No Runny Eggs

The repository of one hard-boiled egg from the south suburbs of Milwaukee, Wisconsin (and the occassional guest-blogger). The ramblings within may or may not offend, shock and awe you, but they are what I (or my guest-bloggers) think.

Archive for July, 2007

July 20, 2007

A few more for the roll

by @ 9:37. Filed under The Blog.

Time to catch up on roll processing –

– I’ve been a bit late in adding some sunshine to the roll, but please forgive me, Little Miss Sunshine. I do tip my hat often; I try to be a gentleman.
– James T. Harris has his 620WTMJ “corporate” blog up – The Hip Musings of James T. Harris. Don’t fret; he still has The National Conversation active.
– Even though Coop has gone bonkers on the rail issue, According to Coop is more-or-less right most of the time. As I sometimes say, “If someone is agreeing with you all the time, stop talking to yourself.”
– I REALLY wish that CNI would implement RSS feeds for their blogs (I recommend the new JSOnline blogging software); it would make stuff like finding and regularily reading Kevin Fischer’s This Just In, Brian Fraley’s Tosa Takes (Wauwatosa’s Official Non Partisan, Good Government, Rainbows and Unicorns for Everyone, Watchdog!), and the previously-rolled The Right Side of New Berlin so much easier to read.

Can we sue the lawyers, CAIR and the DhimmiRATs when the next successful terrorist attack takes place?

Revisions/extensions (10:55 am 7/20/2007) – It was (as likely as I can determine) Justin Higgins at Right on the Right that created the graphic. Sorry about not passing along proper credit earlier.

(H/T – Michelle)

The Dhimms, including Wisconsin’s twin embarrassments, Russ el-Slimeroad (Moonbat-Al Qaeda) and Nobody’s Senator, Herb Kohl, as well as Dhimm Presidential candidates Chris Dodd and Joe Biden, voted to kill protections for John Does mere hours after the House killed it. The John Doe amendment was intended to protect those that report suspicious behavior from lawsuits such as the one filed by the infamous Flying Imams. In “honor” of this, CDR Salamander has created a new PSA poster

dhimms-v-john-doe.jpg

I have a message for them – I am STILL John Doe, and if your minions decide to pull any shit in my presence, I won’t just be informing on them and waiting for the police to do something.

Revisions/extensions part 2 (11:22 am 7/20/2007) – WisCon, commenting on Michelle’s thread, has el-Slimeroad’s initial statement on his support of the Islamokazis and lawyers:

From Russ Feingold’s office:

"The bill is too ambiguous and too complex blah blah blah."

So that’s why he voted against it, because it’s too complex?

"He is preparing a statement right now and I can send it to you."

I put in a request to WisCon to get a copy if he does.

Dow closes at 14,000, women and children hardest hit

by @ 7:40. Filed under Business, Presstitute Follies.

Or so says Avrum D. Lank on the front page of this morning’s paintcatcher. Leave it to the presstitutes to pour pee in the punch bowl.

July 19, 2007

Open Thread Thursday – almost on-time for a change

by @ 8:50. Filed under Open Thread Thursday.

Well, at least it’s the first thing appearing here today. I do have a couple things in the hopper, but they can wait.

Before I forget, Fred’s opening up the Cheddarsphere fantasy football league. The silly rabbit thinks he’s going to repeat. He don’t know me or my history of fantasy leagues very well; I am the exception that proves the theory of the sophomore slump.

July 18, 2007

Walker on transit – the expanded version

by @ 18:14. Filed under Choo-choos, Politics - Wisconsin.

Milwaukee County Executive Scott Walker previously made his feelings on City of Milwaukee Mayor Tom Barrett’s desire for streetcars known via Owen and Charlie. Now, it’s my turn to get the (expanded) Walker e-mail:

Two weeks ago, I was part of a group that traveled from Milwaukee to visit transit operations in Portland and Denver. While the sizes of these cities are similar to Milwaukee, the demographics are much different. According to 2006 census estimates, Portland had a 1.5% population increase while Denver went up by 2.4%. Milwaukee, on the other hand, went down by 4%. These growing urban centers have much greater congestion problems than we do in Milwaukee.

