Sunday, May 06, 2012

Revealed: Full List of ALEC's Corporate Members (and a Wyoming company is on it)

Common Cause has a full list of ALEC's Corporate Members (via AlterNet). Couldn't find the names of any Wyoming corporate members, but there are very few major corporations based in WY. The list shows that Cloud Peak Energy is located in Colorado. But that's not what it says on the CPE web site:
Cloud Peak Energy Inc. (NYSE:CLD) is headquartered in Wyoming and is one of the largest U.S. coal producers and the only pure-play Powder River Basin (PRB) coal company. As one of the safest coal producers in the nation, Cloud Peak Energy specializes in the production of low sulfur, subbituminous coal. The company owns and operates three surface coal mines in the PRB, the lowest cost major coal producing region in the nation. The Antelope and Cordero Rojo mines are located in Wyoming and the Spring Creek Mine is located near Decker, Montana.
The company employs lots of people and sponsors worthy causes in the state. So why does it belong to an anti-worker org such as ALEC? Find out more about the American Legislative Exchange Council at ALEC Exposed. Here's a snippet from its site:
Through the corporate-funded American Legislative Exchange Council, global corporations and state politicians vote behind closed doors to try to rewrite state laws that govern your rights. These so-called "model bills" reach into almost every area of American life and often directly benefit huge corporations. In ALEC's own words, corporations have "a VOICE and a VOTE" on specific changes to the law that are then proposed in your state. DO YOU?

Daniel Junge will be on hand to intro his Oscar-winning doc May 19 at CIFF

The Cheyenne International Film Festival program for 2012 is completed. The CIFF May 17-20 is highlighted by Cheyenne native Daniel Junge and his Oscar-winning documentary “Saving Face."

He’ll be on hand and in person at a reception taking place on the Mezzanine of the Plains Hotel on Saturday, May 19. The screening takes place across the street at 1615 Lincoln.

Saturday is full and starts with a return screening of John Ford’s classic western “Cheyenne Autumn” which made its World Premiere at the Lincoln Theater in 1963. Actress Carroll Baker will participate in a live interview via Skype following the movie.

See the entire program here.

Saturday, May 05, 2012

Cheyenne lecture about the Indian Removal Act documents "The Dark Side of American History"

Blame "Old Hickory"
A sordid tale, but one that needs to be told, and will be this week at the Wyoming State Museum in Cheyenne:
The Indian Removal Act, an unpopular and controversial part of the settlement of the American West, will be the focus of this month’s Wyoming State Museum lecture series presentation on Tuesday, May 8, at 7 p.m.

Dr. Robert Munkres, of Estes Park, Colo., presents “Indian Removal: The Dark Side of American History.” His presentation discusses the problematic relations between the Anglo population and the tribes native to the regions being settled.

Increasingly, white authority called for the removal of native tribes to the West, culminating in the passage of the Indian Removal Act of 1830.

This presentation describes the implementation of the act, together with the terrible cost it imposed upon the Native American population.

For more information about this and other State Museum programs, please call 777-7022. The Wyoming State Museum is located in the Barrett Building, 2301 Central Avenue in Cheyenne.

