Sunday, December 03, 2006

Anyone know Ryan Paul Boody?

kdka.com - Police Probe 23-Year-Old's Disappearance Police Probe 23-Year-Old's Disappearance

(KDKA) MOON TOWNSHIP Moon Township Police are investigating after they say a 23-year-old man disappeared.

Police say Ryan Paul Boody went to the 'Image Bar' on the South Side Thursday and hasn't been seen since.

Authorities say they're concerned because he hasn't used his cell phone or debit card.

He drives a 1995 teal Ford Mustang with the PA license plate DML 0322.

Anyone with information is asked to call Moon Township Police at 412-262-5000.
This is a problem. How do you do an Amber Alert for an adult? We should have a better system of staying connected and raising alarms.

Saturday, December 02, 2006

Perspectives: Restore trust first - Costa makes me giggle.

This letter caught my attention. It made me giggle.
Perspectives: Restore trust first Perspectives: Restore trust first
It's time to change the way state legislators do business

Friday, December 01, 2006 By Jay Costa
Then I got this email as a reply. It is worthy of posting here, regardless of if the P-G prints it or not.

RESPONSE TO: http://postgazette.com/pg/06335/742602-109.stm

In response to Senator Jay Costa’s perspective: Restore Trust First, on December 1st, I am in agreement with the proposed rule changes and reforms that have been recommended and hope our legislature does even more to see that the people’s business is done in a moral, ethical, open, and honest way. After gambling lobbyist’s contributions have quadrupled, even more must be done to stop their anonymous influence, as well as those of other profit seeking lobbyists. That influence was observed in the recent lame duck session in Harrisburg.

The legislature decided to offer us free drinks at gambling facilities as part of twenty six pages of amendments to a bill. This decision was done: without public hearings or input, without the constitutionally required waiting period, and without giving small business owners who will be affected by this provision the time to contact their representatives and let them know how it may affect them. The people were left out.

This was done even after a bipartisan house group signed on to the REFORM agenda. Twenty three of the fifty three house members of this group voted for these recent changes. (See November 12 Forum: The pay off and July 10: House Rebels try to break the Iron grip of Leadership, both in the Post Gazette)

While Senator Costa’s initiatives should be commended and would be a great service to the Commonwealth, a greater service would be done if the members of the general assembly simply followed the rules that were already in place.

Steve Karas, Forest Hills
Did Costa agree to the rule change for free drinks at casinos, or not? How did he vote? Why didn't he protest from the floor to ask that the bill be held? Where is the text of his statement from the floor of the chamber?

Friday, December 01, 2006

Book fest with Tom Poole of PCTV

Below is a press release reminder of our Barnes & Noble event this Saturday. Most of the producers being showcased at this venue work with youth or are youth themselves. This is an excellent opportunity to bring children that are close to your heart

Since this store is closing at the end of the month many of the books will be 40% off (perfect for Holiday shopping) and, just as importantly, PCTV will receive a potion of the total sales for the time period that we are presenting. So come down some time between 10am and 4pm and let family, friends and associates know about our book fair. And bring your vouchers for PCTV to be credited for a sale the vouchers need to be presented)

PRESS RELEASE FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE December 1, 2006

Pittsburgh Community Television (PCTV)-1300 Western Avenue-Pittsburgh, PA 15233

Darlene Terry, Outreach Director (412-322-7570) e-mail darlene@pctv21.org

Meet Pittsburgh Community Television's (PCTV) Producers at Barnes & Noble-Smithfield Street Downtown Pittsburgh


Pittsburgh, PA--Barnes & Noble's Book-fair will be showcasing several PCTV producers that work extensively with youth. Brother John's daughter Ms. Nay Nay; Karen Jones, author of children's stories; Da Button Pusha, hip-hop artist; Bill Heh, illusionist; Rick Murray, Slick Rick youth exercise; and Umoja African Arts Company will all demonstrate the talents that they regularly exhibit to the community on their television shows to those attending this event. This is a wonderful opportunity to meet these dedicated artists, a convenient time to do some holiday shopping and to support literacy in general.

