Democrat corruption: It’s not just a Cuyahoga County thing

Athens County, Ohio, home of Ohio University, is on a much smaller scale than Cuyahoga County.  Nonetheless, they’ve had to do some corruption-purging among Athens County Democrats.  Don’t make too much noise about it though, because they might charge you with defaming their character in a lawsuit, as former Athens County Democrat Party chair Susan Gwinn has threatened against Nate Nelson, an OU student.

Nate Nelson is blogging about this at From the Rust Belt:

http://fromtherustbelt.wordpress.com/2010/02/03/gwinn-threatens-ou-student-with-libel-suit/

Back in November 2009, he ran a story about  Susan Gwinn at Nate Uncensored that was linked by Michelle Malkin, highly esteemed conservative blogger with a national following.

For more of the back story, Southeastern Ohio Conservative Thoughts has an archive about Gwinn.

There’s even more complete Susan Gwinn coverage at Athens Runaway.

[UPDATE] How do illegal immigrants register vehicles?

Well, for awhile, Ohio was facilitating vehicle registration for illegal immigrants to the United States of America.  And it happened on Strickland’s watch.

We’ve known about this for awhile now.  I hadn’t blogged about it before, but it’s been blogged about at:

Collecting My Thoughts: http://collectingmythoughts.blogspot.com/2009/09/governor-stricklands-illegal-immigrant.html

Right Ohio: http://www.rightohio.com/2009/11/02/strickland-administration-grants-illegal-immigrants-now-illegals-are-panicked-that-laws-might-be-enforced/

and

Kyle Sisk: http://kylesisk.typepad.com/sisker/2009/09/ted-stricklands-new-program-driving-privileges-for-who-the-hell-knows.html

Well, now actual numbers are rolling in to quantify just how bad the problem is.  Kyle Sisk has added these blog posts that will make your head hurt:

http://kylesisk.typepad.com/sisker/2010/02/hay-caramba-less-than-6-you-have-got-to-be-kidding-me.html

http://kylesisk.typepad.com/sisker/2010/02/the-inspector-generals-report-on-stricklands-handpicked-director-continued.html

http://kylesisk.typepad.com/sisker/2010/02/central-ohio-drivers-here-is-some-info-you-might-want-to-know.html

[UPDATE 2/5/2010] Kyle Sisk wasn’t finished with his coverage of these illegal hijinks.  There’s more:

http://kylesisk.typepad.com/sisker/2010/02/either-ron-obrien-or-the-ohio-senate-must-investigate-stricklands-plategate.html

http://kylesisk.typepad.com/sisker/2010/02/playing-nostradamus-with-the-strickland-administration-investigation.html

http://kylesisk.typepad.com/sisker/2010/02/why-plunderbund-is-wrong-re-their-take-on-the-strickland-administration-investigation.html

Press Release: HB 436, part of Republican “Future of Ohio” plan, sponsored by Boose and Balderson

Editor’s note:  Terry Boose represents the 58th Ohio House District in the General Assembly.  Troy Balderson represents the 94th Ohio House District.

Lawmakers Work For Accountable, Efficient State Government

Reps. Boose and Balderson Urge Transparency Through Legislative Measure

Columbus—State Reps. Terry Boose (R-Norwalk) and Troy Balderson (R-Zanesville) today introduced House Bill 436, which when enacted will create the Council on Efficient Government to review and advise agencies that choose to use private contractors, as part of the “Future of Ohio” Government Reform package.

“This is about government accountability and protecting your tax dollars,” said Boose. “Reducing excessive costs while improving public services is one of many steps this legislation can assist in making Ohio’s government a more accountable government.”

House Bill 436 is a vital component of “The Future of Ohio” Government Reform package, a collection of 10 bills that was unveiled by House Republicans in November. These bills aim to improve government efficiency, create jobs and make Ohio nationally competitive. The Council on Efficient Government would serve to trim down the cost of state government and make agencies work better for the people of Ohio.

“This bill, as well as the other “Future of Ohio” bills, can have a lasting effect on the way Ohio does business,” Balderson said. “Now is the time to enact common sense solutions to Ohio’s problems so we can create jobs and better serve the people. Any measures to improve efficiency and reexamine how our state agencies operate are worth exploring.”

Many businesses, local governments and non-profit organizations have taken advantage of using outside private contractors to reduce costs, increase efficiency and better serve the public. If applied to state agencies, it would give the departments the ability to reduce their budgets while providing the same level of service to Ohioans.

