Journalist @baltimoresun writer artist runner #amwriting Chaplain PIO #partylikeajournalist

Journalist @baltimoresun writer artist runner #amwriting Chaplain PIO #partylikeajournalist
Journalist @baltimoresun writer artist runner #amwriting Md Troopers Assoc #20 & Westminster Md Fire Dept Chaplain PIO #partylikeajournalist

Tuesday, October 17, 2006

20061015 Hagerstown Herald Mail Endorsement of Ehrlich

Hagerstown Herald Mail Endorsement of Ehrlich

The Herald-Mail ONLINE

http://www.herald-mail.com/?module=displaystory&story_id=149549&format=print>%20&story_id=149549&format=print

Sunday October 15, 2006

Herald-Mail Endorsement - Ehrlich for governor

In the polls, the race for Maryland governor is close. It shouldn't be. Gov. Robert Ehrlich has done what he set out to do - put the brakes on spending and start getting Maryland's financial house in order.

The important items he hasn't succeeded with - legalizing slot machines at the state's horse tracks and reforming the state's medical malpractice laws - failed because a legislature dominated by Democrats blocked them.

These Democrats are the legislative leaders that backed electricity deregulation in 1999, then forgot about it until this year, when Baltimore Gas & Electric proposed a whopping 72 percent increase for its customers.

These are the leaders who backed the Thornton Commission's educational reforms for the state, but failed to identify a way to pay for them.

And these are the leaders who went along with former Gov. Parris Glendening's plan to settle a suit seeking millions more for the Baltimore City school system by giving the system millions more without mandating that the system have some firm performance benchmarks.

Then, when the state proposed a takeover of the system because it had failed to deliver promised services to special-education students, Baltimore officials claimed that they were being treated unfairly.

Democrats that takeover of the system, a measure which had been threatened since 1999, even though the federal government threatened to reduce special-education money to every system in the state if there weren't improvements.

These are the people who back Mayor Martin O'Malley, who, like his Democratic predecessors, has big plans, but is a bit vague about how he will pay for them.

On Tuesday, O'Malley told The Washington Post that he would like create health insurance polls for small businesses and boost funding for school construction and land preservation.

Some of the money would come from the federal government, he said, adding that it would be irresponsible to say he wouldn't raise taxes during his term.

O'Malley isn't saying much about law enforcement, which is good. He's had a series of police commissioners, one of whom went to prison for spending public funds on things he shouldn't have, including gifts for girlfriends.

Ehrlich's performance in office hasn't been perfect. Considering the Maryland's governor has a tremendous amount of power over the budget, he hasn't used it to build alliances.

His feud with some newspaper reporters was just plain silly. Every smart elected official knows how to deal with the press, or at least to co-exist with journalists. Ehrlich's not stupid, so we must conclude he's getting bad advice from somebody.

Some of his appointments were also questionable, including that of Joseph Steffen, who was fired after it was learned that he was spreading gossip to the effect that O'Malley's marriage was in trouble.

But on balance, Ehrlich has done about as well as he could have, considering Democratic attempts to hobble him. Does anyone doubt that if O'Malley is elected, he will soon discover the need for more cash and back slots to get it?

Ehrlich will face the same fight if re-elected, but the prospect of going back to the way it was during the Glendening years does not appeal to us. Our endorsement goes to Ehrlich.


CopyrightThe Herald-Mail ONLINE

Monday, October 16, 2006

20061016 New Rule Boosts Protection of Underground Drinking Water

New Rule Boosts Protection of Underground Drinking Water

Posted October 16th, 2006

Hat Tip: Mr. Jim

Pasted below is “a new rule issued today by the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency … (which) targets utilities that provide water from underground sources and requires greater vigilance for potential contamination by disease-causing microorganisms

Of course, anything that protects drinking water is a good thing, but nevertheless, I will look forward to an analysis from my public works colleagues as to exactly what this means. The devil is always in the details and one can only hope that this is not yet another unfunded mandate…

The news release reads:

News for Release: Thursday, Oct. 12, 2006

U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA)

New Rule Boosts Protection of Underground Drinking Water

Contacts: (Media only) Dale Kemery, (202) 564-4355 / kemery.dale@epa.gov

(Other inquiries) Veronica Blette, (202) 564-4094 / blette.veronica@epa.gov

(Washington, D.C. - Oct. 12, 2006) More than 100 million Americans will enjoy greater protection of their drinking water under a new rule issued today by the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency. The rule targets utilities that provide water from underground sources and requires greater vigilance for potential contamination by disease-causing microorganisms.

"The Bush Administration's Ground Water Rule boosts drinking water purity and public health security," said Benjamin H. Grumbles, assistant administrator for Water. "These first-ever standards will help communities prevent, detect and correct tainted ground water problems so citizens continue to have clean and affordable drinking water."

The risk-targeting strategy incorporated in the rule provides for:

· regular sanitary surveys of public water systems to look for significant deficiencies in key operational areas

· triggered source-water monitoring when a system that does not sufficiently disinfect drinking water identifies a positive sample during its regular monitoring to comply with existing rules.

