Monday, June 16, 2014

Mary Pierce vs Becky Sharpe in School Board District 8 race. Future of Charter Schools is dividing issue.

Green Hills school board race a battleground for charter school fight

by Joey Garrison, The Tennessean, July 17, 2014 -  Green Hills has become this summer’s battleground for a debate on charter schools that only seems to grow louder.

Its leading actors are two mothers in their 40s competing for the Metro Nashville Board of Education District 8, a largely affluent swath that lacks a single charter school but where some parents have sought one in the past.

And while one of the candidates, Becky Sharpe, believes she’s been miscast as a charter skeptic, stakeholders began drawing lines months ago between contenders who overlap in many other areas.
Her opponent, Mary Pierce, is a favorite of a pro-charter crowd that is......(read more)

Stumble Upon Toolbar
My Zimbio
Top Stories

Domestic benefits, budget lead Metro Council agenda

by Michael Cass, The Tennessean, June 15, 2013 - Look for Metro Council members to do something they do every year and something they’ve never done before when they meet Tuesday.
The agenda for the 6:30 p.m. meeting includes the adoption of a budget for the year starting July 1 and a plan to extend health insurance and other benefits to domestic partners of Metro employees. (read more)

Stumble Upon Toolbar
My Zimbio
Top Stories

Sunday, June 15, 2014

Poetry Break: Dad's memories will always be there, by Ken Jakes

Dad's memories will always be there.
by Ken Jakes

I miss my Dad, I miss him more each day.
I miss my Dad, and the simple things he'd say.
When he met you, he'd ask you " how are you peculating " ?
He'd respond back to you without even waiting.
" I'm peculating pretty goooooooood. "
I knew that response was coming and understood.

My Dad greeted everyone with a smile upon his face.
And, I never even wondered, I knew he was saved by God's Grace.
He lived it in his life, and I knew God held him a special place.
I cherish those fond memories of that smile upon his face.
He was wounded many times in battle, he was American to the core.
And he would get upset when someone would disgrace the Flag, he adored.
Though money wasn't abundant, he supplied our family all its needs.
And he taught me though he may not have known, in all his good deeds
How lucky I am to have had him for my Father, and my love will never end.
He was much more than my Father, you could even call him friend.
In his later years he would tell Mom, " Its time for Ken to come in the door "
For he knew that I would be there, if just for a moment or more.
Dad, told me many times, how proud he was of me as a son.
But to have had a Father like Leonard Jakes, I was the lucky one. 

Stumble Upon Toolbar
My Zimbio
Top Stories

Saturday, June 14, 2014

Metro again sponsors twinks area at Gay Festival this weekend.

The Metro Human Relations Commission will again be sponsoring the Youth Pavilion this year at Nashville's Gay Pride Festival. Metro's Youth Pavilion is described as "a space for youth to hang out at the annual Pride Festival."


(For the naïve, this is a female impersonator performing at last years festival.)

If you think it is wrong for Metro Nashville to be using your tax dollars to sponsor a Youth Pavilion at the Gay Pride Festival and thus normalizing perversion among young people, then blame your Councilman. Metro Council members have had numerous opportunities to stop this promotion of decadence and perversion, but have not done so.  Instead of protecting young people who may be confused about their sexuality, we are throwing them to the wolves.

When members appointed by the Mayor to the Human Relations Commission came before the Council for confirmation, not a single Council Member questioned them as to whether or not they supported Metro's sponsorship of the Youth Pavilion.  All members appointed to the Human Relations Commission were approved without any dissenting  votes.

Stumble Upon Toolbar
My Zimbio
Top Stories

Friday, June 13, 2014

School Board meeting of 6/10/14: Pinkston's fight against School choice stalls. Pinkston loses ground in other fights.




Here is the School board meeting video of 6/10/2014. It is almost four hours long and I have not watched it and don't believe I will have an opportunity to watch it and report on it. If I do, look for updates. If someone else watches it and finds anything interesting please leave a comment and a time stamp notation.

The School Board produces great agenda's with all the same handout that members of the Board get. To get your own copy of the 140-page agenda, follow this link.

Here are news reports of the meeting:

Pinkston’s No Good, Awful, Very Bad School Board Meeting  


 The Nashville Scene, byAndrea Zelinski on Wed, Jun 11, 2014 - After having long driven the agenda of the Metro Nashville School Board, Will Pinkston’s priorities hit turbulence at last night’s board meeting. 
 
