Lehigh Valley Ramblings

Conservative or Liberal, Deist or Pagan, Jersey transplant or Lehigh Valley native, we're all in this mess together. Let's talk. Let us do no harm. Today's one-liner: "Are you crying? Are you crying? ARE YOU CRYING? There's no crying! THERE'S NO CRYING IN BASEBALL!" Jimmy Dugan

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Name: Bernie O'Hare
Location: Nazareth, Pa., United States

Friday, October 31, 2008

A Glendon Ghost Story

"When we lived in Glendon in an old home (in the family for 6 generations), we had several strange instances....light on and off, footsteps, doors slamming, etc. Grandsons [X] and [Y] visited when they were around 3 and 4. I was watching them and had given them baths. We were watching Disney when all 4 of their eyes popped wide open and they asked "Who's that, Pops?" When I turned I saw or felt a man walk behind me and into the dining room. When I jumped up and went in, nothing anywhere. Going back in, I asked what we saw. They said "I don't know who he was, he came right out of the wall." Needless to say, they were scared stiff. As they were Wizard of Oz fans, I told them there were good ghosts and bad ghosts (like witches) and we had a good ghost that kept the bad ghosts away. That satisfied them but not me.

"Interestingly, after we sold and moved (saying nothing about ghosts), the lady of the house asked me if we ever had trouble with ghosts! When I asked why, she mentioned same types of things. Apparently ghost goes with the house and not the family.

"Boring story but true....Happy Halloween!
"

This story was contributed by a reader but it is by no means boring. Do YOU have any ghost stories????

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The Albino Banshee

I'm going to tell you a scary story. It happens to be true, which makes it even scarier.

In the early 60's, when I was in 8th grade at St. Theresa's, we lived in a 300 year-old, stone farmhouse in Hellertown. Its three foot thick walls kept the house cool in summer and warm in winter . . . except on the third floor. That's where my brother and I slept at night.

During recesses at school, a group of us formed the Ghost Hunters' Club. We would periodically go to old abandoned houses that were supposed to be haunted. We never actually went inside any of them, but would take notes and make plans to go into them later . . . at night.

It was around this time that we began hearing about the Albino Banshee, a terrifying witch who lived somewhere in Allentown. She had long white hair, pink eyes, sharpened teeth and very long fingernails. Her piercing shrieks could be heard at night in Allentown. Her wail, all by itself, could cause a heart attack. Word on the playground was that she had already killed several people. All she had to do was touch you with her long, thin fingernails. Not everyone believed this story, but one of the nuns admitted to me that it was true.

One night, after we had all turned in, I awoke to hear the third floor attic door slowly creak open. Footsteps slowly came up the steps, accompanied by the sounds of rattling chains.

Holy cannoli! It's the Albino Banshee! I tried to scream, but couldn't open my mouth. Or eyes.

Once whatever I heard had reached the top of the steps, I could hear it walk towards my brother. I wanted to defend him, but was paralyzed by fear. My brother was a goner. But this thing did not stop with my brother. In a matter of moments, its steps came for me. It was suddenly very cold. I was unable to budge.

Then I felt it. A banshee's fingernail traced itself right across one of my cheeks. But for some reason, I didn't die. Then the steps walked off and into the other room on the third floor.

While still sweating with fear, I could hear that door open again. This time even more footsteps came up the steps. Although too terrified to open my eyes, I could tell that lights were on. Just as suddenly, the lights went off and the footsteps went back down the steps.

The next morning, when I woke up, I was happy to see my brother was still alive but was a little ashamed by own cowardice in failing to defend him. I told him what had happened. He told me I was nutz. Then we went downstairs for breakfast.

After sitting there for awhile, I told my mom, dad and sisters what had happened. I expected them to tell me I was nutz, too. Instead, they looked at each other, and then my mother told me they had heard someone going up the steps to the third floor themselves. In fact, they decided to investigate, which explains the second set of footsteps I heard that night. Whatever had come up the steps had just vanished.

Now I know that whatever it was, it was no albino banshee. But to this day, I get chills when I think about that night.

Happy Halloween.

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Sea of Blue Rally in Allentown on Sunday

The Mike Welsh for State Rep. campaign will hold a "Sea of Blue" rally in Allentown on Sunday afternoon. It will focus on Allentown's need to add significantly more police officers. Mike Welsh supports legislation to add more cops as the best way to combat the Queen City's crime problem. In contrast, incumbent Jennifer Mann's public safety solution is . . . a hockey rink.

Yeah, that's the ticket.

When: Sunday, November 2nd from 12 PM to 3 PM

Where: Allentown Rose Garden Pavilion

Questions: 484-347-1833

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The People's Advocate, Ralph Nader, Will Be in Allentown on Sunday

According to Ralph Nader's web page, this independent Presidential candidate will be in Allentown on Sunday.

Date: Sunday, November 2nd, 7:30 pm

Where: Scottish Rite Cathedral, 1533 Hamilton Street, Allentown, PA 18102

Questions: Call 484-350-3788.

"A vote for Nader/Gonzalez on November, rather than being wasted by piling onto an Obama landslide or McCain implosion, will produce a stronger hammer and watchdog for what millions of Americans want — including public Medicare for all with private delivery and a living wage for the one in three workers who don’t make one." - Ralph Nader

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McCain Palin Campaign Snubs PSU Prez

Obama and McCain are supposed to be kicking and fighting and mudwrestling over every vote here in the Keystone state. After all, this is one of the "battlegrounds." But amazingly, at the very time that Palin was flailin' at PSU on Tuesday, some idiots in that campaign refused to allow Penn State Prez Graham Spanier to greet Palin or attend her event.

"He's a big Democrat. Why would he want to meet Palin?" is what a campaign aide allegedly asked.

There you have it. If you are a Democrat, the McCain-Palin camp wants nothing to do with you.

I'm heartbroken.

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Thursday, October 30, 2008

Fellow Veteran Slams McCain


If you think Rolling Stone's "Make Believe Veteran" was tough on McCain, get a load of what this former vet has to say.
Mea culpa: My thanks to a reader, who points out that I have the wrong title for that Rolling Stone piece. It's "Make Believe Maverick."

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Sam Bennett Campaign Chronology: A Comedy of Errors

Below, in chronological order, I've listed links to stories over the last two years about Sam Bennett's LV Congressional campaign. She's a nice lady with "good hair," but her campaign has been a joke, from beginning to end.

In a heavily Democratic district, how did this happen? When we allow party bosses to preselect candidates, we only have ourselves to blame.

Congressional Rumblings in the 15th District (2/22/07) - State senator Lisa Boscola's flamboyant chief of staff, Bernie "Gonzo" Kieklak, wants to get this message out about Sam Bennett. Never heard of her? Party boss Joe Long is "clearing the field" so she can run for congress.

Boscola's Congressional Hopes Fade, Thanks to Aide's Sexist Remarks (6/13/07) - If Lisa Boscola was ever really serious about running for congress, she isn't anymore. Her chief of staff, Bernie Kieklak, has single-handedly managed to "clear the field" for Sam Bennett.

Congressional Wannabe Sam Bennett: The Gift That Keeps on Giving (6/25/07) - Bennett screw up her first financial disclosure, claiming she has between $150 and $250 million set aside for retirement. "Take three zeros off all of it, and you've got the right answer," her campaign spokesman chuckles.

Sam Bennett's Nonprofit Helping Her Congressional Ambitions (7/11/07) - The Morning Call's Josh Drobnyk, told us a few days ago about congressional candidate Sam Bennett's outrageous $110,000 salary at Properties of Merit, a nonprofit whose annual budget is just $351,000. Most of us believe she simply conned Governor Rendell into a nice $100,000 grant so that she could run for Congress full-time without worrying about a job.

Congressional Wannabe Sam Bennett Takes a Stand ... and Bends Nonprofit Rules Again (8/28/07) - Bennett politicizes antiwar nonprofit.

FEC Thows Penalty Flag at Bennett's Former Employer (9/27/07) - Bennett's former employer, Americans Coming Together (ACT), hit with a massive fine by the Federal Election Commission for their activities during the 2003-2004 election cycle.

Sam Bennett in Congress? (4/24/08) - Bennett in Washington to speak with "special interests." What did she say?

Sam Bennett Interview: Iraq and Foreign Affairs (5/9/08) - Bennett unable to name President of China, France's Prime Minister, Germany's Chancellor, India's Prime Minister, Afghanistan's President, Syria's President or Sudan's President. "I've got to work on that. I'll research it today."

Justice Delayed & Denied to Allentown News Carrier (5/27/08) - Bennett refuses to call police after her own 78 year-old news carrier, is mugged and assaulted outside her home. She gives conflicting accounts about what happened.

The Sam Bennett Meltdown: You Want This in Congress? (7/19/08) - Bennett's bizarre 2001 concesssion speech. "Wuh, wuh, wuh, wuh, wub, wub, wuh nyuk, nyuk, nyuk."

Stop the Presses! Dent Attends Great Allentown Fair! Has Good Time! (8/27/08) - After Bennett falsely accuses Dent of skipping out on Musikfest, Congressman Dent issues preemptive press release to announce that he's attending the Great Allentown Fair.

Bennett Misses Yet Another Candidates' Night (9/5/08) - After continually claiming that Charlie Dent is ducking her, Bennett misses her second opportunity to mix it up.

Sam Bennett Needs Revolving Door for Campaign Managers (9/16/08) - Bennett picks up her fourth campaign manager.

Is Bennett's Nonprofit, POM, Playing Politics? (10/8/08) - The answer to that question is Yes. POM's Board President was forced to resign over that nonprofit's political activity.

BLEEP! Bennett's Fact Free Debate (10/14/08) - In a televised debate between LV Congressman Charlie Dent and challenger Sam Bennett on Business Matters, Channel 69 has to insert a disclaimer before the show ever airs. The station even has to blur her lips and blank her audio. BLEEP!

The Sam Bennett Primal Scream (10/29/08). It used to be "Wuh, wuh, wuh, wuh, wub, wub, wuh nyuk, nyuk, nyuk." Now it's "Ni, ni, ni, ni, ni, ni, ni, ni, nyuk, nyuk, nyuk."

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The Baseball Gods Smile at Last

Game delayed by rain.

Losingest team in baseball.

World Series Champions.

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Wednesday, October 29, 2008

PBS's TEMPO Mires Itself in Congressional Politics

I just got a robocall from state Democrats telling me to tune in to Channel 39's Puff News Tempo tonight. Host Amy Burkett, aka Harriet Nelson, polls a married couple after LV Congressman Charlie Dent and contender Sam Bennett sits down separately for dinner with them - spaghetti and meatballs. Since Democrats are spending money telling folks to tune in, I can only conclude that Burkett, consummate news professional that she is, has already tipped the Bennett camp in advance, enabling them to promote their candidate and her show.

Last week, Properties of Merit Board President Jim Molchany fell on his sword and resigned after allowing Bennett's propaganda minister, Gary Ritterstein, help organize a news conference.
This time, the news arm of another nonprofit crosses the line to help Sam Bennett promote her campaign.

Isn't that nice?

The call came from 616-712-1796 and the automated caller states the call was paid for by the Pennsylvania State Democratic Committee.

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The Sam Bennett Primal Scream


About thirty seconds into this video, LV Congressional candidate Sam Bennett treats us to her primal scream. Looks like another meltdown is in the works.

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Shegda: This Ron is NOT For You!

Like most extremists, whether they're on the right or the left, state rep. wannabe Ron Shegda bristles at the slightest criticism. He instead surrounds himself with religious wingnuts who bring holy cards to debates. One of them damn near assaulted popular incumbent Bob Freeman over, of all things, diabetes.

I had no idea that was such a hot button issue.

Neither, apparently, do most voters. When Shegda waged a write-in campaign against Freeman two years ago, Freeman beat him 50 to 1.

This time around, Shegda's name is actually on the ballot, so Freeman's margin of victory will probably only be 40 to 1. You see, Shegda aligns himself with right wing kooks like Berks County-based state representative Sam Rohrer, a graduate of Bob Jones University. Rohrer actually sends letters instructing judges that Pennsylvania's Vehicle Code only applies to commercial vehicles. According to Rohrer, our use of an automobile is simple an extension of our liberty to move about as we wish. That's Posse Comitatus and sovereign citizen talk, baby.

Cuckoo!

Shegda also believes young people need no health insurance because they are "invincible."

Cuckoo!

As if his own extremist temperament were not enough, Shegda regularly lashes out at those who contradict him. For example, when The Express Times recently decided to endorse Freeman, Shegda slammed editor Tony Rhodin, who happens to live in that district. "Tony Rhodin, The Out of Touch Leftist, is the E-T spokesman. You would think working for Avis and Gimbels, he'd be more interested in being #1. Tony, I will debate You anytime!"

Two years ago, Shegda threatened me with libel. I'm still waiting for that suit.

But after my story about his sad performance against Bob Freeman in the Grave Cellar debate, Shegda was kind enough to copy me in a letter to one of his three or four supporters.

"You must realize
Bernie O'Hare
Is a crank short
In America's
Ongoing Revolution."


I like that. He's got that ad hominem down pretty well, but not much else.

Contrary to what he tells you, this Ron is NOT for you.

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Some Northampton County Capital Ideas

While Northampton County Exec John Stoffa recuperates from surgery, Director of Administration John Conklin has been standing in for the boss. After yesterday's budget hearing, he may soon be checking into the hospital himself.

Northampton County Council member Diane Neiper and her colleagues had plenty of tough questions at yesterday's budget hearing. Instead of looking for ways to cut costs, they demanded to know why the county isn't spending more. The usually quiet Mike Dowd summed up the feeling of fellow council members. "We've sat here for three years and, quite frankly, the ball hasn't moved past the ten yard line. . . ."[W]e are constantly shifting objectives and priorities."

Ron Angle , of course, was a lot more blunt. He slammed the paucity of capital projects in its proposed budget.
I got to tell you people. This capital projects part of the budget stinks. There is no capital projects in here. You haven't addressed it. I'm going to go home before you give me the speech that you're working on the big, long-range plan. You've been working on the big, long-range plan for three years. It's budget time. If there was some kind of a plan, it belongs here in the budget. There is no plan.
Conklin quietly laid out some of the county's future projects.

Juvenile Justice Center. - The county is "definitely moving forward" with that $5 million project, and will be ready to start this Spring. It can be financed by loan, bond or budget amendment. Right now, the bond market is in the tank. We are in a "historically scary" period right now, explained Fiscal Director Vince Mazziotti. he's waiting for the credit market to improve.

Archives. - When Neiper voted to purchase the Milides building, across the street from the courthouse, she did so because she believed that's where the archives building would be located. "For whatever reason, Mr. [County exec] Stoffa doesn't think it should go there anymore. So my question is, why should I vote for this because, whatever he presents, it's not happening?"

Conklin agreed most members of council wanted archives located at the Milides building, and noted that Stoffa's recent idea of moving archives into downtown Easton has bombed with Mayor Sal Panto. But the county is hesitating about using the Milides property as a new home for archives. Easton has become "very tight on its zoning requirements, especially regarding parking." The location is great, but the county would be forced to dedicate parking there that will never be used.

Neiper, unhappy with Conklin's answer, told him "that archives building should be built now. It should be done. Every time you change your mind and you go down another avenue, there are just more obstacles in the way. I'm really not liking that we can't get anything done in Northampton County. Nothing. Name me one thing we've done."

Conklin explained that archives is really a "cost neutral operation." The money the county brings in from records improvements fees currently pays to house county records. Conklin, noting that construction of archives will cost us $3 million, urged caution and suggested the Milides building may turn out to be the right location.

Parking Deck. - Public Works Director Steve DeSalva told council that the parking deck depends on long-range plans. If the prison stays at the county campus, so will the parking deck. Major repairs, sufficient to extend the life of that parking deck for another ten years, will cost the county $1 million. Conklin added there is no "immediate need to jump into a new parking deck" that might cost $24 million. If the administration moves to Gracedale, a parking deck is unnecessary.

Relocation to Gracedale. - One idea being considered right now is to relocate county offices, including those at the Governor Wolf and Bechtel buildings, to Gracedale. According to council member Dertinger, "I don't know that there's two votes to even put an ordinance forward for a $139 million master plan at Gracedale. The idea simply being floated has caused a number of people to be calling my house."

Parking Lot at Union Street to Be Paved. - It will cost $400,000. Easton has not given final approval.

