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A dozen sites
I'm diggin'


1. The Las Vegas Sun has a crew driving to the Democratic National Convention and is filing multimedia stories along the way.

2. I have never seen anything like this amazing "Swan Lake" performance. [Flash]

3. The Livescribe Pulse Smartpen links written notes with audio. Cool for journalists and students.

4. An educator friend of mine in Lebanon reports that citizen- generated news is all the rage in Arab countries.

5. Wow, look at The (Shreveport, La.) Times' Olympic coverage. Impressive.

6. Here are photos of folks learning Soundslides in Poynter's recent seminar "Multimedia for College Educators." We'll offer this twice in 2009, in February and July.

7. ProPublica uses graphics to show the human cost of war. (See related graphics here.)

8. A spray-on waterproof coating for electronics. If this stuff really works like they say (watch the videos) it will save a lot of gear.

9. This very cool hurricane site includes live cams, a tracking map, historical maps and live radio from landfall.

10. Cake Wrecks: when professional cakes go horribly wrong.

11. This is my current home page.

12. Who killed Chandra Levy? The Washington Post spent a year looking for new clues and insights and presents its findings in a 13-part series.

All of my Diggin' sites are saved on Poynter's del.icio.us page.



Editor's Note: Al's Morning Meeting is a compendium of ideas, edited story excerpts and other materials from a variety of Web sites, as well as original concepts and analysis. When the information comes directly from another source, it will be attributed and a link will be provided whenever possible. The column is fact-checked, but depends on the accuracy and integrity of the original sources cited. Errors and inaccuracies found will be corrected.





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State Governments Laying off Thousands
While economists debate whether we are in a recession, state governments are feeling a big time bind. Here are some highlights from a Stateline.org article:
  • In California, teachers' unions estimate that nearly 14,000 pink slips already have been sent out and more are in the offing as the state grapples with a $16 billion projected deficit for 2009.
  • Some 3,000 state employees in New Jersey and 1,200 in Rhode Island could find themselves in the unemployment line under proposals to stop the red ink flowing in those states.
  • Some 7,000 mentally ill and elderly in Maine could be dropped from Medicaid, the state-federal health program that serves 59 million needy.
  • Medicaid recipients in Vermont may face a higher co-pay.
  • Arizona is considering eliminating child-care subsidies for 3,200 children in low-income families.
  • College students in Iowa and Pennsylvania will have to find student loans through private banks as the credit crunch led those two states' lending agencies to suspend programs.
  • Researchers at the Urban Institute estimated in February that a 1 percent hike in the unemployment rate translates into 2.5 million people nationally losing their employer-sponsored health insurance, Medicaid rolls increasing by 1 million and ultimately a 3 percent to 4 percent decline in state revenues.
  • Today, 22 states have a collective budget shortfall of at least $37 billion, which is about the same size deficit they had at the start of the 2001 recession, said Iris J. Lav, deputy director of the Center on Budget and Policy Priorities. If the current downturn follows the path of previous recessions, 35 to 40 states could face budget cuts in 2009, the National Governors Association recently estimated.
It's not all bad. Stateline points out that oil, gas, ethanol and coal revenues have helped Alaska, Montana, New Mexico, Wyoming, Iowa, Nebraska and South Dakota.

Critics do not weep for state governments. The Stateline story points out:

"States didn't do a good job preparing for the inevitable," said Pete Sepp, a spokesman for the National Taxpayers Union, which advocates lower taxes. "Sure the inevitable happened sooner than anyone thought," Sepp said, but he criticized states for going "on such a spending spree." State spending grew a robust 9.3 percent in fiscal 2007, far above the 30-year average of 6.4 percent, according to figures from the National Association of State Budget Officers.
 
"In the last three or four years, states saw strong revenues and never had to make the tough choices," Williams of ALEC said.

It is interesting to look at the texts [PDF] of various governors' state-of-the-state addresses. A few of them used dire language. Many mentioned the words "green" and "environment."

Posted at 3:52:12 PM

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