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Archive for July, 2009

Published by CTBC Director on 28 Jul 2009

“A Week in the Life” for CTBC - Clear The Bench Colorado Director Matt Arnold makes the rounds (upcoming appearances)

Clear The Bench Colorado is spreading the word (NOT spreading the wealth) around the state, with speaking engagements, press interviews, radio appearances, and a television debut (see below).  This week is even busier than most, with Director Matt Arnold attending at least one event every day.

Tuesday, July 28th: Appearing in Fremont County (621 Main Street, Canon City, CO) 6-8:30 (Speaker)

Wednesday, July 29th: At Liberty On The Rocks, Denver (Uptown Tavern, 17th & Pearl), 7-8:30ish

Thursday, July 30th: At the R Block Party event (not a speaker), South Suburban Golf Course Clubhouse (Colorado & Dry Creek) 7900 S Colorado Blvd Centennial, CO 80122 from 6:30 - 8:30

Friday, July 31st: multiple engagements -

Speaking at Johnson’s Corner breakfast event, 0630-0830 AM, just off I-25 @ 1.5 miles South of Hwy34

Attending the “Celebrate Freedom” lunch honoring Milton Friedman (12-1:30, Irish Snug, 1201 E. Colfax)

And Last Not Least: Appearing on the Independent Thinking television program with host Jon Caldara and fellow guest John Andrews for a discussion on ”Voter Approval of Supreme Court Justices” at 8:30 on KBDI Channel 12 for my broadcast television debut.

Meet up with Clear The Bench Colorado Director Matt Arnold at one of these events this week (if you can catch him standing still) and learn more about the grassroots movement to restore accountability to our judiciary in Colorado.  Let’s Ditch the Mullarkey Majority (Justices Michael Bender, Alex Martinez, Nancy Rice, and Chief Justice Mary Mullarkey) by voting “NO” to retain these unjust justices in 2010! Let’s Clear The Bench, Colorado!

Published by CTBC Director on 28 Jul 2009

Clear The Bench Colorado Director Matt Arnold interviewed by Law Week Colorado

A few weeks ago, Clear The Bench Colorado Director Matt Arnold met with Law Week Colorado’s Don Knox (formerly of the late, lamented Rocky Mountain News) for an interview discussing the grassroots movement to restore accountability to Colorado’s Judiciary.  That interview was published online this Sunday (26 July 2009) on the State Bill Colorado website.

A few excerpts:

Matt Arnold, who is calling his 2010 campaign “Clear The Bench,” landed upon his idea in the weeks following the high court’s decision earlier this year in Mesa County Bd. of County Comm’rs v. Colorado.
Because of that ruling, written by Mullarkey, Colorado lawmakers are free to increase state revenue by more than $2 billion by repealing tax credits and exemptions most had considered untouchable under the Taxpayer’s Bill of Rights, or TABOR. …

“I was absolutely outraged at not only the ruling but the pretense of legal logic that accompanied that ruling,” Arnold said of the high court’s March 17 decision. “I’m not a lawyer, but I’ve stayed at a few Holiday Inn Expresses, and I’m a pretty smart guy. …. I read that ruling and it did not make any sense.”
He said he also went to his lawyer friends, and it didn’t make sense to them, either.
“It had no basis in logic, and it turned the constitution completely on its head,” said Arnold, a TABOR supporter. “It substituted a preferred outcome for what the law should have been.”

Read the complete interview article to learn more about Clear The Bench Colorado and why Colorado voters should Ditch the Mullarkey Majority (Justices Michael Bender, Alex Martinez, Nancy Rice, and Chief Justice Mary Mullarkey) by voting “NO” to retain these unjust justices in 2010! 

Let’s Clear The Bench, Colorado!

Published by CTBC Director on 24 Jul 2009

Friday Funnies - the straw that broke TABOR’s back

After searching far and wide for recent examples of humorous content relevant to our Supreme Court (and believe me, after a long and busy week, I needed the laugh), I came up empty.  Apparently, it’s been a very unfunny week for the Colorado judiciary.