Early intervention and prevention crucial for children's mental health

Here are some points to ponder about children’s mental health. As a parent of children with mental health challenges, and as an adult who's dealt with recurring bouts of depression, I ponder these things often and not only during the upcoming week devoted to education and awareness. Governor Matt Mead will sign a proclamation on Wednesday, May 9, 10 a.m., designating May 6-12 as Mental Health Awareness Week. The following stats come from the Federation of Families for Children’s Mental Health
  • One in five young people have one or more mental, emotional, or behavioral challenges.  One in ten youth have challenges that are severe enough to impair how they function at home, school, or in the community.
  • One-half of all lifetime cases of psychological challenges begin by age 14, and three-quarters begin by age 24.  In addition, 80% of people who experience multiple issues with mental health and substance abuse report onset before the age of 20.
  • Suicide is the third leading cause of death in adolescents and young adults. Children experiencing symptoms of psychological challenges, particularly depression, are at a higher risk for suicide.  An estimated 90% of children who commit suicide have a diagnosable mental illness.
  • Despite high rates of mental illness in children, 4 out of 5 children ages 6 to 17 who have experience symptoms do not receive any help.  The majority of those who do not receive needed mental health services are minority children.  For example, 88% of Latino children have unmet mental health needs.  In addition, Latino children are less likely than others to be identified by a primary care physician as having a mental disorder.
  • Unmet mental health needs may complicate daily activities and education for youth.  Almost 25% of adolescents who required mental health assistance reported having problems at school.  Over 50% of students who experience psychological challenges, ages 14 and older, drop out of high school—the highest dropout rate of any disability group.
  • Early detection and intervention strategies for mental health issues improve children’s resilience and ability to succeed in life.  According to a study by the National Institute of Mental Health, preschoolers at high risk for mental health problems showed less oppositional behavior, less aggressive behavior, and were less likely to require special education services 3 years after enrolling in a comprehensive, school-based mental health program.
What can you do?
Create awareness surrounding positive mental health practices and supports.  Work to reduce stigma!
Contact your local, state and federal legislators to request funding for early intervention and prevention programs. 
Encourage culturally and linguistically competent supports and services.

UPLIFT has a terrific list of resources for Wyoming families at http://www.upliftwy.org/resources.html. I am on the UPLIFT board and admit to a certain bias. But it is a terrific list.

Wednesday, May 02, 2012

Jalan Crossland -- from Ten Sleep to Key West to Cheyenne

Ten Sleep, Wyoming's "trailer park troubadour" Jalan Crossland will perform in concert on Wednesday, May 16, 7 p.m., at the Historic Plains Hotel ballroom in Cheyenne. Tickets are $10, $5 for students. Sponsored by the Cheyenne Guitar Society. FMI: http://cheyenneguitarsociety.com/

Jalan's on stage this week at the Better Angels Songwriters Festival in Key West..

Jalan's Dylanesque mug graced the Iowa newspapers last December when he was arrested at an Occupy protest in Des Moines during the Iowa Republican caucuses. We expect some new songs emerging from this encounter. Read more at http://hummingbirdminds.blogspot.com/2012/01/planet-jackson-hole-wy-picker-causes.html

Monday, April 30, 2012

One of Colorado's top ten summer concert destinations is in Cheyenne

Merle
The Denver Post says “don't miss these 10 summer concerts.”
Colorado's legendary summer weather combined with Coloradans' renowned passion for live music creates a maelstrom of good times. And here are 10 shows we're especially looking forward in the next few months.
Some great names on the list. Mana. The Shins. The Denver Ukefest with Jake Shimabukuro, Nellie McKay and Aldrine Guerrero. Slim Cessna's Auto Club.
Number seven on the Post’s top ten list is a concert series in a neighboring state – ours. Pretty unusual choice in this usually Denvercentric Front Range universe.
7. CHEYENNE FRONTIER DAYS WITH ZAC BROWN BAND, BRAD PAISLEY, MERLE HAGGARD, JOURNEY: Frontier Days always features a big lineup, but this year's is especially mammoth. From country legend Haggard to megastars Brown and Paisley — along with arena rockers Journey — this is as solid a lineup as the event has in years. (July 20-28, Cheyenne Frontier Nights).
Cool.

Read more: Colorado summer music preview: From Drake to Jack White, the UMS to Folks Fest, don't miss these 10 summer concerts

A photo sampler from the Wyoming Outdoor Council's annual calendar contest

Skull Creek Rim, Adobe Town, Wyoming’s Red Desert.
Lupines, Happy Jack Road, Southeast Wyoming
Wyoming is a photographer's dream. Check out some of these shots by Laramie's Ken Driese. Ken submitted them to the annual Wyoming Outdoor Council calendar contest. See more: Photo Submissions: Spectacular Red Desert, Laramie Basin, and More

Rep. Mary Throne -- one of the good ones -- announces reelection bid

I've leafletted a few neighborhoods and made phone calls on behalf of Mary Throne. And I may just do it again, even though I'm not lucky enough to have her as my Rep. This news comes from a WyoDems press release:

Representative Mary Throne, House District 11, announced today she intends to seek re-election to the Wyoming House of Representatives. The House Minority Whip is seeking her fourth term representing her Laramie County constituents.