Not only did his effort to delay approval of new zoning lines in the Hillsboro cluster fail, but the board picked apart his plan for public engagement and he found out the financial model he was counting on using to evaluate charter school applications would be useless this year.(link)

School board emails to Register vary wildly


The Tennessean, by Joey Garrison, June 11, 2014 - For every email JoAnn Brannon and Sharon Gentry sent Metro Director of Schools Jesse Register in recent months, their school board colleague Will Pinkston sent more than 100 to the superintendent.

Contact via email between members of the Metro Nashville Board of Education and Register varies wildly, according to a board breakdown provided to The Tennessean by the district upon request.
Register came to last week’s Governance Committee school board meeting prepared with this list in hand. After he received criticism from Pinkston about his administration’s response to constituent complaints and questions, the superintendent provided media with a count of Pinkston’s email tally. (link)


Stumble Upon Toolbar
My Zimbio
Top Stories

Caffeinated Conservatives June Meeting - Common Core Edition

From Stephen Clements, the original Caffeinated Conservative:

Hi everybody,
Saturday June 21st from Noon - 2 PM at Bagelface Bakery (700 Main Street in East
Nashville), come talk with David Mansouri, Executive Vice President of SCORE (State Collaborative on Reforming Education), a non-profit education think tank founded by former Senator Bill Frist, and a member of the Board of Directors of Nashville Classical Charter School. I asked him to come tell us why Common Core is a great idea, so bring your questions about education and Common Core, a friend, and your appetite for great bagels and coffee!

Stephen Clements

Caffeinated Conservatives

Check out the SCORE website for more information on this advocacy group:
http://tnscore.org/about/
The Davidson County Republican Party Annual Picnic is June 14th, so get your tickets here!
http://gopnashville.org/
Our friends at the Nashville TEA Party have Senator Ted Cruz's dad, Rafael Cruz, coming to deliver a barn-burner of a speach! It's free to attend, but I plan on buying one of the VIP seats. See you there on July 19th!
https://www.eventbrite.com/e/we-the-people-rally-featuring-pastor-rafael-cruz-father-of-sen-ted-cruz-tickets-11790512741

Stumble Upon Toolbar
My Zimbio
Top Stories

Southeast Nashville Conservative Breakfast, Saturday, June 21, 2014

Where: Shoney's (Antioch),  Bell Road @ Cane Ridge Road, I-24E Bell Road Exit
When: Saturday, June 21, 2014, Breakfast/Social (8:30 am - 9:00 am), Meeting (9:00 am - 10:00 am)
 
Guest Speaker(s): U.S. House Candidates: Chris Carter, Bob Ries, "Big" John Smith
 U.S. Senate Candidates:  Lamar Alexander*, Joe Carr* 
*Due to scheduling conflicts, both Senator Alexander and State Representative Joe Carr have advised they will be represented by key campaign members.
 
Remember:  Early Voting begins  July 18!

Stumble Upon Toolbar
My Zimbio
Top Stories

Joe Carr interviewed on Laura Ingram, gets ink in Washington Times, and more.

Since the Eric Cantor loss, more attention has been focused by the national media, especially the conservative media, on other races where tea party challengers are challenging more establishment Republicans, including Joe Carr's challenge to Lamar Alexander here in Tennessee. I am still convinced that it would take a miracle for Joe Carr to beat Lamar and believe the more people learn about Carr the less likely they would be to vote for him, still his campaign is benefiting from the turn of events in Virginia. Conservative talk show host Laura Ingraham interviewed Joe Carr today for 17 minutes. Follow this link to listen to the audio.  Does Joe Carr have what it takes to oust Lamar Alexander? - June 13, 2014.

Yesterday, writing in the Washington Times, Judson Phillips continues to push the Carr candidacy writing:

And many people are now asking, “Who is the next Dave Brat?”
His name is Joe Carr, and he’s taking on Lamar Alexander, the liberal Republican senator from Tennessee. (link)
Joe Carr is also interviewed today on the JD Hayworth NewsMaxTV America's Forum internet program and you can find the video here.

Stumble Upon Toolbar
My Zimbio
Top Stories

Thursday, June 12, 2014

Council Meeting of 6/10/2014: The AMP put in the capital improvements budget meeting. How they voted.



It is almost unbelievable that the AMP was left out of the Capital Improvements budget and had to be amended in, but it was. Apparently it was a simple mistake and had been in the Capital Improvement Budget for the last six years, one senior Council member told me. The Capital Improvements Budget does not spend any money, but if a project is not already in the Capital Improvements Budget when it passes the Council, then to add it to the CIB later requires a two-thirds vote to amend it in and the move to amend in a project must be initiated by the Mayor, therefore it is very important to the Mayor or a councilman who wants a project funded to get it in the CIB.

