Friday, September 02, 2011

Fwd: [DW] Sustainable civic hacking - mySociety, App contests beyond the bandwagon



---------- Forwarded message ----------
From: Steven Clift
Date: Friday, September 2, 2011
Subject: [DW] Sustainable civic hacking - mySociety, App contests beyond the bandwagon
To: newswire@groups.dowire.org


Two great articles:

How to create sustainable open data projects with purpose
Tom Steinberg on making a website vs making a difference.
by Tom Steinberg  | @mysociety  | +Tom Steinberg  | Comments: 4 | 30 August 2011
http://radar.oreilly.com/2011/08/how-to-create-sustainable-open.html

Everyone jumped on the app contest bandwagon. Now what?
The next wave of government app contests need to incorporate
sustainability, community, and civic value.
by Alex Howard | @digiphile  | +Alex Howard  | Comments: 5 | 19 August 2011
http://radar.oreilly.com/2011/08/app-contests-sustainability-usability.html

My comments below ...

As the likely original person suggesting FixMyStreet should be
FixOurStreet to my friend Tom ;-), I enjoy his laser focus on the end
user. I do want to counter and say that I do see a continuing problem
with narrow, often one-time online experiences, from my community
builder perspective. If "my" marketing and a focused problem-solving
service brings more people into a service, how do you leverage that
engagement as an organizer for broader civic purposes/good? What I
really really like about FixMyTransport is that it really is that by
definition it is a broader -OUR- public service. So "my" marketing
aside, it will be interesting to see this effort unfolds.

One quick lesson, our city-wide "online townhall model" -
http://e-democracy.org/if - attracts some 1% of households for
engagement that often lasts _years_. As Tom might say, most people
don't wake up and say, I want to engage my city government today. Too
abstract. On the other hand, in a few neighborhoods in Minneapolis,
our model using the exact same technology, rules, facilitation, etc.
as a "neighbors forum" is attracting 20% household participation (or
over 800 members in my neighborhood - http://e-democracy.org/se ).
Someone loses a pet, joins us, then finds their pet ... 9 times out of
10 they stay on our general purpose neighbor-to-neighbor exchange and
are exposed to the serendipity of local exchange they would not have
click on or searched out. The silos of local interest can and must be
broken at a level where the common interest in protecting or building
your very local community trumps differences in ideology, ethnicity,
income, etc. which often divide us.

To me this points out the missed opportunity for mySociety and many
other break through projects - you have place-based participants, why
not put some trust into those who want to connect for more generalist
local purposes and channel them into spaces so they can reach critical
mass? I am continuously amazed by the capacity of local people, once
they have an ice breaking online public space, to not just ask someone
else to fix something for them, but to share ideas and take action.

Steven Clift


Steven Clift - http://stevenclift.com
  Executive Director - http://E-Democracy.Org
  Follow me - http://twitter.com/democracy
  New Tel: +1.612.234.7072

-----------------------------------------
Group home for Newswire - Steven Clift's Democracies Online Newswire:
http://groups.dowire.org/groups/newswire

Replies go to members of Newswire - Steven Clift's Democracies Online Newswire with all posts on this topic here:
http://groups.dowire.org/r/topic/3Yjq4Rut48txbXd2DqdoSQ



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412 298 3432 = cell

New bike shop in town to do electric bikes

From china - bike
If I had some money, I would have done this three years ago.

Thursday, September 01, 2011

Spectacular Eden Park Opening Ceremony set to kick-off Tournament





If you cannot view this email, please click here <http://www.rugbyworldcupnews.com/mail/display.php?M=533161&C=9872a387828d192362b024e7ab7b4e5b&S=689&L=2&N=342>.

 
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MEDIA RELEASE
2 September, 2011 

Spectacular Eden Park Opening Ceremony set to kick-off Tournament

Key role for New Zealand sporting legend
Fans urged to be in seats by 7pm
4,000 tickets still available
NZ broadcasters Petra Bagust and Jeremy Corbett to warm up crowd

Tournament Organisers for Rugby World Cup 2011 (RWC 2011) today unveiled some key elements of the Opening Ceremony which will kick-off the seventh Rugby World Cup at 7.30pm (NZT) on Friday, September 9, including a key role for a New Zealand sports star.

"In one week's time, the world will be watching us as the seventh Rugby World Cup gets underway," said Martin Snedden, CEO for Tournament Organiser Rugby New Zealand 2011.

"We promise all fans, at Eden Park, and those watching from afar, a night to remember.

"It is the perfect double bill – a spectacular Opening Ceremony, the likes of which New Zealand sports fans will not have experienced in this country, coupled with two great Pacific nations kicking off Rugby's showpiece Tournament."

Host nation New Zealand plays Tonga in the opening match which starts at 8.30pm (NZT).

Unique flavour

Mr Snedden said the Opening Ceremony signals the official start of the Tournament and is the first opportunity for Kiwi fans to see some dazzling video projection technology not seen on such a scale before in New Zealand.

The 30 minute ceremony will tell the story of New Zealand and its unique place in the Pacific and represent the coming together of countries from around the world in New Zealand in pursuit of Rugby's greatest prize.

A New Zealand sporting legend will also have a special role, but Tournament Organisers say exactly who and what they will do is being kept under wraps.

"Rest assured he or she will play a pivotal role in the ceremony.

"There will also be special recognition of Christchurch, which lost its role as a host city for RWC 2011 following February's tragic earthquake.

"As well, there will be a unique interpretation of the official Tournament song World in Union featuring the combined talents of over 400 singers, in a performance that will have a special Pacific flavour.

"The performance will sum up the cosmopolitan character of our young nation with singers of Maori, Pakeha, Samoan, Fijian, Cook Island, Niuean, Tongan, Tokelauan, Australian, Chinese, Korean, English, Irish, Danish, American, Canadian, Dutch, South African and Indian descent.

