Nov 30

ISP — Day #66 thru #75

2006 at 10:39 am  |  posted by Rep. Craig Frank 0 comments

Day 75 (Thursday).  Elliptical Trainer:  40:00 minutes, 4.01 miles, 635 calories.  400 crunches (all I could do this morning).  Weight: 191.6 pounds. 

Day 66 through Day 74.  A lingering head cold has made it difficult to work out.

Nov 30

CONGRATULATIONS–Better Late Than Never

2006 at 10:37 am  |  posted by Rep. Craig Frank 0 comments

CONGRATULATIONS TO MY LEGISLATIVE COLLEAGUES Speaker Greg Curtis and Rep. Mark Walker for the outcome of their final, final election results. A couple of nail-biters for some–we knew you gentlemen had it all along! Curtis’ final count was a 20 vote margin and Walker’s final count was an 18 vote margin.

Nov 30

ENVIRONMENTALIST–HEAL Thyself

2006 at 1:04 am  |  posted by Rep. Craig Frank 2 comments

Some people seem a little “hot” under the collar these days over this whole EnergySolutions arena deal.  Please.

Gone are the days of Jason Groenwald former Executive Director of HEAL Utah.  But there’s a new gal in town…Vanessa Pierce.  Ms. Pierce did a bit on KCPW and KSL Radio 1160 with Doug Wright this morning.  Jason’s gone, but the beat goes on! Same old junk science…same old scare tactics.  And now, they’re attacking…basketball!

Hazardous Waste Task Force

In 2004, I was assigned to fill a vacancy on the Hazardous Waste Regulation and Tax Policy Task Force.  The two-year task force had already met for a year when I started meeting with them.  Absorbing all the technical data accumulated by this group during that time was a real challenge.  Envirocare, as they were known back then, was the primary focus of this two-year inquiry.  There were a number of other entities discussed during the deliberations of this group; however, the primary focus was Envirocare.

My wife reads novels for fun—I read technical manuals and publications.  I know, I know…you, too!  One of the most fascinating books I’ve read from cover-to-cover was a publication from the National Safety Council’s Environmental Health Center, titled Understanding Radiation In Our World.  While I was serving on this task force, my wife and I took a business trip to Hawaii where I had a work project.  While laying out by the pool soaking up the Hawaiian sun (which I later found out wasn’t a good thing to do), I learned more about radiation and radiation stuff then…well…most people in Utah.

A couple of things I learned while on “the force.”

First, “The overall risk to the public from radioactive waste is lower than from other sources of radiation, such as radon and nuclear medicine.”  Understanding Radiation In Our World, p.45

Radon (Rn), is a radioactive element that is one of the heaviest gases known.  Its atomic number is 86.  It is found naturally in soil and rocks and is formed by the radioactive decay of radium.

[Note:  On average, each of us receive about 360 millirem (mrem) of radiation each year.  About 300 mrem, or 82% of the total, is natural background radiation (from radon and other natural sources).]

Here’s something truly frightening…a little exercise…go outside and look up at the majestic granite mountains of the Wasatch front rising thousands of feet above the valley floor.  It’s all decaying granite.  Decaying granite, has the highest level of Radon known to man (at least for rocks).  And, we’ve built a community around it.  Before you go back inside, look up at the sun…not directly at the sun…all along the Wasatch Front…47…that’s right…47 millirem dosage (annually of course).  The food you eat for a year…40 millirem.  Live in a stone or brick home…add 7 mrem.  Had an upper GI lately (like I have)?…245 mrem.  Don’t breathe that air…200 mrem/yr!  Move up to Park City (elev. 6700 feet) from Salt Lake City…add an extra 19 millirem per year.

Public and Occupational Radiation Levels

Another thing I learned, “In enforcing Environmental Protection Agency’s exposure standards for the nuclear industry, (the) Nuclear Regulatory Commission (NRC) limits the air and water emissions of radionuclides from nuclear reactors to levels that would expose no member of the public to more than 25 millirems of radiation per year (25 mrems/yr.).

“For occupational exposures at nuclear plants, NRC limits the sum of both internal and external doses to workers to 5,000 millirem.  The average worker dose in the US nuclear energy industry in 1995 was about 160 millirem, less than 5 percent of the NRC limit.” Understanding Radiation In Our World, p.68

Now, here’s the real kicker!  Eight.  That’s right…8.

