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Free military records

There’s some good news for all those genealogy buffs out there.

The folks at the National Archives and the genealogy Web site Ancestry.com announced today they are teaming up to digitize U.S. military records.

And for a limited time (until May 31), you can search for free those military records digitized so far at the Ancestry.com site. It’s part of the site’s commemoration of the upcoming Memorial Day holiday.

You still have to log in and pick a user name and password, but it took me less than a minute to find the World War I draft card of my step-grandfather in Rusk, Texas.

–Paul


Campaign money dustup

Turns out there’s a little controversy brewing down at the state Ethics Commission, Oklahoma’s agency that tracks campaign finance and election spending.

For years, the commission and its backers have complained it doesn’t have the budget or manpower to track the ever-increasing sophistication and professionalization of state political campaigns.

So, you’d think a budget increase for the upcoming year would be welcome news, right?

Not so fast.

Turns out the agency’s $150,000 budget increase this year comes with a stipulation: the commission must spend $50,000 of that amount to begin development of a new Web-based campaign filing system modeled after the one at the Federal Election Commission.

The problem is, nobody asked the commission if they wanted or needed that software. The vice-chairman of the commission, John Raley, has an op-ed in today’s Oklahoman. He says:

The $150,000 increase this year includes a $50,000 earmark for filing software that we did not request, do not want and that would destroy the ability to track aggregate totals — a key element in Oklahoma’s campaign disclosure law. In short, one-third of our funding would waste taxpayer money and distort data.

The paper also had a news brief on the funding bill, H.B. 2286. It passed the House 96-2.

As Executive Director Marilyn Hughes explains it, tracking aggregate campaign contributions is done differently in Oklahoma than at the federal level.

The FEC tracks contributions by election, so you can contribute maximum amounts (now $2,300 for individuals) for primary, runoff and general election campaigns at the federal level.

But Oklahoma law allows for maximum contributions ($5,000 per year for individuals) for the entire campaign, including the primary, runoff and general elections.

Paul Ziriax, spokesman for Senate Co-President Glenn Coffee, R-Oklahoma City, said the filing software currently used by the Ethics Commission is “seriously flawed”:

Over the years, our office has received numerous complaints that the Ethics Commission’s current electronic campaign reporting software is seriously flawed and does not properly function. We believe it can be replaced with reporting software that is more reliable and more user-friendly, such as the FEC’s software adapted for Oklahoma’s laws and rules.

If the Ethics Commission was forced to use the FEC software as is, “it would make our enforcement tool pretty useless,” Hughes said.

So the $50,000 approved by the Legislature would go to the state’s software vendor, OK.gov (a unit of Kansas-based NIC Inc.) to modify the FEC software for Oklahoma. NIC/OK.gov currently retains seven lobbyists at the Capitol.

Problem is, nobody knows just exactly how much the modification might cost.

Ziriax said Senate Republicans “sought $150,000 in funding to begin the process of obtaining FEC-style campaign reporting software.” That figure was whittled down to $50,000 in the bill approved Thursday by the House.

Hughes said Friday that OK.gov officials e-mailed her an estimate of between $750,000 and $1 million to modify FEC campaign filing software for Oklahoma. Later e-mails backtracked, saying it would be “significantly more than $150,000.”

Zirax said: “The cost estimates for the FEC software that are being e-mailed around the Capitol today seem high. But the Senate staff is working to develop an estimate of the total cost of acquiring the FEC campaign reporting software and adapting it for Oklahoma’s laws and rules.”

(Full disclosure: I use the Ethics Commission campaign finance data on the back end to track election spending. I have no hands-on experience with the front-end of the system that candidates and political action committees are required to use.)

–Paul


A good time to buy lettuce…and pork

Rising gasoline and grain costs continue to dent consumer’s wallets at the pump and the grocery store, but if you’re in the market for some lettuce and pork, you’re in luck.

Turns out the price of lettuce is down 3.2 percent from last year. And pork is down 4.4 percent. That’s according to the latest Consumer Price Index numbers from the federal Bureau of Labor Statistics.

Over the weekend, The New York Times published an interesting graphical representation of inflation on consumer items. It’s an effective way to look at what items make up the broader Consumer Price Index and just how much each is weighted for its share of the typical consumer’s budget.

No prizes for guessing which category claims the one of the largest percentage increases, though. Predictably, it’s gasoline, which is up 26 percent from 2007 prices. Gasoline accounts for roughly 5 percent of consumer spending, according to the BLS.

In the food category, the largest increases were in eggs–up almost 30 percent. Other dietary staples like milk, cheese and bread rose between 12 percent and 14 percent.

There is some good news, though. If you’re looking for something to blow the federal government’s $600 rebate check on, take a look at the TV category in the chart. The cost of TVs is down more than 18 percent from last year.

–Paul