THEY CALL THIS BIPARTISANSHIP IN PA

4 comments

Posted on 17th March 2013 by Administrator in Economy |Politics |Social Issues

, , , , , , , ,

Don’t you love when Republicans and Democrats can work together to screw the taxpayer over? The latest of hundreds of bribery scandals in my fine State of Pennsylvania has revealed the bipartisanship that kept the taxpayer money flowing into the grubby hands of slimy politicians, corrupt government drones, and the corporations who paid tthem off for bloated construction contracts. Whoever was in control of the PA state government got 60% of the bribes and the other party got 40% of the bribes. See. This is proof that Republicans and Democrats can work together. The fine upstanding politicians in Washington DC should study how it is done in PA so they can implement it nationally.

If you buy into the party politics that run this country, you are a fool. Both parties are fucking you.

 

Many steering clear of Pa. turnpike’s 60/40 scandal

Published:March 16. 2013 12:01AM

HARRISBURG — Supposedly, it was an open secret.
Of the allegations emerging from a sweeping grand jury investigation into corruption at the Pennsylvania Turnpike Commission, one of the most damning was witness testimony that lucrative contracts were guided by politics: 60 percent were awarded to supporters of the governor’s political party and 40 percent to those of the other.
The perversion of the turnpike commission’s process of hiring environmental, design and engineering consultants to reward political contributors was a familiar subject in Harrisburg’s circles of power, said Pennsylvania State Police Commissioner Frank Noonan.
Still, only one elected official — former Senate Democratic floor leader Bob Mellow from Lackawanna County — is facing charges, while some top lawmakers and commission members, past and present, say they knew nothing of such allegedly pervasive corruption.
“I think that this type of activity has been well-known and well-discussed throughout political circles for a number of years,” Noonan told reporters as he and Attorney General Kathleen Kane announced the charges. “But … you have to have evidence. The people who were charged are the people we have evidence against.”
It was not enough to charge an elected official simply because they knew about the 60/40 rule: Evidence was necessary that someone had worked to rig the process, Kane said.
On Wednesday, Mellow, three former top Pennsylvania Turnpike Commission officials and two businessmen were charged in what prosecutors say was a long-running scheme in which contract-hungry vendors gave lavish gifts and political campaign contributions to improve their chances of landing a contract.
Contracting decisions at the Turnpike typically followed the 60/40 rule, according to the 85-page grand jury presentment.
“According to several witnesses testifying before the grand jury, whichever political party (is) in power gets 60 percent of the contracts or jobs, and the minority party receives 40 percent.”
The turnpike commission might be unavoidably political: The governor nominates turnpike commissioners to four-year terms and each must be confirmed by a two-thirds majority of the state Senate, giving senators influence there. Traditionally, three of the five turnpike commissioners are from the governor’s political party, and one must be the state transportation secretary.
According to the grand jury, an unnamed former chief operating officer of the turnpike commission said “typically, there was always a 60/40 rule” that was dictated by either the Senate leadership or the governor’s office.
Allen Biehler, Rendell’s transportation secretary for eight years, said he had heard about the 60/40 split, perhaps even before he became transportation secretary in 2003. But he said he did not know if it was true.
As a commissioner, he voted on contracts, relying on commission staff to recommend a firm. He would quiz the staff about their conclusions, but he did not have time to review all the competing proposals for each job, he said.
Still, the culture at the agency worried him.
“I always had an uncomfortable feeling about the place,” said Biehler, who said he was not contacted by law enforcement.
Rendell, a Democrat who served from 2003 to 2011, as well as House Speaker Sam Smith, Senate President Pro Tempore Joe Scarnati and Senate Majority Leader Dominic Pileggi, all of whom were in positions of power during the period scrutinized by the grand jury, said through spokespeople that they knew nothing of the 60/40 split.
Former Senate Majority Leader David Brightbill did not want to discuss it. One former commissioner, Timothy Carson, and current Commissioner Pasquale Deon, who joined it in 2002, did not respond to requests for comment Friday.
Former Senate President Pro Tempore Robert Jubelirer, who served until 2006, said rigging contracts is “completely foreign” to anything he or his fellow Republicans did while running the Senate. If a formula to guide hiring was developed, he did not know about it, he said.
“We recommended people who were very competent,” said Jubelirer, who also said he was not contacted by law enforcement. “Sometimes they got hired, sometimes they didn’t.”