· implementation of corrective actions by ground water systems with a significant deficiency or evidence of source water fecal contamination

· compliance monitoring for systems that are sufficiently treating drinking water to ensure effective removal of pathogens

A ground water system is subject to triggered source-water monitoring if its treatment methods don't already remove 99.99 percent of viruses. Systems must begin to comply with the new requirements by Dec. 1, 2009.

Contaminants in question are pathogenic viruses — such as rotavirus, echoviruses, noroviruses — and pathogenic bacteria, including E. coli, salmonella, and shigella. Utilities will be required to look for and correct deficiencies in their operations to prevent contamination from these pathogens.

Microbial contaminants can cause gastroenteritis or, in rare cases, serious illnesses such as meningitis, hepatitis, or myocarditis. The symptoms can range from mild to moderate cases lasting only a few days to more severe infections that can last several weeks and may result in death for those with weakened immune systems. The new ground water rule will reduce the risk of these illnesses.

Fecal contamination can reach ground water sources, including drinking water wells, from failed septic systems, leaking sewer lines, and by passing through the soil and large cracks in the ground. Fecal contamination from the surface may also get into a drinking-water well along its casing or through cracks if the well is not properly constructed, protected, or maintained.

The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention reports that, between 1991 and 2000, ground water systems were associated with 68 outbreaks that caused 10,926 illnesses. Contaminated source water was the cause of 79 percent of the outbreaks in ground water systems.

Ground Water Rule and more information about drinking water: http://www.epa.gov/safewater/disinfection/gwr


####

20061016 Hedge Funds Draw Insider Scrutiny


Hedge Funds Draw Insider Scrutiny

October 16, 2006

For my financial-geek colleagues out there who share my passion for economics and the financial markets; the e-mail I received earlier today from the New York Times “DealBook,” edited by Andrew Ross Sorkin, (For tips, feedback: e-mail dealbook@nytimes.com; Subscriptions: http://www.nytimes.com/dealbook) called attention to an article in the New York Times today By Jenny Anderson: As Lenders With Easy Access, Hedge Funds Draw Insider Scrutiny.”

Mr. Sorkin introduces the piece by saying: Hedge funds have crashed the once-clubby world of corporate lending in a big way, and the increased presence of these lightly regulated funds is raising some concerns, especially as relates to the use of inside information. In at least one case, regulators are taking note. The Securities and Exchange Commission is looking into whether hedge funds who were lenders to Movie Gallery took their inside knowledge of the company's recent struggles and traded on it.”

She begins the article by saying:

In early March, executives from Movie Gallery, a big movie rental chain, held a private conference call for their lenders to talk about how disastrous 2005 had been for the company. A string of Hollywood flops had kept customers away. More people were recording movies from television instead of renting them from a store. The executives said they needed more time to fix the problems, which included more than $1 billion in debt.

Most of the roughly 200 lenders were not bankers, but hedge funds. And what they heard was supposed to be confidential: it was inside information, as valuable to investors as a tip about an imminent takeover.

During the next two days, though, Movie Gallery’s shares were heavily traded, and its stock plummeted 25 percent.

A coincidence? Regulators are not so sure. The Securities and Exchange Commission is now looking into whether any of the hedge funds on the private call with Movie Gallery took their inside knowledge of the company’s struggles and traded on it. Movie Gallery announced earnings results to the public nearly two weeks after the private conference call.”

You can read the rest of the article here. The more you read, the more its gets curiouser and curiouser.

Kevin Dayhoff writes from Westminster Maryland USA. E-mail him at: kdayhoff@carr.org www.thetentacle.com Westminster Eagle Opinion and Winchester Report www.thewestminstereagle.com www.kevindayhoff.com has moved to http://kevindayhoff.blogspot.com/

20061015 Celebrate Local Heroes Festival in Westminster








Celebrate Local Heroes Festival in Westminster
October 15th, 2006
This Sunday afternoon, Caroline and I attended the 4th annual Local Heroes Festival from 1 p.m. to 4 p.m. at Dutterer Family Park at Winter's Alley and Monroe Street in Westminster.

It is at this event, put on by the Westminster Department of Recreation and Parks that the local community comes out to honor the fire, police and street department volunteers and staffs that work so hard for our community. Local organizations also displayed information and there were also games, food from neighborhood vendors and 4-H animals.

Former Carroll Times writer, Joanne Morvay Weant, a dairy farmer, helped bring the 4-H animals. She brought several rabbits and a chicken. Also present were a couple of goats and a friendly horse.

Lots of folks came together for this year’s successful event. First among equals being the new Westminster Recreation and Parks Program Director Jen Mellor.
Ms. Mellor certainly demonstrated that she is wonderful with kids. She helped children paint 65 pumpkins and create many lollipop ghosts and goblins – decorated tootsie roll pops.

