Tuesday, February 14, 2006
Medal Contest
Noreway = 11
RUSSIA = 9
USA = 7
Those who have entered the contest I promoted last week are all going to get a gift from me in the mail. Deadline has passed.
SI.com - 2006 Winter Olympics - Russians continue domination in pairs skating - Monday February 13, 2006 9:40PM
SI.com - 2006 Winter Olympics - Russians dominate in pairs skating - if you ignore 2nd, 3rd and 4th.In Pairs Figure Skating, there wasn't a scoring flap as there was at the last Olympics. The Russians won with room to spare. But how about those skaters from China: 2nd, 3rd and 4th.
The top pair from the USA got 7th.
What does that do to the skating show that tours the states after the Olympics end? Isn't there generally a "Champions On Ice" show that comes to the Civic Arena? Do you think that the pairs from China are going to be as big as an attraction for the masses of spectators? I don't know.
When we were in China, we did go to a skating facility -- but it wasn't for "ice" but rather "roller skating." We were in the southwest part, much like Florida weather, so ice skating wasn't to be expected.
This skating rink was rather interesting however. It was right on the landing within the large, central sports (soccer) stadium. A roller rink was on the cement within the second level of the stadium. No wasted space.
At another edge within the stadium there was a ballroom dancing studio -- where space was used for dance. The space was not enclosed by glass or anything special, but more like a fence or larger metal gates that could have been locked to keep folks from entering into the areas of the seats in the stadium, but you could easily see the field and such.
Other places around town were used for community dance and more group exercises -- but this dance studio within the stadium was more of a formal ballroom set up with more limited use and coaching, it seemed.
Generally, the Chinees are not only world class at diving and syncro swimming -- they are OUT OF THIS WORLD. So, it goes to reason that they'll be tops in the figure skating too. The sports of diving (springboard, platform, syncro) have a similar artistic yet athletic constitution.
Meanwhile, we Americans, and even my 2nd son, is all RAD about the half-pipe and the snowboarders. Yesterday, he got a hand-me-down board and boots from a bigger kid we have known from school. They share the same birthday. But he is four years older. So, of course, my guy is pumped to hit the slopes and try out the new gear.
Today's P-G reported upon the Pittsburgh connection with the guy skater representing the US. His mom and some other family is local. That's 'neat.'
Too good to be true -- exciting sports news.
SI.com - 2006 Winter Olympics - U.S. curling team beats defending champs - Monday February 13, 2006 11:30AM The U.S. men routed the defending Olympic champions 11-5 in the opening game of the curling tournament on Monday, scoring a whopping five points in the eighth end and forcing Norway to concede with two frames to go.Just when you said, 'pinch me, its too good to be true,' then can the next shocker.
... The Americans followed up by losing 4-3 to Finland when skip -- or captain -- Pete Fenson missed with the final rock of the night.Pete! What's up with that?
Thursday night's agenda -- hosted in part by Senator Fontana
Beltzhoover to host senator, candidates for meeting night
The Greater Beltzhoover Inter-Agency Network will host an evening with State Senator Wayne Fontana and the candidates running for the District 3 City Council seat on Thursday, Feb. 16.
There will also be information about Medicaid and PaceNet provided during the course of the evening.
The meeting at the St. Paul AME Church,400 Orchard Ave., will begin at 6 p.m. with a reception immediately preceeding the meeting at 5 p.m.
This week's ink in the South Pgh Reporter
: The final candidate at the Candidates Night at Arlington was Mark Rauterkus who showed up a few minutes late for the session. The reason he was not there on time was due to a commitment he had with a youth organization he is involved with.
A South Side resident, Mr. Rauterkus has been a tireless worker when it comes to organizing youth activities. He is a strong proponent in making sure that young people play an active role in the neighborhood, noting that is the only way the city can stop its downward trend in the neighborhoods. He feels that if the city budget focuses more on the needs of the young people, rather than catering to corporations that do nothing for the neighborhoods, the city will begin to flourish again.
�People vote at the polls, but they also vote with their feet [moving out of the city] which they have been doing for a long time,� said Mr. Rauterkus, noting the city�s population has dwindled by the hundreds of thousands in the past 30 years.
Mr. Rauterkus said he wants the city to stop giving tax breaks to the wealthy and start focusing more on the neighborhoods because if this trend continues, there will not longer be a base of middle-class residents which is the backbone of the city.
�Our endeavor is about performance, the kids, wellness, accountability, communication, openness, open-source technology, freedoms, personal responsibility, taxing land, prudent spending, real democracy and respect of the marketplace,� Mr. Rauterkus said.