PA TURNPIKE – “ALL THE ANIMALS (POLITICIANS) COME & DRINK THERE”

9 comments

Posted on 15th March 2013 by Administrator in Economy |Politics |Social Issues

, , , , ,

 The Pennsylvania Turnpike just jacked up tolls by 10% on January 1. They claimed it was needed to repair the crumbling roads in our state. This is happening across the land. You hear liberals and Keynesian idiots wailing about the crumbling infrastructure and the need for a national program to rebuild it. What a crock of shit. Every State and municipality in this country has an annual capital budget to maintain and restore infrastructure. They chose not to allocate the billions under their care to doing what was needed. The story below reveals the truth of how it really works. Criminal dirtbag politicians and criminal government bureuacrats collude with big business to fuck over the taxpayer and enrich themselves.

Every infrastructure project done in this country costs 40% more than it should due to payoffs, bribes, and government union no-bid contracts. In PA it seems that all of these criminals are Democrats and the political contributions went to Fast Eddie Rendell and his cronies in Philly. I hope this doesn’t interfere with the day to day activities of the former Democratic Senate leader who is already in prison for other corruption charges. Politicians are nothing but lowlife swine. They don’t give a fuck about you. Their only purpose is to enrich themselves, their cronies and the companies that bribe them. Remember why your tolls went up 10%  next time you hit a pothole on the PA Turnpike.  

Ex-Sen. leader, 7 others charged in Turnpike probe

By By Marc Levy And Mark Scolforo on March 14, 2013
 

HARRISBURG, Pa. (AP) — A witness told grand jurors investigating an alleged “pay-to-play” culture at the Pennsylvania Turnpike Commission that the agency, awash in toll-payers’ money, is like the Mesopotamia River.

“All of the animals come and drink there,” the grand jury report quoted the unnamed witness as saying. “If you were an engineering firm or a law firm or a consulting firm or whatever, you go to the turnpike because that is where the money is.”

On Wednesday, a former state senator, three former top Pennsylvania Turnpike Commission officials and two businessmen were charged in a sweeping investigation that prosecutors said involved a long-running scheme in which contract-hungry vendors gave lavish gifts and political campaign contributions to improve their chances of landing lucrative contracts.

The group of former state officials used their extraordinary power over multimillion-dollar turnpike commission contracts both to enrich themselves, rig bids for favored businessmen and help sway political campaigns, Attorney General Kathleen Kane said. The largely-secret investigation that came to light Wednesday dates back to 2009 and involved hundreds of witnesses to crack a political and corrupt culture, she said.

“Evidence of secret gifts of cash, travel and entertainment and the payment of substantial political contributions to public officials and political organizations by private turnpike vendors and their consultants demonstrates that the turnpike operates under a pay-to-play system that is illegal and corrupt,” Kane said.

The public, she said, “has lost untold millions of dollars” in inflated contracts, and she added that the “greatest improper influence” involved the turnpike’s procurement process.

Charges were filed against retired state Senate Democratic floor leader Bob Mellow, currently jailed in a federal prison in South Carolina on unrelated corruption charges. Mellow, 70, was accused of helping supporters and contributors get business from the turnpike and pressuring turnpike staff to support him politically and raise campaign funds.

Also charged were former turnpike chief executive Joseph Brimmeier, 64, and former turnpike chairman Mitchell Rubin, 61.

The investigation is continuing, but is restricted by an eight-year statute of limitations, Kane said.

Turnpike vendors named by the grand jury gave hundreds of thousands of dollars collectively in political campaign donations, while winning tens of millions of dollars in contracts over the past decade. Recipients of the campaign donations included former Philadelphia state Sen. Vincent J. Fumo, who is in federal prison on unrelated corruption charges, and former Gov. Ed Rendell.

The vendors also paid for gifts and entertainment worth tens of thousands of dollars, including trips to Paris and Vienna, tickets to professional baseball games, golf outings and expensive meals, some of which was not reported as required by the law, Kane said.

Business executives, including the two businessmen charged in the case, who participated in the pay-to-play system were rewarded with multimillion-dollar contracts, authorities said.

“The reason they made these contributions and provided these gifts (is) because they knew that was the way they would get these contracts,” said state police Commissioner Frank Noonan.

Companies identified by the grand jury, but whose executives were not charged with wrongdoing, included engineering firms, transportation planning and design firms and a major bond underwriter.

Kane said the selection and recommendation of turnpike vendors followed what witnesses identified as a 60-40 rule that split up contracts among firms favored by Republicans and Democrats: 60 percent of the turnpike contracts went to the “majority party” and 40 percent went to the “minority party.”

The governor appoints turnpike commissioners. Traditionally, three of the five turnpike commissioners are from the governor’s political party, while the other two are from the other political party. Each must be confirmed by a two-thirds majority of the state Senate, helping give senators influence there.

