Monthly Archive for July, 2010

Change…

Everyone pays “lip service” to change, but the fact is, when change happens people are unhappy, angry, even frightened.

As a counselor, I know that change, even when positive, is difficult. As I work with clients everyday, I realize their struggles to enact changes in their lives.

We are all creatures of comfort, predictability, and habit. When change happens, we are not in control and that’s what’s frightening for us.

But, we must realize that things change DAILY. Everything is ephemeral, nothing stays the same–we grow older, seasons change, children grow up, parents, partners, and pets die, leaders change, our financial circumstances evolve and all of us this takes place gradually, slowly, we’re not even aware of it.

As we incorporate change into political and social issues, people’s discontent with accomplished change is understandable. One of the failures of change is because we can’t agree on what “change” should look like. This is why the concept of “change” has failed. We have to visualize what it looks like, what it feels like, in every detail…and we must ALL agree upon it.

To have a shared vision, we must ask four simple questions:
1. What do you want?
2. What are you doing to do to get what you want?
3. Is it working?
4. If it’s not, change what you’re doing OR change what you want.

This is WHY “wholesale” change doesn’t work…we must have a clear and SHARED vision of what we want. Until we can agree on our VISION, change will be a contentious and combative issue. It’s time to unite, it’s time to come to the middle. It’s what I want so much. It’s what I work for each day.

It’s Time For Some Accountability on Outsourcing Contracts in the State of Texas!

One of my strategies for balancing the Texas budget is to examine every outsourcing contract for its efficiency. It’s NOT that I am against outsourcing state functions because 90% of the time, private companies can do a much more efficient and cost effective job than State Government BUT…it’s merely good business to evaluate those to see if we are getting what YOU, the taxpayers, are paying for! I’ve been doing some research on this and much to my surprise and dismay the State of Texas does very little (or almost nothing) in the way of oversight and evaluation of these contracts. Florida has an agency, The Council on Efficient Government that tracks all the state’s outsourcing contracts AND provides a cost-benefit analysis for each.

Yes, we have the Texas Council on Competitive Government but it currently only oversees 5 (that’s right ONLY FIVE) of the thousands of outsourcing contracts. Texas has had its share of “boondoggles” that have cost YOU money–Accenture LLP involved w/HHS, a nameless Spanish company that was to oversee the TransTexas corridor, Evercare of North Texas that was supposed to provide care for the chronically ill elderly AND didn’t and we were paying them $1.8 MILLION per month–how many more of these inefficient contracts are out there and we don’t know about?

We need more efficient ways of monitoring these contracts–I would like to have an agency or committee created to do JUST that!

Everyone is for more EFFICIENT government aren’t they?

This would be a first step!

My intended speech at the Texas Democratic Convention 2010

The Texas Democratic Convention 2010 in Corpus Christi was pivotal in my motivation for running for Texas House, District 84.

I had a long speech prepared, but ended up giving bits and pieces of this speech in 24 different gatherings on Friday and Saturday. I loved speaking to people at the convention because one of my intentions for running for office is to inspire people to do things in their own way and with their own talents to make their community kinder, happier, unified, compassionate places.

Here is a copy of that speech:

My name is Carol Morgan and I’m your candidate for the Texas House, District 84. I’m proud to be from Lubbock, Texas. Home of Buddy Holly, Land of the flat open plain, we have more sky, where we can see clearly every sunrise and every sunset—a metaphor for all the possibilities—an uncluttered vision available for anyone with a dream. It’s incomprehensible beauty that is matched ONLY by the beauty of its people.

 In a time of such derisiveness and cynicism, I’m constantly asked why I would want to run for political office?

The reasons are so clear to me, just five words: I WANT TO BELIEVE AGAIN. 

 I want to believe again—to regain the visions and dreams of our ancestors who came from the political chaos of Europe, the famines of Ireland and the interiors of Mexico. They had GRIT and they had GANAS—“el fuego en el vientre”—fire in the belly-and they tamed a wild land into a place of freedom and noble possibilities.

I want to believe again. I think about the noble statesmen of Texas past—Sam Rayburn, Lyndon Johnson, Pete Laney, George Mahon, and Ann Richards. Certainly they made political deals—but they kept their people, their constituents, at the forefront of every deal. I want to be one of those. I want to believe again.

 Right now, Texas is a state of many contrasts. We are #1 in business in the United States. And I am steadfastly committed to maintaining that honor—but we are also #1 in child hunger, #1 in the amount of uninsured, #2 in the number of students who drop out of high school, I want to believe again. I’ll never forget the words of Barbara Jordan at the 1976 Democratic National Convention. “Equality for all, privilege for none.” I was twenty-three years old, I had voted for Richard Nixon in my first election as a voter and I was discouraged, disillusioned and worst of all, cynical. I didn’t want to be cynical. I wanted to believe with every part of my heart that people were at the heart of every governmental action. Those words resonated within me and they still do so today.

Yes, we have challenges, but I want to believe our difficulties are mere opportunities—to get it RIGHT, once and for all. I want to believe again. I want Texas to be #1 in opportunity—whether your name is Huang, Haddad, Kapoor or Singh, Gonzales or Smith. And it shouldn’t matter if you are Stephen or Stephanie either.

I want to believe again, that’s why my campaign is based on education, economic development and energy–these three pillars will maintain Texas’ greatness and honor Her to become even better.

 I want to believe again—that we can be a state of two parties that work together in a spirit of cooperation and mediation keeping our people FIRST in everything we do. I will work hard to make that happen. 

 I want to believe again. Public opinion of politicians is at an all time low, but I want all of us to change those attitudes—by having our words match our actions, so we can transform skepticism into trust and bring back nobility, morality and ethics to Texas. All it will take is three seats, three seats to make everyone believe again.

I want to believe again. And I want you to believe it, too. Thank you.