So much for “independent boards.”
At least a week before Veterans Affairs Secretary John Scocos was fired, the department’s board members had secretly come up with a strategy to dismiss and replace him, complete with a “PR plan” and “talking points” about the decision, e-mails show.
And Gov. Jim Doyle’s office reportedly had advised a board member to openly criticize Scocos to “ensure public exposure prior to the actual removal vote,” according to the e-mails, which were obtained through a state open records request.
The board voted on Nov. 24 to fire Scocos and replace him with Ken Black, a department administrator. The governor’s office and board members have repeatedly said the board acted independently of Doyle, but the e-mails raise questions about whether that’s the case - and if the state’s open meetings law was violated.
If this is obviously a case of the governor imposing his will on an “independent” board, what other boards has he manipulated (PSC?)?
Davyyyyyy… DAYYYYYYVY Crocket… King of the wild frontier!
Fess Parker, a baby-boomer idol in the 1950s who launched a craze for coonskin caps as television’s Davy Crockett, died Thursday of natural causes. He was 85.
Family spokeswoman Sao Anash said Parker, who was also TV’s Daniel Boone and later a major California winemaker and developer, died at his Santa Ynez Valley home. His death comes on the 84th birthday of his wife of 50 years, Marcella.
I just want to make sure y’all are aware of what’s in the legislation that the House is considering:
Beginning in 2014, most Americans would be required for the first time to purchase insurance, and face penalties if they refused.
You got it. The government would FORCE you to buy health insurance - even if you don’t want it. Not only is this unconstitutional, it is tyranny.
The jobless rate in West Bend started the year higher than the previous month, according to statistics released Wednesday by the state Department of Workforce Development.
The city’s January unemployment rate was 13.9 percent, up 1.5 percent from December.
In 2009, the city’s jobless rate topped out at 14.6 percent in June after starting the year at its lowest point, 10.5 percent in January.
In Washington County, the January 2010 jobless rate was 9.6 percent, up 1 percent from December, but lower than the 2009 high mark — June’s 10.1 percent. Washington County has the 46th highest unemployment rate from among Wisconsin’s 72 counties. The jobless rate is highest in Rusk County, at 14.3 percent, and lowest in Dane County, at 6.3 percent.
What a bunch of thugs. They’ll cut everyone else’s pension, but won’t cut their own. Shameful.
A proposal to cut pensions of elected Milwaukee County officials to match the same trim approved for other county workers was defeated Thursday by the County Board on a 7-7 vote.
The measure came up only after a substitute calling for a study of the county joining the state pension system also failed on a tie vote.
Voting in favor of imposing a 20% cut on future pension credit on supervisors, County Executive Scott Walker and a handful of other elected county officials were: supervisors Mark Borkowski, Paul Cesarz, Christopher Larson, Joseph Rice, Joe Sanfelippo, Jim “Luigi” Schmitt and Peggy West.
Voting against the pension cut were supervisors Marina Dimitrijevic, Willie Johnson Jr., Theo Lipscomb, Michael Mayo Sr., Johnny Thomas, John Weishan Jr. and Lee Holloway.
For the record, none of these jokers deserve a pension funded by the taxpayers.
Wow.
“I want to send a couple of messages to my colleagues in the House. If you voted “no” and you vote “yes” and you lose your election, and you think any nomination for a federal position isn’t going to be held up in the Senate, I’ve got news for you. It will be held.
Number two is if you get a deal, a parochial deal for you or your district, I’ve already instructed my staff and the staff of 7 other senators that we will look at every appropriations bill at every level at every incidence and we will outline it by district and we will associate that with the buying of your vote. So, if you think you can cut a deal now and it can not come out until after the election, I want to tell you that that ain’t gonna happen. And, be prepared to defend selling your vote in the House.”
Awesome. Those House members should realize that Obama is not a king and doesn’t have the sole authority to deliver on all of the deals he is making.
Hat tip Dad29.
Who knew!?!? Smartest. President. Ever.
This really pisses me off. Here is an email that the West Bend Superintendent sent to Judy Steffes in response to an inquiry. Herdrich copied everyone and their dog, including the media, so I think she meant for it to be public. It also went from her public account, which is subject to public record requests. I won’t tell you where I got it.
rom: Pat Herdrich
Subject: response to Judy Steffes for my W2
To: “Deb Roensch”
, “Pat Herdrich”
, “judith steffes”
Cc: “LeadershipTeam”
, “Board_Members”
, “Jason J Penterman”
, jbadzinski@conleynet.com, “Steve Ciccantelli”
, “Bob Bonenfant”
, “Shelly J Krueger”
, “Kim Will”
, “Wickland, Jeff”
, “Joe Donovan”
, “Mark Lustig”
, “Craig Farrell”
, “Jim Hodges”
Date: Wednesday, March 17, 2010, 11:12 AM
Judy,
My contracted salary is $147,347.
