Smart grids and dumb power lines

Back in the 1970s, a young college professor named Paul Wellstone joined the battle against a high voltage power line in rural Minnesota. He and fellow professor and activist Barry M. Casper later wrote Powerline: The First Battle of America’s Energy War. That war, and the battles over power lines continue, with the latest MN Public Utilities Commission (PUC) ruling last week allowing yet another power line to march across Minnesota.

The Emperor’s Old Clothes

Today’s battle in Minnesota centers on two giant power line proposals, ITC’s “Green Power Express” and Xcel’s CapX 2020. They both claim the cloak of green energy, but it’s long past time for public officials to recognize that these particular emperors are not wearing any clothes. Here’s why:

First, the power companies boast that the new, giant power lines will carry renewable, green energy. The catch: they are not required to do so. Most electricity in this country is generated by burning coal, so that’s what is most likely to move over the new “dumb” power lines.

Second, they claim that new transmission lines are needed because the nation needs more electricity. That’s not true either. According to NPR, which has just completed a 10-part series on “Electricity in America:”

Power companies are planning to beef up the nation’s electricity transmission grid. At the same time, conservationists are trying to reduce the vast amount of power wasted in Americans’ homes and offices. That raises a question: If we simply used energy more efficiently, would we need to spend billions of dollars on a new grid?

NPR quotes Revis James, who works for the industry-funded Electric Power Research Institute, who assures us that demand for electricity inevitably will keep on growing. It fails to mention that U.S. Department of Energy figures show that national electricity use is already falling — by more than two percent in January 2009 compared to January 2008, marking the sixth consecutive month of falling electricity use. Instead,

Xcel and ITC claim that CapX 2020 in southern MN and the “Green Power Express” across the northern part of the state will transport green energy from Midwestern states to the supposedly power-starved states east of here, which lack any wind, solar or geothermal resources. Never mind that Chicago — one of the supposed beneficiaries — is well-known as “the Windy City.” Never mind that a recent study shows that “at least half of the fifty states could meet all their internal energy needs from renewable energy generated inside their borders, and the vast majority could meet a significant percentage.” In fact, says the study:

However, while significant variations in renewable energy among states exist; in most cases, when transmission or transportation costs are taken into account, the net cost variations are quite modest. Homegrown energy is almost always cheaper than imports, especially when you factor in social, environmental and economic benefits.

Smart Grids and Smart Meters

There are other, better ways to power the nation. The two best directions — increasing energy conservation and encouraging local ownership of local renewable energy projects — do not generate large profits for utility companies.

Smart grids and smart electric meters give consumers more information as a means reducing peak demand and overall energy use. The Washington Post reports:

Smart grid refers to an array of switches, sensors and computer chips that will be installed at various stages in the energy-delivery process — in power stations, in electricity meters, in clothes dryers — in the next two decades, if the vision holds and the technology works.

To flatten spikes in demand, smart meters will tell users when power is cheaper, in case they want to run dishwashers and dryers when it costs less. For customers who agree ahead of time, the meters can do the calculations and start the appliances automatically.

NPR’s series reports on both business and individual consumers dramatically cutting their electricity consumption through the use of smart technology. A business example comes from the home of the U.S. Green Building Council in Washington, which “should use about half the electricity of a conventional office.”

For a personal consumer’s point of view, NPR turns to Tammy Yeakel in Pennsylvania:

When PPL installed a smart meter on Tammy Yeakel’s Pennsylvania home, she cut her electric bills by 20% reported NPR.

“This is one of my favorite things,” Yeakel says, reading from the computer screen. “How does my home compare to similar homes in my area? And I’m always about $120 less than everybody. So that’s kind of neat. That’s like vacation.”

Tom Stathos from PPL explains that the meters go hand-in-hand with the company’s website, which explains how to cut electricity consumption:

“It’s not a matter of doing without — it’s just a matter of making smart choices,” he says. “The meter is the absolute direct connection with the customer. So this is definitely the start of a smart grid,” Stathos says. With information from the smart meters, PPL is launching a new pricing program. It’s offering two rates — one during times of peak energy use, and a cheaper, off-peak price. The company hopes this encourages customers to use less power when electricity is priciest. And Stathos says that’s just a beginning.

The Obama administration wants to use stimulus money to help install smart meters and promote a smart grid.

