Thursday, February 28, 2019

7TH DISTRICT (INCLUDES MOST OF STARK CO) CONGRESSMAN BOB GIBBS EMBARRASSED HIMSELF IN COHEN HEARING?

MICHAEL COHEN
THE PERFECT SQUELCH
ON 7TH DISTRICT CONGRESSMAN BOB GIBBS


Even Congressman Bob Gibbs' political friends do not defend congressman's inability to communicate effectively


Watching Gibbs yesterday as one of 17 minority Republican members U.S. House of Representatives' Committee on Oversight and Reform embarrassed himself and his constituents in Ohio's 7th congressional district which includes most of Stark County.

But that is what one gets when a political party gerrymanders congressional districts so that the chief attribute of getting elected in to be "alive as evidenced by breathing.'

People like Ohio Republican Party chairwoman Jane Timken (a Stark Countian, by the way) thinks that gerrymandering which inflicts the likes of Gibbs on is good for the country and Ohio.

Wow!

What a sad day for Stark County and the rest of the 7th.


If it were not for the gerrymandering, Stark et al might have elected Ken Harbaugh (Country Over Party) last November.

Instead, we got a Party Over County guy who seems to think being a member of the Committee on Oversight entails being a cheerleader for the president and exercising oversight over a co-equal branch of government is an act of disloyalty.

Oversight means. holding the executive and judicial branches accountable in our Constitutional system of "checks and balances," no?

Here is how the NY Magazine Intelligencer described Gibbs' performance in Washington yesterday:


The Committee is one of several with the Democratic Party takeover of the House in the November 2018 elections who feel that the changeover from  being Republican-controlled to being Democratic-controlled was a message from voters that the public wants the House and Senate to reassert the Congress as being a co-equal branch of government with the Executive and Judicial branches of government and in particular the Committee on Oversight ... to hold the executive branch accountable.

Most Republicans serving in the Senate and House apparently think that their role is to defend the president on a host of allegations of presidential misconduct. Chief defender on the Committee is Republican Freedom Caucus member Jim Jordan of Ohio.  Jordan is the ranking minority member.

And Gibbs of Holmes County demonstrated he is one of the sycophants to the president.

We can all agree that Michael Cohen, a convicted felon, is close to being a match to the president conduct and veracity.

It seems his willingness to "take a bullet for the president" is how get was able to "up close and personal" with Donald J. Trump.

Trump must have sensed in 2007 when he started to have Cohen doing his Trump Organization legal work that Cohen was going to do what he did over the next 10 years:  "protect and take marching orders (direct or implied) from Donald J. Trump.

"Dumb Bob" proved his stupidity yesterday in comparing his "little bit" of knowing President Trump to Cohen's 10 years or better.

But that "ain't all."

First, Stark County Political Report (SCPR, The Report) readers need to see the Gibbs' debacle.

Bloomberg as upload the entire hearing to YouTube.  Gibbs begins his questioning at the 3:18:42  mark of the hearing and ends it at the 3:22:49 mark.

And to really get the feel for the incoherent Gibbs' rambling, here is the full transcript of his exchange with Cohen:

Gibbs:

THANK YOU, MR. CHAIRMAN. I'VE BEEN SITTING HERE, I'M NEW TO THE COMMITTEE. I'M NOT AN ATTORNEY.

I WAS LOOKING THROUGH THIS -- YOU COMING HERE AND YOU RAIL ON THE PRESIDENT OF THE UNITED STATES, COMMANDER IN CHIEF, WHILE HE'S OVER ACROSS THE PACIFIC OCEAN, TRYING TO NEGOTIATE AND HAVING THE COMMITTEE AT THIS TIME

BUT YOU CALL HIM A RACIST, A CHEAT. YOU'RE ATTACKING HIS CHARACTER AND I'VE BEEN WITH THE PRESIDENT A LITTLE BIT AND I DIDN'T SEE THAT IN THE PRESIDENT. I SEE A PRESIDENT WHO'S VERY SINCERE, HE'S TRYING TO MAKE THIS COUNTRY BETTER FOR EVERY AMERICAN

AND FOR YOU TO COME IN HERE AND DO THIS, IT'S REALLY UNBELIEVABLE. REAL REPENTANCE WOULD BE GO SERVE YOUR TIME AND DON'T COME HERE AND MAKE ALLEGATIONS.

LOOKING HERE FROM THE REMARKS ON THE PROSECUTOR OF THE SOUTHERN DISTRICT OF NEW YORK, FALSE STATEMENTS TO BANK 3 WHICH COHEN PLEADED GUILTY -- IT WAS A LONG SERIES OF SELF-SERVING LIES COHEN TOLD NUMEROUS FINANCIAL INSTITUTIONS.

EARLIER IN YOUR TESTIMONY, I THINK I HEARD YOU SAY IT WAS A HOME EQUITY LOAN. BUT THE PROSECUTORS THINK THERE WERE OTHER FINANCIAL THINGS THAT YOU DID. MANAGED TO COMMIT A SERIES OF CRIMES ALL WHILE BEING A LICENSED ATTORNEY.

ALSO THE SOUTHERN DISTRICT PROSECUTORS SAID THAT -- WROTE THAT YOUR CONSCIOUSNESS OF WRONGDOING IS FLEETING, THAT YOUR REMORSE IS MINIMAL AND YOUR INSTINCT TO BLAME OTHERS IS STRONG.