Also available at this year’s festivities was moon bounce and face painting.
The Westminster Police Department under the leadership of Chief Jeff Spaulding, the Westminster Street Department’s Larry Bloom and Wayne Reifsnider; and the Westminster Fire Department also rolled their sleeves up and were out in force. The local National Guard Unit stationed at the Armory on Hahn Road brought a 105 Howitzer.

Of course, Lori Walsh Graham, her sister Jalna Brown and Mrs. Dutterer Gist need an honorable mention for their steadfast support and hard work.
Without public safety, we have no community and I think it's important to take time out to recognize the fire department, the police department and the street department.

The weather was beautiful and it was great to see so many of the folks who do the heavy lifting for our community.

NOTE: I'll get some more pictures posted as soon as I get a chance...
####
Kevin Dayhoff writes from Westminster Maryland USA. E-mail him at: kdayhoff@carr.org www.thetentacle.com Westminster Eagle Opinion and Winchester Report www.thewestminstereagle.com www.kevindayhoff.com has moved to http://kevindayhoff.blogspot.com/

20061015 Streisand performed last Friday at Verizon Center in DC



Streisand performed last Friday at Verizon Center in DC

October 15th, 2006

Carroll County Times writer Jordan Bartel informs us that “Barbra Streisand is back on stage.”

In spite of her enormous talent – I was busy re-arranging my sock drawer that evening and I just wasn't able to make it; especially since Representative Nancy Pelosi, San Francisco, CA 8th District, has taken over her body. See: “20061010 Streisand goes emo at Madison Square Garden concert.”

To be certain, Representative Pelosi, who fights for the little guy, can afford the tickets since she is worth over $25 million…

I wonder if Ms. Streisand told audience members to “Shut the **** up!” at this concert?

Apparently “The most riveting moment of Barbra Streisand's Madison Square Garden concert was one of the only unscripted ones.”

Update: Libby Copeland, a Washington Post Staff Writer loved her performance. Ms. Copeland's review of Ms. Streisand's performance appears in the Saturday, October 14, 2006 Washington Post on page C01.

Anyway, Mr. Bartel recently wrote:

Concert Watch: Streisand to perform with Il Divo at Verizon Center

Barbra Streisand is back on stage.

The venerable Streisand, along with multi-platinum selling quartet Il Divo, will perform at 7:30 p.m. Friday at Washington, D.C.'s Verizon Center.

Streisand is the music industry's all-time best selling female artist, with 50 gold, 30 platinum and 13 multi-platinum albums. She is second only to Elvis Presley on the all-time music sellers' chart. She is a multiple Grammy winner, and has an Oscar, Tony and Peabody Award to her name.

Il Divo has become the most successful international music act of the past few years, selling more than 12 million albums. Their first two albums, "Il Divo" and "Ancora," achieved 26 top chart positions internationally, including the top debut in the United States.

Tickets range from $100 to $750 and are available through the Verizon Center box office and through Ticketmaster outlets at www.ticketmaster.com.

Verizon Center is at 601 F Street, NW.

-Jordan Bartel

####


20061015 Basket Bingo fundraiser for Junction

Basket Bingo fundraiser for Junction

Posted October 15th, 2006

A Longaberger Basket Bingo fundraising event for the benefit of Junction, Inc., a Carroll County grassroots drug and substance abuse outreach, prevention and rehabilitation organization will be held on Saturday November 11, 2006 at the Westminster Moose Family Center located at 309 Buena Vista Drive, Westminster. Doors open at 5:30 pm.

(I have been a member of the Junction board since October 2000.)

Early bird games begin at 6:45pm; regular bingo begins at 7:00pm. Tickets are $12.00 in advance and $15.00 at the door. Tickets include 20 regular games. Additional specials, raffles and door prizes are offered. All baskets are filled! Refreshments are available.

Proceeds will benefit Junction, Inc., a non-profit substance abuse prevention and treatment agency in Westminster. For ticket information call Lynda Niles at Junction, Inc. at 410-876-1788.

####

Sunday, October 15, 2006

20061015 Who was Oriana Fallaci?


Who was Oriana Fallaci?

October 15, 2006

Author’s note: I finally had a chance to clean-up earlier “versions” and re-write the piece with no word limitations…

For my earlier posts about Ms. Fallaci, please see: “20060915 Italian lioness of letters Oriana Fallaci had died;” “20060917 Oriana Fallaci buried today Sun Sept 17 2006;” “20061003 Who was Oriana Fallaci?;” and here in The Tentacle:Oriana Fallaci, a refreshing approach.”

_____

October 15, 2006 by Kevin Dayhoff (1370 words)

On September 15, Oriana Fallaci, the Italian lioness of letters, died of cancer.

Although Ms. Fallaci was one of the world’s greatest artists of letters; she is today, relatively unknown in the United States.

A prolific – quite controversial - journalist and existential writer with an aggressive and indefatigable approach to life, she had been shot several times and left for dead, had torrid affairs and put on trial.

She never skipped a beat.

Born in Italy on June 29, 1929 Ms. Fallaci served in the fascist resistance during World War II. She began her journalistic career in 1950 as a teenager and went on to be a war correspondent in Vietnam, the Middle East, South America and the Indo-Pakistani Wars.

