FREE WHITEWATER

Raw Milk’s Not an Ordinary School Food

I have long favored raw milk as a choice for adults, and adults who choose it for their children.  It’s not, though, a food that’s ready for school children whose parents have not constented to its inclusion on a menu:

Laboratory test results show that the Campylobactor jejuni bacteria that caused diarrheal illness among 16 individuals who drank unpasteurized (raw) milk at a school event early this month in Raymond was the same bacteria strain found in unpasteurized milk produced at a local farm, according to officials from the Department of Health Services (DHS) and Western Racine County Health Department (WRCHD). A parent had supplied unpasteurized milk from the farm for the school event.

Unfortunately, an incident like this will be used to justify banning organic milk comprehensively and indiscriminately, even in America’s Dairyland.

SeeRaw milk source of campylobacter that sickens 16 in Wisconsin school.

Daily Bread for 6.21.11

Good morning.

It’s a day of thunderstorms with a high temperature of about eighty ahead for Whitewater.

It’s a busy day of public meetings in the Whippet City. At 4 p.m., Whitewater’s Community Development Authority meets (see, Community Development Authority 6.21.11 agenda). At 4:15, Whitewater’s Urban Forestry Commission meets (see, Urban Forestry 6.21.11 agenda).

Later, at 6:30 p.m., Common Council will be in session (see, Common Council 6.21.11 agenda).

Daily Bread for 6.20.11

Good morning.

It’s a cloudy day forecast for Whitewater, with a high temperature of seventy-seven, and a chance of thunderstorms.

There’s a Park & Recreation Board meeting today in Whitewater, at 4 p.m.  The meeting agenda is available online.

Today is the anniversary of a labor controversy from 1911, as the Wisconsin Historical Society recalls:

On this date Italian working men, employed by Andrus Asphalt Company in Madison, went on strike and threatened to kill their foreman if they did not receive an increase in wages for laying pavement. The men demanded a 25-cent (a day) raise, from $1.75 to $2.00. To learn more about strikes and the labor movement visit our Birth of the Labor Movement page in Turning Points. [Source: Bishops to Bootleggers: A Biographical Guide to Resurrection Cemetery, pg. 184]

Whitewater’s Different Search Strategies

While Whitewater’s police department has embarked on a traditional search strategy with a consulting firm, Whitewater’s school district is willing first to consider internal candidates in a backyard-search strategy.

Will the different methods produce results different in candidate quality? Thats hard to knoww, although a national search should yield a stronger field.

Officials and Notice of Departure

A few quick remarks on officials and giving notice of departure.  An official who’s not very good, just struggling along, will give ample notice (both implicit and explicit) of a departure.

Here’s how to tell: the official will have been a second or third choice initially, will try unsuccessfully for years to leave (being rejected elsewhere time and again), will have a reputation for being dull and delinquent, and will give notice as much because there’s nowhere else to go as any other reason.

It’s only a retiree or mediocrity who gives seven months’ notice.  By the time the official declares that notice, no one is surprised, of course: the years of wasting time, money, and others’ opportunities will already have been known in the community.

By contrast, a good administrator will always be in demand, and present an organization with a chance of departure for the many other places in which she’s likely to be in demand. Talented officials are always in demand, and well-known to national organizations that are searching for, and welcoming of, excellent candidates.

If Whitewater wants good officials, really excellent ones, she’ll have to get used to fighting to keep those officials from leaving for the exciting, competitive opportunities that are open to talented people.

Anyone who thinks that it’s better to have a mediocrity (who’s so undesirable that she can give a half years’s notice) over an excellent administrator (who will be in demand  nationally and so operate under a shorter notice of leave) is foolish.

It takes more work to keep a good administrator, but that work will always be worth the effort — as the community gets the continuing tenure of a good leader in return.

 

Keeping up with the Whitewater School District

Over at Walworth County Today and the Janesville Gazette, Kevin Hoffman has solid reporting on the Whitewater School District’s search for a new administrator.  It’s the best press coverage of the district available — Hoffman’s stories provide readers insight into the thinking of school board members.

His reporting is must-reading for information on the ongoing search, and other district news.

SeeWhitewater School Board to seek leader from within and

Scaling back cuts still an option for Whitewater.