SO I'M KIND OF LEFT HERE, WHY YOU WORKED FOR THE PRESIDENT FOR TEN YEARS, BEFORE HE WAS PRESIDENT, IF YOU HAVE ANY SENSE OF INTEGRITY, WAS THAT BAD, WHY DIDN'T YOU LEAVE? YOU WEREN'T STUCK THERE FOR FINANCIAL REASONS, YOU HAD WAYS TO LEAVE. YOU WERE AN ATTORNEY.

THAT'S KIND OF -- THE PRESIDENT IS WORKING TIRELESSLY.

YOU'RE GOING TO HAVE A VERY LUCRATIVE DEAL AT SOME POINT IN YOUR LIFE BECAUSE YOU DON'T LOOK LIKE YOU'RE CLOSE TO RETIREMENT. YOU'RE GOING TO HAVE SOME TYPE OF A DEAL.

ONE OF MY QUESTIONS IS, TALKS WITH YOU AND YOUR ATTORNEY AND THERE'S BEEN TALKS ABOUT MEMBERS OF CONGRESS AND STAFF AND YOU SAID THERE WAS SOME DISCUSSIONS, WAS ANY OF THOSE DISCUSSIONS THAT YOU OR YOUR ATTORNEYS HAD WITH MEMBERS OF CONGRESS OR STAFF OR PROSECUTORS TO CONSIDERATIONS TO FAVOR OR OTHER CONSIDERATIONS OF YOUR FAMILY IN THE FUTURE?

NO. THE CONVERSATIONS WERE ABOUT THE TOPICS AND BECAUSE THERE WERE THINGS THAT ORIGINALLY WE COULD NOT SPEAK ABOUT AT THE REQUEST OF WHETHER IT WAS THE SPECIAL COUNSEL'S OFFICE, THE SOUTHERN DISTRICT OR ANY OF THE OTHER AGENCIES INCLUDING THE HOUSE SELECT INTEL OR THE SENATE SELECT INTEL.

THIS WORLD TODAY WITH THESE LUCRATIVE BOOK DEALS AND MOVIES THAT COME ABOUT, I THINK YOU'LL BE PRETTY GOOD IN ABOUT FIVE YEARS.

COHEN

JUST FOR YOUR PERSONAL EDIFICATION HERE, I WAS ASKED TO COME HERE. YOUR CHAIRMAN SENT A LETTER TO MR. DAVIS. AND I ACCEPTED. SO I'M HERE VOLUNTARILY.

I UNDERSTAND THAT. I THINK THIS IS POLITICAL THEATER.

I TAKE NO PLEASURE IN SAYING ANYTHING NEGATIVE ABOUT MR. TRUMP.

YOU'VE MET HIM FOR A SHORT PERIOD OF TIME. I'VE BEEN WITH HIM FOR OVER A DECADE. I'VE TRAVELED WITH HIM INTERNATIONALLY, I'VE SPENT DINNERS WITH HIM.

IT DOESN'T MAKE ME FEEL GOOD ABOUT WHAT'S GOING ON HERE. AND AS FAR AS SAVING FACE, I'M NOT SURE HOW BEING IN FRONT OF THE WORLD, BEING CALLED --

Wednesday, February 27, 2019

STARK COUNTIANS: BE SURE TO MAKE YOUR VOICE HEARD ON PROPOSED GASOLINE TAX INCREASE

February 28th UPDATE - Statement by Representative Thomas West (D - 49th Ohio House) on his consideration on a proposed gasoline tax increase, to wit:
:
I am incredibly honored to be in a role in which I am tasked to look at the infrastructure, transportation and transit needs of Stark County.

I've been hearing from concerned constituents, local community and business leaders, and from the DeWine Administration about the proposed gas tax intended to fix our crumbling infrastructure and improve our roads.

I will be diligent in my work to come to a conclusion about the proposed gas tax increase and will continue to listen to all those who will be affected.

February 27, 2019 To Date Results

VOTE IN POLL LISTED BELOW



In order for Stark Countians to have an avenue to speak to members of the Stark County delegation on controversial issues that come to the fore, The Report will be publishing polls for everyday Stark Countians to respond to and be heard.

Hopefully, enough Stark Countians will participate so that our county's legislators will have to listen.

THE POLL

Saturday, February 23, 2019

MAKE YOUR VOICE HEARD BY OELSLAGER, SCHURING, STOLTZFUS & WEST ON PROPOSED GASOLINE TAX INCREASE

VOTE ON PROPOSED 18 CENT GASOLINE TAX INCREASE AT END OF THIS BLOG.

Results so far included.

UPDATE: 02/26/2019  JLEC (as reported by Capitol Letter) Financial Disclosure of Rep. Thomas West for 2017.


(EXTRACT)

1. West reported earning from $0 to $999 from his position on the Canton City Council (he left in January 2017 to become a state representative) and from $3,000 to $30,996 spread out between four rental properties. West earned $60,584 in legislative pay.

2. He reported investments with the Public Employee Retirement System and the State Teachers Retirement System.

3. At some point in 2017, he owed more than $1,000 to Navient, CSE Credit Union and the law firm Roderick Linton Belfance.