The discussion of the CIB starts at time stamp 12:51 and the discussion of the AMP amendment starts at 16:49 and continues until the end of the meeting. Councilman Tim Garrett successfully sponsors an amendment to the amendment that adds the AMP funding back to the CIB, that removes the term "east-west connector" from that amendment. This means the $54 million being added back into the CIB could be used elsewhere for either another AMP-like project or for Bus Rapid Transit. However, as a practical matter, any other route could not advance fast enough to start construction this coming fiscal year, so if another route was chosen, the project could be included in next year's CIB. There is also other money in the CIB for Bus Rapid Transit. This amendment taking out the reference to and east-west connector no doubt made it easier for some council members to support the amendment but the amendment as amended is clearly for the AMP project.

Charlie Tygard makes the point that to have a successful mass transit system, you need a dedicated source of funding and until we have that we are not serious about mass transit and should not be spending money on individual projects. We should not be chasing federal dollars, he says.

A roll call vote is taken on the amendment that would restore the AMP project to the capital improvements budget and it passes 25 yes, 8 no, and 6 not voting. There was then a roll call vote on the CIB as amended and that vote was 29 yes, 4 no,  and six not voting.  Those who voted "no" on the final vote were in effect voting against all capital improvement projects.  I do not recall a time when the final CIB got any "no" votes before.  Those who voted "no" on the complete CIB were Standly, Blalock, Dominy, and Duvall. I don't know if those who were listed as not voting just chose to not vote or if they were absent.

Below are the Council members who voted "no" on the amendment to restore the AMP funding to the Capital Improvements Budget.

Charlie Tygard
Josh Stites
Burce Standly
Phil Claiborne


Davette Blalock
Duane Dominy

Robert Duvall

Carter Todd

Stumble Upon Toolbar
My Zimbio
Top Stories

(final update) Council meeting of 6/3/14: The budget hearing, charter admenments, honky tonk protection, and gay rights meeting.



At almost five hours long, this has got to be one of the longest Council meetings on record. Or, at least the longest in a very long time. When I served on the Council in the 80's we used to have some long meetings but in recent years they have gotten shorter and shorter. Some contentious zoning issues, proposed charter amendments, the budget hearings and metro benefits for same-sex couples make for a crowded agenda. While many council meetings are boring, this one is not. This is one of the most interesting council meetings I have observed in years.

To get your own copy of the analysis and agenda, follow this link. Here is a summary of the meeting.

  • Same sex benefits for metro employees passed on second reading 26-5 with 3 abstentions. Councilman Josh Stites publicly spoke against it. God Bless Josh Stites.
  • No one spoke against the Mayor's $1.9 billion budget but some wanted more spending for their favorite interest or department and the budget passed on second reading. No one speaks for more government efficiency or points out waste except in years when taxes are to be raised; proponents of more spending are constant advocates.
  • All proposed charter amendments were rejected. That is a surprise to me.  Some had passed the Charter Revision Commission. I thought something would get passed.
Here is a play-by-play of highlights of the meeting with time stamp notation:

Public hearings on the operating budget starts at time stamp 13:42 and ends at 35:18. There is no point in watching it, it is pretty boring. Everyone who speaks, speaks in favor. There is no opposition.   Policemen want more money, a 3% pay raise. Bruce Wood of BURNT laments pockets of poverty and what he sees as misplaced priorities. Advocates of free bus passes speak as well as advocates of shuttle bus service and other advocates of mass transit. Advocates of improved fire service speak. The budget is approved and referred back to the Budget Committee.

Public hearing on the Capital Improvements budgets: The Capital Improvements Budget is not really a budget but a planning document that prioritizes what will be built if money is available to build it. It is an important document but does not actually appropriate any money. Rick Williams who heads the anti-AMP group speaks in opposition to an item in the document to fund the AMP on West End. He makes the point that to make the improvements on West End would require State legislative approval. See his remarks at time stamp 37:09.

BILL NO. BL2014-747 defines “communication huts” which is a step necessary for Goggle's proposed new network to move forward. It passes with no one from the public speaking pro or con.

