Friday, April 15, 2011
Bruce Kraus raves about his trip to San Francisco. Worry reasons here.
Bruce Kraus raves about his trip to San Francisco. Worry reasons reside in ideas in this news.
Thursday, April 14, 2011
Civic Arena: Petition and its easter is just around the bunny trail!
Sent on the Sprint® Now Network from my BlackBerry®
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Chuck Half wrote in an email that landed here:
Thank you for expressing your opposition today to a Special Exception being granted by the Zoning Board of Adjustment (ZBA) for a social club with liquor license at 2214 E. Carson Street. Clearly, the will of South Side property owners, residents, businesses, and community organizations is to be granted a reasonable legal voice in zoning and permitting business options in the South Side. The ZBA will be making a decision based upon its very limited sphere of influence within 30-days.I did NOT go to the public hearing nor make comment about this issue.
Mayor Ravenstahl has supported this specific concern since March 2009 when he instructed the Law Department to defend any court action challenging the City’s 2007 Ordinance limiting the number of liquor licenses in a Pittsburgh Local Neighborhood Commercial (LNC) Zoning District. His agreement to support your wishes evolved from lessons learned during 15 meetings of the Mayor’s Advisory Committee for the South Side (MACSS).
In mid-March 2011, PA’s Commonwealth Court upheld the decision by Allegheny County’s Court of Common Pleas reaffirming the unlawfulness of City of Pittsburgh’s “liquor saturation” ordinance. The ordinance was judged to be “an infringement upon the power of the Pennsylvania Liquor Control Board (PLCB). The Pennsylvania Liquor Code vests the PLCB with exclusive power to control and regulate the business of dispensing liquor in the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania. By limiting the number of restaurants with bars in the area surrounding East Carson Street, Defendants [Planning Department and City Permitting Process] are impermissibly seeking to regulate the business of dispensing liquor in the areas so designated in the ordinance.”
Does the PLCB have too much power and impact in determining the balance of businesses in our South Side neighborhood? What do you want? Should the PA state government be operating wines and spirits stores in our neighborhoods? Should a robot kiosk be selling you wine in a grocery store? Should you be able to purchase beer, wine, and liquor in a single location? Should a South Side neighborhood improvement district (NID) be allowed to assess each restaurant with bar a fee based upon occupancy, or gross revenues, to pay for additional police protection, parking enforcement, and neighborhood cleanliness? Are any of these questions inter-connected?
Mayor Ravenstahl has requested, and the City’s Law department has agreed, to carry forth an argument of appeal of this anti-South Side decision to the PA Supreme Court. Until an appeal is officially filed by the City, however, any zoning applications and permits for restaurants with bars to the East Carson Street LNC can not be delayed. When the appeal is submitted, and until a PA Supreme Court determination is made, the liquor saturation ordinance will, again, be temporarily in effect. If the lawyer side of you is interested, go to http://www.pacourts.us/OpPosting/Cwealth/out/11CD10_3-18-11.pdf
Chuck Half
South Side Comminity Representative, and City Performance Manager - PittMAPS
Office of Mayor Luke Ravenstahl
512 City-County Building, 414 Grant Street
Pittsburgh, PA 15219
412.255.0819 -office
412.287.2650 - mobile
chuck.half@city.pittsburgh.pa.us
What does the city do well?
What, exactly, does the Pittsburgh city government do well? Why not list them in the presentation?
City government does not keep track of its finances well, at all.
City government spends too much, as shown by the pension liability. Perhaps the inverse could be made to be true in that the city is GREAT at over-spending on workers who don't work for the city any longer. The city is great at trading votes for political favors: political paving, jobs and patronage, firefighters contract details, etc.
The city had been really good at giving away TIFs and other tax breaks in super creative ways. Remember how clever they were with the hotel developers at Bakery Square and "air rights" so as to not use the ground floor of buildings to skirt union employees.
To be fair, I do think that the city does a fine job at trash collection.
Here is Bill's slide show:
Wednesday, April 13, 2011
Pgh Public Schools parent meeting April 28th
Sunday, April 10, 2011
Sports Headline: Lucky to get zero. These guys got ripped!
I get a kick out of the tone of the reporting. (pun), all within a single article:
+ Lucky to get zero
+ No threat of All Star players. All teams have their best players get lifted for stints on national teams. That's a good thing, generally.
+ Guys throwing away their names.
+ thrashed
+ Darkest day
+ thrashed
+ pathetic performance
+ unable to catch, unable to tackle, unable to think
+ showed about as much heart as a French soldier during the opening weeks of the Second World War.
+ Players have completely lost the plot.
+ Simple ease of making mistakes.
+ Senior players can't point fingers after his own poor effort
+ Not showing enough courage and passion.
+ display a shocking inability to master the basic skills of the game.
+ we could not keep hold of the ball
* It’s nice to read about a new living room set or a snazzy garden from a player in family magazines, but to gain respect from fans, you should as least be able to catch a ball and wear your jersey with pride. This characteristic is absent among the current crop of players.