"The ceremony will be a powerful tribute to New Zealand's creative skills. Some of our finest talent have been working hard to show the world why we are such a skilled and innovative country so this is their chance to shine on the world stage. We have drawn on many of our best choreographers, costume designers, set builders, musicians and many others, plus a cast of 1000 volunteer performers who have given up their time to be part of this amazing show.

"The ceremony has also been masterminded by one of the world's best live event companies, David Atkins Enterprises (DAE), which has staged many other spectacular opening events such as the Vancouver Winter Olympics and Sydney Olympic Games so fans are in for a special night.

"DAE have assembled an amazing team of New Zealand creative talent who have given the ceremony a uniquely Kiwi feel."

Rugby World Cup Limited Chairman Bernard Lapasset, who arrived in Auckland on Wednesday, expects the Opening Ceremony to be the most exciting and spectacular in the history of Rugby World Cup.

"Fans attending the Opening Match and the millions around the world watching on television are going to be in for a real treat.

"The ceremony will be a celebration of New Zealand and its rich cultural and Rugby heritage, the history of the Game and the values that binds it together. It promises to be spectacular and I can't wait to see it.

"There is no doubt that it will set the tone for what will be a very special and successful Rugby World Cup."

Get there early

Broadcasters Petra Bagust and Jeremy Corbett will welcome fans to the stadium from 7pm and plan a few tricks of their own to entertain the crowd.

"We don't want fans to miss any of the action so our best advice is get there by 7pm because the show will start at 7.30pm sharp," said Mr Snedden.

"With an international television audience estimated at over 50 million everything needs to run to a tight schedule. We want the perfect start to this Tournament so we urge Kiwi fans to do their bit when the world switches on to watch New Zealand's big night and don't delay getting to Eden Park."

The good news for fans who have yet to purchase is that 4,000 tickets are still available. Tickets can be purchased online at www.rugbyworldcup.com/tickets <http://www.rugbyworldcupnews.com/mail/link.php?M=533161&N=689&L=59&F=H> and at selected Ticketek outlets.

Ends

The RWC 2011 Opening Ceremony – some facts

Start time: 7.30pm Friday 9 September
Pre-show start time: 7.00pm
Duration: 30 minutes
1,000 performers
200 back stage production crew
200 back stage support volunteers
400 performers to sing World in Union
8,000 blades of flax harvested and 9.5kms of silk to be used in costumes
During rehearsals, performers and crew consumed:

13,122 muesli bars
5,740 litres of water
5,636 hot drinks

<http://../../Recruitment+Alerts/Recruitment+Alert_clip_image001.gif> 

Official Travel and Hospitality Programme: Tickets packages are still available through the Official Travel and Hospitality Programme. Visit www.rth2011.com <http://www.rugbyworldcupnews.com/mail/link.php?M=88827&N=621&L=23&F=H> to book your packages now.

About Rugby New Zealand 2011 Ltd (RNZ 2011): RNZ 2011 was established in June 2006, following the selection of the New Zealand Rugby Union (NZRU) as the Host Union for RWC 2011 by the IRB Council in November 2005. It is the organisation responsible for the planning and delivery of RWC 2011 in New Zealand on behalf of its shareholders, the NZRU and the New Zealand Government.

About IRB Rugby World Cup: IRB Rugby World Cup is the third largest sports event in the world. The inaugural tournament took place in 1987 and it is held every four years. In 2007 the sixth tournament was held in France and enjoyed a cumulative worldwide broadcast audience of more than four billion.

For the latest on RWC 2011 visit www.rugbyworldcup.com <http://www.rugbyworldcupnews.com/mail/link.php?M=533161&N=689&L=11&F=H>.


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412 298 3432 = cell

Fwd: JC Penney breaks promise to families following deadly fire



---------- Forwarded message ----------
From: Judy Gearhart, International Labor Rights Forum
Date: Thursday, September 1, 2011
Subject: JC Penney breaks promise to families following deadly fire
To: Mark@rauterkus.com



Call on J.C. Penney to institute fire safety and justly compensate families -- send a letter now >> <http://afl.salsalabs.com/dia/track.jsp?v=2&c=HO0bvjuvfFjakCQWcttHatldNylKj2HG>

Dear Mark,

Last December, 30 Bangladeshi factory workers perished in an easily preventable fire that broke out in the unsafe, multi-story sweatshop in which they were working.

Following the fire, over 65,000 ILRF supporters and Change.org members called on U.S. apparel brands sourcing from the factory to assume responsibility for fair compensation for the affected workers' families and to take meaningful steps to stop the epidemic of workplace deaths at their suppliers in Bangladesh. But further action is needed now <http://afl.salsalabs.com/dia/track.jsp?v=2&c=vU9tEyNzruMUrTwvu35Rz9ldNylKj2HG>.

Most U.S. apparel brands that were doing business with the factory have now signed a commitment to act, but J.C. Penney has shamefully broken this pledge. While other brands continue negotiating in good faith to establish an adequate worker compensation fund and sustainable fire safety initiatives, J.C. Penney has dropped out of this initiative, despite its initial commitment to support these efforts.

We need your help to send a message calling on J.C. Penney to honor the commitments the company made in January.

Sign the new petition to J.C. Penney now! <http://afl.salsalabs.com/dia/track.jsp?v=2&c=qwkir%2BmhftoDBHz%2FI4ggeNldNylKj2HG>

In Bangladesh, nearly 500 workers have died in factory fires during the past five years. Establishing effective initiatives to prevent fires like this from occurring again is critical. Nothing less than workers' lives are at stake. Don't let J.C. Penney walk away from workers in Bangladesh.

Are you on Twitter? Help JCPenney feel the heat by tweeting along these lines: 

@JCPenney: honor your commitment to compensate Bangladeshi factory fire victims & adopt fire safety. http://tinyurl.com/jcpfiresafety @ILRF

Thank you,

Judy Gearhart

------------------------

This message was brought to you by the International Labor Rights Forum <http://afl.salsalabs.com/dia/track.jsp?v=2&c=qfVzTLmE8TZeHXGIkcDSRdldNylKj2HG>.

