Tuesday, December 9, 2008

Don't bail out the Auto Makers!

Since the 1970s, Detroit’s Big Three auto makers have failed to keep up in the competitive auto industry. Now they are begging the federal government for a bailout to the tune of $75 billion!
Ten years ago the Big Three posted a combined profit of over $16 billion dollars. But management failed to wisely invest these profits.
The Big Three are heavily weighed down by irresponsible labor costs. The problem in the auto industry is caused by unrealistic union contracts written decades ago. These contracts did not give the industry the flexibility it needed to respond to market changes and burdened the industry with legacy costs.
General Motors is leading the call for the $75 billion taxpayer bailout, speeding up the $25 billion loan program to develop fuel-efficient vehicles, $25 billion in general support to keep the companies operating, and $25 billion to bailout promises to union benefits.
It is time to draw the line in the sand when it comes to federal bailouts. Please contact you U.S. Senators an Representatives and urge them notto support a bailout of the Big Three auto makers.

Tuesday, December 2, 2008

No New Taxes in Pennsylvania

Pennsylvania is running a surplus this year. Budget projections underestimated the amount of revenue that is actually going to the commonwealth. In April, the state government collected more than $3 billion in tax dollars. This money should be used to provide tax relief to Pennsylvanians. Unfortunately, some are calling for more spending and taxes.
Gov. Rendell’s budget opens the door to future massive tax hikes on Pennsylvanians. He is pushing for HillaryCare in Harrisburg, which would require more of our hard-earned tax dollars. More than likely, Gov. Rendell will increase taxes on tobacco, which does not make much sense.
Cigarette taxes rarely bring in the amount of money desired, due to the fact that smokers tend to avoid the tax by purchasing cigarettes on the internet or in nearby states. Gov. Rendell and lawmakers should avoid raising taxes and should instead find ways to cut government excess and reduce the tax burden for average Pennsylvanians.

Monday, December 1, 2008

State Legislator's COLA. Do they deserve one?

December 1, 2008 will provide a 2.8% salary increase for legislators, raising the rank and file pay to $78,315 with top leaders as high as $122,000. So far, state legislators have met in formal session in Harrisburg for about 10 days since July. The legislature will meet for one day in early January to be sworn in for the 2009-10 session, but won't be back until later in January. With the exception of Kevin Murphy defeating Frank Andrews Shimkus; Representatives Staback, Wansacz, and Smith have once again run unopposed for another term. With the new session beginning just less than two months away let us look at what they have (or haven't) done. After the infamous pay raise of 2005, Pennsylvania still has one the most expensive legislatures in the country, the second largest legislature/full-time legislative staff, and have taken several COLA's (cost of living adjustments). State lawmakers promised to reform and touted 2007 the "ye ar of reform". The fact of the matter is that 2007 ended without a single law being enacted to raise standards of public integrity. This years budget includes $750 million in WAM's (walking around money) to pass out for projects in their districts, up from $640 million last year. This violates the state Constitutions separation of powers by giving lawmakers a direct hand in spending money appropriated to executive agencies. Last year legislators slush fund increased from $215 million to $241 million. This money could fund the State Ethics Commission for 115 years. Media reported in 2006 that $6 million was paid by the House for "public service ads" for incumbent lawmakers and in 2007, Media reported four legislative caucuses spent $500,000 for partisan polling. This money is supposed to come from political party expenses not at the expense of the taxpayer. Pennsylvania is the only state where this occurs. In 2006, M edia reported, $50,000 in gifts to lawmakers. Public officials are allowed to accept "gifts" of $250 without ever having to report them.

In closing let's not forget about criminal charges brought against 12 lawmakers and their staff, a Pa. senator indicted on 139 counts of public corruption, and the state's attorney general working with a grand jury investigating $3.6 million in bonuses. There is more but space constraints will not allow me to express what they "have done". These "leaders" do not need a cost of living adjustments! What they need is concerned citizens to look at what they are (or aren't) doing for us. Citizens need to follow the next two years of these elected officials careers and look at what these public servants are (or aren't) doing.