The average annual exposure (2003) per individual radiation worker at the Clive facility of Envirocare (now part of EnergySolutions) was less than 8 mrem.

I have the DEQ report/memo right here in my hand—8 mrem.  Substantially less (58% less) than the additional annual 19 mrem a person would get by moving from Salt Lake City to Park City.  And, less than 2% of the NRC annual occupational limit of 5,000 mrem.  [No single worker at Clive received over 270 mrem/yr.  in 2003—5.4% of NRC annual occupational exposure.]Truth be told (holding all background numbers constant)…It’s radioactively safer to live next door to the Clive facility in the West Desert than to live on the East Bench in Salt Lake City.

Here’s another thought: There are some experts who say small doses of radiation (similar to exposures in EnergySolutions’ Clive Workers) are beneficial to humans—Hormesis it’s called.

*** WARNING:  Wearing sunscreen with SPF 30 while outside searching for spotted owls in the rain forest will reduce your risk of radiation exposure. ***

Nov 29

Utah’s 4th Congressional Seat — Part VIII

2006 at 4:38 pm  |  posted by Rep. Craig Frank 0 comments

MAP L.  That’s the one.  Map L received bi-partisan support from the Redistricting Committee by a vote of 10-1 following two days of tornadic travel across the state.  Opposed to Map L was Rep. Ben Ferry (R-Corinne) who felt the concept of having a good mix of urban-rural was not found in the proposed 2nd Congressional District.  Click HERE for Redistricting Committee link & HERE for Senate Site information.

Nov 29

MANDATING MINIMUM WAGE HURTS WORKERS & THE FREE MARKET

2006 at 1:53 am  |  posted by Rep. Craig Frank 8 comments

(The experts say that a “good” blog will be between 300 and 400 words…Oh well!)
 
“The most terrifying words in the English language are: I’m from the government and I’m here to help.”   –Ronald Reagan

There is a tendency by the public to expect their Government to “fix” perceived politically expedient “problems” every time they crop up.  Or instead, for politicians to hastily come to the “aid” and “rescue” of those with a perceived “need.”

My First Job

Throughout most of my sophomore year during lunchtime, my job was to operate the deep fryer in the high school cafeteria.  (You couldn’t allow just anybody to perform such a highly-skilled, and frankly, highly-dangerous assignment.)  Each day I was dressed from head-to-toe in the appropriate spatter resistant clothing.  Back then (1978) you opened #10 cans of lard and spooned the “contents” into the fryer bin that was super-heated to several hundred degrees.  A wire basket with the pre-packaged flash frozen “shoestring” potatoes was then delicately lowered into the molten animal fat.  The spitting and sputtering and popping during the first few seconds was…well… horrific to say the least…this wasn’t a job for the faint of heart.  At precisely the right moment the wire basket was manually hoisted, by Me, the tater technician, from the blubber bath and hung from the back of the bin for a few seconds to drain off the excess…well…whatever it was that was dripping from those things.  I’m sure a good portion of what was in that #10 can never left the fries before it hit the student bodies’ stomachs…poor souls.  (Oh, I forgot a step…”lightly” salted to perfection—heart stopping good!)  Nonetheless, my fries were FAMOUS…people would come from…well…across the school commons for Frank’s Fries…and for nearly forty minutes straight each weekday, I made “french” fries…or freedom fries…or whatever we’re calling them today.  After nearly an entire school year at the fry machine, and following a relatively vigorous job performance review, I was moved UP to the “Coke Machine.”  (There were actually several different sodas available through this…well…relatively dangerous and complex high-speed carbonated fluid dispenser.)   The day I moved up…well…in all humility…my parents were SO proud…but…that’s another story for a different Blog…

You’re probably thinking at this point…Wow…what a great story!  But…what does this have to do with the minimum wage?   $2.70.  That’s what.  $2.70 per hour.  My first job in the high school cafeteria was a state mandated minimum wage of $2.70 per hour (actually $2.65).  Bamm…not only did I have a great job…I got $2.70 an hour to do it.  (Truth be told, I probably would have done it for free—sorta like working in the Legislature.)  What I didn’t know, but would quickly come to understand, is that $2.70 an hour doesn’t REALLY mean $2.70 an hour…FICA…State and Federal Taxes…unemployment insurance…work clothes expenses (the pair of my skateboarding shoes, Vans as I recall, ruined—spattered with…who knows what)…opportunity costs…get the picture?!  (I guess I didn’t realize it at the time, but, that was the first time, and only time, I’ve been a state employee…until now, as a “part-time” Legislator.)

