Thursday, September 15, 2005
Bad week for the airlines
Bad week for Delta and Northwest. Like this is going to make us feel better? Remember when all the cities had crime -- so we are just like them. Remember when the rust belt north lost its population. So, we are like them? I say think again. Too many leaders just go along and follow.
ESPN.com gives Swann some ink in race for PA Gov job
ESPN.com - NFL - Garber: New arena Swann lacks experience, but celebrity status a plus
AlterNet: WireTap: To Have and Have Not -- unplanned parenthood thrives in Ohio
A longer read about Kent, Ohio, and the kids in the high school.At one school, 64 girls are pregnant.
AlterNet: WireTap: To Have and Have Not: "Timken High is a well-policed fortress; it's a shame the real threats -- politically motivated ignorance and soul-crushing boredom -- lie within its walls.
Eminent Domain gathering here in Pittsburgh
Kathleen Walsh at Ridgemont neighborhood friend from back in the Fifth-Forbes days wrote with this info. I put in for a time to speak.
The State Government Committee will be holding a hearing on eminent domain at 11:00 am., Sept. 22, City Council Chambers, City-County Building, fifth floor. The public is invited to attend. People who wish to speak must register before the hearing by contacting Susan Boyle by either email, sboyle@pahousegop.com or by phone (717-772-3465).
She will schedule speakers as time permits. Please attend whether you plan to speak or not. There are very few speakers scheduled thus far.
The State Government Committee will be holding a hearing on eminent domain at 11:00 am., Sept. 22, City Council Chambers, City-County Building, fifth floor. The public is invited to attend. People who wish to speak must register before the hearing by contacting Susan Boyle by either email, sboyle@pahousegop.com or by phone (717-772-3465).
She will schedule speakers as time permits. Please attend whether you plan to speak or not. There are very few speakers scheduled thus far.
... After our struggles of the past, it will be very sad if the committee comes to Pittsburgh and does not get a full picture of the problems we have had and of the community's deep opposition to eminent domain.
I am sure you are aware of the recent Supreme Court decision which approved the use of eminent domain to transfer property to private parties for so-called economic development, which is just the sort of legalized theft that we fought against.
In response to that decision, a number of states are considering legislation to restrict the use of eminent domain. In Pennsylvania, two bills have been introduced, House Bills 1835 and 1836. You can find the text of these bills at www.legis.state.pa.us. The hearing is concerned with problems that have been experienced with eminent domain, and what type of reform is needed.
Operation PA Clean Sweep's leader, Russ Diamond, visited Western PA
Photo by Mark Rauterkus. Click image for enlarged view.
Leaders from Operation Clean Sweep gathered (Sept. 14) at 5 pm at Crawford Grill in Station Square. I was able to attend, with 18 others on two days notice.
Russ Diamond recorded some segment with Clear Channel to play on six various radio stations in the days to come.
Photo by Mark Rauterkus. Click image for enlarged view.
Feeling especially tidy, so enjoy the bonus photo of a helper. Send me a photo of you and your dust-pan, and we'll see if we can make you famous for cleaning up PA Politics by getting a new house and senate in 2006.
Road trip to DC for techie talks in the wake of Katrinia and other storms ('n at)
Does anyone want to go to DC for an event?
N-TEN and HumaniNet invite you to a unique conference that will focus directly on the use of information and communications technologies (ICT) in humanitarian relief operations and post-crisis development.
ICT and Humanitarian Relief:
Being prepared, launching your response, and creating sustainable change
Monday, Oct 17 * Omni Shoreham * Washington, DC
Register: http://www.nten.org/conferences-ict
From the Katrina Response to the Tsunami to Darfur to Afghanistan, humanitarian relief operations depend critically on the effective use of information and communications technologies (ICT). In both emergencies and ongoing relief efforts, humanitarian relief operations present enormous ICT challenges: working environments with non-existent or damaged communications and support infrastructure; the need to interoperate with other aid organizations and government agencies; and managing massive logistical problems and information flows. Successful relief operations that bring about sustainable change depend upon early preparation and planning.
