Al Franken's Blog, page 64

May 22, 2013

Grand Rapids Herald-Review: Sen. Franken: Every measure should be explored to ease the pain at the pump for Minnesotans

U.S. Sen. Al Franken (D-Minn.) made the following statement in response to the overnight spike in gas prices in Minnesota as a result of the temporary closure of two oil refineries in the Midwest:


“I’m very concerned about how gas prices in Minnesota have spiked following the temporary refinery closures. Every measure should be explored to ease pain at the pump,” said Sen. Franken, the Chairman of the Energy Subcommittee on the Senate Energy and Natural Resource Committee. “I’m currently working with the Department of Energy to explore whether there’s a way to make sure that we can avoid having multiple temporary refinery closures in the same area of the country—which is part of the reason why we’re seeing the spike in gas prices.”


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Published on May 22, 2013 11:50

May 21, 2013

NBC: How to help Oklahoma tornado victims

The loss of life and stunning devastation in Oklahoma City suburbs after a monster tornado ripped through the area are heart-wrenching. But within hours, relief organizations were getting out the message on how to help.


American Red Cross


The Red Cross has set up shelters in various communities. You can donate to the Red Cross Disaster Relief fund, and the organization also suggests giving blood at your local hospital or blood bank.


If you’re searching for a missing relative, check Red Cross Safe & Well’s site. And please register if you’re within the disaster region. The site is designed to make communication easier after a tragedy like this.


If you want to send a $10 donation to the Disaster Relief fund via text message, you can do so by texting the word REDCROSS to 90999. As in the case with other donations via mobile, the donation will show up on your wireless bill, or be deducted from your balance if you have a prepaid phone. You need to be 18 or older, or have parental permission, to donate this way. (If you change your mind, text the word STOP to 90999.)


Phone: 1-800-RED CROSS (1-800-733-2767); for Spanish speakers, 1-800-257-7575; for TDD, 1-800-220-4095.


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Published on May 21, 2013 07:16

May 16, 2013

MSNBC: Al Franken’s financial reform proposal: A sampling of the reaction

As the Securities and Exchange Commission commissioners, debt-issuers and others credit-rating industry participants held a round table discussion on Tuesday to assess the current credit-rating industry, the world wide web exploded with commentary, reacting to Minnesota Senator Al Franken’s interview on MSNBC’s The Last Word with Lawrence O’Donnell. Sen. Franken explained in his interview his proposed legislation that offers changes to the credit-rating system by implementing an independent board that decides which rating firm rates a financial product, and while the three-panel round-table analyzed the Franken Amendment, people on the internet also reviewed whether substantial changes to the rating process are necessary.


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Published on May 16, 2013 14:22

Star Tribune: Franken’s plan for ratings reform finds no SEC consensus

Sen. Al Franken pleaded with the Securities and Exchange Commission Tuesday to change what he considers a hopelessly corrupted ratings system for financial products.


The Minnesota Democrat believes rating companies promoted “junk” in exchange for continued business from financial institutions. An amendment he co-sponsored with Sen. Roger Wicker, R.-Miss., to the 2010 Wall Street reform required action if a study revealed ongoing conflicts of interest between ratings agencies and companies that hire them to judge the risk of financial products.


That study, released in December 2012, concluded that the potential for conflicts remains. But the effort to change financial product ratings has progressed glacially.


“My plea to you today is that you take action,” Franken told commissioners at the start of Tuesday’s daylong hearing to discuss how to fix conflicts of interest that led to AAA ratings for virtually worthless securities, which helped cause the Great Recession.


SEC commissioners listened to 26 experts from the financial services sector, ratings agencies, academia and government, as well as Franken, Wicker and U.S. Rep. Scott Garrett, R.-N.J.


The hearing left in limbo Franken’s and Wicker’s proposal to let an SEC-appointed commission name the agencies that perform initial risk assessments of structured financial investments such as mortgage-backed securities.


“Investors are always going to have to rely on these ratings,” Franken said. “A pension manager making investments for the pension funds of volunteer firefighters in Kandiyohi County in central Minnesota simply doesn’t have the resources to do his or her own complex credit risk analysis.”


Franken has said he expects SEC action within months to address conflicts of interest in the ratings process.


That timetable is optimistic, said Norm Ornstein of the American Enterprise Institute.


“Once you begin changing, the big money comes out to try to thwart it or dilute it,” Ornstein said, referring to the financial services industry as well as the rating agencies. “The review process has a lot of people involved who don’t want anything to happen,” he said. “One thing I realize after 43 years in Washington is if you expect it’s all going to happen in the next two years, you’re going to be disappointed.”…


Public policy specialist Jay Kiedrowski of the University of Minnesota sees those moves as efforts from a chastened ratings industry.


“They had been convinced [packaging mortgages] was viable,” Kiedrowski said. “They didn’t have the ability to do the proper analysis.”


But Franken read from an e-mail obtained by investigators in the S&P fraud suit: “Let’s hope we are all wealthy and retired by the time this house of cards falters,” it said.


Dave Berg of Eden Prairie takes that cynicism personally. Berg did not attend Tuesday’s roundtable, but Franken quoted from him while speaking to the SEC commissioners. Berg lost his IT job in 2008 and has not worked full time since. Now 60, Berg has spent practically all of his retirement savings living day-to-day.


As he drew down those funds, the stock market crashed and shrank his nest egg.


“You would think a AAA rating would be a good investment,” Beg said in an interview. “We depend on the rating system to be accurate. When banks pay for AAA ratings, that doesn’t lend a lot of faith.”


