FREE WHITEWATER

Video: Scott Walker’s Good Friend (Update 22 in a Series)

One sometimes hears that all political ads are exaggerations. Not all of them — sadly, this one from the Barrett Campaign about Republican Scott Walker’s failure to clean house after abuses at the MIlwaukee County Mental Health Complex is true. (H/t to the Journal Sentinel.)



Link: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-tK2RgmPhg4

I’ve posted about Chianelli’s policy, and the tragedy that is conduct at the MHC, before. See, A Milwaukee County Bureaucrat’s Immoral Utilitarianism, Update: A Milwaukee County Bureaucrat’s Immoral Utilitarianism, Update 2, Update 3, Update 4, Update 5, Update 6, Update 7, Update 8, Update 9, Update 10, Update 11, Update 12, Update 13, Update 14, Update 15, Update 16, Update 17, Update 18, Update 19, Update 20, and Update 21 more >>

Georgia Politician: Boring Names Will Stop Sign Theft

McIntosh County has a problem – costing thousands of dollars each year – of people stealing street signs. County Commissioner Mark Douglas has a solution – make the names of the signs boring.

It’s a clever idea, although it would mean a change of street names, and the end of any clever or whimsical choices. Yet, boring – rather than repulsive – may be the way to go.

See, Georgia Politician: Boring Names Will Stop Sign Theft.

Whitewater’s Innovation Center: Grants and Bonds

Whitewater’s planned Innovation Center and Tech Park rest on a multi-million dollar federal grant and millions in federally-subsidized bonds. The grant is for $4.7 million, and here is how a page from the Economic Development Administration described the purpose for those millions:

September 7-September 11, 2009

….$4,740,809 to the Whitewater Community Development Authority, the University of Wisconsin Whitewater, and the City of Whitewater, Wisconsin, to fund construction of the new Innovation Center and infrastructure to serve the technology industrial park, including a road linking the project with the University of Wisconsin’s Whitewater campus. The goal of the project is to create jobs to replace those lost in the floods of 2008 and those lost from recent automotive plant closures. The Innovation Center will serve as both a training center and technology business incubator and will be constructed to meet Leadership in Energy and Environmental Design (LEED) green building certification standards. A portion of the project’s cost will be funded through EDA’s Global Climate Change Mitigation Incentive Fund. This investment is part of an $11,051,728 project which grantees estimate will help create 1,000 jobs and generate $60 million in private investment.

Every part of this description of the grant’s goals is astonishingly inapplicable to the use and value (such as it is) of the Innovation Center that Whitewater is actually building.

The EDA states that “the goal of the project is to create jobs to replace those lost in the floods of 2008 and those lost from recent automotive plant closures.”

Although I have been a critic of the project, there’s no greater criticism possible than the gap between the goal of these millions and the use to which they’re being put.

These millions came from some taxpayers, to create jobs in our community to alleviate suffering from natural disaster and industrial decline.

Instead, resources from taxpayers were taken for this project, thus they have been denied to needy people who might have made proper use of them. They’ve been squandered on an empty project that depends on shuffling publicly-paid employees from one suffering community to another, or airy speculation about video games, etc.

Millions are out of work, across America, and our own community is afflicted with plant closures, high unemployment, and high child poverty. Other communities in the Midwest have those same problems.

It was wrong, and selfish, to take this money and use it so poorly. What we have wasted others might have used for a better and truer purpose.

In all the time that I’ve read of this project, I cannot recall anyone ever stating plainly the intended goal of the grant. When Whitewater’s City Manager Kevin Brunner mentioned the grant in one of his Weekly Report posts, he mentioned the amount, but not the federal goal of the grant. See, Weekly Report for 12-18-09.

There have been reports stating plainly the goals of other grants, including a similar one that UW-Whitewater and other schools received for $5.9 million. (That grant, involving job-retraining in conjunction with other nearby universities, apparently has a goal similar or identical to the one that the Innovation Center plainly isn’t meeting.)