4. At some point in 2017, Gloria Norris, LeErika Lawson, Cantonian LLC and ABLE Inc. owed West at least $1,000.

5. West received $6427.77 in travel reimbursement, including $4596.80 from the state of Ohio, $833.15 from SIX Legislative Conference, $425.40 from the Public Leadership Institute's Strategy Forum, $296.40 from the Blue Green Alliance and $276.02 from the Ohio Chamber of Commerce. 

 

UPDATE:  02/25/2019 So far most poll takers support 18 cent gasoline tax increase!

TAKE SCPR POLL
(AT END OF BLOG)

FIRST RESULTS:


BY CITY/VILLAGE & TOWNSHIP



ORIGINAL BLOG

LET YOUR STATE REP/STATE SENATOR
KNOW HOW YOU VIEW GOV. DEWINE'S 
PROPOSED 18 CENT GASOLINE TAX INCREASE


It appears to The Stark County Political Report (SCPR, The Report) that newly elected Republican Reggie Stoltzfus as state Representative for the 50th Ohio House District (see above) is going to be the most interested in and responsive to the wishes of Stark Countians as a member of the Ohio General Assembly (OGA).

Undoubtedly, Ohioans and Stark Countians know that the Ohio Department of Transportation (ODOT) has run out of money to do new road construction work across the state.  ODOT will only be able to maintain the roadways it is responsible for and that's it if the OGA does not agree to new revenues in the form of additional taxes on gasoline going forward.

Governor DeWine has the unhappy job of convincing Ohioans that Republicans are again at the forefront of raising our taxes.  On the other side of the tax issue is a history whereby Republicans have decreased (though mostly benefiting the well-off) Ohio's income taxes.


Of course, Stark Countians want to hear the viewpoints of members of the Stark County delegation to the Assembly.

Moreover, the state representatives and the state senator (Kirk Schuring; R-the 29th) should want to hear the viewpoint of their constituents here in

The SCPR has contacted Stoltzfus and Democrat Thomas West (the 49th House District) but not Oelslager and Schuring.

Oelslager and Schuring have demonstrated to this blogger is that both have taken on an arrogance likely by virtue of been members of the OGA for a combined 60 years (either as a state representative or senator as they switch back and forth in order to overcome Ohioans desire for a term limit of eight (8) consecutive years in either the House or Senate.

The "organized" Stark County Democratic Party has not put up viable candidates of either over those 60 years.

Hence Stark County has two OGA members who only .listen to and engage "the movers and shakers" in Stark County politics.  Certainly not everyday Stark Countians especially if like SCPR they ask pointed, put them on the spot, and/or difficult to answer questions.

But Stoltzfus is showing that he does care.

Here is the complete exchange between the SCPR and Representative Stoltzfus.

On Feb 22, 2019, at 11:54 AM, Martin Olson <tramols@att.net> wrote:

Representative Stoltzfus,

What is your position on Governor DeWine's proposed increase on gasoline taxes at 18 cents per gallon?

Thank you,

Martin/SCPR

Hi Martin,

 I am never in favor of more taxes, I believe we pay enough taxes already.

 I will be open to listening to the Governor, and ODOT Director Marchbanks state their case as to why Ohio needs to raise the gas tax. 

I will be more interested in hearing how the residents of the 50th District feel about this proposal, these are the people I represent.

Thanks. -Reggie 

The jury is still out on Representative West.

In order for Stark Countians to have an avenue to speak to members of the Stark County delegation on controversial issues that come to the fore, The Report will be publishing polls for everyday Stark Countians to respond to and be heard.

Hopefully, enough Stark Countians will participate so that our county's legislature will have to listen.

THE POLL

Thursday, February 21, 2019

DEWINE USED OHIO TAXPAYER MONEY TO DELAY EFFORT FOR FAIRNESS/COMPETIVENESS IN OHIO CONGRESSIONAL ELECTIONS HAS FAILED


UPDATED:  FRIDAY, 02/22/19 - GERRYMANDERING HISTORY, STATUS OF CURRENT SCOTUS CASES & POINT/COUNTERPOINT ARGUMENTS

IS HE THE GOVERNOR OF "ALL" THE PEOPLE 
OR 
PRIMARILY FOR REPUBLICANS?


SOURCE OF MAP

Regular readers of The Stark County Political Report (SCPR, The Report) takes a stance of "a pox on both their houses" regarding the "organized" Democratic and Republican parties and their self-serving ways as manifested in either party, where the opportunity presents itself, to gerrymander legislative districts so as to ensure that the party's candidates have a huge advantage in contending for election.

Polls consistently show that Americans oppose this practice by a large margin.


This duopoly use voters in general to feather the nests of their respective political organizations and more particularly the well-being of individuals in each party who control the structure of his/her party.


In November, Freakonomics (a popular podcast series) published a podcast entitled America's Hidden Duopoly.

For anyone who wants to break up this duopoly, the America's Hidden Dupoly podcast presents some ideas.

This podcast (LINK) is a must listen to broadcast for all who care about the health of court democratic-republic.

The sometimes collusive action by the Dems and Reps to "stack the deck" for their respective parties and/or candidates/elected officials is in the assessment of this blogger "political corruption."

To see a history of gerrymandering, the primary court arguments and the status of all legal challenges currently underway, here is a LINK to Ballotpedia's blog on the matter.


America by its Constitution is intended to be a democratic-republic which both the organized Republicans and Democrats (sometimes alone, sometimes collusively with each other) corrupt the framers of the Constitution.

