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![]() January 12, 2004 Art Jones Pension better than $100K per year
Two other Mayoral candidates eligible soon Usually it is only rich guys who enter public service for the service. However lofty the intentions of our elected full-time representatives money is usually a factor. Not so for Art Jones! Hes getting piles of it already. Jones retired as Milwaukee police chief on November 19th last year, at the age of 57, and was immediately eligible to receive a pension. He chose a survivorship option, which reduced his monthly payment to only $9,786.97 per month instead of the $10,937.61 he was eligible to receive based on his 36 years of service as a police officer. Jones also picked up a lump sum bonus check of $67,057 when he walked out the door. His $117,443 annual pension is not much less than the $130,000 or so he could expect to earn as mayor, so it is nice to know that Jones will have something to fall back on in the event that the public does not elect him mayor. (Interesting sideline: One month of Joness pension income is more than the total pension every single penny received by former Mayor Frank Zeidler for his 12 years service as mayor. Mr. Socialist, who is still alive and could probably use the money, worked in a day when public pensions did not have quite the impact on the public purse they have today.) Acting Mayor Marvin Pratt will turn age 60 on May 26, 2004, and could receive a pension then. He has not asked the Employees Retirement System staff to prepare an estimate as to how much he will receive, and neither has candidate Vince Bobot, a youngster, who will not reach 60 until December 30, 2012. Bobot, who has been a police officer, an attorney and a judge for the city, has worked for Milwaukee since August 16, 1971, and could retire at age 55 in 2007. Another mayoral candidate, Tom Nardelli, did request an estimate of his future pension, assuming a July 4, 2004 retirement date, when he will turn 60. The city figures he would receive $2,368 a month along with a lump sum bonus of approximately $13,900. These figures could be reduced if Nardelli chose a survivorship option. Acting Mayor Pratt replaced himself on the Annuity and Pension Board with Bobbie Webber on October 16, 2003. Webber will serve until the next Common Council President determines who will be his or her three appointees to the board. LAST LAUGH Local attorney leaves over a million to his four children and even more to his house The Hilarious Last Will and Testament of George Miller Chester A couple of decades ago, George M. Chester, an attorney for Foley and Lardner, appeared in a suburban municipal court to represent a friends son who had been involved in a minor mishap. When the judge asked Chester a routine question about his expertise, he answered, Your honor, I specialize in corporate takeovers and disorderly conduct cases. Chester, who died at 81 last year on March first, was legendary in Milwaukee for his wit as well as his wealth. His funeral at St. Pauls Episcopal Church was attended by the citys bluebloods along with a scattering of friends he had made over the years people a daughter, at the service, referred to as unusual individuals from the fringes of respectability. Outside the church a horse and a llama from Chester Farms stood grazing in the shadow of the Edward Townsend Mix building, to the delight of some, and to the consternation of others. That was George. The Wall Street Journal had once written a front page profile of Chester; his witty annual reports for the Wisconsin Securities Company of Delaware (now Wisconsin Securities Partners), a family holding company, were the equal of the celebrated Warren Buffett Berkshire Hathaway shareholder messages. KIDS AS RICH AS KENNEDYS
His final witty missive can now be found in the Milwaukee County Courthouse, and it is worthwhile to recount a few passages from his Last Will and Testament. The chuckles begin with the first sentence: THE WIDOWS MITE His wife Margaret received three Northwestern Mutual Life Insurance Company policies on his life (he had been a trustee of the organization), property in Arizona, including the home where she lived for much of the year. In a wistful note, Chester regretted not spending more time there. Margaret Chester also received the penthouse apartment in the Regency condominium, down the hall from Sen. Herb Kohl, who caught Chester snitching his newspaper so often he simply bought an extra subscription. (When certain unusual individuals from the fringes of respectability would visit George Chester in his condo, he show off a picture of Michelangelos David he had hung in a closet.) There were numerous other bequests, but as is the case with most very wealthy people, much of Chesters assets had been dispersed prior to death, or were in any number of family trusts, like the Wisconsin Securities Partners. $4 MILLION FOR THE LAKE HOUSE George Chester honored a bit of his own primogeniture in his will in an unusual bequest to his lake house, built by his grandfather, Benjamin Kurtz Miller, who, like his