Ohio Valley Environmental Coalition
Archive list of "E"- Notes newsletters

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February 2007
Contents

Sludge Safety Project: People Power in ACTION
ANOTHER Legal Victory for Mountain States Environment
Waging Democracy in the Kindgom of Coal: OVEC and the Movement for Social and Environmental Justice in Central Appalachia 2002-2003
Help Out Sludge Safety Project 
Goodbye to Sibby Weekley
Surprise, Joe! Gov. Gets Special Delivery from 400 Kids
Big Victory in Boone County for Sludge Safety!
Slurry Communiqus
Bad Water? Better Organize Now to Help!
Sludge Safety Projects Handy-Dandy Guide to the Golden Dome
OVEC Works! - Thanks
Holding King Coal Accountable - It CAN Be Done
Truth IS Stranger than Fiction - Coal Mine Wants Charity Tax Break
And Another One: Coal Companies to Perform Virginia Highway Study
Buffalo Creek Remembered: An Act of Man Leaves 125 West Virginians Dead
West Virginians Take on the FAT CATS
This is THE Year for Public Funding of Election Campaigns
Security Of Electronic Voting Condemned
With Clean Elections, Could We Have Universal Health Care Too?
Support the Push for Clean Elections - Here's How to HelpRight Now
A True Freedom Bill: Public Financing Will Ensure Voters are Heard
Groups, Individuals Work for Environment: Much Vital Work Goes On Behind the Scenes
Going Before the UN: We Z New York, Again 
Gutless Wonders: Corps Issues MTR Permit in Secret
Whose Security are They Talking About When They Say Homeland Security?
Goodbye to Hazel Mollett
Selenium Slugfest: DEP Seems to Think Heavy Metals Are Good For You
Voices From the Mountains and Beyond
Way to Go Dustbusters! Sylvester Residents Win Another Round
Situational Science Man
My Family in West Virginia, and How MTR Changed It
OVEC Gets A New Voice in Washington, DC
Miscellany


For viewing the PDF version of the newsletter

 
Winds of Change Newsletter, February 2007     See sidebar for table of contents

A True Freedom Bill: Public Financing Will Ensure Voters are Heard

by Rev. Dennis Sparks
Op-ed in Charleston Gazette, Jan. 10, 2007

During the run-up to last Novembers election, it was impossible to miss the pervasive presence of money in politics. Details of special interests vying to affect the outcome of our elections here in West Virginia were an almost daily news event. And even financial support of a less insidious nature continues to increase, as campaigns spend more and more with each election cycle.

Why should concerned citizens care about the amount of money our politicians raise and spend? The national campaign reform organization Public Campaign has calculated that the candidate who spends the most money wins over 90 percent of the time. That is an appalling statistic when one considers its implications for our democracy.

Right now in West Virginia we have a remarkable opportunity to move in another direction. We began in 2006 when our West Virginia Legislature adopted an excellent piece of legislation to regulate the activity of 527 organizations, requiring these organizations to disclose their identity and funding sources. We can continue on that path with the Public Campaign Financing Act. I often call it the true "freedom bill" because through the passage of this bill, we increase the opportunity for our citizens to trust our government and provide that our elected officials can earnestly listen to their constituency and vote their conscience.

The funding system is totally voluntary no candidate is required to participate. To qualify for public funding, candidates must demonstrate public support by collecting a certain number of signatures along with $5 contributions from registered voters in their district. The show of public support required will weed out so-called "fringe candidates." A candidate will have to stand for something positive to attract voter support. Qualifying candidates receive an amount of money sufficient to run a viable campaign. There are clear-cut and stringent guidelines as to how the public money can be spent, and violating the law can lead to prosecution.

Public funding has been proven to work. Maine and Arizona became the first two states to implement this system, which has been a clear success. Clean Election reforms freed candidates from fund-raising and allowed them to run more issue-oriented campaigns. There is greater financial equality among candidates, and the overall amount of campaign spending is decreasing. Electoral competition and voter choices have increased. A much more diverse group of legislators is being elected. After the 2004 election, Maines Senate is now made up of 83 percent Clean Elections candidates, with 77 percent in the House.

Free and open elections are a public good and indeed, the bedrock of our democracy. To provide public funding for candidates reduces the possibility of corruption, reduces the amount of time a candidate spends raising private funds, and diminishes the role that special interests have in determining public policy. It increases the likelihood that legislators can listen to their constituents and pursue the common good. People who could make excellent legislators, but could not dream of financing their own campaign, can run and win. The time is right for our state to become a leader in ensuring that the voices of all West Virginians will be heard in choosing our public policies.

Sparks is executive director of the West Virginia Council of Churches.

 

 

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