Shree Kulkarni, a local developer and major campaign donor to Mayor John Cranley's 2013 election, has been appointed to the Cincinnati Historical Conservation Board.
In 2013 the Kulkarni family and 4 of his companies contributed $8,300 to Cranley's campaign. The individual limit is $1,100 for both the primary and general election periods. This week he was appointed tot he board by the City Manager Harry Black who takes no action without approval of Mayor John Cranley. Buying your way onto a public board appears to be acceptable to the Mayor. How man other suburban based developers have gotten their money's worth?
As the Business Courier's article points out, Kulkarni's appointment is being questioned by the the OTR Foundation. Over-the-Rhinre (OTR,) in case you are new, has the most historic buildings for the board to review and is a nationally recognized district of historical buildings. The OTR Foundation's questions, according to the article, appear to rest on Kulkarni's comments on the recent action of the Conservation Board on the Davis Furniture Building. As a suburban developer, Kulkarni's belief in conservation of history seems to not extend beyond the best interests of the developers who don't seek to preserve the history and architecture.
We need urbanists to make decisions about urban areas. We don't need Cranley's strip mall mindset to have more power in our city's government.
Sunday, August 09, 2015
Wednesday, July 08, 2015
Smitherman's Hand Picked Cabal is Sued by National NAACP
The Courthouse News Service is reporting a group calling it self the "Cincinnati Branch" of the NAACP as an "fraud" and unsanctioned group. In Federal court they are seeking an Injunction to shut down the group and $300K in damages.
This group was previously run by Cincinnati City Council member Chris Smiterman who resigned to run for public office. His allies took over the group and refused to allow for an orderly election and allegedly have continued to try and run the organization as if the national organization did not hault the election and freeze out everyone from controlling the local chapter.
A Note for the local media, don't attribute any press released from anyone sued by the NAACP as speaking for the local branch of the NAACP until a new election of leadership is held.
This group was previously run by Cincinnati City Council member Chris Smiterman who resigned to run for public office. His allies took over the group and refused to allow for an orderly election and allegedly have continued to try and run the organization as if the national organization did not hault the election and freeze out everyone from controlling the local chapter.
A Note for the local media, don't attribute any press released from anyone sued by the NAACP as speaking for the local branch of the NAACP until a new election of leadership is held.
Thursday, January 22, 2015
Sittenfeld Running for Senate
As much rumored in the last few weeks, Cincinnati City Council Member PG Sittenfeld has announced he is running for U.S. Senate. He'll face a primary challenge next year, but as he's the only known declared candidate, who he'll face is unknown.
This is on the surface a long shot, but Sittenfeld does look before he leaps. All Democrats running against Rob Portman will need the voter turnout to be bolstered by the Presidential race that year in order to win. Sittenfeld has to worry about the primary before that and he could face the challenge of former Governor Ted Strickland, who would be a good candidate against Portman and be the front runner in a primary race.
More from WVXU.
This is on the surface a long shot, but Sittenfeld does look before he leaps. All Democrats running against Rob Portman will need the voter turnout to be bolstered by the Presidential race that year in order to win. Sittenfeld has to worry about the primary before that and he could face the challenge of former Governor Ted Strickland, who would be a good candidate against Portman and be the front runner in a primary race.
More from WVXU.
Thursday, January 08, 2015
PG Sittenfeld Is Getting Some National Attention
It is a long held axiom that any attetention is good attention, but for PG Sittenfeld when that attention is positive attention, it it triples the value. The National Journal has given him some of that good attention.
Give a cigar to his PR team.
The next few months wil be where the most the political action will happen when we see who runs for Senate against Portman and who does not. PG wants to run, that much is obvious, but is it wise for home to run now? That is the action that is turning in his head. I don't envy having to make that political judgement, but I'd like to be a fly on the wall when he discusses it with his advisors.
Strategic planning is the holy grail of political analysis.
Wednesday, December 31, 2014
Cranely Using Smoke and Mirrors on Pension Deal to Hide City's Sacrifice
From a financial perspective, there are actual steps in the City's pension deal that on the surface appear to help reduce the funding problem, but that is only half of the story.
Yes, getting the retirees to suspend COLAs for three years and then reducing the COLA formula will mean lower benefits paid and help solvency.
Yes, the city paying more into the fund certainly will help solvency.
The details Cranley is hiding deal with where the city will get the additional money to increase funding for the pension trust. Here are the problems:
This is the type of Mayor we have, one who hides the real sacrifices the city has to make to allow him self the ability to take a faux victory lap. This plan may actually be workable, but the Citizen of Cincinnati deserve to know the real impact this will have on the City Budget and the services the City provides. Hiding details is dishonest. This is insulting to people of Cincinnati. This is, however, how Mayor John Cranley operates. We must demand the truth from the Mayor. We won't get it, but everyone in the City must call out the Mayor's half truths and lies every chance we get.
Yes, getting the retirees to suspend COLAs for three years and then reducing the COLA formula will mean lower benefits paid and help solvency.
Yes, the city paying more into the fund certainly will help solvency.
The details Cranley is hiding deal with where the city will get the additional money to increase funding for the pension trust. Here are the problems:
- What is the long term impact of moving $200 Million from the retiree health care trust? Is this the fund Cranley and Luken already screwed up? Previously this year the Plan was only going to be $100 million, so how did it double in size and still have Council backing?
- Where does the $38 Million a year for seven years come from? Saying the City will "borrow against future revenue" is no different from saying "I'll gladly pay you Tuesday for a hamburger today." Revenue from what? The pension fund? Income Taxes? A bake sale? Cranley's hiding the details. He does not want us to know what he's doing.
- Where does the additional 2.25% of the annual operating budget come from? How much is this actually? Is this based on the $358 Million in expenses or just of salaries? What is Cranley going to do, increase revenue or cut something? Which ever he is planning, he's not giving the details and is once again hiding something.
This is the type of Mayor we have, one who hides the real sacrifices the city has to make to allow him self the ability to take a faux victory lap. This plan may actually be workable, but the Citizen of Cincinnati deserve to know the real impact this will have on the City Budget and the services the City provides. Hiding details is dishonest. This is insulting to people of Cincinnati. This is, however, how Mayor John Cranley operates. We must demand the truth from the Mayor. We won't get it, but everyone in the City must call out the Mayor's half truths and lies every chance we get.
Friday, December 26, 2014
Zombie News Gone National
Gotta love how the suburbs can look like idiots on a scale to get some national attention.
At least the local media was there first. Can't beat the visuals, so TV wasn't going to miss out on this.
At least the local media was there first. Can't beat the visuals, so TV wasn't going to miss out on this.
Wednesday, December 10, 2014
Enquirer Channelling the New York Post
When ever you start out a headline with the phrase "uh-oh" like the Enquirer did with the article Uh-oh, streetcar savings account running out, then you start sounding like a tabloid. Picture the New York Post.
Cincinnati does not need bad attempts at comedy in the headline of a serious news article.
The only reason for this was to YET AGAIN garner the eyeballs from anti-streetcar readers (that means most of the GOP), and drive up website traffic. The bias comes through once more n the Enquirer. It's what we expect from the hollow news outlet.
Cincinnati does not need bad attempts at comedy in the headline of a serious news article.
The only reason for this was to YET AGAIN garner the eyeballs from anti-streetcar readers (that means most of the GOP), and drive up website traffic. The bias comes through once more n the Enquirer. It's what we expect from the hollow news outlet.
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