Weaversville Park. - Council members wanted to know why this $6.5 million project has not been started. Director of Administration John Conklin explained we're still looking for the money, and may have to use open space money for that in 2010.

These folks seem to have their roles reversed. Usually, the executive branch wants to spend a gazillion dollars, and the legislative branch keeps a tight grip on the purse strings. In The People's Republic of Northampton County, it seems to be the other way around.

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Norco Personnel Comm'n to Review Salary Study on Friday

I've got good news and I've got bad news.

Northampton County's controversial Hay Group salary study, which applies to its 350 nonunion employees, will be presented to its three-member Personnel Commission this Friday. That's the good news because it will give the Hay Group an opportunity to explain what it did.

Now for the bad news. The Personnel Commission will meet at 3 PM, when most county workers are still on the job. What is up with that?

The three members of the Personnel Commission are Marna Hayden, Joyce Lang and Deborah Patterson.

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Tuesday, October 28, 2008

Joe Biden at Muhlenberg on Thursday

VP Candidate Joe Biden will visit Muhlenberg College's Memorial Hall this Thursday at 6:30 PM. Doors open at 4:30 PM.

This event is free and open to the public. Tickets are not required; however, an RSVP is strongly encouraged. You can do that here.

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Why Do Baseball Gods Hate the Phillies?

On the brink of victory, the baseball gods are conspiring to make sure the Phillies remain the losingest (is that a word?) team ever, in the whole wide world. It's enough to make me an atheist.

Yeah, yeah, I know. The umps did not suspend play until the game was tied. But they also made sure of that, forcing the Phillies to defend when it was simply impossible to control or field the ball. When play resumes on Wednesday, I'm pretty sure players and fans will have to wait until after the Obama infomercial. Since when is presidential politics more important than baseball? If Barack is smart, he better be talking change-ups, not"change."

Sure, the Phillies will have twelve outs to outscore a team that gets only nine. But now it loses Mr. October, Cole Hamels, who won't be returning.

The rain was supposed to stop, but the radar gun caught drops coming down at 99 mph. The baseball gods are laughing.

Only one thing to do.

Win.

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While We Sink, the Russian Bear Rises

All of this has happened in the last week.

Item: Russia offers to share air defense savvy with Cuba.

Item: Russia signs landmark oil pipeline deal with China.

Item: Russia inks oil deal with Vietnam.

Item: Russia laughs at U.S. sanctions aimed at $30 billion in arms exports to China, India, Algeria, Venezuela, Iran, Malaysia and Serbia.

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Coming to a Local Government Near You - The Perfect Storm

It's coming. Few realize it, but the perfect storm is well on its way. It's about to envelop local government, but our only early warning system consists of a few voices in different local governments.

Bethlehem Township Manager Jon Hammer joins Lehigh County Commissioner Dean Browning and Northampton County Council member Ron Angle in warning us that local governments face dark times. In an well-written op-ed recently published by The Inky, Jon lays down the Hammer. Here's a taste.

Local governments throughout the country are struggling to make ends meet, and millions of Americans will be affected by significant decreases in services, significant increases in taxes, or both.

If your local government is telling you something different, it's not true.
Hammer notes a combination of increased contributions to defined-benefit pension plans; rising gas and utility prices; stagnant revenue; and crumbling infrastructure. Angle and Browning add a government whose cost is rising faster than its revenue and reductions in the amount of money coming from the state. In Hammer's words, it's a "bona-fide calamity," one blissfully ignored by most local government officials.

Defined-Benefit Pension Plans

In a defined-benefit pension plan, the employer commits to paying its employee a specific benefit for life beginning at his or her retirement. This type of retirement package is rare in the private sector, but quite common for government workers. No matter how lousy the stock market, the retiree can count on his annual pension.

In 2008, Northampton County contributed $2.36 million to its retirement fund. This year, the budget calls for $5.14 million, a 117.4% increase. According to Ron Angle, that fund is actually $50 million below where it needs to be. As the stock market continues to underperform, that contribution will increase dramatically over the next few years.

Lehigh County has been hit, too. This year, it had to contribute $ million to its retirement fund. Browning, who is looking for ways to contain this rising cost, notes the unfairness. "It is the private sector that pays the taxes that benefit the public sector. These benefits cannot be sustained long-term."

Rising Gas and Utility Prices

In his budget message, Northampton County Executive notes that "[h]eating and gasoline costs, mileage reimbursement and postage have all significantly increased." Department by department, that reality has taken a toll.

Stagnant Revenue

In the very first sentence of his budget message, Stoffa notes that "[p]roperty tax revenue is stagnant due primarily to the decline in the housing market." In Lehigh County, where revenues are also stagnant, they've been deficit spending since 2006, burning the candle at both ends. Nobody predicts a quick recovery.

Crumbling Infrastructure

Expect to see fewer decent roads. Hammer notes asphalt prices have shot up seventy per cent in some areas. Northampton County's prison, built around the time of civil war, is a lawsuit waiting to happen. Its parking garage is ready to collapse. Northampton County has already reduced the budget to maintain and repair its 115 bridges and Dean Browning worries how Lehigh will continue to find money for the upkeep on its 47 bridges. "We need to refocus on county core services. That does not includes rail studies or Pip the Mouse or Shad Tournaments."

Rising Cost of Personnel

Lehigh's personnel costs increase around 4.5% every year, but revenues are increasing only 2.5%. Every year, that gap gets bigger. In Northampton County, the workforce makes up 41% of the county's operating budget expenditures. Last year, we paid $87 million in salaries and $40 million in fringe benefits. This year, it's $6 million more, a 4.7% increase during a time in which total revenues have actually gone down 3.8%. It makes little sense to pay more when revenue is actually declining.

Reductions in State and Federal Pass Through Money

In a slumping economy, states are cutting back. In Pennsylvania, Rendell has failed to get the cash he needs to repair our rotting infrastrcture. There's a hiring freeze and ban on out-of-state travel. His last budget included spending increases for social services (6.6%) and education (5.5%), but contains no tax increases.

In the first three months of this fiscal year, state revenues are $300 million short of projections. By next July, that figure could be between $1 and $2 billion.

This is bad news for county governments, which rely on the state for around 70% of their total revenue. In this climate, Pennsylvania will be slow to reimburse counties for human services. Because Pennsylvania's own financial house is in disorder, reductions are inevitable.

This looming storm has gone unnoticed by the County Commissioners Association of Pa., whose top priority this year is "tax fairness now." But Browning and Angle are acutely aware of the damage this can do to a county budget.

Worst Case Scenarios

Browning is predicting a hefty tax increase or reduced services by 2011. Angle claims that, unless drastic measures are taken, county taxes will double in the next five years.

This is why the budget review is so important to county government. It's also why Browning would cut frills like "Pip the Mouse." It's why Northampton County Council's $500,000 "contingency" fund should be eliminated. Both Angle and Browning feel the county should focus its resources on its core services - the courts, corrections facilities, human services and row offices. Easton's State Theatre should look to country clubs to fund its new marquee. Pip the Mouse can get his cheese elsewhere. Right now, local governments need every nickel they can get.
Update: The Morning Call today reports that several LV road projects have been delayed. In the last 5 years, the price of construction materials has skyrocketed - fabricated steel is up 156%, asphalt has jumped 88% and even concrete costs 53% more.

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Monday, October 27, 2008

In-Car Video Camera Systems for Forty LV Police Departments

U.S. Rep. Charlie Dent (PA-15), along with Bethlehem Police Commissioner Randall Miller, representatives of more than 40 Lehigh Valley area police departments, and other regional officials, will today preside over the unveiling of new in-car video camera systems installed in police cars throughout the region. Purchased with a federal appropriation that Congressman Dent secured last year, this inter-municipal project is the first major rollout of next-generation equipment in the entire country.

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Morganelli Picks Up Questionable Endorsement in AG Race

Northampton County DA John Morganelli picked up the Express Times' endorsement for AG yesterday. "His ability to find solutions to tough crime-related problems will re-energize the AG's office."

Today, he's picked up another endorsement, this time from Pennsylvanians for Immigration Control and Enforcement. I'm not sure he wants that one. That group proudly links to Pennsylvania Minutemen, a scary outfit. . According to the Southern Poverty Law Center, both of these are "'nativist extremist' organizations, meaning that they target individual immigrants rather than immigration policies."

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How to Get Free Grant Money - Just Ask.

Northampton County's Community Development Administrator, Lori G. Sywensky, is part of a three person committee that recommends the "quality of life" grants funded by the county's 4% hotel tax. She's trying to instill some professionalism and objectivity in a process that usually has relied on telephone calls and letters.

This year, Lori's committee graded 24 applications, from 1 t0 5, based on answers to these questions: (1) Does it increase county tourism?; (2) Is there a clear budget that leverages other funding?; (3) Does it have an economic or cultural impact on the county?; and (4) Is there a need for the funding requested? All but three applications were approved. Although this committee is a laudable attempt to remove some blatant politics from the process, most of the grants should still be denied or reduced.

County Council Politicizes These Grants

Last week, I published a blog detailing exactly how Council prez Ann McHale is trying her best to squeeze a little more money for Easton's State Theatre. McHale would like to be the next county executive, and realizes that the high rollers and country club types on that nonprofit's board would certainly reward her appreciation of the arts.

McHale is by no means the sole council member who politicizes these grants.

Charles Dertinger angrily demanded to know why only $2,000 was being awarded to agricultural fairs. It made no difference to him that those requests were fully funded - more money should have have been awarded. Why was only $4,000 proposed for the Delaware Shad Tourney? Why not give them the full $8,000 sought? Why no money at all for the Atlas Cement Memorial Museum? Who cares that they found other funding sources? Even the Northampton County Bulldog, Ron Angle, echoed some of Dertinger's concerns.

These politicians are pandering for votes, just as McHale is after campaign contributions. I suppose they can't help it. They don't mind using your money to get what they want.

Why Most Grants Should Be Denied or Reduced

Northampton County currently owns Easton's 1753 Bachmann Publick House. Lafayette College is willing to commit $320,000 to that historic building in a joint venture under which the county would agree to spend $520,000 to revitalize that building over four years. While this idea is being batted back and forth, the county is paying for the upkeep of this building from its general fund.

Why?

According to the Hotel Tax Law, the only restriction placed on hotel tax money is that the county use the funds for the "further development of tourism facilities and for community development initiatives, within that county, that enhance regional tourism." Instead of paying $130,000 for the annual maintenance and upkeep of that building from real estate tax revenue, hotel tax should be used. The remaining county "quality of life" grants can be reduced pro rata.

This adds another $130,000 to the till.

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Northampton County's 2009 Quality of Life Grants

Northampton County currently imposes a 4% hotel room rental tax. This revenue must be used to promote tourism and community development. For reasons that elude me, these are called "quality of life" grants in Northampton County's 2009 proposed budget. They are detailed below.





















































































































































































































































































































Hotel Room Rental Tax Grants

2006

2007

2008

2009 Request

2009 Actual

Agricultural Fairs

$3,000

$3,200

$3,200

$2,000

$2,000

ArtsQuest (Musikfest)

$21,000

$46,000

$0

$23,000

$0

Atlas Cement Memorial Museum

$4,000

$4,000

$4,000

$0

$0

Bach Choir of Bethlehem

$20,000

$20,000

$20,000

$20,000

$10,000

Bachmann Publick House

$17,500

$10,000

$10,000

$0

$0

Bath Borough Log Cabin

$17,500

$17,500

$17,500

$0

$0

Bethlehem Marketing

$2,500

$0

$0

$0

$0

Celtic Fest

$4,000

$5,000

$5,000

$10,000

$5,000

Delaware Shad Tournament

$7,000

$8,000

$8,000

$8,000

$4,000

Easton City (Ambassador Program)

$0

$10,000

$35,000

$35,000

$20,000

Easton Farmers Market

$10,500

$10,500

$10,500

$24,000

$12,000

Easton Marketing

$2,500

$0

$0

$25,000

$0

Gov. Wolf Historical Society

$9,600

$10,100

$10,100

$17,610

$3,500

Historic Bethlehem Partnership

$0

$16,800

$16,800

$17,640

$16,800

Historical Society

$25,200

$30,000

$30,000

$100,000

$30,000

Jacobsburg Historical Society

$10,000

$10,500

$10,500

$10,500

$10,500

Kreidersville Covered bridge

$0

$13,400

$13,400

$82,137

$13,400

Lehigh & Keystone RR Club

$5,000

$5,000

$5,000

$0

$0

Lehigh Tp. Historical Society

$5,000

$5,000

$5,000

$0

$0

LV Arts Council

$0

$2,500

$2,500

$12,750

$3,800

LV Convention and Visitors Bureau

$640,340

$744,093

$746,000

$0

$746,000

Lower Saucon Tp Historical Society

$2,500

$2,700

$2,700

$0

$0

Mariton Wildlife Sanctuary

$0

$0

$4,000

$0

$0

Miss Pennsylvania

$0

$0

$0

$10,000

$2,500

Moravian Historical Society

$6,300

$6,600

$6,600

$17,910

$6,600

Nat'l Canal Museum

$16,000

$16,000

$16,000

$17,375

$5,200

North'mptn Area Historical Society

$16,900

$17,800

$18,900

$198,000

$7,200

North'mptn Community College

$75,000

$0

$0

$0

$0

Northern Lehigh Future Focus

$0

$2,500

$2,500

$0

$0

Slate Belt Heritage Center

$2,200

$2,300

$2,300

$2,400

$2,400

State Theatre

$0

$0

$50,000

$55,000

$25,000

SteelStax performing Arts Center

$0

$0

$86,128

$0

$87,800

SteelStax Public Broadcasting center

$0

$0

$86,127

$0

$87,800

Sun Inn Preservation Ass'n

$0

$0

$0

$8,000

$0

Walnutport Canal Ass'n

$5,000

$5,500

$5,500

$28,750

$5,500

Zoellner Arts Center

$0

$0

$0

$33,125

$0

Future Grants

$0

$0

$5,997

$0

$19,000

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Sunday, October 26, 2008

Barack Obama: Vote For the White Half!

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Friday, October 24, 2008

Bob Freeman & Ron Shegda in Grave Cellar Debate

Last night's public tête-à-tête between Pennsylvania state representative Bob Freeman and challenger Ron Shegda had all the makings of a sleepfest. For one thing, it was conducted in a frickin' "grave cellar" at some Easton church. I half-expected to be sitting with a bunch of dead bodies. Aside from a few borough mayors, the grave cellar was filled with seventy very live bodies and decaffienated coffee, as we all waited for the showdown. By evening's end, Bob Freeman was very nearly assaulted, people were screaming and a church sexton was ready to knock someone out. My kind of debate!

That was a shocker in a debate run by the LV League of Women Voters and AAUW, which ask questions like "How about those energy rates?" They do allow the audience to submit questions on index cards, but we were told that "All card questions must be respectful and written with dignity." How the hell do I write with dignity? Do I put on a suit?

For years, I've submitted question after question to the LWV. They've always ended up in the trash. Maybe tonight would be my lucky night. In my best handwriting, I penned a question asking why county human services are being shortchanged by the state.

Once the debate started, Freeman exuded a quiet confidence about state issues. revealing himnself as a very careful and detail-oriented thinker. At times he was eloquent, quoting Humphrey and FDR. Yes, his thinking his liberal, but what impresses me about Freeman isd the same quality I find most impressive in Congressman Charlie Dent. Both of these public servants take their jobs seriously, work very hard, understand the issues and have thoughtful responses. They understand that they work for us, and not the other way around.

Shegda, who did appear to be more relaxed and friendly than I expected, was in way over his head. For a guy who has been running for this job for the last two years, he was pitifully unprepared. He seems to think elimination of property taxes is the answer to every question. His idea of alternative energy is digging for coal. At his low point, Shegda actually claimed young people are "invincible" and need no health insurance. That elicited a few boos. When asked whether county seats are entited to some kind of tax relief because of the large number of tax exempt properties, the challenger simply did not understand the question. In contrast, Freeman has introduced legislation to provide some relief to places like Easton, where 27% of the property is tax exempt.

When audience questions were posed at the end of the debate, one Shegda supporter got very upset and insisted on reading his own question. He wanted to know why Freeman never answered a letter written over six years ago. It was a question about diabetes.

"Gee, my office is pretty good about answering mail," is all Freeman got out before this dude got really upset and started screaming, getting closer and closer to Freeman, accusing him of medical fraud. People tried to quiet the guy down, but he got more upset, claiming that Freeman is a "smooth talker like Obama" and a "son of a bitch."