A key witness who testified under grant of immunity was Tony Lepore, chief of staff to Mellow and to the current Democratic floor leader, Sen. Jay Costa of Allegheny County.

“Lepore explained that Senate officials would learn of work becoming available at the turnpike and would call … Brimmeier and tell him which firm, vendor or consultant they wanted to steer turnpike work to,” the grand jury wrote in an 88-page presentment released with the charges. “Generally, their requests were honored.”

The other defendants were the turnpike’s former chief operating officer George Hatalowich, 47; Dennis Miller, 51, a former vice president of information technology firm Ciber; and vendor consultant and registered lobbyist Jeffrey Suzenski, 63.

Miller, Rubin, Hatalowich and Suzenski were arraigned Wednesday and released on $100,000 unsecured bail. Brimmeier was due in court Thursday. Arrangement was pending for Mellow.

The men either declined comment or could not be reached Wednesday. Miller’s lawyer said his client has cooperated fully with the grand jury investigation and will fight the charges.

The grand jury issued a separate report for two former turnpike commission employees.

Raymond Zajicek, 67, described as a close associate of Brimmeier and now retired from his $110,000-a-year job as fare collection operations manager, allegedly performed personal errands regularly on state time and occasionally made political fundraising calls during the work day or requested turnpike employees to perform political activities.

Melvin Shelton, 81, “held himself out to be a ‘labor relations specialist’” but acted more like a Democratic party functionary, the grand jury said. He allegedly pressured officials to rehire fired employees who were registered Democrats by emphasizing his contacts with an unnamed Philadelphia congressman and with Rubin.

The turnpike figured tangentially in the federal criminal case against Fumo, who was convicted in 2009. Fumo is not identified by name in the jury report, but as Senator No. 6 he is described as having a powerful influence over the turnpike.

Political donations from turnpike vendors were directed to him and other senators of both parties who had sway over the turnpike commission, the report said.

Rendell ousted Rubin in March 2009, citing what he called “overwhelming” evidence in Fumo’s trial testimony that Rubin had been paid $150,000 for a no-work job for the Appropriations Committee under Fumo.

Rendell also was not named, but it is clear he is referred to in the grand jury report as Gubernatorial Candidate No. 1, for whom Brimmeier and Hatalowich were allegedly collecting political donations from vendors. Rendell said Wednesday that he had not read the indictment and was unaware of any inappropriate activity.

JUNIOR ADMINISTRATOR, ALTOONA, BIG K & THE WRATH OF GOD

26 comments

Posted on 28th August 2011 by Administrator in Economy |Politics |Social Issues

, , , , ,

My oldest son has now made it through his first week in college at Penn State Altoona. It was such a busy week, I was unable to give a brief synopsis of the eventful trip. On that Wednesday night we packed all of his earthly belongings into his CRV and my Insight. His hockey stuff, amplifier and electric guitar took up 70% of the space in his car. His check-in time at his apartment complex in Altoona was 11:00 to 12:00. The plan was to leave in a caravan at 7:00 am for the 3 1/2 hour drive.

I slept like crap and got up at 5:00 am on Thursday and began the orderly shower progression . I put on a pot of coffee and walked outside to get the newspaper. As I reached down to pick up the paper, a flash of lightening departed from the heavens.

I should have known right then it was going to be a long day. The weather forecast was for scattered thundershowers. That usually means a late afternoon 20 minute storm. But Nooooo!!!! Not today. The rain started to fall and thunder and lightening increased. The path to Altoona is pretty straightforward – 180 miles west on the PA Turnpike and 40 more miles on Route 220/99. We got under way at 7:00, but driving through a heavy thunderstorm on the Turnpike with 18 wheelers sharing the road with you is stressful and much slower.

After about an hour on the road we blasted through the storm and into sunshine. We started to make good progress until the Administrator’s bladder filled up and we needed to stop at a rest stop. We made one more stop on the way to get some more gas and arrived in 4 hours and 15 minutes.

When you pull into Altoona you notice a Sheetz store/gas station every other mile. They are the Wawa – 7/11 of Altoona. The other thing you notice is the closed up deteriorating locomotive factories that haven’t built a train in decades.

 

We pulled into the apartment complex up on the hill overlooking the beautiful mountains that surround the campus. The clubhouse has a pool, workout room, game room and TV room. Not exactly like the hovel I lived in at Drexel in West Philly.

We unloaded the cars and started to move Kevin into his new home. We met two of his three roommates and their parents. They struck me as good kids. It must be just me, but I find most of the Millenials that I meet to be good kids with good manners who try their best. As we set up his room, we realized the missing piece was a floor lamp. We decided to cruise around Altoona looking for a place to buy a floor lamp and get some lunch.