Looks like we’ll have to generate our own humorous content for the site - and yes, we do have some great projects in the works, but they’re not quite ready for prime time.  Check back next week, though…

Meanwhile, courtesy of designer/illustrator/cartoonist Benjamin Hummel, we reprise his depiction of the straw that broke TABOR’s back: the “Mill Levy Tax Freeze” ruling of 16 March 2009:

 

treading-dangerous-ground-b-hummel-03-21-09

The infamous “Mill Levy Tax Freeze” ruling did more than just (unconstitutionally) raise property taxes; it also opened the door to millions in new taxes, some of which were proposed literally hours after the legislature was briefed on the ruling before passing into law in the last legislative session.

Added to the stealthily-issued (the day before national elections) ruling upholding an outrageously expansive definition of “fees” (replacing “taxes”) and the later unconstitutional repeal of the Arveschoug-Bird spending limit, and TABOR has indeed been “bumped off the cliff” by the Mullarkey Court.

Wow - I guess it has been a pretty unfunny week after all.

Don’t let the Mullarkey Court throw grandma (er, TABOR) off the cliff.  Ditch the Mullarkey Majority (Justices Michael Bender, Alex Martinez, Nancy Rice, and Chief Justice Mary Mullarkey) by voting “NO” to retain these unjust justices in 2010!  Let’s Clear The Bench, Colorado!

Come back every week for another edition of the Friday Funnies at Clear The Bench Colorado!

Published by CTBC Director on 19 Jul 2009

Special Report re-broadcast: Clear The Bench Colorado Director Matt Arnold reprise on Backbone Radio 7PM Sunday 19 July

Reprising Thursday’s broadcast “Under The Dome” special report, Clear The Bench Colorado director Matt Arnold appears on Backbone Radio (710 KNUS in Denver, 1460 KZNT in Colorado Springs, and on http://www.710knus.com) at 7PM Sunday evening.  From the original station promo:

“A campaign is underway to vote down Colorado’s chief justice and three of her colleagues on the 2010 ballot.  What are the pros and cons? Get the story from former Senate President John Andrews and his guest experts on “Under the Dome,” a NewsTalk 710 special report.”

If you missed Thursday’s presentation (or just want to hear it again), tune in Sunday evening at 7PM to hear Matt present the case for restoring accountability to our judiciary in Colorado.

Exercise YOUR right to vote “NO” on retaining the four unjust justices of the Mullarkey Majority (Justices Michael Bender, Alex Martinez, Nancy Rice, and Chief Justice Mary Mullarkey) who need YOUR approval to continue taking away your rights: your right to vote on tax increases, your right to defend your homes and business from seizure by rapacious governments, and your right to enjoy the benefits of the rule of law, not rule by activist, agenda-driven “justices.”

Let’s Clear The Bench, Colorado!  Vote “NO” on unjust justices in 2010!

Published by CTBC Director on 17 Jul 2009

Friday Funnies - “inspirational” life story no basis for confirming Sotomayor (or anyone) to lifetime Supreme Court appointment

Following “three days of grueling questioning” (including such hard-hitting gems as “what was the publisher of  the encyclopedias your working-class mother bought you because she so strongly believed in the value of education” and “Perry Mason won all but one of his cases - what was the one case that he lost?“), Sonia Sotomayor is set to be confirmed as the next U.S. Supreme Court justice - the most rapid (rushed?) confirmation of any Supreme Court justice in U.S. history (beating out current justice and Clinton nominee Ruth Bader Ginsburg by a few days, depending on when the vote is actually held).

It was apparent even before the hearings began that the fix was in (Feinstein: Sotomayor a sure thing). Given the overwhelming numerical advantage of Democrats in the Senate, and hard behind-the-scenes arm-twisting to ensure party discipline, there was little that either “blue-dog” Democrats or Republicans could do to block confirmation.  However, our Senators missed a golden opportunity to stand on principle and make the case for the rule of law, and the importance of confirming (or retaining) justices on that basis.

Instead, the discussion revolved around racial politics (”underlying politics are dicey for Republicans“), personality (She is an amazing, warm and intelligent woman“) and her “inspirational life story:”

ba090712 

Now, I’m as much a fan of “inspirational life stories” as the next guy; and when I have a daughter, I hope she’s just like Gracie (the cute, wide-eyed, precocious kid in the ”Baldo” comic strip, above) - especially since if I have a son, he’s MUCH more likely to resemble Calvin (of Calvin and Hobbes) at that age.  But an inspirational life story is NO BASIS for confirming or retaining a Supreme Court justice! 