Nowhere in the United States of America Constitution are political parties mentioned.

The "organized" Reps' and Dems' perversion of the intentions of the Constitution framers is, grain-by-grain, undermining public confidence in our government staffed for the most part with declared Democrats and Republican.

Grain-by-grain the voting public gets more and more disillusioned with the Democrat/Republican undermining of fair and competitive processes of governance and elections which, slowly but surely, prompts ordinary citizens to opt out of our political processes.

The best that can be said for the manner in which "organized" Republicans and Democrats function is that they appear to be "a necessary evil."

A key way to keep them in check is for fair-minded citizens and civic organizations to file or be part of a lawsuit designed to impose Constitutional standards on the "organized" parties.

A striking example of this phenomenon is action taken by then Governor-elect Mike DeWine's hijacking of taxpayer finances/resources in the waning days of his being attorney general of Ohio (notably:  not before the gubernatorial election of 2018) in seeking to delay a trial set for March 4, 2019 "in the name of all of Ohioan which, of course, is designed to benefit Republicans.

The DeWine action has been taken over by November, 2018 elected Dave Yost as attorney general.  He is also a Republican.


Stark Countian Constance "Connie" Rubin is a named plaintiff in the lawsuit.  She is quite active in the party.

The main of DeWine's argument: (Citing that the US Supreme Court is considering two gerrymandering cases presently [see specifics several paragraphs down in this blog]) is as follows:
“If the Supreme Court finds that these redistricting claims are nonjusticiable, then this upcoming trial will constitute a waste of time, money and resources of the litigants, the Court, and the taxpayers of Ohio,” 
The entire DeWine argument:



The Court's decision rejection of the DeWine initiative.



In other state jurisdictions (e.g. Wisconsin and Michigan), Republican factors have sought (at taxpayer expense) to delay judicial proceedings in fear that the courts will find for the plaintiffs in filed "end gerrymander" lawsuits which possibly result in gerrymandered congressional states dominated by Republicans  having to create "fairer" and more competitive districts in time for the 2020 congressional elections.

Consonant with the Wisconsin/Michigan objectives is clearly DeWine's goal obvious objective has been to delay fairness and competitiveness in Ohio elections until the 2022 elections before which an Ohio voter-mandated district (state and federal) reformulation will have taken place.


Ohio will only have 14 congressional districts in 2020, down two from the current 16 as shown in the partisan map above.

DeWine/Yost apparently seek to benefit the likes of 7th Congressional district Bob Gibbs, who, if he had to run in a competitive election, would likely lose.

Gibbs is the vapidest and among the most partisan U.S. congresspersons from all the collective of Ohio districts.

Before this blogger hears it, it is acknowledged that the Democrats do it too.

Response:  Two wrongs, do not make an act right."

That is why the SCPR over the 11-year span of the blog has worked hard to be equally critical of each political party and filtering down to each party's candidates for officer and, of course, elected officials of both parties post-election.

Organized Republicans and Democrats each have an instance of claimed in Maryland (Democrat controlled) and North Carolina (Republican controlled) of unconstitutional gerrymandering before the U.S. Supreme Court.

To repeat, "a pox on both their houses."

Both "organized" political parties are "might makes right" entities.

To quote Ohio Republican chairperson and Stark Countian Jane Timken:

"elections have consequences"

which impliedly is tantamount to saying "to Hell" with Constitutional standards of fairness.

Where else are we hearing nearly on a daily basis these days:  "to Hell" Constitutional standards (e.g. Separation of Powers in our national government).

To repeat for a third time with regard to "organized" Republican and Democratic entities:  "a pox on both their houses!"

Monday, February 18, 2019

CANTON CITY SCHOOLS BOARD MEMBER ERIC RESNICK HAS CANTON EDUCATION CIRCLES RILED UP, AGAIN?

UPDATED:  TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 19, 11:20 AM

A defense of Adrian Allison's Work as Superintendent


Note:   Readers of this blog should go to this Ohio Department of Education (ODE) LINK to get definitions of the headline criteria used in the introductory graphic to this blog.

One of Canton's most activist/provocative citizens, The Stark County Political Report thinks, is Canton City Schools board member Eric Resnick.


SOURCE:  CCS WEBSITE

The latest of which is his January 30, 2019 posting on his Facebook site this:



The furor at the surface level seems to be over the above-Resnick-posted-documents' use of explicit sexual language.

But the outrage expressed by some Cantonians may be more about race than about the document's language.

When one has one agenda, it is not unheard of for such a person to hide the primary agenda under the subterfuge of another.

And that is what some folks are saying that what really is at play here in the wake of African American Adrian Allison Canton City Schools (CCS) Board of Education's removal of Allison as CCS superintendent (six years as superintendent) in early January of this year.


It appears that a former and highly respected African American CCS BOE member Nadine McIllwain Massey is leading the charge in taking Resnick to task on the Facebook posting which some think is because he was part of the dismissal of Allison in a 5 to 0 vote of the CCS BOE.

See McIllwain in a link to The Repository's  video of her appearing before the CCS BOE and in a Greater United Way of Stark County video in which she is being awarded United Way's Gold Key in 2013.