Kevin took the wheel and we set off. We found a Wendy’s and pulled in. As usual, whenever I’m out among the masses I try to be observant. I noticed that just about everyone in the Wendy’s was a candidate for wearing Depends. Altoona has 30% more people over 65 than the US in general. This is surprising since it is a college town with 4,000 students skewing the demographics to the younger categories.

When you examine some other key demographic factors, you come up with a median household income of $28,000 versus $50,000 for the US. The population has declined from 82,000 in 1930 to 46,000 today. The population is 96% white. The poverty level is 18% versus 14% in the U.S. So, we’ve got very poor old white folks living in Altoona. This sets the stage for the next part of the story.

Kevin turned down what appeared to be the main retail strip in Altoona looking for a Wal-Mart or somewhere to buy a floor lamp. We drove five miles with no luck. Since I wasn’t driving, I was observing. We passed McDonalds, Olive Garden, KFC, Taco Bell, Red Lobster, Texas Roadhouse Grille, Outback Steakhouse, Applebees, El Campasino, Alegros, Cracker Barrel, Denny’s, Eat n Park, Friendly’s, Hoss’ Steak & Seafood, Perkins, Ponderosa Steak House, Pizza Hut, Ruby Tuesday, TGI Fridays, the Waffle House and a few other eating establishments. We passed a Veteran’s Hospital and about ten other medical related facilities and senior centers. For mile after mile there was nothing but strip malls. I did not see one business establishment that actually produced anything. Nada.

Eventually, there she blew – A Big K. We knew there would be a floor lamp in the Big K. I had not stepped foot in a Kmart in ten years. And now I know why. The staff and clientle at Big K make the People of Wal-Mart look like the upper class.

fail owned air fresh fail Daily Awesome: People of Walmart, Kmart, & Waffle House (35 pics)

kmart funny 01 Daily Awesome: People of Walmart, Kmart, & Waffle House (35 pics)

coke Daily Awesome: People of Walmart, Kmart, & Waffle House (35 pics)

We found a Chinese floor lamp and tried to escape this asylum as quickly as we could pull out of that parking lot.

I found myself pondering how all these restaurants, retailers and strip malls could stay in business when the median household income in this area is $28,000. I come back to our entitlement society. The only way this mecca of consumerism and fast food can survive is from government transfers to the residents of Altoona. There is no other explanation for these businesses surviving. The entitlement stream will run dry. That is a certainty. The impact will be a collapse of our already crumbling consumer society. I don’t think those 20 restaurant chains listed above are anticipating this event. Too bad. It is happening. 

We found our way back to the campus without running over any old farts and took a stroll on the beautiful campus. Then it was time to go. Avalon was tearing up. I contributed by asking her about the day her baby was born. We all hugged the Junior Administrator and set out for home.

It had been a beautiful sunny day in Altoona. I usually do all the driving, but I was a little tired. I asked Avalon to drive the first half of the trip home until we got to a rest stop to eat. On the way out to Altoona she had yelled at me for going too fast at 75 mph because Kevin was following. I said I needed to pass the 18 wheelers because being  near them in a Honda Insight was a death wish.

Avalon took the wheel and we were off. In the first 15 minutes she cut off two cars and almost missed a turn. I knew I should have driven. I am not comfortable in the passenger seat. At some point it seemed like we were going pretty fast. I looked over at the speedometer and pointed out to Avalon that she was travelling 87 mph. She said OOHHH, I’ve never gone that fast before. I think she set a new land record for a hybrid. I was thankful when we pulled into the rest stop. After eating a half cooked “deep dish pizza” I was ready to assume control of the Insight.

We pulled away from the rest stop near Harrisburg with less than two hours to go. Then it happened again. Off in the distance.

 

WTF!! What did I do to incur the wrath of God? I continued to see lightening far in the distance. I assumed it was just a passing thunderstorm and maybe it would pass before we got there. I had another thing coming. It got darker and darker. The lightning became more violent.

Then it happened. The most violent downpour I’ve ever driven through. Drivers began panicking all over the turnpike and pulling off the road. The 18 wheelers didn’t slow down and seemed to be surrounding me. Avalon was scared and telling me to pull over. I determined it would be more dangerous to pull over and risk being hit by some other idiot. My Insight has less metal than a Coke can.

The rain did not let up for about an hour. It was a tense hour of driving 50 mph on the PA Turnpike. It seemed like God was trying to get me. But he failed this time. We made it home in 4 1/2 hours and I slept like a baby.

This concludes the story about the day Avalon’s baby left the nest and started his journey to adulthood.