Donate <http://afl.salsalabs.com/dia/track.jsp?v=2&c=i2jyaUdSAif5icS3WOz2ztldNylKj2HG> | Subscribe <http://afl.salsalabs.com/dia/track.jsp?v=2&c=X4778zRvPjT66O1IK9RletldNylKj2HG> | Unsubscribe <http://afl.salsalabs.com/dia/track.jsp?v=2&c=5kKypoqPULSk7vIscvSAL9ldNylKj2HG>

<http://www.salsalabs.com/?email>


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412 298 3432 = cell

Fwd: Neighborhood Learning Alliance Supports More Than 250 Students This Summer



---------- Forwarded message ----------
From: Neighborhood Learning Alliance
Date: Thursday, September 1, 2011
Subject: Neighborhood Learning Alliance Supports More Than 250 Students This Summer
To: Mark <mark.rauterkus@gmail.com>


Is this email not displaying correctly?
View it in your browser <http://us2.campaign-archive1.com/?u=0d73f31b85a8a8a698be115a1&id=d39d1f3fae&e=a353c2ac8b>.
<http://www.neighborhoodlearning.org/sites/all/themes/denizen/images/logo.gif> <http://neighborhoodlearning.us2.list-manage.com/track/click?u=0d73f31b85a8a8a698be115a1&id=c9d4b74aa0&e=a353c2ac8b>
<http://gallery.mailchimp.com/0d73f31b85a8a8a698be115a1/images/SD1.jpg>   <http://gallery.mailchimp.com/0d73f31b85a8a8a698be115a1/images/SD2.jpg>
 
Summer Dreaming   This summer, Neighborhood Learning Alliance (NLA) provided a fun, educational summer camp experience to more than 150 middle school students as part of the PPS Summer Dreamers Academy. NLA offered three camps: Check Mate chess instruction, Make a Splash swim and polo lessons, and Health Smart nutrition- and health-related curriculum and activities.
 
More Than 150 Credits Recovered!  Neighborhood Learning Alliance was hard at work this summer making sure that more than 100 students who needed to make up credits were able to do so before the start of the 2011-12 school year.

In partnership with University Prep, NLA helped more than 75 students recover classes through summer school.
NLA provided transportation and fiscal support to 40 Peabody and Westinghouse students who attended summer school at Allderdice High School.
An additional 10 students recovered classes by attending NovaNet instruction at the NLA offices in East Liberty.

For more information about the work of NLA, contact Stephen MacIsaac, Executive Director, at 412-363-1914 <tel:412-363-1914>, or visit us online at www.neighborhoodlearning.org <http://neighborhoodlearning.us2.list-manage2.com/track/click?u=0d73f31b85a8a8a698be115a1&id=cde1c63276&e=a353c2ac8b>.


 follow on Twitter <http://neighborhoodlearning.us2.list-manage1.com/track/click?u=0d73f31b85a8a8a698be115a1&id=123bb641e5&e=a353c2ac8b> | friend on Facebook <http://neighborhoodlearning.us2.list-manage1.com/track/click?u=0d73f31b85a8a8a698be115a1&id=22dec9e98f&e=a353c2ac8b> | forward to a friend <http://us2.forward-to-friend.com/forward?u=0d73f31b85a8a8a698be115a1&id=d39d1f3fae&e=a353c2ac8b
Copyright © 2011 Neighborhood Learning Alliance, All rights reserved.
You are receiving this because you are a friend of Neighborhood Learning Alliance, formerly called Wireless Neighborhoods.
Our mailing address is:
Neighborhood Learning Alliance
218 N. Highland Avenue
Pittsburgh, PA 15206
Add us to your address book <http://neighborhoodlearning.us2.list-manage1.com/vcard?u=0d73f31b85a8a8a698be115a1&id=68f97ff1dc>
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412 298 3432 = cell

Fw: [PURE Reform] New comment on How we got where we are Part XIX (June2008).

Sent on the Sprint® Now Network from my BlackBerry®


From: Old Timer <noreply-comment@blogger.com>
Date: Thu, 1 Sep 2011 03:36:07 -0700 (PDT)
To: <mark.rauterkus@gmail.com>
Subject: [PURE Reform] New comment on How we got where we are Part XIX (June 2008).

Old Timer has left a new comment on the post "How we got where we are Part XIX (June 2008)":

Mr.Moss was one of four teachers who won slots with the PFT--against all odds and against the "slate" choices of Tarka's gang.

They won and represent a mandate from teachers....and Tarka's response has been to try and mute them at all turns.

Dirty. This is a dirty union.

If we say that those making choice in government--indeed, within school boards and administrations--are corrupt, then you would have to put PFT leadership even lower than that.

Ethically bankrupt.

Any teacher who does not vote this do-nothing, capitulating, cowardly leadership OUT this year truly IS a fool.

I only hope a new president like Mark Sammartino can clean house and amend "bylaws" that do nothing but insure that they are untouchable.

Each teacher pays $800 in union dues. You might as well call that theft.

Post a comment.

Unsubscribe to comments on this post.

Posted by Old Timer to PURE Reform at September 1, 2011 5:44 AM

Wednesday, August 31, 2011

20 Years Ago...


From: Glenn A. Walsh

Today (August 31) at 5:00 p.m. EDT, twenty years ago, Pittsburgh's original Buhl Planetarium and Institute of Popular Science (a.k.a. Buhl Science Center) closed as a public museum.

This was Saturday of the Labor Day Weekend in 1991. I had issued a memorandum to Pat Weidman, Director of the Department of Visitor Services and Volunteers, suggesting that the last day of public visitation should be Labor Day, September 2. This would give Pittsburghers two additional days to visit Buhl Planetarium before it closed, as well as give Buhl the additional income from these nostalgic visitors. This would have had no effect on the move to the new Science Center building, as nothing would be moved during the holiday weekend.

