Saturday, June 14, 2008

Carlynton has sports and participation troubles. Some school board members

For a few years, I was a swim coach at Carlynton with the CSC, the Carhttp://www.blogger.com/img/gl.link.giflynton Swim Club. Plus, I coached at Crafton at a municipal pool and the Crafton Crocs. Great fun. With the growing boys and changing duties (last fall I ran for city council and city controller), it made more sense to switch to another team and our time is now been spent working out at the JCC.

Furthermore, I ran for public office in a state senate district that includes most of those areas that are west of the city. PA Senate 42 stretches from South Side, where we live, to Green Tree to Crafton to Montour, Scott and the Rocks. So, I like to stay involved with the communities, to say the least.

There is some weirdness going on with a suburban school district outside of the city. Go figure. At Carlynton, a few want to change the school's facility use policy. Bad ideas.

To help get the issue out and understood, another blog has been launched, http://Carlynton.blogspot.com.

Generally, you win by addition. When subtraction is used -- defeat comes quickly, often and with a vengeance.

In the realm of education, being open minded, competitive, inclusive, and outgoing brings big benefits. I want to invest in areas where good things happen and were there is hope and opportunities to create literate Olympians here.

If you'd like to help with this issue at Carlynton, let me know.




By Francesmary Modugno


Some elected school board members of the Carlynton School District are proposing significant changes to how the community uses our facilities. Their policy proposal is sure to cause great hardships to kids and families throughout the district. They want to limit children’s after school programs run by parent volunteers to groups consisting of 100% Carlynton students, kicking out their friends from neighboring areas. Groups that fail to meet that requirement would be shut down or forced to pay thousands of dollars in additional fees. Some school board members want to go a step further and ban adult programs from using the classrooms, pool, gym and fields.

Think again. Let’s side with inclusion and participation so our kids are kept off the streets. We should help the program leaders work with our youth so they have goals to shoot for rather than shooting at each other out of boredom and turf war madness. And let’s make our schools centers for education, culture and recreation for citizens of all ages. Our adult residents should see the schools as resources for them as well.

Curtailing opportunities by advancing a policy to limit programs to school-aged children is short sighted:

  • The proposed plans being pushed by some school board members would destroy swim lessons for our pre-schoolers - that's a safety issue!
  • Adult GED programs, AARP and Silver Sneakers would be barred – not welcomed at Carlynton.
  • Girl Scouts, Boy Scouts and local youth groups with kids and volunteer leaders from other municipalities would get axed by the proposed changes, too.

Every Carlynton resident could be impacted by the lack of quality local programs because our kids are going to be hitting the street corners and not be engaged in positive, directed pursuits. The majority of people in the district would be denied access to the properties their taxes built and maintain. No more walks with friends on the track for residents. Walkers, use the streets and co-exist with the kids displaced there too, just hanging out.

The current policy allows youth sports teams and any group to use Carlynton facilities at cost provided the group's enrollment has 75% district membership. The activities with fewer district residents (below 75%) pay heavy fees. Even with this current policy, several youth sports teams told the school board they have trouble fielding teams. Allowing some non-residents to join our clubs gives local programs more stability, more income and lower-fees for in-district participants. Still, some directors want to push forward their agenda to curtail our children’s opportunities.

The May 27, 2008, school board meeting featured several leaders of our youth programs. These leaders clearly stated that changes to the after school policy will wipe out opportunities for our kids and impose additional burdens to our respective programs. Notes.

Schools need to be a part of our community. Families need to keep our kids engaged in safe, healthy, wholesome fitness and team building activities. With rising gas prices, we need to create more opportunities for our kids right here, near their homes. Because Carlynton is the smallest school district in the region, this can only happen if after school activities are open not only to our own kids, but to their friends in our neighboring communities as well.

Still, some elected school board members want to kick out neighboring kids from our programs and raise program fees. The organizations can’t afford those proposals and neither can local tax payers and parents. In essence, these directors want to impose on Carlynton residents an additional facilities tax for the use of school properties that we have already paid for with one of the highest millage rates in Allegheny County.

The reasons these directors give for excluding non-residents:

  1. Non-resident children take away opportunities from Carlynton children because the non-residents outperform Carlynton children (directors Brown, DiPietro and Schirripa)

  1. By allowing non-residents into Carlynton programs, we are “training the competition” and that’s the reason the Carlynton JV and Varsity teams don’t win more often. (directors Brown, DiPietro and Schirripa)

  1. School facilities are for the use of school-age children only. (directors Brown and Schirripa)


Their proposals are detrimental to all Carlynton residents, especially children:

  1. There is no evidence from any group that non-resident children are taking opportunities away from Carlynton kids. Furthermore, it is insulting to Carlynton children to imply that their peers from other districts are better than they are. Moreover, these directors are implying that they need to create artificial environments for Carlynton children to succeed because they don’t think Carlynton children can succeed on their own. That’s insulting, too.

  1. There is no evidence that youth sports groups “train the competition”. Nor is there evidence that non-district youth athletes are the reason Carlynton Jr/Sr high school teams don’t win more often. No way. If non-resident athletes get expelled, they would likely go elsewhere for training and enrich other clubs by keeping those teams’ costs in line. Meanwhile, Carlynton clubs would be unable to field teams and would fold. Sure, Carlynton clubs might not “train the competition”, but they would certainly not be training Carlynton children either. With the plans advocated by some directors, Carlynton's youth would have to go elsewhere and pay higher fees, if our kids are fortunate enough to have parents who could drive them places and pay more money for after school activities. Carlynton youths whose parents can’t provide this type of support would be left out. Their policy attempt to not “train the competition,” results in Carlynton youth athletes being less prepared to compete at the Jr/Sr high school level. Their proposals would backfire and ensure the exact opposite of what the directors are claiming they want to do.

  1. State law (SC 775) allows the use of school facilities by non-school age children and other groups. Carlynton residents have made a tremendous investment in the school facilities. As stated in the School District Policy: “..our schools are an integral part of the community and in order that maximum benefit might be derived by the school system and community from properties held by the district, should be available to the public for education and recreational use at such times when school is not in session…” While school property is primarily for school use, no where is it written that it is exclusively for school use. After spending millions of dollars on facilities, one would hope that the residents could get some return on their investment. This return comes via activities at the school.


The evidence is clear. Carlynton does not gain by excluding non-residents and Carlynton will lose greatly by doing so. The evidence confirms that Carlynton residents gain when our facilities are open to both residents and non-residents.


Many groups stated on the record:

  1. Non-resident help Carlynton groups field teams. Without the non-residents, these teams would fold. That would be lost opportunities for Carlynton children.

  1. Non-residents help in keeping lower fees for residents. Additional members, especially in lean years, help with stability and organizational survival.