Barnes & Noble will donate a percentage of every sale made with a special Bookfair voucher. Attached is the voucher. Please help support PCTV and our producers by attending and shopping at Barnes & Noble, downtown store on Smithfield and 6th Avenue, on Saturday, December 2, 2006 from 10 am - 4 pm.

Times in which producers will present:

Sat. Dec 2, 2006

10 am - 11am Umoja African Dance Company - drumming instruction

11 am - Noon Universal Street Academy's presents Ms. Nay Nay - host of Kid's Spot, a forum for youth

Noon - 1 pm Karen Jones "Imagination Way"-reading children's stories she wrote

1 pm - 2 pm Slick Rick - exercise demonstration

2 pm - 3 pm Bill Heh - a magic show

3 pm - 4 pm Da Button Pusha - a showcase of positive spoken artist and Q& A with teenagers

PCTV is a non-profit community access station. Our mission is to encourage dialogue, promote media literacy, provide a platform for free speech and build a stronger community thru training and by providing local citizens and non-profit organizations with the tools to produce and broadcast programs from their own unique perspectives

For more information about PCTV, please visit our website www.pctv21.org

###

Lastly, visit PCTV's on-line auction site you might find some packages that you can use or give as gifts for the holidays http://pctv21.cmarket.com Let me know what you think of the site and I look forward to seeing you this weekend.

Honz show: Voter in Plum gets away with fraud

Solutions offered on the air by my call in:

First: If a voter is not known to the poll workers and fails to present I.D. before voting, the voter should be asked to dip his finger into an ink bottle. The purple thumb is a mark of voters in the middle east. It could work here too to snag people who might run around from poll to poll to vote for others who don't generally vote.

Second: Take everyone's photo before they vote. Use a digital camera or video, like a security camera used in schools or a gas station / retail store. Then when the real voter arrives and a conflict is noted, the authorities will have a photo of the one who created the voter fraud. If the chances of being caught on tape are high, then that type of fraud might not occur. But still, the multiple voters would need to be punished and spend five years in jail or with house arrest.

The guest on the KDKA Radio show was from the Allegheny County GOP, Dave M. (spelling?)

Fred H (show host) blames the Dems for always blocking voter ID use at the polls.

My solution is cheap. An ink pad at each polling place might cost $1. And, it would be darn effective. The person might get two votes, but not a third. And, a video camera at the doorway could go a long way to curb those who vote under false names.
Performancing

Loss of HQs pondered in Arizona

Smug. What's up with that statement? It comes at the end of the article from Jon Talton.
Valley again risks loss of HQs - 4 this time The truth is that Phoenix is the last big factory town in America. The product is building houses, along with all the services that are needed by a rapidly growing population. It's a move that has 'worked' for the past half-century, and right now we're as smug as Pittsburgh steelworkers in, say, 1979.

Lien sale looked good then - Pittsburgh Tribune-Review

See, I'm not the only one who is still knocking the ugly deals that former mayor, Tom Murphy, stuck to the citizens of the region. He was bad news and still has a bad approach in North Carolina with the Land Institute.
Lien sale looked good then - Pittsburgh Tribune-Review With Pittsburgh short on cash but flush with unpaid tax bills in the mid-1990s, then-Mayor Tom Murphy received an offer that must have seemed too good to be true.

Capital Asset Research, a private company later taken over by MBIA, a New York-based bond insurer, wanted to pay Pittsburgh more than $32 million for liens against property owners who hadn't paid their taxes.

More than a decade later, Mayor Luke Ravenstahl's administration is negotiating to undo the agreement with MBIA by purchasing the tax liens for pennies on the dollar.

'Everybody realizes it was a bad deal on all ends,' said Adriane Aul, vacant property program manager for the Pittsburgh Community Reinvestment Group. 'It was a short-term solution that created a very long-term problem for everybody.'
I'm waiting for Tom Murphy to come back into the state-wide news by organizing a new deal so as to sell off the Pennsylvania Turnpike.