Nevada’s tempest in a teapot–Obama’s right about a few things

I picked up this story of huffing and puffing Nevada politicians at ABC’s website.

It seems that all the politicians in Nevada are expressing umbrage at the President for saying the following:

“Responsible families don’t do their budgets the way the federal government does.  When times are tough, you — you tighten your belts. You don’t go buying a boat when you can barely pay your mortgage. You don’t blow a bunch of cash on Vegas when you’re trying to save for college. You prioritize. You make tough choices. It’s time your government did the same.”

Of course, the federal government should’ve tightened its belt, too, and that fact seems lost on Obama, but the rest of what he said is perfectly sensible.  I said in September of 2008 that families should prepare as best they can for the worsening economy.  The events of September 2008 are different than the events of today, but the prospects for continued and perhaps even worsening economic malaise are still staring us in the face.

But Nevada politicians, whether Democrat or Republican, are evidently irrational.  They’ve built their state’s economic foundation upon the sand (see the economics explained here and here) instead of upon a rock, and when the economic storm blew in, their economic house was pulverized.  Do they face the music of generations of bad decision-making?  Apparently not.  They are still in denial about what a prudent course of action should be.  All they’ve done so far is shoot the messenger, in this case, President Obama, when the truth of the message is plainly evident.

I might add that there was never a time when it was OK to blow a load of cash in Las Vegas casinos at the expense of a college fund, not even in the good times.

President Obama sent a letter of clarification to Senator Reid.  In the letter, the President still makes perfect sense:

“I was making the simple point that families use vacation dollars, not college tuition money, to have fun.”

For the record, I like vacations.  I like to travel.  I learn many things about our world from my travel experiences.  But I wouldn’t be able to afford much traveling or vacationing if I feed those one-armed bandits called slot machines.  I certainly don’t see any educational value in making a casino my tourist destination.

Remember when Senator Reid was accused of making racist remarks?  How many politicians came to the Senator’s defense?  He made an apology to the President, and the President vouched for the Senator’s character, that the Senator was not a racist.

But, in this instance, no apology is necessary, yet Senator Reid, with lightning quickness, has thrown the President under the bus, even after the President reached out to him with a letter of clarification.  I think the President would do well to file this episode of disloyalty in repayment of his own loyalty in a place where it can be easily retrieved in the case of a future dispute.  Bad karma for Senator Reid.  Bad karma.

One of Reid’s potential opponents for his Senate re-election, Republican Danny Tarkanian, isn’t demonstrating any more intelligence on the issue than Reid is.  I won’t bother to quote any of the Nevada politicians, since their rants aren’t sensible enough to be worthy of repetition on my blog.

So, why all the nonsensical bluster?  As I posted in the run-up to Ohio’s elections on the casino issue, GAMBLING BUYS POLITICIANS.

Groundhog Day 2010

Like Bill Murray in the Groundhog Day movie, I wish the ORP would have to redo everything, with the calendar not advancing until February 3rd until they got things right.

A snapshot and a video of yesterday’s protest against the ORP are posted at Right Ohio.

Underway today: Protests against ORP’s primary ballot maneuverings

Today, February 1st, the state central committee of the Ohio Republican Party is receiving phone calls and facing on-the-spot protests in Columbus regarding the heavy-handedness of the ORP in clearing the Ohio Attorney General primary field for Mike DeWine, and for endorsing David Yost for the Ohio Auditor primary over a qualified CPA, Seth Morgan.

The ORP has mishandled statewide elections in the past, anointing candidates (think Taft) based on campaign treasuries, political favors, and name recognition while throwing consideration of a candidate’s competencies, qualifications, and principles under the bus.

This year has been particularly egregious, as I’ve pointed out in a prior post about the DeWine, Yost, and Morgan machinations of the ORP.  It’s amazing how, in the span of a few short weeks, the Republican hold on the key apportionment board seat of Ohio Auditor went from a virtual lock to a near forfeit to the Democrats.  The ball was clearly fumbled by the ORP, and Seth Morgan, a qualified CPA, recovered the ball.  The ORP, however, is telling the grassroots that we are all blind, that there was no fumble and the ball was handed off to Yost.  We’ll soon find out if the rank-and-file Republicans of Ohio can swallow such revisionism.  We weren’t doing much swallowing in 2006, when scandals involving Bob Ney and Tom Noe had sickened our stomachs.