  1. More members creates more competitive teams and encourages young athletes to strive to improve their skills.


The non-residents want to be in Carlynton clubs are our friends and neighbors who live in Ingram, Thornburgh, Greentree, and Scott. They live blocks away from the Carlynton elementary schools and down the street from Carlynton high school, itself located in the Montour school district. These non-residents want to be in Carlynton clubs because they are friends with Carlynton youths. Kids want to be in after school activities with their buddies. Some live closer to Carlynton than their own schools and many attend parochial schools, especially St. Philip in Crafton. They consider Crafton their “home town” – where they shop, worship, work, go to school and have fun.

Being neighborly helps. Carlynton Jr/Sr High School was built in the Montour School district. Montour provides gymnastic facilities to Carlynton because Carlynton has none. Let's return the generosity of our neighbors and go a step further by being the most welcoming school district around.


Carlynton is the smallest school district in the area. Plus, we have the greatest number of students on public assistance. Forty percent receive some form of federal aid. That’s more than twice the rate of neighboring school districts. Those districts offer programs and activities not found at Carlynton. Their policies are less restrictive than Carlynton’s current policy, welcoming non-resident youth. Let's hope those districts don't ever adopt a similar “no outsiders here” attitude put forth by some of Carlynton’s school board members.


At the April 17, 2008, school board meeting, the board members considered six (6) different proposals to replace the current policy. These proposals had numerous problems, including charging excessively high fees in the thousands of dollars to sports teams to host home games. The fees were far in excess of the actual cost of running the facilities.


At that meeting, the urge from citizens to the directors was to consider the impact of the proposed policy changes. The text and video of
the statements and discussions are online. Citizens pointed out that Residents already pay for the facilities through their taxes and charging groups a fee above cost to use facilities would be a form of additional taxation. Instead of excluding non-residents or charging a fee to groups that include non-residents, charge a facilities usage fee to non-residents, much the way many municipal swim pools do.


Counter proposal:

  1. Resident groups with a majority of district residents use district facilities at cost;

  1. Resident groups give priority in membership to residents; and

  1. Non-resident participants pay a small facility usage fee. Sure, non-residents do not contribute to the tax base that supports the facilities. The sum of $60 per year, (or pro-rated at $5 per month) represents 50% of the per capita cost of Carlynton facilities operation and management. This is more than fair compensation to the district because no group uses Carlynton’s facilities 50% of the time they are available.

In follow up meetings, the board heard more details about process:

  1. Team are ensuring maximum participation of Carlynton youths in clubs using district properties;

  1. Youth sports and other groups aim to create the best possible environments for members, thus insuring a fertile training ground for future Carlynton Jr/Sr high school athletes;

  1. Teams aim for fairness in the relationship with tax payers. Non-residents charges are equivalent to what tax payers are paying to maintain facilities. The additional monies would offset the cost of running the facilities, thereby decreasing the facilities costs to all Carlynton residents; and

  1. Carlynton parents benefit by avoiding additional “facilities tax” for after school programs.

In this way, Carlynton youths win, the taxpayers win and Carlynton maintains positive relationships with its neighbors.


Hopefully, Carlynton residents will stand up for their rights and protect their children’s futures.

2-fer LTEs (Letters To Editors) against war on drugs and for Barr for President

LTEs on Drug War by Mik and Harold

Mark Crowley:

Do you remember my nagging about using the Barr candidacy to promote libertarian ideas, I suggested a Pgh Post-Gazette editorial about the drug war being an LTE opportunity. Well Mik and Harold both submitted LTEs and they were both printed today -- a two-fer.

Here's the link. Their LTEs are the last ones.
http://www.post-gazette.com/pg/08165/889584-35.stm

Mark


Minds need to change on the drug war

It was disheartening to read about the consequences of the
drug war in the Post-Gazette's June 3 editorial ("Drug War:
In the U.S. and Mexico, the Casualties Pile Up"). There is
no doubt the harm caused by this flawed policy is
far-reaching and has dire effects not only on individuals
but also nations.

This issue must be addressed if there is to be any hope of
eliminating the tragic results of the drug war on people and
communities. Fortunately, there is a candidate who will
initiate a sensible approach to the issue, Libertarian
presidential candidate Bob Barr.

That's right, Bob "Drug Warrior" Barr has realized there is
a better approach and come out against the drug war. He
would completely reorient federal law enforcement
priorities. Clearly there is a better way to approach the
issue of drugs, and I hope Bob Barr can bring some reason on
this issue to Washington, D.C.

MICHAEL J. ROBERTSON, Sligo


Barr can help

I read with interest your June 3 editorial about Mexico and
our failed "drug war," which is really a war against people
and human nature. You noted the elephant in the living room
-- the $400 billion U.S. recreational drug market.

While I don't use drugs other than caffeine and alcohol, and
while I abhor unnecessary violence, I find it both
refreshing and reassuring that many people still take action
to do what's in their own best economic interest, rather
than relying on government handouts.

I'll probably support the Libertarian Party presidential
candidate, former drug warrior Bob Barr, who lately has been
lobbying in favor of states' rights regarding medical
marijuana and for ending the federal government's calloused
role in keeping dying people from getting their medicine.
It's not just cancer patients deprived of their medicine,
slain government officials in other lands and children
caught in the drug dealers' crossfire here at home who are
the victims of this myopic repeat of Prohibition. Mr. Barr
rightly recognizes that our privacy rights also are a
casualty.

I'm encouraged that Sens. Barack Obama and Hillary Clinton
also have vowed to let sick people obtain their medicine.
And if Mr. Barr's candidacy does nothing more than prevent
drug warrior and global interventionist John McCain from
attaining the White House, I will consider it a resounding
success.

HAROLD KYRIAZI, Schenley Heights

Friday, June 13, 2008

Schenley proposal called irresponsible'

Yes. Mark Roosevelt's proposal to close Schenley High School, a top performing school, is irresponsible.
Schenley proposal called irresponsible': "Schenley proposal called irresponsible'
Mark Roosevelt is not responsible. To have the slogan, Excellence for All -- one needs to find areas of success, such as Schenley High School, and replicate it. Sustain the high performing places.

Roosevelt's plan is about squashing excellence. Roosevelt seems like he wants domination of all, not excellence.

The full reports from Roosevelt have not been released to the masses and reported upon by the Post-Gazette. Hence, that is were the irresponsible resides.

The headline from the P-G is telling.

Mr. Dowd, a former school board member, said it would be foolish for the district to overhaul Schenley with little more than hoped-for taxes from a Reizenstein redevelopment.
Mr. Dowd says something I am in full agreement with. Read the quote and all the words.

It would be foolish for the district to do an overhaul of Schenley. However, it would not be foolish for the district to do a modest rehab so as to remove the asbestos and patch a bit of the walls and ceilings.

It is Mark Roosevelt who says that the cost is $76 million -- and his plan is an overhaul of all the systems. That is foolish. That is stupid. That is NOT want we need nor what we want.

We don't need a food court.
We don't need air conditioning throughout the entire building.
We don't need to rehab the pipe organ in the auditorium.
We don't need to change all the electrical.

We need the school to be touched up this summer and resume operations again in September.

An overhaul is foolish. That's the only thing that small thinking, high spending, consultant driven, out-of-touch politicians like Mark Roosevelt can spin.

