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As fit citizens, neighbors and running mates, we are tyranny fighters, water-game professionals, WPIAL and PIAA bound, wiki instigators, sports fans, liberty lovers, world travelers, non-credentialed Olympic photographers, UU netizens, church goers, open source boosters, school advocates, South Siders, retired and not, swim coaches, water polo players, ex-publishers and polar bear swimmers, N@.
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3 Rivers Connect | 425 Sixth Ave. | Suite 1310 | Pittsburgh | PA | 15219 |
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Dear Mark,
Please join Congressmen Pat Toomey, Tim Murphy and special guests this Saturday, June 19th, at the opening of our Pittsburgh GOP Victory office.
Below is the information for the event - please be sure to forward this email and invite your friends. We look forward to seeing you, and introducing our Pittsburgh operation.
PA Victory Pittsburgh Kickoff with Pat Toomey
Saturday, June 19 12:00PM
100 Fleet St, Green Tree PA 15220
For more information, please reply to this email or contact Daniel Alfaro at 412-872-2294.
Hope to see you there!
Sincerely,
Daniel Alfaro
412-872-7994
Alfaro@ToomeyforSenate.com
www.ToomeyforSenate.com
World Cup considers horn ban - World Cup News - FOX Sports on MSN World Cup organizing committee head Danny Jordaan on Sunday did not rule out banning vuvuzelas, the noisy plastic trumpets that have proved a hit with fans in South Africa but threaten to deafen players and viewers alike.When we were at the Olympic games in Beijing, there were times when it was loud. But, the noise in South Africe seems much greater given these horns. In China, the chant was "JGy-oh" -- to mean 'get gas' or 'show energy.' (My spelling is not accurate.)
Criticism of the vuvuzelas has been almost as loud as the instruments themselves with broadcasting companies complaining the din is almost drowning out commentary.
Union and city bicker over hiring of summer help: "A 20-year-old program to hire summer laborers for Pittsburgh's Public Works Department is foundering for reasons city and union officials disagree on, raising concerns about whether the city will look its best this season.Ugh.
The city annually hires 15 to 30 laborers who work 40-hour weeks anywhere from April to November, cutting grass, picking up litter and performing other work. The positions pay $17 per hour.
None has been hired so far, and it's possible none will be hired all summer, Public Works Director Robert Kaczorowski said.
Mr. Kaczorowski said the union's hiring demands, including that he forgo background checks on program participants and hire the people the union tells him to, has stalled a program that's operated smoothly for years.
'All of a sudden, it's hardball,' he said."
An Agenda for Excellence: A Great K-12 Education for Every Pennsylvania Child | Tom Corbett for Governor: "An Agenda for Excellence: A Great K-12 Education for Every Pennsylvania Child"
January 29, 2003 - PPS Press ReleaseSigh.
At its legislative meeting, the PPS Board of Education approved an enrollment policy for the Creative and Performing Arts High School (CAPA) that will permit students from around the county to apply and audition for admission to the program. Now housed at the BaxterBuilding in Homewood, the CAPA program will move to a new building at Ninth and Fort Duquesne streets at the start of the next school year.
Under the new policy, preference will be given to resident students who qualify for admission; however, up to one third of the school's enrollment could be comprised of non-resident students who pass the audition or portfolio review.
The policy stiupulates that the Pittsburgh School District will not cover any portion of a non-resident's tuition.
If legislation is adopted at the State level to allow for the transfer of student fees fromstudents' home districts to Pittsburgh, the difference between the payment and the actual per pupil cost will become the reponsibility of the students' parents. This may come from personal sources or scholarship funds, if available.
If such legislation is not adopted by the State, the students' parents or guardians will be responsible for full payment of the CAPA tuition.
Under the policy students applying for Grade 10 and above shall be subject to a special consideration panel that will assess each applicant's artistic and academic achievement, citizenship and attendance, and admit them on a space-available basis. Resident students applying for upper grades will have preference over non-residents.
In other action, the board approved the school calendar ...
The Board also approved the purchase of assessments to measure student performance in reading, writing, mathematics and science for a cost of $1.1 million. Additional mathematics assessments will be determined at a later date.
In personnel action the Board promoted Andrew King from his current position of Director of Student Services to the position of Chief Academic Officer. He will assume responsibility for overall school operations and curriculum development and instruction, among other duties.
