Former U.S. Rep. Solomon Ortiz eyes return to politics
27 years was enough!!
What: Community welcome, public invited
When: 2:15 to 3 p.m. Saturday
Where: Line up along Ocean Drive, between downtown and NAS Corpus Christi
Why: Patriotic show of support for homecoming
The community is invited to line Ocean Drive from 2:15 to 3 p.m. Saturday for a show of patriotism. Patriot Guard Riders and Corpus Christi police will escort the Marines’ bus from Interstate Highway 37 downtown to the Ocean Drive gate for Naval Air Station Corpus Christi, where family members have planned a homecoming reception.
http://www.caller.com/news
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Saturday, August 6 · 6:00am – 9:30pm
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Reliant Stadium, Houston Texas
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| For | NW Tea Party |
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| More Info | Come together with local Christian conservatives and gather with us at Reliant Stadium in Houston for Governor Rick Perry’s “The Response” day of prayer. We have chartered a bus leaving the Corpus Christi area at 6AM and returning around 9-10PM. All local Christian conservatives are invited. Tickets will be $27/seat. There are 57 seats on the bus. If we have enough folks for 2 buses we can reserve a second bus. I have preregistered the 57 folks on the bus with the event. Click on the following link to download a flyer for this bus trip that you can share with your friends, family, church, and coworkers! http://www.scribd.com/doc/60404385/NW-Tea-Party-The-Response-Bus-Trip-Flyer For more information on this event, please visit the event’s website. http://theresponseusa.com/ Here is the invitation from the governor: http://vimeo.com/25676383 UPDATE: The bus will be departing from: Annaville Baptist Church 4025 Violet Road Corpus Christi, TX 78410-3124
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Obama’s Food Police in Staggering Crackdown on Market to Kids – HUMAN EVENTS
Tony the Tiger, some NASCAR drivers and cookie-selling Girl Scouts will be out of a job unless grocery manufacturers agree to reinvent a vast array of their products to satisfy the Obama administration’s food police.
Either retool the recipes to contain certain levels of sugar, sodium and fats, or no more advertising and marketing to tots and teenagers, say several federal regulatory agencies.
The same goes for restaurants.
It’s not just the usual suspected foods that are being targeted, such a thin mint cookies sold by scouts or M&Ms and Snickers, which sponsor cars in the Sprint Cup, but pretty much everything on a restaurant menu.
Although the intent of the guidelines is to combat childhood obesity, foods that are low in calories, fat, and some considered healthy foods, are also targets, including hot breakfast cereals such as oatmeal, pretzels, popcorn, nuts, yogurt, wheat bread, bagels, diet drinks, fruit juice, tea, bottled water, milk and sherbet.
Food industries are in an uproar over the proposal written by the Federal Trade Commission, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, Food and Drug Administration and the U.S. Department of Agriculture.
“The most disturbing aspect of this interagency working group is, after it imposes multibillions of dollars in restrictions on the food industry, there is no evidence of any impact on the scourge of childhood obesity,” said Dan Jaffe, executive vice president of the Association of National Advertisers.
The “Interagency Working Group on Food Marketed to Children, Preliminary Proposed Nutrition Principles to Guide Industry Self-Regulation Efforts” says it is voluntary, but industry officials say the intent is clear: Do it, or else.
“When regulators strongly suggest a course of action, it’s treated as a rule, not a suggestion,” said Scott Faber, vice president of federal affairs for the Grocery Manufacturers Association. “Industry tends to heed these suggestions from our regulators, and this administration has made it clear they are willing to regulate if we don’t implement their proposal.”
It’s not just the food industry that will be impacted. Hundreds of television shows that depend on the advertising revenue, such as the Nickelodeon Channel, ESPN, and programs including “American Idol” will be affected, critics of the proposal say—at a cost of $5.8 trillion in marketing expenditures that support up to 20 million American jobs.
If the food is not reformulated, no more ads or promotions on TV, radio, in print, on websites, as well as other digital advertising such as e-mail and text messaging, packaging, and point-of-purchase displays and other in-store marketing tools; product placement in movies, videos, video games, contests, sweepstakes, character licensing and toy branding; sponsorship of events including sport teams and individual athletes; and, philanthropic activity tied to branding opportunities.