Fix the school and save money by just doing what must be done.

The new windows are being screwed shut in some spaces because the warranty work has not been requested.

Do the basics.

Sustain a good school.

Ask Mr. Dowd if he feels he has been lied to in the past by Mr. Roosevelt.

Ask Mr. Down about the ALAs and the performance of the extended school year and how few of the students go to classes in August.

Ask Mr. Dowd about the performance of Reizenstein in the past.

Ask Mr. Dowd about when the fight to save Schenley really began and why it was on the closed school list when the right-sizing plan looked at Elementary Schools.

Ask Mr. Down about the plan for Vo Tech Education. That was promised when South Vo Tech closed. We are still waiting.

Peduto's Schenley plan praised, panned - Pittsburgh Tribune-Review

Peduto's Schenley plan praised, panned - Pittsburgh Tribune-Review A Pittsburgh councilman's last-ditch plan to save Schenley High School got a sharp rebuke from school Superintendent Mark Roosevelt but praise from parents fighting to keep the Oakland landmark open.
Frankly, what Mark Roosevelt says any more is not going to matter.

Schenley will either be open again in September or it will be open again in a future year. Schenley is too important to be closed. The future school boards will re-do what he wants to do -- if this board doesn't do it anyway.

What is preposterous is how an entire high school reform task force can do work for a couple of years, with hand-picked mandate from Mark Roosevelt. Then, Mark Roosevelt tosses their suggestions out the window.

On one meeting, the work of one person (Mark Roosevelt) tries to take down the legacy of 91 years and academic success of many students and families each year.

What is preposterous is how clueless Mark Roosevelt is. And, his out-of-town consultants and out-of-town advisors are out-of-touch. The golden parachute from Mark Roosevelt is preposterous.

To begin to build new high schools -- rather than use the capacity of what is already built -- is preposterous. To close 22 schools and make some K-8 one year and then to try to open new schools and make then for grades 6 to 12 another year is preposterous.

Roosevelt dismissed parts of the plan as "preposterous."


What is wrong is Mark Roosevelt.

"From what I can tell, this is a couple students who did some work," Roosevelt said. "Almost every fact throughout the thing is wrong. In some places it's so preposterous. As a paper for a college term paper, it would barely pass muster."

Roosevelt is wrong because Roosevelt didn't do his homework.

Campaign for Liberty

Attention Ron Paul supporters:

If you haven't heard Ron Paul's big announcement last night, we are entering a new chapter in the freedom movement! Ron Paul announced that he will be leading a new national organization called the Campaign for Liberty!!

Because of this major announcement, and exciting new campaign to spread the message of freedom, peace, and prosperity, the Original Ron Paul Pittsburgh and Western PA meetup group (#97) has undergone an exciting change to show Ron Paul that we are behind him in this new endeavor, and WE WILL CONTINUE THE FIGHT!!!

The Original Ron Paul Pittsburgh and Western PA Meetup Group, is now Ron Paul's Campaign For Liberty: Pittsburgh and SW PA!! We are one of the first Ron Paul Meetup Group's in the nation to have undergone this change in support of the new organization. This group's new focus is to facilitate grassroots organization at the local level for Ron Paul's Campaign For Liberty.

The Meetup group page has been updated to reflect this new focus: Ron Paul's Campaign For Liberty: Pittsburgh and SW PA.

In addition to a new "About us" page, two new meetups have been added: The Revolution March in Washington, DC, on July 12th, and The Ron Paul "Convention" in Minnesota, on September 2nd. In addition to the two meetups already scheduled, a first-ever meetup of Ron Paul's Campaign For Liberty: Pittsburgh and SW PA will be called and will be posted in the next few days!! Please look for that, mark your calender, and plan to attend!!

There is good reason for calling the first meetup. In Ron Paul's announcement of his new organization he set two very important goals. First, he asked for 100,000 members by September. Wouldn't it be great to double or triple that number by September? We could if we promote it!! We must get the word out about this new campaign so the goal can be exceeded!!

The second goal he set is to get 11,000 people to Minnesota on September 2nd for his rally/convention! We would like to coordinate the transportation and help with lodging arrangements for as many local supporters as want to expirience that event!!

The third thing that we want to do is discuss new and exciting ways to do something that Ron has asked us to do and that is "SPREAD THE MESSAGE!!" So many people in this country are being forced to chose between option A and option B and don't like either of them! We want to show them that there is a third option, option C (of course, C standing for Constitution). We want to show them that Americans can be free, can be at peace, and can be prosperous at the same time!! It's a message that unites us all regardless of party, or religious affiliation, and regardless of race or social status. It's also the only way to save this nation!!!

So the primaries are over, but it's not the end!! This is just the beginning of the glorious revolution to restore our great republic!! We now know that Ron Paul is stepping up to lead us in the fight through his Campaign for Liberty!!

So please join Ron Paul's Campaign for Liberty at www.campaignforliberty.com, and join the local effort to restore freedom!!!

Any questions, comments, ideas, or suggestions you can always email ronpaulpgh@gmail.com, or click on the "email me" link under the "organized by" section on the meetup page.

Ron Paul's Campaign For Liberty: Pittsburgh and SW PA has a site too.

Honz Man Show to talk, we think, about Schenley

Watch Friday's show on PCNC:

Fred Honsberger offers thought provoking and entertaining insight on politics and news during the hour-long talk show.

Honsberger LIVE starts at 10 a.m Talk to Honsberger live by calling (412) 333-PCNC during the show. Honsberger LIVE airs:Monday-Friday 10 a.m. (repeats 5 p.m. each day)
If anyone sees the show, let us know. Send a mini report. I'm going to be busy.

Thursday, June 12, 2008

I'm # 33 and Erik is #34 -- Monday the 16th at Pgh Public Schools Board of Ed Bldg

To speak on Monday, June 16, 2008 to the Pgh Public School Board and Administrators call this phone #: 412-622-3600.

I just called, Thursday at 4 pm, and got onto the list. I'm number 33.

Makes me thirsty.

I'd love for you to get onto the agenda too.

The secretary will ask you what you are speaking about. I told her, "Fix Schenley." My son's topic, simply, "Keep Frick."

She'll also ask for an address and organization.

Don't wait. Do it.

If you can't show up that night -- get your name on the list and be 'counted' at least.

The meeting starts at 7 pm. If every person is present and each take the full 3 minutes, that's 10 speakers per 30 minutes. I'll be speaking around 8 pm, give or take 15 minutes.

Mr. Isler, bless his heart, the board president, has, in the past, gone through the entire list of speakers and then at the end they do a roll call again of those that were signed up to speak in case anyone missed their scheduled slot. That was very nice. I missed the last time by about 2 minutes due to some late drop off at the swim pool. I did get to speak. So nice.

Bike Pittsburgh � Get Ready for BikeFest 08!

Bike Pittsburgh � Get Ready for BikeFest 08!: "Get Ready for BikeFest 08!"

Close South Side, expand Mercy, UPMC keeps up with the times

banner

South Side Hospital, err, UPMC South Side Hospital, is going to close, it seems.