However, when Pat Weidman took my suggestion to the Management Committee, it was rejected. It was obvious that Buhl Science Center Director Al DeSena and other Program staff had no interest in giving the public extra time to see Buhl Planetarium. They only thought about the glory of opening the new science center building. Since they had no intentions of being in the Buhl building on Labor Day, the final day of visitation would be the last day they would be in the building for the evening's special member event--that Saturday evening.

The building and most equipment and artifacts continued as the "Allegheny Square Annex, The Carnegie Science Center" until February of 1994 when the building was completely abandoned by The Carnegie Science Center. Science Center science and computer classes, and teacher development programs, were centered in the original Buhl building during this time period.

Originally, the new Carnegie Science Center building had specifically been constructed without classroom space. During Pittsburgh Mayor Richard Caliguiri's Administration, the city and the Science Center had agreed, through what could be called a "gentleman's agreement," that the Science Center would not abandon the original Buhl Planetarium building. However, after a couple years of operation of the "Allegheny Square Annex," and after the untimely death of Mayor Richard Caliguiri and a new city administration, the Science Center's agreement to continue operating the original building was conveniently forgotten.

After abandoning the building, the Science Center attempted to sell-off the historic Zeiss II Planetarium Projector and 10-inch Siderostat-type, Refractor Telescope to a college south of Dallas. The irony is that the college had no intent to actually use the equipment, but only to display them as antique artifacts (but for how long?). Had these pieces of equipment left the city at that time, there might have been an excuse to tear-down the building.

A grass-roots effort, helped by many of you, stopped this sale of historic Pittsburgh artifacts. At this link, you can learn more about the efforts to stop the sale of the Zeiss and Siderostat:

http://buhlplanetarium3.tripod.com/Buhlnews.htm#1995hearing

Although we won the battle to keep the historic equipment, the historic equipment and artifacts remained in an empty and unused building for several years. Proposals to reuse the Buhl Planetarium building, which would have kept the historic equipment and artifacts in-place and occasionally used, were considered but fell-through for both financial and political reasons. Such proposals included a Pittsburgh Public Schools Center for Gifted Children, Italian-American Cultural Center, and an annex of the National Aviary.

In 2000, the Children's Museum started planning an expansion into the Buhl Planetarium building. However, despite strong lobbying efforts, they refused to keep most of the historic equipment and artifacts in the building. The Carnegie Science Center quickly agreed to move the Zeiss Projector, Siderostat Telescope, and the large Mercator's Projection Map of the World into a warehouse, to ensure they would not be used in competition with The Carnegie Science Center.

A couple years later, the city loaned the large U.S. Steel mural, "The Rise of Steel Technology" by Nat H. Youngblood, to the Rivers of Steel Heritage Area/Museum in Homestead.

The first floor's Great Hall was reused by the Children's Museum as a cafe, but the east wall was replaced with a huge window, to view the historic clock tower and entrance to the Allegheny Regional Branch of Carnegie Library. The destruction of this wall included the destruction of an astronomical verse from the Bible, inscribed on the exterior of the wall. The wall remnants of this Bible verse remain in storage, as does the Civil Defense sign that had been mounted outside the building's entrance.

The Great Hall's grand clock continues in use. And, the Children's Museum did return to the Great Hall, from the Science Center, the original Buhl Planetarium Foucault Pendulum.

Bowdish Gallery, which had been home of the Miniature Railroad and Village, was turned into a small auditorium/exhibit gallery, with the reuse of 40 original seats from Buhl's Little Science Theater (LST). The reuse of original LST chairs was the only suggestion I made that the Children's Museum implemented. Radio studios of the weekly Saturday Morning Light Brigade children's radio program were constructed in the former miniature railroad maintenance areas east of Bowdish Gallery.

The Mezzanine Gallery is now used as a temporary gallery/program area. The Octagon Gallery, which did not have good handicapped access, is now used as a workshop. The original Buhl Planetarium Workshop was rented to a small nonprofit organization, as were the Discovery Lab (Lab 1) and Lab 2 classrooms.

The Theater of the Stars (Planetarium Theater) and the Little Science Theater were converted into exhibit galleries. The Hall of the Universe is now used as a traveling exhibits gallery.

The second floor office area and Buhl Library are now used for daily children's classes. The third floor Observatory is now used as a Children's Museum Board Room.

Last year, The Carnegie Science Center finally reassembled the Zeiss II Planetarium Projector as a non-usable, static exhibit at the extreme western end of the Science Center's first floor Atrium Gallery (next to the entrance to their Science Stage theater).

The 10-inch Siderostat-type, Refractor Telescope and the Mercator's Projection Map of the World remain, dismantled, in a Science Center warehouse. The Science Center claims they will be reassembled and reused with an expansion of the Science Center building. The Science Center has filed plans for an expanded Science Center building with the city. However, there have been no efforts toward developing a specific timeline and finding funding for such building expansion.

The original Buhl Planetarium building was custom-built to include the Zeiss Projector (inside a 65-foot diameter planetarium dome) and the Siderostat Telescope. Without replication of these specific chambers, the Zeiss Projector and Siderostat Telescope cannot be reused.

It is obvious that the Science Center has no intentions of replicating Buhl's Theater of the Stars. Although they claim they will replicate Buhl's Observatory, they have no firm plans or funding to do so; such a new siderostat observatory would only spend money replicating a chamber that already exists.