Saturday, November 29, 2008

Pa. chopping block grows as deficit gets bigger

By MARC LEVY Associated Press Writer



HARRISBURG, Pa.—Gov. Ed Rendell and legislative leaders are intensifying their search for budget cuts and spare millions as the deteriorating economy continues to unravel Pennsylvania's $28.3 billion spending plan.
The state's bleak revenue collections look certain to make November the seventh straight month that expectations have not been met as Rendell's agency heads draw up a second round of spending cuts to try to avert a deficit.
Some of the biggest recipients of the state's funding—hospitals and nursing homes that serve the poor and uninsured, and counties that administer safety nets for addiction treatment, mental health needs and neglected children—are worried about those cuts.
"Worried is sort of an understatement," said Jim Redmond, a Hospital and Healthsystem Association of Pennsylvania lobbyist.
Public schools this year received a big new injection of money to help them educate students to meet Pennsylvania's academic standards, and now school boards are worried about the future of those programs.
County commissioners warned the state against cutting their funding and simply sending the costs down the ladder to county taxpayers.
"The state cutting its share may save state taxpayers money, but those same taxpayers are hit when we are forced to raise property taxes to make up the difference," said Dave Coder, a Greene County commissioner who is president of the County Commissioners Association of Pennsylvania.
Advertisement
GetAd('tile','box','/news_article','','www.ldnews.com','','null','null');
OAS_rn = new String (Math.random());
OAS_rns = OAS_rn.substring (2, 11);
document.write('');


Through October, Pennsylvania state government revenue collections were running 7 percent behind—at that rate, the state would be facing a deficit of nearly $2 billion when the fiscal year ends on June 30.
On Oct. 30, Rendell announced that he was freezing $311 million in spending, and asked groups outside his control, including the Legislature and Judiciary, to take similar steps. Two weeks ago, he ordered his agency heads to undertake a second round of cuts, to be revealed Dec. 9 when Rendell briefs legislative leaders.
Decisions on where to cut, and whether to increase a tax, is likely to send partisan sparks flying.
Senate President Pro Tempore Joe Scarnati and Democratic House Appropriations Chairman Dwight Evans are saying everything should be considered—although they diverge on the question of a tax increase.
Evans' spokeswoman said the Philadelphia Democrat is willing to consider a "targeted" tax increase, as opposed to a more general tax increase. Scarnati's spokesman said the Jefferson County Republican believes the budget can be balanced without an increase.
Regardless, there are plenty of suggestions from Capitol observers on what should be done.
"It is a cop out just to do a 5 percent across-the-board cut, because you're rewarding bad programs and punishing good programs," said Eric Epstein, coordinator of RocktheCapitol.org.
For starters, tens of millions of dollars in grants—known as "WAMs," for walking around money—are controlled by state legislative leaders. The grants may go toward worthy causes, such as community non-profits and school groups, but Epstein and others say recipients are selected in a secretive process that is not based on merit.
The state spends tens of millions more on what the libertarian Commonwealth Foundation calls "corporate welfare"—grants, tax credits and reimbursements that reward businesses for picking Pennsylvania over another state as a destination to expand or relocate.
The state also has reserves to consider.
That includes a "rainy day fund" of nearly $750 million for hard economic times. The Legislature keeps its own surplus, too, squirreled away since the 1990s in the name of shielding the institution during a budget dispute with a vengeful governor. The last annual audit of the surplus tallied it at more than $240 million on June 30, 2007.
Then there's the tax code.
The liberal Pennsylvania Budget and Policy Center pointed out that the state could capture more than $600 million if it closes a loophole through which many businesses avoid paying Pennsylvania's corporate income tax.
In addition, Pennsylvania is one of the biggest natural gas-producing states that does not tax the activity—a free pass that could cost Pennsylvania more money in the future as exploration companies flock here to drill into the potentially lucrative Marcellus Shale gas formation.