According to published accounts, “During the 1968 Tlatelolco massacre prior to the 1968 Summer Olympics, Fallaci was shot three times, dragged down stairs by her hair, and left for dead by Mexican armed forces.”

She continued her career by interviewing many of the world leaders of our time and consistently took no prisoners. Her journalistic style is the stuff of mythology and legend.

Ms. Fallaci would often wax philosophical about existentialism and then abruptly switch to calmly delivered, aggressive questioning that disarmed the greatest men of words. The many world leaders she interviewed included Henry Kissinger, the Shah of Iran, Ayatollah Khomeini, Lech Wałęsa, Willy Brandt, Walter Cronkite, Omar Khadafi, Yasir Arafat, Indira Gandhi, Golda Meir, and Sean Connery.

In later years she penned a series of books and articles in which she was critical of the Muslim religion and culture.

It was only by a cruel coincidence that she passed away three days after Pope Benedict XVI, in a speech on Sept. 12, at the University of Regensburg in Germany, recited the words of Byzantine emperor Manuel II Paleologus; which reflect a view that the religion of Islam is spread by the sword.

Militant and extremist Muslims throughout the Middle East objected to that characterization by violently demonstrating, burning churches and killing innocent folks.

Hmmm. Okay, moving on,

Ms. Fallaci, an existentialist and an atheist publicly stated on August 27, 2005, her respect and admiration of Pope Benedict, specifically citing his 2004 essay entitled "If Europe Hates Itself,” after she met with the Pope in a private audience.

“Fallaci, who made her name interviewing statesmen (and not a few tyrants), believes that ours is "an age without leaders. We stopped having leaders at the end of the 20th century".”(Varadarajan, Telegraph, Apr. 9, 2005)

Ms. Fallaci, the subject of radical Islamists’ death threats, was diagnosed with cancer several years ago.

She was living in New York; in part, to avoid prosecution in her native Italy “under provisions of the Italian penal code for "vilipendio", or "vilification", of "any religion admitted by the state,” according to an article by Tunku Varadarajan in the Telegraph in Great Britain on April 9, 2005. (She quietly returned to Italy just days before her death, so that she could die in her native country.)

"When I was given the news, I laughed," Fallaci says of her indictment.

"Bitterly, of course, but I laughed. No amusement, no surprise, because the trial is nothing else but a demonstration that everything I've written is true." (Varadarajan, Telegraph, Apr. 9, 2005)

The article had the long descriptive title: “The moment you give up your principles, and your values, you are dead, your culture is dead, your civilization is dead. Period.”

When Tunku Varadarajan interviewed Ms. Fallaci for the Telegraph article, shortly after an Italian judge had indicted her, she was in “her mid-seventies and stricken with a cancer that, for the moment, permits only the consumption of liquids - so yes, we drank champagne in the course of a three-hour interview.”

“She pauses to light a slim black cigarillo and take a sip of champagne…

She professes to "cry, sometimes, because I'm not 20 years younger, and I'm not healthy. But if I were, I would even sacrifice my writing to enter politics somehow." (Varadarajan, Telegraph, Apr. 9, 2005)

(This writer certainly understands “I would even sacrifice my writing to enter politics somehow.")

To add some punctuation to his article, Tunka Varadarajan then emphasized: "Civilizations die from suicide, not by murder," the historian Arnold Toynbee wrote, and these words could certainly be Fallaci's. She is in a black gloom about Europe and its future: "The increased presence of Muslims in Italy, and in Europe, is directly proportional to our loss of freedom."

Tunka Varadarajan elaborated:

There is about her a touch of Oswald Spengler, the German philosopher and prophet of decline, as well as a flavour of Samuel Huntington and his clash of civilisations. But above all there is pessimism, pure and unashamed. When I ask what "solution" there might be to prevent the European collapse of which she speaks, she flares up like a lit match.

"How do you dare to ask me for a solution? It's like asking Seneca for a solution. You remember what he did?" She then gestures at slashing her wrists. "He committed suicide!" Seneca was accused of being involved in a plot to murder the emperor Nero. Without a trial, he was ordered by Nero to kill himself. One senses that Fallaci sees in Islam the shadow of Nero.

"What could Seneca do?" she asks, with a discernible shudder. "He knew it would end that way - with the fall of the Roman Empire. But he could do nothing."

The cause of her most recent problems surfaced in a book that she wrote in 2004, called: “The Force of Reason,” which has reportedly sold over a million copies worldwide.

Part of the problem is a particularly indelicate passage in which she said, Muslims "multiply like rats" and said "the children of Allah spend their time with their bottoms in the air, praying five times a day;" according to an Associated Press article written by Alessandra Rizzo and published the day she passed away.

This just threw salt in a wounded relationship Ms. Fallaci had maintained since she published another best-seller, days after the terrorist attacks on Sept. 11, 2001: “The Rage and the Pride.” This book also drew condemnation by the militant Muslim world.

