Boots & Sabers

The blogging will continue until morale improves...

Month: November 2015

Online Deer Registration System Bogs Down

One would have thought that they would have been able to predict the volume and prepare for it better. That being said, I registered a deer from Saturday on my mobile device and it worked like a charm. I loved the ease and convenience of it.

Nearly 116,000 deer were registered on the opening weekend of the 2015 Wisconsin gun deer hunting season, according to the Department of Natural Resources.

The volume of registrations caused a hiccup in the state’s new deer registration and reporting system.

The electronic system, used statewide for the first time this season, was unable to generate updates to the deer kill from Sunday evening to noon Monday.

A note posted Monday to the Department of Natural Resources website stated the reporting summary was “experiencing significant data gaps and delays. We are working to remedy the situation.”

The agency reported 115,971 deer were registered at noon Monday. But no details were available, such as the number of bucks and does registered, or county of kill. The DNR said it would post detailed registration data later.

The new “e-reg” system requires hunters to use a phone or computer to register their deer kills.

It was touted by the department as more convenient for hunters. It would also, the agency said, allow “the 9-day firearm season data to be updated in real time” and permit the public to track the number of deer registered.

Growing Number Approve of Government Suppression of Speech

This is a very, very sad and distressing revelation.

Four-in-ten Millennials say the government should be able to prevent people publicly making statements that are offensive to minority groups, while 58% said such speech is OK.

Even though a larger share of Millennials favor allowing offensive speech against minorities, the 40% who oppose it is striking given that only around a quarter of Gen Xers (27%) and Boomers (24%) and roughly one-in-ten Silents (12%) say the government should be able to prevent such speech.

Frankly, I’m ashamed of my generation (Gen X) too. What is clear is that there is growing support for government speech restrictions. I find this kind of talk offensive. I wish the government would prevent people from expressing such views.

Obamacare Needs the Young

It’s almost as if someone could have predicted this

Robert Laszewski of Health Policy and Strategy Associates has contended that the health plans “are just plain unattractive” because of their high premiums, deductibles and copays for people who don’t receive the additional subsidies.

“The value simply isn’t there for the working and middle class — unless of course you are sick,” Laszewski, a Wausau native, recently wrote in a column for Forbes magazine.

The cost still is high even if you are sick. The lowest-cost health plan in Milwaukee County — sold by Molina Healthcare — requires 30% coinsurance payments if someone is hospitalized, until the out-of-pocket maximum of $6,850 is reached.

Even for common health care expenses, the limited coverage provided by some plans sold on the marketplaces can be frustrating.

Kathryn Bruce, 28, bought the least expensive health plan this year. She pays only $15 a month, but the plan has a $5,000 deductible. When she got the flu and her doctor prescribed Tamiflu, an antiviral medication, she learned that it would cost her $400.

“I was just blown away by it,” said Bruce, who lives in Milwaukee. “They can diagnose you, which is free. But getting better is the most expensive part.”

The only way insurance works is when there are a lot of people who buy it and don’t use it. For health insurance, that means a lot of young, healthy people need to buy insurance to pay for the old, sick people who use it. But when the insurance is so expensive, it is difficult for a young, healthy person to justify it. And for the vast majority of those young people who choose to go without insurance, they will be just fine. In hindsight, it will be a good bet for them.

But Obamacare can’t tolerate such decisions. The young people who do not need health insurance NEED to pay into it so that the old people can have their bills paid. So our government will now force the young folks to pay a bunch of money for insurance they don’t need.

Of course, health insurance is always a good idea to protect yourself in the event you have a catastrophic health need, but we, as a society, could have addressed that sliver of circumstances without the monstrosity that is Obamacare.

World Health Organization Flubbed Ebola Response

Ouch. So the questions is, why did they wait so long?

“The most egregious failure was by WHO in the delay in sounding the alarm,” said Ashish K. Jha, Director of the Harvard Global Health Institute. “People at WHO were aware that there was an Ebola outbreak that was getting out of control by spring…and yet, it took until August to declare a public health emergency. The cost of the delay was enormous,” Jha said.

[…]

The Ebola outbreak created “immense human suffering, fear and chaos, largely unchecked by high-level political leadership or reliable and rapid institutional responses,” the panel said in a poignantly worded report published in the renowned medical journal “The Lancet.”

Putin Eases Nuclear Cooperation with Iran

Why not?

Moscow (AFP) – President Vladimir Putin on Monday eased restrictions on Russian companies working on Iranian enrichment sites as he travelled to Tehran for his first visit since 2007.

A decree Putin signed on Monday enables Russian firms to help modify centrifuges at the Fordo enrichment site and help Tehran redesign its Arak heavy water reactor.