 

Recent Tweets, 6.12 to 6.18

Indeed: State budget will force most school districts to cut property taxes – JSOnline http://bit.ly/ilD8p3
Insightful, revealing look at district: Whitewater School Board to seek leader from within — Walworth County Today http://bit.ly/ldk9Tm
Selecting a new administrator – Whitewater Schools’ Coin Flip « FREE WHITEWATER http://bit.ly/iXDUYE
Weekend Poll and Comment Forum: State Budget « FREE WHITEWATER https://freewhitewater.com/?p=16820
Ruling w/ majority, Justice Prosser again demonstrates judicial independence for which Milwaukee Journal Sentinel profusely praised him
Buried inside WI banker admits bank took TARP $ didn’t need WI banks lag on TARP payments Marshfield News-Herald http://bit.ly/lL3JWj
Whitewater, WI Has No Reason to Worry About ‘No Child Left Behind’ Results | FREE WHITEWATER http://bit.ly/l7GV1v

Weekend Poll and Comment Forum: State Budget

The Wisconsin Biennial budget is on its way to the governor.  So what do you think: do you favor or oppose?

SeeSenate sends budget to Walker for signature, but effects already being felt and Senate OK’d budget goes to Walker:

Aside from changes to the school voucher program, the state budget approved Thursday by the Legislature also includes provisions that would:

  • Put tight limits on property taxes.
  • Cut school funding by almost $800 million.
  • Require local governments to make employer contributions to match the new pension contributions being required of public workers, which in the case of state workers are equal to 5.8% of their salaries.
  • Loosen restrictions on payday loans.
  • Let bail bondsmen set up shop in Wisconsin.

Previous proposals that were removed from the bill include:

  • A plan that would have made it harder for owners of land sitting in the way of a highway or power line project to challenge a government takeover of their property.
  • A proposal for $2 million in state borrowing for improvements at Milwaukee’s National Soldiers Home.

I’ve a poll and comments forum open for your opinions.

The use of pseudonyms and anonymous postings is, of course, fine. Although the comments template has a space for a name, email address, and website, those who want to leave a field blank can do so. Comments will be moderated, against profanity or trolls. Otherwise, have at it.

The forum will be open until Sunday morning, and this post will stay at the top of the website during that time. Other posts will be up during that time; they’ll just appear below this one until Sunday.

The FBI wants your garbage (and a lot more)

Yes, they do.

Here’s a message from the ACLU, describing another of the federal government’s ceaseless quests for more power over the lives of law-abiding citizens:

You probably wouldn’t expect that FBI agents would want to dig through your trash unless they had a real good reason. And you surely wouldn’t want them following you and gathering information about you from commercial databases and local police files unless they had some suspicion you were doing something wrong.

But, according to The New York Times, the FBI — despite a stunning record of abuses — will soon be giving its roughly 14,000 agents significant new surveillance powers.1

The loosened surveillance standards reportedly include giving agents more leeway to search commercial and police databases, to go through household trash, and to use surveillance teams to scrutinize the lives of people the FBI doesn’t even suspect of wrongdoing.

In the waning days of the Bush administration, Attorney General Michael Mukasey updated the guidelines governing FBI powers and essentially gave the FBI a blank check to open investigations of innocent Americans based on no meaningful suspicion of wrongdoing. Unbelievably, the FBI is now demanding even more power to investigate you, while refusing to provide information about how it is using its new powers.

 

As it is, the current guidelines set a dangerously low threshold for beginning an investigation or conducting surveillance about individuals or groups who are not suspected of any criminal activity.

The guidelines in place now also allow the FBI to collect, analyze and map racial and ethnic data about local communities, opening up the possibility that the FBI is engaging in unconstitutional racial profiling.

Please help us put the Obama administration on notice that we don’t want the FBI to have even more authority to engage in abuses. We need stronger safeguards against the FBI using race and religion as grounds for suspicion, not an expansion of unchecked surveillance powers.

 

The FBI could issue these dangerous new guidelines at any moment. Please act now to protect privacy and rein in abuses of the government’s far-reaching surveillance powers.

1. “F.B.I. Agents Get Leeway to Push Privacy Bounds,” The New York Times, June 12, 2011.http://www.nytimes.com/2011/06/13/us/13fbi.html