lframerica.com Blog

February 19, 2008

Gun’s At Schools A Future Possibility

Filed under: Politics, Schools, Uncategorized — Administrator @ 10:10 pm

I am so glad I gave up that second income lifestyle to homeschool my children.  At least I know they are safe at home and not being subjected to the junk found in our modern “public education” system.  I suppose after the first mass shootout between two gangs, with innocents caught in the crossfire they “might” consider this a realllly stupid idea.
azfamily

PHOENIX — A committee of the Arizona Legislature is weighing arguments made today over a proposal to let people with permits to carry concealed weapons bring guns to K-12 schools, community colleges and universities.

The Senate’s Judiciary Committee listened to more than two hours of testimony about the proposal, but didn’t take a vote.

The testimony came four days after a gunman opened fire during a lecture at Northern Illinois University, killing five young people before turning a gun on himself.

Supporters say the permit-holders should be allowed to carry guns at schools so they can defend themselves and others if a gunman starts shooting people and police haven’t yet arrived at the scene.

Opponents say police officers urgently responding to a school shooting might have difficulty distinguishing innocent permit-holders from the gunman.

Oregon Governor Signs Law To Strengthen Licence Rules

Filed under: Illegal Alien, News-Television, Politics, Uncategorized — Administrator @ 4:38 pm

Cudo’s to Governor Kulongoski for placing American’s and U.S. Laws first.   It’s a sad day when State’s have to protect the citizens because the Federal Government won’t, but it’s nice to see that the States care about their citizens and country enough to step up to the plate for them.
Statesman

Gov. Ted Kulongoski, without fanfare, has signed a bill requiring drivers to show they are in the United States legally before obtaining, renewing or replacing licenses.

Senate Bill 1080 takes effect July 1, before the expiration of temporary administrative rules that the state Driver and Motor Vehicle Services Division adopted last month to put his Nov. 16 executive order into effect.

“Oregon used to have some of the most lenient requirements in the country for obtaining a driver license,” Kulongoski said in a statement. “This legislation brings us in line with the majority of other states and ensures the integrity of Oregon driver licenses and identification cards.”

Kulongoski has been the target of criticism by immigrant-rights groups and the object of praise by critics of illegal immigration, although the legal-presence standard is mandated by the federal Real ID Act of 2005. The Legislature’s lawyers advised lawmakers that the standard could be enacted only through a law, not an executive order.

Both chambers passed the bill within a few days last week. Kulongoski announced the signing through a news release Friday.

The new law will require a Social Security number, proof of identity and Oregon residency. Legal immigrants and visitors will need documents issued or verified by the federal government.

A new unit within DMV will help applicants who have problems obtaining the required documents. It will fulfill a requirement in the new law for an ombudsman for that purpose.

Fees for new and renewed licenses and identification cards will increase July 1, as provided in the bill, to pay for computer software for verification. Fees already had been scheduled to increase because of a 2005 law requiring anti-fraud measures.

A new license will cost $59, up from $54.50; renewal, $39, up from $34.50. A new identification card will cost $33.50, up from $29; renewal, $29.50, up from $25.

House Bill 3624, which in its original form was similar to Senate Bill 1080, will be converted to legislation requiring DMV to report to lawmakers about how the law is implemented.

The revised bill will specify reports about whether the numbers of uninsured and unlicensed motorists increase.

A hearing is scheduled by the House Rules Committee at 8 a.m. Monday in Hearing Room F at the Capitol.

 

February 18, 2008

Senator Vows To Target N.J. Businesses Hiring Illegal Aliens

Filed under: Bills, Illegal Alien, News-Newspaper, News-Television, Politics, Uncategorized — Administrator @ 11:20 pm

newsday.com/news/local/wire/newjersey/ny-bc-nj–immigration-sanct0218feb18,0,359993.story

Newsday.com

Senator Vows to Target N.J. Businesses Hiring Illegal Immigrants.

By TOM HESTER Jr.

Associated Press Writer

10:56 AM EST, February 18, 2008

TRENTON, N.J.

A New Jersey Senate leader said he will push legislation to punish businesses who knowingly hiring illegal immigrants.

Senate Majority Leader Stephen Sweeney said his decision comes after a federal judge upheld an Arizona law that prohibits businesses from knowingly hiring illegal immigrants and yanks the business licenses of those that do.