Russian companies can now also carry out activities linked to Iranian exports of enriched uranium of more than 300 kilograms in exchange for the supplies of natural uranium to Iran, the Kremlin decree said.

Obama Takes Harsher Tone on IS

Apparently, Obama’s harsh tone is supposed to make our enemies think he’s serious this time.

(CNN)U.S. President Barack Obama toughened his rhetoric against ISIS at a weekend press conference in Malaysia that concluded his nine-day trip abroad.

The group responsible for the Paris terror attacks is “a bunch of killers with good social media,” he said. “They are dangerous and they’ve caused great hardship to … an overwhelming majority of people.”

The global coalition formed to destroy ISIS “will not relent,” he vowed. “We will not accept the idea that terrorist assaults on restaurants and theaters and hotels are the new normal, or that we are powerless to stop them.”

Around the Bend by Judy Steffes

Sorry I’m a bit late getting this up. I was in the woods for the opening of the gun deer season. I shot a full 33% of the deer I saw… so, 1. In any case, here you go:

New location for West Bend’s Amity nativity

The Amity nativity has a new home. The nativity had been displayed since 2007 on the grassy knoll outside Westbury Bank on S. Main Street. This year the display will be moved across the street and a bit further south. The Downtown West Bend Association took donation of the nativity in 2007. The DWBA board of directors had a meeting this week to hash over a new location.

“We wanted to keep it downtown and keep it on the route of the annual Christmas parade,” event manager Kellie Boone said.

A number of locations were batted about; some were nixed because of conflicts between church and state and then the perfect location became apparent. “Bits ‘n’ Pieces is on the parade route and it’s very visible,” said Boone about the location, 319 S. Main St.

Pat and Deb Bohn, owners of Bits ‘n’ Pieces, have been great community servants and work is underway to get the nativity set up in its new home before the Nov. 29 parade.

Officials at Westbury indicated the manger was unsafe. They said if it would be repaired they’d consider taking the manger back in the future.

On a history note: The nativity was special ordered in the late 1960s by Tom and Bob Rolfs. The nativity used to be displayed in front of the Amity Outlet on Highway 33 and prior to that sat in front of the Amity building at 735 S. Main St., what is now the West Bend School District office.

Could demolition of bridge jeopardize theatre project

There’s an effort underway to breathe new life into the downtown West Bend Theatre. A critical part of its success, according to investors, is the bridge over the Milwaukee River.

“Saving the bridge is number one,” said Mark Pfaller of Pfaller Architectural Associates. “There’s not enough parking to facilitate the theatre anywhere downtown. If the bridge does not stay and get renovated it could be a deal breaker.”

Pfaller has renovated and restored more than 40 theatres in his career including the Pabst Theatre in Milwaukee, the Rialto Theatre in Joliet, Illinois, and the 850 seat Grand Opera House in Oshkosh.  He’s been hired along with Gene Eggert from Architectural Designs Inc in Delafield to complete a study on what is needed to resurrect the downtown West Bend Theatre.

A brainstorming session was held this month at Dublin’s to get the ball rolling on the project. The one problematic issue is the city of West Bend has already signed a contract that involves the removal of the bridge behind the theatre.

The city of West Bend currently has a $567,946.05 bridge contract with Janke General Contractors, Inc. The Common Council approved the contract Oct. 5, 2015.

The bridge project includes construction of a pedestrian bridge over the Milwaukee River between Veterans Avenue and Service Drive, as well as removing two existing bridges in the area. City administrator T.J. Justice said “the city can negotiate the terms and conditions of the contract so the scope of the project could change.”

That change is connected to the request being made by Rep. Bob Gannon and state Senator Duey Stroebel to delay spending DOT grant money without losing the funding. There’s an effort underway to see whether the DOT can reallocate some of the money meant to demolish the bridge and have it go towards renovating the bridge instead.

A note from Justice dated Sept. 22, 2015 indicated talks were underway on whether the state DOT “can be flexible with us on the use (and timing) of a portion of the TE grant that’s been awarded to the city.”

Mike Husar, president of the downtown Business Improvement District, owns the property on the north side of the bridge. “That bridge needs to stay. They need to come up with a way to use it and keep it,” Husar said. “We have a theatre that could potentially use the bridge.”

Mayor Kraig Sadownikow said he is pleased a local group is interested in remodeling and, in some way, saving the theater. “If they’re motivated to doing something positive in downtown and they think we need to save the bridge, I’m happy and I’m sure the council is happy to explore that,” Sadownikow said.

This week contractors started removing the windows in the bridge behind the theatre in downtown West Bend.

Sadownikow said removal of asbestos and windows on the bridge will have to be done whether it comes down now or whether it’s refurbished. “I’ve been told they’re not going to take the bridge down until they get authorization from City Hall to do so,” he said.

