May 22, 2012

Military, out of country ballots available tomorrow (AUDIO)

We’re only about six weeks away from a presidential primary election.  State and local election officials are starting the absentee voting process for a special group of Missourians.

Thousands of Missourians are or will be overseas by the time February 7th gets here.  Absentee ballots for them are available tomorrow from local election authorities. For those out of the country, applying for one of those ballots is a little more complicated than it is for stay-at-homes.

Deputy Secretary of State Waylene Hiles in the elections office says applications for those ballots are available on the Secretary of State’s web page. In most circumstances the ballot cannot be cast on the internet.  They have to be sent back through regular mail or through shipping services.  .

However, a person in one of more than fifty hostile zones can use the internet or a fax machine to return the ballot.  The rest have to use regular mail or express services to get their ballots back by February 7th. 

It’s possible to authorize a guardian or a relative get a ballot and return it to the election authority office without the voters waiting for weeks to get the ballot and for weeks to get it back.

AUDIO: Interview with Waylene Hiles 8:02 mp3

 

 

 

 

 

Battleship Arizona records being saved in St. Louis (AUDIO)

Seventy years ago today, the Imperial Japanese Navy attacked the U.S. naval base at Pearl Harbor, Hawaii. About 2,400 U.S. personnel were killed including 1,177 officers and crewmen aboard the battleship Arizona. It remains at the bottom of the Harbor beneath a memorial bearing the names of those lost on her, and others who served on the Arizona and will be laid to rest there.

One connection to that battle can be found over 4,000 miles east, at the National Personnel Records Center in St. Louis. It houses more than 56 million records on U.S. military individuals dating back to 1841. Among them are several hundred files on crewmembers of the Arizona.

Those files were aboard the battleship when it sank. They are now are undergoing conservation measures by the Center’s archivists.

Director Bryan McGraw says he and his staff didn’t know what they had until a request came in for one of those records. “Wow, this one is from the Arizona; that type of thing. So we’ve started a process to take the ones that we know of based upon crew manifests and things, to pull those records and give them some additional conservation treatments because they’re in such fragile condition.”

McGraw says he knows of a few hundred such personnel files from the Arizona that survive. These include a wealth of information on each sailor. “It would have things about their entrance and physical, it would have their assignment history, it would have a variety of demographic data about the individual, various awards or decorations if they earned it, training reports, fitness reports, performance appraisals; those types of things, any kind of discharge or separation documents.” They also including facts of particular interest to families. “It may also have information about dependents; if they got married while they were in the service, if they had children, beneficiaries, things like that. So, if you’re constructing a family history…family tree, these types of records are very, very popular for researchers.”

McGraw says the documents have sustained water damage, bear residue from fires from the battle, and some still smell like fuel. A variety of steps are being taken to save them. That includes mending, humidifying and flattening and removing fasteners, rust and debris.

To see images of some of the documents, courtsey of the Center, visit this [slideshow of documents].

Once each document has been treated as necessary, McGraw says it goes back on file. “These will be kept in a secure room that we have where we store prominent records of famous and historic individuals and figures. They will be kept in there because of the damage that they sustained, and the historical value.”

The project could take months or years before it is completed, as the staff continues to answer other requests for information.

For information on the Center and to learn how to make a request, visit its website.

AUDIO:  interview with National Personnel Records Center Director Bryan McGraw – 10:34

McCaskill wants Afghanistan money kept here (AUDIO)

Senator McCaskill says hundreds of millions of dollars are better spent on roads and bridges in this country instead of on big projects in Afghanistan.  She says the projects in Afghanistan aren’t doing any good.

McCaskill is a member of the Senate Armed Services Committee who has regularly criticized military contracting programs in Iraq and in Afghanistan.  She wants to cut as much as 700-milion dollars out of the Commander’s Emergency Response Program and put it into the federal highway trust fund. 

McCaskill says the money is in a program that was intended for finance small projects designed to win the hearts and minds of people.  But she says it’s become a runaway program. She says hundreds of millions of dollars are being used for projects built in unsecure environments and cannot be sustained.  .

McCaskill says teams of inspectors have reported many major projects cannot be protected from insurgent attacks and are not improving services to people or loyalty to a government.  She says the defense department inspector general has reported as much as 38-milion dollars in the program is vulnerable to abuse, fraud, or waste.

The Pentagon calls the program “critical” to fighting insurgency. 

McCaskill introduced her proposal during debate on the new defense appropriations authorization bill but the Senate did not vote on it before approving the bill. McCaskill still has other avenues to remove the money from the budget.

 McCaskill speaks in senate 9:11 mp3

National Guard documents past decade in book, DVD (AUDIO)

The Remember My Service Project is a compilation of letters, interviews and photos that span from September 11, 2001 through the end of 2010. National Guard historian Alan Brown says he gathered a lot of information for this project.

He says the book will have some journal pages in the back of it for guardsmen to fill out with some memories of their service. Brown says this book will be an asset to future generations who want to know about military service in a post-September 11th world.

Brown says the guard has been deployed around the word, and started the Agribusiness Development Team in Afghanistan, as well as helped out domestically with Katrina and the tornado in Joplin. All of these missions and interviews with families are documented in this project.

Brown says the guardsmen will get their book and DVD this December, most likely when the platoons have Family Day. Copies will be available to anyone else who wants to see the Missouri National Guard history later.

AUDIO Allison Blood reports. Mp3 [1:01]

Hartzler says defense cuts are too drastic (AUDIO)

Congresswoman Vicky Hartzler

The Super Committee charged with coming up with a trillion dollars in budget recommendations has failed, and Congresswoman Vicky Hartzler says now defense spending is on the line.

She says President Obama has defended those cuts as necessary for balancing the budget, and that’s not the case. She calls him irresponsible as Commander in Cheif to let the funding take a hit. She says the percentage of the budget allocated to defense spending is already the lowest its been in years, and more cuts would cripple national security. But not everyone in Congress agrees. She says she’ll be working with others to find someplace else to cut, like mandatory spending programs.

She says she’ll be introducing legislation that reforms mandatory spending programs to save the country money that could be put into defense spending. Hartzler represents the areas that contain Fort Leonard Wood and Whiteman Airforce Base.

AUDIO Allison Blood reports. Mp3 [1:00]