That includes softball teams that are sponsored by food companies and school reading programs sponsored by restaurants.
“The Interagency working group recommends that the food industry, through voluntary self-regulatory efforts, make significant improvements in the nutritional quality of foods marketed to children and adolescents ages 2 to 17 years,” the proposal says.
“By the year 2016, all food products within the categories most heavily marketed directly to children should meet two basic nutrition principles. Such foods should be formulated to … make a meaningful contribution to a healthful diet and minimize the content of nutrients that could have a negative impact on health and weight.”
The foods most heavily marketed directly to children and adolescents fall into 10 categories: “breakfast cereals, snack foods, candy, dairy products, baked goods, carbonated beverages, fruit juice and non-carbonated beverages, prepared foods and meals, frozen and chilled desserts, and restaurant foods.”
Beth Johnson, a dietician for Food Directions in Maryland, said many of the foods targeted in this proposal are the same foods approved by the federal government for the WIC nutrition program for women, infants and children.
“This doesn’t make any sense whatsoever,” Johnson said. “It’s not going to do anything to help with obesity. These are decisions I want to make for my kids. These should not be government decisions.”
Texas light bulb bill would skirt federal plan
State lawmakers have passed a bill that allows Texans to skirt federal efforts to promote more efficient light bulbs, which ultimately pushes the swirled, compact fluorescent bulbs over the 100-watt incandescent bulbs many grew up with.
The measure, sent to Gov. Rick Perry for consideration, lets any incandescent light bulb manufactured in Texas – and sold in that state – avoid the authority of the federal government or the repeal of the 2007 energy independence act that starts phasing out some incandescent light bulbs next year.
“Let there be light,” state Rep. George Lavender, R-Texarkana, wrote on Facebook after the bill passed. “It will allow the continued manufacture and sale of incandescent light bulbs in Texas, even after the federal ban goes into effect. … It’s a good day for Texas.”
The Natural Resources Defense Council, a New York-based environmental group, is calling on Perry to veto the bill.
“The Texas legislation is designed to showcase the state’s independence,” said Bob Keefe, senior press secretary with the council. “But what it really shows off is how some politicians in the Lone Star State will do anything to score political points – even if it means echoing misinformation and wasting time and money passing legislation that can’t practically be implemented and isn’t in the best interest of constituents.”
Perry has until Sunday to veto bills, sign them into law or let them become law without his signature.
Lavender has described his House Bill 2510 as a common-sense bill.
“The ‘new and improved’ compact fluorescent light bulbs don’t work as promised, are significantly more expensive as are the LEDs and have environmental and disposal problems due to the mercury they contain,” according to a statement from his office.
The goal of the bill is to make incandescent light bulbs manufactured in Texas – that are sold in Texas and don’t leave the state – not subject to federal law or federal rules. Such a bulb would have to have “Made in Texas” clearly imprinted somewhere on it. There are no estimates of how many incandescent light bulbs are manufactured in Texas.
If the bill becomes law, it would go into effect Jan. 1 and would apply to light bulbs made from that day forward.
U.S. Rep. Joe Barton, R-Texas, is trying to repeal the 2007 energy independence act passed by Congress and signed into law by President George W. Bush.
The federal act doesn’t ban incandescent light bulbs, but it creates new standards for them, such as requiring 100-watt bulbs to be 25 percent more efficient. After that, similar changes will go into effect for 75-, 60- and 40-watt bulbs. The goal is to make the bulbs more energy efficient because much of the traditional bulbs’ energy leaves the bulb as heat rather than as light.
The act requires the changes or essentially removes incandescent light bulbs from the market by 2014, leaving consumers to mostly use fluorescent bulbs, which some say are more energy efficient and others say are just more expensive.
“People don’t want the government dictating the lighting they can use,” Barton said. “Traditional incandescent bulbs have been brightening the night since Thomas Edison created the first one in 1879. They are safe, cheap and reliable.”
The U.S. House Energy and Commerce Committee may soon hold a hearing on energy efficiency and could include Barton’s BULB act.