Keeping Energy Local

According to George Crocker, Executive Director of the North American Water Office (NAWO), a non-profit organization that has worked on energy issues for more than 25 years:

The old way of doing business was to hook up a few very large central station power plants, mostly coal and nuclear, to high voltage powerlines to serve energy consumers in distant cities. The new way, as this study documents, is to serve those same energy consumers by strategically locating smaller locally owned dispersed renewable energy facilities.

One way to encourage local development of renewable energy projects is through a feed-in tariff, “a price for renewable energy high enough to attract investors without being so high it generates windfall profits.”

According to the “Institute for Local Self Reliance:

Denmark and Germany both used a feed-in tariff to drive renewable electricity generators to more than 15 percent market share. This policy also resulted in large-scale local ownership, with near half of German wind turbines and over 80 percent of Danish ones owned by the residents of the region.

Power Companies and Power Lines

Meanwhile, power companies keep pushing forward with plans to spend billions of dollars on hundreds of miles of power lines. Public utility commissions, including the Minnesota PUC, are still giving them almost everything they ask for.

We are on the hook for this boondoggle. The people who live under or near the power lines pay the highest price, as their land is taken and their e As consumers of electricity, we pay for the new power lines through higher rates. As taxpayers, we pay directly for subsidies for construction.

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News Day: Michelle Bachmann, Norm Coleman / Health care in jeopardy / Swine flu updates / more

Mad Michelle Minute Minnesota Independent chronicles the latest Bachmania, reporting that Bachmann offered an amendment to the Mortgage Reform and Anti-Predatory Lending Act to ban groups facing federal indictment for voter fraud from receiving federal foreclosure relief funds. She proudly explained that “I want to ensure that organizations, such as ACORN, are prohibited from receiving funds while simultaneously facing charges of voter fraud and tax violations.” Only problem with that: ACORN says “The truth is, no criminal charges related to voter registration have ever been brought against ACORN, its leadership, or partner organizations.”

Norm Coleman files Yesterday, Norm Coleman filed his brief before the MN Supreme Court, with “few, if any” surprises, reports Eric Black in MinnPost. Read the brief, which goes on for 62 pages ad nauseam (a legal term, of course), or the Eric Black summary — or just skip the whole lthing because there’s nothing there that you haven’t already heard over the past six months.
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News Day: Mad Michelle Minutes / Sun setting for local media chain? / The virus formerly known as swine / more

Mad Michelle Minute Today’s Michelle Bachmann updates: Making hate crimes illegal means protecting pedophiles and not protecting 85-year-old grandmothers and FDR’s “Hoot-Smawley” tariffs turned a recession into the Great Depression. Of course, that’s actually the tariff authored by Republican Senators Smoot and Hawley, and signed by Republican President Herbert Hoover. Thanks to Minnesota Independent and TPM for today’s Michelle Minute.

More bad news in local media David Brauer at Braublog continues to keep us up-to-date on media news, and that’s usually bad news.

• Now the American Community Newspaper newspaper chain, which includes more than 40 local suburban Sun newspapers, has filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy. “No impact on day-to-day operations” is the usual mantra, but nobody believes that.

• Over at the University of St. Thomas, the student newspaper is being killed to make way for TommieMedia.com, “a future one-stop shop for student-produced radio, broadcast and ‘print’ media.”

• Not that they have every been great local news sources, but now the local Clear Channel stations ((KFAN, K102, KOOL 108, KDWB, Cities 97) will get their news feeds from Colorado.

The virus formerly known as swine Now that the first MN case has been confirmed, the MN health commissioner has asked that we all learn to say “H1N1 novel influenza” instead of “swine flu.” Anybody think that’s going to catch on? There’s a good reason – too many people here and around the world are afraid you can get The Disease by eating pork, and that’s killing pork prices. (In Egypt, the government has ordered the slaughter of all pigs – an estimated 300,000 in the country.) For better answers, take a look at Pandemic and panic: Swine flu Q&A.

Medical marijuana The MN Senate passed a bill legalizing medical marijuana – on to the House – and then to T-Paw’s veto.