It is no secret that the Republican Party at the state level is asking party chairs at the county level to shut out Seth Morgan in the Auditor race against Yost, shut out Sandy O’Brien in the Secretary of State race against Jon Husted, and shut out Tom Ganley in the U.S. Senate race against Rob Portman.  Personally, not only do I favor Morgan over Yost, I favor O’Brien over Husted, and, if you read this blog post about my visit to Senate offices in DC, you’d completely understand why I support Ganley over creatures of the DC Beltway, such as Rob Portman.

For further reading, including breaking developments regarding today’s protests, I recommend:

From Bizzy Blog: http://www.bizzyblog.com/2010/02/01/breaking-no-more-rino-establishment-candidates-tea-party-e-mail-and-planned-protest/

From Cleveland Tea Party Patriots: http://clevelandteapartypatriots.blogspot.com/2010/01/ohio-republican-party-kicks-oh.html

and

http://clevelandteapartypatriots.blogspot.com/2010/02/tea-party-patriot-action-alert-ohio.html

From Thurber’s Thoughts: http://thurbersthoughts.blogspot.com/2010/02/no-more-rino-candidates-movement-gains.html

Press Release: State rep Terry Boose op/ed on Strickland’s State of the State speech

Editor’s note: Terry Boose represents the 58th Ohio House District, which includes Huron County and large portions of Lorain and Seneca counties.

Representative Terry Boose Reacts to Governor’s State of the State

Governor gives lip service to job creation but has no plan to reform Ohio’s Government or support job creation.

Columbus – Following Governor Strickland’s State of the State address, Representative Terry Boose (R-Norwalk) delivered the following remarks:

“ I was glad to hear that the governor is finally talking about Jobs.  Huron County’s unemployment is unacceptable at 15 percent and I find it very unfortunate that the governor has wasted the General Assembly’s time this last year trying to push through projects that we cannot afford, such as the not-so high speed passenger rail, an education plan that cuts funding to local school districts while creating new mandate taxes, and reliance upon racetrack slots to patch up long-term budget problems.

“During my first year in the Ohio House, I along with many of my colleagues have promoted long-term solutions that will get Ohioans working again in the Future of Ohio Jobs Package, such as tax credits for businesses that hire unemployed workers, tax credits for college graduates who chose to stay in Ohio, and a bill that tracks the success of government job placement programs.  Unfortunately, neither the governor or his supporters in the legislature have given us the opportunity to make these job creation tools work for the unemployed workers in Huron, Lorain, and Seneca counties.  In fact, they haven’t even given us the opportunity to vote on them.  If the governor is serious about creating jobs and working in a bipartisan manner, he will consider the Future Of Ohio Jobs Plan.”

In search of Ellie Light

Plain Dealer journalist Sabrina Eaton is on the trail of Ellie Light.  I highly recommend this story and this story.  You have to give credit to Sabrina Eaton for checking her sources.

ORP pushing Yost around to clear AG primary for Mike DeWine

With a heavy-handed top-down approach, the ORP wants to force-feed former U.S. Senator Mike DeWine to you as the GOP nominee for Ohio Attorney General.

Yes, this is the former U.S. Senator who lost to a liberal Democrat, Sherrod Brown, in 2006.  For the record, neither I nor my family members voted for DeWine in the GOP primary of 2006.  William Pierce and David Smith were both more palatable than DeWine.

In the general election for U.S. Senate in 2006, yes, we voted for DeWine and not Sherrod Brown.

This year, though, if Mike DeWine is the GOP nominee, my family members will be voting for Richard Cordray. Richard Cordray.  Let me say that again, because I know that there are some bloggers with a long memory, especially on the left side of the aisle that know I’ve taken jabs at Richard Cordray in the past.  Richard Cordray.

If David Yost, who has served as Delaware County Prosecutor, is on the GOP primary ballot, my family will be voting for Yost.  If Yost is the GOP nominee for AG in the fall, my family will support Yost.

The Republican Party of a few Ohio counties have made endorsements in the AG race already.  So far, those counties have all weighed in on the side of David Yost, including Huron County’s GOP.  None have endorsed DeWine.  Kevin DeWine, a cousin of Mike DeWine, is the chair of the Ohio Republican Party, and it is readily apparent that he is his cousin’s crony because he is doing everything he can to muscle David Yost out of the GOP primary for AG to clear the way for Mike DeWine to be unopposed in the primary.