Perhaps I should send him an invite to hatch a deal for the Wabash Tunnel. He could unload that for PAT's sake as they don't want to operate it any longer. Funny how I want to turn one lane of the Wabash Tunnel into a bikeway while cars and buses can still travel on the other lane. That is something that Murphy should support as he is so pro trails. Such a joke too.

Back to the article. "Did anybody expect this nightmare? No, no, no. Nobody did it intentionally. It's a real process we've gone through." Well, I expected the nightmare.

People will wake up to the evil that lurks behind the increases (recent and more are proposed) in the deed transfer tax too, some day.

Put off the 'day of reckoning' -- or -- as it should be stated, 'era of wreckoning.'

Blind spots are killers. Too often people choose to accept blind spots. Think again!

Thursday, November 30, 2006

We're hosting an invitational swim meet on Saturday.

We don't get to swim outdoors in our December swim meet like we did in August.
Swimming through the lilly pads.

Bad technique in the pads, with Grants head high. Grant says he is standing on the murky bottom in this photo.

I'm going to bring my voice recorder and try to get swimmer interviews and make up a podcast for the kids. More news later. Swimming has "pads." The touch pads are at the end of the lane(s) for the electronic timing in a swim pool. They are often called, "touch pads." Swimming in a lake brings a different set of 'pad' to the swimmer, 'lilly pads.' When they rub against your skin, they can evoke a shout, as the video reveals.



There were videos of the swim in Canada through the pads.

The Libertarian Party of Pittsburgh Meetup Group (Pittsburgh, PA) - Meetup.com

The Libertarian Party of Pittsburgh Meetup Group (Pittsburgh, PA) - Meetup.com Our next Meetup: Holiday Party at John Harvard's in Monroeville

Join us for the Libertarian annual Holiday Party! All are welcome!
Hope to see some Running Mates there.

Music and Drama tidbit

Anne Feeney wrote in her newsletter, in part:
On Monday night, Dec 4th, my friend Jerry Starr debuts his new play, BURIED: the story of the Sago Mine Disaster in a standing-room-only reading at Pittsburgh Playwrights. Directed by the amazing Marci Wood, the play features an all-star cast and music by me and Sue Powers. The reading will be filmed in the hope of finding funding for full-scale productions in 2007.
Break a leg!

College Football Poll Bowl Games

Pitt is not slated to attend a Football Bowl Game at the end of this season, so says this site.
College Football Poll Bowl Games International Bowl, Toronto, Canada $750,000 1/6/07 Noon
ESPN-2, TSN MAC #2 or #3 vs. Big East #4 or #5 Western Michigan vs. Rutgers
This is the first year of the International Bowl, to be played in Canada on January 6 at noon. Pitt had hopes to get an invite there. But, it looks like a long shot now.

Ohio University football and OU Alumni Tailgate

The Ohio Univeristy Bobcats are playing for the MAC Championship on ESPN tonight at 7:30 pm.

Ohio U plays Central Michigan. And, OU footballers accepted an invitation to play in the GMAC Bowl on January 7th. This is the first bowl game for the Bobcats since 1968.
On December 7th, the OU alumni are holding a tailgate before the Steelers Browns game from 5 - 8 pm. At the tailgate we will have various types of food, drinks, and giveaways. The tailgate will be held in Red Lot Clark East, beside the Clark Building. Look for the Ohio Bobcats flag to find the tailgate. If you are interested in attending, please RSVP by November 30th and send a check for $15.00 to:

Colleen Doughty
c/o OUAA Pittsburgh Chapter
5605 Pavillion Court
Wexford, PA 15090

Please make checks out to OUAA Pittsburgh Chapter. In addition, please bring your ID so that I can give wristband to individuals that are over 21. If you have any questions, feel free to contact me at colleenedoughty@aol.com. Please join us and invite your friends!

