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Columbian newspaper faces “foreclosure action”

by Jon DeVore — Tuesday, 4/7/09, 7:04 am

The Columbian in Vancouver, Wa., is facing a “debt foreclosure action” related to a loan it obtained to help finance its move to a new building. Unfortunately for the newspaper, and unfortunately for reporters and others who have been laid off, it has since moved back to its former building and is facing legal action by Bank of America.

But The Columbian has no plans to cease operations. From its business section:

(Publisher Scott) Campbell emphasized that it would be business as usual for readers, advertisers and employees of The Columbian.

“The fact is we have a huge readership — in print and online — that represents the largest aggregation of Clark County citizens available,” he said. “Our products are very valuable to businesses that are trying to reach consumers in an increasingly overloaded and confusing media environment. The economics of the (newspaper) business are changing, but there is a clear path to a sustainable long-term business model.”

Campbell said the publishing company’s strong preference is to resolve the debt issue, but he described the agreement process as complicated for both the bank and the newspaper.

Meanwhile, the new building at 415 W. Sixth St. continues to be marketed for both lease and/or purchase. Two of its six floors are leased.

So here we have a newspaper in financial trouble over a bad real estate decision, and it’s being sued by Bank of America, which acquired Countrywide and Merrill Lynch. If things run true to form we can expect that taxpayers will be called upon one way or another. We know newspaper owners in this state have asked for a tax break, and there has been noise about the City of Vancouver purchasing the new Columbian building for city offices.

On the optimistic side, it is true that The Columbian benefits from a unique media landscape, being the only traditional media outlet of any consequence in Clark County. Historically Portland media has more or less ignored non-heinous news north of the river, and Clark County long ago lost its lone AM radio station to robot-controlled oldies programming. Unlike a lot of metro areas that consider themselves one place, the Columbia River is still a magical barrier when it comes to the flow of information.

I have no earthly idea how long Campbell can ride out the Great Recession, and nobody knows for certain when the economy will truly turn the corner. If Campbell has enough wealth to do so, it looks like he will wait it out.

But as national job figures continue to appear dismal, it’s hard to imagine a big uptick in advertising dollars for newspapers anytime soon.

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Profiles in Courage. (No… really.)

by Goldy — Monday, 4/6/09, 10:52 pm

From Senate Majority Leader Lisa Brown’s blog:

Our sales-tax-based tax system is least fair tax system in the country.

It hammers lower and middle class families, who pay far more than their fair share for the essential public services from which everyone in our society benefits, like K-12 and higher education.

And now they stand to pay more for less. The global economic meltdown has forced lawmakers to make dramatic cuts in the state budget, which will disproportionately affect these same individuals.

Having a conversation about restructuring this tax system so that working class families are treated more fairly is not a conversation I am afraid of having.

So, despite the Seattle Times’ shrill ridicule, Sen. Brown isn’t afraid of publicly having that conversation.  But what about House Speaker Frank Chopp?

I know Chopp understands the issue.  I know he knows all about Washington’s structural revenue deficit, and I know he’s personally appalled at having the most regressive tax system in the nation.  And I know he knows that our current tax structure simply isn’t sustainable over the long run.

I know this, because I’ve privately had this conversation with Chopp, on more than one occasion.  The question now is whether Speaker Chopp is willing to join Sen. Brown in taking this conversation public?

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Seattle faces $43 million budget gap

by Goldy — Monday, 4/6/09, 3:18 pm

Thanks to a steep drop in sales tax revenue, Seattle’s new fiscal forecast is bad and getting worse, with a $29.5 million decline in revenue now projected for 2009, on top of the $13.3 million actual revenue decrease in 2008.  And that’s good compared to 2010, where a “squishy” forecast now projects another $41 million drop in revenue.

As a result, the Council and the Mayor need to cut $43 million in expenses between now and the end of the 2009 fiscal year, plus God knows how much in 2010.  It won’t be easy.  But I suppose, it could be worse.

$43 million amounts to roughly 4.7% of the city’s annual $912 million budget, and I’m guessing a big chunk of that gap will be filled by drawing down the city’s $30 million rainy day fund.  But while I don’t envy the folks who will be asked to make these cuts, it’s a walk in a slightly underfunded park compared to the crisis facing the state:

While the city’s budget troubles are serious, Dively said they are not as bad as the situation state lawmakers face in trying to backfill a $9 billion deficit to a $35 billion two-year spending plan with cuts and possible tax increases. That’s because sales tax alone amounts to more than 50 percent of the state’s general fund revenue.