This is what McIllwain-Massey says about herself on a posting on Resnick's Facebook page:
Nadine Massey Jean Haidet Hershberger Just wanted you to know that I was a teacher for CCS for over 20 years at my beloved Timken HS. I served 12 years on the CCS board of Ed and I am a graduate of McKinley Senior HS. I love CCS school as much as anyone. And for the record, I was the first teacher in Stark County to receive the Millken Family Foundation National Teacher Award. What we said at that board meeting is true and needed to be said. Rinaldi was first to accuse us of racism because of our vote regarding the McKinley football coach. Everything we said at that meeting is supported by newspaper articles and video, which I will be happy to share with you.
Resnick himself says he has a lot of regard for McIllwain.

Also appearing the United Way video was Vincent Watts
  • who has been a commenter on the Resnick Facebook page 
  • who disqualified today (Tuesday) by the Stark BOE as Democratic candidate for mayor of Canton, and
  • who is a former president/CEO of The Greater Stark County Urban League

A Watts comment on Resnick's FB page:
Vince Watts 
Mr. Resnick, Not sure where this post came from or why you are chosing (sic) to repost it, but as a school board member there are several parts that are of a concern to parents, or in my case, grandparents of children in our school system, i.e. p**** in v***** deserve pity, f*** off, really? 
Maybe you can put together a forum to discuss these issues so that we can build an understanding of what it is you are trying to address in this post in particular. There is support out here, but driving this wedge seems intentional and unnecessary. Just my thoughts.
There may be yet another factor in Allison's departure as regards his handling of an incident at a McKinley High School football game on November 9, 2018 involving a gay (according to media reports) McKinley student.

Resnick has been openly gay for some time now.

Undoubtedly, there are those who think that Resnick was a key figure in Allison's being let go as the CCS superintendent owing to his handling of the November, 2018 incident reportedly involving a gay student.

These folks have to be questioning themselves in suggesting such given that January BOE vote to remove Allison was a 5 to 0 vote.

Reasons for why Allison was dismissed likely varies from member to member and The Report thinks it probably a mix of dissatisfactions that prompted the BOE to go in another direction.

And that is not all.  Allison was superintendent of Canton schools when the CCS BOE made the decision on Allison's recommendation to merge Timken High School with McKinley back in 2015.





It is hard to tell whether or not anybody is capable of pulling the CCS out of its ODE overall "F" rating.

Just take a look at Canton's poverty rate.


From the SCPR's point of view, the primary reason should have been Allison's apparent inability to pull the CCS out of its "F" rating on a number of criteria presuming however that there is somebody who can successfully get the job done.

On the poverty factor, a SCPR reader (who requested non-attribution) has made (in a Tuesday, 02/19/2019 e-mail) this point:
I read with interest your recent posting.  
Poverty is not the only issue with regard to school system failures.  
I started life in poverty in Cleveland but the difference is that I had a mother and father who valued education.  Eventually, we moved out of the projects in Cleveland, because my parents cared.  
After graduating from College of Wooster having majored in Physics and Mathematics, I turned down a graduate program at Cornell University and went to Cleveland to teach. It was based upon my Catholic training that to whom much is given then much is expected. 
 When the Vietnamese kids came into the system, I learned that commitment by families to education was important.    
I was privy to some studies that confirmed that family stability is a big factor.  
Such factors as single parent household, and family mobility are very important factors. 
Later after I left teaching and made it to Canton, I learned from Attorney Randy Snow, who was a member of the Canton School Board that mobility is a big factor on student success.  
Poverty is a factor but not the sole factor.  
Family emphasis on education, strong family units and mobility are more important factors. 
I close examination of housing in Canton demonstrates that Canton has a high transient community.  The housing stock has aged and there has been an increase in rentals.  
Allison seemed to have done his best but he did not teach and therefore lacked some of the knowledge with respect to what was going on in the classroom.   
It will be difficult for the Canton School System to turn the system around in the few years left before a state takeover.  Unfortunately, a state takeover is not a solution.  A close examination of the state takeovers in Lorain, and Youngstown illustrate this point.  
Of course in a society which rewards and values its entertainers and athletes more than its teachers, we should not be surprised that we are getting what we pay for in large urban education systems across the nation.
We cannot expect one person to solve the problems.  The solution lies in a greater commitment by the community as a whole.  
One should ask:  Is Canton a realistic candidate for academic redemption?  Take a look at this study.

Isn't the poor academic performance in Canton owing to the high poverty rate which indicates that it will take the entire Canton community to abate that factor?

Solving the link between poverty and poor school performance will not happen overnight no matter who the school superintendent is.

If only the likes of Repository publisher Jim Porter, Canton Regional Chamber of Commerce president Denny Saunier and C. David Baker of the Pro Football Hall of Fame (PFHOF) put the same effort in the finding ways and means to improve Canton schools academic, the timetable to recovering the schools to academic viability could happen sooner than later.

Baker a year or so ago bragged about the CCS "having the best damn high school football stadium in America at what he said was a $150 million price tag.

A stadium, the last the SCPR knew,
  • (The Report has e-mailed board president J.R. Rinaldi about the exact status but he has not answered) 
still lacks locker room facilities for the McKinley Bulldogs.

Talk about not having your priorities straight?

The Youngstown schools are currently under state of Ohio control.

A report indicates that the schools are still failing under state standards but improving.

Resnick last year (September 6, 2018) appeared at an Ohio Schools Board Association sponsored candidates forum (which had candidates for the Ohio General Assembly present).


