Interesting Congressional District Survey

There is a gentleman named Gilbert Nutter who lives in North Carolina who has an email 1 character off from mine so on occasion I get emails meant for him. One of them is from his Congresswoman Renee Ellmers.

This survey came in today’s E-Mail, what are your thoughts on this? I found a couple of the questions very interesting.

Dear GILBERT,

I want to hear from you!

It is important to me that Second District constituents are kept informed about what I am doing in Congress, but it is just as important for me to hear your thoughts and concerns. Please take a moment to answer the following survey questions below:

All able-bodied food stamp recipients should be required to work for their benefits.

Approve
Disapprove
Not sure

Currently all children born on U.S. soil are automatically granted U.S. citizenship. Would you approve or disapprove of changing this federal policy to require that at least one parent be a United States citizen in order for that child to receive these rights?

Yes
No
Not sure

Are you in favor of allowing hydro-fracking or the extraction of natural gas from rock formations deep underground.

Yes
No
Not sure

Do you approve or disapprove of providing every small business that employs fewer than 500 people with a 20% federal tax cut to help small businesses retain and create new jobs?

Approve
Disapprove
Not sure

*By answering this survey, you are subscribing to my newsletter.

If you are having trouble, click here.

Thank you for your input on these policy proposals. You can share this survey with your friends and family using the “Tell a Friend” form in the right sidebar or on social media using the tools at the top of the page.

Please click here to receive my weekly newsletter. The newsletter contains legislative updates from Washington, reports from the Second District, survey questions, and more. Also visit my website at www.ellmers.house.gov for information about legislation, constituent services, and links to other helpful information.

To continue to engage on these and other issues, my Facebook, Twitter and YouTube sites provide up-to-date information and are also an excellent way for you to provide feedback and connect with others interested in our community and government.

Thank you for your participation.


Mike Hayden withdraw’s Interest

I received this note from former Greater Lowell Tech School Committee member Mike Hayden in regards to the possible opening on the Greater Lowell Tech. Board

Gerry

You can count me out of the running ok , On Friday I sent a email to 14 of the 15 people who will be involved in making the pick stating that I not interested in gaining support for the seat.

I left one person out who I suspected was the rat who sent my original email to the Lowell Sun and it ended up in the column. The fact that the paper did not know about the second email confirms my my thoughts of who the rat was.

Secondly the amount of negative talk and blogging on my interest was enough for me to realize that my family and I do not need this negativity in our lives. I spent 16 great years on that board and I am proud of it and that is how I want to remember it. My political days are over.

Mike


Let the Jockeying Officially begin !

According to the Breaking News Section of the Sun and reporter Sarah Favot ” Lenzi’s upcoming move to Dracut will open GL Tech Committee seat”

She states ” The mortgage of the property at 7 Brianna Way, was signed Tuesday by Lenzi and his wife, Sandra, according to documents filed with the Middlesex Registry of Deeds.
Lenzi also filed a Declaration of Homestead for Homes Owned by Natural Persons with the secretary of state’s office, which states the home will be occupied as the owner’s principal residence.”

So according to the Technical School Charter, the combined Lowell City Council / School Committee (15) will select 1 person to fill the seat ONLY until next year’s municipal election at which time someone would have to run to fill the remaining 1 year left on the term.

Already names being floated (but not all have confirmed an interest) are: Mike Hayden – Ralph Hogan – Dave Laferriere – Paul Belley – Cliff Krieger – Ray Boutin – and probably a few more.

Let the jockeying Officially begin !


Big Brother watching and fining you, at what age do we teach students about Plan E?

I was intrigued by two School Committee motions on tonight’s School Committee Agenda.

The first would involve placing camera’s on School Buses to catch drivers who pass when the busses are stopped with flashing lights and sending them a fine. A third Party Company Smart Bus Live would place the camera’s and collect the $$. They would get a share and the state,city would get a share. The motion is sponsored by Dave Conway.

[by David Conway]: To be recorded in support of house bill no. 3817, and further explore the creation of a pilot program with Smart Bus Live for the installation of surveillance cameras on buses to track and penalize motor vehicle moving violations.

While I realize that it is a danger and I get furious when I see people passing stopped school buses, I’m not sure we should ticket a car based on a video. We do that now I believe when people jump the toll booth but when do we stop? Why not set up camera’s and fine people who run stop signs, make illegal right turns or jaywalk? I know we are in the technology age and camera’s are everywhere but I’m not a proponent of this one.

The other motion involves the city running a Civic Day for the Elementary schools by Kim Scott:

[by Kim Scott]:Request the Superintendent report on the feasibility and price for our elementary students to attend a civics day field trip. The day should include a visit to Lowell city hall, the library, the police and fire departments, and a discussion on municipal voting and our plan E charter. Also, to be included in the report would be the pricing for a field trip to tour the state house for our middle school students.

