Archive for July 11th, 2012

The Hero(s) of Canton.

Wednesday, July 11th, 2012

The man woman they call Jayne Ida!

When I was younger, my family lived within reasonable driving distance of Canton, Ohio. As I’ve noted in the past, I still have relatives in the area.

For some odd reason, we never visited the Pro Football Hall of Fame (or, as we called it:

“TheWorldFamousProFootballHallOfFameInCantonOhio”

all one word). I did visit it much later in life, and it’s an okay museum, if possibly a little overpriced.

Canton is about a 30-minute drive from Akron, if you’re planning a family vacation. However, the National Inventors Hall of Fame was closed last time I was in the area, and has since moved to Alexandria, VA. And, sadly, Goodyear has closed the World of Rubber museum.

So what to do to occupy yourself in the greater Akron/Canton area? Especially if you don’t like football?

How about the National First Ladies Historic Site and Library? They even have a gift shop: would you like some Ida McKinley china?

We learn of this fine tourist attraction by way of this column by Drew Johnson, who is among the guest bloggers at Balko’s site. You see, the federal government spent $1,021,000 to run the site last year…and it got 8,254 visitors.

In other words, taxpayers paid $124 in subsidies to the First Ladies National Historic Site for every single man, woman and child who walked through the door last year.

Why does this exist? Because of the hard work of (now retired) congressman Ralph Regula, who spent 36 years representing Canton and the surrounding area, and who set up the deals that acquired Ida Saxton McKinley’s childhood home (now the museum) and a former bank (now the library).

Shortly before he retired in 2009, Regula managed to snag one final $124,000 earmark…The pork handout was used by the National First Ladies’ Library to catalogue every book purchased by First Lady Abigail Fillmore for the White House during Millard’s presidency, and then buy duplicates of those books for the library’s collection.

Not the original books. Duplicates.

And here’s the best part. Would you like to know who the founder of the National First Ladies Library was? Go on, guess.

Would you like to know who else works for the Library? Go on, guess.

The poor man’s lounge.

Wednesday, July 11th, 2012

As they often do, Andrew Rausa and a few friends spent the evening of July 4 lounging barefoot on the front stoop of a friend’s brownstone home in Brooklyn and enjoying a few beers. Escaping the indoor heat, Mr. Rausa and two friends sipped cans of Brooklyn Summer Ale; his girlfriend held an unopened bottle of a blueberry ale.

Cutting to the chase, Mr. Rausa and his friends were cited by the NYPD for drinking in public. Mr. Rausa and his friends dispute the application of the law, as they were on their own stoop behind a locked gate when cited. Mr. Rausa plans to contest his citation in court.

It seems that both the law itself, and the application of it by the NYPD, is ambiguous:

…people who received summonses after the police saw them drinking through open doorways, behind gates, on roofs and even in the hallways of their apartment buildings.

Ah, if only there were a simple solution for this…

Free stuff!

Wednesday, July 11th, 2012

Randy’s Doughnuts in Inglewood is giving away free doughnuts between 11 AM and 2 PM (I assume that’s PDT) today.

“So what?” you ask.

Well, I wanted to post this because: compare this picture

to this one:

Yep. Same doughnut.

Also, this being 7/11, 7-11 is offering their usual free Slurpee today. Note that the free Slurpees are Dixie cup size, so I wouldn’t recommend going out of your way for one. But if you happen to have a 7-11 on the way home…

When the Red, Red Robin goes broke.

Wednesday, July 11th, 2012

There used to be three Red Robin restaurants in Austin.

The one on 290 was seized by the landlord for non-payment of rent, stripped to the studs, and turned into a Longhorn Steakhouse.

The one on 183 near Anderson Mill closed for a while, re-opened, closed again, and is now stripped of all signage. Nothing’s gone in at that location yet.

The one on Parmer at I-35 (near the Wal-Mart) is “closed temporarily” according to the corporate website, and has a notice from the sheriff’s department (stating the fixtures have been seized) taped to the front door.