But let me say it again, if Mike DeWine is the nominee, my family will be voting for Richard Cordray.  I know this because I’ve already had this discussion with my family numerous times.

Boy, will I be eating a lot of crow if I’m endorsing Richard Cordray for AG this fall, but better to eat crow than to vote for Mike DeWine as AG.

And here’s a simple message to Mike DeWine so that he understands at least one principle:  A candidate’s views on the 2nd Amendment to the U.S. Constitution are, indeed, relevant to making a choice about who should be our next Ohio Attorney General.  Sorry, but this is an issue that cannot be swept under the rug or overlooked in an AG race.

Besides the cronyism on full display by ORP chair Kevin DeWine, I suspect that other Washington DC insiders, like Rob Portman and John Kasich, may be complicit in the maneuverings that blocked Mary Taylor from running for U.S. Senate, or even Ohio Auditor, in order to bait a trap for David Yost (who has also served as a Delaware County Auditor) to abandon the Attorney General race and place him in the Ohio Auditor race.

When it comes to the Ohio Auditor race, the ORP dropped the ball.  There was a vacuum for the space of a few days.  The vacuum can’t remain empty.  So Seth Morgan, currently a state rep, declared his candidacy for Ohio Auditor.  The most persuasive argument Mary Taylor made during her campaign for Ohio Auditor in 2006, was that she was eminently qualified for the job, because she was an actual CPA.  Seth Morgan is also a CPA, and, though he got a late start due to Kasich’s meddling, Morgan can tout that credential as the trump card in the race against the Democrat nominee.

So, to the ORP, don’t bother with recruiting an Auditor candidate now.  That problem has already been taken care of.  You had the chance, but you fumbled the ball, and Seth Morgan recovered it.

If Seth Morgan and David Yost face off in a primary for Auditor, I will be endorsing Seth Morgan for Auditor.  The CPA credential is a persuasive one.  But I’d also have to endorse Morgan to punish the ham-handedness of the ORP in trying to pull everyone’s strings.

Am I a lone voice in the wilderness?  A solitary blogger in pajamas?  According to the counties that endorsed so far for AG, no, I’m not alone.  My views on this matter are widely held among the grassroots.  Furthermore, for your reading pleasure, I’d like to plug the following blog articles:

At Weapons of Mass DiscussionThe Fight for the Very Soul of the ORP

At BizzyBlogKevin DeWine, Screwing Up A Perfectly Perfect Storm . . .

At Buckeye Firearms Association: Ohio GOP chair Kevin DeWine attempts to clear path for anti-gun cousin Mike’s return to power

At From the Rust Belt, three posts:  1) Kevin DeWine: Let’s Snatch Defeat From the Jaws of Victory; 2) An Establishment Blog Sides With . . . The Establishment; and 3) Ohio Rages Against the Machine

Some say it would take a bozo of a GOP chair to screw up statewide elections this time around.  We may just have a bozo on our hands.  We shall see.

It’s about the jobs, Mr. President

While at Lorain County Community College on Friday, January 22, 2010, Mr. President, you began with shout-outs to your fellow Democrat politicians who’ve been in office for years making swell promises but who never really deliver the goods.  Nevertheless, the crowd cheered as you announced each name: Governor Ted Strickland, Senator Sherrod Brown, Representative Marcy Kaptur, and Representative Betty Sutton; and with that, the lovefest ensued.

It’s interesting that you welcomed the opportunity to travel to Ohio because you sometimes feel like living in Washington DC is like living in a bubble.  Really, Mr. President?  Funny, how I just blogged about the Beltway cocoon just yesterday.  If you find just the first year in the White House insulating after not even serving a full term as a Senator, then imagine how out of touch the multi-term Beltway creatures are.  So, perhaps voting out Sherrod Brown, Marcy Kaptur, and Betty Sutton would be a good thing for voters to do . . . this year, in the case of Kaptur and Sutton.  We’ll deal with Sherrod in 2012.  And if you really want to burst out of your bubble, Mr. President, you might as well go talk to those people who held a Tea Party nearby.  They want to help you burst that bubble in the worst way.

After your intros and warmups, your speech began:

“I walked into office a year ago in the middle of a raging economic storm that was wreaking devastation on your town and communities everywhere.  We had to take some very difficult steps to deal with that mess to stave off an even greater economic catastrophe.  We had to stabilize the financial system, which, given the role of the big banks in creating this mess, was a pretty tough pill to swallow.  I knew it would be unpopular, and rightly so, but I also knew that we had to do it because if they went down, your local banks would have gone down, and if the financial system went down, it would have taken the entire economy and millions more families and businesses with it.  We would have been looking at a second Great Depression.”