He was so loud that the church sexton came flying down from his apartment, where he was praying or reading the Bible or something. He walked the guy off the property and told me later he had been ready to drop him.

Praise the Lord!

My question was scheduled right after the one this idiot posed, but how can I top that? I told them all we should be watching the Phillies and ran out of the "grave cellar."

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Go Phillies!

I had hoped to have a detailed post about Northampton County's "quality of life" grants today, but took a Phillies break. The Devil Rays made me do it.

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Thursday, October 23, 2008

Another Nail in Sam Bennett's Coffin

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Ron Angle: County Taxes to Double in Next Five Years

Last night, Lehigh County adopted its 2009 budget. Here in The People's Republic of Northampton County, we're just getting started, and had our first budget hearing on Tuesday, two hours of numbers. The county's proposed budget is available online, and you can review it here.

"I don't see anything good" is how the Northampton County Bulldog, Ron Angle, started things off. As a result of state and federal cutbacks, the county's annual contribution to the Gracedale Nursing Home will skyrocket from $381,000 to $6.9 million. The county's contribution to the retirement fund will shoot up from $2.4 million to $5.1 million, and according to Angle, it actually needs a cash infusion of $50 million. Personnel costs have also increased a staggering $6 million.

While county expenses go up, revenues have, at best, remained flat.

After reviewing the cold reality, Angle goes on to predict that our taxes will double in five years unless "extreme measures" are taken. But where? The Stoffa budget proposes cuts in general government (-15.3%), public works (-14.6%) and human services (-2.9%). Only the courts and prisons show a modest increase (+4.6%).

Northampton County Executive John Stoffa told Angle he believes that other counties facing the same problem should unite and pressure Harrisburg to increase funding. Angle thinks that's unlikely. Just last week, state representative Craig Dally told the Pen Argyl Area Concerned Citizens that the state government has $300 million less in the till than it should have at this time of the year. Some believe next year's shortfall could be as high as $3 billion, which will certainly mean a reduction in pass trough money. Counties will be forced to decide whether to cut programs that residents have been using or come up with local tax dollars to cover for the state.

Neither choice is very appealing.

I have at least one idea, which I'll explain below. You may have some, too.

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Eliminate Northampton County Council's Slush Fund

$10,294.57.

That's how much Northampton County Council spent for the laptops they lavished on themselves recently. Did they do this to make it easier to communicate with you? No, you won't find their email addresses listed on the county web page. That extra computer will make it easier for them to read this blog, but it will also make it easier for them to participate in back room shenanigans.

Don't think that happens? Look at the computer purchase. Not a single word was uttered about this transaction in any public meeting. Council instead buried the cost in recent "renovations" to their star chamber.

That's why council's proposed $500,000 slush fund, politely called a "contingency" fund, should be eliminated in its entirety. Council's surreptitious purchase of laptops is wasteful spending. Two members do not even use computers. Moreover, their secretive actions should be discouraged.

So what happens if an unforeseen expense arises? For that, we have the unrestricted cash reserve, the county's rainy day fund.

Eliminating this $500,000 in monopoly money will reduce budget expenditures by 0.2%. It's not much, but it's a start.

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Why Was State Theatre at a Budget Hearing?

Tuesday's Northampton County budget hearing included a $25,000 proposed grant to Easton's State Theatre. This wonderful artsy farsty venture originally asked for $55,000, but Stoffa's administration slashed that request by more than half. Three people from that nonprofit, including Executive Director Shelley Brown, mysteriously appeared on Tuesday. Of 21 grant recipients, only the State bothered sending someone.

How did that happen?

I spoke yesterday with Lori G. Sywensky, the county's very capable Community Development Administrator. In previous years, the county would decide grants based on a phone call or letter to a council member. This year, the county tried to impose a little more objectivity on "quality of life" grants, funded with hotel taxes. A three-person committee was formed, and every group seeking money was required to submit a funding request, which is available online.

All but three requests were approved. The three rejected applicants were Sun Inn (they wanted to hire two people), Zellner Arts (wanted post show parties) and Musikfest (already getting $1 million over the next five years).

Approved applicants were notified by mail. No one was advised about Wednesday's budget hearing. So why did the State have three representatives there?

The answer to that question became apparent during the hearing. Council Prez Ann McHale just happened to notice them, and they just happened to have drawings of all the changes they are always making. Now, the administration has already approved $25,000 for improvements to the marquee, but the State is also installing plush new bathrooms for its members and high rollers, something that Council Prez McHale just loves.

McHale clearly wants those new poopers. "Why such a drastic reduction in their request?", she demanded after admiring the new rain closets.

It's pretty clear that McHale is the reason why State Theatre was present at Tuesday's budget hearing. It's pretty clear that's why they had drawings of their fancy new throne rooms. It's also pretty clear that if McHale wants fancy new bidets at the State, she should donate her money, not the county's.

Tomorrow, if still alive, I'll detail all of the quality of life grants.

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Wednesday, October 22, 2008

Charles Dertinger: Norco Council Only Listens to Landed Gentry

Yesterday was probably a bad day for me to attend a Northampton County Council meeting. The Morning Call had just published my story about the council's extravagant $650 thousand in renovations to its star chamber, which failed to include a nickel to videotape or webcast council meetings. But I was among twenty-seven people, mostly county workers, who attended the first budget review. I'll tell you about that tomorrow. My story today is about what happened after that two-hour meeting.

No sooner had the meeting adjourned than Council Prez Ann McHale summoned me to the dais. She began telling me that council really, really, really wants to webcast its meetings, but there are technical problems of some sort. If this is true, why has no one on council bothered to contact IT Director Al Jordan, I asked.

McHale may have had an answer, but I never heard it because council member Charles Dertinger began unloading on me, telling McHale to ignore me and repeating his "pack of lies" claim. He got off the dais and was in my face. He also told me that since I own no real estate, council has no duty to answer my concerns.

I see.

Well, he's got me. I'm no member of the landed gentry. Maybe I should hunt foxes or something.

But last time I checked, I have the same rights as Charles Chrin, including the right to vote, and pointed it out, rather loudly. It might interest you that an elected official, and a Democrat to boot, would publicly sneer at a renter.

I don't mind the insults. I can give as good as I get. But Dertinger's blast at renters reveals a contempt for a large portion of the voting public.

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Free Laptops For Every Northampton County Council Member!

After the shouting match with Charles Dertinger was over yesterday, Council member Diane Neiper told me she believes it's time to start webcasting meetings, and will make inquiries next time they meet.

That's nice.

Then the Northampton County Bulldog, Ron Angle, let me in on a little secret. Free laptops have been provided to every council member, even though neither he nor council member Wayne Grube care for them. The money for this comes from the $650 thousand set aside for renovations to the Northampton County Star Chamber. No word of this was ever uttered in a public meeting.

Angle told me and an astonished county executive that there is even a hook up for these laptops on the brand new dais, although no one has bothered to try it.

Amazing. We are now approaching 100 scheduled sheriff sales every month. And council is surreptitiously supplying members with laptops, masked as renovation costs. Angle, no computer genius, is unsure whether the county is also paying for Internet hook ups.

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Bob Freeman and Ron Shegda Tangle on Thursday

LV Ramblings readers selected Pennsylvania state representative Bob Freeman last year as the Lehigh Valley's top elected official. That means nothing to Hellertown oddball Ron Shegda, who wants the job for himself . . . again.

Two years ago, Shegda waged a losing write-in campaign for Freeman's 136th state house seat, which extends from Easton to Hellertown. At that time, Shegda was also soliciting contributions for the U.S. Senate in 2010, and claimed to be as "wise as serpents and gentle as doves."

I see enough snakes on Northampton County Council, and I sure as hell would never send one of them to Harrisburg.

A few weeks ago, Shegda and his posse tried to evict AJ and me from our seats at a Bennett-Dent debate in Allentown. We refused to move. He also recently lambasted Express Times editor Tony Rhodin in a goofy email, which you can read here.

He reads like he needs a rest at Happydale.

On Thursday night, Shegda will cross swords with Freeman at a candidates' night sponsored by the LWV and AAUW.

When: Thursday, October 23, 2008, 7 to 9 PM

Where: St. John's Lutheran Church, 330 Ferry Street, Easton, PA 18042.

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Johnny Appleseed Visits Lehigh Valley

Johnny Appleseed, in the form of DCNR Secretary Michael DiBerardinis, brought something better than seeds to the Lehigh Valley yesterday. He presented Lehigh's Don Cunningham and Northampton's John Stoffa with a check for $200,000 for trees for their downtown areas and parks. Its called TreeVitalize, part of a plan to plant 1 million trees over the next five years.

Cunningham notes that, in addition to the environmental advantages, "shade trees in downtown areas increase pedestrian traffic, reduce incidents of road rage, and create safer, more pleasant walking environments.”

The King of Renaissance Square gets $25,000 for 90 trees along Hamilton, Turner and Liberty streets, as well as other areas. “The TreeVitalize initiative is a great program, especially for areas like inner-city Allentown,” says Edwin I.

Yep. It gives people a place to hide during drive by shootings.

Northampton County Executive John Stoffa says trees are good, too. It's unanimous. Here's where they're going.

Allentown -- $25,000 –- 90 trees
Bethlehem -- $25,000 –- 88 trees
Catasauqua -- $3,500 –- 6 trees
Lynn Township -- $2,700 –- 10 trees
Lower Macungie -- $12,400 – 40 trees
Easton -- $25,000 – 100 trees
Tatamy - $3,000 – 10 trees

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PBS & PSU Spotlight 80 Central & Western Pa. Candidates

In the Lehigh Valley, the last place to find a local news story is at PBS-affiliate Channel 39. Its light news program - Tempo - is very much like reading one of the puff blogs. Host Amy Burkett, who reminds me of Harriet Nelson, smiles as she quizzes us about how many women will die from ovarian cancer this year.

WPSU-TV, the PBS affiliate for Central Pennsylvania, takes its role a little more seriously. For the upcoming elections, it has developed a website featuring video, audio and interactive quizzes to help provide easy to use information about all the state and U.S. congressional candidates that fall within Central PA as well as parts of Western PA. It features over 80 candidate profiles from 27 counties. You can view it here.

It is comprehensive and impartial, an informational resource for voters, especially concerning local races that don't normally get much attention in the media. It features video and audio interviews, a questionnaire stating candidate positions on key issues and a blog. It even includes a "My Ballot" feature, in which users can enter their county and township to see which candidates are running within their area.

This is PBS at its best, a real service to the community and one that fills an information gap. Unfortunately, our local PBS affiliate has a long way to go.

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Tuesday, October 21, 2008

Sam Bennett for Congress: I Have Nicer Hair!

In last week's televised debate between LV Congressman Charlie Dent and challenger Sam Bennett on Business Matters, I saw something that has never happened in local politics before. Amazingly, Channel 69 had to insert a disclaimer before the show ever aired. The station even had to blur her lips and blank her audio. In a fact free debate, she falsely claimed two local banks, Wachovia and Sovereign, had folded. Needless to say, these banks were less than thrilled at this kind of advertising, which could have resulted in bank runs. As if that were not enough, moderator Tony Iannelli actually had to take a "shoe break" so that Bennett could find some missing footwear.

Last night, part two of that debate aired. Although there were no disclaimers or shoe breaks this time, it was still bizarre. This time, it was hair.

At the end of the debate, Bennett noted that Charlie Dent is a "nice guy" with "nice hair," but went on to claim that she's nice, too, and has even nicer hair. So I guess we should all vote for her.

All righty then.

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Allentown's Landlord Hall of Shame Ignores Constitution

Edwin I, King of Renaissance Square, aka Allentown Mayor Ed Pawlowski, is angry. Some greedy Allentown landlords allow their properties to fall into disrepair. A few ignore zoning laws, maintenance codes and even refuse to pay their taxes and water bills on time. So by Royal Decree, a "Landlord Hall of Shame" has been established to humiliate these hooligans. A huge placard, complete with slumlord's home address and phone number, is placed at each property. Allentown's Web page, which seems to be good for nothing else, proudly lists each offender. City officials will even buy advertisements in the home newspapers of these dirty dawgs.

You get to have some fun, too. You can make your own nominations.

Whoopee! Isn't that Democratic?

Or is it a lynch mob mentality?

No Notice or Opportunity to Be Heard

King Edwin has worked up a lather over slumlords who won't follow the law, but has no trouble trampling all over the Constitution. Specifically, he's ignoring the due process clause, which is interpreted to mean notice and an opportunity to be heard.

Does a landlord get any kind of notice before he's listed in the city's Hall of Shame? Nah. In fact, the city's first victim, and he is a victim, was taken by surprise. He was ambushed without no hearing.

Allentown's web page does list criteria considered before this modern equivalent of tarring and feathering someone. You can see them here. But they are nebulous, to say the least. Vague tenant and neighbor complaints are actually encouraged, which could lead to all sorts of phony baloney from a disgruntled former tenant or a jealous neighbor. "Police issues," "fire issues" and "health issues" but once again, there are no specifics. In fact, the city also uses "etc." to cover them. How the hell can a landlord be on notice of a health issue qualified like that? If someone catches a cold at a rented property, the landlord can be publicly excoriated. The city also looks at delinquent fees, but provides no guidance there, either. One year? Or is one month enough?

Joyce Marin, Allentown's Director of Community and Economic Development, in a puff blog designed to promote this domestic form of waterboarding as "good news" for Allentown, doesn't really answer how someone qualifies for this dishonor. It must be a secret.

Potential For Abuse

Aside from a total failure to provide basic due process, King Edwin's Hall of Shame can be perverted to punish political enemies. Don't think the King would do that? Think again.

Last year, King Edwin told a Morning Call reporter that a certain civic activist, who was giving HRH a rough time, was nothing more than a slumlord. Now this landlord has never even been cited for a code violation. But he is a political enemy. Imagine how easy it would be to trump up a few testimonials by some disgruntled former tenants or a "neighbor." Next thing you know, this person can find himself a member of the Hall of Shame.

I expressed these concerns to Ms. Marin. She refuses to publish any criticism of this modern form of torture, but allows comments suggesting that slumlords are mostly McCain supporters. She did email me that, after checking with her staff, she learned that HRH has no involvement in the selection of these properties.

Bullshit.

The city's own web page makes clear the mayor is directly involved. All the King's men "choose a city landlord for recommendation to the mayor for selection as an esteemed member of the 'Landlord Hall of Shame.'" The mayor decides.

Reputation an Inherent Pennsylvania Right

In addition to the due process clause, King Ed's "Hall of Shame" violates the "inherent and indefeasible" right of every person to protect his reputation. That right is enumerated in the first sentence of Pennsylvania's Constitution.

The federal and state constitution must be followed, even in the Kingdom of Renaissance Square. King Ed is right to be upset over greedy landlords who thumb their noses at laws designed to protect all of us, but that gives him no excuse to ignore basic constitutional safeguards. They apply to all of us. Even slumlords.

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Charge!


Arsenic and Old Lace, is one of my favorite Halloween movies, but it surprises me that so many people never heard of this Frank Capra classic.

Uncle Teddy is a cRaZy old loon who has convinced himself he's TR. He screams "Charge!" every time he runs up the steps. Before long, everyone is doing it, even Cary Grant. Now, whenever someone screams "Charge!", I'm reminded of those likable serial killers.

Charge!

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Monday, October 20, 2008

Lynne Abraham to Endorse John Morganelli for AG

Philadelphia District Attorney Lynne Abraham, the people's DA, will today endorse Northampton County District Attorney John Morganelli, Democratic candidate for Attorney General, at a 3 P.M. Philly press conference. Morganelli will also outline his plans to attack gun violence at this press conference.

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Lehigh County Steps Forward While Northampton County Hides in Shadows

When Lehigh County Commissioners reviewed their 2009 budget, they added $15,000 for a camera system. Starting next year, there will be a webcast of each meeting, to be posted shortly after each meeting.

In the meantime, Northampton County recently dipped into its own contingency fund for "renovations" to council chambers. Council members spent close to $650,000 of your money for extravagances like a new dais and a fancy county seal, etched in glass, placed directly behind council prez Ann McHale.

It does add a certain je ne sais quoi to that star chamber look.

In the meantime, the amount of working space available for council's staff was actually reduced. Theatre seats for the public were replaced with cheap, plastic crap. The new PA system is just as ineffective as the one that was replaced.