BILL NO. BL2014-769 which would allow smaller secondary houses on lots with an owner occupied house generates some comments. I think this as a good bill. (see time stamp 1:22:45)

BILL NO. BL2014-770 would allow two houses to be constructed on a lot without the little
A tall skinny Nashville duplex
connecting portion now required. I like that portion of the bill. However, another portion of the bill is designed to prohibit the two tall skinny building on a single lot. Several people explain how under certain circumstances this could present a hardship, such as when grade of the lot is lower in the front than in the back of the lot. Also, some other problems are presented.  I would think that the Board of  Zoning appeal could makes some height variances in hardship cases but don't know that. Councilman Bedne tried to ask that question but was ruled out of order. The bill is passed on second reading but made amendable on third. (See 1:26:22- 1:37:17)

BILL NO. BL2014-771 would allow the council to create a “contextual overlay district” in a neighborhood. This is in response to the trend of developers buying small existing houses and tearing them down and building much larger houses that are out of scale to the existing neighborhoods. This COD designation would impose size limitations on replacing of an existing single family home with a larger home. I initially thought this was a positive development, but after hearing from the public, I am persuaded that the bill needs to be withdrawn or deferred and rewritten. I do not like to see modest homes torn down to build McMansions, but that is a matter of taste and aesthetics.

The market is responding to demand and I am not sure that we should impose these restrictions on redevelopment. Nashville is growing. If we are going to discourage urban sprawl and grow the tax base, we should not prohibit the market from responding to demand. If developers cannot tear down a one-bath, two- bedroom house build in the 50’s and build the kind of housing people want, such as a three-bedroom, two-bath home, then the kind of homes people want will be build in surrounding counties. We need to let the market dictate the size and type of homes and Nashville needs the increased tax base if we are to provide the services the city needs without raising taxes. It should be pointed out that these restrictions would not automatically apply to any area but this designation would have to be applied to the area by the Council. To see the discussion of this bill, see time stamp 1:37:18-2:22:26. This bill is deferred two meetings.

BILL NO. BL2014-776  would create the Music City Cultural Heritage Overlay District which
Lower Broad
would apply to property on Broadway, Second Avenue North, and Printer’s Alley. It would require any new businesses in those areas to offer live music or "contribute to the cultural fabric of the district," which means they must sell cowboy boots or hats or tea shirts or tacky music city souvenirs. This bill is in response to Walgreen's interest in opening a drug store on Broadway. Nashville is a unique place, you cannot find what you find anywhere else what you can find in Nashville and we need to preserve it say several speakers. Over 12 million visitors visited Nashville last year and they were not looking for what they could find in any other city.

I do not think a Wallgreens on lower Broadway would destroy it. Tourist attending live outdoor music downtown may need a Tylenol or sun glasses or sun screen or a lawn chair or bottled water.  However, I do want to see lower Broad remain primarily a strip of honky tonks, but an occasional something else added to the mix might enhance the area not distract from it. The Merchants Hotel restaurant does not have live entertainment, so under this bill, it they were not already there, they would not be allowed open. Sometimes, tourist visiting Nashville may want to eat a good meal in a relaxed environment and take a break from live music. On Second Ave especially, I think this is just too restrictive. Candy shops, sports memorabilia stores, ice cream shops and art galleries may enhance the mix and the tourist experience. I support the basic intent of this bill but think it needs more thought. Not every music venue that opens downtown makes it. Some fail. While I think we should try to guide development in this area to protect what has made it popular, I don't think we can micromanage development. Some of the advocates of the bill and the sponsor admit that the bill needs more work. The bill is passed on second reading, made amendable on third and deferred to the July 3rd meeting. (see 2:29:46- 3:09:38)

RESOLUTION NO. RS2014-1052, RESOLUTION NO. RS2014-1087, and RESOLUTION NO. RS2014-1088  are all proposed Charter amendments and they are lumped together for discussion. One proposed amendment would prohibit Metro Council members from serving any other elective office while serving in the Metro Council, another would reduce the size of the Council to 27 members, one would increase the number of terms a council member could serve to three, and one would prohibit Metro Government from asking a potential employee about his criminal record and one would remove protections for the Fair Grounds.  (If you are following along on the Council staff analysis, see page 9.) The amendments are taken one at a time regardless of which resolution they are a part of.  There is some very good discussion.

Council member Megan Barry makes a good argument why one should not be permitted to be a council member and a member of the State legislature. However, she makes the common liberal comparison that the relationship of city to state is the same as that of state to federal government, which of course is incorrect. States have sovereignty; cities do not. Cities only exist at the will of the state. That proposed amendment fails 10 to 22.

There is a good discussion about term limits and the size of the Council. I think term limits were a mistake. Having council members who have served a long time gives them some power to balance the power of the bureaucracy which serves the interest of the Mayor. We have a very strong Mayor form of government and Council term limits makes the Mayor even stronger. However, all attempts to repeal term limits have failed. The size of the Council is discussed with Emily Evans arguing for the smaller council and Ronnie Stein, Tim Garrett and others arguing against it. The argument in favor of the large council is that less wealthy people can serve in the Council because with smaller districts is does not take as much money to run and that with smaller districts council members are more available to their constituents. While I think those are valid arguments, I think the downside of a large Council is that it makes the Council less powerful and concentrates more power in the hands of the Mayor. The bill to reduce the size of the Council fails 10 for, 24 against.

