La sentencia dictada el jueves por el Tribunal Supremo de EE.UU. para hacer más equitativos los mapas electorales de Alabama da nuevas esperanzas a los grupos de Pensilvania que se han unido para conseguir que se aprueben en el Commonwealth proyectos de reforma de la delimitación de distritos para poner fin a lo que consideran una manipulación.
La nueva Mesa de Redistribución de Distritos de Pensilvania es una asociación de organizaciones preocupadas por la redistribución de distritos que quieren que el proceso se centre en los votantes y no en los legisladores y los partidos políticos.
Carol Kuniholm, presidenta del grupo Fair Districts P-A, afirma que más de 200 personas asistieron a un foro virtual, lo que demuestra que existe un interés considerable por la reforma de redistribución de distritos.
"Los panelistas," dice Kuniholm, "debatieron lo que hemos aprendido sobre la reforma, lo que hemos aprendido sobre como garantizar que los votos no se diluyan en el proceso de redistribución de distritos."
Ella dice que su organización lleva intentando que se apruebe la legislación de la reforma desde 2016.
La Liga de Mujeres Votantes y otros grupos involucrados en la asociación han estado trabajando en esto desde la década de 1980. Pero hasta ahora, el liderazgo legislativo ha bloqueado los proyectos de ley.
Kuniholm cree que el proceso de redistribución de distritos debe modificarse por completo para que la voz de los ciudadanos sea más fuerte y los legisladores tengan mucho menos peso en el resultado.
"Así que las comunidades que sienten que no tienen elección a menudo dejan de votar," dice Kuniholm. "La gente siente que siempre han tenido al mismo legislador y que no hay forma de cambiarlo, porque el distrito está diseñado para mantener a esa persona en el poder."
Añade que es importante que los ciudadanos de Pensilvania se mantengan informados sobre el próximo censo de 2030 y el subsecuente proceso de redistribución de distritos que tendrá lugar un año después.
La Mesa de Redistribución de Distritos de Pensilvania planea informar a la gente lo antes posible sobre por qué son importantes estos procesos para garantizar que se cuente a todos.
Divulgación: Fair Districts PA contribuye a nuestro fondo para informar sobre políticas y prioridades presupuestarias, compromiso cívico, problemas comunitarios y voluntariado. Si desea ayudar a respaldar noticias de interés público,
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Pennsylvania's landscape is undergoing a transformation, paid for with billions in federal funding from the Inflation Reduction Act and the Bipartisan Infrastructure Law.
The state is expected to receive more than $13 billion over five years for highways and bridges.
David Gunshore described himself as a "semiretired inspector," working on a bridge project in Clarks Summit and said it's being paid for 100% by federal dollars. Gunshore said the crumbling bridge was built in 1959 and last rehabbed in 1983, and stands 65 feet above railroad tracks.
"Like a lot of the concrete, it rots out and it falls, that means it deteriorates and breaks out," Gunshore explained. "So you cut all that out, and you re-patch it with new stuff, so that the rot can't go any deeper into the pillars. We're redoing the bridge deck and the piers, the pillars, the columns that hold it up."
Gunshore estimated the bridge project will be finished by next fall. As of March of this year, the Bipartisan Infrastructure Law had allocated more than $15 billion to Pennsylvania, for more than 450 projects. Of those funds, $6.7 billion are for highways and just over $1 billion for bridges.
Gunshore pointed out in his years on the job, the construction industry seems to have struggled more under Republican administrations but thrived during President Bill Clinton's tenure and with the Fixing America's Surface Transportation Act during Barack Obama's presidency to fix roads and transit lines. Gunshore thinks it has been money well spent, noting the Biden-Harris administration's support for construction, manufacturing and apprenticeship programs.
"Big government spends the money but you're building roads, people get jobs, and money goes into the economy, and you're still ending up with new roads and new infrastructure," Gunshore emphasized. "I think that's one of the best investments going, that and health care, because the better the health care, the less people are going to get sick."
Gunshore noted the last major federal project he worked on, the Twin Bridges project, is underway to replace two mainline bridges in Lackawanna County. He added there is a lot of work to be done and jobs are available for the project.
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Nebraska is one of four states with measures about state funding of private-school vouchers on the ballot this year. Referendum 435 asks voters to decide whether to repeal the school voucher program passed on the last day of the 2024 legislative session.
Backers of the law claim vouchers are needed by low-income families who can't otherwise afford to send their children to a private school. But studies show that in a number of states, most who benefit from school vouchers are not from low-income families.
Tim Royers, president of the Nebraska State Education Association, said this has been borne out in Iowa.
"In Iowa, for example, who just implemented their voucher system last year," he said, "the median income for the voucher recipients is roughly $120,000."
Iowa data also show that more than two-thirds of the students using vouchers had already been attending a private school.
Another of NSEA's objections is that the law doesn't benefit all of Nebraska, since more than half the counties have no private schools. Critics of the voucher programs say they siphon state funds away from the public school system.
Royers said choice is fine - as long as it's publicly accountable choice.
"As long as private schools can discriminate and deny certain children admission; as long as they don't have to follow the same testing and reporting requirement that we do, we just don't feel public tax dollars should go to those institutions," he said.
Arizona's private-school voucher program has ballooned in scope and cost, and contributed to the need for significant state budget cuts. Dave Wells, research director at the Grand Canyon Institute, a "centrist think tank" in Phoenix, says Arizona's voucher program means the state is essentially supporting two school systems - public and private.
"In Arizona, we can't afford to do that, and it's had really negative impacts," he said. "And I think it has especially negative impacts on rural areas where there aren't private schools even to pick from. And the people who benefit the most from this are people who can already afford to go to private schools, is what we've found in Arizona."
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Former President Donald Trump and Vice President Kamala Harris are trying to appeal to labor groups on the campaign trail.
A much-debated policy blueprint is lighting a fire under Minnesota unions, who warn about the threat to workers. Republicans, including Trump, have tried to distance themselves from Project 2025, a wish list of policy moves drafted by a conservative think tank. But attempts to disavow the project are not easing the concerns of those opposed to it, including the Minnesota Association of Professional Employees, which represents more than 15,000 state government workers.
Megan Dayton, president of the union, found the overall tone from Trump and his advisers troubling.
"This plan promises to dismantle government services," Dayton pointed out. "Donald Trump wants to privatize the Department of Veterans Affairs. This really hits home for us in Minnesota and for MAPE because we have members who help veterans receive specialized care."
Project 2025 lays out a number of union-related reforms, including regulations dealing with overtime rules. In 2018, Trump signed executive orders weakening unions' ability to negotiate contracts and cut hours union reps were able to tend to member complaints. While the former president downplays connections to the plan's authors, other conservatives argued the initiative is about government accountability.
The Minnesota Association of Professional Employees and other Minnesota unions, including the American Federation of State, County and Municipal Employees Council 5, argued the conservative vision under Project 2025 aligns with broader efforts to chip away at individual rights. Dayton noted like so many other populations, it affects their members.
"They (conservatives) are consolidating power by removing the checks and balances that I think have defined our republic since its founding," Dayton asserted.
On a national scale, Harris has the backing of a number of key unions, including the AFL-CIO and the United Auto Workers. However, the International Association of Firefighters and the International Brotherhood of Teamsters declined to endorse anyone in the presidential election.
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