Thursday, December 14, 2006

The LuLac Edition #109, Dec. 14, 2006













PHOTO INDEX: STATE REPRESENTATIVE PHYLLIS MUNDY AND THE LATE PENNSYLVANIA GOVERNOR RAYMOND SHAFER, CIRCA 1968.


MUNDY’S THE ONE

The big news conference with Blue Cross/Blue Shield yesterday announcing that the organization will donate 135 million dollars of its surplus to health care improvement made me think of a few questions.
1. Will area students utilize the school?
2. For years people have talked about health care consumers leaving the area for better medical treatment, this should help in a big way.
3. The news that area doctors are aging is a concern that cannot be ignoredd.
Personally, I think Phyllis Mundy's watch dog attitiude toward Blue Cross is a good thing that will keep the health care organization striving to disprove all of the things the Representative seems to be throwing at them.

YANKEE NEWS

So I was doing some last minute Christmas shopping and thought I’d stop by the Stadium Tuesday to pick up a few hats and complete my Santa list. I was surprised to see a line of 20 people ahead of me when I arrived. In for a penny, in for a pound, I waited patiently and stopped in the store to get my hats. The news media was out in full force, there was a guy they let in early who was also being filmed and interviewed. Again, not being aware of the big day, knowledgeable Yankee fans in line told me he was a contest winner who picked the correct team name. Since there were multiple entries, he won the drawing. A few of those fans behind me began to grumble when it was apparent the contest winner was having trouble deciding on what to buy. (He won a shopping spree). Finally, after he was finished, the line inched further toward the door. I hate long lines mainly because I spent the eighties in them at card show conventions when I was an autograph collector. Plus the concrete played havoc with my back too but if that pain meant me finishing my Christmas shopping, then so be it.
Once in the store, I went for my hats and then found myself in yet another line. The line to check out. The Lackawanna Wunderfuls were woefully unprepared for the onslaught of Bomber fans. They had one cash register, a guy that looked to be a hundred at it, and a credit card slider that went out with eighties big hair and the pop band Chumba Wumba. People ahead of me spent in the hundreds buying almost one of every item. It was routine to hear amounts of $350.00 to $500.00. I felt like a piker with my hats.
Dave DeCosmo from WYOU was outside the building interviewing people. Had not seen him in years and was hoping for a chance to say “hi” but with the line that was not to be. (DeCosmo served as President of the Northeastern Pennsylvania News Media Chapter in the seventies and eighties when I was Secretary/Treasurer after the death of long time newsman Ed Hughes of Scranton.) Still standing, WBRE’s “I Team” reporter Amy Bradley interviewed folks in line. She asked me to make a few comments and never being camera shy, I obliged. She asked me a load of questions but my thirty seconds of fame came when I told her I was an old bald guy who liked hats.
After getting to the cash register, I was temporarily stopped because someone had cut the line. A worker brought a credit card and whispered to the hundred year old guy at the register that “it was for a media guy”. He dutifully ran the card and always being a big fan of the media, special privileges and cutting corners, I certainly wasn’t going to bitch.
Finally, after an hour and more time than I spent combined on my other Christmas purchases, I left the gift store. The line was staggering, winding its way to the “Will Call” window. As I walked out, fans in line asked me what I bought, why it was taking so long and how much my booty was. I joked with a woman and told her I’d sell her one of my hats for $60.00. (It was twenty). She laughed and I said, “Yeah, I’d wind up in Lackawanna County Prison for scalping a Yankee hat!” That of course would not be good, I couldn’t even get out of there to shovel the warden’s walk or chop wood for his fireplace like before. So I minded my “Ps and Qs” and left, a Cleveland Indian fan who ventured into the land of Yankee land right in the midst of the holiday season.