Matt Prescott with Ascendant Holdings in Madison currently owns the building along with business partner Eric Nordeen. The pair purchased the theatre, 125 N. Main St., on May 19, 2012 for $100,000. Prescott demolished the newer additions inside and return the configuration of the old theatre. He said the next step would be left to an outside party to determine the best use of the building.

On a history note, the West Bend Theatre was built in 1927; it opened in 1929 as a single-screen theater.

Staffing changes in the works at West Bend City Hall

Some employees at West Bend city hall are moving on. Lauren Oliveri, recreation supervisor with the West Bend Parks, Recreation and Forestry department, has taken a job at Waterstone Bank. Oliveri recently received the Young Professional of the Year award presented by Wisconsin Parks & Recreation Association. Oliveri organized the extremely popular Dirty Ninja Mud Run for Kids.

Gwenn Soldner, superintendent of the city of West Bend Building Inspection, is leaving at the end of the year for a job in the public sector. Soldner has been with the city 10 years. He took over as superintendent in Building Inspection in 2012. The city has posted an opening for his position.

Sewer Utility Superintendent Scott Tutas is leaving and this time it’s for real. In 2013 Tutas turned in his resignation but was later convinced to stay.  Tutas has been with the city since February 1979 where he started in the Sanitation Department, moved to vehicle maintenance, and eventually took over as Sewer Utility Superintendent in Dec. 2010 after Jim Hron retired.

Some of Tutas’s notable accomplishments include the city’s mercury-reduction program, the infiltration-and-inflow system and the installation of four 65 kilowatt microturbines at the West Bend Wastewater Treatment Plant. “The microturbines run off methane gas and produce electricity,” said Tutas. “Part of the electricity is used to operate the plant and additional electricity generated is sold to WE Energies.”

Earlier this week the city of West Bend revamped the organizational structure of the Department of Public Works. Ruth Mueller is the new utility director and Doug Neumann is the new Department of Public Works Director.

The new organizational structure eliminates the need to fill the Public Works Director position that has been open since Aug. 31 when Larry Retayczak left for a similar position in the city of Germantown. “The new structure will save us $90,000 a year,” said Dist. 7 alderman Adam Williquette. After six months the organizational structure will be reviewed by administration.

New assistant city engineer in West Bend

Emily Roen is the new assistant city engineer in West Bend. Roen replaces Fred Schaejbe who retired in September after 24 years with the city. Roen, 27, has a bachelor’s and a master’s degree in civil engineering from the University of Illinois at Urbana–Champaign.

“She has a lot of municipal experience,” city engineer Max Marechal said. “She was the village engineer in Roscoe, Illinois and she was exposed to running a department and doing contract administration and she touched a lot of fields including pavement maintenance, storm water management, construction of utilities and roads.” Roen was one of two people who applied for the position. “I was just looking to relocate to a bigger city and take on more responsibility,” she said. Roen’s first responsibility will be updating the city’s five-year plan.

Election papers available

Election papers are available for pickup in West Bend and other communities across Washington County in preparation for the Spring Election.

In West Bend the odd-numbered aldermanic districts are up for election. Dist. 7 incumbent Adam Williquette already turned in his papers. Candidates have to wait until Dec. 1 to begin circulating nomination papers and collecting signatures. Aldermen need to collect between 20 – 40 signatures. Those can be filed no later than Jan. 5, 2016.

Others up for reelection in West Bend include Dist. 1 John Butschlick, Dist. 3 Ed Duquaine, and Dist. 5 Rich Kasten.  The West Bend School Board has two seats up for election in spring including President Randy Marquardt and Karen Betz.

WB COLUMNS Holiday Pops Concert

Save the date for the WB COLUMNS Holiday Pops Concert on Dec. 8 at 7:30 p.m. at the Silver Lining Arts Center. The annual scholarship concert benefits graduating seniors of West Bend East and West High Schools. Last year, WB COLUMNS awarded $612,050 in scholarships for graduates to continue their education. More information www.wbcolumns.org

New signage for Albrecht Clinic

New signs going in at Albrecht Clinic: The Albrecht Free Clinic in West Bend is moving to Highway 33 to the former Verre Young Eye Clinic, 908 W. Washington Street. New signage will be added shortly. The building has been undergoing a significant interior remodel as the location will have three full medical rooms and three full dental rooms. Jim Strachota, executive director of the Albrecht Free Clinic said the location “will really be ideal” because W. Washington Street has a high-visibility factor. “It just really feels good and the size fits the community need,” he said of the 3,000-square-foot building.

Homicide update

The October Monthly Report to the Community from the West Bend Police Department ruffled a few feathers as one homicide was reported. Neighbors who pay attention to what’s going on in the community did not recall a homicide in October.

