Archive for March, 2007

hitler plus superman = too much

Wednesday, March 28th, 2007

This tidbit was sent in by Sticks of Fire’s other reader Mike.

Zephyrhills News editor Gary Hatrick has been fired from his job. “I was not at all surprised,” he said.

Neither are we.

It seems Hatrick compared Z-hills city councilman Daniel Burgess to Adolph Hitler. This, of course, upset Burgess’ mommy, who called the paper to complain. Burgess is 20, and on the city council. - Hey Burgess, tell your mom it’s time to let go.

The latest commentary again compared Burgess to Hitler, and asked if he was hiding behind mommy’s apron strings.

But that may not be Hatrick’s undoing. The TBO article says the newspaper’s owner, Barry H. Scripps, wasn’t too keen of Hatrick’s office collection of 160 Superman figurines.

So one guy plays with dolls, and accuses the other of being immature.

I guess that’s just how they roll in Z-hills. Thanks for the tip, Mike!

largo, city of hate and shame

Wednesday, March 28th, 2007

Hateful Bigots

It’s official, Steve Stanton has been fired. Once again, the Largo City Commissioners have taken it upon themselves to expose their naked intolerance and shameful hatred of anything different than their own wholesome, wonderbread selves. These myopic, ignorant and shameful people are embarrassing their city and their state with this awful pageant of loathing.

Here are a couple of quotes of the bigots who voted against Steve Stanton from the St. Pete Times:

“I will tell you it is not about transgenderism,” said Commissioner Gay Gentry. “It is about making sure that the 1,000 people who work in the city, work in such a way that they can give superior services for the 75,000 people who live in this city. I tried to vote the right way for the right reasons.”

Commissioner Andy Guyette said honesty, integrity and trust were the foundations of their relationship with him and that “without trust, there is no longer a foundation to any relationship.”

All I really get from these smarmy, repugnant pols is that they can’t trust transgendered people and after being as blatantly bigoted as they were, they don’t even have the courage or the honesty to admit the real reasons they fired Steve Stanton.

They fired Steve Stanton because he’s different, because he scares them, because they are ignorant assholes who hate everything that doesn’t fit into their hypocritical and inflexible belief systems.

Cross posted @ The Delightful Yank

tampa: now where?

Wednesday, March 28th, 2007

With the last of the Tampa City Council elections finally over, we can now move on to the speculation of just where the city is heading.

We have to discuss Joe Redner at the start. The interest that he helped garner in this race was significant. His efforts to focus on the environmental, transportation, and development issues were with vision and direction. The political baggage he carried as a “strip club owner” was repeated so often by the local media that his issues were usually ignored by the media and by the voters. Just as Al Gore is being recognized now with global warning, Joe Redner might be Tampa’s own harbinger of problems of our own making. We hope those issues stay in the front of public awareness. This was very likely his last campaign for public office.

New council members include Joe Caetano from the New/North Tampa area and citywide winner Mary Mulhern. Caetano has been an outspoken critic of the city in the past. While he has sometimes been a little too “out there” - suggesting New Tampa’s secession from the city? - his points about the need for more attention to District 7 is based on real needs and the abundance of tax revenues the area provides. Mary Mulhern is the new member to watch. She is progressive, open minded, and a newcomer to elected office. Her concerns for environmental related issues have been well articulated. While Charlie Miranda is newly elected, he has served on council before. His pet issues have addressed deteriorating infrastructure needs - roads, water, drainage, sewage issues. Additionally, Miranda is a strong voice for West Tampa, an area on the verge of a significant renaissance.

Tom Scott has a clear record of development issues and concerns about roads and transportation. Gwen Miller indicates she has heard the voters and will address more issues during this term. John Dingfelder is known as being someone that sometimes flips on issues, but it is usually because he has done continuing homework that has lead him to a different conclusion. His low key style has been one of his trademarks. Can he deliver needed goods and services for his district? Only time will tell.

As with many government bodies, Tampa’s City Council has frequently been split between the business / development side versus social concerns. Linda Saul-Sena has an acute sensitivity to historic preservation and a long term approach to city planning. She is outspoken when she has felt the need and is probably the most political member of the current council members. While she has sometimes not been consistent on development issues, she has been a tireless officeholder. With the failed election bid of Shawn Harrison, Saul-Sena may be the heir apparent for Tampa Mayor.

And speaking of the Mayor, Pam Iorio seems more enthusiastic about her second term than ever. She showed great pride of accomplishment at the recent announcement of Ikea opening a store in Tampa. Her plans for a mass transit plan, the riverwalk project - including the Tampa Museum of Art, financial restraint, and improvement of the neighborhoods remain to be realized - or not. She is a strong leader but has shown callousness on some issues. At an Ybor Chamber of Commerce meeting she almost openly challenged the night businesses of Ybor.

