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Monthly Archives: June 2012

Today @ the Whitewater 4th of July Festival

Festival Website: http://www.ww4th.com

Saturday, June 30th

12 Noon – Festival Opens
– Midway by Christman Amusement Opens
– American Legion Beer Tent Opens
– Food Vendors Open

12:00 Noon – Minneiska Ski Show on beautiful Cravath Lake

12:00 Noon – 4:00PM – Arm bands for the carnival arm band save money!

12:00 Noon – 4:00PM – Children’s Petting Zoo (sponsored by Dalee Water Conditioning)

Live Music Stage

2:00PM-3:00PM – The Jesus Riders

5:30PM-7:30PM The Nothing But Trouble Band
(www.nothingbuttroubleband.com)

8:00PM-11:30PM 76 Juliet
(www.76juliet.com)

10:00 PM – FIREWORKS sponsored by The City of Whitewater

12 Midnight – Festival Closes

Daily Bread for 6.29.12

Good morning.

Whitewater’s week ends with a high temperature of ninety-two.

As the week ends, Whitewater’s July 4th events begin.  The Independence Holiday website is available at www.ww4th.com.

Here’s today’s schedule:

Friday, June 29th

5:00 PM – Festival Opens
– Midway by Christman Amusement Opens
– American Legion Beer Tent Opens
– Food Vendors Open

Live Music Stage
5:30PM – 7:30PM – Euphoria
8:00PM – 11:30 PM – Rebel Grace (www.rebelgrace.com)

10:00 PM – FIREWORKS sponsored by DLK Enterprises

12 Midnight – Festival Closes
On this day in 1995, a US space shuttle docked with the Russian space station Mir, forming the largest artificial satellite yet to orbit the planet:

Google’s daily puzzle for June 29th is particularly intriguing: “In the native language of Leonardo Pisano Bigollo, what is the largest cube in his sequence?” more >>

The CDA Session from 6.27.12

Part of the Community Development Authority’s discussion for its June 27th meeting included consideration of a proposal for a digester, in a possible agreement with Green Energy Holdings, Inc.

I’ve no remarks to make here about that company, or its work elsewhere, but about the conduct of Whitewater’s Community Development Authority there is reason for concern. The handling of the 6.27.12 session was embarrassingly sub-standard, and reveals confusion about basic principles of the proper exercise of political authority.

GEH seeks to build a digester to convert food waste into methane, to become compressed or liquid natural gas. Although some digesters use animal waste, theirs for Whitewater would use food waste.

That’s not unusual, but the conversation about it, from the members of the CDA board, certainly was. Consider, from my own transcription, at just less than 12 minutes into the session, these comments, from the CDA board chairman, and a CDA member, to the representatives of GEH:

CDA chairman (speaking to CDA member): “Well, they’ve got their eyes on you (CDA member), by the way, being from Chartwells [crosstalk], because one of the things they want to do is take all of your waste…”

CDA member (to whom chairman was speaking): “That’s my question [laughter]. Where do you get all your food waste?”

GEH representative: “Pardon?”

CDA member: “Where do you get all your food waste?”

One cannot say more bluntly that no one on the CDA board – even in jest – should be speaking this way, or asking this sort of question, about a commodity to which he or she is connected. It’s an obvious conflict under any circumstances, and even worse when an applicant’s proposal is under immediate consideration.

One might mitigate a potential conflict by declaring immediately that one sought no economic interest, and would accept none.

Embarrassingly, these questions from the CDA were prefaced with the opposite approach — the CDA chairman’s own assertion of how an applicant’s needs might benefit a CDA member’s economic interests.

About two minutes later, before going into closed session to discuss GEH’s development agreement, this is what the CDA chairman had to say about an assured outcome:

CDA chairman: “….this [development agreement] has already been approved by the city council, but we’re gonna to talk in closed session about some edits and changes that need to be approved as – when – we come out of closed session. Ok? So, we’ll be approving then a preliminary development agreement, that’ll have to go back to the city council for it to be amended. All right?”

Too bad all that certainty-in-advance couldn’t be channeled into something clever, like picking the next 10 World Series winners…

No way to run a railroad, a CDA, or any other responsible organization, anywhere in America.

Daily Bread for 6.28.12

Good morning.

The forecast for Whitewater’s Thursday calls for a hot day, with a temperature of ninety-eight, and a slight chance of thunderstorms.

On this day in 1919, the Treaty of Versailles was signed, ending the First World War.