Chief of Police Ken Meuler said a 54-year-old West Bend man who lived on Deerfield Drive died Oct. 15. Police were only recently able to verify he died from an overdose of heroin. Meuler said the case remains under investigation and police have no one in custody.

Lt. Mike Hartwell retiring from WBPD

Lt. Mike Hartwell is retiring after 28 years with the West Bend Police Department. “It’s time for a change,” said Hartwell. “I had mixed emotions on retiring but it’s time for a change of pace.”

Hartwell was 24 when he started as a patrolman. Jim Skidmore was chief of police at the time. In 2004 Hartwell was promoted to detective and in May 2011 he was promoted to lieutenant.

Over the years Hartwell, 52, has been involved in a number of memorable cases including the July 1, 2005 robbery of U.S. Bank.

“Van Beek and I were going out to pick up a forgery suspect and a call came across from a citizen inside the bank that it was being robbed,” he said.  “When the guy came out of the bank he jumped on a bike and tried riding east and we were parked right there and the guy hit the curb, went head over heels, money flying all over and he dropped the gun.”

Hartwell said they eventually took him into custody.

During his years with the department Hartwell has also been an integral part of the Police Explorer program. “I’ve been an adviser for 18 years,” he said. “Over the last 14 years the West Bend P.D. has hired six Explorers to our post and over the four years Explorers from our program have been hired by McFarland Police Department, Madison Capitol Police, Town of Brookfield, UW-Oshkosh Police and Hartford Police Department.”

Hartwell will begin work for Shorewest Realty in January. His last day with WBPD will be December 18.

Updates & tidbits

Property sale: 8.0485 acres on Corporate Center Drive. Fortune Development LLC sold to Delta Ventures LLC for $403,650. This will be the  new headquarters for Delta Defense.

The annual West Bend Christmas Parade steps off from Regner Park at 5 p.m. on Sunday, Nov. 29. The theme is ‘Christmas Dreams.’ Pease note the judges have been moved from the Husar’s building to the front of the West Bend Area Chamber of Commerce, 304 S. Main St.

-A new sign went up this week at Bits ‘n’ Pieces Floral, 319 S. Main St.

-The Kewaskum Christmas Parade is Sunday, Dec. 6 starting at 5 p.m.

A generous donation by the North Washington Charter of Thrivent Financial group as it delivered 148 turkeys to food pantries in Kewaskum, West Bend, and Jackson. Folks involved include Brian Justman, the meat manager at Geidel’s Piggly Wiggly in Kewaskum, Judy Koenig, Barb Knorr and Dan Fischer.

The Silverbrook 5th and 6th grade Robotics Club will be competing Sunday, Nov. 22 at Marquette FLL Regional 2.  Local sponsors that help promote science, technology, engineering and math include John Deere, Delta Defense, Salberg Law, Dunn Bros, Spiros and MPTC.

– An intimate celebration this week as volunteers with Interfaith Caregivers toured the organizations new home at 2374A W. Washington St. It’s in the same strip mall as the Lawrence & Vivian Stockhausen Center. Interfaith Caregivers used to be on Schoenhaar Drive, in the same building as the Red Cross. That building was sold and Interfaith moved.

-Next Saturday, Nov. 28 the West Bend High School drumline will compete in the 2015 Fresh Coast Classic at UWM’s Klotsche Center. Tickets are $8 for adults or $5 for students with ID. Bring a new toy for charitable donation and get $2 off your ticket price.

-Winter street parking rules go into effect Dec. 1 in West Bend.

 – The West Bend High School Student Council’s Blood Drive is Wednesday, Dec. 9 from 7 a.m. – 5 p.m. in the south gym at the high school. Last year 413 units of blood were donated and this year the goal is 600 units. The blood drive is open to the community.  The link for online sign-up is www.bcw.edu/WBHS.  The theme this year is ‘The holidays and giving the gift of life.’

– West Bend High School choral director Karen Wysocky is retiring at the end of the year and a huge alumni turnout is being organized for the Hallelujah Chorus at the Christmas concert Dec. 21 at 6 p.m. at the West Bend H.S. Silver Lining Arts Center.

Moose the chocolate Labrador diabetic alert dog is being delivered today to 17-year-old William Springer of Slinger. Neighbors can meet Moose and William at the Texas Roadhouse, 800 W. Paradise Drive from 5 p.m. – 7:30 p.m. on Nov. 23. The West Bend Lioness Lions Club helped raise money to pay for Moose.

Neighbors in Washington County can support community programs by buying All-Day Breakfast during “McDonald’s Day for United Way” on Saturday, Nov. 21.  McDonald’s will donate the proceeds from all breakfast items sold between 11 a.m. – 8 p.m. at four participating locations including Hartford, Jackson and two stores in West Bend. All funds raised will be invested in community programs including education, income stability, and health.