One page brochure to rally in PDF.
Text of brochure:
Jordan Miles, in a photo released by his mother
after Pittsburgh police brutally assaulted him.
On January 12th, plain-clothes police officers
Richard Ewing, Michael Saldutte and David
Sisak brutally beat Jordan Miles, a CAPA
honors student and viola player. On March
19th, Ewing, Saldutte and Sisak were
awarded commendations by the Pittsburgh
Police Bureau.
The officers involved claim that Jordan was
carrying something heavy and resisted arrest.
Considering that the three officers were not
wearing uniforms and were driving an unmarked
vehicle, his desire to escape was
more than justified. Jordan Miles’ only crime
was being a black teenager in Homewood.
Join us to demand:
Prosecute Richard Ewing, Michael Saldutte and David Sisak!
End racial profiling and police brutality!
Community control of the police force!
Issued by the Alliance for Police Accountability
For more information: bsfish27@aol.com or 412-628-5849
While Jordan is one of the most recent victims, any one of us could be next. People
across communities need to stand up and demand an end to police brutality. On June
12th, let’s make it clear that racist attacks on Pittsburgh’s youth by those who are paid
to protect us will not go unanswered in a system that demands equality for all!
The Pew Internet and American Life Project just
released their "Neighbors Online" report.
Join dozens of "neighbors online" hosts in a Q and A with the report's
lead author Aaron Smith on the Locals Online community of practice:
http://e-democracy.org/locals
The report is available directly here:
http://pewinternet.org/Reports/2010/Neighbors-Online.aspx
Here is a blog summary I wrote up with a particular focus on what the
report challenges us to do in terms of making this powerful and
cherished form of online community building accessible to _all_:
http://blog.e-democracy.org/posts/858
The text from that page:
According to the just released Neighbors Online report from Pew
Internet and American Life, 27% of American adult Internet users (or
20% of adults overall) use “digital tools to talk to their neighbors
and keep informed about community issues.”
This is an amazing number and a great starting point.
Today, we finally have baseline for the growing neighbors online
movement. The other week we hosted a webinar on how to use technology
for community building. This week we have some real numbers to help us
develop strategies to broadly serve and connect as many people as
possible not just those who easily show up – because if we don’t we
will soon be talking about how we red-lined neighborhoods out of the
community and democracy building opportunity of a generation.
In summary, to reach the 27% of Internet users engaging locally online:
* 14% read a blog dealing with community issues at least once in
the last year (while the frequency of visits wasn’t measured in this
survey, 1/3 of general blog readers check blogs each day)
* 13% exchanged emails with neighbors about community issues
(think informal “to:” “cc:”)
* 7% say they belong to a community e-mail list (this intensive
and typically daily experience is the cornerstone of E-Democracy.org
Neighbors Issues Forums experience) – this equates to about 10 million
American adults connected most days with their neighbors online in
community life!
* 6% communicated with neighbors by text messaging on cell phones
* 5% joined a social network site group connected to community
issues (like Ning and Facebook)
* 3% followed neighbors using Twitter (note the embryonic trend of
geo “hashtags” like #nempls – we feed it too)
Aaron Smith, the report author, in a private exchange noted to me that
2/3 of respondents only did one of these items. This bolsters my view
that the “there there” very local spaces online is almost a natural
monopoly – so making a unified online space available via multiple
technologies is essential (we use e-mail, web, web feed, Facebook, and
Twitter in an interconnected way for example) to reach more people.
The Inclusion Challenge
It has been our experience that the vast majority of “organic” local
online places started by passionate volunteers (some placeblogs are
quasi-commercial, but outside of such blogs, this is not an adjunct of
journalism) serve middle and upper income communities – urban
homeowners. The people who know about neighbors forums – LOVE THEM –
based on the feedback we’ve received on our forums (including the one
I host) and the all the new volunteers emerging to serve the 10+ new
communities (often jealous of what they see just next door to them).
First some good news focusing mostly on 7% on neighborhood e-mail
lists (although we do see local social networks, blogs, etc. all
blending together at some point anyway):
* Whites and Blacks participate equally at 8% of Internet users
* Urban participation is 10% and suburban isn’t far behind at 7%
* Women participate strongly at 9% in fact, we could say we need
more men who are only 5% (this is not the case with political
interaction online where white men dominate)
* With the community blog numbers, both young adults (16%) and
African-Americans (18%) Internet users have read a blog with community
issues at least once in the last year compared to 14% overall.