Schools going down for the count The Association of Metropolitan School Districts (AMSD) has counted the damages from legislative education funding proposals, and the numbers are bad, report the PiPress, the Strib. and . Bottom line: Metro area school districts would have to cut $135.7 million to $222.5 million next year under the House and Senate budgets. That translates to job cuts for 1,200 employees at more than 30 metro districts, with 512 to 854 layoffs targeting teachers.

Scott Croonquist, executive director of AMSD, says “The governor has the best proposal on the table right now, absolutely,” since T-Paw’s plan gives a slight increase in funding in year two of the biennium, albeit targeting that funding to specific schools under Q-Comp.

Minnesota 2020 has surveyed rural schools, and reports grim prospects for cuts there as well.

The districts reported that on average they plan to lay off 4 percent of their faculty, 5 percent of administration and 6.5 percent of non-licensed staff to make ends meet.

MN Job Watch From the U.S. Department of Labor: New unemployment claims for the week ending April 25 stood at 631,000, down from the previous week’s revised figure of 645,000. According to AP, the total number of people receiving unemployment benefits increased to 6.3 million, the highest number since 1967.

National/World headlines

BBC: Watch out, Google! Here comes Wolfram Alpha, which”is like plugging into a vast electronic brain,” according to one expert. “It computes answers – it doesn’t merely look them up in a big database.”

BBC: Turkish warplanes bombed Kurdish targets in northern Iraq, hours after the deaths of 10 Turkish soldiers in two separate attacks that were blamed on the rebels.

Daily Kos: Fox refused to carry the president’s press conference – and President Obama didn’t call on Fox for a question, though he did call on all the major networks. The Daily Kos says “Amen — there’s no reason to pretend that Fox is anything but a GOP propaganda tool.

• Congress passed a non-binding budget resolution — with no GOP votes.

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Pandemic and panic: Swine flu Q&A

The media has been saturated with swine flu news. Here’s our round-up of questions and answers and a list of places to go for information, including some of the big swine flu news centers, official sources, and some lesser-known information.

The local angle: Minnesota has one suspected case of swine flu in Cold Spring, as of April 29, and local officials closed schools as a precaution. Official Minnesota, however, wants a name change for the new virus. Instead of “swine flu,” Minnesota’s Health Commissioner, Dr. Sanne Magnan, is calling it “H1N1 novel influenza.” Officials are responding to fears that are driving pork prices down, pointing out that you don’t get swine flu from eating pork.

Questions and answers

How serious is H1N1 “swine” flu compared to “regular” or seasonal flu?

We don’t know yet. The symptoms for both types seem similar — fever, cough, sore throat, body aches, chills and fatigue, and sometimes diarrhea.

We do not have enough information yet to say that swine flu or H1N1 is or is not more deadly than seasonal flu. People have died from H1N1, but people also die from “regular” seasonal flu — about 30,000 every year in the United States and from 250,000 to 500,000 worldwide.

What is this H1N1 or swine flu virus?

Both seasonal flu and this new strain of flu are caused by a Type A H1N1 virus. The “H1N1 novel influenza” virus contains different genetic material. The best explanation I have seen comes from BBC:

H1N1 is the same strain which causes seasonal outbreaks of flu in humans on a regular basis.

But this latest version of H1N1 is different: it contains genetic material that is typically found in strains of the virus that affect humans, birds and swine.

Flu viruses have the ability to swap genetic components with each other, and it seems likely that the new version of H1N1 resulted from a mixing of different versions of the virus, which may usually affect different species, in the same animal host.

Pigs provide an excellent ‘melting pot’ for these viruses to mix and match with each other. …

Most humans have never been exposed to some of the antigens involved in the new strain of flu, giving it the potential to cause a pandemic.

Is there a vaccine to prevent the newest strain of H1N1 flu? Can it be treated?

There is no vaccine yet, but work on developing a vaccine has begun.

H1N1 flu can be treated. Tamiflu and Relenza both seem to work, especially if treated in early stages — during the first 24-48 hours — but may also have benefit if given later in severe cases. But viruses can develop resistance to these medications, and that’s another one of the unknowns.

What makes this H1N1 flu so scary?

We don’t know what the virus is going to do to people. And that’s scary. We do know that people do not have immunity to this strain of H1N1 because it is a new virus, and because it is being transmitted person-to-person, and in countries around the world.

Why did the World Health Organization raise the pandemic alert level to Level 5? What does that mean?