It continues to be the case that the most cost-effective way to reuse the Zeiss II Planetarium Projector and the 10-inch Siderostat-type, Refractor Telescope will be to convert the original Theater of the Stars and Buhl Observatory back to their original functions. Then, these historic pieces of astronomical apparatus, which exquisitely taught science to the public for more than 50 years, can return to teaching science to the young visitors to the Children's Museum of Pittsburgh.

gaw

Glenn A. Walsh, Project Director,
Friends of the Zeiss < http://friendsofthezeiss.org >
Electronic Mail - < siderostat1989@yahoo.com >
SPACE & SCIENCE NEWS, ASTRONOMICAL CALENDAR:
  < http://buhlplanetarium.tripod.com/#news >
Author of History Web Sites on the Internet --
* Buhl Planetarium, Pittsburgh:
  < http://buhlplanetarium.tripod.com >
* Adler Planetarium, Chicago:
  < http://adlerplanetarium.tripod.com >
* Astronomer, Educator, Optician John A. Brashear:
  < http://johnbrashear.tripod.com >
* Andrew Carnegie & Carnegie Libraries:
  < http://andrewcarnegie.tripod.com >
* Civil War Museum of Andrew Carnegie Free Library:
  < http://garespypost.tripod.com >
* Duquesne Incline cable-car railway, Pittsburgh:
  < http://inclinedplane.tripod.com >


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412 298 3432 = cell

Tuesday, August 30, 2011

Fwd: How we got where we are, part 19, June 25, 2008.

Blast from the past about PPS as the school year nears.

Those in 9th grade begins on Wednesday. Westinghouse started last week.

This series generally is published at another blog, http://purereform.blogspot.com.

How we got where we are, part 19, June 25, 2008 continued:

June 25, 2008: In the face of continued enrollment decline, the Board approved:

- Opening "a new 6-12 Science, Technology, Engineering, and Mathematics (STEM) focused magnet school at the Frick facility. The STEM school will be phased in beginning with grades 6-9 for the 2009-10 school year." Oh but wait! What happen to the Westinghouse Science and Math program (SAM) that was so successful? After investing millions of dollars in the renovations of Westinghouse, including the state of the art science labs, PPS decided to abandon them. I hear now some of those expensive class room rooms  that were set up as science labs are being used to teach English and other non science courses. What a waste.

- Opening "a new 6-12 International Baccalaureate (IB) school focused on language and culture. The IB School will be phased in, beginning with grades 6-10 for the 2009-10 school year and be located at the Reizenstein facility at least through the 2011-12 school year. The IB offers a continuum of high-quality education that encourages international-mindedness and a positive attitude to learning." This is a great program for the few. But the reality is less than 20% of the students  who are actually in the program get the IB Diploma. There are major barriers along the way for completion to include the cost of sitting for the exams. 

This IB item was amended to include language that "The Board will work with the Superintendent to create a committee to include Administration, Teachers, Students, Parents, and Community Leaders to determine the best permanent home for the IS/IB Programs." Or better put, lets create a IB site selection committee and take over the Peabody building. But first we must put the Peabody neighborhood feeder pattern kids out of their own building because they are not good enough to be in the same building with the IB students. 

PPS tried blending  two schools. This short lived experiment  was with the remainder of the Schenley students from the hill, with the new IB students who had come over from Frick. There were a few Schenley student loyalist who didn't leave Schenley once PPS broke up their school. But PPS didn't feel the blending worked and it was doomed for the start. PPS separated the Schenley students from the IB student by floors, staff, principals and Pods. So what can we do with the students from, Larmer, East liberty, Garfield, Bloomfield, lawrenceville, Stanton Heights, Morningside and friendship. We have to make way for the new East liberty development and Highland Park?  Someone had a brilliant ideal. Bingo!  It was decided to send the remainder of the Peabody students to Homewood, i.e. Westinghouse, or the Hill, i.e. Uprep, which began the process of re-segregating the schools. But no one will notice or care, will they? Did they notice how PPS did Schenley?

- Closing "the Schenley facility for use as a school effective June 30, 2008. Pursuant to 24 P. S. 7-780 of the Public School Code of 1949, as amended, the Board conducted a public hearing on November 27, 2007 in order to take public comment on the proposed closing of the Schenley facility."

This item was also amended to include language that "The Board will work with the Superintendent to create a committee to include District, community, and other governmental representatives to work together to pursue several long-term options for use, investment and/or renovation of this historic landmark."

- Relocating "Pittsburgh Schenley grades 10, 11 and 12 and to establish Pittsburgh Schenley as a 10-12 school at the Reizenstein facility beginning with the 2008-09 school year. The Pittsburgh Schenley school will be reduced by one grade per year and remain at the Reizenstein facility until its last class graduates in 2010-11....To allow the students of Pittsburgh Schenley to remain together at the Reizenstein facility until the final class graduates in 2010-11." This way we can eliminate the Schenley alumni and legacy because they may rise again as they gave us a little scare. For a minute there it looked like they were going to put up a real fight to save their school. It was only one of the most diverse schools in the district, and lords knows we can have that.

Architects are approved for the temporary relocation to Reizenstein and the Frick renovation for Sci-Tech. And big time money is about to be spent so we can't go back now. Plus why not get the Reizenstein building really ready for who we want to sell it too, with tax payers dollars since we are moving the IB program to Peabody. We just want to make the IB site selection committee think they have a real say so in where they will move the IB program to. Even though PPS paid the Dejong group, a facilities study company, $500,000.00 to tell PPS what facilities were the best and they ranked them. Oh did I say that the Dejong advised that the IB program stay at Reizenstein? Sorry its a secret.

Board member Randall Taylor remarks, "I think it's a very, very historic meeting that we have this evening, and some of the decisions that this Board may have I think may have long-term implications for this District, and it may have again long-term impact on the type of services and the type of choices that we like to be able to offer our students. The District, as we know our finances are not in the greatest of condition, and I believe that some of the proposals on the table this evening are going to exacerbate our I think very poor financial position."

Mr. Taylor makes a motion to move Schenley into the Peabody building.  He notes, "So I think a proposal of Peabody is financially a better proposal than the administration's proposal, and I think educationally it's a better proposal because it preserved Schenley High School as the excellent facility all their teachers and all their programs in another building." 

Mr. Roosevelt contends that Peabody is too small and perhaps it is here that we see why former Chief Operations Officer Richard Fellers was exiled and forced to retire. 