A judge’s appearance, gender, ethnicity, “inspirational life story,” etc. are irrelevant.  Our system of justice requires a judiciary committed to upholding the rule of law and equal administration of justice.  Although “we the people” don’t (directly) have a vote at the Federal level, we CAN vote to uphold the rule of law here in Colorado.  Vote “NO” on the unjust justices of the Mullarkey Court in 2010 - let’s Clear The Bench, Colorado!

Published by CTBC Director on 16 Jul 2009

When is a “fee” not a tax? When the Mullarkey Court says so…

In a little-noticed ruling issued November 3rd, 2008 (yes, great time to avoid attention, don’t you think?) the Mullarkey Majority on the Colorado Supreme Court quietly handed down an extremely far-reaching decision designed to permanently end-run TABOR and undermine the Colorado Constitution.  Like most people, I missed the significance of this case (Barber vs. Ritter) both at the time (my attention, like most Americans, was focused elsewhere) and even after launching Clear The Bench Colorado.

However, recent expressions of citizens outrage in response to massive increases in vehicle registration fees and exorbitantly punitive late fees - all part of the so-called FASTER bill (SB 108) passed by the Colorado Legislature and signed into law by Governor Bill Ritter, who continues to defend the increased fees - have turned the spotlight on the issue of fees vs. taxes.

Fees vs. Taxes - what’s the difference?

A fee is a charge for use of a service or amenity - the amount of which is related to the cost of providing that service or amenity.  Thus, licensing fees for hunting and fishing help fund game wardens, forestry service personnel, equipment, and property, etc. while fees for visiting state parks similarly help provide for personnel, property, upkeep, and the like.  The key feature of fees is that the user of a given good or service pays, and the funds collected are related to the purpose of providing the good or service.

A tax, on the other hand, while it may be applied to a particular good or service or more generally to the population at large, is collected to raise general purpose revenues.  Taxes collected may be unrelated, or completely disproportionate, to expenditures.  Thus, taxes on sales of goods (alcohol, clothing, etc.) or services (restaurants, dry cleaning, etc.) are not necessarily related to the cost of providing, regulating (e.g. health & safety inspections) or protecting (police, fire, courts, etc.) the goods or services taxed.  Government can spend tax revenues on anything it wants.  That’s why taxes go into the “General Fund” and expenditures are allocated by the legislative budgetary process.

Back in the days when the Colorado Supreme Court apparently still believed in upholding the law instead of engaging in creative exercises of convoluted argumentation to circumvent it (Mullarkey apparently had yet to hit her stride), decisions reflected these definitions and principles.  The 1989 Bloom v. City of Fort Collins decision (mangled almost beyond recognition in the Barber v. Ritter ruling) was clear:

A fee is distinct from a tax in that, “[u]nlike a tax, a special fee is not designed to raise revenues to defray the general expenses of government, but rather is a charge imposed upon persons or property for the purpose of defraying the cost of a particular governmental service.”

Morphing Taxes into Fees - the Mullarkey/Ritter shell game

Governor Ritter, the Colorado Legislature, and the Mullarkey Majority find the requirement to first ask before raising taxes (as required by TABOR) to be rather tiring - and restricting their power to accomplish their goals with your money.  What to do, what to do?  Simple - creatively define their way out of the restrictions; impose fees, instead of raising taxes - no need to ask the voters first; then just transfer the collected revenue (the ol’ shell game) into the general fund, so as to avoid those pesky restrictions on spending the money only on the “particular governmental service” for which the fee was collected.

But these semantic shenanigans can’t be legal, right? That’s what the plaintiffs in the Barber v. Ritter case thought - and they had good legal precedent (Bloom v. City of Fort Collins) on their side, too.  However, they failed to reckon with the logic-bending and creative writing skills of the Mullarkey Court.

Starting with Bloom’s premise that a fee “might be subject to invalidation as a tax” when the “principal purpose” is to raise general revenues, the Mullarkey Majority went on to declare that to find “principal purpose” and legislative intent, “we look to the language of the enabling statute for its expression.”