Personally, Mr. President, I think we’re looking at a second Great Depression, no matter what.  We’re Americans, though, and we’re tough enough to weather this storm as long as there’s a rainbow on the other side.  Artificially trying to stave it off with interventions like bailouts and Congressional spending binges, I believe, will only leave us in a holding pattern as the storm batters us and batters us.  To eventually correct course, we needed the chief culprits to fail.  Bailing out the financial institutions only enables those culprits to stay in their positions and continue to wreak the havoc that they’ve been wreaking.  It’s hypocritical for you and your political allies, Mr. President, to pout and scold over the bloated compensation packages of Wall Street executives.  Why do they even have jobs?  Because you bailed them out.  You are the enablers.  If their companies failed, they would have been out of work at least temporarily, their compensation bubbles would have burst, and the marketplace would have readjusted their compensation packages when they finally landed new employment.  You, and Mr. Geithner, and, before you, President Bush, and Mr. Paulson, and all the members of Congress have perpetuated the ills of the financial sector for the foreseeable future because you bailed them out.  Surely, as you say, if they fell, other dominoes would have fallen.  Understood.  But America is like a phoenix.  Something new always emerges from the ashes.  Unfortunately, we haven’t reached that stage.  Nothing newer, more efficient, and more advanced can emerge because the old guard still wields the power, propped up by the bailouts.

I’ve campaigned in Lorain County back in 2002 and 2004, and the topic of jobs was the number one issue on the minds of voters back then, and it’s been the number one issue going back even further than that, so, you can be sure, Mr. President, that, on a day like today, when Ohio’s unemployment is announced to be 10.9%, it’s still the number one issue.

So as you turned your focus to talking about creating jobs, the crowd was applauding frequently and loudly.  Sherrod Brown has made those same kinds of speeches to these same people with much the same content year after year after year after year.  It works like a charm.  It’s what the voters always love to hear.

Yet in all the years that Sherrod Brown has represented Lorain County in elected office, do you think that the bright tomorrow he always speaks of has ever arrived?  No.  It never materializes.

Why do you think that is?

Do you think it might be due to the fact that the federal government can’t stop micro-managing the economy, demanding that the economy meet benchmarks of social justice set by the arbiters of what’s politically correct?  Do you think that the federal government might be devouring too big a chunk of the nation’s GDP?  Just as the laws of physics, such as the law of gravity, cannot be suspended by politically willing them to, neither can the laws governing economics be suspended according to whim.  For every action, there is an equal and opposite reaction.  Helping unqualified borrowers purchase homes through Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac may seem politically expedient, but the piper eventually must be paid.

As you can see, unemployment is not an economic condition that can be corrected in isolation from other economic conditions.  What is needed is a holistic approach that allows for purging of what doesn’t work and emerging of what will work.  Oh, except that the bailouts prevented purging just as surely as they prevent emerging.

Those who stood to pose questions were pretty narrowly focused on employment, weren’t they?  See, I told you jobs has been the number one issue in Lorain County for years.  Virtually every single question from the audience touched on employment in one way or another.

Pundits, and even other Capitol Hill politicians, have been saying that your initial push as President should have been all about jobs.  There would have been more goodwill that could have given you leverage for tackling the health care reform and environmental issues.  Do you see that they were instinctively right?  Isn’t something job related on the mind of virtually every one you called upon, Mr. President?

The special election in Massachusetts gave you an opportunity to take a break from the health care reform issue.  Mr. President, you, yourself, said that health care reform should not be rushed through before Scott Brown is seated in the U.S. Senate.  This stop in Elyria was supposed to be the second stop, after Allentown, Pennsylvania, of a tour about reviving the economy and boosting employment.

But you couldn’t let go of the health care reform issue for even one day, could you, Mr. President?  Even after the Q & A was all about jobs and jobs and jobs, you had to deliver a second town hall speech.  You looked pained that no one had asked you a question to serve as a launching pad to discourse at length on health care reform.  Did you notice any difference in the audience response to your second speech when compared to your first speech?  I did.  Applause was not as frequent and not as raucous.  I think perhaps some of the audience members were wishing for a brief respite from the banter about health care reform and were refreshed to hear you talk about jobs.  Unfortunately, you didn’t grant them much of a respite at all, did you?