Most amazing at all, council has set aside no funds at all to videotape and webcast its meetings. IT director Al Jordan tells me this could be done for as little as $1,500, but no one has even asked him. So iCarly has no reason to fear any competition.

Of course, if the public saw what goes on in that star chamber, it would get rid of most of them.

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One More Reason Why Democrats Should Support Charlie Dent

Most Democrats agree that LV Congressional contender Siobhan "Sam" Bennett is a lightweight, at least when standing next to incumbent Charlie Dent. The Express Times, which endorsed Dent on Sunday, notes he "has become authoritative on several issues because he's invested time and effort, such as traveling overseas and investigating alternative energy technology." Some Dems will privately acknowledge this, but plan on voting for Bennett anyway. The argument? A heavily Democratic Congress will enable Barack Obama to push his agenda.

Here's my counterpoint. According to no less an authority than Speaker Pelosi, Dem will increase their majority this November to 250 members. So there's no real justification for pulling the straight party lever to back a candidate whose campaign has been riddled with, among other things, recklessly false statements about the financial stability of two local banks. It makes more sense to put a thinker in office.

Currently, Democrats account for 233 of the House's 435 voting members.

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Saturday, October 18, 2008

Pennsylvania May Be Blue For Elections, But Its Budget is in the Red

Earlier this week, state representative Craig Dally told a Pen Argyl crowd that Pennsylvania has $300 million less in the till than it should at this time of the year. According to a recent report from the Center on Budget and Policy Priorities, Pennsylvania is one of twenty-one states facing midyear shortfalls.

Many of these states are already reducing services, including health insurance for children, daycare for seniors, eliminating funds for education and reducing its workforce.

According to The Philadelphia Business Journal, Pennsylvania has imposed a hiring freeze.

Will state governments be the next group to ask for a bailout?

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Friday, October 17, 2008

Should $75k Fund Rail Study or Help Heat Homes?

Two weeks ago, rail activist Paul Marin asked Northampton County to contribute $75,000 of the $250,000 cost for a transportation study, a necessary prerequisite to federal funds for commuter rail. The Northampton County Bulldog, Ron Angle, is dead set against the idea, which makes it more palatable to everyone else on council. This money is set aside in next year's budget, but council prez Ann McHale listed the matter again last night, figuring that fellow council members would quickly fund this project now.

She had one big problem last night. Only six council members were present. She needed five votes, but got only four. John Cusick joined Angle in voting No. So the transportation study has been derailed. Marin will probably still get his money, but commuter rail advocates will have to stand in line like everyone else.

That will give them time to consider this Ron Angle question.

"You know what, if you got $75 thousand to throw away, why don't you try putting it in a fund to supply money for heat so the people around this county, the senior citizens this winter, who aren't going to be able to heat their houses? Or why don't you put it in a fund to help the help the 100 people who already are on the January Sheriff Sale list maybe hang on to their house by giving them one payment so they get another month to get things together. . . . You're going to spend $75 thousand for a pipe dream while people freeze to death this winter. You're real managers."

In response to a plea for the cold and homeless, Reverend Dowd had this response.

"I don't mean to throw $75 thousand away, but it goes about six points behind a decimal point in the county budget."

How Christian of him.

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Dertinger's Shot of the Week

Last night's Northampton County Council meeting was a little more civil than the circus that came to town last time this bunch met. Still, council member Charles Dertinger decided to micromanage the elections office.

Northampton County Exec John Stoffa: "Charles, that office is operating better now than it ever has been, and you know it."

Dertinger (sarcastically): "I'm sure it is. Actually, I don't know that, but it's always good for you to tell me what I don't know."

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Northampton County Council Has a New Solicitor

. . . and it's not one of the political players I was concerned about last week. Northampton County Council instead appointed Anthony Martino, an attorney in Leonard Zito's firm. Zito, council's former solicitor, is now a Northampton County judge.

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Top Ten Reason Why Sam Might be Late For a Debate

At Wednesday night's Debate at the Slate, congressional challenger Sam Bennett was late. Express Times reporter Doug Brill writes she was only tardy by seven minutes, but the simple fact is that she showed up at 7:40 PM for a candidates' night that started at 7 PM. By the time she showed up, U.S. Rep. Charlie Dent, had just finished delivering his opening remarks.

What could have made her late? Here's the top ten reasons, as determined by my readers.

10. Traffic jam in densely populated slate belt.

9. Baking cookies.

8. Padding salary at POM.

7. She's still looking for that damn shoe.

6. She was busy memorizing the names of world leaders.

5. She wasn't late. Everyone else was early.

4. Was waiting forever for "light" rail.

3. She was busy practicing a Southern accent for the slate belt.

2. Making plans for her next campaign.

1. Standing in line during bank runs at Wachovia and Sovereign.

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Thursday, October 16, 2008

Northampton County Hangmen Eye Next Victim

A cabal of Northampton County Council, known as the Hangmen, are attempting to curry favor with a green T-shirted lynch mob known as AFSCME. So a few weeks ago, they demanded the resignation of Connie Sutton Falk, the county's Human Resources Director. She was denied both notice as well as an opportunity to be heard, a basic due process violation. County workers loved it. After all, does anyone anywhere ever like Human Resources?

Well, the hangmen are at it again, and this time, they're attempting to string up a regular, career service, employee.

Their latest victim is the Director of the Criminal Division, Leigh Ann Fisher. She had been invited to yesterday's Finance Committee to explain the efforts her office makes to collect restitution. Before she could get started, council prez Ann McHale ambushed her.

Citing vague allegations of "condescending" emails and "complaints", the imperious Ann McHale demanded to know what is going on. Fisher asked for details, but McHale declined, stating that information is classified. In America, you may have a right to face your accuser, but there must be some exception in Northampton County.

What McHale is really doing is pandering for more union votes in a quest to become next county exec. If that involves stepping all over an office supervisor, too bad. What the green T-shirted lynch mob known as AFSCME fails to comprehend is that she'll step all over them, too, when it becomes politically expedient.

If you chop down all the trees in the forest to get the devil, where will you hide when the devil turns on you?

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Bennett Late For Her Own Debate

Northampton County Executive John Stoffa was there. So was Controller Steve Barron. Snarling in the front row - all by himself - sat the Northampton County Bulldog, Ron Angle. A small audience of about thirty people came to last night's Pen Argyl Area Concerned Citizens Debate at the Slate to watch congressional wannabe Siobhan "Sam" Bennett and LV Congressman Charlie Dent mix it up. The audience even included six blue T-shirted members of the Sierra Club, who came with homemade signs to promote Bennett.

But where was Sam?

Two popular and dedicated public servants, state reps. Craig Dally and Rich Grucela, started things off at 7 PM. Neither has an opponent. Rich spoke about his desire to eliminate the state senate while Craig addressed the need for a state constitutional convention. Though they belong to different parties, Dally and Grucela share a bipartisan approach to issues, looking for areas of agreement as opposed to division.

Congressman Dent listened attentively, but where was Sam?

Around 7:35 PM, the debate moderator told the audience he was "extremely disappointed" that Bennett had failed to show up, and someone blurted out she was on her way. She showed up just as Charlie Dent was finishing his opening remarks. According to The Express Times, she was seven minutes late. Actually, it was closer to forty minutes. Debate rules had to be repeated for her. This is amazing conduct from a person who claimed Dent had been ducking her.

When she finally introduced herself and her campaign, it was in some kind of affected Southern accent. She also kept her coat on the entire evening.

Neither candidate said anything new. Questions were uninspired. Most disappointing, and unlike the format in years past, candidates were not permitted to interrogate each other. That's what distinguished Charlie Dent and Steve Barron in previous debates. That feature was dropped last night.

At the end of the allotted hour, the debate moderator was initially going to reward Bennett's tardiness by allowing her to debate on her own. But everyone just started getting up and the evening ended, not with a bang, but a whimper.

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Northampton County Exec Stoffa to Undergo Hip Replacement

Northampton County Executive John Stoffa has been in a lot of pain for the past few years. He needs a new council, one that actually wants to work with him. But more than that, he needs a new hip. Late next week, John will undergo a hip replacement, and I wish him a speedy recovery. Next year, there will be a council replacement, too.

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State Rep. Candidate Mike Welsh Refuses to Meet the Press

Between January 1, 2008 and today, state rep. Jennifer Mann has been mentioned in seventy-five stories by The Morning Call. Over that same time frame, her opponent in the race for the state house, Mike Welsh, has been featured just once. As a member of the state house, Jennifer Mann would naturally be a part of some important stories. But this also gives her an unfair advantage.

Recently, Welsh debated Mann at Tempo Public Square, which you can see yourself right here. Mann clearly took Welsh too lightly. When he began to score points by stressing the need more police in Allentown, instead of a damn hockey rink, she actually started interrupting the moderators, refusing to abide by the rules.

In a fair fight, she loses. But that won't happen, and Welsh knows it. That's why you gotta' love his decision to tell The Morning Call gods, very politely, to stick it. They recently descended from the mountain to glance in his direction. Here's his amazing response.

Mr. Glenn Kranzley
Editor of the Opinion Pages
The Morning Call
101 N Sixth St
Allentown, Pa. 18105

Dear Mr. Kranzley,

Thank you for your invitation to meet with members of the Morning Call Editorial Board to discuss my candidacy as well as your possible recommendation in this election. Unfortunately, I must decline your invitation. I am declining because the lack of coverage of my campaign over the last seven months leads me to believe the endorsement of my opponent is a foregone conclusion.

During my campaign I have focused on critical issues that are facing our community, including the growing crime and gang problem which I believe is the root of Allentown's troubles. Despite issuing numerous press releases and inviting the Morning Call to press conferences where I have outlined solutions to these problems, there has not been one line written about my campaign in your newspaper. For example:

• You chose not to cover my opening press conference in April of this year.
• Despite the presence of a Morning Call reporter at my August press conference nothing appeared in your newspaper. Follow up phone calls pertaining to this issue to Ardith Hilliard and Peter Leffler proved fruitless, as I was told the omission of the press conference was a “glitch in the system”. I was asked to re-submit this information again. I then personally hand delivered this information – again I was ignored.
• My request for an article on the Editorial page pertaining to HB 1189 (Commonwealth Officers Act) aimed at increasing the number of police officers in Allentown and surrounding Lehigh Valley communities was rejected.
• My latest news release in September was also ignored.

I have enclosed copies of each of these communications for your perusal.

There are only two conclusions I can reach from this experience: either the Morning Call has made a conscious decision to ignore my campaign, or your newspaper has pre-determined who they will endorse and support. Since I recently read a glowing article about my opponent's mis-directed efforts to bring a hockey arena to Allentown, I think your bias has been made perfectly clear.

I sincerely hope that I am proven wrong and that the Morning Call will begin providing fair coverage of my campaign. Until that happens, I will continue to take my campaign to the residents of Allentown. It is ultimately their endorsement that matters most in this campaign.

Sincerely,

Mike Welsh

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Wednesday, October 15, 2008

Greetings From Osceola Mills

I'm writing this blog entry from my son's home in Osceola Mills, located about thirty miles away from PSU. He lives in a big old house with his pretty fiancee, Brandy, and a rambunctious chocolate lab nam ed Otis. He even has a two car garage and a brick driveway. His home costs him less than my monthly rent for an efficiency apartment in Nazareth.

Otis and I are sleeping downstairs tonight. I hope he doesn't snore.

I finally got here after about seven hours of driving a rusted out jeep with no radio. Of course, I also got lost. Yep, I'm a title searcher who can get lost in Nazareth. I loved it. The autumn colors here are breathtaking, and there are plenty of neat little places where people grow vegetables and raise animals. They're called farms.

I stopped at one of them and bought some homemade soap for Brandy. Imagine that! Soap.

No Promenade here, baby.

I stopped at another farm so I could call in for a very important telephone press conference with Congressman Charlie Dent. When I chimed in, there were already fifteen people on the line, including the local MSM and somebody from Roll Call. They were next to their PCs. I was sitting close to a tractor, which unfortunately started in the middle of the conference, making it impossible for anyone to hear until I moved next to a cow.

Sorry, guys.

Now, I'm sitting here with Otis, swilling coffee and pecking away on the keyboard. My son crashed long ago.

In the middle of this small town, I have not heard a car drive by for over two hours.

There's something strangely familiar about this place.

Not that many years ago, it could have been called the Lehigh Valley.

Not anymore.

Otis does snore.

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Dent Condemns Bennett's Fact Free Campaign

In a telephone news conference late yesterday afternoon, LV Congressman Charlie Dent condemned challenger Siobhan "Sam" Bennett for statements "designed to cause panic and fear" in the midst of a national financial and economic crisis. Bennett had claimed, falsely, that two local banks had recently folded, and claimed that was somehow Dent's fault. Her campaign manager was later forced to request that her comments be edited because she had misspoke.

It wouldn't be the first time.

Charlie Dent has long maintained that "if the truth and Sam Bennett ever came into contact, there would be a mighty collision."

Dent is right to be upset. Her cavalier remarks concerning two respected financial institutions were "beyond reckless" and actually undermines the bailout recently adopted by Congress. Her campaign manager is now claiming, just as irresponsibly, that these banks had "nearly failed." That remark flies in the face of his own statement, in which he admits these banks are "financially sound."

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So Who's Running For Northampton County Council?

Northampton County's nine-member county council is its legislative branch. Five of these are elected at-large throughout the county. These are the seats currently held by Council VP Wayne Grube, Peg Ferraro, John Cusick, Charles Dertinger and Diane Neiper. Their terms expire next year.

Wayne Grube is ready to step down after a long and distinguished career. Every other at-large incumbent will seek re-election. This means Charles Dertinger will answer to voters for his abrasive behavior.

Aside from the incumbents, who else is running?

The names I'm hearing so far are Democrats Bill Hall (an independent thinker) and John Maher, who waged a smear campaign against Ron Angle last year. Allentown official Ismael Arcelay is reported to be interested as well.

Any Republicans? Mark Schwartz, who lost last year by a scant 91 votes, has already declared he's running again next year.

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Reminder: Debate at the Slate Tonight!

If you can attend just one debate, do it tonight.

The Pen Argyl Area Concerned Citizens will host a candidates' night between Lehigh Valley Congressman Charlie Dent and challenger Sam Bennett tonight from 7:00 to 9:30 PM at Pen Argyl Borough Hall (Lookout Fire Hall).

I'm at PSU with my son today, but hope to make it back in time to watch this show.

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Tuesday, October 14, 2008

Sam Bennett: Let's Not Let Facts Get in the Way


Above you will see Congressional candidate Sam Bennett's remarks concerning two local banks. You'll see them, but you won't hear them because she was completely untruthful. It's one thing to be dishonest about LV Congressman Charlie Dent. It's quite another to spread irresponsible stories about two local financial institutions.

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Sam Bennett: Disclaimer From Her Own Debate


Above you will see the disclaimer that Lehigh Valley Congressional candidate Siobhan "Sam" Bennett was forced to request after Friday's debate with Charlie Dent. According to her campaign manager, Josh Levin, Bennett "misspoke" concerning the status of two local banks.

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BLEEP! Bennett's Fact Free Debate

If you tuned into last night's televised debate between LV Congressman Charlie Dent and challenger Sam Bennett on Business Matters, you saw something that has never happened in local politics before. Amazingly, Channel 69 had to insert a disclaimer before the show ever aired. The station even had to blur her lips and blank her audio.

BLEEP!

Here's what happened. In her opening remarks, Bennett actually claimed that Dent had somehow caused the failure of two local banks. That's pretty serious if there is even an ounce of truth to it. There isn't. No local bank has failed, but 250 local business leaders sat with their mouths open as Bennett actually repeated her charge.

BLEEP!

At a time when we are all jittery and there is a crisis of confidence in our financial institutions, Bennett's accusation was not just baseless, but totally irresponsible.

She is pouring gasoline on a raging fire in a desperate and pitiful attempt to grab votes.

Sadly, her modus operandi in this campaign is a web of deceit. Rather than presenting a reasonable, liberal alternative to Charlie Dent, Bennett has littered this campaign with fabrication after fabrication. She has claimed, falsely, that Dent has suddenly become rich in Congress while refusing to reveal her own financial affairs. She blamed Dent, falsely, for Mack Truck's sudden decision to relocate in North Carolina. She accused Charlie of refusing to debate her when she herself failed to appear at two separate forums. She maintains that Dent opposed a minimum wage increase even though he actually voted for three bills and is one of thirty Congressmen who insisted that Congress remain in session until that was accomplished. According to her, Charlie opposes veterans' benefits. That should be news to the VFW, which just endorsed him.