“Companies that knowingly hire illegals are destroying job opportunities for the working men and women of New Jersey,” said Sweeney, D-Gloucester. “The practice has to be stopped.”

The Immigration and Naturalization Service in 2003 estimated that New Jersey had 221,000 illegal immigrants, though the Federation for American Immigration Reform, which favors tighter border security and immigration laws, estimates the state has 490,000.

New Jersey has about 8.7 million residents and 4.1 million workers.

Under Sweeney’s measure, which he said he will introduce next week, first-time offenders would have their business licenses suspended for 10 days.

Second offenses would bring permanent revocations, Sweeney said.

In approved, the law would take effect at the end of the year and require employers to verify the legal status of their work forces.

“New Jersey should welcome legal immigrants with open arms, but we need to put up a stop sign for illegals who undermine family, educational and health care support systems,” Sweeney said.

The proposal worries businesses, said Jim Leonard, a vice president with the New Jersey Chamber of Commerce.

“We feel immigration is an issue best handled on the federal level,” Leonard said. “Creating a patchwork of laws on this issue throughout the nation makes it even more difficult to run a business.”

John Rogers, a vice president with the New Jersey Business & Industry Association, said employers are prohibited from asking certain information about an employee’s background while hiring and are legally required to take Social Security cards that appear valid.

“I fear that another New Jersey-only bill will unfairly ask the employer community to shoulder increased liability and be responsible for what is a national problem,” Rogers said.

On Feb. 8, a federal judge in Arizona dismissed a lawsuit filed by business groups against Arizona’s law, which was approved last year by the Republican-led Legislature and Democratic Gov. Janet Napolitano.

Arizona business groups argued the law unconstitutionally infringed on federal immigration powers, but the judge ruled there was no conflict because states regulate business licensing.

The Arizona law took effect Jan. 1. An Oklahoma law with similar provisions takes effect for private employers in July.

Earlier rulings on similar measures have been mixed.

In July, a federal judge struck down a Hazleton, Pa., ordinance that would deny business permits for companies that employ illegal immigrants, but another judge upheld a similar measure in Valley Park, Mo., earlier this month.

Copyright 2008 Associated Press. All rights reserved.

LULAC Calls For Action Against Eversole

Filed under: News-Television, Politics, Uncategorized — Administrator @ 1:49 pm

Go Figure, for once I must agree with LULAC.  If our Government isn’t working “For the People”, then that Government needs to be replaced by one that will.  Eversole seems to be more focused on himself and spending the American taxpayers money on his own lifestyle then on improving Houston.

ABC 13 

LULAC says they expect Harris County Commissioner Jerry Eversole to be indicted in the wake of a 13 Undercover investigation.

You saw the video last month. We showed you pictures of the commish working out, shopping and staying home during the county work day. And Eversole’s own records revealed he took a Florida vacation using campaign funds.

The DA’s office said they would investigate the matter. But now LULAC is demanding action. In a letter to DA Chuck Rosenthal, LULAC says they expect him to “end commissioner Eversole’s practice of squandering and stealing hard earned taxpayers monies.”

You can read the letter and the DA’s letter back to LULAC for yourself below.

FBI Investigates Houston City Hall

Filed under: News-Television, Politics, Uncategorized — Administrator @ 1:43 pm

Houston is filled with crime from the top on down. It’s no wonder so many bad elements come to make their home here.  Yet another scandal strikes City Hall.

ABC 13 

The news about Eversole isn’t the only bombshell involving the feds and possible wrongdoing.

We’ve learned the FBI has delivered subpoenas to Houston City Hall looking for records of dealings with two companies and contractors with close ties to a slew of local politicians involved in the creation of city fire stations, county jails and even our football stadium.

You may not have heard of Michael Surface, but his name could soon be in the headlines a lot. He quietly resigned during the holidays as chairman of the powerful Harris County Sports and Convention Corporation, the county created landlord of the Reliant Stadium complex. The county judge says he urged Surface to leave.

“As I told Mr. Surface, you need to take care of your personal business,” said Harris County Judge Ed Emmett.

13 Undercover has learned Surface is under scrutiny in an FBI corruption investigation that could become public in the coming weeks.