-Shop Small Saturday is Nov. 28. It’s a nationwide attempt to drive shoppers to local businesses.

New shipment of St. John’s cookbook next week

The St. John’s Guild cookbook, “Our Favorite Recipes” returned as a conversation piece and fond memory this week following the death of one of its committee members June Spielman.

The funeral for Spielman, 98, was held Friday at St. John’s Ev. Lutheran Church. Spielman was an active member of St. John’s Guild for 64 years and Guild president for 20 years, choir member for 50 years, “Our Favorite Recipe’s Cookbook” chairman for 20 years.

The St. John’s cookbook was established in 1949 by a committee of nine women. Under the direction of Esther Klein and Frieda Lange, the group planned to collect the best recipes into a cookbook and sell it at a low price with proceeds going to build a new kitchen at St. John’s Lutheran Church in West Bend.

A history book on “Our Favorite Recipes” by committee member June Spielman details the “enthusiasm” behind “Esther’s amateur plan.” The ladies’ goodwill effort to share their recipes to benefit the church soon met with the reality check of printing costs, editing, deadlines and taste-testing 300 recipes.

“A majority of recipes were all tried and true,” said Carol Gerner, a member of the cookbook committee since the 1980s.  Gerner, author of the recipe for cottage cheese rolls. “It was a good project and we got our kitchen.”

Over the years the cookbook took on a life of its own as hundreds of thousands of copies have been sold worldwide. Proceeds helped purchase a pipe organ for the church, finance scholarships and support charitable institutions through the Lutheran Church Missouri Synod.

“Not many community cookbooks are successful, but this one is an exception,” wrote the Farm Journal Food Editor of Philadelphia and “A cookbook that refuses to die,” from the Sheboygan Press.

Lisa Achterberg-Schroeder, a sales associate at the former Fireside Books in West Bend said she received a St. John’s cookbook when she was 23 as a wedding shower gift from her mom. “That was in 1988 and she was cleaning out her cookbooks and she still had her copy of it and that was the actual paper spiral binding.

“It’s unbelievable to have such a following. It doesn’t matter what denomination you are, you know about the St. John’s cookbook,” said Achterberg-Schroeder.

The St. John’s cookbook is also on sale at Hankerson’s Bakery in West Bend and in the church office at St. John’s Lutheran. Many dedicated cooks and bakers in the community have a personal tie with their St. John’s cookbook. “I love this cookbook for its unique hand-written style,” Amy Leitheiser said, “and because my Mom used it while I grew up, so I learned to bake using the recipes. The sour cream cookies are a traditional Christmas cut-out.”

Other reliable recipes in the Leitheiser household include the Mile High Strawberry torte, pumpkin bread, banana bread and peanut butter cookies. “Granny Leitheiser was famous for using the butter horns recipe and we still make them from time to time so we can remember her,” Leitheiser said. “But otherwise, nowadays, things like butter horns are a lost art.”

Ann Marie Craig, owner of Century Farmhouse Soaps, also knows her way around the kitchen.

“The perfect recipe for any fruit kuchen comes from true Americana, the local church cookbook — ‘Our Favorite Recipes,’” Craig said. “It’s been our favorite cookbook for generations. My grandmother had the 1949 edition, my mother has the 1959 edition, and my battered copy was published in 1976; our older daughters each have a copy of a more modern edition.”

Craig touts Esther Klein’s fruit kuchen recipes on page 35 of the 1976 edition. “By the way, if you ever find a copy of this book, all of Esther Klein’s recipes are winners,” Craig said.

Peg Ziegler also gave props to Esther Klein’s German potato salad. “It’s the best,” Ziegler said.

St. John’s is expecting a shipment of the next printing of the cookbook next week.

Kennedy anniversary

November 22 is the 52nd anniversary of the death of President John F. Kennedy.  The 35th President of the United States was assassinated in 1963 while riding in a motorcade in Dallas, Texas.

From a history standpoint, Kennedy campaigned in West Bend while he was seeking the democratic nomination for President of the United States. A photo provided by the Washington County Historical Society shows Kennedy walking downtown Main Street during a visit Feb. 17, 1960, when he was a U.S. Senator from Massachusetts.

Kennedy is walking north on Main Street with Thomas F. O’Meara Jr. on his right.

Former West Bend alderman Tom O’Meara III said his father was head of the Washington County Democratic Party in the 1960s and he was the one responsible for bringing Kennedy to town.  “He put out an invitation for Kennedy to come to ‘this mostly republican-bound territory,’” said O’Meara III.

Kennedy spoke at the VFW and stopped at the O’Meara’s house on 9th and Walnut St. “My mother made him lunch,” said O’Meara III. “I don’t know what they had for lunch I was in school,” he said. “But my father enjoyed Kennedy very much; he was a fellow Irishman and they spent most of their time talking about Irish heritage,” said O’Meara III.