The transit system in Portland is paid for largely through a payroll tax that funds the bus and light rail system.

The streetcar system opened in 2001. It cost $56.9 million and there were no federal funds used to start the system. The streetcars are subsidized by a combination of support from the Tri-Met system and aid from the City of Portland and local business owners. Most of the streetcar line runs in a fare-free zone.

In Denver, the bus and light rail systems are funded through a 1% sales tax on all of 7 counties and part of an eighth county in the metro Denver area. In addition, one of the most requested additions to the system is a Bus Rapid Transit line between Denver and Boulder.

Other systems were mentioned on the trip, including Tampa (which was featured in a publication handed out in Portland). Tampa has a 2.4 mile system that cost $63 million and was opened in 2002.

Last year the number of riders declined 10%. A $4.75 million endowment originally set up to operate the streetcar system for 10 years is losing $1 million per year. The City of Tampa is not willing to put any more money into the system.

Bus Rapid Transit is Best

While the systems in Portland and Denver were nice, Bus Rapid Transit (BRT) is still the best option for Milwaukee. BRT works well in other cities: Boston, Kansas City, Miami, Santa Monica, Cleveland, Las Vegas, Minneapolis, Eugene, Los Angeles, Oakland, etc. It is more cost effective, yet has many of the same attractions of a fixed rail system.

A report from the General Accounting Office (GAO) of the federal government compared light rail and BRT and found that BRT capital costs are as little as 2% of those of rail. The report on BRT (which uses Denver for part of its data) makes a strong case to “think rail, use buses.”

Furthermore, a 1998 lawsuit alleged that the Wisconsin Department of Transportation disproportionately funded freeways with federal funds while ignoring transit investments that would otherwise benefit minorities and low-income individuals. The BRT plan is the only option that directly benefits the areas referenced in the 1998 lawsuit.

Bus System Needs Help

The current bus system needs help. While the $91.5 million cannot be used to operate the bus system, it can be used to replace existing routes with new lines that improve and upgrade the bus system.

Conversely, the Mayor’s plan – which covers a 3-mile area in downtown Milwaukee – would use approximately half of the federal funds for a streetcar system. This system would ultimately compete with the bus system for state and federal funding.

All of the data shows that the people most dependent on transit live in the north and northwestern parts of the City of Milwaukee. These individuals would not directly benefit from a streetcar system, but would benefit from an improved and upgraded bus transit system.

The Mayor’s original plan does, however, propose using about half of the federal funds on BRT. I suggest that we take the parts of each plan where we are close to agreement and merge them together. My plan spends $59.5 million of the $91.5 million on BRT. We can combine our routes and debate about the remaining $32 million on another day. That would be a real compromise.

Future Vision for Mass Transit

Finally, I want to share with you a long-term vision for action needed to protect and improve the transit system in Milwaukee County:

· Lobby state government to capture the growth in the existing sales tax collected on motor vehicle related sales ($103.5 million statewide in 2009/2011 biennial budget) and apply it to transit (about half would go to Milwaukee County Transit System).
· Move forward with a pilot phase of Bus Rapid Transit plan that uses $59.5 million of the $91.5 million.
· Expand BRT throughout the major corridors of Milwaukee County over the next five to ten years.

As always, I look forward to your comments on this important matter. I thank you for taking the time to read my thoughts on the issue of mass transit.

Scott

Time for my two cents. Street-level rail does not make an ounce of sense. Unless you have a strip of land (which Milwaukee does NOT have), you take away at least one lane from the street, whether that is parking or driving. The fact that choo-choos automatically have the right of way screws up traffic further. The only way to change a route is to rip up the existing tracks and lay new tracks. The route that the Milk Carton wants is utterly stupid as the only thing it does is connect the Bradley Center and the perpetually-empty convention center with the perpetually-empty train station (never mind that they are all within walking distance of each other). The history of downtown-specific transit is one of utter failure.