BLEEP!

As if this barrage of lies is not enough, Bennett compounded things last night by constantly interrupting Dent with "That's not true." Over and over, as Congressman Dent tried to speak, she continued talking. She even had to stop the debate to retrieve a shoe that somehow fell off her foot - a wardrobe malfunction. I suppose that could have been worse.

BLEEP!

Whatever credibility Bennett has left as a candidate was destroyed last night. It certainly makes you wonder what value she places in honesty.

Maybe her fingers are crossed.

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Northampton County's Lean 2009 Budget

When Lehigh County Exec Don Cunningham released his 2009 budget, he gave a flowery address to the Greater LV Chamber of Commerce. In contrast, Northampton County Executive John Stoffa's budget message is, like him, much more laconic. Just the facts. The county nursing home, Gracedale, is killing us. Property tax revenue is stagnant. The proposed $330 million budget is 10% lower than the last one.

On behalf of the Administration, we are pleased to submit a no-tax increase budget for fiscal year 2009. We have done well to keep costs down: the millage rate will remain at 10.8 mills. A no tax increase budget is proposed despite the following notables:

* Property tax revenue is stagnant due primarily to the decline in the housing market.

* The one-half mill of tax approved in the budget for 2007 remains committed to "Open Space."

* The investment portfolio, cash balances and interest earned are all down due to the economy.

* There is a $25 million decline in estimated revenue and corresponding expenditures due to the elimination of the 2008 General Obligation Bond issue ($20 million) and the line of credit ($5 million) in 2009.

* The Administration is proposing that there be no increase in positions for 2009 (the Courts have requested three (3) new positions).

* The largest increase, $6 million, was in the personnel costs category. This increase was primarily the result of new labor contracts that provided wage increases.

* There is an increase of $487,000 for current and future retiree health care.

* Actuarially determined contributions to the retirement fund increased from $2.4 million to $5.1 million.

* Heating and gasoline costs, mileage reimbursement, and postage have all significantly increased.


* The County contribution to Gracedale is now at $6.9 million up from the original amount of $381,000 in 2008.


* An additional $585,000 in county property tax is earmarked for Children, Youth and Families - an alarmingly expensive trend as the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania continually fails to properly fund Department of Human Services programs.

* The additional $500,000 earmarked for the Area Agency on Aging in the 2008 budget continues for 2009.

* Of the $82 million in property taxes, $52 million (63%) is earmarked for the Courts and court related activities.

* The Administration has committed $75,000 for a feasibility study to explore the possibility of extending rail service from New Jersey into the Lehigh Valley.

* Funding for a regional crime data center is not included in the proposed budget, but the Administration would support a budget amendment to provide $500,000 when gaming revenue becomes available.

* The need for property tax reassessment goes unanswered as the common level ratio is now at 27% rather than the 50% pre-determined ratio.

In summation, the proposed 2009 budget is $330 million, 10.3% lower than last year. The tax rate will remain the same for the second consecutive year.

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The Wall Street Meltdown, As Explained to an Idiot (Me!)

Despite yesterday's 936 point Wall Street rally, many of us remain deeply worried about our economy. Some of us believe the $700 bailout is the only thing standing between us and another Great Depression. Others, like a blogger named Ryan, condemn Congressman Charlie Dent for finally agreeing to an infusion of public money. "I am seriously considering voting for a "write-in" rather than yourself. Sam Bennet is an idiot but you have stabbed me in the back... what really can I do here? Please contact me and tell me I still have some reason to vote for you."

This American Life, hosted by Ira Glass, is one of my favorite radio programs. But it's the last place I'd look for an explanation of our current financial crisis. But Lehigh County Commissioner Dean Browning, who himself is something of a financial maven, has recommended the program because it explains high finance in terms I can understand. We're all aware that there's simply too much debt. We're all aware that subprime lending and a runaway housing market helped create this mess. But few of us, myself included, know a damn thing about the commercial paper market or credit default swaps. Yet those seemingly obscure concepts have played a major role in our meltdown. Here's a summary of this very interesting program.

Commercial Paper Market

This commercial paper market are business IOUs, short-term loans, valued at hundreds of billions of dollars every day. A major business might need $50 million today that it can pay back tomorrow. It's relatively boring business.

It stopped being boring when the most liquid market in the world suddenly froze up.

How did this happen?

That's because of money market mutual funds, which are like savings accounts, traditionally one of the safest places to store money. Money market managers are the folks who often make these short-term corporate loans. Money market managers always seek a stable $1.00 net asset value (NAV): they aim never to lose money. If a fund's NAV drops below $1.00, one says that the fund "broke the buck". For the first time ever, one of the biggest and oldest funds, The Reserve Fund, "broke the buck." Its share dropped from $1.00 to 97 cents. It actually lost depositors' money.

How did this happen?

The Reserve Fund did so with when it gave Lehman Brothers a short-term loan in exchange for commercial paper. Lehman suddenly went bankrupt. All the money lent was gone, and The Reserve Fund was in trouble. Then another mutual fund broke the buck. Money market managers freaked out, and refused to lend any more money, preferring instead to invest their money in the U.S. government. As the panic spreads, no one will lend any money at all, which pretty much destroys capitalism.

Because businesses can't get money, they have to cancel or delay plans. McDonalds, for example, had to delay the installation of latte machines. General Electric, the second largest US company, saw its stock prices fall because it was unable to borrow the money needed to function.

There's another financial product making our financial crisis even worse.

Credit Default Swaps

Credit default swaps, called "financial weapons of mass destruction" by Warren Buffet, classically apply to bond owners who want to transfer the risk of default to someone else. You enter into an agreement paying a third party a percentage every year, and he agrees to pay you if the bond defaults.

What happened is that people who don't even hold the bonds began basically to bet on them. It's like buying insurance for a house you don't own. There are $5 trillion in bonds, but $60 trillion in credit default swap protection worldwide. AIG had to be rescued because it had promised over $400 billion to people holding credit swap default agreements with them, $400 billion it did not have.

The same groups often both buy and sell credit default swap agreements, and there is no way of knowing who in that chain has and does not have the money to pay in the event of a default. After Lehman Brothers, it became apparent that many guarantors simply lacked the capital to pay. Default credit swaps, unlike options and other financial arrangements, are unregulated.

Would it have helped to have swap cops?

That idea was first rejected in 1998, during the Clinton administration, because these products are exchanged by sophisticated financial institutions. Government would just get in the way. In 2000, Congress actually decided (95 to 0) against regulating credit default swap agreements, right around Christmas.

It was a bipartisan failure.

Will the bailout help?

It is a severe and scary crisis, but spending $700 billion will help. Under the Paulson plan, we are about to become the proud owners of a big load of bullshit burgers, i.e. toxic assets. (I give you $1,000, but take all the crap out of your garage). A clear majority of economists prefer a stock injection plan. (I still give you $1,000, but now I own part of your house, and I can evict you if you have not measured up). We still give the bank money, but become a part owner. Conservative Republicans and banks themselves really hate this idea.

Under the bill that passed, the stock injection plan is a possibility.

The majority of economists believe this plan is probably the best we can get, and we have to do something sooner than later.

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Monday, October 13, 2008

Dent-Bennett Debate Airs on Channel 69 Tonight

Tony Iannelli's Business Matters, which airs Monday nights at 7:30 PM on Channel 69, will be featuring the LV Congressional race for the next two weeks. Congressman Charlie Dent and challenger Sam Bennett go toe to toe. After the show airs, you can watch the debate online and even cast a vote for the debate winner.

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Former LV Canvasser Claims ACORN & CWA Have Quotas

On Saturday, I told you that I told you state Republicans are getting a little nutty over ACORN. They seek a statewide investigation into voter fraud even though this grass roots organizer ended its registration efforts last May, at least in the Lehigh Valley.

Then I heard from a fellow, a left-leaning commenter who would rather stay below the radar. He spent a few days working for Allentown's Clean Water Action, an organization that by its own admission runs "muscular and effective grassroots campaigns to defeat anti-environment candidates, and support candidates who are committed to protecting our waters, our health, and our future."

Here's what he tells me. Remember, this is just one person's perspective.
We had a kid work one day with us who use to work for ACORN. Apparently ACORN in Allentown would pull people off the street and ask, 'Would you like to make $10 a hour?' Needless to say, this is not the most crafty way to get good canvassers. A ad in the Treasure Hunt would be better. Many ACORN canvassers/community organizers, may very well be poorly educated and desperate to make quotas.

I was cut loose from Clean Water Action after three days for not meeting fundraising quotas. Had I maybe made up names, I could have stayed. All these non-profits that go door to door have crazy quotas. These groups are rather shady and are definitely pro-Democrat.

Clean Water Action will be hired (I sat in the meeting my last day) by a still unknown but Democratic campaign to do the GOTV. CWA is a non-profit. This sounds like a for profit venture. They have really been stumping for Bennett and may most likely do her GOTV.
Clean Water has a PAC that is permitted to engage in political activity. My concern is that groups like Clean Water and ACORN are sloppy when they canvass. I don't buy the theory that there is some deep, dark conspiracy to steal the election. I do believe, however, that paying people to canvass for registrations, should probably be illegal.

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Charlie Dent Endorsed by VFW

Lehigh Valley Congressman Charlie Dent received an important endorsement on Friday. The Veterans of Foreign Wars (VFW) political arm has endorsed his re-election campaign.

Larry Rivers, Director of the VFW Political Action Committee, stated that the "endorsement is based on [Charlie's] strong support for veterans, national security/defense, and military personnel issues.”

Rivers also notes that the “VFW-PAC endorses only those candidates for federal office who support our nations’ veterans and stand in support of a strong national defense.”

Naturally, Charlie was proud. “This endorsement means a great deal to me. I’ve worked to make sure that our veterans and our fellow citizens now serving in the Armed Forces receive the support and respect they so greatly deserve.”

At the same time that this endorsement was issued, Dent also learned that the Iraq and Afghanistan Veterans of America (IAVA) has given him a grade of “A” on their 2008 Congressional Report Card.

The IAVA graded Congress on issues like veterans health care, expanding the G.I. Bill and providing housing opportunities for veterans.

Previously, in both televised ads, news releases and during a debate at the Jewish Community Center and in televised ads, congressional candidate Siobhan "Sam" Bennett has insisted that Dent refuses to support veternas. "[Charlie] votes against mandatory rest periods for veterans. When those veterans come home, he votes against health care and job training for those same veterans.”

Apparently, veterans disagree.

Representative Dent’s campaign manager, Shawn Millan, noted that the VFW endorsement and the “A” rating from the IAVA shows that charges made by Siobhan “Sam” Bennett regarding Charlie’s voting record on veterans’ issues are false.

“Once again a third party source, with far greater credibility than Bennett could ever hope to muster, has stepped forward to prove that the allegations she makes are reckless, off-the-mark, and not to be trusted,” said Millan.

“In other words, par for the course for her,” he added.

Ordinarily, I'd include a reaction from the Bennett camp. But after I criticized their mean-spirited attack at Rudy Giuliani last week, they've decided to cut me off.

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Sunday, October 12, 2008

Going Into Final Game, Bethlehem Steelers Undefeated


Running back Dat Lambert (#28) of the Bethlehem Steelers (90 lb. or less), breaks loose and scampers off for a score in a close game this weekend against Allentown's Alton Park. The Steelers are undefeated (7-0) with one game remaining next Saturday against the south side's Bethlehem Saints. All of these teams are part of the 17-team Suburban Youth Football League (SYFL), whose goal is "teaching area youth the basic fundamentals of football, discipline and good sportsmanship."
Photo Credit: Michelle Dimmitt, mother of Abraham Dimmitt (#26). (She missed her calling).

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Saturday, October 11, 2008

Pa. Congressional Republicans Get Nutty over ACORN

ACORN, as most of you probably know, is "the nation’s largest grassroots community organization of low- and moderate-income people with over 400,000 member families organized into more than 1,200 neighborhood chapters in 110 cities across the country." It's Project Vote has added 1.3 million voters to the rolls, including 153,000 here in Pennsylvania.

Lehigh Valley Congressman Charlie Dent, however, is concerned that ACORN is engaging in "illegal political activity, including voter fraud." So he wants the state Attorney General to go after the ACORNs with his nutcracker. He's joined by Jim Gerlach, Phil English, Tim Murphy, John Peterson, Joe Pitts, Todd Platts, and Bill Shuster, all of whom just happen to be Republicans. Not a single Democratic House member has joined this request.

Hmmm.

Are these Republican Congressman really worried about voter fraud or are they instead concerned that the 153,000 new voters in Pennsylvania, mostly low-income and minority, are registered as Democrats? One thing is clear. Pennsylvania's Republican Congressman are just part of a larger GOP choir, which includes a “fact sheet” from the Republican National Committee and a McCain web ad.

Pennsylvania's Congressional Republicans claim there are three reasons why Corbett needs to become a nutcracker with ACORN.

Reason 1: In July 2008, Dauphin County election officials investigated over 100 suspicious applications submitted by ACORN. In July, a former ACORN worker was questioned by a Dauphin County detective after turning in between 100 and 150 questionable registration forms. He was finally arrested on Saturday, and is accused of submitting phonies to justify his paycheck. This is one person, not some deep conspiracy.

Reason 2: In June 2007, a Berks County woman employed by ACORN was arrested for alleged voter fraud, including falsifying registrations and registering dead people. Wendy Godfrey was charged with dozens of counts of repeat registrations, false registrations and deceased registrants. But here's the kicker. She never actually worked for ACORN. According to a Berks County official who asked to remain anonymous, she and a boyfriend pleaded guilty to some form of voter registration fraud, and the case is closed. That's two people, not a deep conspiracy.

Reason 3: In September 2006, nearly 100 fraudulent voter registration applications were filed in Delaware County, prompting the District Attorney’s Office to issue an identity theft alert. All 100 applications were filled out by four individuals working for ACORN. I don't know about two years ago, but have no reason to doubt the claim. I do know the Delaware County DA is currently investigating 290 questionable registrations.

Under Pennsylvania law, it is illegal to pay canvassers by the card. But it's apparent some poorly trained canvassers are just filling in some blank cards to get a quick buck. It scares the hell out of Republicans, but it's not really voter fraud. It's voter registration fraud, and ACORN is technically one of the victims. Canvassers are paid . . . well, acorns, and they tend to do sloppy work. As blogger Rick Hasen notes at Huffington Post, "ACORN needs to find a different business model for registering voters, even if it means that fewer voters will be registered and fewer low income people employed in the voter registration business."

But don't kid yourself. The entire Dallas Cowboys may be registered in thirteen different states, but they won't be voting.

No statewide investigation is necessary.
Update: Tne Morning Call reports today that ACORN ended its voter registration efforts in the Lehigh Valley at the end of May, and that as many as 20 out of 100 registrations were invalid in Lehigh County. The American Spectator reports that retired Justice Sandra Newman is concerned November's election will be fair. I don't think this concern is justified. It is one thing to submit a bogus form. It is quite another to engage in actual voter fraud. No one has made that connection.

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Friday, October 10, 2008

Wanted: Northampton County Solicitor

Last week, Lamont McClure was the sole NO vote to a Ron Angle resolution urging the quick confirmation of Leonard Zito's appointment to the Northampton County Court of Common Pleas. Despite McClure's refusal to endorse, the state senate confirmed Zito.

Guess Lamont is not quite so powerful as he thinks.

This morning, Attorney Zito will be anointed with oil and handed his judicial sceptre. A bright and capable lawyer, this Bangor advocate be an excellent addition to the bench. But now that Lenny is floating on black robes, he can no longer serve as Northampton County Council Solicitor. Who will replace him?

That's where McClure's NO vote is very telling. You see, he wanted his wife, an assistant DA who is terrified of a courtroom, to be sitting on that bench this morning. In fact, McClure wanted to be rid of Zito completely. Lenny had this annoying habit of following the law instead of telling McClure exactly what he wanted to hear.

Now, Lamont finally has his chance to get a YES man. He, Joe Long and Charles Dertinger are lobbying other council members to appoint the son of James G. Petrucci, a New Jersey attorney and mega developer, to the vacancy. If that's unacceptable, they'll settle for Don Russo, a Bethlehem lawyer who at one time hosted a Democratic talk radio show featuring people like Joe Long, Charles Dertinger and Lamont McClure as guests.