For nearly thirty years I’ve worked in the private labor sector.  In the private sector (generally speaking), free market forces and principles dictate product prices and wages.  This is not true when government price-fixes labor inputs through creating what has been called a “minimum wage.”

Sound Economic Principles

From my days at the BYU, I’ve kept only a couple textbooks.  A prized possession is a rather dog-eared Sixth Edition of AMERICAN HERITAGE, An Interdisciplinary Approach, authored by Frank Fox and Clayne Pope.  I frequently refer to this volume for discussions regarding Government Philosophy, Economics, and History.  Among the pages of this book is a very targeted discussion on “Minimum Wage” (pages 311-313).

Fox and Pope explain:

The intent of a minimum wage, first established in 1935 and increased every few years, is to help poor workers have at least a subsistence wage and a decent standard of living.  What is the long-term effect of this legislation which was passed with the best of intentions?  Essentially, a minimum wage interferes with the free movement of a particular price—the wage.  Minimum wage legislation sets a limit or floor so that the wage cannot fall below a certain level.

Can we use the four basic economic propositions to understand minimum wage legislation?  The first three propositions concerning demand, supply and equilibrium are relevant.  In the labor market, the law of demand is relevant for businesses hiring labor.  As the wage rises, businesses choose to hire less labor.  They find it convenient and profitable to substitute machinery or skilled labor for the unskilled laborers whose wage has been raised by the legislation.  The law of supply applies to the individuals who are selling their labor in this market.  As the legal wage rises, more and more people choose to supply more and more hours of work.  The effect of minimum wage, then, is to reduce the quantity of labor that businesses choose to buy and increase the quantity of labor that individuals, especially unskilled young workers, wish to supply.  In short, a surplus of labor is created.  More people are looking for jobs than businesses are willing to hire at the minimum wage.  If the market were left alone, the wage would fall until the number of people who wanted to work would just equal the number of the people businesses chose to employ.  However, the minimum wage prevents proposition three, the achievement of equilibrium, from occurring because of the floor below which the wage is unable to fall.  Consequently, the surplus of labor continues.

The minimum wage law has two effects on the unskilled workers for whom the legislation was designed.  First, those who are able to find jobs work at a higher wage and are made better off by the minimum wage legislation.  Second, other unskilled workers lose their jobs or are unemployed because of the legislation.  They are clearly hurt by this action.  How are other groups in the economy affected?  Businesses are worse off because they are unable to hire unskilled labor at a lower wage.  Skilled labor benefits since business will now find it profitable to use a skilled laborer where they might have employed two or three unskilled workers had the minimum wage legislation not been in effect.

Unemployment rates are typically highest for minorities, especially young unskilled minorities.  Many economists believe that minimum wage legislation is partially to blame for the very high rate of unemployment among young blacks.  Businesses find that they can hire all the unskilled labor they wish at the minimum wage.  In fact, there is a surplus of applicants.  Since businesses can then choose among the various applicants, unskilled jobs tend to be rationed according to some characteristic other than wage.  Perhaps the businessman chooses his young relatives, or teenagers nearby, or teenagers that have the characteristics that he values in terms of the appearance and education and, perhaps, skin color.

The example of the minimum wage illustrates a pattern that is often replicated when the government prevents prices and profits from performing their function in the market economy.  The control of prices and profits creates distortion that is usually reflected in either a surplus or a shortage.  This distortion by the government makes some people in the economy better off, while damaging a larger but less represented group.  Finally, there are usually unintended side effects from government intervention in the market system.  These side effects often hurt the very groups that the government is trying to help.  (end)

I’m From The Government & I’m Here To Help

Governor Huntsman was quoted in the Deseret Morning News saying he didn’t think it was a bad idea that the minimum wage be raised from its current $5.15 per hour.  Huntsman said that Congress was looking at raising the Minimum Wage on a National level, and that Utah would keep its eye on Congress to see if they would mandate a certain minimum.

