Author Archive

shipping cuban sugar cookies

Saturday, August 30th, 2008

We received another question for Ask-a-Tampan:

Does anyone know where I can buy cuban sugar cookies (from a bakery on Armenia Ave or La Terisita etc) and have them shipped to me in Tucson AZ?

YUMMMmmmmm…  Cuban Sugar Cookies…   Torticas de Morón…

Of course, when you are looking for authentic Cuban bakeries, Tampa is the place to go.  Unfortunately, niether La Teresita nor La Segunda has a website that I could find.  Alessi Bakeries has a website, but you cannot order anything online. You can reach Alessi at 813.879.4544, and La Teresita at 813.879.9704.

But did you know that you can make ‘em yourself?  Here is a recipe for Torticas de Morón.

Anyone have experience with shipping cuban sugar cookies across the US?  Who do you contact?

city council gives away your money

Friday, August 29th, 2008

St. Pete Times Editorial - Tampa’s firefighters are asking too much

Tampa Tribune Editorial -  City Council That Won’t Say No Falls Over Self To Spend Even More:

Mayor Pam Iorio offered the [firefighters'] union a 6.5 percent average raise, a generous offer in tough economic times. Even a magistrate who scrutinized the impasse said the city’s offer was fair and in the public’s best interest.

But the union wanted an average 10 percent increase and so brought its case to a bigger body of politicians, the city council.

All seven members caved.

Led by tax-and-spend liberals John Dingfelder and Mary Mulhern, the council gave firefighters what amounts to a 9.5 percent annual increase.

… Their largesse will cost taxpayers an extra $730,000 this fiscal year, and an extra $2.2 million if the contract is extended to two years.

And they call this a compromise?

No wonder property-tax statements that recently hit area homes show so little downward movement. The city’s bleeding-heart council has never met a spending proposal it didn’t like. The only time it has said no was when former councilman Shawn Harrison suggested a tax cut. The city had too many unmet needs, members cried at the time.

Taxpayers will be hit hard by the council’s capitulation because word is out that if the mayor shows fiscal restraint in negotiations - a stance for which she will pay a political price - unions should appeal to city council, where anything goes.

…  Tampa’s city council has demonstrated an appalling lack of concern for the financial burden it places on taxpayers. Only Councilman Charlie Miranda seemed to understand that the city cannot afford to keep boosting salaries to unrealistic levels. But given how the others were leaning, Miranda made the vote unanimous. A protest vote would have been preferable.

Dingfelder and Mulhern fail to understand that times are tough. Residents are struggling to make ends meet. Private sector jobs are disappearing. So are tax revenues. Tampa’s recurring property tax-revenues have dropped $28 million over the past two years.

Yet council shot down the mayor’s attempt to kill a convoluted step-plan pay system that in addition to a merit pay increase, gives firefighters a second raise of between 1.2 percent and 19.5 percent a year based on seniority.

Know anyone in the private sector getting that kind of boost?

Council members only wanted to applaud the firefighters, as Councilman Joe Caetano did, for “working their butt off.”

Taxpayers also work their butt off and are struggling to endure a devastating economic downtown. They don’t have time to pack council chambers like the firefighters did. They deserved better.

Instead, council members recklessly inflated the city’s financial obligations to curry favor with a union whose endorsement, as Dingfelder bluntly put it, “we love” to get “on our campaign literature.”

And that, ladies and gentlemen, is how government works.

To get the endorsement of a politically powerful union, Dingfelder, Mulhern and the bunch picked your pocket.

The next election for Tampa City Council is not until 2011.  All seven of them assume (and hope) you will forget this by then.

“And that, ladies and gentlemen, is how government works.”

Other Links:

‘trust me’ doesn’t cut it

Friday, August 29th, 2008

St. Pete Times editorial:  Hillsborough County Commissioner Kevin White should be more forthcoming about alleged payoffs from con man Matthew Cox.

Kevin White deserves the benefit of the doubt now that a convicted swindler has alleged arranging payoffs to the Hillsborough County commissioner. But the blanket denial White issued in a recent statement leaves too many unanswered questions.

White could fill in some gaps by being more forthcoming about his dealings with Cox. In early 2004, after he and former City Council member Bob Buckhorn were told that illegal contributions from Cox and his associates might have been made to their campaigns, Buckhorn went promptly to the police. Not White. He didn’t go to the cops, call for an investigation or express much concern. That same insensitivity to ethics and appearances have marred almost his entire time in elected life — whether he was trying to raise his own salary, or spending campaign contributions on Italian suits, or intervening with police who gave his friend a traffic ticket.

The next election for Hillsborough County District 3 is in 2010.

johnson again defending office

Thursday, August 28th, 2008

Current Hillsborough County Supervisor of Elections Buddy Johnson is an incompetent boob, who can’t keep his own finances straight, much less run an election.

And there he was again Tuesday night, trying to explain computer problems that Hillsborough County experienced. It was a database communications glitch caused by vendor Premiere Election Solutions (formerly known as Diebold). Premiere called a news conference to accept all the blame.

Of course, it was Buddy who chose Premiere, and who completely ignores the fact that Hillsborough was the last county in the state to replace voting equipment.

