Citizen Advocate: A Report For Members Of Ohio PIRG
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Public Transportation

Legislators On Board To Get Nation On Track
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INSERT RAIL HERE—For decades, Congress has turned a blind eye to modernizing transportation by funding projects that fail to decrease congestion or provide greater travel choices.

Growing support around the country for public transportation and high-speed rail has convinced some in Congress to get behind a set of changes that would help to reduce the amount that Americans have to drive.  Imagine the impact of a Midwestern high-speed rail line connecting Cleveland to Toledo before heading to Chicago.

Led by our federal transportation advocate, John Krieger, Ohio PIRG has organized a coalition of more than 150 organizations at the local, state and national levels to call on Congress to adopt legislation that would rethink transportation choices made in the United States.

In August, The New York Times’ editorial board made the same point, calling on Congress and President Obama to help the United States catch up to many other countries by establishing more high-speed rail lines, writing that “both have an obligation to make a down payment on high-speed-rail corridors across the nation.

Campaign Finance Reform

Corporate Money Still Pervades

Lisa Gilbert, Ohio PIRG’s democracy advocate in Washington, D.C., reports that influence peddling is still a growth industry in our nation’s capital, even in an economic downturn. Large corporate donors are attempting to influence hot button issues such as health care, energy, and financial reform through their contributions.

By mid-year, the insurance and real estate sectors had already made $23.8 million in campaign contributions to political parties and candidates for federal office, according to the Center for Responsive Politics.

Ohio PIRG is building support for legislation to curb corporate spending on electoral campaigns. Legislation Ohio PIRG helped to draft is currently being considered in Congress, and 77 members in the House of Representatives have already agreed to sponsor it. The legislation would help to curb the influence of corporate dollars in part by establishing a matching system for small donations by citizens.

Election Reform

Voter Registration Is Behind The Times

We have the technology to use existing state and federal databases to proactively register eligible voters in a way that takes far fewer resources and is more accurate than large registration drives.

So why is Ohio still using a pen-and-paper process that leads to errors and incomplete or duplicate registrations? The systems in place in most states can be intimidating for first time voters, and they place a heavy workload on election officials just prior to Election Day.

According our research, modernizing our voter registration system could have eliminated more than $33 million nationwide in wasted spending during 2008. Many local and state election officials nationwide have put their support behind principles we’ve outlined to modernize voter registration.

Toxics & Public Health

Chemical Safety On Congress’ Back Burner

This summer, our public health advocate in Washington, D.C., Liz Hitchcock, submitted testimony to Congress that repeats our call for an increase in safety standards at chemical facilities that use potentially dangerous chemicals, such as JCI Jones in Barberton.

The legislation we’re backing would require the implementation of safer technologies and alternatives at high-risk facilities and would increase government oversight at those plants, potentially saving thousands of lives in the event of an accident or terrorist attack.

“Congress should not allow unnecessary risk to American communities when we know there are common sense ways to make these facilities safer,” said Hitchcock in her testimony. “There should be no further delay in passing this already long overdue protection.”