Paul grabs prime time while campaign books nearby arena - Pittsburgh Tribune-Review

Yesterday's Trib had as its top story on the front page -- with a photo -- Ron Paul. Paul grabs prime time while campaign books nearby arena - Pittsburgh Tribune-Review: "Paul grabs prime time while campaign books nearby arena"

In additional news from the Paul campaign:

Thursday, June 12th, 2008

We invite you to watch the live video broadcast of Dr. Paul's rally tonight, June 12th, @ 9PM CDT in Houston, TX. Dr. Paul will be making a major announcement, and we would like you to be a part of it.

To view:
http://www.justin.tv/ronpaul2008


I still have my big Ron Paul sign in the window. I had thought about taking it down. But, I think it should stay up until after the GOP convention.

Family friend finds body of missing man in Ohiopyle

Family friend finds body of missing man in Ohiopyle Homer Ray Brown promised a grieving mother that he would find her only son wherever his body might be in the Youghiogheny River.

Mr. Brown, 39, of Sharon, a veteran outdoorsman and former lifeguard, accomplished that sorrowful goal shortly after noon yesterday. He found Esker H. Cottrill III facedown in the water near the left bank of the river, a place shaded by a large overhanging tree, about two miles downstream from Ohiopyle.
Sad. Good deed Mr. Brown.

Bill Peduto holds press conference on Schenley's situation

Update:
Bill's plan, with multiple pages, is on his city web site:
http://www.city.pittsburgh.pa.us/district8/assets/08_save_schenley.pdf


Original post:


From schenley


Bill Peduto held a press conference moments ago (Thursday morning) in the conference room in city hall to give solid suggestions about the school situation and Schenley High School.

There were three TV stations, two radio stations and two or more newspaper reporters there -- so I'm sure we'll be hearing about it shortly.

In a nutshell -- he says:

* Sell Reizenstein.

Mark Roosevelt wants to move the students out of Schenley High School, a great building and a great school, and put some of them into Reisenstein. Reisenstein was a failed school when it was a middle school -- never a high school. And Reisenstein is a failed builing as a school. Reisenstein was build in the era when they made schools much like prisons -- but worse. There isn't a single window in Reisenstein. A lot of good educational research proves that schools have better test results if they have natural light and windows. Duhh....

* The money from Reisenstein can be used to fix up Schenley!

From schenley



Of course the right thing to do is sell the valued properties. Sell Reisensein -- and -- sell the Oakland location for the Board of Education and Administration. Roosevelt wants to sell the wrong buildings.

We'll watch Bill's city council web site for more details, and the media too.
From schenley


Update: Trib article in comments.

Mayor Ravenstahl anxious to settle dispute with developer

Mayor Ravenstahl anxious to settle dispute with developer Mayor Ravenstahl anxious to settle dispute with developer
Mayor anxious. He should have been anxious a year ago. He should have been anxious two years ago. He should have been anxious when he was on city council too, when he was not getting anything done.

The homework is past due. The management and stewardship is far too late.

There is no dispute. There are facts. Continental is in dispute with the truth. Time is up. Continental might have an internal dispute because someone there lost a golden opportunity. Not it is gone.

The validity of the no bid give-a-way from the past is like water over the damm. Gone. That same water isn't coming back. The way to resolve the situation is to put the package together and put it out for bid again. Put the price at 10 times what it went for in the past, at a minimum. Otherwise, let it sit. Sell off some other side yards around town instead.

We don't have to fear a long legal battle as the catalyst for stalling development between Heinz Field and PNC Park. Nope. The development has already been stalled by Continental. They should have the projects done by now.

Note that the mayor is not urging the residents of the North Side and their allies to settle the deal. The mayor is leaving the residents and City Council on the outside. They are being excluded. And, Bruce Kraus says so himself. He isn't going to insist that the land be re-acquired from the SEA and put out for bid by the URA. There are a lot of thing he isn't going to insist upon.

The vapor of the year-round entertainment complex between the stadiums has already delivered a lot of pain to the local economy.

Continental has vowed to advance the projects is a joke. Continental is too little and too late. Contenental voed to advance the project when the deal was struck years ago. The whole outrage is because they already broke the pledge to advance.

Stadium Authority Executive Director Mary Conturo refused to say whether she believes that is so, arguing that to answer "tips our negotiating hand."

Many might think, again, that city council is powerless. Those would be the ones without the creativity. Power needs to be taken and it needs to be applied in creative ways.

For example, the stretch of land that had been squandered can be re-zoned next week by city council. Then we'll see who gets the upper hand. The SEA negotiations should be off.

Mr. Kass is right in this quote: He said. "We haven't done anything .... STOP THERE ... in violation of a contract and, furthermore, they haven't notified us that we were in violation."

Perhaps he meant to say, "We haven't done anything. We are in violation of the contract. Furthermore, we haven't notified anyone we were going to do nothing."

Mr. Ravenstahl asked that cooler heads prevail. But Mr. Ravenstahl -- the players are already cool -- as in cold -- as in frozen out -- as in moving slower than an ice burgh! Cool has won the day, the past month and the past year. Global warming is going to come and flood the lower north shore before they figure out that they want to do something there. Hell, the Rolling Stones are all going to be dead by the time a concert could be hosted.

This would be a nice quote from the mayor about the first week he was in office: "Folks need to sit down and figure out a way to get this done and figure out a way to move this forward," he said. Interim mayor could have said this too.

None have been winners in this deal, except the hand-picked developers.

Wednesday, June 11, 2008

school recap from Jen

Enough stuff packed in here that I'll do the table of contents again:
Correction
City Council Hearing (June 17) scheduled today
News articles and blog links/video
Public Hearing (June 16)

Talking points (feel free to add)
*****************************************************
Whoops, incorrectly attributed something to Jill Weiss in the last email -- the thing about city council came from a different source! Sorry about that; it’ll teach me to try and save time by using an old letter as a form.
**********************************
City Council has scheduled a public hearing about the Schenley High School closing
on
Tuesday, June 17 at 6 p.m. The hearing will be held in council chambers downtown
at the
City-County Building. The hearing will also be televised. People who wish to testify
will be allowed a
three minute presentation; appointments can be scheduled by calling
the council clerk's office
(412-255-2142) no later than 5 pm on Tuesday, June 17th.