I’m not exactly sold on buses either. Many of the MCTS buses do nothing but move air from one part of the county to the other. The one advantage they have over trains, be they trolleys, that commuter rail the lefties are also trying to jam down our throats despite the facts that Kenosha is more-aligned with Chicago than either Racine or Milwaukee and that Racine is pretty much its own little island, is that there is almost no effort or cost to change the routes to reflect changes.

Personally, I’d tell the feds to take that $91 million and buy back some of the Treasury bonds that Red China has.

This day in history – the Swimmer edition

by @ 9:18. Filed under Politics - National.

(H/T for the memory jog) – Sister Toldjah)

I know that the 38th anniversary of the negligent homicide of Mary Jo Kopechne by Ted Kennedy (or at least that’s what he would have likely been convicted of had he not been a Kennedy) won’t get nearly as much attention as the murders of the Swimmer’s brothers, but I can’t let this day pass without noting the most-infamous trip ever taken in an Oldsmobile.

There’s so much that Mary Jo hasn’t been able to comment on.

Top Iraqi in Al Qaeda captured, Dingy Harry deeply saddened

by @ 8:18. Filed under Politics - National, War on Terror.

(H/T – Allahpundit)

ABC News is reporting the capture of Khaled Abdul-Fattah Dawoud Mahmoud al-Mashhadani (aka Abu Shahid), the highest-ranking Iraqi in the Al Qaeda in Iraq terror group. What is interesting is what ABC News has put in its story:

(Brigadier General Kevin) Bergner said al-Mashhadani served as an intermediary between al-Masri and Osama bin Laden and al-Qaida No. 2 Ayman al-Zawahri.

“In fact, communication between the senior al-Qaida leadership and al-Masri frequently went through al-Mashhadani,” Bergner said….

“In his words, the Islamic State of Iraq is a front organization that masks the foreign influence and leadership within al-Qaida in Iraq in an attempt to put an Iraqi face on the leadership of al-Qaida in Iraq,” Bergner said.

Golly, sure looks like that surge is a “failure”, and that Al Qaeda isn’t trying to do to Iraq what they did to Afghanistan under Clinton’s watch </sarcasm>.

Tell me again why the DhimmiRATs and the sycophant cut-and-runners among the RINO Senators want to retreat and defeat from Iraq so badly, they’re holding a sleepover. Is it because they would rather be slaves under dhimmitude and die under Sharia than suffer another term under Republican rule, much less conservative rule? Oh, I’m not questioning the patriotism of you lefties who support immediate retreat-and-defeat; after all, it’s pointless to question what does not exist.

July 17, 2007

Question for WPR – How does WJJA-TV stay on the air?

by @ 10:27. Filed under Politics - Wisconsin.

The latest claim from Wisconsin Welfare Radio and TV is that cutting the number of field engineers from 12 to 6 will endanger the Amber Alert system. That’s funny; WJJA-TV (Channel 49 on your analog dial; I don’t remember what the digital signal is at) is able to operate with pretty much just a machine, and their analog and digital antennas are about 20 miles apart. Tell me again how, if Amber Alert were to be made as robust as the remainder of the Wisconsin EAS (which would actually save money because the fine folks at the state Emergency Operations Center would actually have something to do) and WTMJ-AM/WKTI-FM were involved in the primary loop, it would suffer if 6 people couldn’t do the job of perhaps 2 plus a machine?

Oh, and one more thing; no Wisconsin TV station, whether it be welfare or for-profit, has anything beyond a passive participatory role in either the main EAS or Amber Alert systems. Those are both radio-based.

Add Mitt Romney to the list of those looking at Illinois for fashion tips

by @ 8:08. Filed under Politics - National.

(H/T – Slublog)

The only positive is that, unlike Blags, he “only” paid $300.

Just another reason why I’ll never be a pol; nothing is going to make me look good.