“While you’ll see that we have a significant budget challenge, it’s nothing what like the state has. The state’s is far worse than what we’re talking about here,” Dively said.

By comparison, sales tax revenues account for only about 20% of the city’s general fund, but shhh… let’s not talk about the state’s structural revenue imbalance, as it interfere’s with the popular meme that the budget crisis is largely the result of out-of-control spending.

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http://publicola.horsesass.org/?p=4281

by Goldy — Monday, 4/6/09, 12:05 pm

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In defense of “yellow journalism”

by Goldy — Monday, 4/6/09, 11:01 am

NPR’s On the Media has a great segment this week on the history of yellow journalism, and whether it really deserves its tawdry reputation.  The answer:  not so much.  But the money quote for me comes near the end, at the 4:48 mark, when historian W. Joseph Campbell is asked whether modern American broadsheets might benefit from getting a little yellower:

“The energy and effervescence of yellow journalism certainly could be adopted in many respects in daily American newspapers; a lot of newspapers today tend to be staid, boring, predictable… and those are the features that you would not typically associate with yellow journalism as it was practiced 110 years ago.”

Listen to the whole segment.  It’s worth it.

[audio:http://audio.wnyc.org/otm/otm040309e.mp3]

As I’ve written before, there are a lot of factors contributing to the recent collapse of the daily newspaper industry, many of them outside the control of the editors and reporters themselves, but I think it is past time for a little introspection as to whether delivering a staid, boring and predictable product is a recipe for successfully competing in the 21st century media market.

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Yet another profile in courage

by Goldy — Monday, 4/6/09, 9:19 am

As usual, the Seattle Times editorial board is willing to make all the tough choices:

THE state Legislature must accomplish mission impossible this session. In the worst budget cycle in decades, lawmakers still must pass reform legislation that propels schools into the 21st century.

The price tag will be in the billions, but not now. This is a decades-long investment.

Uh-huh.  The Times wants the Legislature to redefine basic education to fund full-day kindergarten for everybody, and preschool for those who can’t afford it.  They also want the state to fund technology and security, while restoring about a billion dollars worth of education spending cuts in the proposed 2009-2011 budget.  And they want to do all that, without raising any new revenues.

So, let me get this straight.  First, Washington state’s paper of record cautions the Senate Majority Leader to choose personal ambition over the common good, and now it’s urging the Legislature to approve a popular and expensive series of education reforms, that it can’t possibly afford, essentially just saying “we’ll figure out how to pay for it in the future.”

And they have the temerity to complain about politicians?

Don’t get me wrong, I mostly agree with the Times’ education spending priorities.  I just think that the responsible (and mathematically honest) thing to do is to actually talk about how we’re going to pay for the things we promise.

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Don Benton and the granola crunchers

by Jon DeVore — Monday, 4/6/09, 7:17 am

Talk about a marriage of convenience. Sen. Don Benton, R-Vancouver, has teamed up with Portland opponents of the CRC project that would replace the aging Interstate Bridge spans between Vancouver and Portland. Benton showed up at a rally held by bridge foes yesterday in Portland.

State Sen. Don Benton, a southwest Washington Republican, urged the crowd to hold elected officials accountable for their views on the project.

“We need to hear loud and clear: If you don’t stop this boondoggle we will replace you,” Benton said.

Benton left out his often acerbic criticism of light rail and Portland-area urban growth policies. After his speech, Benton said he would prefer a highway ring around the Portland-Vancouver area, perhaps widening I-5 in North Portland and a third Columbia River bridge to relieve congestion on the I-5 bridge.

The Bicycle Transportation Alliance, Coalition for a Livable Future, 1000 Friends of Oregon and Smarterbridge.org were among the organizers and presenters at the event.

These Portland groups have relentlessly attacked the CRC project by yammering endlessly about a “12-lane bridge,” virtually ignoring the fact a new bridge would also (finally) get light rail across the river and yield a vastly improved bicycle facility. Now they’re teaming up with a far-right Republican who wants to build a third bridge and a loop highway around Portland. Which tells you all you need to know about the intellectual honesty of these Portland groups.

I always thought maybe I was being too harsh on these Portland “environmentalists,” but now I’m pretty convinced they are just banging their particular tribal drum. Portland good, Vancouver, bad. There are legitimate reasons to keep discussing the new bridge, as it stands to be one of the most important investments this region will make in our lifetimes, but anyone who has taken a cursory glance at the project knows half of those 12 lanes would be used for “mixing” traffic in a short stretch of I-5 before and after the bridge.