“He indicated there were things going on in his life that he thought he should leave and take care of,” Emmett said.

Two years ago the former head of Houston’s building department, Monique McGilbra, and Mayor Lee Brown’s former chief of staff Oliver Spellman were found guilty of bribery in Cleveland. Newspaper accounts at the time also claimed the government was prepared to prove McGilbra had also been bribed by a company called Keystone here in Houston. Surface was a partner in the company, but neither he nor anyone else at Keystone was charged with a crime.

In 2002 a Houston Chronicle editorial called the company the keystone of Harris County cronyism.

“I know for a fact the FBI certainly hasn’t talked to me, I wasn’t around when anything alleged to have occurred, occurred,” Emmett told us.

Commissioners El Franco Lee and Jerry Eversole led the effort to lease purchase county buildings from Keystone. Lee’s former company did business with Keystone, Jerry Eversole’s son shared office space with the company and while his company made millions from county contracts, Surface was reappointed chairman of the sports corporation by Commissioner Eversole.

Last fall we detailed Commissioner Eversole’s questionable work habits and raised questions whether he improperly used campaign funds for personal benefit. While examining his work calendars, we found evidence of his favorite golf foursome. One of the players was Michael Surface, another was Leroy Hermes who was one of the architects of Reliant Stadium. Hermes got contracts at Reliant while Surface was sports corporation chairman. We also know Hermes did engineering work on the Commissioner’s Eversole’s house. So far Eversole has refused to say how much, if anything he paid for it.

“I’m not the keeper of another elected official, whether they choose to answer or don’t choose to answer is up to them,” Emmett said.

Tonight we learn the city hall subpoenas involve Hermes Firm and design work it may have done on a fire training academy. The subpoena also asks about expense records for a trip McGilbra took to Los Angeles. Add to this the ongoing controversy swirling around the District Attorney Chuck Rosenthal and you get why the county judge was waiting for the next shoe to drop. Now it’s dropped.

“It’s like a spider with eight legs, shoes keep dropping here,” Emmett said.

Michael Surface has refused to talk with us for weeks as we’ve begun to spread our investigation to the sports corporation and the Reliant Stadium. And once again emails are in the mix. The sports corporation lawyer told us Surface deleted emails involving sports corporation business written on his Keystone company computer.

“I think that’s probably troublesome,” Emmett told us.

We know the feds are examining the deals for the city’s emergency dispatch center and at least two Houston fire facilities. But it’s the names of the contractors under scrutiny and their millions of dollars in government contracts that may lead to lots of questions in the coming weeks for lots of elected officials.

Eversole Admits Campaign Report Mistakes

Filed under: News-Television, Politics, Uncategorized — Administrator @ 1:36 pm

It’s about time he fesses up about some underhanded deeds at the cost of American Taxpayers.  Now maybe he can focus on actually doing work and staying out of the coffee shop, stores and spending less time working out and sitting around his expensive home.

ABC 13

County Commissioner Jerry Eversole swore his campaign finance reports were true, even though 13 Undercover told you they weren’t.

Now, a major development in the months-long investigation into the powerful politician’s alleged misuse of campaign funds.

Jerry Eversole has been a county commissioner for sixteen years. He’s raised millions, but he now claims he’s ignorant of the states election laws and that his sworn campaign reports were wrong.

“Ignorance of the law is no excuse,” said campaign ethics watchdog Fred Lewis.

The admission came in a press release issued today. This came months after 13 Undercover documented possible misuse of tens of thousands of dollars in campaign donations.

The commissioner has never agreed to answer our questions on camera, but in a statement he said, “I regret that I have not been more attentive to the details of my campaign finances.”

What a difference a two month surveillance investigation makes. The commissioner has apparently changed some of the ways he spends campaign funds in the wake of our investigation.

“You’re shaking things up,” Lewis said. “People are starting to realize they have to take election laws seriously.”

Gone is the spending in clothes stores written off as public relations.

In his new campaign report, he’s no longer using campaign funds to pay for his workout place. He used to claim thousands of dollars in expenses.

During our surveillance last fall, we couldn’t help but notice the commissioner’s love of Starbucks. On his last campaign report, he claimed $2,700 in expenses at Starbucks in just 18 trips.

This time, just one Starbucks bill was $53.