A story printed in the West Bend News reported mayor Walter Schmidt presented the senator and his wife with gifts from the city of West Bend.

Kennedy then addressed the crowd at the VFW and spoke of the recession of 1958, noting “we must keep employment at a high level to prevent loss in tax dollars so essential for the economic welfare of the country.” The senator was scheduled to have dinner at the Mermac hotel. Enroute to the hotel on foot Kennedy stopped cars and people, shook hands and introduced himself.

The photo was taken as the Senator walked downtown and met with business owners. “I don’t think there are a lot of people in town that knew Kennedy, as a junior senator, was ever in West Bend,” said O’Meara III.

019,946 President Kennedy

Kennedy’s Lying Ways

Heh.

MADISON, Wis. – Staff at Wisconsin’s nearly extinct speech regulator misled their board about the agency’s deep involvement in a politically driven John Doe investigation months before the board authorized the probe, according to a new filingby plaintiffs in a lawsuit against the Government Accountability Board.

More so, the latest court documents show GAB director and general counsel Kevin Kennedy approaching Lois Lerner, the former Internal Revenue Service agent also accused of targeting conservative groups.

Kennedy asked Lerner, then-director of the IRS Exempt Organizations division about the initial findings of the a secret investigation into 29 conservative groups and the campaign of Gov. Scott Walker. Kennedy, who has refused to tell the Legislature about his communications with the IRS, asked his close professional friend Lerner whether the information would be “something the IRS would be interested in looking at.”

So what is more of a threat to our liberty… a politician legally coordinating with a like-minded organization or two government bureaucrats colluding on a secret and illegal investigation into the lives of citizens of one particular ideology?

Someone should start looking into criminal charges for Kennedy.

Dontre Hamilton Protesters Disrupt Tree Lighting

What a bunch of goons.

MILWAUKEE —Protesters are interrupting the city/county tree-lighting ceremony.

They are calling for justice in the death of Dontre Hamilton at Red Arrow Park.

[…]

Protesters were trying to drown out the Lincoln Center of the Arts Choir.

 

And stupid to boot… how does this make people support their cause?

But this is partly the fault of Chief Flynn and Mayor Barrett. They have indulged these malcontents for far too long.

Best Month for Jobs in 23 Years

Good.

The Wisconsin economy added 15,100 private sector jobs in October, the best month of job growth of the year for the state, according to data from the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics. It was the best one-month private sector job gain for the state in 23 years, according to the state Department of Workforce Development.

The state also added 1,000 government jobs in October. Wisconsin’s seasonally-adjusted unemployment rate held steady at 4.3 percent in October.

[…]

Including the preliminary October job numbers, the state has added 30,300 private sector jobs year-to-date, according to BLS data.

Fans Boo During Moment of Silence

Tolerance and whatnot.

Just before Tuesday’s match in Istanbul between Turkey and Greece (a pair of countries with a rocky history), a moment of silence was observed for the 129 people who lost their lives in the terrorist attacks in Paris last Friday.

But listening to the video, one can pick up on the fact that it’s anything but silent.

It’s hard to hear what’s happening in the video, but according to reports from Reuters and CBS, some fans of Turkey’s team booed, hissed and chanted phrases such as “Allahu akbar” (which was said by the terrorists during the attacks and earlier this year during the attack on Charlie Hebdo in Paris).

Honduras Detains Syrians Using Stolen Passports

Thanks, Honduras!

Tegucigalpa (AFP) – Honduran authorities have arrested five Syrians intending to make it to the United States with stolen Greek passports, triggering alarm Wednesday in the wake of the Paris attacks launched by Syria-linked jihadists.

The Syrians were arrested on Tuesday as they flew into Toncontin airport serving the Honduran capital and failed to make it past airport security checks, a police spokesman, Anibal Baca, told reporters.

“Five Syrian citizens have been detained and will be taken to our offices to be investigated because it is suspected they are carrying false documents, passports stolen in Greece,” Baca said.

They had traveled by air from Syria to Lebanon, then to Turkey, Brazil, Argentina, Costa Rica and on to Honduras.

Census Error Distorts Wisconsin’s Tax Ranking

Brought to you by the same federal government that is vetting Syrian refugees with 100% accuracy.

The mistakes appear to go back to 2009 but it’s not yet clear that the Census Bureau will correct data from previous years, Knapp said.

One thing the correction doesn’t change is how much taxes Wisconsin residents actually paid in 2013 and other years. The corrected figures show that residents in the state paid about 10.9% of their total income in state and local taxes in 2013, or about $4,618 per person, less than the 11.3% of income and $4,833 per person that the Census Bureau data would have suggested.