The decimation of architecturally significant Kiley Gardens in downtown appears to have come at her instruction well ahead of any reason to do so. She is conspicuously absent in the looming disaster of traffic issues on Gandy as the incredible rate of development proceeds SOG - South of Gandy.

However, she is usually a good reader of public sentiment and has been focusing more attention to the Drew Park, New Tampa, and East Tampa areas. Her understanding of the downtown core has helped lead to what will be an incredible downtown revitalization on a broad scale by the end of her new term. We believe you can watch for more direction of attention in the short term to the old West Tampa area as it starts to become increasingly significant to the downtown core. Tampa is one of the most exciting places in the US to be. Mayor Iorio has her challenges ahead, but we can’t think of anyone better to lead and direct our city. Along with the 2007 City Council, now the real work begins.

We thank everyone that seeks any public office. Your sacrifice of time, money, and more helps to shape our quality of life.

kenndey blvd.

Wednesday, March 28th, 2007

You know, when we misspell something here, we have the luxury of changing it just as soon as it is noticed. After newspapers have gone to print, they are just sorta stuck. Too bad all the street signs aren’t electronic, especially this new sign at the corner of Ashley Dr. and Kenndey Kennedy Blvd. in downtown Tampa:
Kenndey Blvd.

miller and caetano are your new councilmembers

Wednesday, March 28th, 2007

9:02 pm - The results are in. Gwen Miller has won re-election to the City Council. There were 297 more votes cast in this election than the total cast in District 1’s primary. Almost as many as were cast in the Mayoral election (91 votes short).

Turnout was indeed higher.

City Council, District 1
112 of 112 Precincts Completely Reporting
    Percent Votes
Gwendolyn ”Gwen” Miller 56.47% 15,383
Joe Redner 43.53% 11,587
  27,240
City Council, District 7
19 of 19 Precincts Completely Reporting
    Percent Votes
Joseph P. Caetano 59.54% 2,589
Frank J. Margarella 40.46% 1,759
  4,348

Congratulations to Councilman-elect Joseph Caetano and Councilwoman Gwen Miller.

tampa election runoff results: liveblogging

Wednesday, March 28th, 2007

I decided to live blog the runoff election results - mostly because it was so much fun to do the first time.

PoHo has a report that turnout would be around 14% - about the same as for the primary.

7:07 pm - Miller takes the early lead with the early voters, by an almost two-to-one margin: 61.4% to 38.6%. Caetano has a slightly larger lead at 66% to 34%. More than 4,700 votes were cast city-wide, almost 800 of them in District 7.

City Council, District 1
0 of 112 Precincts Completely Reporting
    Percent Votes
Gwendolyn ”Gwen” Miller 61.42% 2,891
Joe Redner 38.58% 1,816
  4,707
City Council, District 7
0 of 19 Precincts Completely Reporting
    Percent Votes
Joseph P. Caetano 65.97% 508
Frank J. Margarella 34.03% 262
  770

7:19 pm - The votes get closer. Miller’s lead down to just 57.3% to 43.7% over Redner. Caetano is down to 59% to 41% over Margarella.

(more…)

al-arian ends hunger strike

Tuesday, March 27th, 2007

Former USF engineering professor Sami Al-Arian ended his hunger strike last week, taking a liquid meal for the first time in two months. Hours later, a federal appeals court affirmed the Virginia ruling holding the 49-year-old in contempt of court for refusing to testify in a federal investigation of Islamic charities accused of assisting terrorists.

I have never understood hunger strikes. This may be due to my first experience with the term coming from the 1991 Temple Of The Dog record of the same name, a performance that launched both Soundgarden and Pearl Jam to national attention. Its use as a rhetorical tool only came to my attention much later.

Mohandas Gandhi engaged in several hunger strikes during his campaign to bring independence to India, but his approach had a foreseeable conclusion: if Gandhi were to die while imprisoned by the British, it would turn international opinion against the colonists while simultaneously creating a martyred hero for the nonviolent revolutionaries. In the end, Britain had no choice but to acquiesce to his position.

Sami Al-Arian, according to his wife, has lost 50 pounds off his already slight frame, and can no longer walk due to his refusal to eat. Her imploring led him to change his mind and start eating — which leads us to ask again exactly what point was he trying to make? There is an aspect of performativity in hunger strikes insofar as the rhetorical act is written on the body, as Philip Auslander would say, but nobody is seeing Al-Arian’s bodily rhetoric anyway. He is shouting in an empty forest. The topic of terrorism does not generate the universal sympathy of Gandhi’s struggle against colonialism, and he hasn’t the name recognition to become a motivational martyr.