I know, they’re chain burger places. But when I first went to one, I thought it was actually a pretty decent chain place to get a burger (especially since Fuddrucker’s collapsed). The last few times I went to the Parmer Red Robin, though, it was…not good. Not in the “induced vomiting” sense, but in the “I paid good money for this?” sense.

I feel sorry for the staff who lost their jobs; most of them seemed like good people trying hard. But I don’t feel too sorry for the management, who managed to take a workable concept and run it into the ground.

Banana republicans watch: July 11, 2012.

Wednesday, July 11th, 2012

Fullerton PD officer Manuel Ramos is no longer with the department as of July 3rd.

Former officer Ramos faces murder and manslaughter charges in the beating death of Kelly Thomas. (Graphic image at that link.) The department did not state whether officer Ramos was fired or resigned. Ramos and officer Jay Cicinelli (also charged in the Thomas death) have been on “unpaid leave” since October.

In other news, the LA County Sheriff’s Department was apparently in the habit of passing out “official looking” badges to “civilians with no law enforcement duties”, like local politicians.

Now they’ve decided they’re going to take back about 200 of those badges.

At first glance, the badges closely resemble those deputies wear, with the same six-pointed star design. Instead of identifying the person as a “deputy sheriff,” the badges read “City Official Los Angeles County.”

Why are the badges being recalled? Well, they’ve been a source of concern since the attorney general issued an opinion in 2007, stating that the badges “created the potential for civilians to falsely pose as law enforcement officers”. The department swears that the badge recall is prompted by that opinion, and has nothing to do with the arrests of the Cudahy council members.

And why would anyone think this had anything to do with the Cudahy council members?

That’s why. That photo was taken in a nightclub in Cudahy. The badge she’s wearing is one of the badges in question; specifically, indicted Councilman Osvaldo Conde’s badge.

(Obligatory.)

It looks like San Bernardino is the next city up on the bankruptcy watch.

And retiring police chiefs are making out like bandits when they cash in their unused sick leave and vacation time:

Those employees include Roy Campos, Downey’s former police chief, who was paid $594,000 in 2009 after cashing out more than 3,300 hours of unused sick and vacation time. The same year, Monterey Park’s outgoing chief, Jones Moy, earned $531,000, including cash-outs of about 2,700 unused hours. In 2010, Santa Clara’s police chief, Steve Lodge, left his job with almost $600,000 in total pay thanks to a variety of cash-outs.
In contrast, [Los Angeles Police Chief Charlie] Beck earned $297,000 last year and [Los Angeles County Sheriff Lee] Baca made $334,000.

More:

Over his thirty-plus years with the department, [El Monte Police Chief Thomas] Armstrong was permitted to bank unused hours without limit, then cash them out at the hourly rate he made as police chief. Some of the unused sick hours also counted toward his CalPERS safety pension, which at $229,000 a year is among the largest in the entire state. Armstrong’s pension is also higher than the largest base salary he earned, $217,000.

(The LAT notes that the El Monte PD had 110 officers, for a city of 113,000, and that El Monte’s credit rating has been downgraded to “junk bond”.)

And more:

[Former El Monte chief Ken] Weldon’s and Armstrong’s contracts permitted more than three months off each year. That total covered one month of vacation, about three weeks of leave, as many as 12 sick days and 14 holidays (including Admissions Day, a September holiday that celebrates the date California became a state).

I picked the wrong profession. I should have become a police chief in California.

Edited to add: Here’s a shocker that either I missed, or that wasn’t in the original LAT story about San Bernardino:

City Atty. James Penman said city budget officials had falsified documents presented to the mayor and council for 13 of the last 16 years, masking the city’s deficit spending.
“For the last 16 years the budget prepared for the council showed the city was in the black,” Penman said, not naming those allegedly responsible. “The mayor and the council were not given accurate documents.”

If the city attorney’s assertions are true, I would expect criminal indictments somewhere down the line.