If the language discloses that the primary purpose for the charge is to finance a particular service utilized by those who must pay the charge, then the charge is a “fee.” On the other hand, if the language states that a primary purpose for the charge is to raise revenues for general governmental spending, then it is a tax. Moreover, the fact that a fee incidentally or indirectly raises revenue does not alter its essential character as a fee, transforming it into a tax. (Barber, p. 26)

Ergo, as long as legislators remember to say that a “fee” is for a particular purpose when drafting legislation, it makes no difference if in practice the “fee” is collected and spent for purposes entirely unrelated to the enabling statute.  Legislators can now avoid the dreaded “ask first” TABOR restrictions on taxes by simply calling it a fee and remembering to specify a particular purpose - say, “restore crumbling bridges” - one can always shift the collected revenues to one’s pet project later.

So what’s the bottom line?  Well, the good news is that thanks to the Mullarkey Majority on the Colorado Supreme Court, you probably won’t see the Colorado Legislature increase taxes much next year - as long as they haven’t completely killed TABOR, they would have to ask your permission first (well, in theory, anyway).  The bad news is that thanks to the Mullarkey Court, they won’t have to raise taxes - they’ll just increase or add new “fees” instead.  Now doesn’t that make you feel better?

Of course, if you’d rather not suffer an increase in either fees or taxes - at least not without being asked specifically first, as is your right under the Colorado Constitution - you have one last chance to DO something about it.  Ditch the Mullarkey Majority - vote “NO” on unjust justices before they can tax you again in 2010!  Let’s Clear The Bench, Colorado!

Published by CTBC Director on 15 Jul 2009

Clear The Bench Colorado Director Matt Arnold appearing on “Under The Dome” special report Thursday 16 July at 7PM

Clear The Bench Colorado Director Matt Arnold is appearing on a Backbone Radio “Under The Dome” special report this Thursday evening at 7PM (710 AM KNUS).

From the KNUS 710 station promo:

“A campaign is underway to vote down Colorado’s chief justice and three of her colleagues on the 2010 ballot.  What are the pros and cons? Get the story from former Senate President John Andrews and his guest experts on “Under the Dome,” a NewsTalk 710 special report on Thursday night at 7:00.”

Tune in Thursday evening at 7PM to hear Matt present the case for restoring accountability to our judiciary in Colorado by exercising YOUR right to vote “NO” on retaining the four unjust justices of the Mullarkey Majority (Justices Michael Bender, Alex Martinez, Nancy Rice, and Chief Justice Mary Mullarkey) who need YOUR approval to continue taking away your rights: your right to vote on tax increases, your right to defend your homes and business from seizure by rapacious governments, and your right to enjoy the benefits of the rule of law, not rule by activist, agenda-driven “justices.”

Let’s Clear The Bench, Colorado!  Vote “NO” on unjust justices in 2010!

Published by CTBC Director on 14 Jul 2009

Clear The Bench Colorado Director Matt Arnold appearing on Pirate Radio (104.7FM, Greeley) Wednesday 15 July

Clear The Bench Colorado Director Matt Arnold is appearing on Pirate Radio (104.7 FM, Greeley) Wednesday July 15th from 11-12AM.  Pirate Radio was recently profiled in a Denver Post feature article (”Good times for old-time radio“) for its independent ownership, innovative/retro format (”a formula of old-time radio schtick along with playlists of the top 100 songs from the years up to 1964″) and popular success (”Pirate Radio now boasts about 40,000 listeners and dominates the local radio market”).

Matt will present the case for restoring accountability to Colorado’s judiciary by voting “NO” in retention elections for the “unjust justices” of the Mullarkey Majority in 2010 (FOUR Colorado Supreme Court justices - Michael Bender, Alex Martinez, Nancy Rice, and Chief Justice Mary Mullarkey - must face Colorado voters in November 2010).  They need your approval to continue taking away your rights - DON’T GIVE IT TO THEM!

Vote “NO” on unjust justices, ditch the Mullarkey Majority, and Clear The Bench, Colorado!

Published by CTBC Director on 11 Jul 2009

Additional Eminent Domain Abuse - will the Mullarkey Court back Boulder’s Land Grab, too?