Who Northampton County Council selects as its next lawyer will speak volumes about who is in control of that dysfunctional body.

I know one thing. You won't see any "low hanging fruit." No gay attorney for Charles Dertinger.
Mea Culpa: I claimed the son of developer James G. Petrucci is being touted for the post. It's actually Michael Perrucci, Esquire, not Jim Petrucci. Both have offices in NJ and are sometimes confused because both are in development.

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Charles Dertinger's Homophobic Slam

I recorded the Jerry Springer show that erupted during last week's Northampton County Council meeting, and presented it to you earlier this week. The Morning Call's Bill White loves it when government officials start mud wrestling, and actually wrote a column about this great debate, which he aptly calls "Your Mother Wears Army Boots."

Believe it or not, Northampton County Council member Charles Dertinger, who actually ran for Congress against Charlie Dent just two years ago, managed to sink even lower last Thursday. Most of us, who were still recovering from the childish antics that had gone on earlier, completely missed it. The tape recorder, however, caught it all.

Passenger rail activist Paul Marin had just finished his presentation, describing the rail study as a "low hanging fruit" that we should grab now. Because Angle had expressed reservations, Dertinger decided this was a great idea.

Dertinger: "Are you saying Charlie [Dent] couldn't . . . couldn't pull it off?"

Angle: "If only we had you there, Charlie, you could do it. You and Sam. You and Sam [Bennett]."

Dertinger: "Mr. Angle, please, I have the floor. Um, speaking of low hanging fruit."

In the middle of a public hearing, attended by numerous passenger rail proponents, Council member Charles Dertinger casually tossed a homophobic slur at Angle. In an attempt to disparage Angle, Dertinger actually diminishes himself and simultaneously sends a message of intolerance to the gay community.

If you'd like to hear this brief audio yourself, click here. Look for the 64Kbps M3U (Lo-Fi) at the left sidebar and you can stream the audio.

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Thursday, October 09, 2008

McCain Support at Stabler Demonized


Earlier today, I told you about the exchanges between McCain supporters and deriders outside Stabler arena. Exchanges of vitriol, delivered with smiles, were very much two-sided.

Mike Morrill, Dear Leader at Keystone Progress, was there, too. He's now circulating an email, with a link to a very misleading video. He includes some of the more goofy statements made by McCain supporters with no mention of the equally ridiculous taunts coming from the other side.

It is an intellectually dishonest portrayal of the exchanges. The obvious reason is to demonize McCain support.

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Lehigh's McCain-Palin Rally - The View From Outside


Arriving early at Lehigh's Stabler Arena on Tuesday, I thought I'd have no problem parking and getting in line for the show. I thought wrong.

You see, most of these folks are Republicans. When they're told to be somewhere at 10 AM, they show up at 9 AM. Lots of suits and ties and good-looking women, too. Everyone was lining up along the sidewalk to nowhere, which wound all over the place. Nobody was trying to cut in front of anyone. Nobody even ducked behind a bush to take a whizz.

I was looking for the protesters, so I popped off the yellow brick road and began looking until I found a small group of about 18 "protesters" in a parking lot located just a few yards from where Republicans were queued up.

Lucky for me, this parking lot was the place set aside for VIPs like those MSM broadcast journalists. Every now and then, some really hot-looking babe would saunter by, microphone in hand, looking more like a high class hooker than a reporter. A few gave me bedroom eyes, but I was a blogger on a mission. I was there for the friendly exchanges between McCain supporters and detractors, damn it!

"I want Sarah to wink at me."

Republicans: "You got a really big crowd."

Protesters: "Our friends are all at work cuz' they have to be."

Republicans: "You're takers!"

"Baby killers."

Protesters: [to kids in Catholic school uniforms]: "Why aren't you in school?"

Republicans: "Remember September 11."

Undetermined: "Penn State sucks!" [Everybody laughs].

Republicans: "Why don't you go register some dead people?"

Protesters: "Where do you work, Wall Street?"

Republicans: "USA, USA, USA."

Protesters: "USA, USA, USA."

Cop: "Finally, they agree on something."

Protesters: "Equal pay for women."

Republicans: "Equal rights for Hillary."

"Is Nader running again? Didn't know he was still alive."

Protesters: "Didn't know John McCain was, either."

Republicans: "Bill Ayers for Secretary of Defense."

Protesters: "Read the Book of Luke. Jesus was a commie."

Republicans: "50 million babies have been killed by abortions."

Protesters: "How many babies have died in Iraq?"'

Republicans: "You can do this because my son is protecting us in Afghanistan."

And so on.

Both sides delivered all these taunts and jeers with smiles. Every now and then, one group would shout to the other, "We love you, though." I suspect there are many more similarities than differences in these two groups.

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Lehigh's McCain-Palin Rally - The View From Inside


Sure, Lehigh County GOP chair Bill Platt went too far when he stressed, inside Stabler Arena, that our next Prez could be Barack Hussein Obama. The McCain camp itself condemned this "inappropriate rhetoric." But hey, it was a pep rally, not some nuanced policy discussion. Let's face it, the McCain-Palin bus drove right into the frickin' arena, and I think Palin was driving.

Cindy McCain, and not Sarah Palin, played pitbull. "The day that Senator Obama decided to cast a vote to not fund my son when he was serving sent a cold chill through my body."

Blogger's Note: Photo and report from inside provided by Ellen Solarek.

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MSM Looks For Hug at McCain-Palin Rally

I've finally met the evil MSM.

He was at yesterday's McCain-Palin rally, walking around with a sign saying, "I need a hug." He got one, too, from none other than the John McCain look-alike posing with the protesters.

The MSM is actually the Washington Post's Dana Milbank, who tells me he's putting together some sort of video for Rough Sketch.

Update: The video is up, and it's hilarious!

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Wednesday, October 08, 2008

McCain-Pally Rally Very Crowded

7,000.

That was one security attendant's estimate of the number of people present for today's McCain-Palin rally at Lehigh's Stabler Arena. It was 10 AM.

When I left at noon, the estimate was more like 17,000 for a rally in a building that only holds about 7,000.

I positioned myself among the largest group of protesters, about 18 Obama and Nader supporters, who had positioned themselves right across what they called the "sidewalk to nowhere," along with McCain supporters walked on their way into the building.

I'll tell you about those interesting exchanges tomorrow.

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Jerry Springer for Northampton County Council?

Thursday night's Northampton County Council was more like a Jerry Springer show than a meeting of the Lehigh Valley's second largest government. Earlier in the evening, I had criticized Council's lynching of a Stoffa cabinet member. When he finally had a chance, Council member Charles Dertinger responded with his usual personal attacks. He essentially called me a liar who "crawls home" to my computer. Northampton County Bulldog Ron Angle questioned Dertinger's insults, and he responded by blasting Angle, too. The result was fireworks in which AFSCME union members, Ron and Dertinger continually yelled at each other.

Although the meeting itself lasted three hours, this Jerry Springer show was only about five minutes, and I am bringing it to you. They've spent $650,000 for "improvements" to their throne room, but those don't include the ability to videotape or record a meeting.

So I've done it. If you want to see just how petty Charles Dertinger can be, you can listen to the clip below. If you want to hear the hoots and hollers of the green T-shirted lynch mob from AFSCME, then this audio is for you. Unfortunately, I don't have a video clip of the damage done to Angle's barn that evening.

Note: If you have an old dial up modem, click here, look for the 64Kbps M3U (Lo-Fi) at the left sidebar and you can stream the audio.

Update: I removed the audio player because it does not work, but you can hear the five minute circus by clicking on the link in the note above.

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Is Bennett's Nonprofit, POM, Playing Politics?

Sam Bennett, the Lehigh Valley's Democratic candidate for Congress, is executive director at Properties of Merit, a publicly-funded nonprofit whose annual budget is somewhere near $350,000. Most of us believe she simply conned Governor Rendell into a nice $100,000 grant so that she could run for Congress full-time without worrying about a regular job.

Amazingly, her community "annual awards receptions" are held right before the elections. Do you really think that's a coincidence? These events are designed to ensure "maximum attendance at the reception." They're free, open to the public, and even have refreshments donated by area merchants. Isn't it wonderful to see a tax exempt non-profit used to help elect Sam Bennett to Congress?

Allentown's Program was last night. Michael Fegley, who just happens to be a state Democratic committeeman, acted as Master of Ceremonies. Oh yeah, Lehigh County Exec Don Cunningham and Allentown Mayor Ed Pawlowski were there, too. Bennett handed out the Founder's Choice award. Additional receptions are being planned in Coplay (Oct 11th) and Bethlehem (Oct 23rd).

Charlie Dent was invited to the program, knowing he would decline.

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McCain Speaks Softly

. . . and carries a big stick. That's the image John McCain conveyed at tonight's "town hall" debate at Belmont University in Tennessee. When he spoke about the dangers of blustering about Pakistan (pronounced Pokistan in two debates by Obama), the Republican Senator clearly made the most sense. But when Obama stressed the importance of speaking to enemies like Iran, he seemed to win the TR competition.

Unlike the first debate, this one was interesting. Lurking in the background is a global economic crisis about which neither candidate, despite claims to the contrary, had a clue until just a few short weeks ago. Neither candidate really addressed the sacrifices we will certainly face in the months to come.

The wrinkly old white guy was the only person who actually had a new idea - he wants the Treasury Department to buy bad mortgages and allow homeowners to renegotiate.

McCain and Obama, who clearly have no love for each other, remained civil. They'll both be blasting each other tomorrow.

Don't ask me who won.

Moderator Tom Brokaw asked great questions, but did a terrible job controlling both candidates. If anyone lost, I'd say it was him.

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Tuesday, October 07, 2008

McCain-Palin to Get Warm Welcome From LV Progressives on Wednesday

When John McCain and Sarah Palin visit Lehigh University's Stabler Arena on Wednesday, they'll certainly be getting a warm welcome from the right. They'll be getting it from the left, too.

Mike Morrill, Dear Leader at Keystone Progress, has been asking "progressives" everywhere to be there. He even has a theme for everyone.

BUSH = McCain, WE CAN'T AFFORD MORE OF THE SAME.

He wants people to make signs and banners using that theme. I sure hope the LV's one man protest machine, Bernie Berg, is there. Usually festooned in Pirates or Steelers gear, this ex-priest has made a career of demonstrating against Dent and Toomey. In fact, about 100 years ago, he ran for Congress himself, pulling down about 23 votes.

His theme? "Berg - the Lesser Evil."

I disagree with Bernie, but people like him make democracy fun.

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Some New Voices in the Blogosphere

Here in Blogistan, everyone has a voice. If you hate what I say, you can always start your own blog and express your views. Here are three new blogs and one monthly e-publication.

1. LV Trains. This is a single-issue blog whose sole purpose is to promote passenger rail in the Lehigh Valley. After Paul Marin's rail presentation to Northampton County County, council member Ron Angle made this argument:
"I find it so ironic that for the past twenty years, I've heard all the people who've moved here from New York City tell me the reason they moved here was to get away from New York City and they liked it out here in the country. Now, twenty years later, they want us to give them everything they had in the city, but they want their taxes to stay the same here in the country. If you like the city life, then the answer is to live in the city."
2. CasablancaPA. This is an anonymous slam blog against AG Tom Corbett, obviously the work of a Democratic House staffer in the land of midnight payraises. It accuses Corbett of everything, from the financial meltdown on Wall Street to that nasty storm we had last week.

3. J. Spike Rogan is back, and no more Mr. Nice Guy. This Easton's blogger's latest effort has something to do with election fraud in the Poconos. He also uploaded a pic of some poor moose that pissed off Sarah Palin for some reason.

4. LV Flavor. An Alfosno Todd publication about life in downtown Allentown. This month's edition includes an essay by a young lady about the "new normal" in relationships, i.e. hooking up.
"Most of the guys that you meet out or online or through work are just looking for a no-strings, casual, long-term bed buddy. . . . It's the new normal to get 100 text messages from a guy a day, but never actually talk to him on the phone. Let's face it, most guys, unless they're drunk or making a booty call, don't like talking on the phone. I actually have a guy friend who, every time he answers his phone or says "bye" and hangs up, sounds like he's in serious pain."

Holy cannoli! Things sure got easier.

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Monday, October 06, 2008

Obama Running for President, not Fuhrer


Barack Obama, eloquent and inspirational, has galvanized America's youth. That's a good thing. But I hope these kids remember he's running for President, not Fuhrer.

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Bennett Camp Snarks Giuliani's 9/11 Leadership

2,603 lives were lost at the Twin Towers of the World Trade Center on 9/11. Some lived here in the Lehigh Valley.

Just two blocks away from the South Tower, NY Mayor Rudy Giuliani had just lost some close friends. Yet he walked two miles until he could find a phone that worked and called the media to urge calm. In the days that followed, he was an oasis of trust in a desert of uncertainty. On 9/12, there was garbage pickup. On 9/13, city paychecks were issued. In a little over a week, the stock market was back in action.

He reassured us. He also consoled us, attending as many as five funerals in a single day.

This is the man who came to the LV on Friday to urge support for Charlie Dent and John McCain. While he was here, talking about the importance of this area and Pennsylvania, the Bennett campaign issued a mean-spirited news release that slams Giuliani's 9/11 leadership and the significance of that sad day.

ALLENTOWN – Months after Republican incumbent Charles Dent backed one of the most embarrassing campaigns in Presidential primary history, he has called on former Mayor Rudy Giuliani to bring his political acumen to the 15th District.

“While Republican Congressman Dent is in Washington playing political catch up on a rescue plan, Giuliani’s law firm is advising corporate clients on how to profit from it,” says Gary Ritterstein, Bennett Communications Director. “It’s pretty telling that the biggest draw that Dent could get is a former Republican candidate that couldn’t even win one primary in all 50 states. The Lehigh Valley voters want more than just ‘a noun, a verb, and 9-11.’”

During the 2008 Republican Convention, the only concern Giuliani mentioned about Democrats was that they didn’t mention the September 11th attacks enough. Since that point, his law firm, Bracewell & Giuliani LLP, formed a corporate task force to help “financial institutions, private investment funds, and institutional investors” take advantage of new legislation.


Ritterstein must not know this, but 9/11 was a terrible day here in the Lehigh Valley. Many of us were directly affected. The Bennett camp's needless snark at this tragedy is in very poor taste. I complained, but Ritterstein refuses to speak to me on the record.

Actually, I'm not looking for a comment from him. I'm looking for one from Sam Bennett, condemning his divisive remarks.

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Would You Cut Any of These Lehigh County Grants?

There's very little fat in Lehigh County Exec Don Cunningham's 2009 budget. Lehigh County Commissioners considered, but decided against, slashing some of the $200,000 in what are called "Quality of Life" grants. Over the weekend, Commissioner Dean Browning listed them in one of the comments.

I've decided to list them all below, with one question - would you eliminate any of this funding if you were King?

1. Allentown Art Museum $48,563.00 Arts education designed to enrich lives by engaging, informing and inspiring people through collecting, preserving, studying, exhibiting and interpreting works of visual art.

2. Allentown Symphony Association $9,744.00 Provide funding to allow local & Non Profits to use Symphony Hall at a reduced rate.

3. America on Wheels $5,000.00 To provide funding to lower the student educational programs and to preserve the historical, social and cultural impact of over-the-road transportation systems.

4. American Federtion of Musicians Local 45 $6,218.00 To provide funding for approx. 80 concerts to be performed by 6 Lehigh County Concert Bands.

5. ArtsQuest (Musikfest) $6,196.00 Musikfest- Funding for Banana Island, which focuses on a myriad of art and entertainment for children.

6. Bach Choir of Bethlehem $5,513.00 Promote and encourage appreciation of the aesthetic and spiritual value of Bach's music through education and performance. Financial support for the 102 annual Bach Festival May 1-2 & 7-9,2009.

7. Baum School of Art $9,207.00 Support of the Baum School's Scholoarship and Financial Assistance Programs.

8. Burnside Plantation $3,564.00 Support the Educational Programs and Activities at Burnside Plantation.

9. Civic Theatre of Allentown $6,395.00 Operational support to Civic Theatre, an organization providing quality, affordable live theatre/music/films through arts education.

10. Community Bike Works $1,369.00 Sponsorship of 4 children for the 3 month Earn a Bike Program.

11. Community Music School of the Lehigh Valley $4,223.00 Financial Scholarship Assistance and Outreach Programs, to introduce youngsters to music and instruction to reorganize sr. population and music.

