Citizen Update: A Report For Members Of NMPIRG
NMPIRG.ORG HOW YOU CAN HELP MEMBERSHIP

Fair & Open Elections

PIRG-Backed Coalition Fights Anti-Voter Measure
/uploads/5W/TI/5WTIDYQqAKtqOVupWQH2qg/1813228666_4db4b4daa2_o.jpg
NEW VOTERS ON CAMPAIGN TRAIL—Staff and volunteers with the New Voters Project trailed the presidential candidates, asking them to address issues of concern to young people.

After our New Voters Project registered more than 500,000 voters in 2004—most of them young and first-time voters—several states, including New Mexico, adopted onerous regulations and restrictions for civic organizations that run voter registration drives. U.S. PIRG, our national federation, has joined a lawsuit against New Mexico to stop this new law from going into effect and prevent similarly restrictive bills from being passed across the country.

The restrictions are meant to discourage organizations from engaging in registration efforts and include limits on the number of forms given to a single civic group, unreasonable deadlines for returning the forms, steep fines for honest mistakes and other obstacles.

Legal analysts say the new rules violate the National Voter Registration Act and the Help America Vote Act. A decision is expected in June 2008.

Higher Education

Relief On The Way For Costly College Textbooks

New Mexico’s congressional delegation helped pass a comprehensive higher education reform bill that included policies championed by NMPIRG.

If approved by the Senate, the College Opportunity and Affordability Act will help students and their parents find better deals on expensive textbooks. Under the bill, publishers would provide the price of textbooks when they market them to faculty, and sell their textbooks “unbundled” from costly workbooks and CD-ROMS. The bill also requires private lenders to clearly disclose the rates and terms of student loans and requires lenders and colleges to notify students about their options to borrow more affordable federal student loans.

Media Reform

TV Blackout? Signals Mixed On Digital Transition

The “digital transition” is coming. Will your TV make the switch? In February 2009, television broadcasting signals will switch from analog to all digital signals.

Our expert on the issue, Amina Fazlullah, found that Wal-Mart, Best Buy, Target and other electronics retailers are using the transition to their advantage, convincing customers to buy unnecessary equipment, or neglecting to inform would-be analog buyers about the transition. 

While a rebate program has been established to help consumers purchase analog to digital converters, information on the program is often hard to find. Estimates put the number of households in danger of being cut off from television with the digital transition between 13 million and 21 million. Fazlullah testified before U.S. House and Senate committees on the issue.

“So many of us getting so much of our news and information from television,” said Fazlullah. “The digital transition could mean much more than just missing our Thursday night shows.”

Money In Politics

NMPIRG-Backed Panel To End Era Of Self-Policing

In March, the U.S. House of Representatives voted to set up an independent office to police ethical scandals under a plan recommended by a special task force and endorsed by NMPIRG. We applaud Rep. Tom Udall for fulfilling a promise to clean up Congress.

In January of 2007, the House approved strong, NMPIRG-backed rules designed to curb the influence of lobbyists over members of Congress. The rules banned lobbyist-paid gifts and travel and required lobbyists to disclose fundraising for candidates. The House put off a decision on how to enforce the rules for most of 2007, setting up a task force to examine the options. NMPIRG’s Gary Kalman urged Rep. Michael Capuano (Mass.), the head of the task force, to recommend a truly independent office, one that would end the current practice of “self-policing” that has let lobbyists shower members of Congress with favors for years.

NMPIRG
Citizen  Update
Summer 2008
Vol. 34, No. 2


/uploads/Kj/ny/KjnytYR9ZTn5z0BVUW37NQ/pelosi.recalls.MarkWilson.getty.77563860-copy.jpg
/uploads/1C/0w/1C0wyHKNvC9z5FRbCCHvzA/OHchemplantnearAthens.Jeremy.Stump.cc-copy.jpg
/uploads/HK/a-/HKa-TAsS5BGBRuB5V4SPnw/train_speed_iStock-copy.jpg
/uploads/Uj/va/Ujva8vilKE94genXZ8xV8Q/ADelattre_CPDC_DC06-copy.JPG

To Our Members

Summer will be just around the bend by the time you get this letter. You’re probably making sure that you have your travel plans lined up. Here at NMPIRG, we’ll be making sure we have enough clipboards...




MEMBER Action

ACTION ALERTS
Sign up to get NMPIRG e-mail action alerts. We'll let you know when decision-makers need to hear from you on critical public interest issues. Join our e-mail action network.