Parking authority rehiring angers union
I also devote a lot of my time talking about kids and talking about freedom. Both of those pursuits are low-budget items and not what could be called, "cash businesses" like "parking meters." The meat that goes with meters doesn't meet when talking about kids and freedom. My "meat" of my message looks to be vegan in terms of kickbacks and "pork."
Parking authority rehiring angers union Mr. Stenger and his wife own two houses, one in Brentwood, and one on the South Side Flats. The Brentwood house, which they bought in 1990 for $78,000, has a county property tax break available only to owner-occupied homes. The South Side home, which they bought in 2004 for $5,000, does not have a homestead exemption, and is rented out.
Since 2004, Mr. Stenger has been registered to vote at a second Flats address, owned by a family member.
'[H]e lives in South Side. That's the address that's on his driver's license,' Mr. Onorato said. 'If [Mr. Stenger] didn't qualify, we wouldn't have hired him.'
I do talk a good deal about the parking authority, as in its liquidation.
At least I get a lead on a local voter.
Run, Baby, Run, Reform Initiative Launches Campaign to Elect Women Candidates to Reform State Legislature: Financial News - Yahoo! Finance
Run, Baby, Run, Reform Initiative Launches Campaign to Elect Women Candidates to Reform State Legislature: Financial News - Yahoo! Finance The political satire program included skits and spoofs of songs such as 'There is Nothing for Us Dames', a take off of 'There is Nothing Like a Dame' from SOUTH PACIFIC; 'Anything You Can Do, I Can Do Better' and 'Pay Raise', a take off of 'Memories', from CATS.when they had a meeting some months ago, I passed out my CDs to those who attended. Now I've got a new CD that has a new song, "Lay The Shovel Down."
Monday, February 13, 2006
Statement to PPS Board of Education
Statement to the Board and Administrators of Pittsburgh Public Schools
From Mark Rauterkus, candidate for city council, district 3, special election on March 14, 2006; Vice-chair of Allegheny County's Libertarian Party; parent students who attend PPS (2nd & 4th graders) 412 298 3432 Mark@Rauterkus.com
Feb 13, 2006
Schools need to be woven into the fabric of our communities. Likewise, school planning and communicating must be woven into community.
The "Smoky City Image" sticks to Pittsburgh because smoke still swirls around as deals get hatched behind the scenes.
The new Right Sized Plan is pretty good. It has been pretty good at keeping others at bay. It has been pretty good generating smoke. The Right Sized plan has been pretty good at taking a pretty good district into the future where we'll be pretty darn good.
Pretty good isn't good enough when smoke fills the landscape. Pretty good isn't good enough when our most precious, our kids, face large impacts.
The parent hot line is pretty good. I wanted a robust, open-source, time-saving, interactive communication infrastructure. I suggested this at the November hearing.
Mr. Roosevelt marveled about Pittsburgh's rumor mill. Starve that problem - and don't feed it. Pull the plug on pretty good and make excellence the standard. Justifications and reasonings are necessary. An open defense is necessary, not negotiations. Adjustments are expected.ve Put changes and challenges into the open. Then confidence can take root.
1. Pre-school needs and numbers seem to be ab- sent from the Right-Sized Plans. Are you going to kick out the pre-school kids from Roosevelt because they've occupied four classrooms, to make room for Bon Air's students, and in-turn open Bon Air for Pre-School?
2. What about the failing Duquesne School System? The region is too small to turn a blind eye to any pocket of despair. We can't ignore. We need everyone's talents to thrive. Let's absorb Duquesne. To sloup of Hazelwood.
3. Bergwin in Hazelwood seems necessary. The Hazelwood site is never going to come back as a thriving, riverfront community if we don't have a school. Regionally, we need Hazelwood to function. With Bergwin closed, the past closure of Gladstone (middle and HS), Duquesne's proximity, the idle land on the site, it doesn't add up to me.
4. South Vo Tech should remain under the ownership of the PPS district. I'm a free market guy, through and through. But there are some public assets that we should not sell off.
The principal at Schenley HS mentioned a possibility of moving students to South for a year while Schenley's rehab occurred. The flexibility of the facility for South for the future is needed -- should new urban high-rise flats be built five block away on the east side of Station Square. If we put 4,000 to 5,000 new residents along the rivers just four blocks away, we'll need a school there. Don't sell South now.
5. Closing Knoxville is a devastating blow to that hilltop community. Perhaps a second middle school for creative and performing arts could fit there. Everyone wants Rodgers to move to their neighborhood, let's repeat the success.
6. When is a K-8 school not a K-8 school? As a parent, if my kids are all in K-8 grades, and they go to a K-8 school, they need to be in the same school. The research for the K-8 model won't hold true if the model isn't K-8. Call two schools with one principal two schools with one principal, not a K-8 school.
7. Thanks for thinking again about Schenley. Join the WPIAL. Organize school newspapers, district wide. Insist student governments operate in all schools. And, may I join the High School task force, because there is more work to be done.