That means that instead of being 15th in the nation for taxes per capita, Wisconsin actually came in 19th.

That was good news to Sen. Duey Stroebel (R-Saukville), one of the Legislature’s most committed conservatives, but it didn’t affect his view that the state’s taxes are too high and must come down for the good of families and the economy.

“I don’t think we’re anywhere near the point where we’re ready to declare victory,” Stroebel said. “I wouldn’t even go there.”

Jon Peacock, research director at the Wisconsin Council on Children and Families, disagreed. He said the errors helped explain some of the disconnect between Wisconsin taxes, which are traditionally higher than the national average, and the state’s spending ranking, which has usually been lower.

“However, there are also a couple other significant factors. Wisconsin relies less on fees than most other states and historically has ranked low in federal (government) revenue,” Peacock said.

When it comes to spending, he said, Wisconsin is now in the middle of the pack among states.

The problem is that this only has to do with a ranking against other states. Just as a rising tide lifts all boats, a rising tax burden affects all citizens. The fact that Wisconsin isn’t quite as highly taxed when compared to other states as we thought is good news. It is also good news that Wisconsin’s spending has not been going up as fast as other states… but it is still going up while people’s wages are not going up as fast. We still have a lot of work to do in Wisconsin.

Little Chute Teachers Appeal Case

Heh.

A lawsuit brought by retired Little Chute Area School District teachers and the state’s largest teachers’ union has moved to appellate court.

The educators and the Wisconsin Education Association Council argue the school district violated a 2012 collective bargaining agreement when it eliminated a long-term care benefit. The benefit paid for a portion of nursing home stays for employees. It cost the district $72,000 annually. Employees contributed $700 each year to the plan.

The board voted to eliminate the plan in 2013 and put the money back into its general fund. WEAC and the educators filed the lawsuit in 2014.

The school district claims it upheld its end of the contract and was fully within its rights to stop offering the benefit. In June, Outagamie County Judge Mark McGinnis ruled in favor of the school district, paving the way for an appeal.

On the merits of the case, I suspect that the union is going to lose this one. But what struck me was this part:

It cost the district $72,000 annually. Employees contributed $700 each year to the plan.

What a benefit! These kinds of deals is why Act 10 was needed. Only in an environment where the deck is stacked for one side can such things occur.

Judge Issues Injunction Against Kohler Union Goons

Good.

Kohler — A Sheboygan County circuit court judge issued a temporary injunction Tuesday barring striking Kohler Co. workers from interfering with traffic near the firm’s property.

The order came after the company filed a complaint alleging that a march on Monday by more than 1,000 striking workers and their supporters caused traffic jams stretching two miles in every direction. Kohler employees represented by United Auto Workers Local 833 went on strike Sunday.

The complaint alleged that pickets spoke abusively to drivers, crowded around vehicles and harassed people trying to enter company property.

“Some of our contract security officers were also assaulted by picketers (elbows in the ribs, etc.),” Kohler director of security Patrick McCarthy said in an affidavit filed with the court.

The injunction was issued by Sheboygan County Circuit Judge James Bolgert.

I don’t begrudge them striking. Unemployment is low and the company is doing well. If they want to band together to push for a better deal, then more power to them. But leave the rest of us the heck out of it. Why should some poor mom running her kids to basketball practice have to have her day disrupted and deal with abuse because some welder at Kohler wants an extra 30 cents an hour?

And another thing… in what world do the union folks live in if they think that such tactics will improve their bargaining position? All they are doing is ticking off the community that might otherwise support them.

The Islamic State rends the fabric of Western civilization

My column for the West Bend Daily News is online. Here it is:

It had been a long time since a foreign power darkened the City of Light, but the Islamic State did just that last week. Hours after President Barack Obama declared that “we have contained them,” the Islamic State killed at least 129 people and injured hundreds more in synchronous suicide attacks on several locations in Paris.

The Paris attack is, sadly, another in a string of attacks perpetrated by the Islamic State as they have continued their aggressive growth. From a small band of terrorists forged in the power vacuum of Iraq in 2011, the Islamic State has grown into a powerful, depraved quasi-nation with separatist outposts on three continents.

Since June, the Islamic State has killed 38 tourists on a beach in Tunisia; 102 people in Ankara, Turkey; 224 people on a Russian airplane leaving Egypt; 18 people at a funeral in Baghdad; 44 people in south Beirut; and many other smaller attacks. They have been flexing their terrorist muscles on foreign soil in an effort to strike terror into their enemies, recruit more fanatics to their cause and fulfill what they believe to be their sacred duty to kill anyone who does not share their Islamic faith.

The attacks in Paris were not an aberration. They were the furtherance of a strategy. There will be more. Many more.