12. DaVinci Discovery Center of Science & Tech. $5,250.00 Support part of the salary and expenses of a new staff position dedicated to expanding public programs on energy conservation, sustainability & the environment.

13. Lehigh County Agricultural Society $6,197.00 Promotion of the Allentown Fair's Agricultural Educational Program. Improvement & advancement of Agriculture, Horticulture, Livestock, domestic/mechanical arts and entertainment to the county.

14. Lehigh County Historical Society $5,000.00 Funding for Historical Programs. Allentown Band Concert, Coplay Days, Ghosts of the Museum & History Expo.

15. Lehigh Valley Arts Council $3,682.00 Funding for publications and cooperative arts marketing initiatives.

16. Liberty Bell Shrine Museum $5,000.00 Annual support of Pip the Mouse program.

17. Mayfair $20,000.00 Sponsorship of MayFair 2009, which is scheduled for May 21-25, 2009.

18. Minsi Trails Council/Boy Scouts of America $5,513.00 Operational support of the Learning for Life Program supporting Elementary Students in urban areas.

19. Muhlenberg Summer Music Theatre $7,323.00 Sponsorship of Muhlenberg's Summer Music Theatre.

20. PA Shakespeare Festival at DeSales University $10,100.00 Sponsorship of the Pennsylvania's Shakespeare Festival at DeSales.

21. Pennsylvania Sinfonia Orchestra $6,496.00 General programs and operational budget of 4 summer concerts and 5 subscription series.

22. Police Athletic League $2,000.00 Funding for Camp Blue Line, a week summer program for 4th &5th grade students in Allentown.

23. Repertory Dance Theatre $5,000.00 "Programming cost associated with educational outreach programming "

24. Volunteer Center of Lehigh Valley $1,847.00 Program support of the Youth Program and the Youth Volunteer Connections desigend to mobilize the community to care for one another through volunteer networking.

25. WDIY (Lehigh Valley Community Broadcasters) $4,917.00 Operations support for the 2009 year for WDIY 8811 listeners support radio.

26. Whitehall Historical Preservation Society $2,000.00 Funding for restoration of the Peter Grim House. Provide planning, funding, management and general oversight for advancement & preservation of historical heritage in Whitehall

27. Wildlife Information Ctr (approx.) $5,110.00 Funding for public programming and interpretive signs, brochures and support for Environmental Educational Center.

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Saturday, October 04, 2008

John McCain and Sarah Palin Will Be at LU on Wednesday

Road to Victory Rally-Bethlehem, PA
Lehigh University
Stabler Hall
124 Goodman Drive
Bethlehem, PA 18015
Doors Open: 10:30am
Wednesday, October 8th

For free tickets, click here.

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Rudy Giuliani: How Pennsylvania Goes, So Goes the Nation

In a sign of the importance the Lehigh Valley plays to Republicans in this year's Presidential contest, an energetic Rudy Giuliani dropped in on campaign volunteers and a raucous crowd of several hundred Dent and McCain supporters late Friday afternoon. He first encouraged volunteers working a phone bank buried inside the Westgate Mall, and then stepped outside to greet his fans. After a brief speech, he hurled himself into them, signing autographs and shaking hands.

From there, he even met the press (and one blogger).

"Sarah Palin scored a big victory last night," he boasted, portraying McCain and Palin as reformers who try to straighten problems out. "I'm also here for Charlie Dent. He's one of the most effective members of Congress. Sometimes, when he's your Congressman, you don't realize how important and effective he is. He's one of the hardest working people in Congress. He's done a very good job for this District. He had to cast a very tough vote over the past couple of days. I think he came through for us."

Giuliani predicts that if John McCain wins in Pennsylvania, "he'll be the next president of the United States. . . . If you can swing this state, you get the necessary electoral votes to win." He explained that swinging Pennsylvania would mean that some other close states, like Ohio, are swinging as well.

"I think we all realize this is a battleground state."

Giuliani called Obama one of the least qualified persons to run for president in the last hundred years. "He's never run a city, never run a state, never run a business, never run a military unit."

"At a time like this, you've got to with someone who's been tested by crisis, and John McCain has been tester by crisis over and over again."

"We also need someone who can work in a bi-partisan way. John McCain, probably more than any other senator, has worked more with the other party. In fact, he's worked so often with Democrats that he sometimes gets criticized. John is known for that. We need someone who can work on both sides of the aisle and bring us together."

"Barack Obama, you have to respect him for his beliefs, but he has been a very partisan Democrat."

Given an opportunity to ask a question myself, I did.

"You're known as America's mayor who cleaned the thugs out of New York City. But they all came to Allentown. How are we going to get rid of them?"

Laughing, he told me he'd give me some recommendations, and whispered "passenger rail" in my ear.

In a news release, the Bennett camp belittles America's Mayor. “It’s pretty telling that the biggest draw that Dent could get is a former Republican candidate that couldn’t even win one primary in all 50 states. The Lehigh Valley voters want more than just ‘a noun, a verb, and 9-11.’”

Oh yeah, it also repeats Michael Moore's claim that Giuliani's law firm is trying to cash in on our Wall Street meltdown.

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Nazareth Hosts Quarters For Military Families on Sunday

They lay their lives on the line. Can you put a quarter on the line?

Tomorrow, between 1 and 3:30 PM, people will begin placing quarters along Nazareth's Main Street, starting at the Circle and going and going and going. The Blue Star Mothers and LV Military Affairs Council will use the money to buy things like phone cards for LV soldiers serving overseas.

If you can't make it, you can make a contribution to Quarters for Military Families, First Star Bank, 14 South Main Street, Nazareth, PA 18064.

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A Tale of Two Counties

Thursday night was a long night for both Northampton and Lehigh County governments. Northampton County Hangmen demonstrated their pettiness with name-calling and votes cast against the judicial nomination of a person the judges themselves have requested. Lehigh County Commissioners did their job.

According to Darryl Isherwood's well-written account, Lehigh County legislators spent 3 1/2 hours going over Don Cunningham's budget with a fine-tooth comb. Motion after motion scrutinized different funding requests, from Paul Marin's rail study to Cunningham's policing proposal.

From what I'm, even "Pip the Mouse" was called in to explain all those dinners with Minnie.

When all the dust had settled, a Republican-controlled Board of Commissioners ruled that Democrat Don Cunningham's budget was fiscally responsible. There's just not much room to make cuts. In fact, they even added $100,000 for the zoo.

It's weird. In Northampton County, one party controls all three branches of government. Yet it's a dysfunctional mess. In Lehigh County, where power is split, things run smoothly. The legislature and executive work together. No commissioner calls another commissioner names. Unions do not march in to demand the heads of county workers on their hit lists.

Last year, I attended about six Lehigh meetings and always left impressed by the class acts in control at that county, from Cunningham to its commisssioners. They may have different philosophies, but work well together.

What a difference!

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Friday, October 03, 2008

McClure Refuses to Support Zito's Nomination as Judge

At least night's Northampton County Council meeting, a resolution was introduced to urge the state senate to confirm the nomination of Leonard Zito as judge. Zito currently sits as the Hangmen's solicitor and previously served as a judge.

Amazingly, Lamont McClure refused to support this resolution. He's obviously miffed that Mr. Baseball, Baltimore lawyer Peter Angelos, failed to get the nomination for his own, much less qualified, wife.

Petty.

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Green Party’s Greta Browne Endorses Sam Bennett

Green Party member Greta Browne, who has occasionally run for Congress, has endorsed Democratic candidate Sam Bennett. In 2004, as a declared candidate, Browne dropped out on election eve, throwing her support to Democrat Joe Driscoll.

“I am so honored to have Greta’s support. Our district can’t afford another two years of Congressman Dent,” said Bennett. “With Greta’s help, we can bring change to the Lehigh Valley – an economic policy that helps middle and working class families, an energy policy that focuses on renewable energy, and an environmental policy that reverses the impact of global climate change."

Charlie Dent's campaign manager, Shawn Millan, notes this endorsement demonstrates that Bennett will embrace the "extreme side of every issue," even the need for a rational energy policy.

"Bennett’s energy policy in brief is this: no oil, no natural gas, no clean coal, no nuclear – no nothing. At least nothing that is currently practical."

No word yet from Ralp Nader.

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Northampton County Hangmen & Lynch Mob Angry: Was it Something I Said?

I'll let you in on a little secret. Although I attend lots of public meetings, I rarely speak. It's been well over a year since I opened my big mouth. I'm mostly a voyeur. But last night, I unloaded on the Northampton County Hangmen, and they reacted like little kids.

You see, two weeks ago, the Northampton County hangmen (council) teamed with a green T-shirted lynch mob (AFSCME) to string up Connie Sutton Falk, the county's human resources director. The whole thing was an ambush, designed to embarrass both a county employee as well as her boss, county executive John Stoffa.

I was upset. Still am.

With no notice or opportunity to be heard, the hangmen told a Stoffa cabinet member she should resign. We fought a revolutionary war to secure our right to due process of law. But the Northampton County hangmen, led by Lamont McClure and Charles Dertinger, trampled all over that basic constitutional protection.

I decided to tell the hangmen and their green T-shirted friends that their conduct was despicable.

Last night, there were actually two groups of green T-shirted lynch mobs. One was AFSCME, the same group that strung up Connie Sutton Falk. They were there to gloat. The other union was a bunch of steelworkers, out to screw around with Keystone Cement. It was standing room only, with at least 80 union members present. In addition to that, there was also a group of at least thirty rail supporters.

Knowing I was about to say some things that would be extremely unpopular with both the hangmen and lynch mobs, I told rail activist Paul Marin he should stay far away from me. He sat next to me anyway. The guy has guts.

The meeting started off with "courtesy of the floor," where schleps like me are given five minutes to complain about something. Last night, there were ninety minutes worth of talkers. These included some old lady who claimed Stoffa had stiffed her over $300, after which she walked off without her purse. (I think Angle stole it). Some union dude in short-shorts claimed there's some diabolical conspiracy involving the Saucon Valley Country Club and the FBI to steal land in Lower Saucon Township. I was waiting for black helicopters to come andd get him. No such luck.

I was just one of several wingnuts addressing the hangmen. I mostly repeated the criticisms I've already made here. As each of us droned on, Paul looked like he wanted to shoot himself. Union dudes were actually making and receiving cell phone calls, and the smell of booze wafted in the air, along with stale tobacco. But unlike the others, I really got to Hangman Dertinger, who got redder and redder as I spoke. I could also hear mumbling from the green T-shirted lynch mobs behind me. When I was done, I was extremely unpopular with two different unions.

Hangman Charles Dertinger, chomping at the bit to get back at me, finally got his chance later in the evening. But the Northampton County Bulldog, Ron Angle, had my back. What follows is a circus, demonstrating rather clearly that AFSCME really does think it is running the county and that Dertinger is one of their lackeys. Dertinger actually threatened Angle with violence. Some bald-headed union thug also started walking towardws the dais, shouting and attempting to bully Angle. I recorded every word, and here's a transcript.

Charles Dertinger: "As I sat here relatively patiently, after being accused of some pretty impressive things by our local blogger and character, although his accusation that I made were false against Miss Sutton, they were not only not false but he made no attempt whatsoever to say they were not false.

"I did indeed indicate that Miss Sutton-Falk was abrasive here, and on several occasions my degree being industrial labor relations, she had directed her comment to me, 'If you understood the law . . . ,' which I would find to be argumentative and abrasive. So I believe my comment stands and I stand by my comment.

"His characterization again, and this becomes altogether too commonplace for Mr. O'Hare. He comes to these meetings, he makes a collection of lying statements - I'm sorry, I don't have anything better - lying statements time and again, either here or when he crawls home to his computer.

"To say that things that are in fact - that we violated the ..."


Ron Angle: "Point of order. Do you think it's appropriate to say that he crawls home to his computer?"

Dertinger: "I have a problem with the hypocrisy that has been levelled here tonight. ...

Ann McHale: "We don't need any arguments tonight."

Dertinger: "Specifically, specifically, Listen, you [addressing Angle] don't have to talk from his lap. I'll deal with that."

Angle: "Talk from his lap? Who the hell do you think you are?"

Dertinger: "I ... I ... I'm looking at a man ... "

Angle: "Just who the hell do you think you are? You're obnoxious."

McHale: "Gentlemen, how about we take a five minute recess?"

Angle: "Five minute recess? I'm about to take a two hour walk and get out of town because, quite frankly, they insult everybody who comes in here any more."

Dertinger: "You sat here and lied to us. You ..."

Angle: "Everybody's a liar to you, Charles. The world's a liar. We're all incompetents. 'The World,' by Charles Dertinger. You made accusations a coupla' months ago. Take him into the back room and talk to him somebody."

McHale: "Council's going to . . . uh ... "

Angle: "Region 4 made a decision on you, Charlie. They throwed you out twice."

Dertinger: "Throwed me out?"

Angle: "They voted you out twice, Charlie, they're pretty sharp."

Dertinger: "Time and again, they voted you out as well, pal."

Angle: "Go back to New York."

Dertinger: "Keep walking."

Angle: "If you put the rail in, you can be the first on it back to New York."

Dertinger (now standing): "You wouldn't like to see how I would act without the press here."

Angle: "Get gone."

Dertinger: "You're an absolute coward."

Angle: "You're a pitiful individual."

Dertinger: "Coward."

Angle: "You insult a woman out there . . ."

[The green T-shirted lynch mob begins making cat calls and starts yelling at Ron Angle.]

Angle [to the lynch mob]: "Sit down and be quiet. You're a bunch of puppets out there. You and the union wants to run the county, that's good."

[Green T-shirted lynch mob continues yelling at Angle, and a bald-headed brawny union thug approaches the dais, yelling].

Angle [to the thug]: "You can have yourself removed. You don't run this county. The government runs this county, not the union. [to Dertinger]. He's your lap dog. Take him outside and talk to him."

[Bald-headed union thug]: "I'm here for the employees."

Angle: "You're here for the employees all right. You're here for the union dues. Who are you kidding?"

Angle: [to Dertinger] "Bernie's right. You drug them all out here to put a show on."

Dertinger: "You're a hypocrite and a liar." [Green T-shirted lynch mob begins to applaud].

Angle: "Connie Sutton Falk, don't you think she's a human being?"

Union thug: "She lives in New Jersey."

Angle: "She lives in new Jersey. Oh, that's the reason you insult her - she lives in New Jersey."

Dertinger: "The entire administration lives outside the county. Are you kidding me?"

Angle: "He brings the union out here to make a mockery out of government. The President [McHale] won't control those two [Dertinger and lynch mob] and that's why it's out of order. When he said that he [O'Hare] crawled home, she should have said that's out of order, right then and there. This could have ended. You know, taxpayers don't crawl home."

Dertinger: "I will suspend my remarks."

McHale: "We have Mr. Marin here to make a presentation that a number of individuals are here to see. I apologize to every one of you for the behavior [blah, blah, blah]"

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Thursday, October 02, 2008

LC Republicans: Cunningham Budget "Fiscally Irresponsible"

This is Lehigh County Commissioner Dean Browning's favorite time of the year. A finance maven, he loves to review budgets. In fact, when County Executive Don Cunningham released his budget for next year, I sat down for breakfast with Dean, hoping to pick up a few pointers and write a story. I took copious notes, but when it came time to write a story, I realized I never understood a damn word he said. I understood that the county is spending more money than it takes in, but little else.

I'm a Democrat.

Lehigh County Republicans, who get touchy about that sort of thing, have adopted a resolution that repeats the "fiscally irresponsible" mantra about a gazillion times. Tonight, when commissioners hold their final budget hearing at 6 PM, Cunningham is concerned commissioners will cut "millions of dollars" in the following areas:

* Quality of Life grants to more than 20 cultural arts and community organizations
* Farmland preservation
* Open space preservation
* Borough revitalization funding
* Community partnership grants for townships
* Community police matching grants
* Urban parks funding
* Brownfield/industrial land economic development
* Regional economic development funding
* Passenger rail study/mass transit funding

He has already notified nonprofits and other special interest groups they may want to attend tonight's meeting.

So what's going on? That's where Dean Browning enters the picture. I'll let him tell you himself in the next post.

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Why Dean Browning Believes Lehigh County Budget is Excessive

An advocate of transparency, Dean Browning today shared his concerns with Lehigh County's budget. His memo to other commissioners is reproduced below. I have highlighted some of his more important points.

