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Milwaukee's air quality is 17th worst in the country says the American Lung Association. |
| By Doug Hissom Special to OnMilwaukee.com E-mail author | Author bio More articles by Doug Hissom |
| Published June 8, 2007 at 5:24 a.m. |
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(page 2)
Packing Up Jobs at PIC: In the continuing irony that Milwaukee's lead job training and workforce development agency is having to lay off people while attempting to keep its doors open, a new development could also cause ripple effects of lay-offs for other agencies involved in job training.
Since the Private Industry Council has kept its contractors in the dark as to the future of their work, some agencies, such as Interfaith, have already begun to lay-off the help. PIC itself has notified eight employees they have lost their jobs. Milwaukee Mayor Tom Barrett's office is taking over the workforce training effort for the county beginning July 1 and the $14 million in grants and aid that comes with it.
Meanwhile, PIC President Gerard Randall is still knocking on doors attempting to get other sources of funding, an uphill fight indeed. "No foundation is going to give money to a place that just lost its federal funding," says a source close to the action.
Alderman Resigns … Not McGee: While Milwaukee Ald. Michael McGee cools his heals in the county jail while collecting his pay from the city, a Stevens Point alderman promptly resigned in order to follow the law.
McGee is accused of taking bribes in return for license favors while Stevens Point Ald. Norm Barber was forced to quit his job because state law says local officials are not allowed to own businesses that sell supplies to taverns and other businesses that require local licenses. Barber sells vacuum cleaners. The Stevens Point mayor called the law "the strangest thing I ever heard."
Counties Getting Counted: State Rep. Sheldon Wasserman (D-Milwaukee) wants to reduce the number of counties in Wisconsin from 72 to 18 and, predictably, the state county association is none too pleased. In a letter worthy of the label "bureaucratese," Wisconsin Counties Association Executive Director Mark O'Connell told Wasserman that "of course, many ancillary issues are interrelated to these primary issues and thus, we must consider the number and structure of our governing bodies."
O'Connell, clearly earning his salary with this letter, warned that retiring baby boomers would tax county services and strain the labor supply. He also termed Wasserman's projection that 18 is a good number of counties "arbitrary."
"I am deeply concerned that your proposed legislation will hold some popular appeal by offering a means to, from one perspective, be more efficient while failing to recognize the dramatic changes our state will see in the next few years," says O'Connell.
Protecting Our Private Property Gets a Grade: Wisconsin gets a slightly above average grade when it comes to eminent domain reform in light of a Supreme Court case that allowed governments to seize private property for the economic gain of other private entities. The Institute for Justice ranked all 50 states for reforms and found that the Wisconsin Legislature has passed one bill that would only tighten rules on how governments determine blighted residential properties. That effort got the state a C-plus grade.
The Institute suggests that Wisconsin expand that protection to all property. The states that passed the strongest reforms are Florida, Michigan, Nevada, New Mexico and the Dakotas. Nine states have done nothing. "Much more work remains if homeowners, small business owners, churches and farmers are to be safe from the unholy alliance of tax-hungry governments and land-hungry developers," warns the report.
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