One of Resnick's most provocative questions had to do with the passage and implementation of House Bill 70 (see this LINK for efforts to repeal it) which dealt with the state of Ohio takeover of the poverty-ridden/highly urban Youngstown School District and the bill's threat to districts like the Canton City Schools district.

These are not happy days in the CCS.

The question is:  Is Resnick helping or hindering a turnaround with the Canton City Schools and the public perception of the district?

It is hard to believe that diversions like the Things Queer Culture Teacher Teach That Straight Culture Doesn't.

Thursday, February 14, 2019

REPUBLICAN STARK CO POLITICAL SUBDIVISION "ELECTED" OFFICIALS OUTNUMBER DEMS BY WIDE MARGIN



AND 
CONTROL MORE UNITS OF STARK POLITICAL SUBDIVISION GOV'T
BUT 
AT NO ADVANTAGE TO EVERYDAY CITIZENS!



There are 196 elected Republicans and 125 elected Democrats and 34 elected non partisans (aka "independents" in Stark County Political Subdivision government.

The most prized ought to be those who serve in local government as politically independent (registered as non partisans).

They are eight in number.

However, note in the SCPR posting of "organized" majority (Republican Democrat and evenly distributed) of staffing of Stark political subdivisions that the remaining 26 non partisans are sprinkled throughout.  As stated above, there are only 34 of them who are the majority in four local political subdivision venue. to wit:

  • Note:  a few of  serving public officials are appointed such as was Canton law director Kristen Aylward-Bates and Canton City Council president William V. Sherer, II.
"Organized Republicans really do control Stark County's political landscape in 2019.  Sixty-six (66) of this counties government entities are staffed with a majority of Republicans, to wit:


Organized Democrats have a majority in 35 Stark County political subdivision jurisdictions and there are 6 evenly divided between Republicans, Democrats and non-partisan jurisdictions, to wit:


Here is the entire list of 2019 serving public officials:


(Data based on information provided by Stark Co. BOE)

So far as The Stark County Political Report is concerned, both of the "organized" Dems and Republicans parties are corrupted in the sense in looking out for political party interests over community interests and, derivatively,  individual elected officials in the sense of looking after the political welfare of themselves and their "inside the beltway" supporters rather than overall community interests.

All one has to do is to look at the goings on in Washington and the political warfare that is underway.

Political parties gaming one another, individual Republican and Democratic politicians grandstanding and a president who sees everything in terms of his self-interest and has no problem whatsoever in telling lie, after lie, after lie in order to justify himself.

And very few, if any, Senate Republicans and House Republicans  (including 7th District [includes much of Stark County]  congressman Bob Gibbs) will call Trump's rampant dishonesty out.

Why?

Perhaps to save the Republican Party and themselves in the hope that the president can, through political bravado, survive the mounting disaffection of independent minded everyday Republicans.

Meanwhile, the ordinary citizens of America, Ohio and Stark County grow more and more cynical of major party elected officials to put "country, state, county, city, village and schools" above political party.

More and more voters are abandoning "official" political identity but have not yet translated that independence into making it clear to "died in the wool Democratic/Republican" candidates that the more partisan and political party entrenched they are perceived to be,  the less likely that you and I are to vote for them.

One of the more disturbing events in Stark County is the return of Canton mayor Thomas M. Bernabei to the "organized" Democratic Party.

Undoubtedly, former county Dems' chair Phil Giavasis was overjoyed at Bernabei's return for he willingly witness his circulating a petition for the mayor (likely would have gladly signed one but for his not being a Canton resident) in the light of his joining the fight to deny Bernabei (up to then a lifelong Democrat) the right to run as an independent  against two-term, seeking a third term, William J. Healy, II.

Anyone who thinks William J. Healy, II is a better fit than Tom Bernabei for the benefit of Canton obviously hinges that evaluation on his loyalty as a Democrat.

Somewhat understandable in that Giavasis was party chairman at the time.  But not really if one has a vantage point to know better than most of us to know that Healy was bad news for the future well being of Canton.

Undoubtedly, Giavasis knew the accounts of Bernabei repeatedly ripping Healy "a new one" when he Bernabei was was Canton service director/chief of staff in Healy's first term.  For which (even for the well being of Canton's citizens) got Bernabei fired in a humiliating manner.

Chairman Phil had to know all that and, accordingly, should easily be able to see him as a "party over community" politico.



And witness these individual signatures from "about as close as one can get" as being as being "political party" and 'individual political" interests over community interests.


Oh! not that the don't do their jobs as public officials in a workman sort of way.

But this blogger thinks in an overall since community is not over party when "push comes to shove" with likes of these folks.

Bernabei in taking on the "organized" Democratic Party establishment" struck a blow for community interest priority over political party/individual political interests.

Now that is all lost in terms of being an example of what courageous independent of political parties can do.

Disappointing for a man who could have been easily been reelected as an "independent."

But perhaps there is more to this story which, if so, it appears Bernabei is unwilling to discuss.  Not that long ago Louis Giavasis (shortly after having being appointed Stark County clerk of Court while brother Phil was chairman) floated a trial balloon of running as a Democrat.


The question is:  Was there  deal whereby the official Democratic Party hierarchy agreed to drop a possible Louis Giavasis challenge?

Nonetheless, the SCPR still thinks he is by far the most capable and independent-prone-thinking person in all of Stark County political subdivision government.

