Archive for the 'frankfort' Category

A pie by any other name…

I would like to live in a world where carpenters make their money by building things, filmmakers make money by producing movies and kitchens make money by preparing food. Unfortunately this is not the case.

Kern’s Kitchen owns the copyright to “Derby Pie,” meaning they and only they control the rights to produce that specific pie, and only they can refer to their creation as such. If you manage to create a strikingly similar (read: exact) pie in your home or restaurant, you might well be infringing on their legal rights.

Chef Rick Paul found this out this week. Kern’s Kitchen sent a private investigator into his Frankfort restaurant to catch Paul in the nefarious and outrageous act of selling food to customers. The nerve.

Kern’s has promptly gotten the courts involved, a practice they are not at all shy about employing. Having pacified Iraq, stopped global terrorism, bolstered the economy, achieved energy independence and made our public schools the envy of the world, the government now has plenty of resources for pie-gate.

Over the years, Cox said Kern’s has probably filed 25 lawsuits, “and we have prevailed on every single one. We tend to get larger settlements when it’s a second offense.”

At first, “we put people on notice and ask them to sign a letter agreeing not to infringe,” Cox said. “When they sign the letter, we keep a record. The next time, we sue them.”

Kern’s biggest cash award in a court case “has probably been $25,000 or $30,000,” Cox said.

Thus says the Frankfort State-Journal. Kern’s Kitchen isn’t the only one pouring money into litigation as opposed to gastronomy. If you hold a raffle for a big screen TV to watch the NFL’s well known championship game, you better not refer to it as the Super-you-know-what. That name’s copyrighted. The NFL can and will ask you to stop. The same applies to the large college basketball tournament commonly held in the third month of the year.

So if anyone needs me, I will be in my kitchen trying out pie recipes and thinking of popular-sounding names for them. I’m thinking of some kind of lemon custard thing with a light egg foam on top, but nothing is solid yet. I could make a fortune charging other people for the right to sell it…

In the meantime, I will let Chef Paul have the last word, since he usually does anyway:

“I think they probably would be better served going after some of these people on the Internet that are advertising Derby Pie as their own recipe, every day.”

Closed Door Policy

Brian Richmond slugs lawmakers for negotiating the Kentucky state budget in secret (again).

Yet again this year the General Assembly manages to make us all laughingstocks.

Yes yes, it just isn’t a legislative session in the bluegrass unless some elected official does something so patently absurd that it defies all modicum of common sense and embarrasses the entire state on a national stage.

This years annual award for outstanding achievement in the field of dumb goes to Tim Couch. His bill to make posting anonymously on the internet illegal has now appeared on fark.com and Reason Hit & Run.

I haven’t been this proud since Gov. Fletcher nearly got shot down flying into Reagan’s funeral in what the nation assumed was the flying equivalent of Jed Clampett’s truck.

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A Tax Hike Bill Emerges in Kentucky

After several years of overspending in Frankfort, Kentucky House Budget Chairman Harry Moberly wants to solve the problem by raising $400 million from you:

Rep. Harry Moberly said the severity of the proposed cuts has driven him to try to find more revenue than the roughly $200million a year he spoke of early this month.

“I’m looking at proposals that would be anywhere from $240million to $400million each year,” he said in an interview.

The state faces a gap of about $900million between current spending and anticipated revenue for the next two-year budget period, which begins July 1.

Moberly, D-Richmond, said the main element of his package remains a 25- to 30-cent increase in the state’s 30-cent-per-pack cigarette tax. That is projected to raise roughly $125million a year.

He said again that he’s also considering an increase in the corporate income tax rate, which was cut in 2005, and hopes to realize savings by refinancing some state bonds.

I think Dave Ramsey might have a few things to say about reshuffling the state’s debt to realize those savings.

Government spending in Kentucky has skyrocketed over the past several budget sessions. Has anyone considered selling some state assets to balance the books? How many golf courses does Kentucky’s government own?

Showing the Love

Steve Beshear will not raise $500-million with his plans for (gulp!) 12 casinos in Kentucky. The licenses for the first (gulp!) seven casinos will essentially be given away. The C-J’s Stephenie Steitzer has more:

His proposal calls for seven casinos operated by horse tracks — either at the tracks or elsewhere in the respective counties — and five free-standing casinos.

The five free-standing casinos could be in Daviess County, Christian County, Kenton or Campbell counties, Boyd or Greenup counties and Laurel or Whitley counties. Those casinos would be subject to a local referendum in the city or county where they would be located.

Beshear said $500 million could be raised through the sale of the casino licenses.

What’s happened is this: Gov. Beshear has agreed to give race tracks exclusive market area for the casinos that they will own. Why else would casinos owned by non-racetracks be barred from existing in Jefferson (Louisville), Fayette (Lexington) or Boone counties?

Exclusive market area would raise the value of the licenses, but there’s no clear evidence that the tracks would pay any substantial sum for the licenses they’d receive.

But read the casino amendment carefully:

“Are you in favor of increasing state financial support for elementary and secondary education, expanding health care for senior citizens, children and others, support for local governments, and combating drug and alcohol abuse and other important programs by permitting the General Assembly to authorize up to five casinos subject to approval of the voters in the city or county where the casino is located; and up to seven casinos licenses for existing horse racing associations, all of which will be subject to the approval of a state agency created to oversee casino gaming?”