Wednesday, November 26, 2008

State politician squares off against bishop in labor fight

By PATRICK O'NEILL
Publication date: November 28, 2008
Section: G1. News
WILKES-BARRE, Pa. -- State Rep. Eddie Day Pashinski doesn’t like the position he’s in as a faithful Catholic and member of St. Mary of the Maternity Parish.
Pashinski is leading the battle in the Pennsylvania State House of Representatives against his own bishop. As sponsor of House Bill 2626, Pashinski is trying to resurrect the Scranton Diocese Association of Catholic Teachers, a union no longer recognized by Scranton Bishop Joseph F. Martino.
Earlier this year, Martino announced in the diocesan newspaper, The Catholic Light, he would no longer recognize the teachers’ association, implementing in its place an employee relations program critics have dubbed “a company union.” Martino has refused to meet with union representatives, and will not take questions on the matter from media outlets.
Pashinski, 62, a Pennsylvania native, admits to being torn, but he says he is being forced to take on his bishop because he must also be loyal to his constituents in this heavily unionized and heavily Catholic region of northeastern Pennsylvania.
“It’s a difficult position for a lot of people, all of us who love our faith,” he said. “This is not the kind of position we want to be in.”
Following the 2007 closure of some diocesan schools and the consolidation of others, diocesan officials assured teacher association president Michael Milz that the union would be recognized under the restructured system. Martino later changed his mind, a decision he announced last January in The Catholic Light.
-- CNS/Rich Banick/Catholic Light: Bishop Joseph F. MartinoMartino’s decision has set off a firestorm in parishes. Teachers and students have engaged in walkouts and pro-union rallies have been held throughout the diocese. Milz said he has received supportive phone calls from dozens of diocesan priests who back the union, but refuse to speak out publicly against Martino.
The union has turned to the legislature for help. Because Catholic lay teachers were not included for protections in the 1935 National Labor Relations Act, the union has asked the state legislature to amend the Pennsylvania Labor Relations Act to cover lay employees of religiously affiliated schools. If the bill passes both houses, and is signed into law by the governor, the Scranton Diocese Association of Catholic Teachers can start organizing in the schools again. Pashinski said the legislation has a strong chance of being approved next year.
Pashinski got some chuckles from the audience at the daylong hearing when he asked a panel of Catholic opponents of HB 2626 if the Vatican had a union. When none of the panelists knew the answer, Pashinski said the Vatican does, indeed, have a labor union.
Although Martino has refused to meet with the union or the news media, he was well represented at two hearings conducted by the House Labor Relations Committee in which it was clear the union had strong support from committee members.
Robert L. Paserba, superintendent for Catholic schools in the Pittsburgh diocese, which has some unionized teachers, spoke against the bill, saying it “would create a general statewide law with unknown consequences and dangerous involvement of the state in defining religious issues and mission in Catholic parish schools and Catholic high schools. Moreover, it would represent the choosing of sides in an internal church dispute over the application of church social teaching in one particular diocese.”
A different picture was painted by Irene M. Tori, vice president of the Association of Catholic Teachers, which she called “the sole and exclusive bargaining agent for the lay teachers in the 29 [high] schools of the archdiocese of Philadelphia.”
Tori, who spent 25 years as a math teacher in Archbishop Ryan High School in northeast Philadelphia, said the union has been unable to organize the diocese’s elementary schoolteachers and maintenance workers because they fear losing their jobs if they meet with union officials.
“The fear is pervasive,” Tori said at a Sept. 18 Labor Relations Committee hearing at Wilkes University. Tori said the workers always ask her: “ ‘Can I be fired for doing this?’ We would always answer them honestly and say, ‘Yes.’ At that point the teachers, no matter how bad the working conditions were, would begin to backtrack.
“Passage of House Bill 2626 would change the answer that the association has to give them.”
Rita C. Schwartz, president of the Philadelphia-based National Association of Catholic School Teachers, said HB 2626 would offer protections to Catholic lay teachers throughout the state. At the present time, six of the state’s eight dioceses have Catholic teachers’ unions.
“Since there is at present no protection under the law, all Catholic school teachers in Pennsylvania are one bishop away from what has happened in the diocese of Scranton,” she said.
Over the years, Tori said she has filed eight complaints “against various bishops” with the Vatican over union-related disputes. None was resolved in the union’s favor. “It’s kind of like Lions 8, Christians 0,” she said.
Last month, the Scranton teachers’ association lost its Vatican appeal over Martino’s decision not to recognize the union.
Canon lawyer Nicholas P. Cafardi, dean emeritus of Pittsburgh’s Duquesne University Law School, spoke against HB 2626.
Raised in a pro-union family, Cafardi said the Code of Canon Law gives the bishop full authority over church schools. “Teachers in Catholic schools are the bishop’s collaborators in this theological ministry,” Cafardi said at the hearing. “They are not simply employees, but are rather co-ministers with the bishop in his ministry of Catholic education.”
A “state-enforced labor relations model ... would impede if not destroy this co-ministry,” he said. “It would require the diocesan bishop to use the mechanisms of the state to deal with what is not, at base, a secular, but rather a religious and spiritual relationship.
“Should the proposed legislation be adopted, the church-state conflicts that it would propagate are enormous.”
In an interview with NCR, Cafardi said he was not familiar with the specifics of the Scranton standoff between Martino and the teacher association, but he added that the bishop also has a role to play in settling disputes.
“Speaking abstractly, because I don’t know the facts in Scranton,” Cafardi said, “if the code says these people are your co-ministers, you need to treat them as co-ministers. You need to treat them as your full collaborators in propagating the faith, which just means that you treat them with a certain level of respect.
“If the church says that, then act that way. While it means that the state should not interfere in that relationship, it also means that the bishop should prize it and nurture it.”
For his part, Pashinski would be happy not to be leading the charge of state interference with his church.
“I don’t like being in this position,” Pashinski told NCR. “If these five other [Pennsylvania] dioceses worked it out with their bishops, they don’t have a problem. Government’s out of it.
“I’m having difficulty as a Catholic trying to understand how, when the bishop represents the shepherd of Jesus Christ, why he can’t bring all the members of the flock together and settle it the way I believe Jesus would.
“[In Scranton] there doesn’t seem to be any movement to meet with the members of the flock. This is not a regular employer-employee relationship. These teachers are Catholic teachers. Every Sunday they put their money in the basket to support the schools, to support the churches, and on top of that they’re dedicating their lives to promote our faith for generations to come.”
Patrick O’Neill is a freelance writer living in Raleigh, N.C.
National Catholic Reporter November 28, 2008