grandson, was an attorney at Wisconsins oldest and largest law firm, then Miller Mack & Fairchild, and now Foley and Lardner. WRITTEN OUT OF THE WILL? NOT SO BAD FOR TWO Chester also made and revoked two $10,000 bequests in his will, one to Dr. Edward Buchanan of Brookfield a friend and business associate and the other to Steven A. Lopez, of San Francisco, and formerly of Milwaukee, where he met Chester as a young man about 25 years ago. Lopez was described as a former employee, friend and horseback riding companion. According to the third codicil to the will, the bequests were revoked because Chester made the gifts during my lifetime for tax purposes. LIVE FROM THE ELECTION COMMISSION If youve always wanted to see the look on the face of a guy whos just discovered that he is about to get a guaranteed four years employment for the asking, then you should have been at the City Election Commission Tuesday January 6 when Comptroller W. Martin Wally Morics, C.P.A. realized that, once again, nobody was going to show up to run against him. No fundraising or campaigning needed! This will leave Morics plenty of time to concentrate on his profession as the citys Chief Financial Officer, custodian of our sacred credit rating. At 4:56 p.m. Morics walked into the fifth floor office of the commission, and asked Julietta Henry, its director, Am I good to go? Well, there were still four minutes left before the deadline. Morics decided to wait in the lobby, saying, dont talk to me for 240 seconds. (The man just lives for numbers.) Morics broke his self-imposed silence soon enough, to announce that he had refinanced $110 million in short term debt for the city. Taxpayers will pay less than one per cent interest for the loan. I cant believe nobody picked up on that. In fact with arbitrage lending, the city actually makes $1 million a year, he said. FOOTNOTE Clarke, the darling of talk radio, announced last Tuesday that Ulice Payne would advise him on his campaign, and would appear at a Clarke fundraiser at the Italian Community Center , 631 E. Chicago St., on Tuesday, January 13th, which could prove to be a fateful one for him, since it is not certain he will have enough signatures, which could put a damper on things. Former U.S. Rep. J.C. Watts is the special guest; a reception with the hosts will run you $500, or a thousand if you want a picture taken. Regular entry is $25.
COMING UP The Fundraising Season Resumes
Now that the signatures are in, the fundraising season has resumed. Fourth Street Forum Schedule, January 2004
January 8th What Should We Expect from Government?
Panelists: Jim Carpenter, Lecturer, Economics Dept., MATC and former Green Party candidate; Alberta Darling, State Senator; Barbara Lawton, Lt. Governor; and Ed Thompson, Chair, Libertarian Party of WIModerator: Jack Murtaugh, Co-Chair, 4th Street Forum Executive Committee
January 15th The Patriot Act: Balancing Freedom & Security
Panelists: Bob Barr, JD, former U.S. Congressman & 21st Century Liberties Chair for Freedom & Privacy, American Conservative Union; Steven M. Biskupic, JD, U.S. Attorney, Eastern Dist. of WI; David Mitchell, Special Agent, FBI; and Nadine Strossen, JD, President, ACLU and Constitutional Law Professor, NY Law SchoolModerator: Jack Murtaugh, Co-Chair, 4th Street Forum Executive Committee
January 22nd Why Don't We Vote?
Panelists: Kathleen A. Dolan, PhD, Associate Professor, Political Science Dept., UWM; Gladys Gonz·lez, Director, Lawyer Referral & Information Service, Milwaukee Bar Assoc; Todd Robert Murphy, President, Todd Robert Murphy Advertising & Public Relations; and Rev. Rolen Womack, Minister, Progressive Baptist ChurchModerator: E. Marie Broussard, 4th Street Forum Executive Committee Member
January 29th Can Milwaukee Government Create Jobs?
Panelists: Sheila Cochran, Secretary Treasurer, Milwaukee County Labor Council; Curtiss E. Harris, Sr. Partner, Advantage Business Partners; Barry R. Mandel, President, Mandel Group; and Julia Taylor, President, Greater Milwaukee CommitteeModerator: Julilly Kohler, JD, Co-Chair, 4th Street Forum Executive Committee When: Both Forums are from noon to 1:00 p.m., which Milwaukee Public Television (MPTV) tapes for later broadcast. (See below for the broadcast schedule.) If you can spare the time, stay for an additional 30 minutes of question and answer with the panelists. Where: Milwaukee Turners Hall, 1034 N. 4th Street (2nd floor) Note: Forums are free and open to the public. Bring your own lunch or purchase it from the Historic Turners Restaurant. MPTV Channel 10/36 broadcasts the afternoon forums on Channel 10, Friday at 10 p.m. and again on Channel 36, Sunday at 3 p.m. Questions? Call (414-272-2833) or email martindock@aol.com Deidre A. Martin, Program Director of 4th Street Forum. 4th Street Forum is a program of the Milwaukee Turners with co-sponsors, Milwaukee Public Television and UWM Milwaukee Idea and the Center for Urban Initiative and Research. 4th Street Forum is dedicated to promoting a healthy democracy through open and substantive public discussion.
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