We are going to try to organize our presentation among the first ten to twelve speakers, after an initial presentation. We need to plan a meeting in the next couple of days to get this started. Testimony will center on the value of the building itself to the city, the value of the school (and of a transparent and open school administratin) to city life, etc.
If you are willing to meet, organize, and write AND/OR to be one of the speakers of the prepared presentation, please email. Perfect opportunity for people who work downtown to have a chance to speak up for Schenley. Students may also speak (as part of the main presentation or on their own) but again, the emphasis should be on issues relevant to the city/city life as a whole.
If you can’t make this, please send a letter to your city council member:
Mayor Luke Ravenstahl
mayorcompl@city.pittsburgh.pa.us
City Controller Michael Lamb
michael.lamb@city.pittsburgh.pa.us
District 1, Darlene Harris
darlene.harris@city.pittsburgh.pa.us
District 2, Dan Deasy
dan.deasy@city.pittsburgh.pa.us
District 3, Bruce Kraus
bruce.kraus@city.pittsburgh.pa.us
District 4, Jim Motznik
james.motznik@city.pittsburgh.pa.us
District 5, Doug Shields
doug.shields@city.pittsburgh.pa.us
District 6, Tonya Payne
tonya.payne@city.pittsburgh.pa.us
District 7, Patrick Dowd
patrick.dowd@city.pittsburgh.pa.us
District 8, Bill Peduto
bill.peduto@city.pittsburgh.pa.us
District 9, Rev. Ricky Burgess
reverend.burgess@city.pittsburgh.pa.us
****************
Final days at Schenley High School video from the Post-Gazette website
Blogging Schenley:
Think again about high school reform -- not everyone’s thrilled about the 6-12 CAPA concept
TV show about Schenley HS and the ‘sky is falling falsehoods’ -- listen to the broadcast from Friday, hear what’s in those reports.

*************************
Board of Education Public Hearing on Monday, June 16th
Call 412-622-3600 to register. As of noonish today, there were 25 signed up to speak. Many talking points/unanswered questions directly below.

*************************
Short version of the message -- stop, look, and listen before you do anything else as a board! The school board needs to have a clear idea of the vision and plan for the future before voting in any more spending or changes!

There are big changes coming to every high school in this district (being closed, having an influx of students, the "streamlining" of electives, new feeder patterns and a new lottery system, to name just a few), but no one has a clear idea of the big picture. In the meantime, money is being spent in bits and pieces as parts of this plan go forward. At some point, enough will have been spent that it will seem as though there's no turning back.
Why are we beginning reform by moving and changing currently attractive and successful programs? Innovation and change are great, but they should be aimed where there is failure and bad programming first.
What is going to happen to the currently underenrolled and underperforming high schools? How are those students helped by these plans?
Will it really save taxpayer's money to split students, faculty & staff into four different physical locations - all of which will require significant renovation costs?

If Reizenstein is not being renovated and Frick is supposed to be renovated next year with 4 grades there -- why is it again that the 9th graders aren't going to Reizenstein? Who is going to teach the 9th graders at Frick? No one wants to lose building seniority by moving for a year!
If Schenley is closed will we pay anyway to abate the asbestos if it is sold? (think South Hills High School: The board of education recently completed a $3.5M site remediation, which included removing asbestos, replacing the roof and removing an addition.” April 2007 -- http://www.popcitymedia.com/developmentnews/shhs0418.aspx)
What are going to be the effects of dispersing a highly effective faculty & staff from a high school that most students want to go to?
How will all of these new schools be staffed without pulling good teachers from current programs?
Are smaller high schools equipped to provide full complement of athletics, arts, and after-school programs and extracurriculars? If the goal is college ready, all of those things are important. Roosevelt has implied that "comprehensive high schools" are obsolete. The suburbs don’t seem to have gotten this memo.
Parents and students will have to make "choices" about their educational track in fifth grade for these 6-12 schools. Do these themed schools also make later choices more difficult – what about kids that are a bad fit for the school, how limited will their choices be then?
Jen Lakin

Heated words, again, in council about North Shore -- time is up!

kdka.com - Heated Words Over North Shore Amphitheater: "Heated Words Over North Shore Amphitheater"
Great story from KDKA TV News. Good job citizens!

It is fifth, or sixth down. Steelers play football. They know that they only get fourth down. They punted. Time ran out. The clock has been at 00:00, time expired, for more than a year.

We should demand a new bid process. An OPEN BID process. Seek bids, not private deals from behind smoke filled rooms.

We don't need the Steelers to get a kickback from PA Governor Rendell again.

Good job KDKA and great job citizens.

Want to hear the public hearing, click the button below. The first part, a presentation from SEA boss, Mary C, was not included. This starts as the councilmembers question her after her presentation. Then come the citizens.


Schenley High School and public hearing

Date: Tuesday, June 17 at 6 pm in City Council Chambers and it will be on city cable.

Call 412-255-2138
.


The idea from Tonya Payne and Jim Motznik was to hold the meeting at Schenley High School auditorium. That failed as Council President, Doug Shields, didn't want to make too many waves.

I called to get onto the speakers list. My comments: Save Schenley. Save money.

As to holding the meeting within the public building that Mark Roosevelt wants to abandon, Shields said it would be the wrong signal to send to the school board. Walking onto their turf and getting in their face. Sheilds does not want to position the council to help all parties. This is our venue, our chamber.

We talk about the parents of Schenley. What does that mean. There are others being involved as you talk about blah, blah, blah.

Setting off on a bad foot.

Doug Shields won't put others on the spot. He has little spine.

Patrick Dowd read the homerule charter. He is not a fan of blocking public commentary. He does want to be mindful that this body has zero authority on how to act on school governance. Dowd says we have no authority, no jurisdiction.

We could make a public comment, so says Dowd. We could offer solutions. They would be irresponsible until we were able to comprehend the deep, deep, deep conditions.

To second guess at any way would be reprehensible, until and unless we spent the time requred to know intimately those positions.

What a scolding professor.

Dowd wanted to make a cut-off of speakers. That was not well recieved by both Peduto and Shields. If you RSVP -- up to 5 pm -- you will get to speak for 3 minutes. Others who show up to speak at the meeting you'll be able to get one minute.

Registry, live blog

Doug Shields teamed up with Bruce Kraus to make a natural extension of a benefit for the management of benefits.

Doug has another amendment that he'll offer in the future about joint loan obligation, lease, deeds and so on as to the proofs necessary for the registry.

The grandfather provision is in the bill. That's funny. Everything kosher, so said Doug. There are less than 10 people who have been getting this benefit, offered from the city since 1998. The ones already getting benefits only need to make sure that the existing mutual commitment affidavit.

Breaking up is hard to do. The new changes make for fiscal responsibility.

Shields said that this does not open the door to gay marriage. The intent here is an orderly administration of benefits for the public and private employees.

There are 72 cities that offer a registry process. You must be a resident of the city to get into this registry. Red tape.

Cleveland Heights has names on a list and that is a right of self government. So, why would you want to make new lists and gather new names and keep them within governmental offices.

This registry does nothing with private employers. Nothing.

Companies in the city that offer benefits to domestic partners have employees that may or may not live in the city. Hence, to call this registry one-stop shopping, as Shields did, is a big over-reach in the real world. Non-city residents are NOT going to be a part of this registry.

The cost is $25 for those that register. There won't be an expense to the city above the fees collected.

They don't know if this is public record or not.

Under HIPPA -- give me a break. This is NOT medical information. This registry has nothing to do with medical information.

To register yourself in the registry, you're name has to be 'on the books.' That is a public statement, a public action, a public record, a public act.

Who knows the right to know act.