He used to go Java Java restaurant near his Heights home a lot on campaign funds. There were 44 trips between January and June. There were zero instances on this six month report.

Also startling, the amount of money Eversole now says he has in his campaign account, $1.8 million.

The commissioner says he’s sought the advice of experts to help him clean up his campaign finances and former Judge Robert Eckels will now handle his campaign money.

The commissioner is using campaign funds to pay lawyer Rusty Hardin. That bill is nearly $15,000 in one month. We reported last month the FBI was probing the commissioner.

But Eversole remains silent on possible misuse of government employees and equipment on his campaign and how much he paid a county contractor for design work on his home in the Heights.

And he’s still refusing to sit down on camera to answer all the questions raised by our investigation.

See Eversole’s press release
- SEE FULL CAMPAIGN FINANCE REPORT

A Work Week In Eversole’s Shoes

Filed under: News-Television, Politics, Uncategorized — Administrator @ 1:17 pm

Make that tennis shoes, shorts, and T-shirt.  It seems Harris County Commissioner Jerry Eversole’s yearly salary (Paid for by the Tax Payers of Houston) goes to shopping trips, fixing golf clubs, working out, Starbucks and just hanging out at home.  Oh that we all had such a work week, and still got paid big bucks for doing nothing.
ABC 13 

It’s the result of weeks of surveillance over two separate months of someone you’ve elected more than once.

Elected officials don’t punch time clocks. They don’t even have to tell us how much vacation they take or how much they work. But remember — Channel 13 is watching.

Maybe you don’t sing on the way to the office like the seven dwarfs do… and they work in a mine. But you still have to go to work or get fired. “Any public official that’s paid $140,000 a year owes the taxpayer 40 hours a week,” said taxpayer advocate Bob Lemer.

But are you also paying Harris County commissioner Jerry Eversole $144,000 a year to go shopping?

Fixing his golf club? Working out? Or just staying home?

We showed Lemer Eversole’s official schedule.

“In the private sector, he’d be canned,” said Lemer.

“You’re being paid,” we asked Eversole’s paid spokesperson Bill Miller.

“Yes, I’m being paid for this, yes,” he said.

Austin Lobbyist Bill Miller is being paid for to answer our questions because Commissioner Eversole refused to.

“I’m not an observer of his work day, no I’m not,” he told us. “Based on my knowledge of Eversole and how he conducts his business, he puts in well over 40 hours of work towards what he does as commissioner, if not sitting in his office. If he sat in his office all day, in my opinion, he wouldn’t be doing his job.”

It was the day before the controversial vote to hike toll road prices back in July and we have a surprise for Commissioner Eversole.

“Channel 13 is watching,” said Lemer.

After his routine morning stop at Starbuck’s, the commissioner heads to Blackeyed Pea for a staff briefing over lunch. He hasn’t been to his office yet. It’s one o’clock.

“He needs to be out of his office. He needs to be on the move,” said Miller.

The commissioner instead heads to a shopping center on 1960. We call his office for an interview and are told he’s in a meeting… if you consider a visit with your trainer a meeting. There’s the commish doing a bench press. The workout will last longer than his staff briefing did.

Eversole’s official calendar for nine months shows 90 scheduled workouts. On 11 county work days, the workout is the only event you’ll find.

On January 2, the day he was sworn in for another term, the only other event on Eversole’s calendar is his workout.

“The healthy workplace is a good workplace,” said Miller.

“So the residents of Precinct 4 should actually thank Commissioner Eversole for his workout schedule,” we said.

“I think they should be grateful that he’s in good health and can respond to what they need,” replied Miller.

When his workout was over that day in July, Jerry Eversole could have gone to the office. But instead, he made his third trip of the day to Starbuck’s, then went home to take in his garbage cans. He was home for the rest of the work day.

“And probably thought long and hard about the vote, be my guess,” said Miller.

“While he was home?” we asked.

“Sometimes it’s good to reflect on big votes before they happen,” said Miller.

The Precinct 4 commissioner is on hand to deliver his vote for the toll hike the next day. The increased cost for you won’t affect him because he has a county car and has racked up 58 free tolls this year, some on days his schedule shows no county business at all.

After the big vote, it’s lunchtime. By 1:15, most folks are back at work.

“Figure he goes to the office then to maybe garner constituent response?” we asked Miller.