Sunday, November 9, 2008

FACE BOOK

Please vist my Face Book @ Paul Dudrich

Wednesday, November 5, 2008

Same old story

Now that the election is over in Pa. and the state legislators in Northeastern Pa. have once again have been re-elected by running unopposed, I am urging all to look what they are doing for us in Harrisburg. You can go to www.libertyindex.com to see how they have performed in previous terms.

Saturday, November 1, 2008

Running for State Representative in 2010

Seeing as how our elected officials for state representatives in Lackawanna and Wayne Counties in Pennsylvaniaonce are once again running unopposed, I will once again in 2010, run for state representative in the 115th District. This seat is currently being held by Ed Staback.

Paul Dudrich

Tuesday, May 27, 2008

Gerrymandering HB 2420

Approximately a year and a half ago, lawmakers proposed amendments to the
constitution that would take Pennsylvania from second worst to first in how we
map out our borders in legislative districts. These bills remain in the House
and Senate State Government committees without action. However, last week HB
2420 was introduced by Rep. Steve Samuelson with 90 bi-partisan co-sponsors.
Rather than amend any other bill, this piece of legislation which is touted by
integrity advocates like the Womens League of Voters, should serve as the standard for drawing political lines. One of the highpoints of this bill is it takes the power out of the hands of Senate and House leaders. In order for HB 2420 to become law it must be passed by both the House and Senate in two successive sessions, be signed by Governor Rendell and then be approved by the voters in a ballot referendum on the ballot in the next General or Primary election.