Council members Robert Duvall and Duane Dominy speak against the bill that would weaken the fair grounds protections and that amendment fails 12 in favor and 20 against.

Council members Gilmore's proposed amendment that would prohibit metro from asking about a job applicant's criminal history fails 23 for and 11 against.

The argument in favor of the other proposed amendment which would increase the number of terms a councilman could serve from two terms to three terms is made by Charlie Tygard. It fails 23 for and 12 against. All proposed amendments fail and the three resolutions containing the amendments are withdrawn. For the discussion of the proposed amendments see time stamp 3:15:12 - 3:57:32.

RESOLUTION NO. RS2014-984  requests the Davidson County Delegation to the Tennessee General Assembly to introduce and support the necessary legislation to provide a dedicated funding source for local mass transit. At the request of the sponsor it is deferred indefinitely.

BILL NO. BL2014-698 attempts to curtail the litter caused by those free Tennessean newspapers that litter the neighborhoods. Due to First Amendment protection, the press has a greater right to litter than other people so this bill can't do a lot but it is an attempt. In response to this effort the Tennessean agreed to adopt some policies to police itself and the sponsor request passing it on second reading and then an indefinite deferral. There is some good discussion of this bill and opposition to passing it on Second reading. There is allegation and concern that the sponsor tried to use this bill to force the Tennessean to write an article on the issue. The bill fails to pass on a machine vote of 10 for and 21 against. (see time stamp 4:03:3- 4:15:09)

BILL NO. BL2014-775 establishing the tax levy. It is deferred and rerefered to the Budget and Finance Committee of the Council.
BILL NO. BL2014-779  is the metro benefits for same-sex couples bill.  Council member
Josh Stites
Megan Barry recites a long list of cities and fortune 500 companies that offer this benefit. Councilman Phil Clairborne takes to the floor to argue against it, primarily siting the cost and how it may cause homosexual couples to move to Nashville and seek government employment to gain this benefit. Because of this we cannot know the cost of this change. Congratulations to Councilman Josh Stites who makes a principled argument against it citing his faith as the reason for opposing it. Scott Davis speaks passionately in favor of it getting a round of applause. Several others speak in favor and it passes by a vote of 26 for, 6 against, 3 recorded abstentions and 5 not voting. Those to be commended for voting against this bill are Pridemore, Pardue, Glover, Stites, Clairborne, and Dominy.  The abstention are Bennett, Blalock and Dowel. I am terrible disappointed in some councilmembers who voted for this, abstained, or did not vote. I will have more to say about this in another post. (
See time stamp 4:17:15-4:34:39)


For news reports on last nights meeting follow this link , this link , this link, and this link.

Stumble Upon Toolbar
My Zimbio
Top Stories

Dave Brat who beat Eric Cantor is no Joe Carr

In a recent post addressing Dave Brat's win over Eric Cantor I said that, "We have a means to compare Eric Cantor to Lamar Alexander but we have no means to compare the challenger of each. Maybe Cantor's challenger, Dave Brat, was a sensible and accomplished and capable tea party candidate, instead of a nutty fringe and incompetent candidate like Joe Carr."

Well, we do know something about Dave Brat.  He is an intellectual while Joe Car is, well..., Joe Carr. While Cantor and Alexander  are both mainstream Republicans with Cantor being slightly more conservative than Alexander, we now know Cantor's challenger was a smart, educated guy.  He is not someone you be embarrassed having represent you. Below is an excerpt from a National Review piece:

He chairs the department of economics and business at Randolph-Macon College and heads its BB&T Moral Foundations of Capitalism program. The funding for the program came from John Allison, the former CEO of BB&T (a financial-services company) who now heads the Cato Institute. The two share an affinity for Ayn Rand: Allison is a major supporter of the Ayn Rand Institute, and Brat co-authored a paper titled “An Analysis of the Moral Foundations in Ayn Rand.” Brat says that while he isn’t a Randian, he has been influenced by Atlas Shrugged and appreciates Rand’s case for human freedom and free markets.

His academic background isn’t all economics, though. Brat got a business degree from Hope College in Holland, Mich., then went to Princeton seminary. Before deciding to focus on economics, he wanted to be a professor of systematic theology and cites John Calvin, Karl Barth, and Reinhold Niebuhr as influences. (read more)

Stumble Upon Toolbar
My Zimbio
Top Stories

Brian L. Mason host Kickoff Cookout June 26th


Stumble Upon Toolbar
My Zimbio
Top Stories