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Judge: Purdy Can Stay

By Antonio D. French

Filed Thursday, August 31, 2006 at 5:32 PM

BREAKING NEWS
READ IT HERE FIRST


A Circuit Court judge has upheld School Board member Bill Purdy's right to sit on the board. Purdy was being sued by two fellow board members, Flint Fowler and Ron Jackson, and 47 other citizens, including fired Vashon basketball coach Floyd Irons. The lawsuit claimed Purdy was serving on the board illegally and should be removed.

The issue was whether a person can run for the school board if he or she has relatives who work in the district. Two of Purdy's daughters and a grandson are teachers in the district. A recent change in state law allows school board members to serve even if they have family working in the system. But the school board bylaws still say that is illegal.

Those bylaws have not been amended to reflect the state law. But today's ruling by Judge Steven R. Ohmer affirms Purdy's assertion that state law trumps board bylaws.

Had Purdy lost the suit and was forced to give up his seat, Mayor Francis Slay would have appointed his replacement, shifting the balance of power on the school board for the second time in six months.

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Clay to Host Field Hearing Tomorrow

By Antonio D. French

St. Louis Congressman Lacy Clay and Republican Congressman Jon Porter from Nevada will convene a congressional field hearing Friday at 1:00 p.m. at Washington University Medical Center.

According to a press release from Clay's office, the subject of discussion will be how the creation of a proposed national electronic health records network could "prevent thousands of unnecessary patient deaths each year, save billions of healthcare dollars, and provide emergency responders with a powerful new Homeland Security tool to assist them in the event of a terrorist attack or major natural disaster."

Experts from the government and the private sector will offer testimony about the issues facing healthcare providers as they attempt to create a secure, electronic health records system.

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So Long, Kevin

By Antonio D. French

KWMU reporter Kevin Lavery is leaving the station for Michigan, where he's getting a promotion of sorts -- he'll be a news director in East Lansing. His last day in St. Louis is tomorrow.

And speaking of KWMU, science reporter Robert Frederick had an interesting piece this morning on empowerment zone funds offered to the Solae biotech company to stay St. Louis. Click here to listen.

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School News

By Antonio D. French

The special five-member committee appointed by State Education Commissioner Kent King last month to analyze the current state of St. Louis Public Schools is meeting today -- and unlike its last meeting, today's session is open to the public.

The committee will meet at the Washington University West Campus building (the old Famous-Barr in Clayton), 7425 Forsyth Blvd, at 3:30 p.m.

Check back later for video...



UPDATE: The video is up and the full story is at slswatch.pubdef.net.


The Missouri Department of Elementary and Secondary Education will be releasing the results from the 2006 MAP tests tonight at midnight on its website. CORRECTION: DESE won't be releasing the numbers on it's website until tomorrow morning some time. But we have the numbers already and we will be releasing them tonight at midnight on slswatch.pubdef.net.

Check back late tonight for SLPS results...



Bill Bryan of the Post-Dispatch reported yesterday that a 17-year-old male Beaumont High School student was reported to be in stable condition at a hospital after he was shot in the stomach during a fight at a school bus stop.

According the report, it happened about 6:22 a.m. at Thekla and Ruskin avenues. Officers said they suspect the incident was an extension of a separate fight Tuesday night. A suspect was sought in the shooting. Nobody else was reported hurt.



SLPS Attendance -- Day 1: 72%, Day 2: 84%, Day 3: 88%

Get daily news on St. Louis Public Schools at www.stlschools.org

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Callow is New Preservation Bd. Chair

By Antonio D. French

Filed Wednesday, August 30, 2006 at 6:17 PM

Michael Allen of Ecology of Absence is reporting that Richard Callow, political consultant to Mayor Francis Slay and live-in boyfriend of deputy mayor of development Barb Geisman, is the new chairman of the City's Preservation Board. Allen writes:

At its Monday meeting, the Preservation Board elected a new chairperson: Richard Callow, the public relations consultant who edits Mayor Slay's campaign website. New board member David Richardson nominated Callow after Melanie Fathman nominated architect Anthony Robinson, a reasonable voice who would have done well in the position.

Callow received the votes of Richardson,
Luis Porello, Mary "One" Johnson (who presided over the vote rather clumsily), John Burse and new member Michael Killeen. Robinson received Fathman's vote, and the nominated parties abstained.

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Mathis is New Election Board Chair

By Antonio D. French

THIS JUST IN...