They say that this bill isn't going to cost the city any money. Meanwhile, the conversation in city council has already gone more than an hour. The lawyers are sitting at the table.

Dowd has to be honest. He is 100% supportive. But.... I would like to some day perhaps to see a way in which we can see this more than a list and confer rights. So Patrick wants to begin to think of ways to confer rights. Patrick wants to open a bigger can of worms. He is sad that the city isn't going far enough.

Once rights are confered, then he'll think that people will be required to register. But really, Professor Dowd, that isn't how rights are granted. You should not need to apply for rights. Rights are granted by law for everyone. I have a right to free speech -- without getting a stamp from the free speech registry before I stand on my soapbox or post to the blog.

Toyna says go no further unless we know if the names are going to be open records. Wedding licenses are public record.

Tonya wants to be able to accept applications from an online form, without the need of the people needing to come into the office.

Tonya wants to give benefits to mothers, aunts, and so on. The health care insurance companies do not offer benefits to those people under those relationships.

Folks -- the benefits and the registry are different. The best case is the pool pass example that I blogged about last week. If a couple with two kids want to get a $60 pool pass each year, they should be able to do so if they are on the registry. Otherwise, the pool passes would cost $30 extra per year.

The registry is a singular function -- except for pool passes within the city.

Bill Peduto wants to move the meeting along at 12:54. There is still a pre-agenda and a meeting with a new board member. No lunch again!

Bill Peduto said it seems very 1930s Germany for me! Then he realized about the type of world we live in. This is a first step. If we get to the first step. Pittsburgh can change. It is going to require an incredible amount of courage. Take progressive steps. Create the 8th largest city, merger, knowlege workers. That's all I have to say about this.

This bill means a lot to Mr. Kraus. Two staffers were invaluable tools.

Two women brought the idea to Doug Shields after getting him at a charity auction item.

All voted to approve it except Rev. Burgess.





Above link is with 20-minutes or so of dead air at the start. Meeting started late, as usual. Mr. Kraus was more than 30-minutes late to the table.

Tuesday, June 10, 2008

CAPA and Schools -- doing it better

LA arts high school brings prestige, but high cost - Yahoo! News

LA arts high school brings prestige, but high cost - Yahoo! News: "LA arts high school brings prestige, but high cost

Veto Memo from Luke Ravenstah on Campaign Finance Reform

Luke's letter with a veto.


This is getting a lot of attention for what it is and isn't.

The veto came on this campaign finance reform legislation


Ordinance supplementing the Pittsburgh Code, Title One, Administrative, by adding a new section, Article XIII, entitled, “Campaign Finance Regulations.”


Be it resolved by the Council of the City of Pittsburgh as follows:


Section 1. The Pittsburgh Code, Title One, Administrative, is hereby supplemented by adding a new section, Article XIII, entitled, “Campaign Finance Regulations,” as follows:


Chapter 198: Campaign Finance Regulations


§198.01 Definitions

For purposes of this Chapter, the following definitions shall apply:

(1) Candidate

(a) An individual who files nomination papers or petitions for City elective office.

(b) An individual who publicly announces his or her candidacy for City elective office.

(2) Political Committee.

Any committee, club, association, political party, or other group of persons, including the candidate political committee as required by §198.03, for the purpose of influencing the outcome of a covered election.

(3) City elective office

The offices of Mayor, City Controller, or City Council.

(4) Contribution

Money, gifts, forgiveness of debts, loans, or things having a monetary value incurred or received by a candidate or his/her agent for use in advocating or influencing the election of the candidate.

(5) Covered election

Every primary, general or special election for City elective office.

(6) Person

An individual, partnership, corporation, sole proprietorship, or other form of business organization permitted under the laws of the Commonwealth to make political contributions.


§198.02 Contribution Limitations

(1) Except as provided in subsection (3), no individual shall make total contributions per covered election, including contributions made to or through one or more political committees, of more than two thousand dollars ($2,000) to a candidate for a City elective office.

a. On the Wednesday following a municipal general election, the contribution limit shall increase by the percent difference in the Consumer Price Index for All Urban Customers (CPI-U) for the previous two years.

(2) Except as provided in subsection (3), no political committee shall make total contributions per covered election of more than five thousand dollars ($5,000) to a candidate for a City elective office.

(3) The limitations imposed by this Chapter shall not apply to contributions

from a candidate’s personal resources to the candidate’s political committee. However, if such contributions total $250,000 or more (regardless of the time period over which such contributions are made), then the contribution limits set forth in this Section for all other candidates for that City elective office shall double.

(4) The limitations imposed by this subsection shall not apply to volunteer labor, but they shall apply to the value of in-kind contributions.

(5) No candidate for City elective office, and no political committee, shall

accept any contribution which exceeds the contribution limits set forth in this Chapter.


§198.03 Candidate Political Committee Accounts

A candidate for City elective office shall have no more than one political committee and one checking account for the city office being sought, into which all contributions for such office shall be made, and out of which all expenditures for that office shall be made. If the candidate for office maintains other political or non-political accounts for which contributions are solicited, such funds collected in these accounts shall not be used for the purpose of influencing the outcome of a covered election


§198.04 Competitive Bidding and Disclosure

(1) Any person who makes a maximum contribution during an election cycle may not be awarded a contract relating to City affairs, without going through a competitive bidding process.

(2) Any candidate seeking an elective office in the City must submit a disclosure form for every contributor who makes a contribution of five-hundred dollars ($500.00) or more:

  1. Does business with or has a contract with the City, its Authorities, Boards or Commissions and the nature of said business or contract for the past five (5) years;

  2. Is employed by the City, its Authorities, Boards or Commissions or was employed by the same in the past five (5) years;

  3. Has an appointment to any Authority Board or any other Board or Commission of the City or has held one in the past five (5) years;


§198.05 Public Record of Reports

All candidates submitting campaign finance reports to the Allegheny County Department of Elections shall simultaneously file copies with the City Controller for the City of Pittsburgh. The Department of City Information Systems shall be responsible for maintaining an up-to-date and public database that is searchable based on the following


categories: candidate name, contributor name, contribution level, and, where applicable, employer.


§198.06 Required Notice of Contribution Limits

The Ethics Hearing Board shall annually arrange for the publication of a notice setting forth the contribution limits set forth in this Chapter, together with a plain English explanation of the provisions of this Chapter and the penalties and remedies for violations. Such notice shall also appear at all times on the City’s official website.


§198.07 Penalties, Injunctive Relief & Wrongful Acts

(1) Any person residing in the City of Pittsburgh, including the City Solicitor may bring an action for injunctive relief in any Court of competent jurisdiction to enjoin any violations of, or to compel compliance with, the provisions of this Chapter. The Court may award to a prevailing plaintiff in any such action his or her costs of litigation, including reasonable attorney’s fees.


(2) A person who brings an action or causes or precipitates an action for injunctive relief alleging a violation of this chapter is subject to liability for wrongful use of this Chapter if the complaint was frivolous, as defined thereby, or without probable cause and made primarily for a purpose other than that of reporting a violation of this Chapter.

