2008

Saturday Odds & Ends

I saw this in McKennan park today. Thought the Al Franken sign was a nice touch – I wonder if Daugaard lives there?

LMFAO- Saw this video today, I think the kid nailed it. “I hope you hit a whale on the way to France.”

Seems the McCain campaign is spinning the Hockey Mom status of Palin a little further . . . I always thought she was a VPILF instead?

The school board decided to not let extremists distribute their crap in the schools anymore, but the Gargoyle Leader has even a better idea . . . junk mail and spam. Yeah, that’s a GREAT IDEA! this from the same people who endorsed Vernon Brown and the sales tax hike.

Perhaps there still is some way for the school district to help those groups whose important missions revolve around helping children grow and learn. Electronic communication quickly is becoming universal. Some sort of opt-in e-mail distribution list might make sense. The schools could then turn that list over to organizations that ask for it, thereby escaping the middle-man role. The same could be done with mailing addresses.

Absentee voting has begun

I voted today because the precints and super precints in Sioux Falls are such a f’ing mess I prefer to absentee vote.

How I voted:

Obama-Biden

Johnson

Herseth-Sandlin

Constitutional Amend G: No

Constitutional Amend H: No

Constitutional Amend I: Yes

Constitutional Amend J: No

Initiated Measure 9: Yes

Initiated Measure 10: Yes

Initiated Measure 11: No

(I left out the local races – but I did vote for one Republican; secrets, secrets)

No Rescue for the Hungry

From the Washington Post;

According to this commentary by Joel Berg, executive director of the New York Coalition Against Hunger, he and other social services advocates have trouble understanding why the federal government is ready to spend “a trillion dollars” to bail out the financial sector, while millions go hungry across the U.S. “When advocates point out that our nation is facing…soaring hunger and homelessness, and that a large-scale bailout is needed to prevent social services nationwide from buckling under the increasing load, we are told that the money these agencies need just doesn’t exist.” Berg cites USDA statistics showing that in 2006, 35.5 million Americans (up 4 million from 1999) live in households unable to afford enough food to eat – households that include more than 12 million children. When advocates called on Congress to “obtain serious funding increases to meet the soaring needs,” they were told “times are just too tough to increase budgets.” Berg notes that times are “bleak” in New York City, with the mayor and state governor working to cut emergency feeding programs while the number of meals served by the city-supported food pantries and soup kitchens has increased nine percent over the past year. Berg concludes “Just as it is unthinkable for the country to allow financial giants to go belly-up, it should be unthinkable to look the other way as tens of millions of low-income Americans (the types of people who clean the offices of AIG and Fannie Mae at night) go without food or shelter. It’s time to get our priorities in order.”

Gene ‘Montgomery Burns’ Rowenhorst defends the fleecing of taxpayers in SF

Like a good Munson soldier, Gene tells us that paying more taxes is necessary (Argus Leader);

I would like to put this discussion in context. In March 2008, the mayor and the City Council commissioned a citizen survey that reached 3,000 households in Sioux Falls. Citizens were asked to rate the statement, “I receive good value for the city of Sioux Falls taxes I pay.”

Gene, why didn’t you mention there was only aproximately 1,000 respondents? That’s right, city hall is making decisions with your taxdollars based on the opinions of aprox 0.66% of the population. But if you include the metro area (which will be affected by the arterial roads that percentage drops to 0.44%.) Not a good guage if you ask me. On top of that, we still don’t know who these surveys were sent to, which should worry us even more. Mailing lists are very accurate and specific. You can order a list to go to any demographic within a city. I would be curious what demographic this was sent to. One indicator was a large number of people saying they felt unsafe Downtown at night. This tells me that the survey was sent to 1) Senior citizens 2) yuppies who never come downtown and are generally scared of downtown areas because they watch too much Fox News about inner city crime.

I also take issue with this statement;

That leaves $139 million in our budget.

$27 million is for railroad relocation. This is money coming from the federal government that we need to show as part of the budget due to accounting rules even though the citizens of Sioux Falls are not funding this project. This money cannot be used for arterial street construction.

What Gene isn’t tell you is that SF Taxpayer’s are footing this bill and we will (hopefully) get repaid by the FEDS. In most cases when cities or states foot the bill first, it is rare that the FEDS pony up. and if you think after this $819 billion dollar bailout that they are going to be handing out checks like this, you are freaking nuts.

This is also misleading, and he should have given a breakdown;

That leaves $90 million in our budget.

  • $43 million is in other funds that are restricted for specific purposes such as transit, community development, storm drainage, etc. This money cannot be used for arterial street construction.
  • Most community development dollars are loans that are merely originated by the city. But lately you will notice that the city has been giving handouts in the form of TIF’s and Facade programs. I would be curious how much of that $43 million is for community development handouts.

    Once again the city has told us how they are spending our money, but not how they are trying to save us money. That is what is fundamentally broken at City Hall and the department heads that work there. They are not looking out for us.