Attorney Kimberley J. Mathis has been sworn in as the next Chair of the St. Louis City Board of Election Commissioners. Governor Matt Blunt announced today that he had selected Mathis to replace Ed Martin, who he recently tasked to serve as his Chief of Staff.

"I have tremendous confidence in the selection of Kim Mathis. She will contribute a fresh perspective to our election process," stated Martin. "Kim brings an exceptional legal, professional and personal background to this job and will continue to lead the Board’s ongoing efforts to maintain the confidence of our voters in this process."

Mathis, 34, is an attorney with the downtown law firm of Blackwell Sanders Peper Martin LLP. Mathis holds a Bachelor of Science and Bachelor of Arts degree from St. Louis University, and a Juris Doctorate from Washington University. She is married to James Mathis, an attorney for Anheuser Busch. They reside with their three children in the St. Louis Hills area.

"I am honored to serve at the pleasure of Governor Matt Blunt," said Mathis. "His administration is one that takes action with results, and I hope to lead the Election Board in much the same way he has lead our great state."

Mathis also praised out-going Chairman Ed Martin for his dedication and devotion to changing the way the citizens of St. Louis perceive the election process. "Martin has put us back on the map," said Mathis. "He deserves a lot of credit and praise. Ed has put into place a team which has helped rejuvenate and restore confidence in our city’s voting process."

Mathis was sworn in at 11:30 a.m. today at the Federal Courts Building by Judge Ray Gruender. There will be a formal swearing in sometime after the November election.

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VIDEO: City Marshals Defend Us All

By Antonio D. French

So say you're downtown paying your property taxes when all of a sudden Bin Laden's boys decide to attack City Hall with VX nerve gas (it could happen). What are you going to do? You have no idea, do you? Well, fear not, you simple-minded civilian. Lucky for you, you're being protected by the elite fighting force known as the St. Louis City Marshals.

Three such marshals -- "martial artists" are more like it. We hear they can kill you with a single blow, a move known only as the "shiny badge of death" -- anyway, three marshalls recently gave us an exclusive tour of their secret lair buried deep under City Hall in abandoned caves once used by Harriet Tubman. But when we later checked our videotape, only snow and static had recorded (surely the result of some superior Marshal technology designed to keep their secrets -- and St. Louis -- safe).

Well, we've got some technology too. And we were able to salvage a couple of minutes of footage of Marshals Robert Howard, Antron Lavington, and Christopher Fischer telling us about some Homeland Security training they recently completed at a secret facility in Anniston, Alabama.

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Lawyers Rate Local Judges

By Antonio D. French

In the November general election, Missouri voters will determine whether Non-Partisan judges whose names are on their ballot should be retained for another term. To help them decide, The Missouri Bar has provided information they feel is important in making those decisions.

Members of The Missouri Bar have evaluated each of the judges who will be standing for retention this fall and the evaluations are now online at www.showmecourts.org.

In St. Louis County, the Bar recommended two judges, Judy Preddy Draper and Brenda Stith Loftin, not be retained. Click here to see those recommendations.

Click here to download the Bar's recommendations for St. Louis City Circuit Judges. And click here for Associate Circuit Judges.

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Political Briefs

By Antonio D. French

Filed Tuesday, August 29, 2006 at 7:15 PM

NEW HQ, OLD BS -- St. Louis City Democrats will be opening their new temporary headquarters Thursday to stage campaign activities for the November general election. The new digs will be located in the St. Louis Marketplace on Manchester. Interesting location, considering the gigantic failure of leadership that the Marketplace represents to so many locals.

Developed in 1992 with the use of eminent domain, $15 million of public money, and a familiar promise to "spur development," most of its life has been spent near vacant and as an ugly reminder of what happens when BS from overly optimistic politicians doesn't line up with the reality of Joe and Jane Public, who haven't dropped much dough at the Marketplace in over a decade.

The Dems better hope Joe and Jane are more generous with their actual votes than they are with their dollar votes.

BETTER ON DAY TWO -- St. Louis Public Schools reports nearly 84% of students expected to attend school today were in the classroom. These Day Two numbers reflect a big boost from the 72% attendance on Day One.

"We are certainly pleased to see an increase in the attendance for day two," said Interim Superintendent Diana Bourisaw in a statement released to the media. She added that district leaders still want "all of our kids in school tomorrow."

The total enrollment for St. Louis Public Schools today was 27,620 compared with the first day enrollment of 23,558.