Assuming that the Mullarkey Court follows its own precedent (set with last summer’s Telluride Land Grab ruling), Boulder-area land owners (Feeling stepped on in Boulder) are in for some rude treatment at the hands of local government, backed by the Colorado state Supreme Court.

Boulder County appears dead set on following Telluride’s example in seizing private property through eminent domain in order to build a recreational trail - the same county officials who wouldn’t let a rancher build a “picnic gazebo” in his own back yard because it “didn’t jibe with his agriculturally zoned home.”  Now we know why: they wanted to grab the picnic property for themselves.

As the Denver Post article notes on the second page, “Using eminent domain for open space has precedent.”  True - the Mullarkey Majority set that precedent with last summer’s notorious “Telluride Land Grab” ruling in June 2008.  As noted in the article:

Telluride’s valley floor case

In 2004, the town of Telluride condemned its 572-acre valley floor, a pristine meadow where a developer had long envisioned a residential and commercial village. The town wanted the parcel protected as undeveloped open space.

The Colorado Supreme Court weighed in on the Telluride valley floor case and overturned legislation (Ed. ignored legislation by declaring it inapplicable; the law still stands, for what it’s worth) that had restricted open-space takings. Ultimately, Telluride was allowed to condemn its valley floor but had to pay the developer $50 million for rights to the land.

“It is not nearly as common as roads or utilities, but it certainly is not unheard of here in Colorado,” said Jack Sperber, an attorney with the Denver firm Faegre & Benson, who specializes in eminent-domain issues.

… Colorado has statutes allowing for open-space or recreational condemnation, and the Telluride case established a precedent showing open space as a valid public service…

 Uh-oh.  Looks bad for the Boulder County landowners.  But wait, there’s more:

The Telluride case emboldened Colorado municipalities to consider recreation when pondering eminent domain, said Jessica Corry, a policy analyst with the free market-focused Independence Institute in Golden.

The state hasn’t seen more land grabs because municipalities are struggling with dwindling revenue right now, Corry said.

“When coffers start to return to normal levels, I’d predict we’ll see more attempts,” she said.

So the Boulder County landowners may be only the first in a new wave of eminent domain abuse cases to join the victims of the Mullarkey Majority’s Telluride Land Grab.

So is there anything that these property owners can do to defend themselves?  Sure, they can fight the impending Boulder Land Grab in court; they may even be able to take it up all the way to the Colorado Supreme Court, where the Mullarkey Majority will be sure to give them fair, impartial, and evenhanded consideration of their claim to defend their land.

Yeah, right.

OR: they can fight the case in court, and simultaneously do everything in their power to ensure that when their case IS eventually heard by the Colorado Supreme Court, it will be with a fresh set of justices that will actually UPHOLD the law and their constitutional rights.

Just saying.

Ditch the Mullarkey Majority - vote “NO” on retaining unjust justices Michael Bender, Alex Martinez, Nancy Rice and Chief InJustice Mary Mullarkey in 2010!  Let’s Clear The Bench, Colorado!

Published by CTBC Director on 10 Jul 2009

Friday Funnies - Dogs trump unjust justices on eminent domain

It is rare to see such wisdom expressed in the old-school dinosaur media at all, much less in the comics section, but today’s “Dog Eat Doug” cartoon was right on target.

In this cartoon, the baby represents government (Ronald Reagan’s quote is apposite: “Government is like a baby. An alimentary canal with a big appetite at one end and no sense of responsibility at the other.”)  The dog represents the common citizenry - imbued with uncommon common sense.

crdog090710

Here, a dog - a puppy, really - displays more wisdom than did the Mullarkey Majority in upholding the “Telluride Land Grab” in June 2008 (a blatantly unconstitutional abuse of eminent domain by the city of Telluride - seizing property outside its jurisdiction).

Don’t let our Constitution - and our Supreme Court - go to the dogs.  Ditch the Mullarkey Majority (Justices Michael Bender, Alex Martinez, Nancy Rice, and Chief Justice Mary Mullarkey) by voting “NO” to retain these unjust justices in 2010!  Let’s Clear The Bench, Colorado!

Come back every week for another edition of the Friday Funnies at Clear The Bench Colorado!

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