WHO has a six-level alert scale. Level four means that outbreaks are occurring in community clusters. Level 5 means that human-to-human transmission is confirmed in at least two different countries. Level 6 means that there is a pandemic, defined as community level outbreaks in one additional country in another region.

How is this flu spread? Can I get it from eating pork?

This H1N1 is being transmitted person-to-person, by coughing, sneezing, or by touching infected surfaces. It is not spread by eating pork.

How bad could it get?

MPR summarizes nicely:

A full-scale pandemic — like the 1918 Spanish flu — would sicken 90 million Americans, or about 30 percent of the population.

It could claim the lives of about 2 percent of those infected, about 2 million people, according to government experts. To put that in perspective, the flu typically causes about 30,000 deaths each year.

How long do we have to worry about this flu?

Typically, the flu virus is more active in cold weather, so we are coming to the end of the season in the northern hemisphere. One reason for caution: in the 1918 flu epidemic, the virus had a relatively mild effect in the spring, and then returned with greater strength and deadliness in the fall, and that’s when it killed millions.

We may not know the full impact until some time this fall or winter.

What should we do to avoid getting sick?

Avoid close contact with people who are sick. Practice good hygiene – covering your nose and mouth when coughing or sneezing, using a tissue when possible and disposing of it promptly.

Most important – wash your hands frequently and thoroughly with soap and water. Clean hard surfaces like door handles frequently.

Keeping up with the news

Major news sites

NPR Swine Flu: On the edge of a pandemic

BBC Special Reports | Swine Flu

CDC Swine Influenza (Flu)

The Great Pandemic Website

And a few interesting sidelights

Grist links the new virus to Granjas Carroll, a pig factory-farming operation located in the state of Veracruz and owned by Smithfield Foods, the world’s largest pork packer and hog producer. Granjas Carroll produced 950,000 hogs in 2008. The Washington Post reports that the first person identified as having this virus is a five-year-old boy in La Gloria, and describes the town’s suspicions:

Some residents of La Gloria blame the area’s industrial hog farms for their illnesses because they said the open-air waste pits dry out and the hot winds blow dust through nearby villages.

Scientists, however, say it is more likely that people who worked with pigs became infected and passed it on to other people.

The Biosurveillance blog claims to have been the first to report the outbreak at Biosurveillance: Swine Flu in Mexico – Timeline of Events

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News Day: Big stink at the MPCA / Lies, mistakes and spreadsheets in St. Paul / “New wave” foreclosures / more

NOT in News Day today News about swine flu, Arlen Specter, the neverending Franken/Coleman saga, or the first 100 days of Barack Obama’s presidency. (Except to note that the ever-in-the-press Michelle Bachmann archly observed that swine flu seems to occur only under Democratic presidents. Only one problem, Eric Black points out: the other recent swine flu scare started under the decidely non-Democratic Gerald Ford in 1976.

Big stink at the MPCA Neighbors repeatedly driven from their homes by the stench from the 1,500-cow Excel Dairy near Thief River Falls are seeking to close it down. State and federal health officials have declared the dairy a public health hazard. Neighbors want the dairy shut down, citing past bad behavior. (This is not a small bunch of tree-huggers — the Marshall County Board also is also on their side.)
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News Day: Ellison arrested / Fong Lee inside story / Mpls: From suspended principal to school closings / MN health cuts / more

In good company Rep. Keith Ellison was arrested Monday, along with civil rights icon and Georgia Rep. John Lewis, and others, as they protested at Sudan’s embassy in DC. After indictment of President Omar al-Bashir by the International Criminal Court on charges of war crimes in Darfur, Bashir ordered foreign aid workers to leave the country. That cuts a lifeline for embattled Darfur, where the U.N estimates that 300,000 people have been died in the war since 2003, and 2.7 million people are receiving aid after being forced out of their homes. Ellison said:

Today, I join with my Congressional colleagues and advocates from Save Darfur and ENOUGH to demand the Government of Sudan immediately take humanitarian action on the situation in Darfur. …

We implore all countries to demand that the Government of Sudan respect and protect human rights and put an end to the acts of atrocities and crimes against humanity in Darfur.

