The Pitt News - O'Connor promises revitalizationO’Connor never went to college.
But, O'Connor worked in a restaurant in the Cathedral of Learning. (Roy Rodgers)
O’Connor got involved in Greek Week, a big thing.
O'Connor got involved with the hospitals. (Assume he sold fries to them too.)
O'Connor grew up not knowing anything about politics.
O'Connor wants to retain more of the city’s large collegiate population. O'Connor says, "Job opportunities are certainly here." (Yeah, right.)
O'Connor thinks the key is to create the atmosphere [college students] feel comfortable in and can enjoy. (More enjoyable fast food?)
O'Connor thinks Oakland should be able to hold graduates to Pittsburgh. (Everyone wants to settle down and raise a faimly in Oakland, right?)
A major theme of O’Connor’s is expanding transportation. Bob didn't learn his first lesson from his spring campaign in 2005. Bob's first step then dealt with the creation of a streetcar from Oakland to Downtown. His plan went over like a lead baloon. Bob back-peddaled around those streetcar statements throughout the spring. Now O'Connor falls back into the same rut.
O’Connor believes another key is attractive neighborhoods for young people and old people who don't live here.
O'Connor thinks young people want to live in Squirrel Hill because of Barnes & Noble.
O'Connor does not think Downtown Pittsburgh is linked with Oakland.
O'Connor thinks job centers, Downtown and Oakland, need to be linked. Bob does not understand that a hospital employee does not need to go down to Grant Street often. These centers are centers unto themselves. The link that really needs to occur is between residents and work places. People live at home and go to work. People at one job don't need to travel to other jobs site centers as a normal course of travel.
O'Connor thinks Pittsburgh is growing everywhere except Downtown.
O’Connor thinks Downtown housing would jumpstart revitalization. Frankly, I think it is silly to subsidize housing for rich people. And, the shift to move Downtown into a housing center subtracts from Downtown's strength as a job center.
“The only thing that will change Downtown is having people live here. That’s what changed Squirrel Hill, all the shops and cafes,” he said. “Same thing can be done with Downtown and Oakland, they could do a lot better.”
Humm. O'Connor forgets to mention that loss of the local shops in Squirrel Hill because of the Waterfront in Homestead. Lots of small businesses went out of business because of the subsidized outdoor mall in Homestead. And, given O'Connor's thinking, why is Homestead not booming with housing because of all the shops and stores there?
O’Connor wants to work with companies that are already in Pittsburgh to help them expand and grow. But, that didn't happen with Homestead's Waterfront and existing businesses in Squirrel Hill while Bob was on City Council.
O'Connor thinks there have been plenty of debates. In the primary we had around 80 or 90. O'Connor can't count. But more over, O'Connor must think that freshmen who do lots of homework can stand up to their next professor in the next semester and say, "I've done plenty of homework -- last semester." Even a second grader knows that first-grade homework doesn't count in the next, present round.