RAY SHAFER


Former Governor Raymond Shafer died Tuesday at the age of 89. My first awareness of Shafer began in 1963 when he was sworn in as Bill Scranton’s Senior’s Ltn. Governor. The year before, my father was a huge supporter of Philadelphia Mayor Richardson Dilworth who ran against Scranton on the Democratic side. So when the opposing team took office, he pointed that out to me.
Shafer was elected Governor in 1966 over Milton Shapp. As a twelve year old, I followed that campaign with wonder. First the drama of the plane crash that killed State Attorney General Walter Allesendroni who was running for Ltn. Governor. Then the Shapp win in the Democratic primary over then 36 year Robert P. Casey, Senior, which would be the first in a series of three losses for Governor for him. Of course, then the general election campaign where Shapp spent millions over Shafer. Shortly before that election, former Governor David Lawrence collapsed at a podium with a heart attack, later dying in mid November of '66. So that year was a pretty dramatic one in Pennsylvania politics.
Despite Shapp's millions, Shafer prevailed and became Governor. Shafer was the first to push for a State Income Tax and I have old Democratic newspaper ads from 1968 which actually call the Republican, Shafer a “Tax and Spend Liberal”. Two years later, when Shapp was elected, the Dems changed their tune when it was evident that a tax was needed to save the state from future fiscal ruin.
Shafer also pushed for the revamping of the Pennsylvania Constitution and called a convention in early 1968. Also during the ’68 Presidential campaign, Shafer was frequently mentioned as a Vice Presidential running mate for either Richard Nixon or Nelson Rockefeller. Just 51 at the time, Shafer was an attractive candidate with WWII credentials as a PT Boat commander and was well spoken. Shafer endorsed Nelson Rockefeller for President and kept the delegates for him at the convention in a move of great loyalty to a northeastern political soul mate. In that move, Shafer sealed his political fate with the Nixon crowd and kissed any chance of a Cabinet appointment or federal judgeship goodbye.
Shafer appeared on PCN from time to time and was regarded as an elder statesman among Pennsylvania politicos. Here’s a recap of his life:
Raymond Philip Shafer was born the youngest of five children to Rev. David P. and Mina Belle Shafer on March 5 1917, in New Castle, Lawrence County. The family moved to Meadville, Crawford County in 1933 when David was appointed pastor of First Christian Church. Ray Shafer attended and graduated from public school in Meadville in 1934 where he served as valedictorian. He continued his education as a political science major at nearby Allegheny College where he served as class president for four years. Shafer was also an All-Pennsylvania basketball player as well as an All-American soccer player. He graduated in 1938. While at Allegheny he met Jane Harris Davies (class of 1939). They were married on July 5, 1941.
Shafer attended Yale University Law School from where he received the L.L. B. in 1941. Classmates at Yale included numerous individuals later associated with civic affairs including Gerald R. Ford, William W. Scranton, Cyrus Vance, and Sargent Shriver. Following law school Shafer was commissioned as an ensign in the U.S. Navy serving from 1942 to 1945 as a P.T. boat captain and in Naval intelligence. He later earned the rank of full lieutenant and received the Purple Heart, Bronze Star, and the Commendation for Meritorious Service. Following World War II Shafer went into law practice in Meadville and was elected as Crawford County District Attorney serving from 1948-1956. In 1958 he won election to represent Pennsylvania’s 50th State Senatorial District and served from 1959 to 1963. In the spring of 1962 Shafer agreed to run as lieutenant governor with William W. Scranton of Lackawanna County. Aligned with the progressive wing of the Republican Party, Scranton and Shafer defeated Philadelphia Mayor Richardson Dilworth by 486,000 votes and took office in January 1963.
In the spring 1966 primary, Republicans supported Raymond Shafer for governor and the Commonwealth’s Attorney General, Walter E. Alessandroni for lieutenant governor. When Alessandroni was killed in a tragic plane crash before the election Philadelphian Raymond J. Broderick—a lawyer and prominent regional Republican—filled out the ticket. Shafer and Broderick ran against Philadelphia millionaire Milton J. Shapp who secured the primary by defeating Democratic nominee Robert P. Casey of Lackawanna County. Despite Shapp’s aggressive campaign Shafer, trumpeting the Scranton-Shafer record, won the general election by 241,630 votes. The Republican Party maintained small majorities in both the state Senate and House of Representatives.
Shafer’s administration is perhaps best known for reforms that were made to the Commonwealth’s antiquated 1874 constitution. Another major theme of his four-year term was state government reorganization to better accommodate programs and policies that reflected the needs and demands of the times. Growth in state programs and spending for education and welfare also dominated most of Shafer’s tenure.
Shafer had campaigned on revising the Commonwealth’s constitution. In the spring of 1967 he signed an Act authorizing a May 16 ballot referendum placing nine issues before the electorate. These included permitting a governor to serve two four-year terms instead of one, making the Secretary of Internal Affairs a gubernatorial appointment rather than an elected post, making General Assembly sessions a full two-years, repealing outdated constitutional provisions affecting railroads and canals, and calling a constitutional convention to address reforms that could not otherwise pass the legislature. Each measure was approved by the electorate; in some cases by margins of 400,000 votes. A bi-partisan constitutional convention convened in December 1967 and completed its work by late February 1968. Once again reforms were placed before the electorate to allow political subdivisions to elect home-rule, raise the ceiling on state borrowing, subject all state financial affairs to audits, mandate that the governor annually develop and submit a spending plan for state programs, establish new tax rules particularly for real estate and public utilities, and create a unified judicial system under the Supreme Court of Pennsylvania. Though the revisions were criticized for not doing enough to reform state government—such as reducing the size of the General Assembly—they won majority approval by voters in April 1968. Besides constitutional revisions, state government was reorganized to more acutely address issues prevalent in the late 1960s. In 1970 Shafer signed Act 275 to create the Department of Environmental Resources. The agency’s functions included environmental and natural resource protection in addition to land, water, state park, and state forest management, and mining regulation. The Commonwealth also invested in programs to clean streams of acid mine drainage, long a problem left over from a largely bygone era and industry.Shafer signed Act 120 of 1970 to consolidate state-run transportation functions housed in four separate agencies into the new Pennsylvania Department of Transportation. PennDOT was given responsibility to develop and maintain a safe, adequate, and efficient transportation infrastructure. Its creation coincided with the near completion of Pennsylvania’s portion of the nation’s interstate highway system. By the end of Shafer’s term about 85 percent of the interstate system was open to traffic across the state including Interstates 80, 81, and 79 (named the Raymond P. Shafer Highway). Shafer also authorized an equal employment opportunity initiative to eliminate discrimination among highway construction contractors.
With some reluctance, on July 23, 1970 Shafer signed Act 195 making Pennsylvania the first state in the nation to permit its public employees to bargain collectively, join a union, and strike. Act 195 superseded a 1947 statute that prohibited such activities. The law resulted from a study by the Public Employee Law Commission (otherwise known as the Hickman Commission) that recommended numerous changes in the relationship between public sector employees and employers.
Other initiatives of Shafer’s term included creation of the Pennsylvania Crime Commission as a unit of the Department of Justice and enactment of the Corrupt Organizations Act to prohibit individuals associated with organized crime from investing in Pennsylvania businesses. Shafer also enhanced the Commonwealth’s role in nursing home oversight—a growing business—by requiring the licensure of administrators. Amendments to the enabling legislation for the Pennsylvania Human Relations Commission expanded it duties to police discrimination in housing, education, and employment. Finally Shafer led trade missions to Europe, the Far East and South America.
Shafer’s popularity waned in the closing years of his term. In the election of 1968 his influence in the General Assembly was diminished when the House turned decidedly Democratic. For fiscal year 1969-1970 Shafer proposed a record $2.5 billion state budget, up from $1.9 billion the previous year. Most of the increased state spending was for education and human services including basic education, for which state spending grew by 71percent during his term; higher education by 47 percent; and public assistance by 187 percent. To pay for the growth Shafer proposed a state income tax that won little public or legislative support. Instead, Shafer reluctantly increased the sales tax to 6 percent. His proposal to merge state health and human service agencies was voted down as well.
On the national scene Shafer was appointed vice-chair of the Republican Governor’s Association in 1969. He assumed the chair from California’s governor Ronald Reagan in 1970. He was the last governor of Pennsylvania who was ineligible for two consecutive terms. The election of 1970 pitted Shafer’s lieutenant governor, Raymond Broderick, against their 1966 rival, Milton J. Shapp. Though Republicans were united in the primary and general election, skepticism regarding Shafer’s proposed income tax, an insolvent state budget, and other factors eased Shapp into office by nearly a half-million votes. And, the Commonwealth’s house and Senate became firmly Democratic for the first time since 1936.
Shafer continued in public service after leaving Harrisburg. In 1971, President Nixon appointed him chair of the National Commission on Marijuana and Drug Abuse that issued reports in 1972 and 1973. He continued to speak on drug issues for several years afterward. From 1974 to 1977, he served as counselor to Vice President Nelson Rockefeller. He was elected to the Board of Trustees of Allegheny College in 1964 and served as its president from 1985 to 1986. Shafer also maintained a legal practice in Meadville. He died December 12, 2006.