Mr. Taylor continues, "It's a senior person very much involved over the years with our school closing and the number they gave me was 1,700 or 1,800 students that fit in Peabody High School. Absolutely." Oh Randall you don't know what your talking about do you? Opps let me be quiet  I forgot he went there and knows Peabody can hold the students, because that's what it had when he was there, and the building didn't shrink did it?

Solicitor Weiss' comments that the Board has already approved construction contracts for Milliones and Reizensten; his opinion holds sway over the majority. Therefore the thought is I guess we better spend that money now before the people find out that in 2011 and...... we will be broke and having to lay off over 300 people and close more schools. Naw that cant be true can it?

Taylor's motion is defeated 2-7.


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Ta.
 
 
412 298 3432 = cell

Friday, August 26, 2011

Summer Olympic Games 2012: Ottawa area athletes with a dream

Summer Olympic Games 2012: Ottawa area athletes with a dream

What area athletes are aiming for the Olympics from the greater Pittsburgh area? Any?

We know some swimmers with Olympic trials cuts.

Great video

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wTjEVUhYqqE&feature=youtube_gdata_player

Wednesday, August 24, 2011

Fw: Back to School

Sent on the Sprint® Now Network from my BlackBerry®


From: "The Nation" <email@thenation.com>
Date: Wed, 24 Aug 2011 11:09:30 -0700
To: <Mark@Rauterkus.com>
ReplyTo: email@thenation.com
Subject: Back to School

Please whitelist us here. Not interested anymore? Update your email preferences or unsubscribe from all Nation emails.
 
The Nation Magazine
 

ATTENTION: Educators, Students, Parents and Grandparents

The Nation is excited to announce the launch of the 2011/2012 Educators Program, bringing America's most incisive writers and editors to classrooms with free teaching material.

In this year of economic uncertainty and primary elections, the corporate-owned media will not be offering lessons about: the crisis in higher education; conservatives demonizing teachers, cops, firefighters and public workers; the phony "panic" over debt; vets abandoned by the VA; taxes and the Tea Party and much, much more.

Where can students and teachers turn for more than they're getting from mainstream media? The Nation, that's where: the most independent, strong-voiced and fearless champion of democracy in this country.

The first of twenty-four weekly teaching guides (available free) will be posted on Monday, August 29, 2011. Check the Educators link on our homepage, or go to thenation.com/educators to view prior teaching guides, to sign up for The Nation's Educator e-mail Newsletter, or to preview our pre-planned Learning Packs.

                                  

HERE'S WHAT'S INCLUDED:

1. FREE Weekly Teaching Guides

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Sign up here to receive The Nation's FREE Educator Newsletter via e-mail. Beginning next week, we'll e-mail a link to let you know when each free weekly teaching guide has been posted, and highlight articles of special interest and stories that will help you and your students get the most out of The Nation.

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Monday, August 22, 2011

Mike F still on the attack




PRESS RELEASE
For more information, contact:
Mike Ference
412-233-5491
mike@ferencemarketing.com

The Last Call: September Protests to "Out" Local Abusers and Sympathizers

Pittsburgh, PA  – August 16, 2011 – Well-known local activist Mike Ference
will stage a series of protests beginning September 11, the 10th anniversary
of 911 and targeting local institutions and individuals associated with the
abuse of children and young adults.

"For two decades I have called on certain institutions and individuals to
come forward and take responsibility for their roles — active or passive —
in child sex abuse," Ference explains. "This is the last call — if they
don't do the right thing in the next couple weeks, then I will 'out' them at
a series of protests where I will publicize incriminating details from my
22-year investigation of such cases. Abusers who have harmed children and
individuals who knowingly covered up the crimes will be named — I want
everyone in our community to know who the bad guys are."

Ference began his investigation in 1989 after his son was shot on a school
bus by a boy who then committed suicide. Although grateful that his son
survived, Ference was disturbed that an investigation into the shooting was
quashed or botched at every turn. Agreeing that the case had been
prematurely closed by the McKeesport police, William Scully, then Public
Safety Director in Clairton, gave Ference notes on the case and encouraged
him to continue investigating on his own. A central starting point was the
possibility that the shooter had been sexually abused by a local Catholic
priest.

Ference's initial investigation has inspired a lifetime of activism against
child sexual abuse and cover-ups. He has written extensively on the sex
abuse scandal within the Catholic church, amd has consistently emphasized
that such abuse can't happen without a lot of other community stakeholders
"looking the other way."

"This is the last call for the Pittsburgh Diocese and its syndicate of
dysfunctional sex freaks who have exploited children and teenagers for
decades," Ference says. "It's the last call for the hospitals and other
institutions who helped cover up crimes against innocent children. It is
time for elected officials and law enforcement to stand up and protect our
children instead of the Catholic church hierarchy, Sicilian mobsters and
corrupt political leaders."

The first protest is scheduled for noon, September 9, on the steps of St.
Paul's Cathedral in the Oakland section of Pittsburgh. Ference believes that
Oakland, Shadyside and the surrounding areas have been prominent spots for
Pittsburgh Catholic clergy to abuse children and teenagers.

Additional protests are in the planning stage. Ference says UPMC Hospital in
Oakland is a likely site because of its handling of a clerical abuse case
involving Greg Witkowski. He is also considering the police departments and
municipal buildings of McKeesport, Clairton, and West Mifflin, which were
all central in his initial investigation. District Attorney Stephen
Zappala's office and the Pittsburgh Post-Gazette were also mentioned as
stakeholders who have been more interested in protecting the church
hierarchy than punishing abusers and defending children.

For more information on the September 11 protest or other upcoming events,
call Mike Ference at 412-233-5491, or email mike@ferencemarketing.com.



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Ta.
 