The administrative team as a whole recommended to the board that our salaries be frozen for the 2009-10 school year. And they were. Therefore this is the same contracted amount as the 2008-2009 school year. The administrative team also recommended to the board the higher level of co-pay for insurance based on the budget recommendations we framed for the current year. So we did. The entire leadership is working with the same pay and higher health care costs as they did in the 2008-09 school year.
On my W2 you will find an amount of $152,206 and here is the difference
Less the tax sheltered annuity dollars I set aside annually
Less the flexible spending dollars (medical) I set aside annually
Less Health Insurance Dollars I pay pre tax
Less Vision Insurance I pay pre tax
Less Cost Health Insurance paid
Less the taxable fringe benefit of the car lease through the school system
Thus resulting in the total taxable compensation level of $152,206.
I would be happy to share with you also the amount of taxes I pay state and federal every year once my returns are completed by my tax adviser should you be interested in that information as well.
The lease of the car for my role has been assessed as less expensive in comparison to paying me mileage on an annual basis.
You asked on the phone for my W2 questioning a compensation rate you were stating was $168,000. I stated to you that was inaccurate. You asked me how you got that amount and I responsed [sic] I did not know. The W2 record has been printed and redacted for confidential information (social security numbers etc) that would not be accessible through open records. You may pick that up with Deb Roensch, my assistant to verify the information. She will charge you for the open record request.
You asked me if I had been contacted by recruiters for other positions. I indicated that I had, but I have not submitted any resumes and I am not pursuing any employment opportunities other than my current job as the Superintendent of the West Bend Public Schools.
You asked if the evaluation process also results in conversations of pay raises. I stated to you that I do not ask the board independently for compensation during my evaluation process that is conducted annually. We have an administrative compensation process for the entire leadership team that examines the benchmark data for positions in the market as well as performance. We freeze the salary of administrators who are not performing to their job expectations. We will also shorten the number of years a contract will be issued in accordance with their performance. We examine the benchmark data for the number of administrators we employ in comparison to the benchmark districts and the job scope and responsibilities to ensure the span of control is appropriate.
Our focus is to sustain a balanced budget and sound fiscal decision making for team compensation for retention and replacement.
You asked if you may quote me.
I indicated yes as long as the responses are accurate and used in context. I am sharing this with the board, the leadership team and our Citizen’s Financial Advisory Committee, prior to your article, so they inturn [sic] may understand the context of our conversation.
I would expect that your reporting follow the ethical standards for appropriate journalism which I have forwarded to you in the past which is provided by your national association.
If they are not Judy, I am indicating to you now that as a leadership team we will no longer respond to your requests other than the public information requests specifically required by law.
I work regularly with reporters from print media, TV, and the radio and have for decades. I have always been committed, and remain committed, to strong working relationships.
I expect the same, however, when I work with media representatives and writers who publish their work within regular media venues. Fair reporting on hard issues I will never debate. Skewed reporting is a concern I have discussed with you prior. I recognize you are a freelance writer and do not represent the West Bend Daily News. I am copying their leadership, however, as they are the entity who inturn pays you for your work. I want everyone to understand my position with respect to our ongoing working relationship.
My concerns continue with your focus of reporting Judy. And here is why. At no point in time has your work focused in the same way on the other leadership teams in the region, or school boards, that the newspaper covers. At no point in time has your work focused on the other municipal leadership teams or boards in the same way as you have the public school system of West Bend. Yet, the West Bend School are recognized for being more fiscally responsible and higher performing than our counterparts. Our team and our results are nationally recognized as programmatically strong, financially sound and we are ranked in the top 7 percent of all school districts in the state for sound fiscal management. At no point have you covered that information. Rather your work has repeatedly targeted this team, this board, this district negatively.
This leads me to conclude that the specific elements framed within the ethical standards for journalism are compromised within your current focus.
I have stated to you directly that we will continue to work well with each media representative. We remain committed to the community and families we serve. We face hard issues on a daily basis head-on. This leadership team is recognized collectively and individually. We have strong work ethics and serve with a strong code for professional conduct. We have actively worked to better the context of funding for this system with the state while sustaining strong programming for our students.
I would again ask that you too engage your work on the issues, the critical issues, facing public schools and this community. Your work has not represented that to date. We would be happy to work with you if that in turn is your focus.
Short of that, if your articles focus on responses inaccurately, continue to focus solely on this system, and in a skewed manner; we will respond solely to the open records required by law.
Feel free to contact me if you have any questions regarding my email or the information you requested.
Sincerely,
Pat Herdrich
Deb please copy to CFAC as well.
Superintendent of Schools
West Bend Joint School District #1
735 South Main Street
West Bend, WI 53095
With all due respect… WTF? I have sent countless requests to Herdrich and district and NEVER received such a condescending response like this. Is Herdrich berating Steffes because she’s a woman? Because she reports regularly on the district? I don’t know. I think the entire response is condescending, bullying, and downright unprofessional. For a public official to lecture a reporter on journalistic ethics and the focus of their reporting is utterly unethical and unprofessional.
Is this how Herdrich treats all inquiries? Not to me, but is this how she treats other folks who ask questions? Didn’t the district just make a stink about bullying in the schools? Did Herdrich not attend these sessions?