Throne is widely recognized as a bi-partisan leader, able to work across the aisle on issues of importance to the state of Wyoming and Cheyenne, particularly in the areas of energy and education. In 2011, she was the House sponsor for legislation to provide road assistance for counties impacted by the Niobrara play. Laramie County received $1.7 following the passage of the bill. When she saw her children losing nearly a month of class time to PAWS and learned Wyoming was spending millions of dollars more than most surrounding states on testing, she teamed with fellow legislators to streamline Wyoming’s K-12 assessment system. Rep. Throne was then appointed to serve as the only Laramie County member of the Select Committee on Statewide Educational Accountability. She has been the prime sponsor of successful bills to assist deployed military with child custody orders, to improve Wyoming’s property tax appeal system, and to increase access to legal services, as well as being a strong advocate for worker safety.

“The best legislative work I have done does not carry my name.  When we park our politics and focus on finding solutions to the issues that matter to the people of Wyoming, only then are we doing our jobs. Wyoming is facing an uncertain funding future due to low natural gas prices. Fortunately, we have saved during the good times to help prepare for this situation.  If re-elected by the voters in House District 11, I am committed to working with my colleagues to preserve essential government services.” Throne said.

In addition to her other legislative duties, Rep. Throne serves on Judiciary, Rules, Management Audit, the Select Committee on Capital Financing and Investments, where she is Vice-Chair, the Taskforce on Capitol Building Restoration and Energy Council.   As one of a handful of women serving, Rep. Throne is the Vice-Chair of the bipartisan Wyoming Women’s Legislative Caucus, a group that actively works to encourage women candidates at all levels of government.

Rep. Throne and her husband, Kevin Boyce, a geologist, have three sons at home.  She is a member of Rotary, the First Presbyterian Church, and the Laramie County School District’s Parent Advisory Committee.  Throne grew up on a ranch in Campbell County, earned an undergraduate degree at Princeton and her law degree at Columbia Law School, graduating in 1988. She returned to Wyoming in 1992 to work as an Assistant Attorney General, representing the Wyoming Department of Environmental Quality before moving into private practice in 1999.

Sunday, April 29, 2012

Local blogger interviews Wyoming author Craig Johnson about his books and upcoming "Longmire" A&E series

Craig Johnson's latest
Walt Longmire mystery
 debuts May 15.
Cheyenne writer Karen Cotton interviewed Ucross, Wyoming, mystery writer Craig Johnson ("The Cold Dish," "Another Man's Moccasins") for a story on her new blog. She got some great quotes. Here's one with Craig describing his ongoing main character, Absoraka County Sheriff Walt Longmire:
“I was looking for an individual that would be emblematic of the American West, but still complex enough to be compelling to readers,” Johnson said. “Walt is, what I refer to as, a detective for the disenfranchised; he cares about the cases that no one else does. He’s an elected official that’s responsible to his community and I like that better than the ‘lone-wolf’ style characters that kills forty people before the book is over. Walt is a little ‘over’—over age, over weight, overly depressed, and facing a lot of the things that the readers face every day and I think that keeps him real.”
The sheriff (portrayed by actor Robert Taylor) will star in a new TV series on A&E, "Longmire." It debuts June 3.