SHE'S STILL GOT GALL! -- Jamilah Nasheed, who is running unopposed in north St. Louis' 60th State Rep District after winning the primary three weeks ago, is recuperating tonight after having her gallbladder removed earlier today. We're told she came through the surgery fine and was back on her cell phone within the hour. Bladder or not, we're sure Nasheed's trademark boldness and "gall" will be back to full strength in no time.

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VIDEO: 72% Attendance on First Day

By Antonio D. French

Filed Monday, August 28, 2006 at 5:13 PM

Slightly above 7 out of 10 St. Louis City kids attended the first day of school today. That's according to Interim Superintendent Diana Bourisaw, who told PUB DEF that while she considers the school district's Back-to-School campaign a success, she is not satisfied with more than a quarter of students missing the first day.

"We're not satisfied until we have 10 out of 10 attending," said Bourisaw. She said that SLPS attendance has typically been around 80% by the end of the first week. "We are well on our way to exceeding that 80% number," she said.



Bourisaw also addressed a concern brought forward by some of our readers about confusion surrounding a later start date for some Early Childhood students. She said that historically those students have started a week after other students (Sept. 5 this year). "We need to change that," said Bourisaw. "They need to start from Day One like everyone else.

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School's Back, So is STLSchools.org

By Antonio D. French

New backpacks filled with crayons, three-hole paper, and bright yellow, unsharpened Number 2 pencils. The terror in the pit of your belly over the thought of being teased about your Payless shoes by kids wearing new Jordans whose price tags would cause your mother to faint.

It must be the first day of school.

School is back in session and so is PUB DEF's sister site, STLSchools.org. After a short summer break (it's not like anything ever happens with SLPS in the summer, right?), the watch dog is back on the beat. Check it out over at www.stlschools.org.

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Some Felt Snubbed by McCaskill's Early Exit, Staffer Says Family Comes First

By Antonio D. French

Filed Sunday, August 27, 2006 at 9:23 AM

Some attendees of Friday's NAACP Freedom Fund Dinner were upset by what they described as a "snub" from the Democratic candidate for U.S. Senate. PUB DEF received the following report yesterday from one insulted attendee:

State auditor Claire McCaskill, a democrat who is working to unseat incumbent U.S. Senator Jim Talent(R-MO) seemingly gave short shrift to the St. Louis County Chapter of the NAACP when she stopped by before the group's 65th annual Freedom Fund Dinner last night at the Airport Hilton and stayed only 10 minutes.

Dinner attendees who were mingling outside the ballroom before the dinner said they caught a fleeting glimpse of McCaskill who smiled and waved during a quick walk-through.

Her political director,
Brandon Davis, was later AWOL when he was called to the dais during the event to convey greetings from McCaskill. He failed to respond when his name was mentioned and some dinner attendees noted that he left shortly after McCaskill did.

If McCaskill stayed she eventually could have glad-handed at least 500 potential voters and touched bases with influential people like attorney
Frankie Freeman, County Executive Charlie Dooley, State Representatives John Bowman (D-70) and Esther Haywood (D-71), State Senator Rita Days, radio personality Deneen Busby, and television journalist Bonita Cornute.

McCaskill could have politicked with
Jim Buford, president of the St. Louis Urban League, county NAACP president Ina Boon and her counterpart in the St. Louis city branch, Harold Crumpton.

It seems like she missed an opportunity to score some points with a segment of her electoral base. The crowd could have been considered a broad cross section of the Black community that was equal parts male and female, of varying incomes, suburban and urban, and between the voting ages of 18 and 70. That is a demographic McCaskill sleeps on while she assiduously courts rural Missouri farmers and others.


PUB DEF contacted the campaign's communications director, Adrianne Marsh, who said McCaskill had a very busy schedule Friday and did not expect to even be able to make the dinner at all.

She said McCaskill left early because of a family obligation. "It's difficult balancing being a candidate for statewide office and a mother of three teenage daughters," said Marsh.

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Sunday Funnies

By Antonio D. French


New YouTube, Flickr Addresses

By Antonio D. French

Filed Friday, August 25, 2006 at 4:24 PM

Check out more than 180 PUB DEF videos at www.YouTube.com/PubDef. And check out our Flickr page at www.Flickr.com/photos/PubDef. You'll find photos there from last night's happy hour for Ed Martin.

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VIDEO: Recall Opponents Allege Fraud

By Antonio D. French

Supporters of Alderman Freeman Bosley, Sr. announced today that they have filed complaints with the U.S. Attorney's Office, the St. Louis City Circuit Attorney, and the St. Louis City Board of Elections alleging fraud in the ongoing effort by a group of 3rd Ward residents to recall Bosley.