If these Portland groups want to team up with a guy like Benton, nobody in Washington state progressive circles should really take them very seriously. If they were serious they would present their arguments in an intellectually honest manner instead of focusing on a distorted messaging campaign and sideshow tricks.

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Why do Republicans have so little respect for the wealthy, and so much faith in Karl Marx?

by Goldy — Sunday, 4/5/09, 2:19 pm

One of the stupider arguments in the comment threads and elsewhere against implementing a state income tax—especially a high-earners income tax on millionaires—is that if we tax the wealthy, they’ll all move out of state.

Huh.  Really?  To where?  Across the border to Idaho, where the top bracket is currently 7.8 percent?  Or perhaps we’ll see economic refugees pouring into Oregon, seeking shelter under its 9 percent top rate?  Or maybe nearby Montana at 6.9% or California at a whopping 10.3%.

In fact, apart from Washington, there are only six other states with no income tax—Alaska, Wyoming, South Dakota, Nevada, Texas and Florida—all either unbearably hot or unbearably cold for much of the year.  So it’s hard to image that a top rate of between 1 and 5 percent would be enough impetus to prompt the wealthy—who have the luxury of affording to live whereever they please—to pick up and leave our temperate clime, natural splendor and vibrant cultural scene for, say, Sioux Falls or Las Vegas.

Even maintaining a second home for tax purposes doesn’t make much economic sense when you look at the actual numbers across a range of incomes.  For example, under the Kohl-Welles plan, a family earning $2 million a year would pay an additional $10,000 in state taxes, and the higher you go up the income scale the less the marginal utility of the money paid. Meanwhile, extending the tax downward to the lower income wealthy, while having more of a real-world impact, hardly costs them enough money to make a move financially worthwhile when a family earning $300,000 might pay only an additional $1,000 annually.

But in fact, I think even this analysis misses the point.  In general, the wealthy aren’t as inherently selfish as some on the right suggest, and neither are they purely economic animals who make every decision according to the bottom line… both notions that put the most vocal critics of an income tax squarely in the philosophical camp of Karl Marx.

Humans are incredibly complicated creatures, and money is far from our only motivation.  Some moved to our state for jobs, some for the music scene, some for nearby access to recreation and wilderness.  (I moved here for love, and stayed because this is my daughter’s home.)  To argue that a person earning $10 million a year, who chose to set down roots in our region for any number of reasons, would simply pick up and move his family to Texas to save a mere $90,000 in taxes a year, is absolutely ridiculous.

Furthermore, it is based on the false assumption that the wealthy as a group have no sense of social obligation and no understanding of or gratitude for the public investment that helped make their wealth possible, and that helps to protect and maintain both their property and their quality of life.  Look at the Seattle precinct maps from the last time an income tax was on the ballot and you’ll see that the measure did best amongst those who were being asked to raise their taxes the most.  In reality, it is the Frank Blethens of this world who are the exception to the rule, not ultra-wealthy fair-tax advocates like Warren Buffet and William Gates Sr.

Thus when Republicans and their surrogates insist that an income tax—any income tax—would drive wealth and jobs from our state, they show an incredible amount of disrespect for the integrity and intelligence of the wealthy, who for the most part, would be willing to pay a little more of their fair share, if they can be convinced the money would be put to good use.

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Bird’s Eye View Contest

by Lee — Sunday, 4/5/09, 12:00 pm

Last week’s contest was won by Milwhcky in 14 minutes. It was Hagerstown, MD. WyWyWa provided the link. Here’s this week’s, good luck!

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It’s not about helping Democrats

by Goldy — Saturday, 4/4/09, 8:10 pm

Another profile in courage, this time from the Republican side of the aisle:

Senate Republican Leader Mike Hewitt, R-Walla Walla, said an income tax is a dangerous path for Democrats to take. “This politically hurts them,” he said. “I don’t think this helps them at all.”

Well, duh-uh. Since when are taxes, of any kind, popular?

But it reminds me of a conversation I had with John Carlson about a proposal to reinstate voting rights to felons upon their release from prison. I suggested to John that he and his fellow Republicans should support the measure, because demographically, Washington’s felon population generally matches one of his party’s core constituencies—white, working class men with less than a college education—to which John retorted in disbelief: “Then why would Democrats support it?”