Considering the Economic Development Administration’s stated project goal, it’s easy to see why those backing the project would want to omit mention of the grant’s intended, specified purpose.

No matter what one thinks of federal spending, that money should be put to good use in pursuit of the stated and specified federal goal. That’s not happening in this project.

There’s more to write about the gap between the goals of the grant and the sad use to which it is being wasted.

And yet, it’s not merely the grant that’s so ill-fitting. As I noted last January, a press release for the bonds used to supplement the eleven-million-dollar project’s cost didn’t accurately mention the poor condition of one of our tax incremental districts. Instead, that press release from Moody’s gave an unrealistically sunny description of our TIDs (“successful use of tax increment districts (TIDs), including five additional TIDs established in 2007”).

This description is both shocking and risible, as months earlier, in preparation for the city budget, Brunner mentioned the possibility of distressed status for TID 4. (The legislation for distressed TID status in Wisconsin was not yet enacted, but was then only pending.)

(See, from January 21, 2010, On Whitewater, Wisconsin’s Recent Bond Rating.)

This project wrongly relies on a grant used in ways stretched beyond all fair and reasonable meaning, and millions in bond debt for a city with an already-ailing tax incremental district.

Daily Bread for Whitewater, Wisconsin: 9-28-10

Good morning,

Whitewater’s forecast for today is for a mostly cloudy day with a high temperature of sixty-four degrees.

The Wisconsin Historical Society recalls the birth on this day in 1925 of one one Wisconsin’s — and America’s — greatest inventors: Seymour Cray.

1925 – Seymour R. Cray Born

On this date Seymour R. Cray was born in Chippewa Falls. Cray received a BS in Electrical Engineering from the University of Minnesota. He established himself in the field of large-scale computer design through his work for Engineering Associates, Remington Rand, UNIVAC, and Control Data Corporation. In 1957 Cray built the first computer to use radio transistors instead of vacuum tubes. This allowed for the miniaturization of components which enhanced the performance of desktop computers. In the 1960s he designed the world’s first supercomputer at Control Data. In 1972 he founded Cray Research in his hometown of Chippewa Falls where he established the standard for supercomputers with CRAY-1 (1976) and CRAY-2 (1985). He resigned from the company in 1981 to devote himself to computer design in the areas of vector register technology and cooling systems. Cray died in a automobile accident on October 5, 1996. [Source: MIT and Cray Company]



Cray-2

WI Republican Candidate Ron Johnson’s Testimony Against Child Abuse Bill

There’s a video now available on YouTube of Republican senate candidate Ron Johnson’s testimony against a Wisconsin bill that would have made it easier for victims of child abuse to sue their abusers. (The bill was defeated.)

The video (h/t to the Milwaukee Journal Sentinel) is revealing for more than one reason. Superficially, it shows a candidate who’s green, and speaks too quickly, in a political setting where he’s awkward and ill-at-ease.

The more telling aspect of Johnson’s presentation involves his written remarks. Johnson’s stated purpose was to contend that an easier opportunity for victims to sue would place additional and unintended costs on employers. Astonishingly, Johnson contends that these unintended costs would produce “other victims.” That’s startlingly unfeeling; there may be economic consequences, but there is only one set of victims involved — victims of child sexual abuse. It simply dilutes the meaning of the word victim beyond substance to contend that there are victims on both sides of this issue.

Johnson cannot contend that his remark is a mere slip of the tongue; he’s reading from prepared, written remarks.

He gave his testimony only in January; there’s been little time since for maturation in style or — far more importantly — seriousness. Johnson’s remarks are, mildly put, discouraging.

Below is video of his testimony:



Link: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rU43UkT7ZbU. more >>

Banned Books Week, 9-25 to 10-2

It’s Banned Books Week. There have always been books that people don’t like, find distasteful, wrong, etc. Some of these concerns are legitimate — there are distasteful books written every day.