There was an unsuccessful effort in France in 2003, to ban the book. This effort in France came on the heels of a Swiss arrest warrant for Ms. Fallaci when Italy was asked to either extradite her or put her on trial themselves.

Part of what annoyed folks in Switzerland and France was Ms. Fallaci referring to Europe in “The Rage and the Pride,” as “Eurabia.” She describes latest wave of suicidal appeasement and pacifism sweeping “Eurabia” and calls it a continent that has collectively “sold itself and sells itself to the enemy like a prostitute… "Europe becomes more and more a province of Islam, a colony of Islam…”

Tunka Varadarajan quotes Ms. Fallaci: “You cannot survive if you do not know the past. We know why all the other civilizations have collapsed - from an excess of welfare, of richness, and from lack of morality, of spirituality.”

As much as I’m not sure that I agree with Ms. Fallaci’s strident views on the Muslim religion, or that the Pope’s remarks were productive towards a meaningful dialogue with the Muslim world community; the approach of the late Ms. Fallaci and the Pope towards the extremists and terrorists is never-the-less thought provoking - - a hallmark of Ms. Fallaci’s brilliant work, whether one agrees with her or disagrees. (This writer takes no position on her politics. I respect her First Amendment rights and admire her “genius;” her “life of letters” and her joie de vie.)

It is only an existential, if not quixotic, perversion of reality that a child of the persecution of World War II, for which she became a legendary member of the resistance, a veteran war correspondent who often wrote from first-hand knowledge in the combat theatre – and a celebrated woman of letters and words in her seventies and stricken with cancer is persecuted for uttering words, while the world’s community of pandering appeasers apologize for extremist folks who want to kill women and children and you.

Oriana Fallaci will be greatly missed on the world stage.

Kevin Dayhoff writes from Westminster Maryland USA.

E-mail him at: kdayhoff@carr.org

####

20061014 Another great Pillageshop

Another great Pillageshop

Attila, my Maryland Bloggers Alliance colleague over at the Pillage Idiot, reports (Idiota del pillaje?) that his wonderful “Pillageshop” of Kim Jong Il has been picked by a blog, “Eurabian News - Noticias sobre la transformación de Europa en Eurabia,” in Europe that has had the audacity to publish the blog in Spanish. The horror, oh the horror.

In case you have not seen this Pillageshop, please go here. It is one of the best that I have seen on the subject of Kim Jong II.

####

Saturday, October 14, 2006

20061013 Sierra Club-Catoctin Group makes Carroll Co Election endorsements

Sierra Club-Catoctin Group makes Carroll County Election endorsements

Posted October 13, 2006

In a letter to the editor of the Carroll County Times, the Sierra Club-Catoctin Group has endorsed candidates for offices in the upcoming Carroll County general election.

For a list of the Catoctin Group’s other endorsements for county offices, statewide in Maryland go here.

For a list of the Maryland Sierra Club State Level Endorsements, click here.

For your convenience, excerpts of the Sierra Club-Catoctin Group letter to the editor are pasted below:

Letters to the Editor for Friday, October 13, 2006

Conservation key in candidate support

We are a non-partisan group. We select candidates who work for a better world for all of us, not just for the well- connected. We are concerned with growth management, environmental health, energy efficiency, agricultural preservation and protection of open space for habitat, hiking and hunting.

We want to see development held to a moderate rate and the county to realize its stated goal of preserving 100,000 acres of farmland…

… The local Sierra Club-Catoctin Group endorses Julia Walsh Gouge, Dean Minnich and Vincent DiPietro for commissioners; and Ann Darrin and Frank Rammes for District 5A delegates.

These candidates can put strong business experience to work for good conservation efforts!

Gregor Becker

Westminster

The writer is political chair, Sierra Club-Catoctin Group.

Be sure to go to the Carroll County Times website “opinion section,” for other letters to the editor and to read the entire Sierra-Club-Catoctin Group letter to the editor, of which I have excerpted above, click here.

Kevin Dayhoff writes from Westminster Maryland USA. E-mail him at: kdayhoff@carr.org http://www.thetentacle.com/ Westminster Eagle Opinion and Winchester Report http://www.thewestminstereagle.com/ www.kevindayhoff.com has moved to http://kevindayhoff.blogspot.com/

Friday, October 13, 2006

20061013 Students in Action Summit at West Middle School


Students in Action Summit at Westminster’s West Middle School

October 11th and 12th, 2006

I had the pleasure to participate in the Students in Action Summit at Westminster’s West Middle School on October 11th and 12th, 2006.

Pasted above is my rendition of the events.

It was a cutting edge problem identification and resolution opportunity with the 6th, 7th and 8th graders at what may be the most diverse school in the Carroll County Public School system.

Much of the heavy lifting for the event is to the enormous credit of Assistant Principal Aurora Pagulayan.

I was also quite impressed with the level of intelligent participation of the school children, although I was not surprised.

In the last number of years, I have had a number of opportunities to participate in a great many Carroll County Public School’s student programs and events and I walk away consistently impresses with the school system, individuals such as Assistant Principal Aurora Pagulayan - - and most importantly, the young adults in the school system.