Johnson has also been accused of using taxpayer money to campaign. He’s been criticized for sticking his name on three county election vans, ostensibly to remind voters of the new paper ballots. Others also complained about him putting his name next to the word “vote” (as in “Vote Buddy Johnson) on official letterhead. Johnson’s office said they want to encourage people to vote. I wonder if 10% turnout is considered a success over at SOE HQ.

A Supervisor of Elections is like an offensive lineman on a football team. You shouldn’t hear anything about the guy unless he screws up. Unfortunately for Buddy, this year we’ve seen his name in the paper more often than Britney.

tpd says tampa has less crime this year

Thursday, August 28th, 2008

Tampa Police Chief Stephen Hogue says Tampa’s crime rate dropped 12 percent in the first six months of 2008 compared with last year.

During the first six months of this year, 9,126 offenses were reported in seven crime categories, 12 percent less than the 10,367 reported in these categories from January to June 2007.

The biggest statistical drop was in reported sex offenses, which declined 28.6 percent.

Murders declined 15.8 percent, motor-vehicle thefts fell 19.3 percent and aggravated assaults declined 18.6 percent, robberies dropped 16.1 percent, larcenies fell 11.1 percent and burglaries declined 5.1 percent.

Hogue credited the drop in crime not only to his officers, but to residents who join Neighborhood Crime Watch groups or perform independent “community policing” when they notice suspicious activity.

gee, my bad

Wednesday, August 27th, 2008

St. Pete cops call Hillsborough County Sheriff’s Office (HCSO):  Get this illegal immigrant guy, he’s a suspect in a rape in St. Pete.

HCSO Deputies get the guy on a misdemeanor.  Meanwhile, St. Pete cops called Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) asked for permission to hold the illegal immigrant further.  They get no response.

So the HCSO lets the guy go free.

Two weeks later, guy (allegedly) rapes girls in Apollo Beach.

HCSO catches the guy again, this time for rape.

Citizens want to know why Sheriffs let him go the first time.

Head Sheriff David Gee claims St. Pete cops never told HCSO he was a rape suspect.

US Congresswoman Ginny Brown-Waite wants to know how this happened, blasts Gee.

Gee defends Sheriffs office, loudly complains “St. Pete cops never told us the guy’s a rape suspect.”  Also points finger at Legislature, ICE, some guy standing nearby, and the blogosphere.

People are outraged and pointing their own fingers everywhere:

To be sure, ICE and your US Legislators deserve some of the blame for basic stupidity.  But the HCSO makes ‘em look like geniuses.  Especially after what happened today.

Hillsborough County Sheriff’s Office spokesman revealed the truth:  “Ohhhh THAT guy?  Yeah, St. Pete cops DID tell HCSO about him.”

lack of interest or concern

Wednesday, August 27th, 2008

Apathy:

Main Entry: ap·a·thy
Pronunciation: a-pə-thē\
Function: noun
Etymology: Greek apatheia, from apathēs without feeling, from a- + pathos emotion
Date: 1594

One out of six. Imagine any six people you know, and then consider that only one of those six voted in the primary election that ended yesterday:

Voter apathy in Florida plumbed new depths Tuesday. The 2008 primary election drew the lowest statewide voter turnout for a primary in at least 50 years, and perhaps the lowest ever. Incomplete returns late Tuesday showed 16.5 percent of voters cast a ballot.

Oh wait… That is the statewide turnout. You cared even less than that:

In Pinellas County, turnout was just over 12 percent, meaning just 75,000 out of 620,000 eligible voters showed up at the polls. That set a record for primaries. The previous record for the lowest primary vote in Pinellas was 13 percent.

In Pasco, just over 12 percent of the county’s 260,593 registered voters — or about 33,000 voters — cast ballots in Tuesday’s primary.

Hernando had the highest turnout in Tampa Bay, just under 15 percent.

And Hillsborough County?

Hillsborough’s turnout was even more abysmal — fewer than seven people out of 100 went to the polls.

Less than seven percent. That’s one in fifteen.

[Update 11:45am: Hillsborough SOE reports 10.08% voter turnout, 1 in 10.]

Don’t ever again ask: “How can someone like [insert name here] get elected?”

You have your answer: You really don’t give a rat’s ass.

don’t forget to vote

Tuesday, August 26th, 2008

Today is primary election day in Hillsborough County. Primaries determine who will run for each political party in November.  Please make sure your voice is heard.

The Tampa Tribune has a list of all the area races and candidates, and here are those primary candidates for Hillsborough County elections:

Property Appraiser

  • Rob Townsend (R)
  • Rob Turner (R)

County Commission, District 2

  • Tom Aderhold (R)
  • Ken Hagan (R)

County Commission, District 6

  • Brian Blair (R)
  • Don Kruse (R)

County Commission, District 6

  • Kevin Beckner (D)
  • Denise Layne (D)
  • Joe Redner (D)

Hillsborough County School Board, District 1

  • Dave Schmidt
  • Susan Valdes

Hillsborough County School Board, District 7

  • Stephen Gorham
  • Carol W. Kurdell
  • Jason D. Mims

All of the Tampa Tribune Endorsements, and in Hillsborough: Rob Turner, Ken Hagan, Brian Blair, Kevin Beckner, Susan Valdes, Stephen Gorham.

All of the St. Pete Times Endorsements, and in Hillsborough: Rob Turner, Tom Aderhold, Brian Blair, Kevin Beckner, Susan Valdes, Carol W. Kurdell.

Feel free to leave your choice in the comments, and tell us why.