July 16, 2007

More moves

by @ 22:30. Filed under The Blog.

Move #1 – Dean has fled Blogger and moved Musings of a Thoughtful Conservative to WordPress

Move #2 – P-Mac has made the switch to JSOnline’s new blogging software. Comments are ON!

Please adjust your blogrolls and feed readers accordingly.

Expect Breck Girl to head to Illinois presently

by @ 19:28. Filed under Politics - National.

(H/T – Sister Toldjah)

Illinois governor Rod Blagojevich (DUmmieRAT) has been running up the makeup and travel bills lately. Of particular note is a $600 bill from his makeup artist initially paid for by the taxpayers of Illinois for services rendered when he proposed his latest budget, as well as a mounting bill for shuttling between Chicago and Springfield, the capital on a plane (hmmm, I seem to remember a certain ex-governor being pilloried for a couple trips on the state air fleet, and a certain governor, who promised to get rid of the state air fleet, not quite pilloried for making questionable trips on the state air fleet).

The world’s deadliest cell phone

by @ 13:02. Filed under War on Terror.

(H/T – James T. Harris)

You can bet terrorists the world over will want these 4-shot .22-caliber “cell phones” over the iPhone. Never mind that the reception, frankly, sucks because it doesn’t actually do any cell-phone-related stuff. Just hit the right keys to shoot.

July 14, 2007

Gilmore is the weakest link

by @ 16:04. Filed under Politics - National.

(H/T – William Smith)

The Politico has broken the news that former Virginia governor and RNC chair Jim Gilmore has dropped out of the Republican Presidential primary race. In proving that poor preparation causes piss-poor performance, he said, “I have come to believe that it takes more than a positive vision for our nation’s future to successfully compete for the presidency. I believe that it takes years of preparation to put in place both the political and financial infrastructure to contest what amounts to a one-day national primary in February.”

Who’s next? The Other Thompson? McShame? One of the ‘Rats?

July 13, 2007

The “Do Not Disturb” lamp is now lit

by @ 20:01. Filed under Miscellaneous.

“Dogfights” is back with new episodes. Tune into the History Channel NOW!

Flagship console underperforming? How NOT to regain momentum – Part 2

by @ 20:00. Filed under Business.

(H/T – Ace)

Remember that price drop on the 60 GB version of the Playstation 3? Many people, including me, thought it was a move to get the PS3 closer in price to Xbox 360. Well, we were wrong – it is to clear the shelves of the 60 GB in preparation for the upcoming $600 80 GB version.

I now put the odds of the PS3 still being around when Gran Turismo 5 comes out at 33%. If you can forgo the wireless network and HDMI, you can get the “common” version of the Xbox 360 (once called “Xbox 360 Pro” – $400) and the HD DVD player ($200) for $600. If you can forgo the hard drive and HDMI, you can get the “Core” version ($300), the HD DVD player and the wireless network ($100) for $600. If you can forgo the wireless network, you can get the HDMI-equipped Elite ($480) and the HD DVD player, along with a larger hard drive and potential integration with Windows Media Edition 2005/Vista Premium/Vista Ultimate (also available with the other Xbox 360s), for $80 more than the PS3. Morever, unlike the all-at-once solution from Sony, Microsoft allows upgradability (of course, at a price).

Meanwhile, the Wii still chugs along at $250, IF you can find it. Never mind that, other than the trick controller, it is essentially the GameCube, and as such, is about as advanced as the PS2 (indeed, certain games on the PS2 can be run in HD, while the best the Wii can do is ED).

Once again, smooth, Sony. REAL smooth. </sarcasm>

I hope we know where Pakistan’s nukes are

by @ 18:59. Filed under War on Terror.

An American Expat has been outlining the problems that Pakistani President Pervez Musharraf has been having lately. Since shortly after 9/11/2001, he has been walking a tightrope between the Taliban (once offically supported by Pakistan)/Al Qaeda/Saudi-funded madrasas on one side and the US on the other. There’s been mounting evidence that he has slipped off the rope, and the Islamokazis that had backed him prior to his tightrope act are poised to succeed in their attempt to take over Pakistan and its nuclear arsenal.