Let our camera show you. Eversole is shopping at a men’s clothing store. Bags in hand, it’s back to the car, of course a stop at Starbucks. By 1:50 in the afternoon, Jerry Eversole is home again for the rest of the afternoon.

“There’s a certain flex that they all enjoy and need to have to carry out the duties of an elected official,” said Miller.

That leaves time for working out and shopping because on many days in nine months, Jerry Eversole didn’t have one single Precinct 4 meeting on his schedule day or night.

“It’s evidence of meetings, yes, correct,” said Miller. “It’s not evidence of interaction, but it’s evidence of meetings.”

“That work schedule is ridiculously low,” said Lemer.

Of course, we can’t tell you what Jerry Eversole does or thinks 24 hours a day or how much he works. Maybe he works better at home.

You can see the commissioner’s schedule for yourselves by clicking here.

Questions About Jerry Eversole’s House

Filed under: News-Television, Politics, Uncategorized — Administrator @ 1:08 pm

ABC 13

For Harris County Commissioner Jerry Eversole, going home means a trip in his county car to his custom house in the Heights.

Eversole’s 3,700 square foot house is valued on the tax rolls at $639,000. It was designed in 2003. We know because we have the plans for the custom house. Look at the architects seal. It says Leroy Hermes.

You know where you can see some of Hermes biggest work? The county owned Reliant Stadium complex.

The Hermes architecture firm made millions and was involved in the Reliant project from the beginning.

In 1998 the county hired Hermes to design a new exhibition building on what was then known as the Astrodomain Complex. It’s a contract worth more than $9,228,000. You know who made the motion to give them the deal? Jerry Eversole. We found other Precinct 4 contracts with Hermes architects and in Harris County. Nothing gets designed for a precinct unless the commissioner who writes it, ok’s it.

“It’s very strange for a firm that does jails and stadiums, tremendous projects to be messing with a residential house,” said campaign finance watchdog Fred Lewis.

We don’t know if the Hermes firm was involved or just Hermes himself. His office told us the firm doesn’t do residential work. All we have is his stamp on Jerry Eversole’s house plans.

That’s why we’ve been trying to get answers about the house Jerry Eversole built.

“When you’re a public official and you’re overseeing millions in contracts, you have to answer the press and public, that’s part of the deal,” Lewis said.

But Jerry Eversole is not talking.

“The concern is he refuses to answer your questions as to what deal he had with his house,” Lewis said.

Three months after the house design, we find more purchase orders for Hermes’ company from Precinct 4. A $25,000 building assessment study on Precinct Four’s regional office and it’s not the last. This year Hermes was awarded the job designing a new minimum security facility on Atascosita Road. Millions more in government contracts.

“When you deal with public’s money, whether you’re a commissioner or architecture firm or engineer firm you have to answer questions or you shouldn’t get contracts and you shouldn’t be in office,” Lewis said.

The Jerry Eversole and Leroy Hermes connection goes deeper than just county contracts or the architecture on his Heights home.

We found a January quail hunting trip on the commissioner’s calendar. The trip included two rounds of golf in San Antonio. County employees helped arrange the trip and Leroy Hermes played.

We found this government email from April about the commissioner’s 12:50pm tee time at Augusta Pines. Leroy Hermes was listed in the foursome.

We didn’t do surveillance on the week of July 23, but you can read Eversole’s official calendar for yourself.

On Monday and Wednesday the final scheduled event was that 1pm workout at Affordable Nutrition.

On Thursday you see a 2:12pm practice tee time on his handwritten calendar. You see who he was supposed to practice with, Hermes.

“We’re talking about people who get multimillion dollar contracts that are decided by one commissioner,” Lewis said.

Our review of the Eversole house plans led us to Sunland Engineering. Sunland did work at Reliant, Toyota Center and in Jerry Eversole’s precinct. They also did the survey work on Eversole’s home in the Heights. Look at the project number 9999.

“This gets more and more problematic,” Lewis said.

Orlando Teran ran Sunland back then until he was plead guilty in 2004 for trying to rip off the state. But Eversole’s calendar still shows him meeting with Teran’s new company.

Sunland has new owners. They say they’ve found no records of a project 9999 in their records, but that’s what it says on the plans for Jerry Eversole’s house.