He could have been so much more in terms of being a model for those who aspire to get away the by and large GOP/Democrat self-aggrandizing monopoly and put community over party.

But of course nobody is perfect!

Monday, February 11, 2019

WHO IS LOOKING OUT FOR STARK COUNTIANS/OHIOANS ON ENVIRONMENTAL CONCERNS?

LAKE TOWNSHIP USES AQUAFALINA ON ITS ROADWAYS 
INCLUDING ITS RESIDENTIAL STREETS

On Sunday, February 10, 2019, the Cleveland Plain Dealer (Cleveland.com) reported as follows:


But there is blowback from the producer of AquaSalina.

See owner Dave Mansbery's note to the SCPR a few paragraphs down in this blog.

WHERE IN STARK COUNTY-SO FAR DETERMINED-THAT AQUAFALINA IS IN USE?

Stark County Engineer Keith Bennett tells this blogger that his office does NOT use AquaSalina in its highway maintenance program.

However, in a survey of various Ohio/Stark County governments just begun; Lake Township road superintendent Daniel Kamerer has told this blogger (I live in Lake Township on a street treated with AquaSalina)  that Lake does use the product and is convinced not only is it a money saver for Lake taxpayers but in his assessment is safe to use.  He says AquaSalina is much cheaper and effective than rival deicing products.



Kamerer put the SCPR in touch with Dave Mansbery of Nature's Own Source, LLC who sent the following rebuttal information to that published in the Plain Dealer article, to wit:

NATURE'S OWN SOURCE, LLC's RESPONSE


Mr. Olson,

Superintendent Kamerer advised me you had read an article in the Plain Dealer this past weekend regarding AquaSalina.  I would be happy to answer any questions you may have.  Several important points were left out of the article.  I am going to send you the exact summary of our 1/31/19 interview below.  I advised him we do not use “fracking brine”.  Number one there is no such product and number two, water used to frac wells are generally fresh and freshwater doesn’t melt ice.  Every effort to educate him was effort wasted.

Please contact me if you have any questions.  Channel 8 and 19 did interviews with me today so, I am happy to answer questions. 

There has been almost $ 1,000,000 in studies by PennDOT and ODOT done on the product.  The product is safe and actually reduces by 30% salt going into our lakes, rivers and streams.  Please note salt is radioactive as well in the attached report on 10 Commonly Radioactive Foods attached.

Regards,

Dave Mansbery
Nature’s Own Source, LLC

Mansbery provided the SCPR of what he says is the complete transcript of the conversation he had on January 31, 2019 with the Cleveland.com (Plain Dealer) reporter who wrote the story.

A copy of that transcript is included in the Annex portion of this blog.

STARK COUNTY HAS A HISTORY OF ENVIRONMENTAL ACTIVISM

Legendary Stark County environmental watchguard Chris Borello now of Plain Township (formerly of Lake Township where she led the fight [beginning in the early 1980s])
  • to protect area families from incurring health problems 
    • due the proximity of the Uniontown Industrial Excess Landfill (aka the Uniontown Dump, created in 1966; also see EPA report
      • in which the federal Environmental Protection Agency and Ohio EPA officials found hazardous chemicals to  have been buried.
Borello forwarded an e-mail to the SCPR among others a heads up on the aforementioned Plain Dealer report.

When President Trump gave his State of the Union speech on Tuesday, February 5, 2019 one of his invited guests was a child with brain cancer.

Joining Melania in the gallery this evening is a very brave 10-year-old girl, Grace Eline. Every birthday since she was 4, Grace asked her friends to donate to St. Jude Children's Research Hospital. She did not know that one day she might be a patient herself. 

Last year, Grace was diagnosed with brain cancer. Immediately, she began radiation treatment. At the same time, she rallied her community and raised more than $40,000 for the fight against cancer. When 

Grace completed treatment last fall, her doctors and nurses cheered with tears in their eyes as she hung up a poster that read: "Last Day of Chemo." Grace -- you are an inspiration to us all.

Many childhood cancers have not seen new therapies in decades. 

My budget will ask the Congress for $500 million over the next 10 years to fund this critical life-saving research.

This is, in part, what Borello had to say in reaction:

IF you watched last night's State of the Union address by Mr. Trump, you saw him use an adorable, precious little girl with brain cancer, to assert he supposedly desires some ( vague) effort to deal with /combat childhood cancer in the U.S... I wanted to hurl...yell, I don't know what....Having talked with parents of such children regarding our Uniontown IEL Superfund way too many times over some 30 years  ... 

It is probably "deja vu" (all over again) for Borello with the revelation by the Plain Dealer that it appears that Ohio's legislators seemed to be prepared to allow the Ohio Department of Transportation (ODOT) to purchase and apply a product called AquaSalina to the roadways of Ohio which, of course, includes Stark County.

Excerpts from the cited-above Plain Dealer article: 

Ohio Department of Transportation snowplows had been spreading AquaSalina, a deicing solution, on the state’s roadways for years when an environmental group last year obtained an unreleased Ohio Department of Natural Resources report that found high levels of radioactivity in the product.

After the 2017 report became public, state government and company officials attempted to debunk it, criticizing the testing protocol and findings as flawed and “worthless.”

A team of scientists from ODNR’s division of Oil and Gas Resources Management/Radiation Safety Section, and the Environmental Safety Section compiled the seven-page report. The team tested 14 samples of AquaSalina from six locations in Cuyahoga, Summit, Tuscarawas and Guernsey counties.