We launched our Inclusive Social Media effort with Ford Foundation and
St. Paul Foundation support to develop inclusive Neighbors Issues
Forums in lower income, high immigrant neighborhoods – or what we felt
are areas that are completely missing out from the community building
power of local online engagement. We see the Internet as the most
cost-effective “ice breaker” opportunity out there that can create new
bridges and sustained bonds. With intervention and resources for real
outreach and inclusion, neighbors online will do far more than just
reflect existing social capital.
So now we have numbers on the digital participation divide we must
close – among Internet users (not just the general population, so we
are talking connected people):
* Only 2% of those with household incomes under $30,000 are on a
neighborhood e-mail list, still only 3% up to $49,000 while between
$50-75,000 it is 7% and over $75,000 it is a whopping 15%
* Only 3% of Hispanics (both English and Spanish Speaking) are on
a neighborhood e-mail list – while they don’t measure Asians or
immigrants specifically, our guess is that the percent would be even
lower – our efforts target the highly East African Cedar Riverside
neighborhood and the plurality ~40% Southeast Asian (Hmong) with
African-American (20%) and White (20%) Frogtown neighborhood)
* Only 2% of rural residents belong to a neighborhood e-mail list
(while terminology may have been a factor here, we’ve learned a lot
from our Rural Voices effort to launch 4 community forums in rural
communities and would like the opportunity to invest more in this area
– in fact we’ve recently submitted small grant proposals to bring the
majority Native American and also lower income Cass Lake Leech Lake
forum into our Inclusive Social Media effort which will put a simple
one hour a day Community Outreach and Information Leader on the
ground)
Next Steps?
Here are some rough thoughts that we add to over time:
1. Inclusion Matters – As an organization, E-Democracy.org needs to
focus on bring these powerful online community building opportunities
to all – especially the people and communities being left behind. We
need more partners and funders to make this happen in the next phase
of our Inclusive Social Media effort in 2011 and beyond. Interested in
helping? Contact us. In the near term, we need to find resources to
work with the vibrant Powderhorn Park Neighbors Forum to build on
their expressed interest in recruiting more Latino participation. They
have had some bi-lingual postings, but the community in looking for
ways to build more connections as they confront in part a summer of
youth/gang related violence.
2. We Need a Good Directory Look-up – Most people don’t know about
online community spaces (I think). If they did far more would join. We
need to create a technology/format agnostic directory with geographic
and map based look-ups for these two-way local online communities. We
need to build on the work of Placeblogger and the UK-based
GroupsNearYou site which isn’t actively being developed.
3. Neighbors Online Week – With a good directory, we can then
promote such sites nationally/globally. I want the President of the
United States to be able to say (like the White House did with the
launch of Serve.Gov), go to X site, connect with your neighbors –
ACROSS the political spectrum – and build your community.
4. Move the Field – OK, so while we’d love to have many more people
start a forum with us, most of you will do your own thing. It is human
nature. As part of our inclusion-oriented Participation 3.0 initiative
we’ve convened dozens of local “hosts” for peer to peer exchange on
Locals Online. Let’s make it hundreds, share effective practices and
lessons, and inspire thousands of new “hosts” to start or effective
grow local online spaces that work. Based on the Pew numbers, we
estimate that there could be 30,000 neighborhood e-mails list hosts
for example. They are almost all working in isolation. Time to
connect!
Closing Remarks
If the Internet was first about going to the world, then connecting
privately with friends and family via social networking, the
revolution is finally coming home to everyday public and community
life. We don’t want the Internet to replace a face-to-face
conversation over the back fence, we want it to make those real
connections among neighbors possible for everyone in a busy modern era
where getting to know your neighbors is extremely difficult. We don’t
want the hyped location-based mobile technology to be viewed as the
way to connect with your existing friends because you are surrounded
by uninteresting strangers. We’d rather use technology to have fewer
strangers starting from where you live everyday. In short, meeting
your neighbors online might just be the best opportunity to connect a
nation in public life and counter those intent on pulling us a apart
with online partisanship and political diatribe masked as online
interaction.