BBC has an informative Q & A that traces the roots of the conflict and describes the International Criminal Court proceedings. More background is available at Sudan: A nation divided

Fong Lee: The inside story Hmong Today has just published a major story on the Fong Lee case, including the family’s point of view as well as a detailed analysis of the evidence released to date. The story describes the police failure to interview eyewitnesses to the chase and shooting, and the Minneapolis Civil Rights Department’s failure to investigate a complaint filed with the agency. Editor Wameng Moua notes that, “Despite Chief Dolan’s many references to an article that ran in Hmong Today, our request for an interview in regards to the Fong Lee case has been denied, “’At the request of the City Attorney.’”

The TC Daily Planet reported earlier this month that the chief gave an exclusive interview to the Strib about the legal case arising from the 2006 police shooting of Fong Lee, but did not respond to requests for interviews from the PiPress, which has reported on the family’s side of the ongoing lawsuit. Subsequently, Chief Dolan also gave exclusive interviews to MPR and KSTP.

Rallying support for Cadotte Last night, supporters gathering to protest the suspension of Burroughs principal Tim Cadotte heard that several legislators were demanding action as well:

Sen. Scott Dibble, Patricia Torres Ray, and Ken Kelash — as well as Rep. Frank Hornstein, Jeff Hayden, Paul Thissen and Speaker [Margaret Anderson] Kelliher, calls the quick move to place Cadotte on leave “alarming.” The letter added that Cadotte “must be reinstated to his position as soon as possible.”

MPR also reported receiving an email from Cadotte that read:

“I am overwhelmed at the support I have received. Sometimes you forget that there was a day you helped a first grader zip up their coat, called home for a student that forgot their lunch or double over when a student tells you a joke you have heard a hundred times but somehow it is funny all over again. I have been reminded 10 fold. I want my families to know I say ‘Thank you.'”

Meanwhile, Minneapolis Public Schools continue to move forward with a reorganization plan for 2010-2011 that would include redrawing attendance lines, reducing busing, and closing four schools: Pratt Elementary, Northrop, Longfellow and Folwell. The recommendation will be presented to the school board tonight, with a month of public hearings to follow before school board action. News stories about the plans cite the need to fix a $28 million deficit in the 2009-2010 school year, but it’s not clear how changes for 2010-2011 could do that.

As the district, school board, and community contend with the painful decisions on cuts and equally painful charges and countercharges of racism, currently focused on the Burroughs dispute, School Superintendent Bill Green sent out an op/ed article calling for reconciliation.

MN Job Watch GM cuts in dealerships and staff across the country will hit Minnesota hard:

Scott Lambert is vice president of the Minnesota Automobile Dealers Association. He estimates that that as many as 50 of Minnesota’s 138 GM dealerships could be closed. And he says some 2,000 jobs in the state could disappear under GM’s plan to close 42 percent of its 6,200 U.S. dealerships by the end of next year.

• The Minnesota Historical Society Press is cutting four of 11 positions and decreasing the number of books it will publish by 30%, due to state budget cuts.

House, Senate slash health funding Both the House and Senate passed omnibus health and human services funding bills, and both slashed funding for health and human services. Session Daily reports:

After more than eight hours of debate, the House passed 85-49 the omnibus health and human services finance bill. HF1362 does not change eligibility requirements for Medical Assistance or MinnesotaCare, but hospitals, long-term care facilities and those using public dental assistance would all receive reductions.

Sponsored by Rep. Thomas Huntley (DFL-Duluth), the bill includes delayed rebasing for nursing homes; a 3 percent cut to long-term care facilities; a 3 percent reduction to hospitals, including reducing reimbursement rates for those on Medical Assistance and General Assistance Medical Care; and limiting personal care attendant hours to 310 per month per individual.

Senate cuts go even deeper, though not as deep as the cuts demanded by the governor.

MinnPost headline:
picture-13

Now that’s reassuring!

Bachmann: The energizer bunny Not only does she get around to dozens of talk shows – now Michelle Bachmann, who said she wanted citizens “armed and dangerous” over Barack Obama’s proposed energy tax has been appointed to the House GOP American Energy Solutions Group. And, just in time, the Democratic Congressional Campaign Commiteee has launched “Bachmann Watch,” a website for fact-checking Michelle Bachmann. MnIndy reports that she’s already using the existence of the site as a basis for a new fundraising appeal.