Need 10 (or more) folks to email me to assist with a new e-forum hosted by international / national expert

Steven Clift, founder of E-Democracy.Org, is a net advocate that I've followed for years. He does fantastic work. Steve has been around the block and around the net on issues and with plenty of tech-based tools and thoughts.

We now need a dozen or so from Pittsburgh -- and from Allegheny County too -- to email me, Mark -at- Rauterkus -dot- com, so we can make a steering group and form a new online community forum. Steven Cliff's associates provide the infrastructure and leadership.

They've got a nice tech partner in New Zealand and a forum there. They've done great things in Minnesota, and I've lurked and participated there too.

Now, they are trying to roll this out in various markets in the country. Others have wanted to lift-off in various cities and Pittsburgh should ride this wave with our own community forum too.

Excellent. Any more takers?

The first step is to create a steering committee with at five members. The more diverse politically, gender-wise, etc. the better. If you can get some representation from community institutions even better, particularly on larger steering groups.

Once you have a small steering team, then we'll set you up with a place-team@ group so you can work on your charter - forum purpose statement and any special rules above our common rules framework. Circulating a draft around the community helps build buy in and interest.

As Carol said, then you need to select a volunteer forum manager.

Then the forum is created and together we put lots of energy into recruitment before the forum opens for posting. Our built-to-last model, requires 100 member to launch. That might seem like a lot or to some too little. The key benefit is it creates a sense of community - I was there from the beginning - ownership. It also forces you to be strategic in your outreach!

So one step at time, create a short e-mail letting people know that you plan to start a local Issues Forum if other join you in the effort. Ask them to e-mail you if they are interested in the idea or might participate. Perhaps what they might want to see discussed. Then in your reply ask them if they have any objection to being part of the steering committee. Feel free to share a draft if you like - make it short and
snappy.

When you think you have enough interest, come back and we can discuss steering committee first steps (like a meeting) and charters. Let's plan to reconnect in two weeks when you have the base of your steering committee recruited. Sound good?

Cheers, Steven Clift. E-Democracy.Org
So, I need to email Steven and provide him with a list of names and email contacts from folks who want to be on this new venture's steering committee.

Please consider this request, if you can use email. And, most of all, we need to get folks from all parts of the political landscape. We can only take three more white guy Libertarians who live on the South Side Flats who have two kids.

First come first served. I'll submit a list at 20. If you don't want to email me, leave a comment in the blog.

FWIW, this won't be a Rauterkus.com effort. It won't be a specific campaign tool. This is a community forum and all are welcome.

UPDATE: I've got three takers within the first day. We still need more. And, I don't yet need to cast a wide net.

Luke on KDKA-Radio with Marty G

Luke says, "I'm here for the long haul."
Luke, you are really here for as long as the people of Pittsburgh decide if you should be retained or not. The voters may elect you to continue the job. You're here until December, 2007. You are here to serve the will of the people. The voters get to decide what happens next. Not Luke.

Nice interview otherwise, except for Janis' call and questions. Come on! Marty shut down part of the question with silence and then just said, "wow." She clearly had an agenda, said the show host.

Many of the top citizen speakers called: Ora Lee, Ms. E.F. Brown, and a zinger at the end about some guy from Public Works who had issue with some dead wood going out of parkland.

Stay tuned until Friday to get the news about those who are still being paid and are on leave: Dennis Regan and a Police Commander, K.McN.

The $50-million price tag for the casino license only included SLOTS. Table games comes for a 10-fold increase in the cost of doing business here.

The jerks in Harrisburg sold slots parlor licenses for $50-million each. The price was too low. There should have been an auction so that the price of entry would have been much greater.

The taxpayers got ripped off with the sale of the $50-million licenses.

Now, there is no way that we'll get a good deal by extending the license holder's rights to host table games, in addition to slots, without a serious auction and about $500-million.

