an attempt to show that two of them had bungled a corruption investigation.
Kane was charged in August with obstruction, perjury and other offenses. No trial date has been set.
As authorities began building the leak case against her, Kane started releasing chains of emails, saying the misconduct allegations against her were concocted by a corrupt old-boy network inside law enforcement to stop her from exposing their raunchy email ring.
Her argument has gained traction with some.
"I think she's being railroaded," said Lora Verbonitz, a 63-year-old Harrisburg suburbanite.
Others contend she has violated people's privacy, overstepped her authority or crossed the line of decency. Critics also accuse her of selectively releasing emails to embarrass her perceived enemies and protect loyalists - allegations she says are unfounded.
On Oct. 1, as she left court in the leak case, she dropped another bombshell: The email scandal also involved U.S. attorneys, attorneys general and a Supreme Court justice who had voted along with the rest of the court just days earlier to suspend Kane's law license. That justice is now being investigated for possible judicial misconduct.
Also last month, the state Senate launched an inquiry that could result in Kane's removal.
Meanwhile, Kane has yet to release all the emails and the names of the participants, as she promised to do, and is fighting a courtroom attempt by The Philadelphia Inquirer to force her to make all the material public.
"I don't believe the citizens of the commonwealth need to see more pornography, but I think they need to see who the players are," said Terry Mutchler, former director of Pennsylvania's Office of Open Records and a lawyer who is representing the Inquirer.
"I think there will be an avalanche if this is all released, and I think there will be a housecleaning unlike any we have ever seen."

Above is from:  Porn scandal: Pennsylvania Attorney General Kathleen Kane keeps releasing raunchy emails | Local News - WTAE Home

Illinois State Museum opening measure in Rauner's hands : Politics

 

SPRINGFIELD | Illinois lawmakers offered some hope Tuesday to fans of the Illinois State Museum and its satellite facilities, but a final decision on reopening the shuttered institution remains in Gov. Bruce Rauner's hands.

In a rare show of bipartisan support, the Illinois House voted 82-32 in favor of legislation that would require the state to keep the museum open.

That came after the Senate approved the proposal in August on a 40-9 vote.

Rauner, who announced the closure of the facilities in June after he and the General Assembly failed to agree on a spending plan for the fiscal year beginning July 1, still has the final say.

"The bill is under review," Rauner spokeswoman Catherine Kelly said Wednesday.

At issue is Rauner's decision to shutter the 136-year-old museum in Springfield and its satellite facilities like the southern Illinois artisan shop in Whittington, a gallery in Lockport and the Dickson Mounds burial ground in Lewistown in reaction to the lack of a budget.

Even if Rauner signs the measure, his office contends he still would have to decide how to manage the state's programs and spending without a spending blueprint from the Legislature.

State Sen. Andy Manar, a Bunker Hill Democrat, introduced the proposal in July after Rauner announced the closure, along with plans to close the Hardin County prison work camp and up to two juvenile prisons.

“The state museum is a vital educational and cultural institution and should remain open. The success of this legislation is a credit to the work of every ISM supporter who made the case and showed how important this institution truly is," Manar said Wednesday.

The situation has left the museum doors locked to the public since Oct. 1, but more than 40 employees continue to show up for work pending the outcome of grievances and lawsuits filed by state worker unions.

In Tuesday's action, a handful of Republicans showed their opposition to their governor's decision when they sided with majority Democrats in supporting the legislation.

The legislation is Senate Bill 317.

Illinois State Museum opening measure in Rauner's hands : Politics