While I like the concept of having a city sponsored Civic Day, I’m thinking that elementary school kids isn’t the right target for this. I’d think an 8th grade and then again at 11th grade Civic Day would be better.

Give the students who will be entering High School some basic lessons on their city, where City Hall is and what it does, talk with the police and fire and show them where the Library is. It could also include a brief overview of Plan E and the importance of voting and explain the voting process of municipal elections versus state and federal elections.

Then do it again when they are juniors and are a year or two away from being able to vote and give them a much more detailed view of plan E and include the State delegation and Congress person to provide an overview of their roles and the importance regardless of party affiliation of voting.

What are your thoughts on this?


School Tour Highlights need of Capital Plan for Schools

Last Friday I tagged along with the combined School Committee /City Council Facilities Sub-Committee to tour the Reilly, Robinson and Lowell High School. The idea was for City Councilors to see first hand the issues in these (and all) schools regarding repairs and maintenance issues. It was also an oppertunity to see first hand the benefit of the AMERESCO project at the Reilly School.

The committee consisted of Co-Chairs Jim Leary and Ed Kennedy along with School Committee members Kristin Ross Sitcawich and Bob Gignac and City Councilors Kevin Broderick and Joe Mendonca. I was pleased that Supt. of Schools Jean Franco, Deputy Supt. Jay Lang ,School Facility Manager Brian Curley, Mayor Patrick Murphy, City Councilor Marty Lorrey, City Manager Bernie Lynch and Asst. City Manager Tom Moses, Sun reporter Sarah Favot and ace photographer Bob Whitaker also attended.

We started at the Reilly School which when I pulled up, realized that all the windows in the front and cafeteria had been replaced and the building itself from the outside looked wonderful. For many years previous, you couldn’t see in or out of these windows and the draft inside from the outside was measurable. We met in the Library where Manager Lynch passed out an information packet that highlighted some of the man hours the city has spent on school maintenance issues and on Capital Projects including:

In FY 2010 the City Completed 1,317 school work orders
In FY 2011 the City Completed 1,222 school work orders
In FY 2012 to date the City Completed 1,379 school work orders
Between July of 2011 and May 9 2012 the DPW completed 23 bubblers work orders.
Between January 2007 and July 1 2011 the DPW completed 36,838 hours of straight time and 1036 hours of overtime on schools (Approx. 8,416 hours)
Gas Pipe kitchen replacements at the Wang and Lincoln Schools
Construction of the LHS MIS Computer Room
Replaced the Generator at the Stoklosa School ($95,000)
Approx. 11 million dollars of the 21 million dollar AMERESCO project will be spent in Lowell Schools

However as we walked around the Reilly we saw many bathrooms with urinals and toilets wrapped in plastic and unusable, water leaking, toilets that didn’t fully flush and one bathroom where the odor of urine was disgusting and the custodian explained that was after many many attempts at removing the smell.

AT the Robinson we saw a board placed over a spot where a truck had hit the building 6 years ago that had not been fixed. A wall in the Cafeatorium that was installed in 1969 when the building was opened that was filthy and had never been replaced, bathrooms with leaks, open electrical boxes, broken doors on stalls,,bent stalls, outside doors in need of weather stripping, windows you can’t see out of that the seals have been broken and lockers without handles.

At Lowell High doors that had no handle, stained ceiling tiles, broken windows, rust in bathrooms, water stained carpets and heaters in the feildhouse that haven’t worked in a few years.

The city in the past few years had been under tough fiscal times and has allowed many of these school buildings to get run down. Most schools haven’t had a coat of new paint in years. There are only so many dollars and so much personal but this city MUST take care of the buildings they own and must provide our students with a safe, clean, maintained building.

The Manager has indicated he has an aggressive capital plan and ideas to work with union 1705, the Greater Lowell tech and Community partners in getting some summer help to work on projects and spend capital on repairs throughout the city.

The school dept. has done an outstanding job in creating a Master List of needed repairs. It is time for the city to spend some capital on our schools.


Stephen King to Speak at UMass Lowell

N E W S R E L E A S E

May 15, 2012

Stephen King to Speak at UMass LowellLegendary Author to Make Rare Personal Appearance at Event for Public, Campus

LOWELL, Mass. – Stephen King’s words on page and screen have thrilled and chilled fans for three decades, but opportunities to hear those words spoken by the author himself are rare.

For one night only, King will take to the stage at the Tsongas Center at UMass Lowell, offering fans the chance to hear King read his work, ask him questions and listen to him discuss his passion for writing and his advice for aspiring authors. “A Conversation with Stephen King” – set for Friday, Dec. 7 at 7:30 p.m. – will be moderated by Andre Dubus III, bestselling author and professor in UMass Lowell’s English Department, the program’s co-sponsor.