This kind of behavior by the Superintendent is utterly unprofessional and condescending to a qualified reporter who was asking relevant questions about how the district spends our money. I hope that the school board takes proper corrective action regarding their out of control superintendent. If this is how the Superintendent responds to a mild request, is Steffes on to something?
I drove to St. Paul yesterday for business. I went 318.6 miles in 4 hours and 32 minutes, so I’m certain there was a rift in the space/time continuum. I came back this afternoon.
As usual, there were an inordinate number of dumbasses on the road. Word to the wise… if you want to go 65, move to the slow lane. If you want to pass someone, please take fewer than 28 miles to do so.
If you plan to drink and drive, please stay in the right lane and try to keep from weaving.
I listened to the entire soundtrack of Les Miserables… twice. If you know it, what’s your favorite song? I admit, it’s a close tie between about six different songs, but at the moment, I’m a bit partial to Drink With Me.
Ahem.
Buyers, beware: President Barack Obama says his health care overhaul will lower premiums by double digits, but check the fine print.
Premiums are likely to keep going up even if the health care bill passes, experts say. If cost controls work as advertised, annual increases would level off with time. But don’t look for a rollback. Instead, the main reason premiums would be more affordable is that new government tax credits would help cover the cost for millions of people.
Listening to Obama pitch his plan, you might not realize that’s how it works.
Visiting a Cleveland suburb this week, the president described how individuals and small businesses will be able to buy coverage in a new kind of health insurance marketplace, gaining the same strength in numbers that federal employees have.
“You’ll be able to buy in, or a small business will be able to buy into this pool,” Obama said. “And that will lower rates, it’s estimated, by up to 14 to 20 percent over what you’re currently getting. That’s money out of pocket.”
And that’s not all.
This could be very bad for Milwaukee and Wisconsin if it’s true.
A rumor that Harley-Davidson Inc. is the target of a takeover bid - by a firm famous for buying and sometimes dismantling companies - drove the motorcycle maker’s shares to a three-month high Tuesday.
The stock closed at $28.35, up 7% in trading that was nearly six times higher than the normal volume.
Investors responded to speculation that Harley was a takeover target by Kohlberg Kravis Roberts & Co., a private equity firm whose $25 billion purchase of RJR Nabisco in 1989 inspired a book and the movie “Barbarians at the Gate.”
New York-based KKR would not comment on the Harley rumor that began with stock traders in Frankfurt, Germany.
Milwaukee-based Harley also declined to comment, but the rumor fueled a frenzy of media and analyst speculation.
My column for the Daily News is online. It’s called, “Crying over raw milk.” Here’s a taste:
The entire kerfuffle over raw milk gives us a nice illustration of the competing interests of liberty vs. oppression, free markets vs. consumer protection and public health vs. consumer choice.
[...]
It’s become somewhat of a novelty for Wisconsinites to actually rebel against government regulation. I suppose it should come as no surprise that it’s happening over a glass of milk.
Dang it. They had it right the first time.
With a little more background information provided and the personal appeal of Heiser Automotive Group’s president, the Common Council changed its collective mind — mostly — and voted to support a resolution asking General Motors Co. to restore Heiser’s Chevrolet and Cadillac franchises in West Bend.
Heiser Automotive Group Inc. has asked for arbitration on GM’s franchise revocation decision and Chris Dulla, the dealership’s president, said community support would help its cause.
Two weeks ago, the seven aldermen decided not to act at all on the resolution requested by Heiser protesting the removal of the dealership franchises from Heiser Chevrolet Cadillac of West Bend.
On a 6-1 vote Monday, the Common Council voted to back the resolution. Alderman Tony Turner cast the lone no vote. “My position hasn’t changed,” he said. “I consider this almost meddling in the free enterprise system.”
He did not feel the city should get involved in a private business decision.
Others saw it differently.
Steve Hutchins asked for the reconsideration after he learned more from Heiser about GM’s decision, he said.
It’s a local business asking for support, Hutchins said. “I think we should give them the support.”
“We would be supportive of any business in the community,” said Roger Kist.
Before its final vote, the council voted 5-2 to reconsider the resolution with Turner and Michael Schlotfeldt voting against.
Not only is a resolution like this completely useless, it is not the business of the City of West Bend to attempt to meddle in things like this.
They are the Republicans of Dane County, a small spot of crimson in a region overrun with blue.
Making fun of Republicans is a beloved tradition in these parts, like going to the Farmers’ Market or taking offense at the student section at Badger games. But how many of us actually know any?
Last month, I set out to acquaint myself with as many local Republicans as I could by going undercover into the Dane County GOP. For weeks I attended the local party’s events: I gave my real name, answered personal questions honestly, and tried to keep an open mind. Mostly what I did was listen.
What I found is that Republicans in Dane County are warm, generous, thought-provoking, and at times outrageously offensive — just like lots of other people I know.
I have found the inverse to also be true. When I engage liberals on a personal level - even when they know me to be a conservative - most of them are kind, decent folks. There are exceptions, of course.
Hat tip Spring City Chronicle.