But I think the audience, even among those that loved you the most, Mr. President, were giving you hints and clues about where the most productive political pursuits lie:  healing the economy, not through artificial interventions, but letting the axe fall where it needs to (including the federal budget), letting the chips fall where they may, and jobs, jobs, jobs, jobs, jobs.

More Obama news made in Lorain County

To access a clearinghouse, of sorts, of news and some blog articles about President Obama’s visit to Lorain County, Ohio, on 1/22/2010, click over to this special section commemorating the occasion provided by LorainCounty.com.

In Sandusky on 1/30/2010: Meet 2 Congressional candidates

More potential candidates are entering races for Congress.  In Ohio’s 9th Congressional District in 2008, you may recall that incumbent Democrat Marcy Kaptur was opposed by Bradley Leavitt, but not many really had the opportunity to see Mr. Leavitt, as Kaptur dominated media attention.

I received this head’s up from Maggie Thurber of Thurber’s Thoughts:

Announcing a new Meetup for The Children of Liberty!

What: Citizens Town Hall Meeting

When: Saturday, January 30, 2010 2:00 PM

Where:
Lyman Harbor Waterfront Banquet Hall/Restaurant
1615 First Street
Sandusky, OH 44870

We have joined with our fellow patriot groups to put on a town hall meeting to meet the candidates. If you are ready to work to change congress in 2010 and stand up for our constitutional principles, come to this town hall meeting. Speaking at the meeting will are Jack Smith and Rich Iott both running for District 9. This is your chance to ask them the questions the Media won’t. IF you are a candidate and wish to speak at this event you need to pre-register with Jeff Lydy at nwopatriots@gmail.com

Learn more here:
http://www.meetup.com/The-children-of-liberty/calendar/12307501/

Thurber also has blog posts about these two candidates that are gunning for the people’s seat currently held by Rep. Marcy Kaptur.

Rich Iott entry is here.

Jack Smith entry is here.

[UPDATE] Tea Party news: “Free Speech Area?”

If you clicked the links to my prior brief posts about MSM coverage of the Tea Party in Lorain County held while Obama’s town hall was in progress, you may have noticed something odd.  A portion of the campus at Lorain County Community College was designated as the “free speech area,” where protesters were welcome to rally.

From this article by Cindy Leise of Elyria’s Chronicle-Telegram, it seems that the “free speech area” was probably not in a prime location that had a high degree of visibility among passers-by.

Just a handful of protestors gathered at the designated “Free Speech” area on the outskirts of campus near a parking area.

Most preferred being near the Abbe Road commercial area, where they spoke to shoppers and proudly showed off signs such as “Thank You Mass” and “No Recovery Here.”

Protesters shrugging off the “free speech area” and lingering along heavily traveled Abbe Road . . hmm . . . what do you think about that?  Probably a smart move that increased the Tea Party’s visibility.

Of course, in the United States of America that I’m accustomed to, the whole nation is a “free speech area.”

[UPDATE 1/23/2010] This poster reads, “Speech can segregate you from everyone,” and, apparently, the President and his entourage wanted to segregate themselves from the speech of the Tea Party, hence the “free speech area.”

freespeech

Chris Ritchey, a former student of Lorain County Community College, is the creator of this poster.  It is with great pride that I reprint it here with the permission of his mother, Loraine Ritchey.  Chris was taken from our midst by the H1N1 virus on December 3, 2009, while he was trying to recover from Hodgkins Lymphoma.  A loving tribute to his legacy may be found on Loraine’s blog.

Loraine shared this piece of information about Chris with me:

“Yes, he did leave a legacy of wit and standing up for freedom . . . actually, I will be exploring that aspect of him as time goes on.”

Personally, I look forward to reading about it.  Thanks so much for sharing.

Smackdown on women at Ford

During the Question and Answer session that was sandwiched between an Obama speech on jobs and an Obama speech on health care reform, a woman who grew up in a family where Ford put the food on the table asked about redress of sexist issues in the workplace.

President Obama’s response had to do with equal pay for equal work regardless of gender, which, I don’t believe was at the heart of the woman’s concerns.  President Obama had already addressed gender equity in the workplace during his jobs speech, I’m sure the woman heard that message, and I don’t think she was asking to have the President repeat himself.  The union contract would ensure equal pay for equal work, too, so I doubt that’s what the questioner was driving at.