Over 100 key program and operations managers from NGOs, government, and the technology industry will meet in Washington, D.C. on October 17 to discuss lessons learned in the tsunami response and other relief operations, with an emphasis on practical, on-the-ground solutions and near-term opportunities.
This conference will bring together practitioners with hands-on experience and fresh ideas about the use of ICT to share "lessons learned" and innovations, to identify opportunities for collaboration, and to craft best practices. The conference will focus on ICT in all phases of relief operations: preparation and planning; emergency response; long-term relief; transition to self-sufficiency.
Please see the conference agenda page at http://www.nten.org/conferences-ict-agenda for more details on the sessions available for the day. We will address such topics as best practices for ICT preparation and planning, "day one" communications and connectivity, tools for collaborative information sharing, and the need to plan for ICT support of long-term, sustainable reconstruction projects.
At the conference, we will form informal communities of interest around the main themes and technologies to maintain the momentum of the networks and recommendations that emerge from the discussions. Cost is $100 for N-TEN members, $150 for non-members.
Camron Assadi, Marketing and Business Director
N-TEN, The Nonprofit Technology Enterprise Network http://www.nten.org
(415) 397-9000 main
(415) 397-1833 fax
camron@nten.org
Wednesday, September 14, 2005
South Side Market House to begin fall programs soon
Market House soccer to begin shortly. News was in the South Pittsburgh Reporter.
The photo above was taken of the kids giving each other a handshake at the end of the game, a tradition at the Market House.
The Market House is a Citipark Rec Center and Senior Center. The Rec Center activities were closed by Mayor Murphy a couple of years ago. All centers were shut. The Market House has re-opened to kids activities again, to some degree, but NOT by the city as it was. Parents and volunteers have a much bigger role in the programming now.
Youth soccer sign-ups are slated for 6 pm to 8 on Monday, Sept. 19 and Thursday Sept. 22 at the Market House.
The programs will be held Mondays, Tuesdays and Thrusdays. Age groups are 4, 5 and 6 year olds from 4:15 pm to 5. The 7, 8, 9 and 10s are from 5:15 to 6 pm.
The games are once or twice a week, after a few weeks of practices. Family night ends the program on December 2.
Open to boys and girls, the nonrefundable fee of $10 is required at sign up. Call 412 488 8390 for more specifics.
Badnarik Class about Constitution
This class and home study program is condensed into just two hours (meeting in Harrisburg and King of Prussia) and comes with the book and 12 hours of instruction on DVD. Cost is $120.
This is a great opportunity for teenage homeschool students. Details in the comments. Now if only we could get our Congressmen and Senators to sign up!
Michael Badnarik is a teacher on the US Constitution and ran for President of the United States. I voted for him -- rather than "W" or Kerry. Badnarik visited Pittsburgh and spoke at a meeting I helped to organize in Mt. Washington.
Michael Badnarik will share with you the little known and lesser understood history and original intent of the Constitution. According to Congressman, Ron Paul (R-TX), "Michael Badnarik has created a constitutional primer that will edify and entertain schoolchildren and seasoned libertarians alike. He does an excellent job of demystifying our founding document, demonstrating that ordinary Americans can and should understand the Constitution and how it applies to their lives."
"Introduction To The Constitution" with Michael Badnarik, Seminar and Home-Study Program, Download the PDF flyer.
Two Pennsylvania classes this month:
Saturday, Sept. 24th: Harrisburg, PA
2:00 - 4:00 pm, Harrisburg Hilton and Towers
1 N 2nd St, Harrisburg, 17101
Contact: Quince Eddens 717-608-5806 (cell)
Sunday, Sept. 25th: King of Prussia, PA
2:30 - 4:30 pm, Philadelphia Inquirer Building
800 River Road, King of Prussia, PA 19406
Contact: Jim Baab 610-574-1222 (cell)
Attend the 2 hour mini-course and receive the course book “Good to be King” and the in-depth, 12 hour DVD set. All for $120.