“If he didn’t pay fair market value of services provided for him from someone who has business in county, there needs to be grand jury empaneled,” Lewis said.

The big question, did Jerry Eversole pay for the design and engineering work done on his house by county contractors, and if so, how much? It makes a huge difference if he paid what you would, it could be perfectly legal under Texas law. But if he didn’t pay full value, it can be a crime in Texas for a public official to accept a gift from a company getting county contractors.

Thursday, Jerry Eversole isn’t talking to us, but some of his constituents are speaking out.

What is County Commissioner Jerry Eversole Doing With His Campaign Money?

Filed under: News-Television, Politics, Uncategorized — Administrator @ 12:56 pm

There are questions about the way a powerful county commissioner spends money; campaign money, and new hidden camera evidence that Jerry Eversole doesn’t put in a full day at the office.

You’ve already seen how a workout is sometimes the only scheduled event on Jerry Eversole’s calendar. Now, we’re going shopping.

It’s a Tuesday morning in September and Jerry Eversole is going out for his morning cup of coffee. No, he’s not going to the office. He’s going back home. Look at what time he leaves his house the second time — 1:51pm.

It’s not listed on Eversole’s calendar as a vacation day, but it sure looks like one.

“Thank goodness you’re starting to expose some of this,” said taxpayer advocate Bob Lemer.

Eversole has 555 square miles of Harris County to govern, so where is he going?

Shopping.

First, it’s Sports Authority on Post Oak. Then, it’s off to Golf Galaxy. And then back home.

On this day, Eversole’s official calendar lists no meetings or events all day or evening.

“Well, that’s very obvious that he doesn’t think he has to go to work,” said Lemer.

We’re watching again a few days later. Its 10:18am when Eversole leaves home, heading north from the Heights to 1960.

He’s going shopping again. You can see him looking at shirts at Edwin Watts golf shop.

There is a luncheon speech on his agenda. But then, Eversole is off to play golf with other Precinct 4 employees.

Jerry Eversole clearly loves golf. On a Thursday in July, the only official event scheduled on his calendar was a practice tee time at 2:12pm. Eversole was playing at the Waterwood Invitational Golf Tournament in Huntsville.

In the last year and a half, Eversole has spent nearly $15,000 just at golf courses and golf stores using campaign funds. On his sworn campaign finance report, he usually calls it simply ‘public relations.’ “I don’t think he bought public relations at a golf shop,” said campaign finance expert Fred Lewis.

Lewis has seen lots of campaign reports.

” When you start spending it on things like clothes, books, and Internet at your house, an exercise club, and meal after meal, you’re starting to get where you’re either on the line or over it,” he said.

Jerry Eversole had no opponent last year and isn’t up for reelection until 2010. Yet he’s spent a whopping $750,000 in campaign money in just 18 months.

“You’re being paid?” we asked Eversole’s paid spokesperson, Bill Miller.

“I’m being paid for this, yes,” he said.

“From campaign funds?” we asked.

“Presumably so, yes,” he responded.

Paid by Eversole to answer our questions because the commissioner wouldn’t.

“The best way to discourage opposition is to be active and that involves spending money,” said Miller.

“That’s utterly ridiculous,” said Lemer. “I can’t imagine what he spent it on.”

More than $4,000 spent at Golf Galaxy, more than $5,000 at Sports Authority, where the commissioner clearly likes to shop.

“There is a requirement that he has to describe the nature of the goods and services,” said Lewis. “In my opinion, he hasn’t done that satisfactorily.”

There are hundreds of restaurant receipts. Such as 109 trips to Java Java alone. It’s a coffee cafe just down the street from the commissioner’s house. Then there’s Starbucks. On some work days, Eversole stopped there three times. Nearly $10,000 in campaign cash spent on coffee.

“That’s a lot of coffee for an office holder,” said Lewis.

There’s expensive art, books.

“He does purchase a lot of items that are giveaways at events,” said Miller.

Giveaways to who? We tried for weeks to get the commissioner to show us receipts, name names, but he refused to do either.

“This is about the worst example I’ve ever seen of campaign expenditures being used for what appears to be for lifestyle and personal use,” said Lewis.

What about the commissioner’s workout? It appears contributors to his campaign paid for his bench presses, more than $8,000 since January 2006.