I have a couple of things in common with the woman who posed the question, as I grew up in a UAW household where Ford put food on the table.  Like her, there was a season when I was a Ford worker, too.  I can’t know exactly what the woman’s concerns are, but I know what I observed at Ford, and perhaps some of it may apply to what that woman and her mother experienced.

If you’ve been a reader of my blog for some time, you may have read my post titled, “Smackdown on women in Sandusky.”  To be sure, I doubt this woman’s family hails from Sandusky, so I can’t be sure that the same conditions apply, but let me just repeat just what kind of environment I was talking about in that post:

In Sandusky, Ohio, one doesn’t have to sift through nuance and subltety to find instances of sexism.  No.  In Sandusky, the Good Old Boys’ tastes in misogyny trend more toward sexism that’s blatant and overt.  Perhaps that’s why I couldn’t discern the nuances that JMZ expounded upon, because I was raised in an environment of stark contrasts.

When I make mention of a smackdown on women in Sandusky in the title of this blog entry, I’m not talking about a one-time event.  The “S” in “Smackdown” in the title is capitalized only because it is the first word in the title, not because it’s a proper noun signifying a singular event.  No . . . smackdown of women by the Good Old Boys happens in Sandusky every day of every year.  It is commonplace.  So, it is “smackdown” with a lower-case “s” that I’m writing about here.  Though I hope someday to illustrate the point with my own Sandusky workplace observations, this blog entry will be lengthy enough just to tell the tale of the woman who was once Sandusky’s police chief, Kim Nuesse.

I’ve worked at many, many places for many, many employers at many, many jobs during my adult life.  How many?  I think I counted 30 different jobs.  It seems every little dip in the economy affects me and sends me scrambling to latch on to something else.  But of all those workplaces, I believe the most rampant, blatant, overt sexism I ever witnessed was at Ford.

In other workplaces, people get fired for sexual harassment, and they draw a very clear line.  You can get fired, maybe, at Ford for sexual harassment, and no clear line was drawn.  Men, even married men, chase skirts and sometimes impregnate female co-workers, sometimes even married ones.  Those men on the most solid footing with union officials are the ones most likely to not fear any consequences.

In the woman’s question to Obama about what to do about workplace sexism, she said that attorneys wouldn’t take up the matter.  This, to me, is a clue that the union is complicit.  The union is supposed to represent the worker’s interests in relation to working conditions at Ford.  Her first attempt to redress of wrongs would be through negotiations with her union reps.  That she’s consulted attorneys means that she’s not getting results through the union.  If, for example, she were to lodge a complaint about sexual harassment, and a man who was prominent in the union was involved, the union would most likely neglect to follow through.  Lawyers would probably say that if the woman wants to sue Ford, she’d also have to sue the union as well, because both have a responsibility, and it has to be proven, with evidence, that both have failed in their respective responsibilities in order to make a case in court.  If you lodge a complaint, and the union rep logs the complaint, and documents that the matter was brought before management, how do you prove that they didn’t do their job to redress the wrong?  The union might say, “We’re still working on it.  Management is dragging their feet.”  So proof can be hard to come by, especially if there have been backroom deals between the union and management where favors are owed for covering each others’ hind ends.

But sexual harassment is just the tip of the iceberg.  There are other complaints that I’ve also seen women’s job opportunities curtailed by concerted efforts by male management and male union officials.  Certain departments within a factory may be clubhouses of “boys only–no girls allowed.”  The hiring of women in Ford factories was just a trickle before the late 70’s.  This means that it’s likely that a bunch of men have more seniority than even the most senior woman in the factory.  If an opening occurs in a “boys only” department, and a woman bids on it, there may be a concerted effort to recruit a man with more seniority than that woman to sign the bid sheet.  If a man with more seniority can’t be found, that doesn’t mean gender integration is inevitable, because all of a sudden, management might say “Oops, that was a mistake to put a bid sheet out.  There really isn’t an opening in that department.  The department is fully staffed.”  (Ooh, goody, overtime is available in the short run).  So that bid sheet was useless.  A number of days may then be allowed to elapse so that the bid rights of those that signed that particular bid sheet have expired, and, voila, an opening has mysteriously appeared in that department again, and the bidding restarts back at square one.  Since all of this is according to contract, there’s really no way for attorneys to tackle such a dilemma, even though sexist discrimination may have been a motive for all that maneuvering.   For the men who have nothing to fear from the union or management, outright intimidation may be used to discourage women from bidding into certain departments.