4 Comments:

At 10:11 AM, Anonymous Anonymous said...

While the Blue Cross "contrubution" is nice, it isn't proper. BC/BS collected money for the stated purpose of providing coverage to the individual insured. In essence this is a public relations scheme to cover the fact that a not for profit accumulated such a large "reserve". In essense what they are doing is possibly, and I am not a lawyer and I don't play one on T.V. so I stress possibly, fraud. They collected money in premiums with the intent purpose that those paying would receive health services not support the development of medical school, improve local hospitals, etc... If Blue Cross would stop cutting their reimbursment to doctors and hospitals, those entities would not require and infusion of cash to "update" their facilities, they would have been able to afford to keep up to date as they went and would not have to spend large amoutns at once. BC/BS is not a private for profit entity so shfiting money is not appropriate. They get a lot of breaks and benifits being not for profit. They have consistently abused this privillage and now they have given a slap in the face of those that have paid their premiums in good faith.

 
At 10:40 PM, Anonymous Anonymous said...

Yankees was the only choice. Red Barons fade into history and eventually become a trivia question.
I'm now a proponent of "cut and run" in Iraq. Gonna be a civil war if we stick around or if we leave. We've done enough harm, lets just leave it to them. Out by Christmas!!! Bush is worried about his legacy. You sucked, ass**** is a good bet! The dead will stay dead and the maimed will continue to suffer and "the beat goes on..."

 
At 10:41 PM, Anonymous Anonymous said...

Blue Cross has all that money from overcharging people in the first place! HOW BOUT A REFUND?

 
At 10:45 PM, Anonymous Anonymous said...

David!! Glad you got your hats. You looked good on TV. Caught it this morning.
Also your tribute to Raymonmd Shafer was quite good. You have a great respect for past governmental leaders and a good memory.
As for Shafer, he was in grand company at Yale with Scranton, Cy Vance, and Gerry Ford.

 

Post a Comment

<< Home