Pennsylvania is one of the most gerrymandered states in the nation. The drawing lines make no geographical sense and the logic is only to keep incumbents safe. If change is to be effective by the next round of redistricting after the 2010 census, a constitutional amendment is needed. The time to pass an amendment requires that the first piece of legislation be passed by June, 2008. If that does not occur, redistricting reform will not happen until after the 2020 census. I urge you to contact Reps. James Wansacz and Ed Staback in these districts and ask them why they have not co-sponsored this bill. Have they co-sponsored another bill or proposal? Will they be one of twelve to join the 90 co-sponsors and advance this bill. Act now! Remember, when you hold a gerrymandered seat the only way you can lose your seat is in the primary election from within your own party. You never have to worry about being challenged in November. Sound familiar? F or summsry on HB 2420 go to www.palwv.org.

Thursday, April 24, 2008

Thanks

I want to thank everyone who helped me during my election. It was a long hard road but worth every minute. I have met so many great people and yes, I WILL RUN IN 2010!

Wednesday, April 16, 2008

Staback Does not Respond Again

In running for state representative, I have responded to a debate from the Lackawanna County Taxpayers Association, candidate interview with the League of Women Voters, I took the Political Courage Test from Project Vote Smart and I have shared my political views with Democracy Rising. I have been going door-to-door for three months andI have been very up front with my views and have not been afraid to meet any challenge that was brought before me. It is sad to say that Rep. Staback has not met any of the above challenges while running for his incumbency. I have been told he does not have to prove anything! I have been told that because he has been in office he has nothing to prove! I say he does! I hope people will realize that issues had to be met but were not! I can only hope that come April 22 the people will not look at all the billboards, signs and money spent on Mr. Stabacks election, but on the reality of what has happened during this election.

Monday, April 14, 2008

Dudrich campaign a ‘one-man job’

Paul Dudrich

Age: 51
Municipality: Jessup borough
Occupation: School teacher
Higher education: Bachelor’s degree in special education from East Stroudsburg University.
Family: Wife, Kimberly; two adult daughters, Korie and Sarah.

Paul Dudrich has a steep hill to climb.

The 51-year-old educator not only has to beat an entrenched incumbent in the upcoming Democratic Party primary for the 115th Legislative District — a statistical challenge in itself — but must also do so without campaign donations or prestigious endorsements that have been swept up by his opponent, longtime legislator Rep. Ed Staback, D-Olyphant.

Even Mr. Dudrich’s own union, the Pennsylvania State Education Association, has gone with the incumbent in the race. Mr. Dudrich found that out when he received a flier in the mail from the association’s political action committee. The association isn’t returning his calls and didn’t return a call to The Times- Tribune for comment.

Mr. Dudrich’s climb is steep, but he doesn’t think it is insurmountable. While lacking money and political support, he hopes to make use of his tenacity with door-to-door campaigning and the public’s frustration with empty promises of, among other things, property tax reform.

“(Mr. Staback) is fine when it comes to needing a form from his office, but when it comes down to the meat of legislation, I believe he doesn’t serve our best interests,” he said.

While Mr. Dudrich has no formal experience in public office, he said Harrisburg needs more citizen legislators. And the Midvalley resident said he has always had a deep interest in politics. Without politics and the New York Yankees, he said “there would be no reason for me to watch television.”

An avid baseball fan, he is also the nephew of the late Nestor Chylak Jr., an Olyphant-born umpire for Major League Baseball.

Part of the reason he never became involved in politics is because of his 22-year career with the U.S. Postal Service, which requires employees not run for any office. He ended his career as a postal worker about three years ago to teach at an alternative school designed for disruptive youth in Wayne County.

Now, with the opportunity to run for office, he said with his frustrations on how state politics have been managed, he felt a sense of duty.

“I am not a politician. I’m just a guy that’s sick and tired of being sick and tired,” he said.

Should he not win this primary battle, he said the experience would serve him well if he decides to run when Mr. Staback eventually retires.

“This campaign has pretty much been a one-man job, but I’ve definitely learned a lot,” he said.