+ did not belong on the same field.
+ Best ever example of simply cannot perform worse.
+ half-hearted attempted tackles
+ it was one-way traffic.
+ one handling error after the other halted them from posing any real threat
+ harsh reality: urgent introspection from every member is surely required.
Full article:
Bulls lucky to get zero
Pretoria - The one positive the Blue Bulls Company should take from yesterday's woeful Bulls performance is that they probably won’t lose any players for the Currie Cup competition.
It is incredibly hard to envision them producing any Springboks for the World Cup if they keep on performing like they did against the Crusaders.
The Crusaders thrashed the (current) champions 27-0.
It is not often that you see guys throwing away their names in 80 minutes of rugby like we saw yesterday, which is probably the Bulls' darkest day in recent Super Rugby history.
You would have to go back to 2005, when they also scored zero points (against the Higlanders), to find a more pathetic performance like the one in Timaru yesterday.
The Bulls were unable to catch, unable to tackle, unable to think, and showed about as much heart as a French soldier during the opening weeks of the Second World War.
Yes, they were lucky to get zero.
Bulls coach Frans Ludeke simply cannot continue ignoring the reality of the performance from some of his players.
Pierre Spies, Wynand Olivier and Fourie du Preez, to name a few, have completely lost the plot.
And, if they want to have any chance whatsoever against the Reds next week, Ludeke has to make some drastic changes.
Every player makes mistakes, but the simple ease with which players like Spies and Olivier knocks the ball on, is simply unacceptable.
A clearly frustrated Victor Matfield admitted that those mistakes are unacceptable, but he could hardly point any fingers after his own poor effort.
Chris Jack taught him a lesson at lineout time, and his own handling error just after halftime resulted in the second Crusaders try at a crucial juncture in the match.
But, this is their problem. The senior players are not showing enough courage and passion and display a shocking inability to master the basic skills of the game.
"Not once could we build phases, simply because we could not keep hold of the ball," Matfield complained afterwards.
It’s nice to read about a new living room set or a snazzy garden from a Bulls player in family magazines, but to gain respect from rugby fans, you should as least be able to catch a rugby ball and wear your jersey with pride.
Unfortunately, this characteristic is absent among the current crop of Bulls.
However, one should not take away anything from the Crusaders, who currently play top-notch rugby, even without the likes of Dan Carter and Ritchie McCaw.
Sonny Bill Williams is the all beast he’s been made out to be, and the disregard he showed for the Bulls defence to score his team’s first try, shows exactly just how much better he is than the Bulls centre pairing.
The Crusaders completely dominated their opponents in every aspect of the game.
The Bulls simply did not belong on the same field.
If there’s ever been an example of one team giving it as good as they’ve got, and one who simply cannot perform worse, then yesterday’s match was just that.
Williams’ try, after he easily broke through half-hearted attempted tackles by Morne Steyn and Wynand Olivier, and three penalties from flyhalf Matt Berquist, gave the Crusaders a handy, though not unassailable lead at halftime.
Matfield’s blunder though, resulted in a try by Israel Dagg, and after that it was one-way traffic.
The Bulls tried to get momentum, with guys like Zane Kirchner, Francois Hougaard and Dean Greyling giving their best, but one handling error after the other halted them from posing any real threat to the Crusaders line.
The Bulls only chance for points came in the first half, when Morne Steyn missed a penalty.
This is the harsh reality for a team, where urgent introspection from every member is surely required.
Friday, April 08, 2011
Meet the four Dem Party candidates for nomination for Pittsburgh City Council, District 3. March Debate Videos
Each of the 12 parts has the replies from the four candidates, with one miss due to a different camera angle need. The order is mixed among the four with each question.
My opinions are being curbed in this blog post.
Hint: The Viddler video server software is especially valuable as mini-notes can be put into the video along the timeline button. But, to leave a note, you'll need to use a Viddler account and log in.
Part 1: Opening statements:
Part 2: Two problems, quality of life, and realistic solutions:
Part 3: Proposed Neighborhood Improvement District, NID:
Part 4: Saturation of bars on the South Side and the failed attempt to restrict them:
Part 5: Cooperation and relationship with the mayor's office:
Part 6: Cooperation with East Carson Street Business Owners:
Part 7: Best asset of the South Side and its protection:
Part 8: South Side Slopes and Flats distinctions:
Part 9: Parks plans:
Part 10: Bad boy city employees:
Part 11: Keeping tax incomes in the South Side:
Part 12 and conclusion:
Your comments are welcome as part of this blog posting, or at Viddler.com, or best of all, within the timeline of the videos. Click the bead that scrolls along the horizontal timeline and insert your tidbits. Then those remarks show up for others to see as they watch.
Feel free to email this URL to others to have them check out the videos on the Pittsburgh group at Viddler: http://www.viddler.com/groups/pittsburgh .
The direct link to this blog posting is: http://rauterkus.blogspot.com/2011/04/meet-four-dem-party-candidates-for.html .