"We're tired of it. We've got the recall blues and we're going to do something about it now," said Janice Jernigans in an interview with PUB DEF following a press conference this morning in front of the Carnahan Courthouse downtown. Jernigans is with Citizens Against the Recall, a group supporting the longtime northside alderman. Bosley was not at this morning's event.



Tim Person, a well-known political consultant who worked in the administration of then-Mayor Freeman Bosley, Jr., said he is volunteering his support for the elder Bosley in his recall battle in part because of what he called the "disgusting" tactics of the recallers.

"This kind of problem led to the Voter ID Act," said Person. "You consistently have people that are intent on defrauding our system."

Person said he would not only like to see indictments in this case, but also forceful prosecutions.

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Bosley Supporters to Meet

By Antonio D. French

Supporters of Ald. Freeman Bosley. Sr., who is the target of an ongoing recall effort, will hold a press conference this morning to announce the actions they have taken against what they call "fraudulent activities engaged by the persons leading the recall effort."

Both sides on the recall effort, along with the St. Louis Board of Elections, are awaiting a decision by a Circuit Court judge as to whether the Board has the authority to allow Bosley to ask signers of the petition to have their names removed. If the policy is upheld, the recall effort will fail for lack of enough signatures.

Members of the "Coalition Against the Recall" will gather at 10:30 a.m. in front of the Carnahan Courthouse, 1114 Market Street.

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VIDEO: Martin Celebrated

By Antonio D. French

Filed Thursday, August 24, 2006 at 10:12 PM

Friends and colleagues of Election Board Chairman Ed Martin gathered tonight at Café Eau in the Chase Park Plaza to celebrate his appointment as chief of staff for Gov. Matt Blunt.

Many of Martin's election board colleagues were on hand to wish him well as he leaves the board and moves to Jefferson City. Republican officials including Lt. Gov. Peter Kinder and Judy Zakibe, Chair of St. Louis City's Republican Central Committee, as well as several elected Democrats -- including License Collector Gregg Daly, Ald. Jeffrey Boyd, Circuit Atty. Jennifer Joyce, Circuit Clerk Mariano Favazza, State Sen. Pat Dougherty, and State Rep-elect Talibdin El-Amin -- stopped in to congratulate Martin, who starts his new job on September 1.



Other well-wishers included: Former Election Board member Angeletta McCormick Franks; former Rams star, Mike "The Tackle" Jones; and Police Board Pres. Chris Goodson.

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Talent, McCaskill Agree to 3rd Debate

By Antonio D. French

Sen. Jim Talent and challenger Claire McCaskill today accepted an offer by KYTV, Ozarks Public Television, KSMU and the Springfield News-Leader to debate during prime time on Monday, October 16.

The Springfield debate will be moderated by KY3 News Anchor Jerry Jacob and the panel will include KY3 Political Reporter Dave Catanese, Springfield News-Leader Editorial Board Editor Tony Messenger (what a great name for a reporter) and KSMU Senior Governmental Affairs Reporter Missy Shelton.

The candidates will also meet in Lake Ozark on September 15, at the Missouri Press Association's Candidate’s Forum, and in Washington, D.C. on October 8, for a debate on NBC's "Meet the Press."

We're told that both campaigns are continuing to work together to schedule additional debates in other regions of the state -- St. Louis, anyone?

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LRA Property Now Fair Game for Inspectors, Thank Elliott Davis

By Antonio D. French

Filed Wednesday, August 23, 2006 at 10:15 PM

For years, city homeowners have complained that the worst slum lord in St. Louis is the City of St. Louis itself. While city inspectors give citations and fines to Joe and Jane Citizen for not keeping their property up to code, city-owned properties are literally falling apart right next door. A recent change in policy might help change that.

Sam Simon, the director of the Department of Public Safety, told KTVI Channel 2 reporter Elliott Davis this week that DPS inspectors will now cite -- or at least, log -- derelict properties owned by the City's Land Reutilization Authority (LRA) just as it would any other property.

"We're going to make sure that we keep ourselves as accountable as we hope the citizens will be," Simon told Davis.

Davis had earlier profiled the plight of homeowners on Maffit Street in north St. Louis who had received citations from the city while two houses across the street sat looking like bombed out shells. Those properties are owned by the city and have for years simply been overlooked by inspectors.