I strongly suspect that, if that happens and nothing is done to either secure or destroy Pakistan’s nuclear arsenal, said arsenal will depart Pakistan for detonation in the West and Israel instead of its intended targets in India. However, I just as strongly suspect that the US does have contingency plans for securing and destroying that arsenal should an Islamist group take control in Pakistan.

Friday video

by @ 18:29. Filed under Miscellaneous.

No, you did not misread that. With no Vent this week from the folks at Hot Air, and Mary Katharine Ham hiring a new producer and thus delaying HamNation, we have but one video – The Original Friday Freefly from Uncle Jimbo, in which he lays the smackdown on the Defeato-DhimmiRATs.

Prayers for the Hansen family

by @ 12:43. Filed under Miscellaneous.

It is so easy to have this happen

Madison "” State Sen. Dave Hansen (D-Green Bay) said his granddaughter died after she ran behind his car as he was backing out of his Green Bay home at about 8:40 a.m. today.

Hansen said the accident killed, Elliana Zaidel, his granddaughter, who would have been 2 on Wednesday.

Hansen said neither he nor his wife, Jane, knew the child had left the home before the accident.

"Ellie adored her grandfather and she was the apple of his eye," said the statement issued by Hansen’s office. "Sen. Hansen is in deep shock and currently attending to the needs of his family. The family requests understanding and respect for their privacy at this time of deep loss and family tragedy and ask people to keep them in their prayers."

The old eggstor.com domain should be moved to Bluehost presently

by @ 11:58. Filed under Miscellaneous.

I’ve got the registration moved over, the files that I had over there moved over, and a request to move the name servers to Bluehost’s name servers in. I even got the old blog’s domain over with a redirect set up to here, so once the name server changes propogate through the Web, it’s buh-bye Yahoo.

Let the fear-mongering begin

by @ 8:55. Filed under Politics - Wisconsin, Taxes.

I’m surprised that the Journtinel didn’t split this into umpteen stories instead of the two they did split it into, or do this in a day-by-day drumbeat. Let’s explode this one by one:

“Wah! Milwaukee just can’t spend less than it did last year!” – NRE has issued a Crying River Flood Warning for Milwaukee City Hall and Milwaukee Public Schools headquarters. Since Milwaukee Public Schools doesn’t maintain old budgets online, let’s take a look at the city of Milwaukee budget between FY2003 (the year before the first Doyle budget took effect) and FY2006 (the last year population estimates are available for proper comparison). The city conveniently has a page on their site that summarizes the main budget numbers between FY1988 and FY2006, and that includes not only the amount of total authorized spending (the “Total City budget” line), but the amount of state shared revenue. Despite a drop in state revenue from $249,921,000 in FY2003 to $239,725,000 in FY2006 ($10,196,000 for the math-challenged among you, or 4.08%), and a drop in population from 585,059 in July 2003 (the day after FY 2003 ended) to 573,358 in July 2006 (11,701, or 2.00%), total spending increased from $1,062,827,429 in FY2003 to $1,211,186,519 in FY2006 ($148,359,090, or 13.96%). Inflation was 9.57% over the same period, so if one were to factor both inflation and population loss, if spending were to have remained constant per person, Milwaukee should have increased spending by only 7.38%. Instead, spending increases outstripped the combined effects of inflation and population loss at a 1.61% annual rate.

Somehow, I doubt that MPS showed any more restraint than the city between 2003 and 2006, and I know neither showed restraint last year. They could both use a trim, and a 3.5% trim to put them back at per-taxpayer/per-student FY2006 levels is a good start.

Oh, and Milk Carton. Where were you and your concern for the taxpayers of Milwaukee when your buddy Craps slashed and burned shared revenue to Milwaukee County to try and punish Scott Walker as he was contempating a gubernatorial run? Oh that’s right; unlike you, Walker knows how to live within his means, even as he gets sabotaged by a tax-and-spend County Board.