Register now at www.constitutionpreservation.org
Even if you think you know the Constitution well, you’ll be shocked at how much you were never taught.
Next Meeting of the Allegheny County Libertarian Party at Rauterkus.com
Come to our office at 108 South 12th Street, South Side, for the next monthly meeting of the Allegheny County Libertarians: 7 pm on Wed. Sept. 21.
Windy City event features Pittsburgh speaker - Monetary Conference
Chicago Monetary Conference is to be held from September 29 to Oct 2, 2005. Pittsburgh's Dan Sullivan will be one of 25 or so speakers. Steven Zarenga is the main organizer. http://www.monetary.org/2005conference.html.
Lessons from Hurricane Katrina (via Libertarians of PA)
Libertarian Party of Pennsylvania
3863 Union Deposit Road #223
Harrisburg, PA 17109
1-800-774-4487
www.lppa.org
For Immediate Release:
Date: 09/14/2005
For more information contact:
Doug Leard (Media Relations) or David Jahn (Chair) at 1-800-R-RIGHTS
Lessons from Hurricane Katrina
Pennsylvania Should Encourage Private Responses
Harrisburg, PA -- The Libertarian Party of Pennsylvania (LPPA) extends its deepest sympathies to those who lost so much from Hurricane Katrina. In the days ahead, much national attention will focus on how the loss of life and property could have been minimized and on policy matters regarding disaster preparation and costs.
Local, state and federal responses to Katrina are not within the LPPA's scope, but lessons learned that apply to Pennsylvania are. One observation is that in times of crisis, communities that are highly dependent on government are highly vulnerable if all levels of government can't coordinate, predict and prepare for every possible contingency.
The lesson is that citizens and local communities need to accept their personal responsibility for self-reliance in times of crisis and that government must not obstruct private relief efforts. To that end the LPPA suggests a legislative review of state laws and regulations to identify those that deter emergency preparedness and response. Some obvious focus areas include:
* Private Organizations Aiding Disaster Recovery – From the Salvation Army to Wal-Mart to churches to credit unions, private organizations have been effective all along the Gulf Coast. We should ask our own private organizations how Pennsylvania can avoid obstructing their efforts during a disaster here. In addition, local businesses and service groups, being on the ground here, should be given latitude since they have invested locally and have special incentive to minimize damage and maximize recovery.
* Medical Licensing Requirements – Out-of-state medical professionals kind enough to offer their services along the Gulf Coast were stopped due to licensing issues. The rapid or automatic granting medical professionals a functioning status here should be a high priority.
* Absolute Right of Self-Defense – In a time of crisis, citizens’ right to self and community defense must not be impeded or questioned by government authorities. Nor should it be for those volunteering for the relief effort.
* Keep Vicitms’ and Responders’ Affairs Private – Some private organizations helped to arrange victims’ mail delivery to their offices where some of that mail was illegally opened and monies taken from victims who received aid. State private property laws should reinforce failed federal laws in these instances for victims and responders.
LPPA spokesman Doug Leard added, “Of course, a well-balanced state budget, a lean state legislature, a healthy economic climate, the absence of parasitic slush funds, would make it easier for Pennsylvanians and private organizations to make preparations and to actually assist during a time of crisis. That in turn makes it easier for the state to step in when truly necessary."
It is still best to walk your bike on the sidewalk. Perhaps I'll make a whole campaign out of nothing else but good city-living guidelines. Forget about heavy subjects, such as freedoms or subsidization of rich people's housing for downtown loft apartments -- just don't burp in public nor play your car radios too loud.
Photo by Mark Rauterkus.
Western Avenue work paid for by those who live on that street
The model has changed for the worse, here again. If a road needs to be improved -- those who have "frontage" on that road are going to pay more.