How should America respond to the certainty that America will soon see attacks like those that have been spreading to other nations?

On the defensive side of the coin, there is a lot that we can do. The Islamic State has shown an affinity to strike at soft targets — places where there are large groups of unarmed people. Take the Paris attacks as an example. The attacks were coordinated to happen at the same time, but they were not particularly sophisticated. They did not require a tremendous amount of preparation, money or time to carry out. It took less than 10 fanatics who were willing to die for their cause to assemble some crude, inexpensive weaponry, and fan out into the city at the same time. A couple of the thugs failed to penetrate a stadium and were limited to only killing a couple of people. Some of them just massacred theatergoers without any plan other than to kill until they were killed. What should worry us is the ease of which a handful of slapdash terrorists can kill so many.

These kinds of attacks could easily happen in America. One way to make them more difficult and mitigate the damage when they occur is to harden our targets. Americans have long been a proud, independent, free people who took responsibility for safeguarding their liberties against all threats. Any American who is able should consider it their duty to arm themselves and be prepared to defend themselves and others. When a terrorist reaches his hand out in America, he should feel the thorns instead of the rose.

Our public policy should align with supporting a free people vigorously protecting their liberties. Instead of politicians carving out more soft targets with gun-free zones and onerous restrictions on law-abiding citizens, they should remind Americans that each of us take responsibility for the liberties that we all share. Unfortunately, the Obama Administration is advocating policies that would disarm more Americans in a naive and disingenuous promise that the government can protect us all the time. It is worth remembering that Paris has some of the strictest gun restrictions in the world.

On offense, the choices are far less clear. The Islamic State is run by people who consider it their religious duty to kill us. In fact, they consider killing us to be a path to paradise. Such people cannot be swayed with diplomacy or soothed by concessions. The only way to stop them is to imprison them or kill them — and there are not enough jails to imprison all of them.

But America should not be the only nation to expend blood and treasure to eliminate a threat to all of Western civilization. While the Islamic State can reach America, its proximity to other nations makes their cooperation both necessary and possible. America should lead in building a broad coalition of international forces to invade the Islamic State’s strongholds with overwhelming force. They cannot be defeated with drones and squads. They can be defeated with tanks and divisions.

Unfortunately, building such a coalition is unlikely with President Barack Obama in office. Under his direction, America has retreated from world leadership and ceded too much power to other nations. From his early abandonment of the Iranian rebels, to the evaporation of his “red line” for Syria, to his estrangement from Israel, to his silence on Ukraine, to his cold shoulder to Poland, foreign leaders do not trust Obama enough to enter into such a precarious enterprise with him. Much like Obama is incapable of building coalitions among his own countrymen in Congress, he lacks the skills and temperament to build and lead an international coalition against the Islamic State. Americans will just have to hunker down and wait for the next president to take on the difficult task of eliminating the Islamic State.

GAB Reform Bill Heads to Walker

Excellent!

The Assembly has OK’d the Senate amendments to the GAB overhaul bill.

The first Senate amendment passed 58-37, with Republicans Warren Petryk, of Eleva; Todd Novak, of Dodgeville; and Travis Tranel, of Cuba City, joining Dems in opposition. Read the roll call here.

I just hope that Walker vetoes out the retired judges from the bill.

States Refuse to Accept Syrian Refugees

Including Wisconsin.

MADISON — Gov. Scott Walker on Monday called on the federal government to not place Syrian refugees in Wisconsin, three days after Islamic State attacks in Paris left more than 130 dead,

“In light of these horrific and tragic attacks, our first priority must be to protect our citizens,” Walker said in a statement released Monday. “It is clear that the influx of Syrian refugees poses a threat.

“The State of Wisconsin will not accept new Syrian refugees. There may be those who will try to take advantage of the generosity of our country and the ability to move freely within our borders through this federal resettlement program, and we must ensure we are doing all we can to safeguard the security of Americans.”

Good. While Americans are, by nature, a generous people, there is no effective way to screen these refugees to prevent terrorists from hiding among them to infiltrate our country. Our generosity should not be allowed to be used to kill us.

“Refugee” Among the Attackers

This potential was pointed out when the outflow from Syria began. Remember that America is welcoming thousands of these refugees too with little will or means to properly screen out those who would do us harm.

BELGRADE, Serbia (AP) — The focus on a Syrian passport found near the body of a suicide bomber in the Paris attacks highlights an uncomfortable reality: European authorities are completing few checks on the hundreds of thousands of people moving across their territory fleeing war and poverty.

Paris prosecutor’s office said on Monday that the man who blew himself up outside the national soccer stadium was found with a Syrian passport with the name Ahmad Al Mohammad, a 25-year-old born in Idlib. It said fingerprints from the attacker match those of someone who passed through Greece in October.

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