Wipe out!
SI.com - 2006 Winter Olympics - U.S. luger Retrosi crashes out of Olympics - Monday February 13, 2006 4:41PM And, that the Olympics aren't always fun and games.Get well soon.
'It was a bad crash. ... But the bottom line is that she's going to be OK,' U.S. team leader Fred Zimny said.
Fontana is a co-sponsor of Senate Bill 1085 for Health Care Reform
Let's get this discussion moving in the right direction.
I'm at an event on Thursday with Senator Fontana. I'll do my best to give him props for this leadership on a very big problem that faces Pennsylvania.
One-Man Think Tank: Pa. Gambling Expansion -- Unintended Consequences
One-Man Think Tank: Pa. Gambling Expansion -- Unintended Consequences
Pedal Pittsburgh is looking for helpers for this year's event in May
This does NOT happen at the Pedal Pittsburgh event.On Sunday, May 21, 2006 the Community Design Center of Pittsburgh (CDCP) will host Pedal Pittsburgh 2006. Last year, the event was before the May election and I attended to meet and greet riders.
Pedal Pittsburgh is the region’s premier cycling event celebrating design, health, fitness, and urban lifestyles. A ride, not a race, Pedal Pittsburgh offers a variety of course options ranging from 15 to 60 miles to accommodate everyone from recreational riders to hard-core fitness enthusiasts. This fun, educational bicycle ride draws more than 2,000 riders, and highlights the neighborhoods and design landmarks that make Pittsburgh unique.
This set of wheels won't cut it for the Pedal Pittsburgh event.
Volunteers are needed for the following tasks:
* Event Registration - Help us get people registered and ready to ride! (Pre-registration and day-of registration opportunities available)
* Pedal Pittsburgh Course Marshals - Help keep our riders safe as they ride the course!
* Ride Guides - Teach our riders about the design highlights of Pittsburgh by giving guided tours!
* Rest Stop Attendents - Keep our riders energized and healthy by handing out snacks and beverages!
* Lunch Set-up - Help serve lunch to our riders as they return!
* Post Event Clean-up - Help us clean-up after a great day of cycling, site-seeing, and fun!
We won't be in our three wheeled bike at the Pedal Pittsburgh event, sadly. When we left China, we sold this dashing red bick with the back bench.If you would like to volunteer, or if you would like more information on Pedal Pittsburgh 2006, contact 412.391.4144 or e-mail at vwilson@cdcp.org, or www.pedalpittsburgh.org.
Veronica Wilson, administrative coordinator, community design center of pittsburgh,
the bruno building, 945 liberty avenue, loft #2, pittsburgh, pa 15222
Proceeds from Pedal Pittsburgh 2006 benefit the Community Design Center of Pittsburgh, a non-profit organization that improves the quality of life in the Pittsburgh region by encouraging good design of the built environment. The CDCP does this by investing in strategic projects, helping individuals and communities access architecture and planning resources, and educating the public about the impact of design.
Fifth-Forbes developer put on hold by O'Connor
Fifth-Forbes developer put on hold by O'Connor 'I'm not going to take letters of intent from anybody until I see all the proposals,' he said. 'I want to have ongoing discussions with them and other potential investors in our city. We want to evaluate who has the best scenario for the people of Pittsburgh.'Keep the options open. Keep an open mind. Haste makes waste.
Getting to the starting line isn't an easy feat.
SI.com - 2006 Winter Olympics - Tim Layden: Mancuso, USOC in flap over RV - Saturday February 11, 2006 5:15PM Sometimes the most difficult part of winning an Olympic medal is navigating the inconveniences that accompany the Games to arrive at the starting line whole.Same too with politics.
Sunday, February 12, 2006
Pro se - Wikipedia's definition. This is a new word I've been exposed to.
Pro se - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia: "Pro se is a Latin adjective meaning 'for self', that is applied to someone who represents himself (or herself) without a lawyer in a court proceeding, whether as a defendant or a plaintiff and whether the matter is civil or criminal. Most courts allow people to appear in court and submit legal documents pro se, but some prohibit legal 'persons' such as corporations from appearing without representation. Pro se litigants are usually able to obtain assistance from a pro se clerk, or in very limited circumstances, the judge may even give certain advice from the bench on how to navigate the law.
The decision to appear pro se may sometimes be one of necessity, given the cost of legal representation.
Turning back the clock on past stances.
Then a person emailed me to say:
The School Board was able to kill the deal because SUN OIL wanted a tax break. The School Board could NOT have stopped the building of the plant. But, the building of the plant, without them paying what they should have paid in terms of taxes was what did them in.