Commissioners:


Based on the number of phone calls and emails that have been generated in the last few days it looks like we should have an interesting meeting tomorrow night. By popular demand, (and since it looks like we’ll earn our money tomorrow) I have withdrawn the motion that would have reduced the Commissioner’s salaries to the old level of $5,500. Given the number of motions and the passion that surrounds any proposed reduction or delay in spending we could be in for a long night or review and discussion. Since I have a number of motions I’d like to try and expedite that process by giving you my thoughts in advance for the items I have proposed. The reason for this is twofold; one – to reduce the amount of time that will be required to explain my thinking (or lack thereof) and two – to give those that are in opposition some time to think through their rebuttal and to develop a convincing counter argument. My hope is that this will speed up the process and reduce the amount of back and forth on each item.

To that end, I’ve divided my motions into several groups and will be sending a separate email on each later today or tomorrow morning. As a prelude to that, I do want to review my general thoughts on the 2009 budget. One email I read today pointed out that the budget for 2009 is only up 1.1% over that for 2008. And that is indeed true if you look at the County’s total budget of over $400 million. However, that number includes pass through revenue and expenses. To me, the more relevant amount is that which is paid for by County real estate tax dollars. That is the number that drives what our residents and businesses pay in property taxes. The year to year budget increase for this component is 3.7%. From our budget review, you’ll recall that much of that increase resulted from two functions, namely the Courts and Corrections. These are areas where the County is specifically charged with the responsibility and in my opinion these can not be short changed.

Having said that I think we need to keep in mind some of the existing trends and how they project into the future. Specifically, the 2009 budget calls for us to spend $12,000,000 more than we generate in property tax revenue. With recent trends in spending and in property tax revenue that gap will widen over the next several years. While that is happening we will continue to spend down the balance in the Tax Relief Fund (TRF). As an aside, I feel the creation of the TRF followed by the 2006 tax decrease has resulted in some negative, unintended consequences. Namely, it makes it difficult to make the necessary, prudent financial decisions to close the gap between spending and revenue. For example, those that will want an additional $200,000 for the Zoo will say, “why can’t you give us the money when you have a surplus fund of over $16 million?”

Nonetheless we are where we are and since there is a finite amount of money in the TRF I believe we need to take steps now to slow the growth in spending. I believe this is necessary to reduce the adjustment required when the TRF is depleted and/or to extend the period of time before we reach that point. The purpose of the adjustments I have suggested is to accomplish that by either:

* reducing spending in areas where we can accrue that benefit over time or
* deferring spending in other areas until we have a better picture of how we will finish out 2008 and/or until the economy begins to expand again and thereby increases our revenue base.


So where does Browning propose making cuts? I'll explain one cut in the post below. Rail advocate Paul Marin is going to be in the wrong county tonight.
Update: Where We Are, Where We've Been and Where We Are Going.

This is the question Browning poses in another email to Commissioners. It explains why he believes Lehigh County should reduce its deficit from $12 million to $10 million.

As we look at the budget for 2009 we are projecting $90,195,486 in tax revenue compared to $102,734,017 in expense covered by county property taxes which gives us a net shortfall of $12,538,531. I know the plan is that by drawing down the Tax Relief Fund (TRF) that we can hold property taxes at the current level through 2011. Assuming everything that went into that assumption comes to fruition, I’m still very concerned about what type of budget will we be looking at in 2012. I know that several years down the road but I believe that if we don’t takes steps now the problem will be that much bigger and more difficult to solve when the time comes.

I know the past is not a predictor of the future but there are some trends we should be aware of as follows:

In 2006 the budgeted expenses covered by county taxes totaled $92,250,299. This increased to the $102,734,017 listed above which is a 3.7% compound annual growth rate. During that time our budgeted tax revenue increased from $85,594,785 to the $90,195,486 listed above which is a 1.8% compound annual growth rate. However, this is really not representative as the budget for 2009 assumes a slight decrease in tax revenue. So to get a more accurate feel for the growth in our tax revenue we should back up a year and look at the growth from 2006 to 2008. During that time period the growth rate was somewhat more robust at 2.8%. Note that I selected the period of 2006 through 2009 for this analysis as that is the time during which the tax rate has been stable at 10.25 mils.

Again, the past the past is not the future but if we continue on the path of increasing expenses at 3.7% while growing revenue at less than that at 2.8% we will be faced with a deficit of $16,500,000 in 2012. And that’s assuming we don’t have to do things like step up our contributions to the pension fund or absorb the costs of programs where the state or federal government freezes or cuts their reimbursement to us. Even with then, bridging a gap of $16,500,000 without the TRF would require a tax increase of 17%.

I know it is hard enough making projections through 2009 let alone 2012 so things may turn out better. However, I truly believe that it is incumbent upon us to take some steps with this year’s budget to reduce the gap between revenue and expenses and thus lessen the impact of the compounding in the out years. Personally I think we should be looking for ways to reduce the 2009 deficit to a number that is under $10,000,000 even if this means cutting expenses or deferring programs into 2010 or until our property tax revenue starts to grow again.

Just my opinion as one of nine.

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Paul Marin's Rail Study in Trouble in Lehigh County

Tonight, passenger rail advocate Paul Marin is scheduled to be in the wrong county. He plans to ask The People's Republic of Northampton County to give him $75 thousand for a regional transportation study. In fact, the plan is to pack the house because "we can't trust the county to do the right thing unless someone is paying attention." Well, he can't trust Lehigh County, either. While Paul passes the hat in Northampton County, Lehigh County's Dean Browning will be filing a motion to shelve Marin's request for funding there.

Ruh roh.

Rather than just killing it, Browning is proposing to offer Marin $1. Here's how he explains his thinking.

The effect of this motion is to maintain the option of conducting the study at some point in the future depending on the year-end results for 2008. My thoughts for deferring his are as follows:

* This is yet another project that is dependent upon funding from our counterparts in Northampton County and they have been less than cooperative in funding other joint initiatives such as the regional crime center.

* One of the supposed benefits of this rail service is that it would help in the revitalization of downtown. However, when rail service was mentioned earlier this year, our County executive commented (and wisely so in my opinion) that this could result in increased sprawl in Lehigh County. I think the latter is more likely than the former.

* I have a bias against conducting studies for projects that I don’t think can be implemented. Rail service to New York is an infrastructure project that will require substantial funding. The Federal and State government have made it clear that there would have to be a local component to any funding for projects like this. We have an existing negative gap between spending and revenue combined with the fact that we don’t have enough money as it is to cover our primary infrastructure responsibility which is the County’s 40 some bridges. I can not see how the results of this study could ever be implemented.

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Grucela: Senate? We Don't Need no Steenkin' Senate

“Why did you pour that coffee into your saucer?” George Washington asked. “To cool it,” Jefferson replied. “Even so,” Washington declared, “we pour legislation into the senatorial saucer to cool it.”

That's how our first (and perhaps greatest) President simply explained, to a genius, the need for a senate. Pa. State Rep. Richard Grucela (D) wants to take that saucer away.

According to a report that first appeared at Blue Coyote, Grucela has proposed eliminating the senate.

Poof!

In a news release, Rich sees "no reason to have two chambers representing the same people doing the same thing." I guess he never met Washington.

His Bill has 24 sponsors, but no fellow legislators from the Lehigh Valley.

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How Can You Navigate Our Financial Crisis?

Today I spoke to a friend who's in a very bad mood. On Monday, he had $30,000 worth of Wachovia stock. Today, they're worth about $2,000. He's just one of the growing number of casualties resulting from out current financial crisis.

What should we be doing?

Thankfully, the Tri-City African-American Chamber of Commerce has scheduled a panel discussion to answer that question on Saturday.

Where: Nationwide Insurance, Village West Shopping Center, W. Tilghman St. and Cedar Crest Blvd in Allentown (next to Blockbuster)

Time: 9:00 am to 12:00 pm

Fee: Free. Breakfast will be provided

Please RSVP to: Phillip Matthews 610-821-1281

Panel participants: Suzanne Fields, Esq, Attorney at Law; Gregory K. Lauray, Certified Public Accountant, Gregory K. Lauray & Co.; Phillip Matthews, Insurance Consultant, Nationwide Insurance; Carlton Taylor, Financial Advisor, Charles Schwab; Tressie Woods, Regional Vice President, Primerica Financial Services.

Gregory Lauray, who happens to chair the Tri-City African American Chamber of Commerce, has the following insight:

"The only precedent for the recent economic tumult that we've encountered is the Great Depression of 1929. The current situation was entirely predictable as our nation moved to financial alchemy and imprudent lending as the primary bases for economic growth. The recent proposals for spending $ 700 billion to bailout the nation's financial institutions is not going to address the core economic issue of job growth. In part, the high levels of debt that some of us have taken on is related to the lack of income growth, so borrowing became a substitute for stagnant income growth.

"The policies that are being pursued by the US Treasury and the Federal Reserve are going to cost us in two ways: inflation and more taxes. In other words, the basic items we need are going to cost us a lot more while the government taxes us more to pay for bailing out the guys who had the party.

"Navigating in this environment will be challenging and the chamber has planned a panel discussion to talk about this. A team of professionals has been assembled to answer your questions and to provide guidance. Here are the topics the panel will cover:

1) How to restructure your debts

2) Bankruptcy: What does it mean and when it is appropriate to file

3) How to protect your assets

4) What is safe to invest in

5) What to do if you owe back taxes

If you have questions, we'll have answers. Please see the details below for time and place. I look forward to seeing you there."

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LaZorro Creates Eco-Friendly Virtual World For Latina Tweens

I call him LáZorro (with an á, damn it!) because of his keen sense of right and wrong. You may know him as Lázaro Fuentes, a venture capitalist who helped make the Lehigh Valley Hispanic Chamber of Commerce a vibrant business voice. What I never knew until today is that he has spent the last seventeen months developing a virtual worlds market for kids, tweens and teens (KT&T).

It's called HipChicas.com, a virtual community with a focus on socially conscious, young Latinas, and an "eco-friendly" stance.

HipChicas.com members will create and customize avatars and living spaces, as well as purchase items with virtual currency called Hip Change. Girls can chat in English, Spanish, Portuguese or French, with an automatic translator that displays the appropriate language for each user.

Now I finally know what young kids are doing on computers all the time. I always thought they were reading Molovinsky on Allentown.

Girls learn that their actions directly affect the environment through games and challenges. It definitely has a green focus. Adding plants and cleaning up a habitat, for example, will cause a native endangered species to flourish.

"We felt that there was a need for content that kids would like and parents would approve of," Fuentes said. "It's as if somewhere along the line, someone decided that being hip meant that girls had to dress or act inappropriately, or had to fit into a specific mold and that their only interests are picking hair colors or shopping for clothes. They are far more than that and are looking for content that gets them; a higher level of engagement. These are kids that want to save the world, be in a band and start a blog all in one day."

Though this virtual world is designed from a Latina-centric perspective, HipChicas.com would likely have multi-ethnic appeal, much like Nickelodeon's Dora the Explorer property. "The girls that were five when they first started watching Dora the Explorer in 2000 are thirteen now," Fuentes said. "And they've already had an unprecedented amount of exposure to Latin-themed content."

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Wednesday, October 01, 2008

Morganelli Using Scissorhands Severson in AG Race

The state AG contest pits scrappy John Morganelli against blueblood Tom Corbett. But it's been really quiet. In one of my posts about that contest, for example, I had just one comment.

"Crickets."

It looks like the race is finally heating up. Capitol Ideas reports Corbett's claim that Morganelli is improperly using an anti-illegal immigration PAC while Morganelli is slamming Corbett's abuse of publicly funded PSAs.

All of this seemed like business as usual until I noticed one sentence in Micek's report.

Holy cannoli!

Morganelli is using Scissorhands Severson.

PMI (Precision Marketing), a Severson outfit, has been paid $6,400 to conduct, of all things, robo-calls.

Severson is currently under investigation by Corbett for possible elections law violations. Last Fall, he ran a series of anonymous robo-calls that viciously slammed Ron Angle and Peg Ferraro. Oh yeah, Severson is also a criminal defendant after he threatened to kill Northampton County Council member Ron Angle during a funeral mass.

When I contacted Morganelli, he confirmed he is, in fact, using Severson. He reminds me people are innocent until proven guilty. True enough.

I have one question for John - Are you out of your frickin' mind??? If you are running to lose this race, this is the best way to do it. You've just associated yourself a person who disrupted a funeral mass, of all things. You've hired a guy being investigated for sleaze campaign tactics, including those anonymous robo-calls.

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How to Squeeze $75k From the Northampton County Hangmen

Rail activist Paul Marin has already persuaded the LVEDC, where he chairs the transportation committee, to kick in $100,000 of the $250,000 cost for a local passenger rail study. He's looking to Lehigh and Northampton County for the rest, $75,000 each.

Lehigh County Commissioner Dean N. Browning explains that the $75 thousand being sought there is "part of the 2009 budget that is currently being reviewed by the Board of Commissioners." A vote on their final budget will occur on October 22.

Here in the People's Republic of Northampton County, things are a little different. Its 2009 budget is still under wraps, and will stay that way until the end of the week. Its budget hearings start later and end later.

Well, Marin wants his money now. Advocates plan to pack Northampton County Council on Thursday to railroad their $75 thousand request down our throats.

In an email, I received this advice. "[W]e can't trust the county to do the right thing unless someone is paying attention. We must fill the seats and train all eyes and ears on them. Bring your family, bring your friends. You don't have to say a thing but you do have to be there."

I tried checking Northampton County Council's agenda to see if this request is even listed, but the last meeting posted is for September 18.

Earth to Northampton County Hangmen: Posting an agenda is meaningless unless it is done before the meeting.

I believe Marin and friends should stand in line like everyone else. But if they want to get on the express train, I have some advice. They should all go out and buy green T-shirts, spraypaint AFSCME all over each one of them and claim that Northampton County Executive John Stoffa opposes their request. It would really help if they brought a noose and gave Stoffa the finger once or twice.

If they follow these simple instructions, Northampton County Council will not only fund their request, but will demand that someone resign as well.

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Are McCain Supporters Racists?

When I was a young man, around the same age as Scott Armstrong's son, I can remember how proud my father was when one of his own, John F. Kennedy, was running for President. In those days, we Catholics were still viewed as something of an underclass in the Lehigh Valley. We weren't quite so bad as those damn Jews or the pork chops (yes, that term was used), but we were still pretty revolting.

I noticed this latent prejudice in high school, when Bethlehem Mayor Payrow invited students from Freedom and Liberty High Schools, Bethlehem's two public schools, to be mayor for a day. The now defunct Bethlehem Globe Times ran a story claiming that Bethlehem's high schools had been represented.

They all forgot about Bethlehem Catholic.

A high school junior, I fired off my very first letter to the editor, nailing both Payrow and the Globe Times for their obvious bigotry. Payrow certainly made sure Becahi was included the very next year.

So I can understand what it must mean for a young person of color to see Barack Obama as a candidate for President. Win or lose, Obama's candidacy alone is a great step forward for a people that, not very long ago, were slaves. I suspect I would be quick to label people who support McCain as racists just as my father called Nixon supporters anti-Catholic.

Scott Armstrong's son is putting up with some of this himself. Here's Scott's story, which also appears in the informative Allentown Commentator.

My twelve year old son informed me today that he was called a "racist" at his school lunch table today by his lunch mates when during a political discussion he volunteered that he preferred McCain to Obama. It made no difference to the accusers when he told them that he had hoped Lynn Swann, an African American would win the governors race two years ago. No, apparently anyone who doesn't support Obama is a racist and that is all there is to it. It was that simple to them.

Where does this sort of thinking come from? How sad is it that it comes from the mouths of twelve year olds? How counter productive is it to the ideals of civil discourse and racial harmony?

I told my son it isn't easy to be a conservative these days. He agreed that it would be much easier to just go along and pretend to believe in the liberal agenda. I was proud he didn't.

Scott Armstrong

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Is an Ethical Campaign Possible?

Cedar Crest College's Ethics Institute will tonight sponsor a community presentation about the climate of our political campaigns. Are ethical campaigns even possible anymore?

When: 7:30 PM

Where: Alumnae Hall, Cedar Crest College

Panel:

Pam Varkony, Nationally recognized writer, commentator, blogger extraordinaire and speaker

John Reynolds, Ph.D.a Professor of Political Science at Moravian College who currently has the misfortune of teaching AJ.

I'd go, but tonight I'm stuffing an anonymous attack mailer.

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