Almost a century earlier, on this day in 1832, another war was as yet unfinished:

1832 – Atkinson starts up Rock River in Black Hawk War

On this date General Henry Atkinson and the Second Army began its trip into the Wisconsin wilderness in a major effort against Black Hawk. The “Army of the Frontier” was formed of 400 U.S. Army Regulars and 2,100 volunteer militiamen in order to participate in the Black Hawk War. The troops were headed toward the Lake Koshkonong area where the main camp of the British Band was rumored to be located. [Source: Along the Black Hawk Trail by William F. Stark, p. 93-94] [Wisconsin HIstorical Society]

Google’s daily puzzle asks about a flower: “What characteristic gives the flower with the world’s largest bloom its unusual nickname?”

The CDA and GEH

There’s a meeting of the Community Development Authority today, and of the topics on the agenda, there’s an item (number 7) to “Discuss Development Agreement with Green Energy Holdings LLC.” (The agenda and packet appear below.)

This item is a reference to approval, from last Thursday’s Common Council meeting, of an agreement with Green Energy Holdings, Inc., a Wisconsin corporation. See, from the council packet, the pages as labeled in that council packet as numbers 45-50.

There’s much to consider about all this, but little information available to Whitewater’s residents. The proposal may be a fine idea, but there’s nowhere near enough public information to know. On the contrary, considering the grand way in which Whitewater’s outgoing city manager has announced this deal, one would expect far more. In that way, Brunner’s approach to this announcement follows his method for the Innovation Center, a bus for Generac, and tax incremental spending, generally. Running the people’s government as a shabby private club has been an eight-year error.

A supposedly big deal requires a thorough explanation; that’s not happened here.

Whitewater’s trend is toward openness. Fortunately, and despite the political inclinations of the outgoing city manager, Whitewater’s trend is toward open government. Meetings recorded and televised live, packets with useful information published before a meeting takes place, online information about local government spending – these are all big steps away from a closed, town-squires approach to politics.

Our past. Unfortunately, our political past is littered with dodgy deals, misinformation, excuse-making, and ludicrous exaggerations. We are a people, over fourteen-thousand in number, deserving much better from the city’s leading administrator.

A predictable, unproven claim. In his Weekly Report of 6.22.12, likely one of his last acts while working for Whitewater’s government, Brunner wrote that this deal would “Create 70 New Jobs and at Least $10 Million in New Property Value.”

That’s false.

Anyone reading the terms of the deal as contained in the City of Whitewater’s council packet would know that Brunner’s claim is erroneous. (Again, please see from the council packet, the pages as labeled in that packet as numbers 45-50.)

No deal could guarantee what Brunner claims, and this one doesn’t. The draft agreement doesn’t guarantee 70 jobs or ten-million in property value; on the contrary, the very terms of the deal make clear that the increase in property value may never approach the figure Brunner claimed (see Paragraph 4). The relevant portion of that paragraph states that

….It is agreed that if the estimated fair market value (which shall be determined by the estimated fair market value as shown on the real estate tax statement for each year in question) is less than $10,000,000 for the tax year commencing January 1, 2014, or in any year through the year 2027, or through the year in which Whitewater TID No. 8 is terminated, whichever is earlier, GEH shall pay a sum equal to the tax shortfall (the difference between the actual tax and the tax that would have been paid if the property’s estimated fair market value on the tax statement was $10,000,000) to the City of Whitewater. Said payment in lieu of taxes (PILOT) shall be due when the tax payment would have been due or February 15th of each year….

That’s not a guarantee of ten-million in property value; a payment in lieu of taxes (for as long as it lasts) would only give city government the taxes on whatever property shortfall might occur; the shortfall itself would not be compensated. Millions wouldn’t come to the city – just the much smaller taxable amount on whatever value fell below the stated target.

There’s a vast economic difference between millions in added property value and getting mere thousands in additional property taxes if the property value never materializes.

In the same way, GEH “represents” that 70 jobs will be created (paragraph 6), but there’s no guarantee. Let’s assume GEH is sincere – I’ve no present reason to think otherwise — it’s still no guarantee.

So, did city manager Kevin Brunner actually read this agreement, or did he hope that the residents of Whitewater wouldn’t?

He got a great (but false!) headline, repeated obligingly at all the expected, cheerleading places. Presenting the deal in such flamboyant terms only shows contempt for the abilities of Whitewater’s residents, or an overweening pride in a bureaucrat’s own, exaggerated accomplishments.

Does the CDA even know the name of the party to this deal? On the CDA agenda, Green Energy Holdings is listed twice as Green Energy Holdings LLC, but in the 6.19.12 common council draft agreement, and in the city manager’s weekly report, it’s listed as Green Energy Holdings Inc. These are not the same entities, although there may be a connection between them.