I am also consistently impressed with the number of community leaders who take time out of their hectic days to get involved in an effort to make a difference and a contribution.

Folks such as: Karen Edmunds, Neeta Pansuriya, Chris Roemer, Jackie Reiff, Andrea Shalal-Esa, Bonnie Andrews, Gary Honeman, Lauren Dundes, and Jim Rodriquez to mention only a few names that come to mind quickly.

Of course, one of the other good things the school system is always careful to do well is to feed us community volunteers. I am not a morning person and the coffee and fruit and pastries went a long ways with me.

Carroll County Times staff writer, Penny Riordan penned an excellent article on the event which appeared in today’s paper: “Finding Solutions: Racial slurs, lockers discipline among problems identified by students.”

Her article will help a great deal to understand the mechanics of the day. You can find it here.

When I catch-up from losing two half-days out of my schedule in the last several days, I will look forward to also writing about this exciting event.

Hats off to Westminster’s West Middle School Assistant Principal Aurora Pagulayan, the young adults at the school, the community leaders who gave so graciously of their time to participate and to the Carroll County Public School System for having the foresight and the leadership to roll up their sleeves and make such an important program happen.

Kevin Dayhoff writes from Westminster Maryland USA. E-mail him at: kdayhoff@carr.org http://www.thetentacle.com/ Westminster Eagle Opinion and Winchester Report http://www.thewestminstereagle.com/ www.kevindayhoff.com has moved to http://kevindayhoff.blogspot.com/

Thursday, October 12, 2006

20061012 Carroll Co. Board of Ed. submits legislative proposals

Carroll County Board of Education submits legislative proposals

Posted October 12th, 2006

The Carroll County Board of Education has distributed the following Legislative Proposals for the 2007 Maryland General Assembly in a press release received this afternoon.

Any feedback needs to be submitted to feedback@k12.carr.org. And the release said that the legislative proposals “will be returned to the Board for approval on November 8.”

Board Of Education Of Carroll County Legislative Position Statements 2007 General Assembly

The following legislative statements are proposed as Board of Education of Carroll County positions for the 2007 General Assembly.

10/11/06

General Positions

Support local control of education policy, curriculum, and school system administration.

Support local control of appropriations and expenditures within budget categories.

Support full State funding for education.

Oppose unfunded or partially funded State mandates.

Specific Legislative Positions

Public Charter Schools

Support legislation that maintains local control and authority over public charter schools and clarifies current Charter School Law by:

Holding local boards harmless for costs that do not decrease as students leave to attend charter schools. These would include, but not limited to, operation and maintenance expenses, debt service, legal expenses, and special education expenses.

Providing specific procedures for dealing with the disposition of a charter school’s assets upon the school’s closure or dissolution with state technical assistance.

Clarifying ownership of failed charter school assets which have been purchased with public funds.

Recovering funds when students transfer back from charter schools.

Oppose legislation that:

Creates waivers for charter schools that release them from compliance with State law and Board policies.

Allows virtual schools to be recognized as Charter Schools.

Expands charter school authority beyond local school boards or weakens academic requirements.

Education Funding & Budget

Support as a minimum requirement the current maintenance of effort as stipulated in the Education Article, Annotated Code of Maryland.

Support full funding of the Bridge to Excellence in Public Schools Act for Fiscal Year 2007 including increased funding to reflect regional differences in the cost of education.

Oppose any shift in funding responsibility for teacher retirement costs from the State to County governments and local school systems.

Special Education

Support legislation that aligns Maryland law with Federal law by reducing the number of days a parent can appeal a special education non-public placement decision from 180 days to 30 days.

Public School Construction - School Construction Funding

Support $400 million state funding level for school construction and renovation projects for 2007.

Support legislation or regulations to revise the State’s definition of eligible project costs to include architectural, engineering and site development costs.

Support legislation to exempt school construction projects from the Prevailing Wage Law or increasing to 75% or more the percentage of State money that must be used in a school project before Prevailing Wage applies.

Teacher Recruitment

Support the development and funding of substantial scholarship and tuition remission programs for students who enter into the teaching profession and commit to teach in Maryland for a specified number of years.

Unemployment Benefits

Support legislation exempting school system employees from unemployment benefits when weather or other events require schools to be closed for brief periods of time.

Collective Bargaining

Support legislation that establishes a commission to study pay for performance models of teacher compensation.

Sponsor legislation that alters the definition of “public school employee” for non-certificated supervisory employees of Carroll County Public Schools in the same manner that currently exists for Baltimore County Public Schools. This change allows eligible non-certificated and certificated supervisory employees to be represented by the same bargaining unit.

Oppose enabling legislation that would allow binding arbitration or agency shop to be negotiated through the collective bargaining process.

####

20061012 This goes to 11

This goes to 11

Maryland Bloggers Alliance grows to 11 members.

October 12, 2006

Remember “Spinal Tap,” and the scene where - - oh, heck; there is a cite from “Spinaltapfan.com,” that explains it better:

Nigel’s key to keeping Tap among England’s loudest bands. In "This is Spinal Tap," he pointed out to director Marty DiBergi that the settings on Tap’s Marshall amps could extend beyond the standard 10 mark.