“I am happy that the state Legislature voted to keep incandescent lights on in Texas, but the state wouldn’t have to get involved if the federal government would just butt out,” Barton said.
For some, the Texas bill represents this state’s efforts to claim sovereignty from the federal government, proving that Texas has the right to regulate some commercial activities conducted only in this state.
“Telling Texans what types of light bulbs they can manufacture, sell, purchase and use is not the proper role of the federal government,” said Janise Cookston, a spokeswoman for the Wharton-based nonprofit group “We Texans,” which works to protect “private property, personal and economic liberty” as well as constitutional government.
“This bill sends the message to Washington that Texas will no longer sit idly by and take unconstitutional intrusion into our lives.”
Some say they worry about fluorescent bulbs because they contain mercury, a toxic metal linked to birth defects and behavioral disorders. Estimates show the average bulb has 4 to 5 milligrams of mercury, enough to cover the tip of a ballpoint pin. No mercury is emitted while the bulbs are in use, but vapors can escape if a bulb breaks.
Supporters also say fluorescent bulbs can cost more than $3 each; incandescent bulbs can cost as little as 35 cents each.
Opponents say the health risks of the mercury are minimal. And they say the bill violates the constitutional clause that states the federal law is the “supreme law of the land.”
They say the state can’t prevent a light bulb from being taken across a state line, which would make it subject to interstate commerce rules and federal regulation. They also say incandescent bulbs are archaic and have been replaced by fluorescent bulbs that last longer, are more environmentally friendly and don’t create the same fire hazards incandescent bulbs do.
“Nobody is forcing anybody to use only compact florescent bulbs,” said Keefe, of the NRDC. “Several manufacturers are already making incandescent bulbs that have the same lighting quality as old-school incandescents that we all know and use. It’s just that newer, more efficient versions use 25-30 percent less energy – saving the average Texas household an estimated $100 per year and reducing overall Texas energy bills by more than $900 million.”
Officials with Osram Sylvania, a popular producer of incandescent light bulbs, declined to comment on Texas’ bill. But the company noted that it has developed a more efficient incandescent bulb called the Sylvania SuperSaver that will meet the new federal requirements.
GE, meanwhile, is moving forward to fill the demand for fluorescent bulbs.
Officials there say demand for traditional incandescent bulbs has declined and consumers have switched to more efficient lighting.
“As policymakers consider changes to current legislation, we hope they keep in mind that repeal of national standards would result in states establishing their own standards,” said Kim Freeman, a spokeswoman for GE Appliances & Lighting. “That could create a patchwork of inconsistent standards across the nation that would mean increased manufacturing and distribution costs, higher prices for consumers and lost sales for retailers.”
(c) 2011, Fort Worth Star-Telegram.
Distributed by McClatchy-Tribune Information Services.
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We would like to thank all of the candidates who attended our forum last week. Ray Madgrigal, Carolyn Moon, Mark Scott, Jesse Noyola, Bryan Menard, David Loeb, Kevin Kieschnick, John Sloan, John Marez, Daniel Lucio, Roland Barerra, Nelda Martinez, Chris Adler and Larry Elizondo.
Also a big thanks to Eric von Wade for moderating the event for us.
Early voting turnout this year is very low.. Please get out there and vote and make your voice heard!
Here is the link to watch the entire forum online: http://nwteaparty.blogspot.com/2011/05/video-from-nw-tea-party-and-island-tea.html and here is the link to review the polling results from our forum: http://nwteaparty.blogspot.com/2011/05/city-council-polling-function-var.html
Please click the following link for the City of Corpus Christi’s Election page, where you can find the mobile and early voting schedules, and sample ballots: http://www.cctexas.com/?fuseaction=main.view&page=4163
Also, please visit and join our Facebook groups:
Northwest Corpus Christi Tea Party: https://www.facebook.com/home.php?sk=group_181554551871897 (Meets the last Tuesday of every month and the Richard M. Borchard Regional Fairgrounds in Robstown.)
Island Corpus Christi Tea Party: https://www.facebook.com/group.php?gid=351306489137
(Meets the first Thursday of every month at the Holiday Inn on Padre Island)
Sorry in advance for the poor quality of the video.. The panel questions everyone is talking about can be found around the 1:00 mark!