“I think it’s very suspect and needs to be investigated,” said Lewis.

On July 18, a Wednesday, the commissioner spent about three hours at his Precinct 4 road and bridge office on Ygnacio. By 12:15pm, Jerry Eversole’s truck is parked in front of Affordable Nutrition again. He’s there till almost 2pm working out. He’ll stop at Starbucks and still be home by 2:36pm.

Want to see the campaign spending for yourself. Click on the links below:

- January 2006 semi-annual campagin finance report
- July 2006 semi-annual campagin finance report
- January 2007 semi-annual campagin finance report
- July 2007 semi-annual campagin finance report

City Controller’s Gang Plan Puts Mayor Antonio Villaraigose In Full Control.

Filed under: Drugs, Gangs, News-Television, Politics, U.S. Security, Uncategorized — Administrator @ 10:40 am

LA DAILY NEWS

Maybe what the city of Los Angeles needs is a blueprint for dealing with blueprints.

With City Controller Laura Chick releasing her detailed plan for dealing with gangs, she included everything but how to wrest authority from the City Council.

In suggesting most anti-gang programs be placed under the direct authority of Mayor Antonio Villaraigosa, Chick has escalated the rivalry between the mayor and City Council over how to run Los Angeles.

The council has proven itself unwilling to cede much of its authority – witness its recent decision complicating an effort to let neighborhood councils open council files – and again is proving reluctant.

Councilman Tony Cardenas, who has chaired the ad hoc committee on gangs and youth violence for the past two years, fired the opening salvo, reminding Chick, Villaraigosa and anyone who would listen that it is the City Council that will approve any citywide gang program.

Councilwoman Jan Perry joined in, questioning whether placing anti-gang programs in the Mayor’s Office would reduce their visibility and transparency – and hurt efforts already under way to combat gangs.

“There are a lot of good programs out there that I want to make sure are able to continue to operate,” Perry said. “I’m not comfortable with (Chick’s) recommendation. I think it needs a lot more input from those doing the work.”

Perry insisted her concerns were not about maintaining the council’s power.

“It’s making sure there is accountability and delivery of service,” Perry said. “Of course, the mayor plays a role, but I’m not sure it should be in charge of everything.”

It is Cardenas’ committee that will review Chick’s report. City Council President Eric Garcetti said he agrees with the report’s recommendation for greater accountability – but also said he is supporting a detailed review of the report by the ad hoc committee and of any other council panel that wants to look at it.

Chick said she hopes preliminary steps to implement her recommendations take place within six months.

For Villaraigosa, the idea of being in charge of all the city’s anti-gang programs fits with his new approach to dealing with the City Council – consult members but go ahead and do what he wants.

Such was the case last week when the council’s Transportation Committee held up his plans to turn Olympic and Pico boulevards into one-way streets.

The mayor issued an executive order and will wait for the council to catch up.

It also seems Villaraigosa is re-energized now that he’s no longer aggressively campaigning for Sen. Hillary Clinton’s presidential bid.

The mayor has returned to taking part in three, four and five events every day – often on widely varying topics – giving rise to jokes that he now has more events he can arrive to late.

To give Villaraigosa credit, he was on time last week to Chick’s news conference on an anti-gang strategy – and even found himself pressed into service in moving a box for Chick to stand on.

“That’s how I like to see the mayor,” Chick joked. “Working for me.”

The biggest local election news last week was the long-expected endorsement by Los Angeles County Supervisor Yvonne B. Burke of Councilman Bernard Parks to succeed her on the Board of Supervisors.

State Sen. Mark Ridley-Thomas, who is challenging Parks in the June 3 primary, said he was not surprised by the endorsement in the nonpartisan race.

“The Burke family and Parks family have maintained a longtime friendship,” Ridley-Thomas said. “It is not unusual or unexpected that a bond between friends would be a significant factor influencing Supervisor Burke’s political decision.

“Her endorsement is not a surprise. She and I met recently. She said she and Bernard are old friends and her endorsement was based on their mutual friendship.”

Ridley-Thomas boasts a number of union endorsements, but the biggest one now out there is U.S. Rep. Maxine Waters, D-Los Angeles.

Waters’ political operation carries a lot of weight in the district, but she has not been close in previous years to Ridley-Thomas.

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