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![]() February 9, 2004 Pratts Reimbursement Mystery Money Acting Mayor Pockets $7,500 with no explanation
Between August 20th and September 5th of last year, then-Alderman Marvin Pratt wrote three checks to himself, each for $2,500, according to campaign finance reports filed on February 2nd at City Hall. It was among the many disbursements Pratts mayoral campaign had made during the recording period. Pratt left blank the reason for one of the $2,500 checks, while the others were labeled reimbursement. Clarkes Funds
Just as Sheriff David Clarke seems to draw his support from out of town, he also looks beyond our citys boundaries to spend his money. Clarkes campaign manager is Jeremy Cole of Louisville, Kentucky, who receives better than $2,500 a month for the service. Public Opinion Strategies of Alexandria, Virginia received $11,000 for polling and focus groups in November. Lisa Sanfilippo received $1,000 a month for her work with the campaign. Local boy Fred Luber gave $3,000 to the campaign. Nice Work if You Can Get it
Tom Barrett took to the streets Saturday February 7th, campaigning up and down Brady Street. Milwaukeeworld asked the mayoral candidate if he was aware that his opponent, Marvin Pratt had written $7,500 in checks to himself. Barrett simply looked astonished by the checks and the amounts and had no comment. Barretts campaign treasury is the largest of any candidate, and although he did not write any checks to himself, his aides are doing well. Campaign manager Joel Brennan makes $6,000 a month doing his job, while Eric Von receives $4,000. Scott Gunderson and Eamon Guerin (son of attorney Mike Guerin) seem to clock in at $1,500 per month, while fundraiser Barb Candy receives $4,500 and Julie Tabak $2,500. Barretts School Plan Revised
Sheriff David Clarke and businesswoman Sandy Folaron are among the mayoral candidates who took Barrett to task for his announced (and then abandoned) plans to take over control of the Milwaukee Public Schools. Around the time he announced his proposals, Barrett met with Superintendent William Andrekopolous and joked, you know, Ive done more to improve your job security that anyone. Andrekopolous said that, indeed, the school board had just extended his contract. Since Barrett doesnt want to take over the schools, what does he want to do? Rather than have the city treat the schools as an unwanted step child, Barrett wants the mayor to be much more involved in the schools. Im embarrassed that we have had six superintendents in nine years in Milwaukee. Since Milwaukee has only had six mayors in 88 years, that is saying something. Doyle Vetoes Stick
Governor Jim Doyle was in Milwaukee on February 4th, breaking ground for a new passenger ferry terminal and breaking bread at the Astor Hotel with supporters of David Riemer in a highly-partisan rally. Doyle announced to the supporters the legislature has voted to sustain my veto on the concealed-carry law. He played up the law-and-order approach to retaining the states historic ban on concealed weapons, finding little merit in the arguments of supporters of the measure that he had vetoed. Will we have kids walking in shopping malls with guns in their pockets? he asked. Maybe so, but they wont be legal. The timing of the override vote seemed designed to embarrass the governor. Instead, the republicans in the assembly failed to observe a cardinal rule of politics: dont call for a vote unless you have the votes to win. Instead, in a rush for the first override since 1981 of a governors complete veto of a bill, the republicans missed their chance and opened themselves up to the governors ongoing criticism that they should stick to real issues instead of the three gs gambling, guns and gays. Food & Froth at Museum
The Milwaukee Public Museum was filled Saturday, February 7th with thousands of beer drinkers enjoying the sixth annual Food & Froth Fest sponsored by the museums friends group. Although long lines queued up at several stations scattered throughout the building, all the lovely things to look at there tempered the wait. By the time you refilled your glass, you could learn all sorts of things about the range of the American Bison, or you could wonder why Pabst Blue Ribbon Beer was stationed up on the third floor instead of in Pabst Park in the Streets of Old Milwaukee. Lakefront Brewerys Russ Klisch was there, having spent the afternoon at New World Wine Company autographing bottles of his new Snakechaser Stout, introduced that afternoon. Paul Moebius of Lakefront says the brewery has already sold 500 cases of its newest offering. The stout has a crisp taste with its toasted malt flavors immediately evident, and in its aftertaste. The beer had a very rich bouquet going down with berry-cocoa-coffee undertones. A true breakfast beer. Michael Bieser was there with his wife Lynn Bieser. He says he is selling software now for his brother and is happy to be out of the brewing business, having sold his share of the Milwaukee Ale House.
Randy Sprecher, inscrutable as always, says he is working on a non-sugar, light soft drink, and would say nothing more about the product. He says his Glendale brewery is undergoing a management shakeup, and you can bet hes the one doing the shaking. As usual, Sprecher says he has no need for outside capital.
