![]() | milehiclub: love the hair RT @maynaseric: wonder if this new pic looks ok on your screen, or need to be bigger. hmm about 48 seconds ago |
![]() | justmeor: RT @henribrissett @RickeySmiley Is it just me or the pic of toes on Rickey Smiley's twitter makes me wanna thro.. link about 3 minutes ago |
![]() | henribrissett: @RickeySmiley Is it just me or the pic of toes on Rickey Smiley's twitter makes me wanna throw the F^(& up! about 6 minutes ago |
![]() | brainscientist2: Dec 19 & 20, have your pet's pic taken with Santa at PetSmart on Hwy 280 to benefit @ShelbyHumane . Or, bring everyone and have a family pic about 6 minutes ago |
![]() | gtMinh: @natcurti "...but if u think abt my baby it dont matter if ur black or white..." he rocks! what do u think abt my pro pic? about 6 minutes ago |
| By Doug Hissom Special to OnMilwaukee.com E-mail author | Author bio More articles by Doug Hissom |
| Published June 1, 2007 at 5:12 a.m. |
|
(page 2)
Hence, Randall received the "Innovator of the Year" award by The Daily Reporter newspaper in 2002 for PIC's receiving of a $20-million-plus youth jobs grant that was in the millions. PIC later lost the grant due to what some suggest was bad management.
More recently, however, PIC has also soured its relationship with major subcontractors, which were to provide training and jobs to unemployed. Goals, standards and pay scales were considered unattainable by some contractors and they stopped dealing with PIC. The city will have to repair those relationships.
This crash and burn is happening at a time when the area has to withstand some major lay-offs, including those at Jewel-Osco, Washington Mutual and the 440th Airlift Wing of the Air Force, which is moving to North Carolina. In fact, no plan has been developed yet to deal with displaced 440th workers, even though it was announced nearly two years ago that the wing would be moving.
Meanwhile, Don Sykes, the designated head of the mayor's new workforce development office, held the first transition team meeting this week. Barrett named the team earlier this month. Its membership includes 20 people ranging from CEOs to education leaders, all whom seem like they would be much too busy to concentrate on the all-important hand-off of PIC to the city. Of the 20, only five are retained from the current PIC board, which has been appointed by County Exec Scott Walker and to a certain extent reflect his Republican roots.
It could take the city between one and three months to complete the transition, so it's obvious that there's a lot of work to do in a little time. What's going to happen to PIC and its programs after July 1 is anybody's guess. Workforce development funds from the federal government, which, again, accounted for 70 percent of the current PIC budget, are expected to be cut dramatically. The slash is considered more a result of PIC's under performance than other issues and with some Congressional help, the city could likely sway the feds to get some of that money back.
McGee's Lawyer has Court Record: Glenn Givens, Jr., Milwaukee Ald. Michael McGee's lawyer, is no stranger to headlines in high-profile cases, although it's usually because he was on the losing side of a difficult-to-win case.
Givens is defending McGee against federal charges of bribery and extortion and state charges of conspiracy to commit substantial battery. His activity in court prior to this has been mainly being a trustee in bankruptcy cases, but there have been notable exceptions.
Among other cases, Givens:
Givens was no stranger to McGee before becoming his lawyer. He got into a public disagreement with the alderman after McGee indicated he would support zoning restrictions in Brewers Hill that prevented developers from building multi-story structures that would block the views of other residents. Givens wanted to put condos on the lot next door to the house he owns on Vine Street.
Board Stiff in the Financial Planning Category: The Milwaukee Public Museum board deserves no credit for coming up with a plan to save the place from bankruptcy, after it oversaw the museum's demise over the past five years because they were too lazy to ask tough questions or even show up for meetings.
The board's solution this time? Ask the county for $13.6 million to bail it out. The museum was privatized in 1992 after a highly touted plan to get the museum off county subsidies. It obviously didn't work, and former museum management raided the bank account to make up for major losses. Ultimately half the workforce paid for the mismanagement by losing their jobs.
The board, however, can continue to put their directorship on the resume. For $13.6 million, the county should just de-privatize the museum and run the place itself. It can't get any more costly.
<< Back
Page 2 of 2 (view all on one page)
|
1 comment about this article. Post a comment / write a review. |
Posted by GlamGirl on June 5, 2007 at 11:43 a.m. (report)
As for PIC, the mayor should consider partnering with faith-based organizations and other volunteer groups to help with some of the services provided. It sounds to me like they could use volunteers down there. I can't believe someone could make $159,000 a year at a non-profit. That's disgusting. We should all be pitching in to help instead of paying huge sums of tax dollars.
| Rate this: |
| Top Clicks | Top Searches | Most Talkbacks |