Less help for immigrants Centro Legal closed its doors after 28 years, leaving one less place for MN immigrants to find legal aid. The burden on the Immigrant Law Center of Minnesota will increase, and it has committed to taking on many of the people whose cases are still open and who were previously represented by Centro Legal. Federal restrictions severely restrict the ability of most legal aid programs to serve immigrants. Some of Centro Legal’s funders will transfer grants to the Immigrant Law Center of MN, including a United Way grant for work on domestic violence issues.

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News Day: Swine flu / MN taxes / Naked hikers / more

Swine flu: Emergency? Epidemic? Pandemic? A new kind of flu — H1N1 –has fearmongers topping the headlines everywhere else, so we may as well follow suit. For actual information, check the CDC, the Minnesota Department of Health, and the University of Minnesota Center for Infections Disease Research and Policy. As the story progresses, these will be good links to keep on hand. And now for the facts: A new strain of flu, caused by a virus with genetic components from pigs, birds and humans, emerged in Mexico. This virus is different from previous swine flu because it can spread from human to human.

No one knows how many people in Mexico have the virus, but Mexico has reported more than a hundred deaths from this flu and hundreds of other people who are sick. The government has closed schools and daycare centers in Mexico City to try to stop the spread of the flu. Far smaller numbers of cases have been reported in at least five U.S. states (CA, TX, KS, NY, OH) and in Canada and Spain. (No cases in MN yet.)

Most people who get swine flu get better. That’s one reason that the extent of the outbreak is hard to track. Tracking the begins with a throat culture, and most people who have flu do not visit a doctor.
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News Day: Lightening up in the legislature / Burroughs brouhaha / Union battles / Entenza announces / more

A little legislative levity In a day that ran long past midnight, Rep. Rod Hamilton (R-Mountain Lake) injected a little humor, offering an amendment that would require:

“A legislator that lives within 50 miles of the State Capitol must provide housing, food, laundry and entertainment for legislators that reside greater than 50 miles from the State Capitol during a special session.”

Rep. Joe Mullery (D-Minneapolis) wanted an assurance that metro legislators could choose which colleagues they wanted to entertain, but after a bit of back-and-forth that included inserting the word “wholesome” before “entertainment,” the proposal was scuttled and what City Hall Scoop called the “world’s best amendment” was withdrawn.
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News Day: Contract or furlough? / Crippling health care / Taking away the children / Comic relief, more

Contract or furloughs or both? State workers who are members of AFSCME and MAPE “won’t be required to take unpaid furloughs under a tentative two-year contract reached Wednesday with the state, according to the unions,” reports the Strib. That was the first read on the contract agreement, and seemed to be good news, since T-Paw had been threatening/demanding 48 unpaid furlough days over the next two years, which works out to a little more than five weeks per year.
But wait — T-Paw’s spokesperson, Brian McClung, jumped in to say the contract makes no guarantees and state government retains its “existing ability to furlough employees if necessary.”

Crippling health care in MN The PiPress details testimony by health care leaders that describes the crippling impact of T-Paw’s plan to remove as many as 93,000 Minnesotans from state-subsidized health programs. Twin Cities health care providers have cut more than 1,500 jobs since last fall, as uncompensated care in the sate rose to an estimated $601 million in 2008. Hospitals said the influx of uninsured patients would mean massive losses and would require cuts in services:
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News Day: MN Budget Watch / A few laughs / Trying hard for a MN-pirate connection (and headlines) / more

MN Budget Watch The House tax bill passed out of committee by a narrow margin, with Rep. Tom Rukavina providing the last necessary vote, but Rukavina says he may not support the plan on the House floor. Meanwhile, reports Steve Perry in Politics in Minnesota, the Senate omnibus bill would work “by essentially reinstating the tax rates that existed in the state in 1998, before the first of a pair of extensive income tax cuts during the Jesse Ventura adminstration,” and adding a new top bracket of 9.25 percent for adjusted gross incomes over $250,000. The increases would be spread over 85% of all taxpayers, and would revert to today’s levels in 2014.

And over at MinnPost, Doug Grow says it is “virtually impossible to create reform,” despite hard work and careful analysis put into the House bill.

In coming days, amendments will be loaded up on both the House and Senate bills. Then, somehow, the House and Senate majorities will have to come together with a single bill, which almost certainly will be vetoed by the governor, who has pledged no new taxes.

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