Sigmund Snopek brought his Beer Show to the party, and captured my heart with the UFO Polka, including several references to the Cedarturd Police. Ouch!
SINK THIS SHIP
Battleship Plans for Lakefront Ludicrous A proposal has been floated to locate the U.S.S. Des Moines on the lakefront of Milwaukee, where the 716-foot battleship would be berthed at Veterans Park. Never mind that the ship has no connection to Milwaukee, or that the Great Lakes have not known naval engagements since the War of 1812. The ship was commissioned in 1948 and served bravely in the Cold War, being mothballed in 1961 in Pennsylvania, where it remains to this day. It might make an interesting tourist attraction, worth visiting exactly once, if it could be hidden in some inaccessible part of our harbor, but it is very hard to hide a ship that is twice as long as a football field. As the Milwaukee Journal Sentinel notes, the ship rises 125 feet above the water line, or the height of a six story building, as the paper puts it. I suppose Journal Sentinel editors live with 20-foot ceilings, but a 125-foot structure is a ten-story building (or more) for the rest of us. The article in Saturdays newspaper also includes what is probably the first quote from John O. Norquist in his capacity as former mayor. Norquist says the proposal is a non-starter. MORE INTERESTING NEWS
Kathleen Patrick and Joseph Catanzaro have moved their studio galleries from Chicago to Milwaukee with the opening last week of Patrick & Catanzaro Fine Art in the old Lou Fritzel building, 735 N. Milwaukee Street. Their affordable art is just right for affordable housing, and maintains much the same aesthetic. The two work prolifically in many genres, most of them quite vivid. The gallery may not have something for everybody, but it does have everything for somebody.
The death of Joan Marcus came as a hard blow to workers at the Pfister Hotel. There wasnt a dry eye in the house when the staff was told that Marcus had died at 62 years old on Friday, February 6th. Stephen and Joan Marcus maintained a low-key existence in town and would often be found dining at Ferrantes Restaurant in Mequon, hardly an extravagant spot. The family will greet friends Monday, February 9th at 1 p.m. at the Marcus Center for the Performing Arts prior to the 2 p.m. services.
Be a part of the discussion! Come to the 4th Street Forum. When: Thursdays, noon to 1:00 p.m. Milwaukee Public Television tapes the first hour of the forums for later broadcast (Friday at 10:00 p.m., Channel 10 and Sunday at 3:00 p.m., Channel 36). For those who would like to stay, audience discussion continues for 30 minutes after the taping. Where: Milwaukee Turner Hall, 1034 N. 4th St. February 5th Power to the Vote
Panelists: Rick Graber, JD, Chair, WI Republican Party; Art Heitzer, JD, Heitzer Law Office, Political Activist; Linda Honold, Chair, WI Democratic Party; and Mike McCabe, Executive Director, WI Democracy Campaign.Moderator: E. Marie Broussard, 4th Street Forum Executive Committee Member. February 12th Race to the White House
Panelists: Barbara Boxer, JD, Co-Chair Government Relations, Reinhart Boerner Van Deuren;Enrique Figueroa, PhD, Director, Roberto Hernandez Center for Latino Affairs, UW-Milwaukee; Thomas M. Holbrook, PhD, Professor, Dept. of Political Science, UW-Milwaukee; and Gerard A. Randall, Jr., President & CEO, Private Industry Council of Milwaukee County.Moderator: Julilly Kohler, JD, Co-Chair, 4th Street Forum Executive Committee February 19th Dissecting the Primaries
Panelists: Eugene Kane, Columnist, Milwaukee Journal-Sentinel; Frederick P. Kessler, JD, Judge; Jim Miller, President, WI Policy Research Institute; and Mary Panzer, WI Senate Majority Leader.Moderator: Jack Murtaugh, Co-Chair, 4th Street Forum Executive Committee. February 26th Has County Government Abdicated Its Role?
Panelists: Sheila Aldrich, Milwaukee County Supervisor; Rachel Forman, Executive Director, Grand Ave Club; Mark Marotta, Secretary, WI Dept. of Administration; and Stephanie Stein, Director, Milwaukee County Dept. on Aging. Moderator: Jack Murtaugh, Co-Chair, 4th Street Forum Executive Committee Admission is FREE. Bring your lunch or you can purchase it from the Historic Turners Restaurant. 4th Street Forum is sponsored by the Milwaukee Turners with co-sponsors, Milwaukee Public Television and UWM Milwaukee Idea & the Center for Urban Initiatives & Research. Questions? Contact: Deidre Martin, Director 4th Street Forum 414.272.2833 www.milwaukeeturners.org
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