Green Energy Holdings, Inc. was registered in Wisconsin effective 04.03.12, and lists “Bryan Lemmens 6601 Cty Rd R PO Box 396 Denmark, WI 54208” as the corporation’s agent.

By contrast, a Green Energy LLC was registered in Wisconsin on 3.27.08 and lists “Dean Pehlke,127 N 3rd Ave Edgar WI 54426” as agent.

Is this a deal with one, both, or neither (perhaps we’ll hear about yet another company in this line of work)?

Are any other companies associated with Green Energy Holdings, Inc?

A predetermined outcome? The CDA is supposed to be an independent and deliberative body, but one wouldn’t know that from the agenda.

Item 7 is to “Discuss Development Agreement with Green Energy Holdings LLC” [sic] and Item 8 is to convene into closed session for consideration of ‘potential development agreements,” but Item 10 gives the game away:

“10. Approve Preliminary Development Agreement with Green Energy Holdings LLC.”

So much for a deliberative approach – the approval is already assumed from the agenda. It’s not “vote on” or “decide about” – it’s listed as “approve” even before the meetings starts.

A thin packet. There’s not even anything about Green Energy (of whatever business form) in the online documents accompanying the agenda. Not even a brochure.

Open government is the right thing to do. Open government is a better approach than the alternatives, including those from Whitewater’s past. Remnants of that way are still kicking about, but they’ve no enduring future in this city.

How this project will turn out, I’ve no idea; one hopes for the best.

Perhaps this was meant to be a final fanfare before a city manager’s old-style approach came to an end. In that he succeeded: this announcement has all the marks of an narrow, failed way of presenting information. This immediate deal deserves a candid discussion, on its merits and as an example of good government.

Daily Bread for 6.27.12

Good morning.

Whitewater’s Wednesday will be hot, with a high temperature of ninety-six.

The city’s Community Development Authority meets today at 4:30 PM, and Common Council at 6 PM.

The Wisconsin Historical Society writes that on this day the

Milwaukee Sentinel [Was] Founded

On this date the Milwaukee Sentinel, the oldest newspaper in the state, was founded as a weekly publication by Solomon Juneau, who also was Milwaukee’s first mayor. [Source: History Just Ahead: A Guide to Wisconsin’s Historical Markers edited by Sarah Davis McBride, p. 19]

Google’s daily puzzle asks, “What fiber did the first material created in a test tube replace?”

Daily Bread for 6.26.12

Good morning.

A sunny day with a high temperature of eighty-two.

Whitewater’s Urban Forestry Commission meets today at 4:15 PM.

On this day in 1963, Pres. Kennedy spoke in West Berlin, and delivered his now-famous ‘Ich bin ein Berliner’ speech.

The Wisconsin Historical Society records that on this day in 1834,

New Land Districts [Were] Created

On this date an Act of Congress created the Green Bay land district (east of a line from the northern boundary of Illinois to the Wisconsin River) and west of this, the Wisconsin Land district. The act followed land cessions by Native Americans defeated in the Black Hawk War. The creation of the land districts opened up much of southeastern Wisconsin for settlement. [Source: Fond du Lac County Local History Web]

Google’s daily puzzle is for card players: “If you pick a card from a standard fifty-two card deck, what’s the probability that you’ll choose a one-eyed jack.”

Daily Bread for 6.25.12

Good morning.

It will be a sunny Monday with a high of seventy-four to start the week in the Whippet City.

On this day in 1876, Custer and the 7th Cavalry accompanying him at Little Big Horn were killed in action against the Sioux and Cheyenne.

The Wisconsin Historical Society lists two Badger State anniversaries on this day, from 1950 and 1966, respectively:

1950 – Korean War Starts
On this date Communist North Korea invaded the Republic of Korea. The Korean War, often called the “forgotten war,” involved more than 132,000 Wisconsinites. [Source: History Just Ahead: A Guide to Wisconsin’s Historical Markers edited by Sarah Davis McBride, p. 112]

1966 – Sheboygan Indian Mound Park Donated
On this date 15 acres of effigy mounds in Sheboygan were donated to the city by the Sheboygan Area Garden Clubs, to be maintained as a park. The mounds date to 500-750 A.D. and are shaped like deer and panthers. [Source: History Just Ahead: A Guide to Wisconsin Historical Markers edited by Sarah Davis McBride, p. 54]

Google’s daily puzzle presumes occasional tears at a movie: “When you cry during a sad movie, which hormone in your tears acts as a natural opiate?”