(a) A person who brings an action for injunctive relief alleging a violation of this Chapter has probable cause for doing so if he or she reasonably believes in the existence of the facts upon which the action is based and either:

(1) Reasonably believes that under those facts the action may be valid under this Chapter; or

(2) Believes to this effect in reliance upon the advice of counsel, sought in good faith and given after full disclosure of all relevant facts within his or her knowledge and information.

(b) Allegations of wrongful use shall be investigated in the manner set forth in § 197.12.

(c) When the essential elements of an action brought pursuant to this section have been established, damages may be assessed by a court of appropriate jurisdiction considering the following:

(1) The harm to reputation by a defamatory matter alleged as the basis of the proceeding;

(2) The expenses, including any reasonable attorney fees, that the person has reasonably incurred;

(3) Any specific pecuniary loss that has resulted from the proceedings;

(4) Any emotional distress that has been caused by the proceedings; and

(5) Any punitive damages according to law in appropriate cases.


(3) The provisions of this Chapter shall be subject to the jurisdiction of the Ethics Hearing Board.


§198.08 Severability

If any provision of this Ordinance shall be determined to be unlawful, invalid, void, or unenforceable, then that provision shall be considered severable from the remaining provisions of this Ordinance, which shall be in full force and effect.


§198.09 Effective Date; Implementation

(1)This Ordinance shall take effect on January 1, 2010.

(2) By June 1, 2009 the City Controller shall provide City Council with a report on the City’s preparedness of the implementation of this ordinance.


King Solomon, my ass. Here is the deal -- you don't have a plan nor a clue

At the start of the 90-minute meeting Mr. Kraus said he felt he was in a King Solomon position where the choice he would make would not make one group happy.
The tail wags the dog these days in the South Side.

Pet owners should be safe with their dogs in their back yards or else on leashes. If you want to be unsafe, then let's talk about dogs in a tiny park space without leashes.

Does dog socialization trump kid socialization?

I understand, in the world of Bruce Kraus, how he values the promotion of cats and dogs before people as they have been a 'pre-agenda' on Wednesdays at city council before citizen public comment.

The large, enclosed grass area is for kids, first. People second. Thirdly -- for other uses.

The adjacent children's playground is part of the park and not a place to confine the kids.
Mr. Kraus provided written material for the residents, explaining that it is against the law to allow dogs to run unleashed unless they are in one of four designated areas of the city: Upper Frick Park, Lower Frick Park as well as West Park and Observatory Hill on the North Side. The Frick parks both serve the Shadyside/Squirrel Hill communities. There are not designated dog parks on the south or west areas of the city. The residents at the meeting want to change that and Councilman Kraus has pledged to help although he admitted that it may be difficult to do it in a timely manner.
Mr. Kraus had no 'dog plan' when he ran for the city council seat. I've thought about this problem for a while. He is welcome to my talking points.

There is a locked park with lots of green space in the South Side. There is a stretch of land around the river's edge by the rail road tracks that can be put into use for a dog run too.

Kraus needs to think out of the box. And, he can't be expected to do that quickly. Mr. Kraus is very busy now trying to get a new governmental registry for unmarried couples. And, Mr. Kraus is slaving over the new sign ordinance plan as the six month moratorium on all new signs is getting ready to expire. Plus, Bill Peduto isn't going to be around much in the months to come to tell him what to do.

If Armstrong Park turns into a designated dog park I wonder how Mr. Kraus is going to tax the dogs.

Suitable nearby alternatives are called hamster, fish, in-house cat, backyard and leashes. Plus there is the South Side Park ice rink and river's edge dog-run.

The current park is, so they say, not conducive to ball playing. Bull shit. Err, dog shit on them. It most certainly is an ideal place for ball playing. We played and do play on those grounds in most successful ways for decades.

That field was home to a semi-pro football team.

That field was home to the biggest Rookie Ball program in the city -- for kids ages, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8 and older.

When the city cut out the Rec Centers and Swim Pools -- we suffered some massive blows to our opportunities with the kids. Holding baseball practices at places where the rest rooms can't be opened sorta sucks. The pitching machine and equipment departed, to gather dust perhaps.

Then there was South High School! They used to play high school softball on that field -- without problems. Not suitable is wrong as can be.

We could let dogs to run on the lawn of South Vo Tech and the lawn of the Pgh Federations of Teachers buildings.

Mr. Ashley, who lives in one of the city�s southern neighborhoods, said that before his pet recently died, he would take his dog to run loose across town at West Park. Thank you Mr. Ashley for being the gentleman and responsible, good neighbor that you are. West Park! A good place for dogs.

Is today the last day of classes at Schenley? - Pittsburgh Tribune-Review

Is today the last day of classes at Schenley? - Pittsburgh Tribune-Review: "For many students, the finality of the occasion has not yet sunk in.
The finality has not sunk in yet, because it isn't final. There has not been a final vote. This isn't a done deal.

Seems that the students are smarter than the media.

By the way, I talked today with Chelsa Wagner about the schools and the urgency. She needs to get into the game, now, even while the state budget efforts are happening.

A change in a vote from, say Jean Fink, school board member, on Schenley, could mean that the school gets some attention to the ceilings this summer and is open again for next school year -- as it should be.

Chelsa should be calling Mrs. Fink to talk about the plans there and all the costs of moving the students.

Chelsa should care because Schenley is a city-wide magnet. Students from Chelsa's district attend Schenley. And the money that Mark Roosevelt burns with the madness of his high school reform crisis is sure to take away other opportunities for others throughout the city.


"It's kind of sad -- the fact that we'll never be back here again," said Brooke Baumbeck, 15, a freshman from Lawrenceville. "It's just sad."
You are right, Brooke. It is sad. But, it isn't just. It isn't only sad. It is also 'mad.' And, it is very bad.

Council fails to override veto of campaign reform bill

Council fails to override veto of campaign reform bill Mr. Shields said the vetoed legislation 'begins to build a house of reform. . . . The great thing about politics and baseball is that there's always tomorrow.'
Doug digs deep to come up with that expression. "There is always tomorrow."

Doug sums up the best of what happens in Pittsburgh's political scene.

There is always a tomorrow -- except when you die. Sadly, there will not be a tomorrow for the mom of Rev. Ricky Burgess. So sorry about the loss. Funeral is slated for 11 am on Thursday.

There will be no tomorrow for Schenley High School -- after graduation on Saturday -- if Mark Roosevelt has his way. Gone. Extinct.

The hope of tomorrow is burning less bright for the city itself. The city may die. It already has two sets of OVERLORDS.

So, in politics, there is not a guarantee of tomorrow.

Back to the news to sustain the discussion:


The mayor said he supports the posting of all contributions, and of big donors' relationships with the city, online. He said he would also back a ban on no-bid contracts for anyone who contributed more than a certain threshold amount to a campaign.

"I have no plans currently, or haven't necessarily worked on it, but I think it's something that we would be willing to do," he said. "Full disclosure, 100 percent transparency, is something that we could do, or work towards doing, as quickly as tomorrow." He said he could work with council to get new rules in place in time for next year's city races.