I have to say, I was for that project. Sun Oil's emission standards surpassed the EPA's. That plant was eventually built in Ohio and cost $1 billion dollars. The very kind of jobs we need in Pgh/AC.
I like jobs. I like industry. I like it when folks build things here. But, come and work and earn a profit and pay your share of taxes. Don't ask for a handout so that the kids get robbed. The plant was seeking to pay less to the school district, pay less to the city, pay less to the county. That's the nature of the tax break. That is what the TIF was about.
Recently, a lot of second guessing has been made of two other bigger deals in Western PA. The Sony plant that made flat screen TVs down the Mon Valley and the auto plant where they used to make VWs. In both instances, big tax breaks were given and jobs were produced. But, as the tax breaks come to an end -- the plants shut down.
We've been played for suckers time and time again. Industry or even executive buildings want to build here -- if there is a tax break. We need to bribe them to build. PNC Firstide needed a T-stop and a Parking Garage. PNC Plaza needs $30-million grant from the state and a $18-million TIF from the city, school and county.
Enough is enough.
Our schools can't give anything any more. The kids are not learning as they should. Some of our buildings are old and many need major renovations. Other districts are failing much worse -- like Duquesne -- that may need to merge with Pgh. Public Schools.
We can't give anyone a free pass.
When we give away this to one corporation, then we are expected to give away something else to everyone else that enters the scene. Then we give away all this to new arrivals -- and the ones who have to pay are the one's who have been here all along. That just isn't fair.
And, it isn't wise to give tax breaks to a firm like American Eagle Outfitters. They move to the South Side from Warrendale. How smart is it to give them money just to move from 724 to 412? That is our money. That can't be good economics.
We need to be insisting upon sustaining jobs that pull their own weight in terms of taxes and market place successes.
To give something away to firm Z -- you have to take in more from firm X. That isn't fair. That isn't how the marketplace needs to work. That is why we are NOT free. The real growth jobs and growth industries are the ones that are going to make their own marks and profits and do so without handouts and bailouts and tax breaks. Those are the ones we need to move here.
Same too with US Airways and the airport. While US Airways had a lock on the airport we built for them, they provided plenty of jobs. But there was a cost to that in terms of higher tickets we had to pay to fly out of Pittsburgh. We had to create a lot of debt that we still deal with for building the airport. And, when other airlines came in -- US Airways would cut prices to those routes. They had a bit of a monopoly -- and had a lot of perks coming from government.
US Senators and even James Roddey, as were others, were keen on building US Airways its hangars and meeting other demands. Those perks soiled the marketplace and couldn't last forever.
Now we have more airlines into and out of the airport and prices for travel has gone down. Southwest would have never come into the market given the dominance of US Airways and the deals it was cutting with our elected politicians.
We need to shoot for honest, viable business partners who provide value -- without the handouts. I feel that type of business operation is a different breed. And, those folks don't want any part of a landscape that has favorites woven into the pockets of government politicians.
We need a new day where we stick to the basics. Everyone needs to pay what they should. That's the fairness that I crave for Pittsburgh and Southwestern PA for my kids.
Freedoms, Liberty and Justice for ALL -- everyone paying their fair share -- that works for me. That is what I mean when I say, "Liberty XL, One size fits all."
Call me bull-headed -- but call me fair. Extras for friends, wink, wink, -- no thanks.
Thanks for the email.
10 Qs and As for delivery on Feb 12, 2006 - Snips from Platform.For-Pgh.org
1) 10Qs and As for delivery on Feb 12, 2006 - Platform.For-Pgh.org Full length text replies to the ten questions from from The League of Young Voters. (Speaker notes.)
2) Transcript of what was said to the group. Transcripts of talk on 2-12-06 - Platform.For-Pgh.org.
Original post was from 4:30 pm. Updated with transcripts at 9:30 pm.
Out of the sound proof booth....
The opening speaker was Congressman Doyle. He gave a general view of matters from his perspective in D.C. He welcomes the challengers to his seat in the months to come, both within his party and from elsewhere.
The rules were such that candidates were not allowed to listen to the other candidates. So, I slipped home for a moment to see the wife and kids. My wife said, "I'm so happy to know that you all (the candidates) are working in a vacume and not able to share good ideas."
In case anyone cares, I'm running for PUBLIC OFFICE. And, I'm a voter in the district too. And, the worst thing we can do is run campaigns that are insulated to the rest of the field and world.
I want to know what the others in the race are saying, not JUST so I can blog about it. But because I want to unravel the falsehoods quickly. And, should I not win the seat, I want to make sure that what gets said does not get forgotten for the future.
False promises are everywhere when candidates are hungry for election wins -- with the other guys.
My replies to the ten questions are on the Platform.For-Pgh.org.
I'll try to get my exact words to be posted shortly, as I made a tape of myself.