Did you catch that? The casinos that would be run by racetracks would face no local option. The casinos run by other operators would have to negotiate local elections. It’s also likely that racetracks would dump money into local campaigns opposing the operation of these competing casinos.

Nonetheless, local communities would not be able to prohibit their local neighborhood racetrack from starting up a casino. That’s not necessarily bad. After all, I wouldn’t want my local government to decide that restauranteurs couldn’t sell their patrons a beer with their meals and … oh wait, local governments do exactly that every day. And it’s not (entirely) unreasonable.

So why do casinos allow state governments to overrule local governments in this one case, especially when community standards are so clearly implicated? That’s a good question for Steve Beshear.

So why won’t he raise the promised $500-million? Because after you’ve given away licenses for seven casinos to be operated by racetracks that won’t have to overcome local opposition, the remaining five casino licenses are severely limited in their location. Also, those casinos will have to overcome some local opposition. Admittedly, it might not be much opposition given the counties named.

It’s hard to get away from the idea that this is a big giveaway to a particular industry. That’s pretty disappointing.

State of the Commonwealth preview

The Lexington Herald-Leader has a preview of Gov. Steve Beshear’s first State of the Commonwealth address. Even though Beshear is continually complaining about how the state budget is in terrible shape it sounds like his proposed “fix” for the state employee pension shortfall will be throwing more money at it without changing or cutting benefits:

Senate President David Williams, R-Burkesville, said he hopes Beshear will use the statewide televised bully pulpit to at least touch on a plan to reform the state employee retirement system, which has been underfunded and must cope with bloating health care bills for retired workers.

Beshear has said he intends to offer such proposals during the 2008 General Assembly.

He says he’s considering selling bonds to raise money to cover part or all of the multi-billion deficit in the public employee pension system. However, he said he was cautioned by the bond-rating agencies in New York that some governments, such as the state of New Jersey and the city of Pittsburgh, Pa., got themselves in more financial trouble by doing so.

Bad idea if this all there is to his pension “solution.” You think it’d be a no brainer to convert all future state employee hires to a 401 k style defined contribution retirement plan, but current state employees seem to raise cain when anyone suggests this notion. Get with the program. Almost everyone in the private sector has this plan and you don’t hear them complaining. Plus, the proposals I have seen do not tinker with any type of current state employees’ benefits.

I expect tomorrow to be a depressing and bleak picture of the state budget. Beshear will probably tell everyone that he will have to cut all kinds of state programs and education funding… that is… unless the legislature passes a ballot initiative to let the public vote on allowing expanding gambling. If the public approves this measure it’ll mean more funding, more programs and no spending cuts… at least that’ll be how I predict Beshear will sell his gambling plan. If the people pass expanded gambling what will happen when the Legislature finds ways to spend all that “new revenue?”

It’ll also be interesting to see if Beshear will support an increase in Kentucky’s cigarette tax. Seems like Jody Richards is backpedaling, as usual, and now would support a cigarette tax increase. Just a couple of weeks ago Beshear was saying he did not support an increase in taxes “at this time.”

The speech airs on KET Monday at 7 PM EST.

Is Jeff Flake talking about Kentucky?

Sounds like it.

Imagine if leading lawmakers in Kentucky rolled the entire state budget and other items (including new taxes, fees, special tax breaks, etc.) into the same bill, prevented lawmakers from seeing it until the last minute and then rammed it through the legislature?

Oh yeah. They did.

Here’s an AP story from March 24, 2006:

The conference committee met publicly on Thursday, a contrast to the closed-door sessions the House and Senate used to develop their initial budget proposals. In years past, the conference committee has met part of the time publicly and part privately.

The tradition of closed budget meetings was criticized Thursday by Jim Waters, policy director at Bluegrass Institute, a Bowling Green-based organization that advocates open government. He said the conference committee should continue meeting publicly.

“If the politicians in Frankfort don’t want their constituents to be privy to the process, then they must realize that a lot of the decisions are not in the best interest of Kentuckians,” Waters said. “When you’re confident of the decisions you’re making, you want your constituents to be privy to the process and discussions taking place.”

Waters said many legislators seem to prefer meeting privately, then holding perfunctory open meetings to vote.

“We have consistently seen unanimous votes on some of the largest expenditures, and by the time those votes are taken on the floors of the House and Senate, the debate has already taken place. The question simply is why,” he said. “Why can’t the taxpayers whose money these politicians are spending, why can’t they at least be privy to the budget process? The budget affects the greatest number of Kentuckians, more than any other decisions these folks make.”

Richard Beliles, chairman of the advocacy group Common Cause in Kentucky, said legislative leaders should open all budget discussions to the public.

“How can the citizens really be fairly represented when they go into these closed meetings? It’s a great disadvantage to the average Kentuckian,” Beliles said. “Even if they make the right decisions, it’s still bad for government. People should have good feelings about their government.”

Beliles said holding budget discussions behind closed doors hurts public trust.

“We as citizens should complain about it enough to get both parties to not hold these closed-door meetings,” Beliles said.

Draud wins Ed Commissioner spot

More from WHAS TV.

Update: C-J confirms the choice.