Contact the writer: cschillinger@timesshamrock.com

©The Times-Tribune 2008

Thursday, April 10, 2008

Staback Hides Again

A debate between Ed Staback and Paul Dudrich was scheduled for April 10, @ 6:00 at Scranton City Hall. Mr Staback did not reply to the certified letter nor did he show up. Mr Staback also did not show up for a candidate interview that was moderated by the League of Women Voters. Too busy? I guess thats how Mr. Staback runs a campagin by running away from the issues.

Tuesday, April 1, 2008

Staback A No Show

An interview of candidates was held Saturday March 29 in Scranton by the League of Woman Voters. Representative Shimkus, Kevin Murphy, and Paul Dudrich participated in the process. Representative Staback said he had a previous commitment.

The interviews will be aired on Ch. 61.

http://dudrich4staterep.googlepages.com

Monday, March 31, 2008

Thank You WNEP

Dudrich Challenges Staback in 115th District
For the first time in more than 20 years, State Representative Ed Staback is being challenged in an election.
http://www.wnep.com/global/story.asp?s=8086000

Find more items like this at http://www.wnep.com

Copyright 2008 WNEP

Tuesday, March 25, 2008

Ed Staback- Because He Does His Job?

....Because he does his job! That is what Mr. Stabacks billboards are saying. According to www.libertyindex.com a non-partisan guide to the quality of representation and performance of our elected officials. Mr. Staback has scored F's for every year of this comprehensive fair and objective analysis. Unlike most ratings presented by limited interest organizations that publish ratings, they have analyzed every single bill that became an Act or was vetoed by the governor from 2003 to 2007.

Thursday, March 20, 2008

Candidate Interview Event

On Saturday, March 29, 2008 between 10:30-11:00 am, The League of Women Voters of Lackawanna County has invited me to a 20 minute taped interview. The interview will be broadcast on Scranton Today-TV61. The interview will take place in the basement of the Lackawanna County Children's Library located at 500 Vine Street, Scranton.

For more information contact:
Bonnie Oldham
(570)574-1806
president@lwvlackawanna.org
PO Box 43
Scranton, PA 18501

Paul Dudrich
http://dudrich4staterep.googlepages.com/

Wednesday, March 12, 2008

Local State Legislators Violate Constitution

Any legislator who took the pay raise in 2005 violated the Pa. Constitution. This is Article 2 Sec. 8....


Compensation
Section 8. The members of the General Assembly shall receive such salary and mileage for regular and special sessions as shall be fixed by law, and no other compensation whatever, whether for service upon committee or otherwise. No member of either House shall during the term for which he may have been elected, receive any increase of salary, or mileage, under any law passed during such term.

Paul Dudrich
Candidate State Representative
115th District

Staback In Favor Of Tolling Turnpike-2007

Mr. Staback voted for Act 44, HB 1590 which would Raise Turnpike Tolls, Grants Turnpike Commission Authority to toll I-80, Allows billions in new debt to be issued by Turnpike, uses road tolls to fund mass transit, expands patronage-ridden Turnpike Commission.

Staback Voting Record 2007-STOP THE SPENDING

Mr. Staback voted yes in 2007 for Act 43, SB 798 which would have created $750 million dollars in new debt, including $250 million for pork-barrel grants!

Monday, March 10, 2008

Grading Our Legislators

See how your lawmakers have done for the past several terms! This is why we have to vote out the incumbents!

http://www.libertyindex.com

Wednesday, March 5, 2008

Staback and the Pay Raise-2 years later

Mr. Staback was quoted in the Times-Tribune that he didn't think the pay raise of 2005 was an issue in this years election! According to Rock the Capital July 5, 2005. Mr. Staback had a pay increase from $69,647.64 to $89,154.00. He was quoted as saying "I do not take any advantage of this". "I don't consider myself a spend thrift, I spend money as I need to spend it, when I need it."

During the 18 month period investigated, Mr. Staback, collected in addition to his salary, $26,745 in per diems, and billed the House $585 a month for a private lease on a 2005 Dodge Durango. That is our tax payers money hard at work!