Utah’s rate of unemployment currently rests at approximately 2.5%.  Last year’s jobless-rate was 4.2% in Utah.  The US Labor Department reported recently that the National rate of unemployment is 4.4%.  The “natural rate” of unemployment is approximately 4%.  So, currently Utah is experiencing what could be termed “full employment.”  (A good article on this topic is found in a story by Jenifer Nii, of the Deseret Morning News.)  That means that there are more jobs than there are workers to fill those jobs. Just look around.  This is no more plainly illustrated than by the glut of “Help Wanted” signs found posted outside businesses statewide. 

The Real Question

With unemployment at an all-time low and with the current surplus of jobs available throughout the State of Utah, is it necessary now (or necessary ever) for Government (State or Federal) to intervene in the free market to adjust the price-input of labor by mandating a minimum wage increase?  Or, should we allow the free market to dictate labor pricing?

Remember, every time government mandates a program or policy, we incrementally give away one more liberty.

“What our country needs is not more liberty but fewer people who take liberties with our liberty.”  (Attribution??)

Nov 28

Legislative Special Session — Monday, December 4, 2006, 10 am

2006 at 11:21 pm  |  posted by Rep. Craig Frank 0 comments

An e-mail I recieved from Chris Bleak, Speaker Curtis’ Chief-of-Staff, asked the members of the Legislature to set aside Monday, December 4, 2006 at 10 am for a potential Special Session.  Among the items that may be found on the Governor’s Call list would be (and I’m speculating now) Congressional Redistricting…(don’t hold me to it though). 

Nov 28

Utah’s 4th Congressional Seat — Part VII

2006 at 11:10 pm  |  posted by Rep. Craig Frank 0 comments

The Senate Site has ongoing coverage and links to the Redistricting Committee’s activities today.  Click HERE for a link to the Senate Site.  (Thanks, Ric!)

Nov 23

Thoughts On Government (By Someone Else)

2006 at 12:46 pm  |  posted by Rep. Craig Frank 0 comments

This morning I was digging through a quote book I use occasionally while preparing for my periodic speaking assignments at church.  A few quotes in the “Government” section caught my eye.  Some quotes carry an undertone of indictment, while others are more tongue-in-cheek (I hope).  Anyway, I thought it might be worthwhile to put a few in my Blog this morning (for posterity).  [The quote book contains no attributions.]

Elections may be more successful if we choose the candidates according to what they won’t stand for instead of what they will stand for.

The public business of their nation is the private business of every citizen.

Bad officials are elected by good citizens who do not vote.

People were satisfied with their walk in life until politicians began to offer them a free ride.

A lame duck – a politician whose goose has been cooked.

Old politicians never die – they just run once too often.

What our country needs is not more liberty but fewer people who take liberties with our liberty.

Too many Americans believe it’s easier to vote for something than to work for it.

A diplomat is anyone who thinks twice before saying nothing.

It is said that politicians are more concerned with deals than ideals.

The main reason the government fights organized crime is because it resents the competition.

And one for Thanksgiving?!

One of the things we have to be thankful for is that we don’t get as much government as we pay for.  Amen.

Nov 21

Utah’s 4th Congressional Seat — Part VI

2006 at 8:49 pm  |  posted by Rep. Craig Frank 0 comments

Although an additional meeting was scheduled by the committee Chair for tomorrow (Wednesday), that meet was cancelled.  Several redistricting plans were “passed out” by the committee to take “on the road” next week during the Pubilc Meeting phase of this ad-hoc committee.  Most members of the committee will hop on board a chartered plane(s) and zip around the state for two days of whirl-wind (more like tornado) public information and input meetings.

Listed below are some LINKS of interest:

Audio of this morning’s Redistricting Committee meeting.  Click HERE.

Time and Dates for all public meetings.  Click HERE.

Related News Articles:

Deseret News, “Lawmakers Eye ‘07 Vote”  Click HERE.

See, also, the Senate Site, for up to the minute News and Information on REDISTRICTING.  Click HERE.  (Thanks, Ric!)

Nov 21

ISP — Day #65

2006 at 11:47 am  |  posted by Rep. Craig Frank 0 comments

Day 65 (Tuesday).  Elliptical Trainer:  44:11 minutes, 4.45 miles, 700 calories.  0 crunches.  Weight:  190.6 pounds.