Nigel: "You see, most blokes will be playing at 10. You’re on 10, all the way up, all the way up...Where can you go from there? Nowhere. What we do, is if we need that extra push over the cliff...Eleven. One louder."

DiBergi: "Why don’t you just make 10 louder and make 10 be the top number, and make that a little louder?"

Nigel (after taking a moment to let this sink in): "These go to 11."

… Nigel's now famous phrase has even been recognized by the Oxford English Dictionary.

Well, with the Maryland Bloggers Alliance: “These go to 11.”

One can only imagine Attila at the Pillage Idiot talking with Soccer Dad and saying: “These go to 11.”

In the last week, the numbers in the ranks of the Maryland Bloggers Alliance has grown by two additional authors, for a total of eleven.

Please join me in welcoming Wade at Free State Politics (http://freestatepolitics.com/fspb/) as the newest member of the Maryland Blogger Alliance.

And just last week, we added Stan at blogger1947 (http://blogger1947.blog-city.com/).

Please take a moment to check out their web sites and enjoy even more points of view and thoughtful insights.

You can find the entire list of the folks with the Maryland Bloggers Alliance on the right hand side of “Soundtrack” under the Maryland Flag: Pillage Idiot (Rockville); Soccer Dad (Baltimore); Maryland Conservatarian (Baltimore); The Baltimore Reporter (Baltimore); The Sun Lies (Baltimore Area); The Not So Free State (Woodlawn); monoblogue (Salisbury); Crablaw (Reisterstown); Kevin Dayhoff (Westminster); Free State Politics (Baltimore); and blogger1947 (Gwynn Oak).

Kevin Dayhoff writes from Westminster Maryland USA. E-mail him at: kdayhoff@carr.org http://www.thetentacle.com/ Westminster Eagle Opinion and Winchester Report http://www.thewestminstereagle.com/ www.kevindayhoff.com has moved to http://kevindayhoff.blogspot.com/

Wednesday, October 11, 2006

20061010 The PNC purchase of Mercantile – a Faustian bargain from hell

The PNC purchase of Mercantile – a Faustian bargain from hell

October 9, 2006 by Kevin Dayhoff

Note - - This post is an iteration of my Tentacle column, “A Sale from Hell,” which will come out Wednesday, October 11, 2006. But the Tentacle column will dwell more upon the issues of Maryland businesses having a competitive disadvantage because of the regulatory and anti-business climate fostered by the Maryland General Assembly.

_____

Last Monday, Columbus Day, PNC, a $94.9 billion bank based in Pittsburgh, PA announced that an agreement had been reached to purchase Maryland’s largest independent bank, Mercantile Bankshares Corporation, in a $6 billion deal..

Although the “experts” have been predicting that the venerable and staid Maryland institution, with Baltimore roots that go back to 1864, was sure to be bought up by a larger bank at some point, most average Marylanders greeted the announcement with a big “Say it ain’t so.”

My shriveled but nevertheless functional sense of decency required that the purchase of Mercantile not be described more colorfully.

Moving on.

Why is it that in recent years, as each and every acquisition announcement is made, it is the Maryland business that is being purchased by an out-of-state entity?

What is it about doing business in Maryland that puts Maryland-based businesses at a competitive disadvantage?

Often it is a blue-chip local business, such as Baltimore Gas and Electric or MBNA that we are losing in the purchase. Is this proof-positive of Maryland’s reputation for a being a “business, regulatory and tax hell.” All of which can be laid at the feet of a liberal anti-business Democrat dominated Maryland General Assembly.

Remember USF&G, once considered the “Cadillac of the insurance industry?” It was purchased by The St. Paul Companies in 1997. The 2000 annual report of St. Paul boasts that it trimmed “about $260 million of expenses, reflecting the realization of merger-related efficiencies.” In plain-speak that means the Maryland economy lost $260 million in economy in the loss of jobs and economic base.

The PNC press release states, “The transaction is expected to result in the reduction of more than $100 million of operating expenses through the elimination of operational and administrative redundancies.”

That is Orwellian double-talk which means that $100 million in jobs and economic base will disappear from Maryland when the PNS-Mercantile merger is completed.

Of course, the larger picture is what is it about doing business in Maryland that puts Maryland-based businesses at a competitive disadvantage? We have some of the brightest minds, a well educated labor pool and hard-working workers.

And where is the discussion about supporting existing Maryland businesses in this mud-slinging orgy of a gubernatorial contest – where inside baseball and trivialities trumping substance is the rule of the day?

Maryland’s number one industry is agriculture and it is treated like a red-haired step-child; for the most part malignantly ignored unless it can be trotted out as the whipping-boy for an environmental issue de jour.

Published accounts have been quick to cheerily but mindlessly mime verbatim the PNC press release that based “on PNC's closing NYSE stock price of $73.60 on October 6, 2006, the transaction values each share of Mercantile's common stock at $47.24.” And that this is almost 30 percent higher than last week’s close.