Monday, March 3, 2008

Dudrich Challenges Staback for 115th Race

I am writing this e-mail because I need your help. I am running for State Representative against incumbent Ed Staback this April 22. Mr. Staback is a career politician who has run opposed only once during his 23 years as a representative in Harrisburg. There are over 20 state legislators that are up for reelection this term and are refusing to run because of the way these politicians operate in Harrisburg. I was very saddened by this and I said to myself, "who will be there to be the voice of the people"?
These legislators have spent over $333 million dollars of taxpayer money on themselves last year, and it seems that there is no end in sight. This practice of spending has to stop! I am in favor of stopping these taxpayer newsletters and public service announcements which are only tools for re-election. However, there are two Legislators Matt Smith and Randy Vulakavich that are calling for a 20% cut. Instead, I am in favor of town meetings held on a regular basis that would serve to let taxpayers know what is going on and what their concerns are.
I am also in favor of term limits for legislators. I feel that Mr. Staback after 23 years in office has been too complacent and has not had the best interest of the people he serves. I will give you a little backround: He has voted for Act 1 of 1999 which provided hundreds of millions of tax dollars to professional sports teams to build new stadiums, but this was nothing but corporate welfare, Act 9 of 2001 which gave a 50% increase to the pensions of lawmakers, while giving a 25% increase to other government employees, Act 46 of 2003 raised the personal income tax rate for Pennsylvanians by 10%, from 2.8% to 3.07%, and don't forget Act 44 of 2005 passed in the middle of the night with no public debate, granting lawmakers a 16-54% pay raise.
It is my desire and goal to bring common sense back to the legislature but I need your help. I am asking you to forward this e-mail to anyone you know that lives in the 115th district to get the word out! I do not have the campaign funds that Mr. Staback has and I am running a grassroots campaign by going door-to-door. Please feel free to contact me at any time if you would like me to speak with you or your group.

Contributions can be made by clicking on the ActBlue web-site below or copying and pasting it into you address bar. I feel very confident about this.

Thank you,
Paul Dudrich
1233 Winthrop Street
Archbald, Pa. 18403-2314

Sunday, March 2, 2008

Dudrich Challenges Staback for 115th

First of all I am in favor of a constitutional convention to address several issues. There is legislation right now that I am in favor of that will address the spending costs of legislators. Last year state legislators spent over $333 million dollars ON THEMSELVES! I am in favor of stopping taxpayer subsidized newsletters and public service announcements, which are only tools for reelection. I support enacting term limits on state legislators and senators. I am also in favor of limiting the ability of politicians to distribute and accept tax dollars in dealing with special interest groups. I will try to restore and favor the concept of a citizen legislature by empowering our our citizens with the right to vote on tax increases and government spending. When the public has the genuine power to vote on tax issues, as they do in other states, it is then and only then that costs will be controlled. Finally, I am in favor of having the creation of a nonpartisan state wide Independent Redistricting Commission to make votes truly count in legislative and congressional elections. This would also create more accountability among elected officials and to put citizens, not elected officials, in charge of elections.

Paul Dudrich
Candidate for State Legislature
115th Didtrich

Friday, February 29, 2008

I Need Your Help

Hello,

I am running for State Representative in the 115th District against incumbent Ed Staback this April 22. Mr. Staback is a career politician who has run opposed only once during his 23 years as a representative in Harrisburg. These legislators have spent over $333 million dollars of taxpayer money on themselves last year, and it seems that there is no end in sight. This practice of spending has to stop! I am in favor of stopping these taxpayer newsletters and public service announcements which are only tools for re-election. However, there are two Legislators Matt Smith and Randy Vulakavich that are calling for a 20% cut. Instead, I am in favor of town meetings held on a regular basis that would serve to let taxpayers know what is going on and what their concerns are.

It is my desire and goal to bring common sense back to the legislature but I need your help. I do not have the campaign funds that Mr. Staback has and I am running a grassroots campaign by going door-to-door. Please feel free to contact me at any time if you would like me to speak with you or your group. I am asking you to help me by clicking on the ActBlue web-site below or copying and pasting it into you address bar. I feel very confident about this.

http://www.actblue.com/contribute/entity/19024

Thank you,

Paul Dudrich
1233 Winthrop Street
Archbald, Pa. 18403-2314