I am against all types of non-democratic weeie-driven, improvement districts that live upon soft money and extra fees and taxes. BIDs = Business Improvement Districts. BIDs are ways to increase taxes as if the residents are not paying enough already. BIDs also come up with fancy ways to spend more money.
When roads get paved because those who live there are paying more for the paving -- it is a case of the rich getting richer. We won't need to pave the roads in the poor neighborhoods.
Road paving decisions need to come from the most prudent logic, based upon fairness, giving economics of the community some weight and allowing opportunities for citizen input and critique. Presently road paving decisions are often about patronage. This move to BIDs makes the special interest groups get more clout and more attention to scares resources.
Road work in progress somewhere in the world.
I am against all types of non-democratic weeie-driven, improvement districts that live upon soft money and extra fees and taxes. BIDs = Business Improvement Districts. BIDs are ways to increase taxes as if the residents are not paying enough already. BIDs also come up with fancy ways to spend more money.
Funds OK'd for Western Avenue work URA director of business development Robert Rubinstein said legislation creating a Western Avenue Business Improvement District, and allowing the assessment, would be introduced in council within weeks. Council would have to conduct a public hearing before voting, he said.
When roads get paved because those who live there are paying more for the paving -- it is a case of the rich getting richer. We won't need to pave the roads in the poor neighborhoods.
Road paving decisions need to come from the most prudent logic, based upon fairness, giving economics of the community some weight and allowing opportunities for citizen input and critique. Presently road paving decisions are often about patronage. This move to BIDs makes the special interest groups get more clout and more attention to scares resources.
Road work in progress somewhere in the world.
Bankrupt city BUYS another property, spends more, further hurts downtown
This is no "redevelopment group" -- it is government. The URA (Urban Redevelopment Authority) gets money from taxes and does NOT pay taxes.
Redevelopment group adds another property - PittsburghLIVE.com
The Pittsburgh Urban Redevelopment Authority added another property Tuesday to its growing cache of buildings in the Fifth and Forbes corridor Downtown.
Authority members unanimously approved the purchase of a 4,100-square-foot building at 218 Forbes Ave. owned by George S. Aiken for $350,000. The purchase means the authority will own at least 18 buildings in the Downtown corridor.
Redevelopment director Jerry Dettore said the building was needed to complete the authority's ownership of a cluster of properties around Aiken's restaurant, George Aiken's Delicious Prepared Foods, which will continue to operate for up to five years. Dettore said his agency has been buying Downtown buildings to prepare the city for Mayor Tom Murphy's plan to attract a major company to develop a large retail district.
The Seattle Times: Business & Technology: Microsoft plans to outsource more, says ex-worker
The Seattle Times: Business & Technology: Microsoft plans to outsource more, says ex-worker Microsoft is on track to outsource more than 1,000 jobs a year to China, according to blistering evidence released yesterday in Microsoft's increasingly nasty spat with Google over an employee who jumped ship in July.
In a revelation that highlights the complexity of China President Hu Jintao's visit to Seattle and Microsoft on Monday, legal filings detailed claims of how Microsoft had offended the Chinese government by not outsourcing as many jobs as promised to Chinese technology vendors.
Slashdot comments
Tuesday, September 13, 2005
Russ Diamond, lead organizer of PA Clean Sweep, visits Pittsburgh on Wed, 14th
Russ Diamond, the lead organizer of PA Clean Sweep, is due in Pittsburgh on Wednesday. We're meeting with him at 5 pm at the Crawford Grill in Station Square. I'll try to attend.
Free Movie at Pitt -- 9 pm on WED -- "Busted"
The movie, Busted, is to be shown this wednesday in room 120 in David Lawrence Hall at the University of Pittsburgh.
"Created by Flex Your Rights and narrated by retired ACLU director Ira Glasser, BUSTED realistically depicts the pressure and confusion of common police encounters. In an entertaining and revealing manner, BUSTED illustrates the right and wrong ways to handle different police encounters and pays special attention to demonstrating how you, the viewer, can courteously and confidently refuse police searches."
http://www.flexyourrights.org/busted
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