To further sweeten the pot, the transaction will give Mercantile shareholders “0.4184 shares of PNC common stock and $16.45 in cash for each share of Mercantile.” Local publications have been effusive that Mercantile shareholders (like me) have reaped a wonderful bargain in the proposed sale.

I’d rather have a locally-owned community oriented bank than a one-time gain.

I’m very happy with the stock and anyone who isn’t should sell it and buy something with which they can be more happier.

As an article in Forbes pointed out, this deal “should make PNC a top-10 U.S. bank holding company in terms of market capitalization and the 11th biggest U.S. bank in terms of deposits;” whatever that means – as if that should make us all feel better.

Monday, of course, was Columbus Day, a holiday observed by the local banking industry. Published accounts report that the employees were e-mailed about the transaction, which is sure to mean the loss of many jobs in the Baltimore region.

It was unclear where Mercantile’s 3600 employees received the holiday e-mails and chances are that many learned of the sale from an early morning article posted on the Baltimore Sun’s web site. Bad news travels fast.

Apparently Wall Street didn’t think too much of the acquisition either. Usually the acquiring entity’s stock falters a bit at such an announcement but PNC’s stock dived close to 4.4% after the announcement.

No mention has been made so far as to what business model will be employed by PNC, so it is unclear as to how many of Mercantile’s 3600 employees lose their jobs.

One thing for sure, forget about local community oriented decision making. A $92 billion bank that will end-up the 11th largest in the nation isn’t going to achieve operating efficiency or capital efficacy by allowing Mercantile’s 11 bank subsidiaries and 240 branches to be independent, locally adaptive and innovative.

Perhaps the silver lining will be the increased business for banks such as Provident, First Mariner or Frederick County Bank. In 2001 when BB&T purchased FCNB, thirty-two employees, of the many who lost their jobs, found employment with the then, newly formed Frederick County Bank and more often than not, they took many of their customers with them.

Deposits increased as many customers wanted to continue a personal and private relationship with a local banker that made local community-based decisions.

After-all, if you’re going to have to change all your bank accounts over to new numbers and adhere to new procedures, you may as well change banks and stay local.

That is, unless you like calling your old bank branch with a little question and being diverted to a call center many states away where they don’t even know where Frederick is, much less care who you are.

There are many PNC business models we hope to not see. Which leads us to the next $6 billion dollar question; as a Mercantile shareholder who takes great pride in Mercantile’s sterling reputation for integrity and excellent management - - why PNC?

Starting slowly - - last July 19, PNC “announced financial results for its second quarter, reporting that profit rose 35% helped by a big improvement in fee-related revenue.”

“Fee-related income” is a bank euphemism for service charges. In other words, PNC was making more money because it has increased its customer service charges.

And many a Baltimore Oriole fan will find it just special that part of those service charges paid to PNC will go to support PNC Park, the corporate-branded home of the Pittsburgh Pirates baseball team. Now there’s a spitball for ya’.

Another business practice we could do without was reported in the Pittsburgh Post-Gazette on Sept. 27: “The U.S. Equal Employment Opportunity Commission is alleging that PNC Financial Services Group -- cited this week as one of the nation's top 100 places to work by Working Mother Magazine -- refused employment to a job applicant because she was pregnant.”

Or how about the July 15 Pittsburgh Tribune-Review article that reported “A federal judge in Pittsburgh approved the $36.6 million balance of a $193 million settlement of a shareholder class-action lawsuit against PNC Financial Services Group over its corporate-loan accounting scandal in 2001.”

On July 17, the Cincinnati Post wrote, “The suit stemmed from PNC's efforts to unload $762 million in bad corporate loans five years ago. PNC sold those loans to three partnerships it created with insurance giant American International Group Inc., in effect removing them from its balance sheet.”

It gets worse; the paper elaborated, “PNC has contributed $90 million to the settlement fund. Most of the rest came from AIG, which paid $44 million, and other insurance companies.”

And finally, “PNC paid $25 million to the U.S. Justice Department to settle charges of conspiracy to commit securities fraud filed in June 2003, and several key executives left the bank.”

Last spring published accounts reported that PNC had to reissue hundreds of debit cards after personal account information was found to have been compromised.

Just days before the announced merger, published accounts report that PNC “says it will sell $2 billion in mortgages and will take a $50 million charge in the third quarter.” The Boston Globe said, “The loss represents the decline in the value of the loans, which is largely due to increased interest rates.”

Think carefully; when was the last time you read something like any of the above about Mercantile?

The bargain that Mercantile customers, shareholders and Marylanders are getting in this deal is a Faustian bargain from hell. If Mercantile had to sell us out, they sure could’ve done better than PNC.

Kevin Dayhoff writes from Westminster Maryland USA. E-mail him at: kdayhoff@carr.org http://www.thetentacle.com/ Westminster Eagle Opinion and Winchester Report http://www.thewestminstereagle.com/ www.kevindayhoff.com has moved to http://kevindayhoff.blogspot.com/