“Wah! Without massive state subsidies, we won’t have Ambert Alerts anymore!” – NRE has issued a Crying River Flood Warning for Wisconsin Public Radio and a Crying River Flood Watch for Dane County Public Safety Communications Center. While WPR is currently the main dissemination source of statewide activations of the Emergency Alert System, the main EAS system is designed to be quite robust. Indeed, WTMJ-AM/WKTI-FM (Milwaukee’s Local Primary-1 stations) have the same direct link to the state Emergency Operations Center, which creates the statewide activation of the EAS outside of Amber Alerts, that the WPR stations that are the State Relay stations have through WPR’s dedicated monitoring studio (I don’t know if Rhinelander’s SR station, a non-WPR station, has that link to WPR’s monitoring studio yet). All the other LP-1 and LP-2 stations monitor WTMJ, either through a dedicated ISDN line or through a satellite, and have a spare monitoring slot that can be hooked into the state EOC.

Why the lawmakers chose to bypass the state EOC and create a separate activation authority for Amber Alerts, and incorporate only one dissemination channel through WPR, is beyond a sane person’s comprehension. Further, seeing that there already is one private radio station that is a SR station, there needs to be no requirement that the remainder remain welfare radio stations.

“Wah! We won’t be able to make UWM/Wisconsin State University into a rival for the Madistan campus!” – NRE has issued a Crying River Flood Warning for UWM. News flash; we can’t afford two huge public universities, especially with UWM undercutting UW-Madison’s tuition.

“Wah! We can’t possibly make those getting into the most-lucrative business in Wisconsin pay anything approaching what their education is worth!” – NRE has issued a Crying River Flood Warning for the University of Wisconsin Law School. Lawyers, especially in Craps’ Wisconsin, stand to make a mint. Why in the hell can’t they pay $17,000 in tuition? And don’t give me the “It would make Madistan’s law school among the most-expensive in the Big 10.” Last time I checked, Northwestern was the only private university in the Big 10.

“Wah! We can’t possibly keep overpaying nutjob lecturers and offering everybody backup jobs on just a 3.1% annual increase in taxpayer subsidies!” – NRE has issued a Crying River Flood Warning for the entire University of Wisconsin system. In a high-tax, low-income state, we can’t afford the 8.7% annual increase in the subsidy to the money pit known as the UW system the ‘Rats want.

Revisions/extensions (10:17 pm 7/13/2007) – Corrected something related to how the EAS operates.

July 12, 2007

If it’s Thursday,…

by @ 14:29. Filed under Open Thread Thursday.

…it’s time for Open Thread Thursday. I do have some stuff I’m working on, but I haven’t been able to finish anything.

July 10, 2007

Drinking Right?

by @ 9:49. Filed under Miscellaneous.

It’s the second Tuesday of the month. You know what that means.

Dunno if anybody else will be at Papa’s Social Club (7718 W Burleigh in Milwaukee), but I plan on being there at 7.

July 9, 2007

Flagship console underperforming? How NOT to regain momentum.

by @ 18:30. Filed under Business.

(Inspiration – Sean Hackbarth’s TAM Money and Finance)

It’s no secret that Playstation 3 has bombed for Sony since its Christmas 2006 launch as the most-expensive gaming system ever. So, what does Sony do?

– First, it keeps on producing and supporting the Playstation 2. It may have worked once when the PS2 was a “mere” $300 and the PS1 was knocked down to $100, but do note that neither Microsoft nor Nintendo went that route when they brought out the Xbox 360 and Wii.
– Drop the “cheaper” $500 version, with a 20 GB hard drive, no card reader and no wireless networking back in April in favor of the then-$600 version with a 60 GB hard drive, a built-in card reader, and built-in wireless networking.
Make a higher-capaicity version (80 GB hard drive vs. a 60 GB hard drive) with an included game, and dropped the price of the “base” 60 GB version at $500, still $20 higher than the highest-cost Xbox 360 Elite (which has a larger hard drive than either PS3, but does not include a high-definition DVD player, which is a $200 add-on or wireless networking, a $100 add-on).