Read more at Karen's blog: http://lifeisassweetascottoncandy.wordpress.com/2012/04/29/new-york-times-bestselling-author-craig-johnson-dishes-about-his-new-tv-series-on-ae-and-his-latest-book/

Saturday, April 28, 2012

ALEC influence in Colorado politics tracked by ProgressNow

ProgressNow's blog tracks ALEC influence in Colorado politics. Go to http://progressnowcolorado.org/blog/

Rodger McDaniel: ALEC casts a spell over Wyoming state legislators

Rodger McDaniel writes today about what we've known for awhile -- "ALEC owns your state legislators." Read all about the American Legislative Exchange Council's undue influence on Wyoming lawmaking in Rodger's weekly Wyoming Tribune-Eagle column (if you get the paper), or on his Blowing in the Wyoming Wind blog. Here's a good line:
In a technical sense, ALEC doesn't lobby "in any state" as it claims [on its web site]. It leaves that to legislators who fall under its spell.
Get more details at ALEC Exposed

Friday, April 27, 2012

Forrest King holds art show and sale of his "The Pink Triangle" series to benefit Wyoming Equality

Available for the first time -- the original oil paintings from Forrest King's line, “The Pink Triangle.” Art show and sale at the Rotten Apple Ink, 218 W. 17th St., Cheyenne, on Friday, May 11, 6:30-9 p.m. Complimentary wine and refreshments. Special signed prints will be for sale too, plus other artwork by Forrest King. There will be lots of fine art prints for sale and auction. 100% of the proceeds from prints – and 50% of original arts sales -- go to Wyoming Equality! Wine, food, magic by Aiden Sinclair. Artwork: 50x70-inch woven blanket.

Thursday, April 26, 2012

Obama volunteer meet-up set for Saturday at the Laramie County Public Library

Pres. Barack Obama speaks to an SRO crowd right down the road at CU-Boulder earlier this week.
From Robert Vernon-Kubichek, director of the Obama campaign in Wyoming:
Volunteers here in Wyoming come from all backgrounds, but they all have a couple things in common: a personal stake in this election and a passion for making sure President Obama and other Democrats win this November.  
Our volunteers here in Cheyenne are buzzing with energy -- so you should come out and get to know everyone at our volunteer meeting this Saturday.

We'll talk about how we're organizing in our neighborhood and how you can get involved.  
Can you make it? Here are the details:  
What: Cheyenne volunteer meeting

Where: Laramie County Library, Sunflower Room 2200 Pioneer Avenue Cheyenne, WY 82001

When: Saturday, April 28th 11:00 a.m. to 12:00 p.m.

FMI: Go here

Wednesday, April 25, 2012

BeatGrass plays at the Atlas April 28

http://facebook.com/beatgrassband

"Bully" screens at Cheyenne International Film Festival on May 19


Cheyenne International Film Festival presents:
“Bully” (2011 TRT: 99 min.)
Saturday, May 19, 1-3 p.m., Lincoln Theatre

Call2ACTion with the Matthew Shepard Foundation
Panel discussion and audience talk-back follows film
Directed by Lee Hirsch (USA)
This year, over 13 million American kids will be bullied at school, online, on the bus, at home, through their cell phones and on the streets of their towns, making it the most common form of violence young people in this country experience. BULLY is the first feature documentary film to show how we've all been affected by bullying, whether we've been victims, perpetrators or stood silent witness. The world we inhabit as adults begins on the playground.

BULLY opens on the first day of school. For the more than 13 million kids who'll be bullied this year in the United States, it's a day filled with more anxiety and foreboding than excitement. As the sun rises and school busses across the country overflow with backpacks, brass instruments and the rambunctious sounds of raging hormones, this is a ride into the unknown.

For a lot of kids, the only thing that's certain is that this year, like every other, bullying will be a big part of whatever meets them at their school's front doors. Every school in the U.S. is grappling with bullying-each day more than 160,000 kids across the country are absent because they're afraid of being bullied-but for many districts it's just one more problem that gets swept under the rug. BULLY is a character-driven film. At its heart are those with the most at stake and whose stories each represent a different facet of this crisis.