Yet, an answer that seeks a state prohibition banning a book like Catcher in the Rye, for example, will always be excessive and illegitimate state authority. (I don’t find Catcher in the Rye distasteful, but I’m sure others do.) The answer to books one doesn’t like is to avoid them, their authors, and their publishers.

Here’s a map of book challenges and bans with data from the American Library Association:



View Book Bans and Challenges, 2007-2010 in a larger map

Book Bans and Challenges, 2007-2010
Hundreds of books are challenged in schools and libraries in the United States each year. A challenge is an attempt to remove or restrict materials, while a banning reflects the actual removal of those materials. The American Library Association (ALA) provides confidential support to teachers and librarians and tracks challenges that occur. ALA recorded 460 challenges in 2009 but estimates that this reflects only 20-25% of actual incidents, as most challenges are never reported.

Alzheimer’s Association: Open Forum on Alzheimer’s Disease and Related Dementia

I received the following press release that I am happy to post —

Open Forum on Alzheimer’s Disease and Related Dementia
“Coffee, Cookies and Conversation”

The Alzheimer’s Association is hosting “Coffee, Cookies and Conversation” for community members who wish to learn more about Alzheimer’s disease or a related dementia. This program will be offered on Monday, October 4, 2010 from 9:30 to 11:00 a.m. at ProHealth Care, 210 NW Barstow, in Waukesha. There is no charge to attend; the program is open to the public.

Have you or a loved one recently been diagnosed with Alzheimer’s disease or another dementia? If so, this open forum session will provide an opportunity to get questions answered and for participants to discover how the Alzheimer’s Association can help. Rather than a formal presentation, this program focuses on answering questions from the attendees. The presenter for this program is Judy Gunkel, Regional Services Coordinator/Waukesha Co., Alzheimer’s Association.

To register, please contact Judy Gunkel at 262-548-7224, or send an email to judy.gunkel@alz.org.

The Alzheimer’s Association is the leading voluntary health organization in Alzheimer care, support and research. Our mission is to eliminate Alzheimer’s disease through the advancement of research; to provide and enhance care and support for all affected; and to reduce the risk of dementia through the promotion of brain health. Our vision is a world without Alzheimer’s. For more information about Alzheimer’s disease and local services visit www.alz.org/sewi or call the Alzheimer’s Association 24/7 Helpline at 800-272-3900.

Open Forum on Alzheimer’s Disease and Related Dementia

Open Forum on Alzheimer’s Disease and Related Dementia
“Coffee, Cookies and Conversation”

The Alzheimer’s Association is hosting “Coffee, Cookies and Conversation” for community members who wish to learn more about Alzheimer’s disease or a related dementia. This program will be offered on Monday, October 4, 2010 from 9:30 to 11:00 a.m. at ProHealth Care, 210 NW Barstow, in Waukesha. There is no charge to attend; the program is open to the public.

Have you or a loved one recently been diagnosed with Alzheimer’s disease or another dementia? If so, this open forum session will provide an opportunity to get questions answered and for participants to discover how the Alzheimer’s Association can help. Rather than a formal presentation, this program focuses on answering questions from the attendees. The presenter for this program is Judy Gunkel, Regional Services Coordinator/Waukesha Co., Alzheimer’s Association.

To register, please contact Judy Gunkel at 262-548-7224, or send an email to judy.gunkel@alz.org.

The Alzheimer’s Association is the leading voluntary health organization in Alzheimer care, support and research. Our mission is to eliminate Alzheimer’s disease through the advancement of research; to provide and enhance care and support for all affected; and to reduce the risk of dementia through the promotion of brain health. Our vision is a world without Alzheimer’s. For more information about Alzheimer’s disease and local services visit www.alz.org/sewi or call the Alzheimer’s Association 24/7 Helpline at 800-272-3900.