“Because it’s the right thing to do,” I told him. John didn’t seem to buy it.

Perhaps he and Hewitt were projecting, or perhaps they really think that poorly of Democrats that it doesn’t even occur to them that we might, just sometimes, be willing to put governance ahead of politics. But the unexpected conversation we’re starting to get about an income tax isn’t part of a strategy to “help” Democrats… it isn’t even about quickly plugging a hole in the current budget. It’s about helping Washington take a step toward a more fair and stable tax system, period. In fact, even putting the issue on the ballot will likely cost Dems a few swing districts in 2010, regardless of whether the measure passes.

No doubt a majority of voters would prefer the Legislature balance the budget without raising taxes, and that would surely be the easiest political path. But that’s not leadership; that’s following. No, leadership isn’t about giving voters what they want, it’s about persuading voters to want what they need.

It remains to be seen whether we have that kind of leadership here in Washington state.

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Had the Seattle Times editorialized during the time of Exodus…

by Goldy — Saturday, 4/4/09, 11:01 am

MOSES is reaching for fairy dust in his proposal to lead the Israelite slaves out of Egypt.  It’s not going to happen.

A mass exodus would require the approval of Pharaoh, most likely only after a series of devastating plagues.

Even if Pharaoh were to allow an exodus, it would still require approval by the Israelites, who are the very people who would be expected to wander in the desert for forty years.  The Israelites have rejected exodus before, and in a time of job cuts, economic worry and unleavened bread, would almost certainly do so again.

Moses has long promoted exodus as a way to “let my people go,” but the people have long suspected that this would lead to even harsher treatment at the hands of their Egyptian overlords.  Here the cynics are right.

Certainly, the enslaved Israelites, beaten and oppressed, are having their problems.  But their Egyptian masters, facing rising mortar prices and a sudden infestation of frogs, have their problems too. Their interest is in quickly building a monument to the divinity of Pharaoh, which is made less likely by an exodus of slaves.

Some advocates say that Moses would lead the Israelites to the Promised Land, but by what route?  Does he expect the people to cross the Red Sea on foot?  And once in the desert, how will Moses feed the Israelite nation?  Food doesn’t fall from heaven, and you can’t get water from a stone.

Moses is said to talk to God.  He might recall that so did Lot.  And we all remember what happened to Sodom and Gomorrah.

Sound familiar?

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Profiles in courage

by Goldy — Friday, 4/3/09, 11:01 pm

Now this is the kind of bold political leadership that would make the Seattle Times proud:

House Majority Leader Lynn Kessler, D-Hoquiam, said she’s not sure an income tax is a good idea.

"I’m concerned about people who have to run for re-election in 2010 and having a big tax increase as one of their votes out of here," she said. "I maintain that if you don’t have the majority, you don’t have much. As the Republicans can tell you right now."

I’m as Machiavellian as the next guy, but let me ask you this Rep. Kessler:  what’s the use of having a majority if you’re afraid to use it?

I’m just askin’.

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Cantwell, Murray vote to slash estate tax on multi-millionaires

by Goldy — Friday, 4/3/09, 1:26 pm

This should make my millionaire-coddling friends at the Seattle Times happy:

Sens. Jon Kyl (R-AZ) and Blanche Lincoln (D-AR) recently introduced a $250 billion amendment to slash estate taxes for the heirs of multimillion-dollar estates. Yesterday, the Senate narrowly passed the bill by a 51-48 vote. Joining Republicans in approving the bill were ten Senate Democrats…

And two of those ten Democrats to cross party lines were our very own Senators Patty Murray and Maria Cantwell.

I mean really… WTF?

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Why does the Times hate political leadership?

by Goldy — Friday, 4/3/09, 11:15 am

Everything that’s wrong with Washington state politics can be summed up by today’s smirk of an editorial in the Seattle Times, “Gasp! Another try at an income tax.”

STATE Senate Majority Leader Lisa Brown, D-Spokane, is reaching for fairy dust in her proposal for a state income tax. It’s not going to happen.

That’s right, the Times ridicules Sen. Brown, not for being misinformed or unserious or on the wrong side of a policy issue, but for merely trying.  You wanna know why we elect so many mediocre politicians, incapable or unwilling to display even an ounce of leadership?  It’s editorials like this.

See, we hate leadership here in WA state.  We hate boldness.  Oh, we like to whine over the lack of it, but the minute a politician dares to assert it, or even (“Gasp!”) tries to start a fucking conversation about a difficult issue, we heap scorn on them for their arrogance or giggle at their foolish stray from executing the paramount duty of government:  taxing poor people to build more roads.