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Published on May 16, 2013 13:05

May 14, 2013

Star Tribune: Sen. Franken says SEC must change ratings method for financial products

U.S. Sen. Al Franken told reporters Monday that he believes the Securities and Exchange Commission is legally obligated to act on a study that shows conflicts of interest among financial institutions and the rating agencies that assess their investment offerings.


Franken came out swinging in anticipation of an SEC hearing Tuesday that could change the way the riskiness of investment products gets judged.


Franken wants to let an independent panel appointed by the SEC choose which rating agencies financial institutions must use to initially assess risks of their products.


The financial industry has generally opposed those efforts. The matter now lies with an SEC Credit Ratings Roundtable, which meets for the first time Tuesday to discuss alternatives.


In the run-up to the Great Recession, allowing financial institutions to choose their own rating services led to AAA ratings for what Franken called “junk” that cost Americans trillions of dollars.


Rating agencies knew that if they didn’t give top financial safety clearances to very risky financial instruments, they would “not get the next lucrative contract” from banks and brokerages, the Minnesota Democrat charged.


Franken sponsored an amendment to the Wall Street reform act passed in 2010 to deal with what he considers inherent conflicts of interest in the current ratings process. The final bill only required a study to determine the extent of the problem.


A study released in December 2012 that found continuing conflicts of interest should be enough to force the SEC to act, Franken said Monday.


“If we don’t do this,” Franken said, “we’re setting ourselves up for another meltdown.”


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Published on May 14, 2013 16:33

MSNBC: Franken aims at reform of credit-rating system


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What is Democratic Sen. Al Franken’s big idea to clean up the credit rating system? Transparency.


Franken, a junior senator from Minnesota, criticizes the Securities and Exchange Commission’s inaction on a 2010 amendment he sponsored that would have eliminated conflicts of interest in the credit-rating business model.


“Our financial system is kind of rigged,” Franken said in his first prime-time interview Monday with The Last Word with Lawrence O’Donnell.


Franken wants to institute an independent board made up of investors, financial analysts and bankers who would determine rating criteria, instead of the ratings firms.


“They made a lot of money, but Americans lost trillions of dollars, they lost their homes, lost their businesses, they lost their pension savings, they lost their jobs,” Franken said of the failure of the ratings process that contributed to the financial collapse of 2008.


“Minnesotans lost their jobs because the credit rating agencies didn’t do the only job they’re supposed to have, the only job they had, which is to give accurate, objective ratings to financial products,” he said.


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Published on May 14, 2013 13:24

West Central Tribune: U.S. Sen. Al Franken offers advice for college graduates


When Sen. Al Franken speaks at college commencements, he urges graduates to hug their parents, “a lot.”


Franken stopped in Willmar on Saturday on his way to deliver the commencement address at the University of Minnesota Morris.


“I’m going to start off by congratulating the parents, because the parents get ignored sometimes in these things,” he said. “As a parent who’s watched two of my children graduate from college, I know it’s an enormous day for them, too.”


Franken said he usually speaks at a couple commencements a year. “It’s a nice thing, because everybody’s happy,” he said.


Franken said he planned to talk about the Morris campus.


“It’s such a special place,” he said, and he brags about it in Washington, D.C. “They have done incredible things, become an incredibly green campus.”


His commencement speeches don’t contain a lot of platitudes, he said, but he does offer a little advice.


“I tell them there are some of you who have a plan of what to do with your life and everything is going to work exactly the way you thought it would, and I congratulate both of you,” he said.


“For everyone else, there are going to be things that happen that aren’t according to plan. … Success may not come the way you thought it would or it may not be what you thought it was.”


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Published on May 14, 2013 13:07

WCCO: Franken: $1.6 Million Available For Community Health Clinics

Senator Al Franken announced Friday that 16 Minnesota community health centers will be eligible to apply for more than $1.6 million in funds to help uninsured patients.


According to Sen. Franken’s office, the funds are a portion of the $150 million made available to help community health centers via the 2010 health reform law.


Franken says community health centers regularly help uninsured citizens, and the funding will help them to continue their important work.


“Community health centers in Minnesota already provide health care to more than 181,000 Minnesotans and are uniquely positioned to support efforts to get uninsured people in our state enrolled in health coverage,” Franken said. “These funds will help them carry out this important effort.”


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Published on May 14, 2013 07:35

May 10, 2013

Keloland: Lawmakers Push For Greener Farm Bill

Some federal lawmakers are pushing for a greener farm bill.


U.S. Senator Al Franken wants the farm bill to include grants and loans for small wind farms as well as for more blender pumps for ethanol.


“It’s good for Minnesota. It’s good for our region, which is a leader in this field and it’s good for the entire country because it will help wean us off foreign oil, it will create American jobs and that’s what’s so important,” Franken said.


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Published on May 10, 2013 09:15

May 8, 2013

MyFox47: Sen. Franken thanks families during speech at Military Sisterhood Luncheon


Military families from southeastern Minnesota gathered Saturday to celebrate strength and togetherness at an annual luncheon.


This is the fourth year that the Beyond the Yellow Ribbon organization has held a Military Sisterhood Luncheon to honor the mothers, wives, daughters, sisters and grandmothers of military families.


Minnesota Senator Al Franken was in attendance as this year’s keynote speaker, joining everyone in the room and those who could not attend as one of the many who take pride in celebrating not only the service men and women, but the families that they leave behind in order to serve.


“I never served myself, but I did a lot of USO tours and that’s where I learned a lot about that,” explains Sen. Franken, “and I learned about how tough it is on families and how re-integration back into civilian life is very much helped by family support.”


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Published on May 08, 2013 08:57

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