 
412 298 3432 = cell

Thursday, August 18, 2011

DEMOCRATIC PARTY LEADERS CALL FOR AN END TO THE CRIMINALIZATION OF THOSE PROVIDING FOOD TO THE HUNGRY IN ORLANDO'S CITY PARKS



---------- Forwarded message ----------
From: Julian P Heicklen

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

August 16, 2011

CONTACT:
Food Not Bombs
Keith McHenry - cofounder
575-770-3377
menu@foodnotbombs.net

The Orange County Democratic Executive Committee passed a resolution at their regular August  15th meeting requesting that Mayor Dyer and the Orlando City Council decriminalize food sharing in city parks and refrain from arresting people for food sharing under city codes 18A.09 -1 and 18A.09-2. Mayor Dyer is a member of the Democratic Party and principle supporter of the law restricting the sharing of meals with Orlando's hungry to twice a year per park.

Orlando police have arrested 29 Food Not Bombs volunteers for sharing vegan meals with the hungry at Lake Eola Park. The first criminal trials for violating the Large Group Feeding Permit Law  begin next week. If convicted the defendants face  Food Not Bombs volunteer Palmer B. Harrell, of Orlando, and Francis "Pat" Fitzgerald, an anti-poverty activist from Gainesville, will begin their trial on Monday, august  22, followed by the trial of Food Not Bombs volunteer Jessica L. Cross  on Thursday, August 25th. The trails will take place at Orange County Courthouse, 425 North Orange Avenue, Orlando, Florida.

It is believed that over 10,000 people are homeless in Orlando and many families are struggling to keep a roof over their heads and seek food assistance. Second Harvest reports that many of the programs they serve are forced to turn away as many as 10 percent of those seeking food. While many of the residence suffer extreme poverty the city of Orlando has spent hundreds of thousands of tax dollars defending the Large Group Feeding Permit Law and now plans to spend hundreds of thousands more attempting to convict those who are volunteering to provide nutritious meals to the hungry while advocating for changes in government policies that would protect American's from having to seek food at soup kitchens.

###



The text of the resolution is below:

"RESOLUTION OF THE COUNTY COMMITTEE OF ORANGE COUNTY DEMOCRATS OF ORANGE COUNTY FLORIDA

"REQUESTING ORLANDO MAYOR DYER AND CITY COUNCIL TO DECRIMINALIZE FOOD SHARING IN CITY PARKS AND REFRAIN FROM ARRESTING PEOPLE FOR FOOD SHARING IN CITY PARKS UNDER  CITY CODES 18A.09-1 and 18A.09-2

"WHEREAS, sharing food with the homeless and hungry is a charitable act that should be commended and supported when done by any individual, organization, or agency.

"WHEREAS, such acts of compassion and selflessness must never be criminalized or penalized.

"WHEREAS, our nation is going through a severe economic recession and the growing population of  hungry, homeless, and working poor men, women and children need special care and attention.

"WHEREAS, the passage of this ordinance and its enforcement involving arrests may reflect badly on Orlando, internationally.  Moreover, adverse publicity about these arrests may significantly hurt the economy and reputation of the City Beautiful.

"WHEREAS, as Democrats, we stand firm in our belief in anti-poverty policies and
expect our elected officials to do the same.

"NOW THEREFORE IT IS HEREBY DECLARED, ON THIS THIS DAY, AUGUST 15, 2011,THAT THE DEMOCRATIC EXECUTIVE COMMITTEE OF ORANGE COUNTY,
FLORIDA, REQUEST THAT THE CITY OF ORLANDO, MAYOR DYER, AND CITY
COMMISSIONERS DIAMOND, LYMAN, ORTIZ, SHEEHAN, STUART AND ING,
DECRIMINALIZE THE ACTIVITY OF ORGANIZED FOOD SHARING AND REFRAIN
FROM ARRESTING THOSE WHO ORGANIZE SUCH FOOD SHARING ACTIVITIES
FOR THE HUNGRY IN ANY AND ALL CITY PARKS OF ORLANDO, FL."



ADDITIONAL DETAILS ON THE CRIMINALIZATION OF POVERTY

Orlando's homeless ranks grow -- many are falling off economy's
'edge'
http://articles.orlandosentinel.com/2009-05-14/news/homeless_1_homeless-services-network-homeless-students-homeless-population

Orlando Large Group Feeding Permit Law
http://www.foodnotbombs.net/fnb_orlando_law.html

END THE CRIMINALIZATION PROTESTS SEPTEMBER 16, 2011
http://www.foodnotbombs.net/resist.html


How America criminalised poverty -The viciousness of state officials to the poor and homeless is breathtaking, trapping them in a cycle of poverty
http://www.guardian.co.uk/commentisfree/cifamerica/2011/aug/10/america-poverty-criminalised

Tampa's homeless get bad news: no free breakfast
http://www2.tbo.com/news/breaking-news/2011/aug/13/3/tampas-homeless-get-bad-news-no-free-breakfast-ar-250363/


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Ta.
 
 
412 298 3432 = cell

Wednesday, August 17, 2011

Did you see the Photos of the Day that featured water polo play in The Hill District at Ammon Swim Pool?

In case you missed it, you can check out the Post-Gazette's Photo of the Day feature from Wednesday, August 15, 2011. http://www.post-gazette.com/photooftheday/



and


It has been great to have some open water polo practices at Ammon Swim Pool, a Citiparks facility.

Kids (mostly) play from 11 am to 12:30 this week, Monday to Friday, ending on August 17, 2011.

Adults are going to try to get one more game in, pick-up style, on Thursday night, tonight, from 6:30 to 8. High school and college kids are most welcome to join us too. And youngsters as well. The pool is open. Kids can come to the shallow end, of course. There is plenty of water.

My invite email:


Hi Fellow South Side Pops, (plus a few other hand-picked friends via BCC)

Let's give this one more try while the catfish are jumping and summer
has yet to fade --- WATER POLO, in pick-up, community style, but with
regulation, floating goals.