Preceded by:
“Art of Misery” (2011 TRT: 4:00)
Directed by Liz Osban (Cheyenne, Wyoming)

Time is fleeting, life is changing and she's absolutely miserable. All in a day’s work of teenage misery.
Tickets - http://ciff2012program3.eventbrite.com/

Joe Minicozzi returns to Wyoming to talk about "The Smart Math of Mixed Use Development" in Casper

Urban planner Joe Minicozzi will talk about "The Smart Math of Mixed Use Development" on Thursday, April 26, at the Casper City Council Chambers at 6:30 p.m. in City Hall, 200 N. David St. Casper's Downtown Development Authority is co-sponsoring the program. It will compare the value of new development outside of downtown with redevelopment within the city core. Minicozzi did similar studies for Cheyenne and Laramie, as well as Fort Collins, Colo. Read more about it in today's Casper Star-Tribune. Arts and culture usually plays a major role in Minicozzi's studies. It did during an excellent presentation he made in Cheyenne in December. He does his homework -- and he's funny, too. Read my post about it here.


Sunday, April 22, 2012

Want adsurdist humor in your novels? Think Tim, not Tom

Great quote from a 2011 Wyofile article on Wyoming novelist Tim Sandlin: “When you think American master of absurdist humor with acute observations about contemporary society, characters to fall in love with, and lines you’ll be quoting to your friend, the first name to spring to mind should be ‘Tim’ (Sandlin), not ‘Tom’ (Robbins),” said Sarah Bird, Austin, Texas, novelist and a friend of Sandlin’s.

Sioux City Journal: It takes a community to stop bullying

Sioux City (IA) Journal devotes Sunday front page to anti-bullying campaign. Neat graphic, gutsy move. A new resource is available locally for parents whose children have been the target of bullying in the Laramie County No. 1 School District. Contact UPLIFT for its bullying ombudsman program at 307-778-8686 or 1-888-875-4383.  

LCCC hosts National Poetry Month Open Mic on April 26

National Poetry Month OPEN MIC at LCCC Thursday, April 26. 1-2:45 p.m. in the student lounge. FREE and OPEN to students, community members and faculty & staff. This is a celebration of language, so all performances welcome (singer-songwriters, actors/scenes from plays, poets, fiction and nonfiction writers, readers of classic work by famous authors, etc.). Refreshments provided and drawings for cool door prizes! Even if you can't make it, please spread the word!

Saturday, April 21, 2012

Slow start to gardening during a year when the weather warmed too fast

Got tomato seedlings?
Cheyenne blogger Karen Cotton tipped me off to today's "Gardening on the Cheap: 10 Steps to Becoming a Cheerful Cheapskate in the Garden" presentation by Denver's Jodi Torpey at the library. It was sponsored by Laramie County Master Gardeners and the Cheyenne Botanic Gardens. Jodi had many good tips for us frugal gardeners, and I plan to take her up on most of them. I am slow getting started on my veggies this year. I am slow and the weather is warming fast -- not a great combination. I've been posting for the past 4-5 years about my return to vegetable gardening after a long hiatus. First it was all about having a Victory Garden ("Eat a tomato for peace, ya'll!") and then it growing your own and being a locavore and sustainability and all that jazz. But gardening is a struggle around here. It's 6,200 feet and arid and possesses a very short growing season. We have been reclassified from Zone 4 to Zone 5, but a tad more warmth every summer won't make a big difference. It may 50 years from now, but I'll be long gone by then (to Florida).

So I'll persevere with herbs and lettuce and tomatoes and squash and beans, etc.

Meanwhile, I ran into Lindi Kirkbride at the gardening talk and her Cheyenne Alliance Church has started a Seed & Feed Community Garden. Church members and residents of a nearby housing complex are gobbling up the plots. Some of the church's teens will be raising veggies for local shelters and the food bank. Anyway, Lindi says that there are five plots left to interested parties. Fee for each raised bed is $20 per year and water is provided. This is good news because both of the community gardens in Lions Park are booked solid and have waiting lists. If you're interested, e-mail seed&feed@gmail.com.