Ed Rendell is quoted on the radio saying he will not support table games at casinos, just yet.

If we get table games, we better get another pay day, ten times as much as before, from the casino license holders.

Difference between slots and table games: Demographics

The difference is that PA has a bunch of seniors that go to Atlantic City and West Virginia to gamble. We send our tour buses out of state and the state of PA does not get that revenue.

The difference is that PA doesn't have an viable outflow of money being spent on table games that could be retained in-state so as to make a tax-windfall to the PA treasury.

PA was getting taken to the cleaners by other states because a chunk of income went elsewhere to play the slots.

PA is not able to justify the expansion of its pending casinos to include table games because a chunk of income from PA is not going elsewhere.

PA has a lot of seniors. Seniors like to play the slots. PA was sold the slots deal so as to capitalize upon the lost incomes.

PA seniors may stay home to spend some of their money in the PA slots parlors. That's it. Done.

PA's seniors won't go out of state to play table games.

Bill at the end of the session!

Frank Dermody was caught by another caller about how there was an amendment and it was voted on in a matter of hours.

Where is the reform group on this?

Frank Dermody said," I would have said that they should have voted the next day."

The next day is bunk.

People had a chance to make public comment on the bill. But the amendment had no chance to make public comment.

Falling Down Stupid Drunk in a casino (call recap with Marty Griffin's show)

I've never said that the casino's should NOT provide free drinks because the free drinks can lead to falling down, drunk casino customers. Ed Rendell has no clue as to my objections.

Others point out that drinking and free drinks can lead to drunk driving, bankruptcy and other dangers.

People can get drunk on both free drinks and drinks that are purchased.

Frank Dermody said that the casio has to comply with the PA LCB laws. The laws are strict. WRONG!

The Governor just signed a bill that makes an exception to the LCB laws. Casinos don't have to follow LCB laws as they legislature and the governor just change the LCB laws. They'll change them again too.

Double-talking jackass.

Frank Dermody also said that there won't be any local taverns that will go out of business.

WRONG!

We'll see 20 or 30 bars, restaurants and taverns go out of business after the casino opens. There will be some marketplace adjustments. Payrolls will not be able to be met. A job shift will occur and perhaps the small businesses, locally owned business will see a serious decline.

Sure, we have too many bars on the South Side, but that will change after the casino opens. That's why I think it is fruitless to fight with the bar limiting legislation, but that is a point for another rant.

We are going to loose jobs on East Carson Street after the casino comes. We might see a job surge in the net output. But, we'll see places close. Bars open and close all the time. To think otherwise is hype that I'm not buying.

Finally, and this was my first point in the phone call, we should put table games to a voter referendum. Frank Dermody should write the ballot questions.

Mayor and others, (read Onorato) to do pole dance on New Years Eve

So, they are going to drop the ball(s) at midnight on a pole on a stage in downtown at the corner of the Horne's Christmas tree.

It's a new feature for first night.


City will have a ball on New Year's City will have a ball on New Year's
Midnight countdown will culminate with raising of 1,000-pound sphere

E. Hills residents seek to turn closed school into community hub

East Hills residents seek to turn closed school into community hub An East Hills group yesterday sought the city's help in turning a shuttered school building into a community center that would offer sports, education and social programs...

Konota Gaskins, a Democratic committeeman and president of East Hills Community Youth Adult Council, pitched the idea to Neil D. Parham, the city's youth policy manager, in a meeting at the City-County Building. Also present was Arlinder Lang, a former East Hills resident helping Mr. Gaskins.

Mr. Gaskins said he has been trying for three years to establish a community center in what he described as a dying neighborhood. He said the East Hills International Studies Academy building, which the Pittsburgh Public Schools closed in June, would be an ideal site.
Don't hold your breath. We've got a closed indoor ice rink on the South Side that has not been opened for years. There is no hope of doing any expansion in the city because those on Grant Street now are only worried about their own needs (selfish) and they're too busy trying to manage the downward spiral of decline.