Ammon Rec Center has an nice outdoor swim pool. It is with plenty of
shallow and deep water. We'll play in 4 foot, again. So, swim ability
is NOT a real big factor. Bring the kids, as they can kick around in
the shallow end as the pool will be OPEN to the public.

Pay $3 for kids and $4 if over 16 at the gate, if you do NOT have a
Citiparks, annual, pool tag.

Invite everyone and anyone, as we can have bigger squads or else subs.

Patrick, a fellow SS Pop, played goalie in Romania as a kid. He is
something to watch and try to score upon, if he isn't on YOUR team.
Some of lifeguards have stayed to play if their shift(s) are over as
it is so much fun.

Easy parking right by the pool on the street.

To get to Ammon from the South Side, cross the Birmingham Bridge and
go STRAIGHT up, (not to Oakland nor Downtown). Follow Kirtpatrick
Street until it ends, at Bedford, at the corner of the pool. The Josh
Gibson baseball field is behind the pool. Bedford Ave also goes next
to the Civic Arena from Downtown. Go about 6 blocks to the pool at the
top of The Hill. If you bike, it is a steep hill.

My kids are out of town, so we really need a dozen guys (and gals) to
make it 'fun.' The pool closes in a few days, so this will be our last
attempt until I get a school pool made available. Don't hold your
breath for that to happen, sadly. But that's another email for another
month.

FWIW, Wednesday's P-G has photos of the day and two of the images are
from yesterday's water polo practice with the kids.
http://www.post-gazette.com/photooftheday/ See image 5 and 6.

Earlier on Thursday, from 11 am to 12:30, a group of kids from North
Allegheny are going to venture to The Hill and play a game or two with
our kids. I'm still looking for players....

Thanks for the consideration. Come if you can. Bring the youngsters.
Last time was a blast. Right, Scott?????



Scott's reply:

Sorry to miss tolorrow's water polo action. I had a great time learning and playing last time and echo Mark's comments about Patrick. On one particular play he dove in one direction to knock back a hard shot. The rebound unfortunately went right back to the shooter who fired on a now empty goal only to see the submerged Patrick somehow rise like phoenix in the opposite direction, knock the ball down, then scoop it up and throw a perfect lead pass the length of the pool to Mark's son Grant who easily scored a breakaway goal on the overmatched opposing goalie, no Patrick he.

Have fun and do let me know when there's another chance to play.

Wednesday, August 10, 2011

Charter School seeking K, 1 and 2 grade students

THERE IS A GREAT OPPORTUNITY FOR CHILDREN AT THE NEW IMAGINE PENN HILLS CHARTER SCHOOL OPENING ON AUGUST 24, 2011. IMAGINE ALSO OPERATES THE HIGHLY SUCCESSFUL ENVIRONMENTAL CHARTER AT REGENT SQUARE.

We are accepting kindergarten, 1st and 2nd grades.

THE SCHOOL WILL ADD GRADES OVER THE NEXT FEW YEARS TO BECOME A K-8.

TUITION IS FREE AND TRANSPORTATION IS PROVIDED
IF YOUR CHILD ATTENDS FAISON OR WILKINSBURG SCHOOLS YOU SHOULD DEFINITELY TAKE ADVATAGE OF THIS UNIQUE OPPORTUNITY.
ALSO RANKIN, DUQUESNE, AND GARFIELD (WITH THE CLOSING OF FORT PITT SHOULD LOOK CLOSELY AT THIS NEW SCHOOL.
GOOD SCHOOLS ARE BECOMING VERY DIFFICULT TO FIND FOR A LOT OF BLACK CHILDREN IN THIS AREA.

WE MAY BE FINISHED ACCEPTING STUDENTS ON FRIDAY AUGUST 12, 2011
CALL OR EMAIL THE INFORMATION BELOW ASAP!

RANDALL TAYLOR
FORMER SCHOOL BOARD MEMBER EAST END OF PITTSBURGH
412-867-8170




1) Students name
2) Address
1) Date of birth
2) Place of Birth
3) Grade entering
4) Last school attended
5) Students lives with?
6) Mother and Father Name
7) Address
8) PHONE NUMBER
9) E-Mail
Send Info to rxtaylor6501@comcast.net
Call me for any questions at 412-867-8170
Sent on the Sprint® Now Network from my BlackBerry®

Spit out your gum and all other negative thoughts, such as "I can't do that." Our final exam is a mega challenge.

Wednesday, July 27, 2011

Pittsburgh Cyclist in history

Thanks for the review.

Sent on the Sprint® Now Network from my BlackBerry®

-----Original Message-----
From: Ernest Schimmerling <eschimme@gmail.com>
Sender: acaracing@googlegroups.com
Date: Wed, 27 Jul 2011 09:22:58
To: Allegheny Cycling Association<acaracing@googlegroups.com>
Reply-To: eschimme@gmail.com
Subject: [ACA Google Group] Just thought you might be interested

There is a book out (published in 2010) about Frank Lenz, a Pittsburgh
cyclist who attempted to ride around the world in 1892 on "safety"
bicycle with inflatable tires, which had just been introduced. He
sent back notes and photographs as he traveled. Lenz headed west and
made it as far as Turkey before disappearing in 1894. Another
American cyclist, William Sachtleben, who had already been around the
world in the other direction, went to Turkey to investigate what had
happened.

Starting in the 1880s, Lenz was a member of the Allegheny Cycle Club.
He raced in and around Pittsburgh and toured thousands of miles on an
"ordinary" high-wheel bicycle on some of the same roads we ride on.

The book seems to be based on diaries these cyclists kept on their
various trips, as well as newspaper articles. It provides details and
photographs that I find curious and surprising. (I'm only half way
done reading the book; the writing style is just so-so passable but
the story holds its own so far IMHO.)

The book is on Amazon at
http://www.amazon.com/Lost-Cyclist-Adventurer-Mysterious-Disappearance/dp/0547195575

(There are also soft cover and iPad versions.)

There is a Wikipedia entry on Frank Lenz at
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Frank_Lenz_(cyclist)