He said council's legislation -- hatched in January and the subject of a public hearing, a special meeting, and repeated council discussions -- was passed prematurely. "Maybe they were interested in just passing something before they went on their summer vacation, just to pass it, to say that we were a city that had campaign finance reform," he said.
Here is the deal, Luke. There should NEVER be ANY no-bid contracts. I'd outlaw all no-bid contracts. The public funds need to be protected. Bids insure honesty and value for the spending.

Every contract that the city enters into should be supported by a bidding process.

As to the full transparency, the solution to that is called transparent PAC accounts. If a local bank wanted to help the situation by offering TRANSPARENT PAC ACCOUNTS as a product offering to candidates, campaigns and political action committees, we'd have a most elegant, private market solution.

The legislation from Bill Peduto was NOT hatched in January. We worked in past years on this bill. The work with the experts began in 2004.

Council fails to override veto of campaign reform bill

Council fails to override veto of campaign reform bill: "Council President Doug Shields said the mayor's four-page veto message, delivered yesterday, was 'somewhat misdirected' and called some of its contentions 'balderdash.'"
I think the memo with the veto is gibberish.

Hard numbers haunt district: City schools' debt $476 million - Pittsburgh Tribune-Review

Hard numbers haunt district: City schools' debt $476 million - Pittsburgh Tribune-Review: "Hard numbers haunt district: City schools' debt $476 million
Reactions welcomed in comments. My thoughts later today.

Running to city council now.

Monday, June 09, 2008

Mayor vetoes campaign finance reform

Forced. That was the word Luke used in his description ... labor would be 'forced to' blah, blah, blah.
Mayor vetoes campaign finance reform: "Under the current bill, the labor community, whose funds are raised at the small dollar level from working men and women, and distributed through PACs, would be forced to find 50 PACs to contribute at the maximum levels proscribed by this bill to match the wealthy, anti-labor candidate.'
First of all, many labor unions force their members to give to their political action committees. Unions often extract money by force from the ranks of the union's membership. Some of those incomes are spend in PACs.

If Luke wants to talk about 'force' -- let's talk about it.

Furthermore, and more to my core of being, is the feeling that unions would be forced to match up to a wealth opponent in the spending department. The amount of money raised does not guarantee votes.

If 50 PACs each donate the limit to a candidate to match, dollar for dollar, what the wealthy opposition has invested / spent, so what. Money can't guarantee votes. The boots on the street and the people going to the polls are much more valuable than the capital in the check book of a wealthy opponent.

Finally, the PAC can give the limit and then pass the word that each of the members of the PAC give from personal accounts. The members of the union can write a check for $50 or even up to $2000 each.

The donation from the PAC to the candidate is just the tip of the point. The wood behind the arrow's point is the additional donations from individuals to the candidate directly.

Pittsburgh mayor vetoes campaign finance limit bill - Pittsburgh Business Times:

The expected veto by Luke Ravenstahl o campaign finance reform arrived. I asked via a note to the mayor for him to to sit with me and consider some counter-proposals to come along with his veto. I didn't want him to veto it. And, even if he signed the bill, he could have offered further, different suggestions for election reform.

The mayor has nothing to say, except offer four letters?
Pittsburgh mayor vetoes campaign finance limit bill - Pittsburgh Business Times:: A bill that would have limited political contributions to candidates for public office in Pittsburgh was vetoed Monday by Mayor Luke Ravenstahl.

Pittsburgh City Council last week voted 5-4 to limit candidates for a city office to a $2,000 donation from an individual and $5,000 from a group, corporation or union.

But Ravenstahl rejected the bill, which Councilman Bill Peduto, the measure's primary sponsor, said was disappointing.

'This is just emblematic of a backward thinking, old-school political town, and it's embarrassing, frankly, that Pittsburgh can't enact progressive legislation like almost every other city and state in this country,' he said.

'(Ravenstahl) said this isn't real reform. (Then) why was it supported by Common Cause, the League of Women Voters, Democracy Rising, and other reform-minded organizations?

'This has been in process for five months, and the mayor never spoke a word until he vetoed it,' Peduto said.

A spokeswoman for Ravenstahl did not immediately return a call for comment.
Update:

The Trib says that the veto came with a four page memo. I would love to see it. I'll post it here as soon as I get a copy.
Ravenstahl vetoes campaign finance limits - Pittsburgh Tribune-Review: "'The ordinance before me is fraught with problems,' Ravenstahl, whose recent mayoral campaign benefited from unregulated contributions, wrote in a four-page veto message to council members. 'It provides an unfair competitive advantage for the wealthy and will have a chilling effect on the labor movement.'"

Swim coach: Jack Pidgeon: Hundreds honor Kiski headmaster's life

Hundreds honor Kiski headmaster's life: "Hundreds honor Kiski headmaster's life"

I wish I would have known him. Always wanted to meet him. He was coaching in recent years with Indiana Univ. of Pa.

Saturday, June 07, 2008

Help us reach out to the city -- and in turn -- the world

If you can send out this pointer, it would be great.

http://AforAthlete.Wikia.com/Olympicpedia

Mark Rauterkus, a dad, coach, publisher and community activist is holding a day camp in June and July as a lead-up to the Beijing Olympics, called Olympicpedia. We'll work on wiki content in a computer lab M-F from 11 am to 1 pm and drop ins on a day-by-day basis are welcomed. Mark@Rauterkus.com 412 298 3432 or see http://AforAthlete.Wikia.com/Olympicpedia.

Thanks!

HealthCare4All-Downloads

HealthCare4All-Downloads: "Single Payer for Business (.pdf) NEW!

Legislative Action Letter (.pdf)

Single Payer Brochure (.pdf or .zip)

Latest Single Payer Presentation (.ppt)

Two Plans for Pennsylvania comparison sheet (.pdf)

The plans versus what we have now comparison sheet (.pdf)

101 reasons balanced health care reform works for Pennsylvania (.pdf)

Senate Bill 300, Mar. 2007 (.pdf)

Senate Bill 1085, Feb. 2006 (.pdf)

Presentation explaining SB1085 pros and cons (.pdf)

House Bill 2722, June 2006 (.pdf)

Universal Single Payer Health Care presentation (.pdf)

House Bill 700, Mar. 2007 or the governor's Prescription for Pennsylvania plan (.pdf)"

Draft Chelsa 2009

A new blog on the Pittsburgh political landscape.
Draft Chelsa 2009: "This blog is dedicated to building a grassroots movement to draft State Representative Chelsa Wagner for Mayor of Pittsburgh in 2009.
I have nothing to do with that blog. I did call Chelsa the other day and I'm waiting for her return call about some serious school matters, however.

Chelsa-target-polling - Fix PA: "Chelsa-target-polling"

Good bye to two

Sad times with the death of Dwight White and Jim McKay.

How Obama Did It - TIME

How Obama Did It - TIME: "Obama's Chicago headquarters made technology its running mate from the start."