October 2013

Where the heck is the media?

I reported this story two months ago after a tip from a reader, and now all of a sudden, Stormland TV stumbles across it like it just happened yesterday, HEY! This is Brandon, you know, the city that stole Automania from us, God Dammit!

Reminds me of the Argus making hay about the $25 appeal fee to parking tickets (two days after I posted about it). Did I get some kind of tip? Nope, just read the City Council agenda and attached documents.

What does our local media do anyway? Show up? Collect a paycheck, and maybe if someone craps on their reporter pads, they will do a story?

The amazing part is if that was my attitude when waiting tables, I would be a very poor man. But please, feel free to crap on my Ugly Table anytime you please.

Is the Mayor’s wife on vacation?

I found it interesting that 1) the city is signing an agreement with the SF Tennis association, before they have even turned a shovel (or brought forth a financial and fundraising report) and 2) Their mighty leader, Cindy Huether, would be absent from the meeting. (DOC: Agenda-ParkBoard102213)

The Park Board has a couple of important items on the agenda for tomorrow.
Sioux Falls Ice Sports Association indoor facility agreement
Dave Fischer, Joe Zueger and Sue Salter to attend
Sioux Falls Tennis Association indoor facility agreement

Dave Fischer, and Bill Townsend to attend

***4:00 at Great Bear
It is also important to note that AL Sports columnist, Stu Whitney’s wife is one of the main fundraisers for the Indoor Tennis Facility. Is this a conflict of interest for Stu when promoting or advertising the facility in the paper he works for?

So are TIF’s political?

A restaurant owner claims her freedom of speech rights are being violated for political reasons.

August 08, 2013

A small restaurant owner in Belleville, Ill., filed a federal civil rights lawsuit on Monday claiming her city unconstitutionally ordered her to remove a sign from her window that sarcastically thanks city government.

Dianne Rogge, owner of the Pour Haus restaurant, posted a big sign in her business’s front window that read “No TIF for us, Tks B’ville.” Rogge claims that her request for $15,000 in tax increment financing— a form of public financing used to spur economic development—was rejected because she had openly supported Belleville mayor Mark Eckert’s opponent, Phil Elmore. She had hoped to use the TIF money to renovate her business.

City employees sent Rogge letters in June requesting she remove the sign or face a $500-a-day penalty. They cited a city ordinance that requires business owners to get a permit and pay a fee to put up signage. The sign, which has been up since June 5, has racked up more than $31,000 in fines, Rogge told a St. Louis television station.

Rogge’s 20-page complaint, filed in federal court by attorney Eric Rhein, says Belleville’s sign ordinance is unconstitutional and is enforced in a discriminatory fashion. It claims that a former city attorney had posted political signs in his window that the city never forced him to remove. “They have to follow the First Amendment no matter who they are,” Rhein told the Belleville News-Democrat. “It reigns supreme and political signs are afforded the highest amount of protection.”

The lawsuit seeks to prevent the city from enforcing its ordinance, monetary damages to Rogge, attorney’s fees and punitive damages of $50,000, the local paper reported.