All of the samples were found to contain elevated levels of radioactivity in excess of state limits on the discharge of radioactive materials. The average radioactivity in AquaSalina also exceeded the drinking water limits for Radium 226 and Radium 228 by a factor of 300. Human consumption of any amount of AquaSalina is highly discouraged, the report said. 


Members of the state legislature rejected the reports’ findings, introducing a law [House Bill 393] last year that would ease regulations on AquaSalina, treating it as a commodity rather than toxic waste derived from oil- and gas-drilling operations. The law would also prevent ODNR from imposing any additional requirements.  (emphasis added)


Notice that Kirk Schuring's name is missing on the HB 393 vote which did not become law because the 132nd OGA ended before the Ohio Senate could take it up.  The SCPR speculates that for whatever reason Republican Schuring and Democrat John Boccieri could not make the vote and therefore there might have been an agreement that neither would be on the record as voting one way or another.


Boccieri did vote "no" in committee, to wit:

NOTE:   Much of the rest of the material in this blog is misformatted and this blogger has not been able to figure out where the problem is.


Of course, following the Republican line, Christina Hagan voted "yes" in committee.  A political courage SCPR "tip of the hat" to Republican Jay Edwards for his "no" in committee.
State Rep. Thomas West (D, 49th House District) voted "no' on HB 393.


Of course, following the Republican line, Christina Hagan voted "yes" in committee.  A political courage SCPR "tip of the hat" to Republican Jay Edwards for his "no" in committee.

State Rep. Thomas West (D, 49th House District) voted "no' on HB 393
Naturally, we all know the name Christina Hagan (quit the Ohio House to run for the U.S. House which race she lost in May, 2018) because of her six year effort to get the OGA to pass what is called "heartbeat" legislation which would prohibit abortions once a fetus heartbeat is detected.

One has to wonder how Hagan could, for consistency sake, lead the fight to

save the unborn but reject credible findings by Ohio government that radiation from AquaSalina  might be a risk to the health safety of Ohioans nearly all of whom use Ohio roadways?

Borello in her tireless work to deal with/eliminate life harmful/threatening chemical/industrial waste pollution that she says affects Stark County residents' health has pretty much gotten the 'deaf ear' from (she says) the likes of (in her words):
  • Dave Johnson, 
  • Scott Oelslager., 
  • Bob Horowitiz, 
  • ll the Stark County Commissioners, 
    • Capestrain, 
    • Dick Watkins, 
    • Norm Sponseller..
  •  local Stark Judges who dealt with IEL cases....since those cases reportedly were precedent setting 
  • Congressman Regula, and 
    • his local chief of staff back then, Daryl Revoldt, who had dual role of Mayor of N. Canton, 
  • Sen. Metzenbaum, 
  • John Glenn..., 
  • Congressman Tom Sawyer,  who threw CCLT under the bus 
  • Sue Ruley [... Lake Twp. Trustees... ] played the CCLT really good for quite awhile 
    • even though we told her how we didn't trust her due to her: 
      • A) telling us she worked for our major polluter, Firestone  
      • B).. She worked on IEL issues, ... AND, 
      • She had been the Zoning Inspector the year, 1966, IEL was PERMITTED to begin officially...
  • Voinovich's office claimed they needed to "defer" to Lake Twp/Ruley, because Voinovich was a "Federalist"...you know...local government stuff rules..
The SCPR infers from the  Borello list as possibly being an indication that one cannot depend on/trust politicians to step forward on environmental issues like the the AquaSalina matter and err on the side of caution.

It could be that AquaFalina's Dave Mansbery is correct and the ODNR division of Oil and Gas Resources Management/Radiation is incorrect on AquaFalina's safety factor.
Given this government finding, repeating partially text from the Plain Dealer piece linked to above:
A team of scientists from ODNR’s division of Oil and Gas Resources Management/Radiation Safety Section, and the Environmental Safety Section compiled the seven-page report. The team tested 14 samples of AquaSalina from six locations in Cuyahoga, Summit, Tuscarawas and Guernsey counties.
All of the samples were found to contain elevated levels of radioactivity in excess of state limits on the discharge of radioactive materials. The average radioactivity in AquaSalina also exceeded the drinking water limits for Radium 226 and Radium 228 by a factor of 300. Human consumption of any amount of AquaSalina is highly discouraged, the report said. 
it hard to believe that on December 6, 2018 the Ohio House (mostly Republicans) were willing to proceed apparently without fully vetting this safety issue.

Politicos are prone to side with business interests until it becomes compelling that the likes of Borello and fellow activists have made a clear case that they have ill-served their constituents.

In the meantime, it seems that they (mostly elected politicians) try to marginalize the likes of Borello.

What are they afraid of?

They should be gratified that Borello et al raise questions about public safety issues and embrace them with a full unbiased vetting of particular concerns.
The only Stark County politician who has stood up and fought for an environmental concerns was then-Plain Township trustee Louis P. Giavasis (now Stark County clerk of Courts) in 2010-2011 when the "fracking" controversy nationwide surfaced.

Here is a video from the archives of the SCPR of an interview with Giavasis.




The question today is whether or not Giavasis would show similar political spunk in 2019.

ANNEX

What Dave Mansbury says is the full transcript of this January 31, 2019 conversation with Cleveland.com (the Plain Dealer)