Daily Bread for Whitewater, Wisconsin: 9-27-10

Good morning,

Whitewater’s forecast calls for a clear day, with a high temperature of sixty-seven degrees.

The City of Whitewater’s public hearing concerning distressed status from Tax Incremental District 4 has been postponed, pending selection of a citizen representative to the Joint Review Board.

[Update, 8:10 AM — I’ve promised a post or two about Tax Incremental District 4, but those posts will now, like the hearing about TID 4, wait for another day. TID 4’s condition is a story on its own, and, I think, is connected to subsequent projects in the city. An explanation of TID 4’s fiscal history at a hearing will prove significant, perhaps, for more than one reason. It makes sense to hear what municipal officials say at that hearing.]

At 4:30 p.m., the Whitewater Community Development Authority will meet. The meeting agenda is available online.

In the online version of Der Speigel, there’s an interesting story entitled, “90 Beds in 90 Days,” about “hitting the town with Berlin’s couch-surfing nomad,” Christine Neder:

Christine Neder, 25, recently moved from Munich to Berlin. She didn’t have time to bother with the hassle of searching for a room, so she made a bold decision: For 90 days she would seek out a new room every night, looking for people willing to host her on social networking sites like CouchSurfing and Facebook. Neder is a fashion designer and writer.

The Web makes Neder’s task far easier, and she describes her adventures in a video, available online. (Neder is apparently something of a performance artist, with different online ventures, so I doubt that her couch surfing is entirely of necessity; opportunity likely plays a role. She hit on the idea not simply on short-notice, but as she remarks, while on holiday.)

The BBC describes the practice, for other travelers:



I can’t see this catching on outside of a small part of America, in a few big cities. I wonder, though, if couch surfing is what the Web has done (or is doing) to the hostel in Europe. more >>

Recent Tweets, 9-19 to 9-25

@davidgumpert: A WI dairy farmer’s answer to DATCP’s lifting of Grade A dairy license: new set of raw milk standards. http://bit.ly/aNJqer
1:10 PM Sep 24th

No time like the present @WiStateJournal: Op-Ed: Overhaul lawyer oversight in wake of Kenneth Kratz case http://ow.ly/196yVs
3:21 PM Sep 22nd

Indeed – sound, serious reporting @WiStateJournal: From your letters: Robert W. Deitz: Kudos to press for exposing Kratz http://ow.ly/196URP
3:20 PM Sep 22nd

Thirty-five million later: UW-W’s Starin Hall no typical dorm http://bit.ly/bkizMf
12:46 PM Sep 21st

Gene-Altered Fish Closer to Approval – WSJ.com http://bit.ly/agNOw2
8:56 PM Sep 20th

Brooklyn residents overrun by possums used by the city to wipe out rats – NYPOST.com http://bit.ly/cJrc1G
8:11 PM Sep 20th

Further allegations against ‘sexting’ DA claim social invitation to an autopsy http://bit.ly/dtzzWo
6:01 PM Sep 20th

Fiend! British woman who threw cat in garbage charged with two counts of animal cruelty – Sky News http://bit.ly/be466e
2:54 PM Sep 20th

71 kicked out of UW football game; 35 arrested http://bit.ly/9sGp8K
12:02 PM Sep 19th

Top 10 New Foods at the 2010 State Fairs | Endless Simmer

With all due respect to George Washington Carver, America’s greatest food inventions have all originated in one place — the state fair. From cotton candy to corn dogs to deep-fried Coke, the enterprising folks at America’s state and county fairs top themselves year after year. Some observers thought state fair cooks had hit their peak last year, when the Texas State Fair debuted Deep Fried Butter. But in 2010, they outdid themselves once again, proving that if it’s edible, it’s even better battered and fried….

I’d try them all, but Number 6, a deep-fried Klondike Bar from the San Diego State Fair, seems particularly intriguing.

Via Top 10 New Foods at the 2010 State Fairs | Endless Simmer.