Smooth, Sony. REAL smooth.

July 7, 2007

Who writes these idiotorials, Daffy Duck?

by @ 18:51. Filed under Presstitute Follies, Taxes.

It’s been a while since I fisked the Fifth Column at 4th and State, but their Daffy Duck “Mine, mine, mine, all mine!” approach to Germantown’s desire to leave MATC deserves a thrashing: Paging Mel Blanc, pick up the red courtesy phone:

There’s been talk in Germantown about whether the community should leave the Milwaukee Area Technical College district and join some other, less expensive, tech school district, such as Moraine Park, which serves most of Washington County. The sentiment is understandable – who doesn’t want to pay less in taxes? – but what makes the most sense is for Germantown to stick with MATC.

Who doesn’t want to pay less in taxes? Dhimms and the MJS editorial board (P-Mac and Mabel Wong excepted).

Although Germantown is in Washington County and obviously has ties to West Bend and the U.S. 45 corridor, it is still an essential part of the metro Milwaukee area. At the same time, the roughly $5 million Germantown sends to MATC makes a significant contribution to keeping the school healthy. And there’s the fact that of the 804 students from Germantown currently in the statewide technical school system, the largest contingent (229) attends MATC campuses.

Translation – “That money’s mine, mine, mine, all mine. It’s not enough the students attend MATC and pay the fees to do so; we need more.” Because MATC is closer than Moraine Park’s main school in Fond du Lac, and because the West Bend school is little more than an afterthought while MATC spent and spent and spent and spent and spent and spent to make all campuses equal, I’ll wager that a heap of West Bend students that want programs not offered at the West Bend Moraine Park school go to MATC rather than schlep up to Fond du Lac.

Still, the proposal should spur a fruitful discussion.

I’ll start; do we need both the system that spawned MATC, Moraine Park Technical College and WCTC, and UW-Waukesha? No.

MATC officials need to pay closer attention to the concern over tax hikes. It obviously requires a hefty budget, but MATC should consider whether it really needs repeated annual 5% hikes in the tax levy and whether its programs are being run as efficiently as possible.

Translation – “Can’t pay those teachers more than college profs any other way, after all. Can’t duplicate all the offerings at all 4 campuses any other way, after all. Besides, when we advocate more than doubling the state tax, maybe we can ask MATC to only raise taxes 4.99%. Let’s figure out how to do that without reducing the size and growth rate of MATC.”

State officials should consider creating a truly metropolitan technical school district by placing Milwaukee, Ozaukee, Racine, Washington and Waukesha counties into one district. Such a district could provide better strategic planning and more efficient governance and could spread out cost.

Translation – “MINE! MINE! MINE! Back, WCTC. Back, Gateway. Back Moraine Park. THAT TAX MONEY’S MINE! ALL MINE!”

Change the governance structure to guarantee fair representation for those paying the bills and some accountability to taxpayers. Of the nine current board members, not one comes from Washington or Ozaukee counties. And board members are appointed in an almost Byzantine process that ensures taxpayers have virtually no say in who is raising their taxes.

Translation – “Throw them a bone for paying all the bills, but keep all the power with the liberals in the city of Milwaukee just like MMSD.”

Keep Germantown in the MATC district. But let’s start a serious discussion about making MATC more accountable to taxpayers and a truly regional work force resource.

I guess I won’t get my idea for getting rid of MATC heard then because by “serious”, they mean, “How do we sucker more people to dump money into this pit?”

July 6, 2007

Blog reconstruction continues into July

by @ 17:34. Filed under Miscellaneous.

Now it’s Wiggy’s turn to put his blog under the knife. I like how he integrated HaloScan directly into the posts. Now if he would just get off of Blogger like everybody else,….

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