And as for the Times’ blunt statement that an income tax is simply “not going to happen”…? Oh, you mean like last year’s rail-only Prop 1?

A graduated income tax would require an amendment to the state constitution, meaning a two-thirds vote of both legislative houses and a majority approval of the voters.

No it would not!  Jesus… have you even read the goddamn Gates Commission report? (Or, for that matter, your own paper?)  The consensus conclusion is that the 1933 decision would likely be overturned.  Where did you go to law school?  What makes you think you’re a more qualified constitutional scholar than Williams Gates Sr. or Prof. Hugh Spitzer?

Stop lying to your readers.

Even if a 1-percent, flat-rate tax would be constitutional, it would still require approval by voters, who are the very people expected to pay it. Voters have rejected income taxes several times before by landslide margins, and in a time of job cuts and economic worry, would almost certainly do so again.

Actually, a millionaires tax would fall on only 0.1% of the voters asked to approve it, and if precinct results from the last income tax measure are any guide, a majority of these fortunate few would likely vote yes too.  And a broader tax on incomes over $200,000 would only fall on 4% of households.  But let’s not let details get in the way of your scare tactics.

Advocates have long promoted an income tax as a way to tax fairly, and the people have long suspected that the real motive was to tax more. Here the cynics are admitted to be right. The obvious motive of this proposal is to raise more money for the state.

I mean, God forbid we try to tax people more fairly, right?  And who in their right mind would want to raise more revenue at a time we’re slashing hundreds of millions of dollars from K-12 education, eliminating 10,000 slots from our colleges and universities, and kicking 50,000 people off the health care rolls?

Certainly, the state is having a money problem. But people who have lost their jobs or taken deep losses in their retirement investments also have money problems. Their interest is in a quick and vigorous business recovery, which is made less likely by new taxes.

But we’re not talking about taxing people who have lost their jobs, or about taxing people’s retirement investments.  We’re talking, under your scenario, about a one percent tax on household incomes over $1 million a year.  That means, if even in this economic downturn, you earn $2 million, you’d pay an additional $10,000 in state taxes a year.  $10,000 out of $2 million.  And we should feel their pain?

Some advocates say they would tax only the high earners. But it doesn’t raise enough money: a 1-percent tax on joint incomes above $1 million would raise less than one-half of 1 percent of state revenues. The state makes its big money in taxing the broad mass of people, which is also the broad mass of voters.

No, a 1-percent tax on millionaires doesn’t solve our budget crisis, but it’s sufficient to maintain outpatient senior care and save a few thousand higher education slots, while still leaving more than enough money left over to pay for that B&O tax reduction on newspapers for which you lobbied so aggressively.

Sen. Brown is said to be interested in being elected governor some day. She might recall the last such candidate who championed an income tax. It was Ron Sims, who was beaten in the Democratic primary by Christine Gregoire.

Hear that, Sen. Brown?  The editors at the largest newspaper in our state, our alleged watchdogs of democracy, are cautioning you to choose personal political ambition over taking a bold stance on principle.  No, you wouldn’t want to do anything potentially unpopular would you, even if you believe it the right thing to do, because it might cost you the governorship.  Just look at Ron Sims.

Like I said, this editorial is an example of everything that’s wrong with Washington politics.  Its attitude is a recipe for timidity, gridlock and stagnation, which, not surprisingly, is exactly the situation we find ourselves in today.

So you know what? I say be a leader, do what you think is right, and just tell the Times to piss off.  It’s not like you’re  going to get their endorsement in four years anyway—that’s going to Republican Rob McKenna—assuming there still is a Seattle Times in four years.

Be bold.  A 1-percent tax on millionaires doesn’t raise enough money to satisfy the Times?  Then expand it to those households earning over $200,000 a year; at the rates suggested by the EOI, that raises a substantial $2.5 billion per biennium, but still only falls on the top 4% of households.

And then, be creative:  put this high-earners income tax on the ballot tied to a half-cent reduction in the state sales tax.  96% of voters would see their taxes go down, even while saving crucial government services.  As for the millionaires?  Fuck ’em!  They’re the Wall Street fatcats who sold out our nation and got us into this mess in the first place, so let them pay to pick up the pieces.  (And don’t worry about whether that sentiment is grounded in reality or not, that’s the sentiment that’s out there, so you might as well use it to your advantage.  That’s what your opponents would do.)