King’s appearance marks the debut of the new UMass Lowell Chancellor’s Speaker Series. Tickets to the Dec. 7 event go on sale to the public Friday, June 1 and are $30 (plus $2 facility fee) for general admission and $50 ($2 facility fee) for reserved floor seating. Tickets will be sold at the Tsongas Center box office, www.tsongascenter.com and 866-722-8780. Admission is free for UMass Lowell students with valid ID who obtain tickets in advance at the Tsongas Center box office.

“Writing requires not just a creative mind and some good ideas, but also dedication to the craft. I look forward to sharing my experiences as a writer and the lessons I have learned with UMass Lowell students and the public,” said King, who will hold a special master class for UMass Lowell creative writing majors during his visit to the university.

To further support UMass Lowell students, King and his wife, Tabitha, will endow a new scholarship fund in their names. King will donate his fee from the UMass Lowell appearance and at least $5 from every ticket sold for the Dec. 7 event will go to this scholarship fund.

“It is a tremendous honor to have Stephen King as the first headliner of the new UMass Lowell Chancellor’s Speaker Series. This is a perfect example of how the series will bring people at the top of their fields to campus to speak to our students and the community,” said Chancellor Marty Meehan. “We are also very grateful to Stephen and Tabitha King for their generous support for student scholarships here at UMass Lowell.”

King’s nearly 35-year literary career includes publishing more than 50 full-length books that have sold more than 350 million copies, as well as many short stories, essays, anthologies and novellas. King’s early thrillers, like “Carrie” and “The Shining,” put him on the map, not only as a writer of popular horror novels, but also one whose work could be successfully adapted for films and television. More than 50 of his works have been turned into movies and miniseries, and many have garnered critical success, including “The Shawshank Redemption” and “The Green Mile,” both of which were nominated for multiple Academy Awards. King made his directorial debut with “Maximum Overdrive,” which was based on one of his short stories, and collaborated on “Ghosts,” a 40-minute music video with Michael Jackson.

King, who also published work under the pen name Richard Bachman, is best known for crafting tales that terrify. But he is also the author of nonfiction books like “On Writing,” his self-described “memoir of the craft,” and “Faithful,” a chronicle of the Boston Red Sox 2004 championship season co-written with Stewart O’Nan. Last year’s “11/22/63” was King’s first work of historical fiction, set around the assassination of President John F. Kennedy. King has penned columns and opinion pieces that have appeared in publications and websites, including Entertainment Weekly and the Huffington Post, and he has made several TV and movie appearances. His body of work includes comic books, audio books and the novella “Ur,” written exclusively for release as an e-book for the Amazon Kindle. King is the recipient of numerous honors, including the National Book Foundation Medal for Distinguished Contribution to American Letters and the Mystery Writers of America Grand Master Award.


Is Greek Community lacking someone with Pericles’ Orator skills?

Pericles was a leader of Athens who was responsible for rebuilding Athens following the Persian Wars. He was also leader of Athens during the Peloponnesian War, but he died of the plague that ravaged the city. Pericles was so important that the era in which he lived (during the 5th Century B.C.) is known as the Age of Pericles . For over 20 years, at Athens’ height, the city was dominated by the ‘Olympian’ figure of Pericles. A magnificent orator with a reputation for scrupulous honesty, Pericles deepened and extended the reforms that Cleisthenes had set in motion some 50 years before.

If as speculated the Greek Community is upset with the bust of Pericles not being in the Mayor’s Reception room the question needs to be ask, Has anyone from the Greek Community directly contacted the Mayor or the Mayor’s Office to ask / request / suggest / discuss that the bust be placed back into the room?

Pericles was a great orator, surely we have members of the Greek Community who are gifted speakers and could contact the Mayor or his office to set up a time to meet and discuss this issue.

So I asked the question if in fact the Mayor has been contacted and it appears that the answer is in fact…NO !

The Mayor or his office has not had a call, a concerned citizen stop by or been approached by anyone from the Greek community to address this issue.

So before we come down on the Mayor for not moving the Bust based strictly on the Lowell Sun report, should we not expect a concerned member of the Greek community to talk directly with the Mayor?

Supposedly concerned members are sending a letter to ALL the Council but it leaves the question open as to why the Mayor hasn’t been directly asked? Ironic that no leader of the community will step forward to talk with the Mayor over a bust involving a great leader and orator. Why?

Now a secondary issue could be brought forward and discussed involving once a gift is given to the city with no defined or direct “strings” or stipulations spelled out as to where it will be displayed, can and should the person or group giving the gift be allowed / encouraged to direct the city what to do with that gift?

That right now is a secondary issue, the main issue is:

WHY hasn’t a concerned member of the Greek Community directly contacted the Mayor or his office to arrange a meeting to discuss the issue of the placement of the Bust of Pericles?


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