He could, of course, be making a much stronger point by using the power of the pen to express his case (the case being that he signed a plea agreement exempting him from future testimony) but that isn’t happening. A hunger strike from a federal prison is as calculatedly irrational as Corporal Klinger’s cross-dressing on M*A*S*H, and in the same way both want the same thing: to be let out without having to testify to anything. I love Klinger, because he is from Northwest Ohio and talks about it constantly. I’m not sure how I feel about Al-Arian (and I represent no organization or institution but myself with these words), but I know I’d feel much better if he’d say anything.

get started on traffic fix

Tuesday, March 27th, 2007

After determining that transportation is this area’s number one problem, we got some suggestions on how to fix Tampa’s traffic problems. Ideas were abundant, including these:

  • Better enforcement:
    • ticket slow drivers in passing lanes
    • Pass on the left
    • Use blinkers
    • Crackdown on speeding/reckless driving
    • ticket red-light runners
  • Stricter standards on licensing:
    • The only minimum standard is a written test with a 70% passing score(correct me if I’m off on that please) and a practical “standards” test by an overworked, underappreciated government employee. Should the standards of driving be set higher, I think so.
    • How about making it a privelidge to drive, instead of a right? How about if you could only drive if you followed the rules?
  • Improve existing engineering:
    • Two-way Florida and Highland
    • 15-35mph range in speed limits on the Interstate is a big source of the problems
    • Implement a dynamic/”smart” traffic light/traffic management system (traffic flow through lights at speed limit)
  • Expand and improve existing transit
    • to serve all citizens (not just those without cars)
    • Transit incentives, park-and-ride lots
    • 24 hour service
  • New mass transit
    • Light Rail. Light Rail. Light Rail
    • Light rail/Monorail system around downtown, westshore, airport, south tampa, seminole heights, usf
    • REGIONAL TRANSIT(Pinellas, Pasco, Hillsborough), get the people from the Burbs to the jobs (Westshore, Downtown)

No one mentioned employer-related solutions. Telecommuting would get cars off the street, as would employee busing (think MacDill AFB or Tampa General). Tax breaks could be given for % of employees that don’t drive.

Growth was mentioned, and the two issues go hand-in-hand, but we’re here to tackle transit first.

The new poll is up. Which solution would be your first step? And feel free to discuss below.

davis islands community news to change owners

Tuesday, March 27th, 2007

Community Publications announced today the sale of the Davis Islands Community News to Tampa Marketing Company. Davis Islands residents have been receiving their news on local issues and events in this local newspaper for seven years.

“Davis Islands is a perfectly located Tampa community that is frequently forgotten due to its ‘destination’ geography,” said Bill Sharpe, president of Tampa Marketing Company. “With Tampa General Hospital, the Peter O. Knight Airport, the Davis Islands Yacht Club and great restaurants and businesses, Davis Islands has a lot to offer its residents and surrounding communities.”

The Davis Islands Community News was founded in 2001 and was taken over by the current editor and publisher, Lee Medart, in 2003. While the April issue with Medart as editor has been distributed, Bill Sharpe and Tampa Marketing Company’s first edition will be issued in May 2007.

“With Lee Medart’s planned retirement, many Davis Islands residents have feared that their local identity might be sacrificed,” said Sharpe. “With the great community identity and discussions that she [Medart] has helped to create, we look forward to following her efforts through the continued publication of the Davis Islands Community News.”

Sharpe added that many Davis Islands businesses are frequently forgotten by the mainland residents and the Tampa Marketing Company hopes to help increase awareness of them.

The Tampa Marketing Company is best recognized as an internet and web-based marketing company with the sites they own or provide advertising sales for including TampaForums.com, TampaRacing.com, TampaGold.com, SOHOTampa.com and Sticks of Fire.com.

In addition, many of the Web sites have been recognized locally including SOHOTampa.com and Sticks of Fire as Creative Loafing’s “Best of the Bay for 2006.” Also, TampaGold.com recently provided web casts of candidates’ forums in several Tampa City Council races and the top five Tampa Marketing Company Web sites achieved more than 108 million page views with more than 1.2 million unique visitors in 2006.

“I have known Bill for over two years and he has done tremendous things to build a greater awareness of the SOHO (South Howard Avenue) area. He has been a member of our Chamber of Commerce, knows Davis Islands and will help to continue the Davis Islands Community News responsiveness to our local neighborhood issues,” said Medart.

The Davis Islands Community News is a monthly publication that is mailed to all of the residents of Davis Islands. The total current distribution is approximately 3,000 and Tampa Marketing Company’s plans call for a significant increase of distribution to more surrounding neighborhood areas.