And the icing on the cake is that our friend Mr. Eyman has made your sales job all the easier, his reprehensible I-960 totally deflating the Times’ inherent slippery-slope argument.  Voters don’t trust the Legislature not raise back the sales tax or expand the income tax to reach into the pockets of middle class families?  I-960 won’t let you!  At least not without a two-thirds majority in both houses, or the approval of voters at the polls.  Hey… thanks Tim!

In fact, the Times’ fact-free prognostication to the contrary (they apparently haven’t seen the polling data that shows a high-earners income tax surprisingly popular), now is the perfect time to put such a measure on the ballot.  Now is the perfect time to offer a stable social safety net and a cut in the sales tax to struggling families who currently hold little charity toward the wealthy who will be asked to pick up the tab… you know, the same wealthy who benefited most from the bubble that set up this devastating bust.  For as the election of Barack Obama and his continued popularity proves, voters are in a mood to take a chance on politicians who are willing to actually do something, even in the face of smug mockery from status quo defenders like the Seattle Times.

Be bold, Sen. Brown.  Be creative.  Shove this editorial back in the Times’ face, and be a leader, whether you’re ultimately rewarded for it or not.

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Junking the Jail

by Lee — Friday, 4/3/09, 5:56 am

City Council member Nick Licata explains why Seattle doesn’t need to build a new jail. Of all the places where we could be saving money right now, this is one of the most obvious. A Citizen’s Initiative has already been launched to find alternatives to building a new jail.

Back in January, Real Change hosted an event to air opposition to the plan. The video below contains some very insightful comments from Seattle middle school teacher Jesse Hagopian about how much we value prisons vs. schools:

[youtube]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3CrByNwp5Gw[/youtube]

The issue of our ever-expanding prison population is finally coming to the fore, thanks to courageous politicians like Jim Webb, who recognize that it’s nothing short of a tragic failure that America has the world’s largest prison population by far. The fact that even here in “progressive” King County we’re looking at fixing a potential shortage of jail beds by trying to spend money on a new jail – rather than re-evaluating why we’re trying to arrest so many people for minor non-violent offenses in the first place – gives us a good idea of how entrenched in our political system this failure has become.

One primary impetus for this failure has been the increased tendency to treat people with mental health and substance abuse problems as criminals who need to be sent to jail. During the 1980s, we began to believe that spending money to treat those people wasn’t a smart way to spend taxpayer dollars. This past week, another hole was blown right through that bit of conventional wisdom. From Blake Fleetwood in the Huffington Post:

The two year study results are in. “Bunks for Drunks” saves tax dollars.

Providing housing for chronic alcoholics, who are still drinking, can save taxpayers more than $40,000 annually, per alcoholic, according to the study released yesterday in The Journal of the American Medical Association.

Of course, at the time the project was launched, conservatives criticized the plan:

“It’s a living monument to a failed social policy” said John Carlson, a conservative local talk show host. It’s “aiding and abetting someone’s self-destruction.”

As we now know, the policy did no such thing:

The researchers found the average cost of alcohol-related services — hospital emergency care, the nonprofit “sobering center” (where police bring alcoholics to dry out), and the King County jail was $57,984 per person, per year while the 95 were living on the streets.

The savings and results were nothing but dramatic. Twelve months after moving into the apartment building, the average cost for these services for the same population dropped to $11,496 per person per year — an annual savings of $46,488.

The study also found that daily drinking fell by roughly 2% per month while subjects were in the program, which offered the alcoholics permanent homes with some supportive services.

So not only did this program save taxpayers money, it helped reduce problematic drinking as well. This seemingly counter-intuitive result is similar to the results found when safe sites have been set up for other addictive drugs. Despite what many non-libertarian conservatives (and even some clueless libertarian ones too) have been telling us for years, it’s simply not true that when government allows a behavior it’s inherently encouraging or rewarding it. The idea that government can be a moral nanny is a fallacy, and there’s no greater proof of that than America having both the highest prison population and the highest rates of illegal drug use in the world.

Washington is facing a very serious budget crisis, and it’s critical for us to base our decisions on the best empirical evidence for what works and what doesn’t – especially when it comes to dealing with the nexus between public health and criminal justice. The fact that the legislature is slicing $1.5 billion in health and human services, but couldn’t even muster up the courage to decriminalize pot should give you a pretty good indication of how fucked we are on this front.

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