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Tag: illegalBy JGillman, Section News
Sometimes the inanity of the left is unbearable.
If ever there was an argument for Right To Work, it is being made somewhere near the middle of the state. If I had to guess, I would bet there are instructors at CMU that aren't real comfortable participating in an illegal strike. Imagine how a young instructor, who feels fortunate enough to have found employment in Michigan, must feel when told by his/her bosses, (the union) that he/she cannot go to work. "Following several rounds of unsuccessful contract talks, the Central Michigan University faculty union said it would strike on the first day of classes today, affecting more than 21,000 students." In the end, this could actually be an opportunity. But first let us consider the negatives for some. The thought of being fired for breaking the law, and possibly losing bennies and an income that most in the private sector would love to have, ought to give pause to such reckless actions. Incomes listed below are as of 2010, and do not include other income such as per diem, paid training, and other benefits. What has to be tough, is for those instructors who already get paid considerably less than their professorial counterparts, and must also participate or face ongoing vitriolic response from those who would work to see them removed in the future.
The CMU board of trustees has a tough job to be sure. From the CMU Board of Trustees page: "... the board retains ultimate responsibility for academic matters and reserves authority over such areas as the mission and goals of the institution; admissions and retention policies; policies governing intercollegiate programs; faculty promotions, sabbatical leaves and tenure; establishing fees; accepting gifts; naming facilities; and a number of other areas." They are also tasked to "ensure financial solvency." Or something akin to it. The offer by the university? It apparently was a 0% increase in pay. After bargaining with the union for the fluff, it (0 percent) was probably all that was left. I would have to imagine that in order to ensure such things as solvency, those decisions are somewhat necessary. The opportunity? - Go below. (4 comments, 744 words in story) Full Story By Nick, Section News
It was just last month that the world learned how Tom "Jonathan" Athans, a former (and failed) liberal radio talk show host and the husband of Michigan's junior US Senator, Debbie Stabenow, was being employed illegally as a lobbyist for a scandal plagued Detroit casino baron. After the initial reports of Athans' most recent illegality both he and his boss sort of faded into the ether. It didn't help that what the man was actively lobbying for (again, in violation of federal law) and his family profiting from had been specifically and explicitly opposed by Senator Stabenow during her re-election bid in 2006. At issue were, and are, hazardous waste wells in the city of Romulus. Athans' boss wants to dump a bunch of highly toxic foreign waste into sites that were closed years ago and he figured there was no one better to take his case to lawmakers in Lansing and DC than the husband of a United States Senator with a record of saying very "green" things. By way of recap: In 2006 the Senator ran for reelection on a platform that included an elimination of the importation of Canadian garbage. Her campaign website still reads:
Continue the Fight to Stop the Importation of Canadian Trash Meanwhile, she and her husband were profiting from efforts to do exactly the opposite. The Ivory Tower reported last month:
Stabenow has declined to comment this entire time, leaving taxpayers, residents and potential criminal investigators with more questions than answers. Like, how long did she know her husband was breaking the law? How much of Papas's money was deposited into her bank account? (In other words, how much did she profit, financially, from her husband's criminal enterprise?) How does she reconcile her public statements with her families actual activities? Why doesn't her walk match her talk? With the EPA set to meet the middle of next month to discuss the Stabenow / Athans / Papas Toxic Waste Importation Plan, the city of Romulus itself is getting a jump on the action and giving residents a venue to voice their displeasure. According to this morning's Detroit News:
"Everybody's really uncomfortable with this potentially reopening again."
In 2006, the facility was shuttered after federal inspectors found more than 20 violations at the site near Interstate 94 and Middle Belt. This is what the Stabenow family was profiting illegally from promoting... a toxic waste injection program with a history of over 20 violations that already caused it once to be shuttered. And we still get neither a peep from Senator Stabenow, her husband or a newspaper or TV reporter willing to ask them a tough question. Well if the press won't bother to get a piece of Senator Stabenow's mind, something tells me folks in Romulus will be offering HER a large and angry piece of theirs. By Nick, Section News
I'm a generous guy. Alas, I'm also chronically cynical. So it takes a concerted effort for me, at times, to give people the benefit of the doubt.
Maybe it started in college, working at Fulton Heights Foods where it turned out that everyone who instinct said was going to write a bad check or try to sneak out with steaks tucked under their shirts turned out to be every bit the crook you figured. Maybe it was all of those group-projects in school... burned too many times after convincing myself the under-achievers the teacher always seemed to assign my squad would actually show up the next day with their share of the work completed. Heck, it was probably that fourth grade class Christmas party when my "Secret Santa," Carla Parker, wrapped and gave me used ChapStick (I wish I was making that up) while my friends were opening GI Joes and Transformers. Freaking Carla Parker. Lets be honest, though... what do raw steak thieves, lazy students and gift-wrapped garbage have on your average politician. Did I mention that I'm a generous guy? I am, though. Or I try to be. So when Michigan and Congressional Democrats prattle on and on about the need for lobbyist reform, for a new era of ethics and for transparency I want to take them at their word. I trust the Democratic Party about as far as I can log-toss Mark Brewer but individually, I do the best I can. Still, there comes a time when even the most gracious observer is left scratching his head. How can someone like Michigan's Senator Debbie Stabenow, for instance, say the things she says and vote the way she votes (remember, this is a woman who voted to create a "Senate Office of Public Integrity") and then sit by while the husband who shares her home, and bank account, presumably, rakes in a half-year's income by working illegally as a lobbyist for a scandal-prone Detroit area developer? And lobbying in favor of a project she made a point of opposing during her last bid for office? Something just doesn't sit right. Red flags pop out of every corner of this thing, as much as the bulk of the mainstream media would like to ignore them. Bells and whistles, too. It is obvious that the Senator understood what her husband was doing these past six months, so I'll ask the obvious question... what would motivate a twice-elected member of the United States Senate to cast aside all of her best rhetoric and surrender her moral high ground? If it weren't for a lifetime spent watching Law and Order re-runs I wouldn't know where to start but the embarrassingly large number of hours spent watching the procedural has taught me one thing about detective work... follow the money. Read on... (8 comments, 733 words in story) Full Story By Nick, Section News
United States Senators are busy people with demanding schedules. Its understandable if one of the most powerful members of the most powerful legislative body in the nation doesn't know where her husband is and what he is doing twenty-four hours of every day. Still, you'd think better than a half-a-year employed by one of your major campaign donors as an illegally unregistered lobbyist... advocating a project you made a point of running against during your last statewide election... might raise a red flag or two.
That's the reality Senator Debbie Stabenow has faced for the last six months as her husband, Tom Athens, made bank on the payroll of Democratic mega-donor and alleged lothario Jim Papas. Unfortunately, despite the unending rhetoric about transparency and ethics in the Dem controlled Congress, the Senator who once voted to establish the Senate Office of Public Integrity chose to turn a blind eye to her husband's criminal actions, putting him, partisan election interests and the family bank account above Michigan residents and campaign promises. Meanwhile, voters and taxpayers are left with more questions than answers... How long has Senator Stabenow known her husband was breaking the law, making a living as an unregistered lobbyist? How much money did Stabenow and Athens deposit into their family bank account as a result of the illegal lobbying? Records indicate that Athens publicly lobbied Michigan lawmakers and at least one member of Michigan's Congressional delegation because he understood they were firmly opposed to green-lighting a hazardous waste well. There are no records of official lobbying of the Stabenow Senate office. Is that because Stabenow supports her husband's efforts to re-open the dump site despite her campaign pledges to the contrary? Read on... (6 comments, 837 words in story) Full Story |
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