Among the job opportunities in a Ford factory where men exhibit the most territorial behavior are the skilled trades.  Skilled trades require more training.  Skilled trades have a higher degree of risk to a person’s safety.  Skilled trades may require more muscle to accomplish assigned tasks.  Mostly, though, skilled trades pay better that production work.   The better pay and the opportunity to use one’s mind and do work that’s less routine are factors that prompt workers to gravitate toward skilled trades opportunities.

Openings in skilled trades are filled mostly in two ways:  1) Hire someone that’s already a journeyman. 2) Train someone through an apprenticeship until they become a journeyman.

The easiest way to play keep away is to hire someone that’s already a journeyman, because management and the union have the best opportunity to pick and choose without strings attached.  I’ve known instances of men hired off the street who weren’t really journeyman, but connections with union heads and management permitted a farce to be perpetrated where the applicants credentials were fudged.  “Fudged” is putting it mildly.  Because they really weren’t qualified, they really aren’t all that productive, (tasks take longer–ooh! opportunity for overtime!), but at least gender integration was averted.

For apprenticeship programs, there are quite a few requirements that the union and management must meet in selecting apprentices, so it’s a little harder to game the system, but there are still loopholes for gaming it.  It used to be that the highest scores on an aptitude test were the ones accepted into the apprenticeship program.  At first, it was mostly men who worked in the factory, so it would mostly be men who took the test, and it would mostly be men who got the highest scores.  As more women joined the factory workforce, the number of women taking the test started to climb, and the likelihood of a woman getting a high score was increasing.  Often, outright intimidation is used to suppress the number of women taking the test.  Once the tests have been scored, and the candidates for apprenticeship are ranked, apprentices are added as openings become available.  If the top female apprenticeship candidate was ranked 10th on the list, you might see just four or five apprenticeship opportunities open up before eligibility expires and the test has to be administered again.  Or maybe just six or seven apprentices added.  Or maybe just eight or nine.  Ten or eleven?  Nah! Not likely this time around, because a woman ranked 10th.  The dearth of females in the skilled trades does not go unnoticed, however, so it was surmised that perhaps ranking apprenticeship candidates based on test scores, alone, was unfair to women and minorities.  Instead of taking the highest scores, why not take all those with passing scores, and then use seniority to rank the candidates?  That way, as long as a woman or minority can meet the MINIMUM requirements, as evidenced by a passing score, they can get a crack at a skilled trades job.  It should be fairly easy to guess how the new ranking method allowed more gaming of the system than the old:  It’s based on seniority!  Even the most senior women have less seniority than boatloads of men!  The new ranking system provided an escape hatch when the old ranking system, based on high scores, was leading to the inevitability of gender integration in the skilled trades.

But even if a female apprentice is added, her progress in the skilled trades may still be fraught with challenges.  Workers can be dropped from apprenticeships if progress is documented to be unsatisfactory.  Without proper vigilance by someone willing to blow the whistle, documentation of unsatisfactory progress can be manufactured.  Mentors and department heads can try to sabotage her progress during her rotation through the various departments of the plant.  Intimidation is often resorted to in order to pressure the female apprentice to drop out of the apprenticeship program.  Even if she completes the apprenticeship and becomes a journeyman, when she bids to a department that happens to be a clubhouse of the good old boys, she can find herself subjected to the same shenanigans that female production workers can experience when bidding.

Only the intimidation, the false documentation, and the harassment are in violation of the contract.  The rest of the obstacles that women may face are part and parcel of the contract, and a lawyer wouldn’t know where to begin to fight it.

I don’t know what circumstances that woman or her mother faced at Ford because she couldn’t really elaborate within the town hall format, but I wouldn’t be surprised if it had something to do with what I’ve mentioned in this blog post.

[UPDATE] Kudos to Plain Dealer for better Tea Party coverage

In contrast to the MJ’s reporting with an ugly slant, the Plain Dealer‘s Thomas Feran presents a more complete portrait of the 300 or so Tea Partiers at LCCC.

I’d be curious to learn other estimates of the people count.

[UPDATE 1/23/2010] Here’s another excellent article by Thomas Feran about the stalwarts who stayed all day to give Obama a defiant send-off.

Tea Partiers had their say on video, posted by David I. Anderson on the PD website.  Check it out.  It’ll put a smile on your face.