This problem is especially bad on the city's north side, where most of the LRA's property is. This was the subject of a resolution introduced by Ald. Charles Q. Troupe (1st Ward) earlier this year [See video below].



In other Channel 2 news... The local Fox News affiliate will be getting a much needed face-lift on its website soon. The current format makes it by far the worst and most useless of all the local news channels sites. The new look will be based on the standard myFox format used in New York, Dallas and D.C.

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Black Roundtable Defends Irons

By Antonio D. French

The St. Louis Black Leadership Roundtable went on the record today criticizing the St. Louis City School Board for firing Vashon basketball coach Floyd Irons.

"The Roundtable is seriously concerned about the recent decision of the St. Louis Public School District to remove Coach Floyd Irons apparently without proper due process," wrote John Moten, Jr., the group's chairman, in a letter sent to the media today.

"Based on the Roundtable’s knowledge, a decision to terminate Coach Floyd Irons at this time, without apparently affording him the opportunity for due process accorded employees, may be irresponsible," said Moten.

"The termination appears particularly inappropriate in view of the fact that the District needs effective administrative and Board leadership focused first on serving the needs of the District's children – leadership that Coach Irons seems to have provided the District."

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VIDEO: Claire McCaskill Interview

By Antonio D. French

Filed Tuesday, August 22, 2006 at 9:32 PM

U.S. Senate candidate Claire McCaskill took a few minutes to talk to PUB DEF before tonight's Willie Nelson concert at the UMB Bank Pavilion in St. Louis County. The country music star has thrown his support behind McCaskill's campaign against Republican Sen. Jim Talent.



We discussed how effective celebrity support is in a close race like hers, why she thinks Nelson chose to support her campaign, what she thinks about Talent's silence on the issue of raising Missouri's minimum wage (which voters will decide the same day they select a U.S. Senator), and if she is worried about having much less money in the bank than her opponent.

We have requested an interview with Sen. Jim Talent some time in the near future.

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VIDEO: Citywide Elected Officials Join for Back to School Message

By Antonio D. French

Several citywide elected officials joined today to bring attention to the effort to get St. Louis kids to attend the first day of school on August 28.

Gathered in the rotunda of City Hall, the group included most of the city's at-large officeholders. But noticeably absent was Mayor Francis Slay.

After unprecedented influence over the city's school district for three years, Slay has been a vocal critic of the new school board majority and has even called on the state to move in to take over the troubled district. Reporters were told that Slay -- as well as Aldermanic Board Pres. Jim Shrewsbury, the second highest ranking city official -- was on vacation.



Comptroller Darlene Green told reporters not to read too much into the absence of the mayor or a representative from his office. "This message is not about the adults today. It's about the children," she said.

"Though there are troubled times in the district, we want the children to know that the elected leadership in the City of St. Louis stands behind them 100%," said Green.

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Bosley Recall Update

By Antonio D. French

The case to decide whether signatures can be removed from a petition to recall 3rd Ward Alderman Freeman Bosley, Sr. has been continued until next week. During that time briefs may be filed in support of the two sides' positions.

The recallers claim that since there is no law that allows the city election board to allow petition signers to have their signatures removed, the board should not have allowed Bosley to ask hundreds of 3rd Ward residents to do just that.

The election board contends that since there is no limit to the amount of time that recallers have to gather signatures, it is only fair to allow signers to change their minds weeks, months or even years after they signed the petition. They also claim that since neither state law nor the City of St. Louis' charter says otherwise, then they are allowed to create board policies in the interests of fairness and maintaining an orderly process.

A decision in this case -- which may have a significant impact on several ongoing and planned recall efforts -- may come early next week.

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Progressives on the Ballot

By Antonio D. French

The Progressive Party of Missouri reports that Secretary of State Robin Carnahan today certified six Progressive candidates to appear on the November ballot. The candidates include:
  • Lydia Lewis of Afton, a retired federal employee and union officer, for U. S. Senate.
  • David Sladky of Mehlville, a retired brewery worker, for Congress (3rd District).
  • Terry Bunker of Kansas City, an in-house accountant for a financial institution, for State Auditor.
  • Melinda “Mel” Ivey of Kansas City, a computer programmer, for U. S. Congress, 4th District.
  • Shirley Yurkonis of Savannah, a retired social worker, for U. S. Congress, 6th District.
  • Bill Hastings of Columbia, a retired psychology professor, for U. S. Congress, 9th District.
Local election authorities had certified to the Secretary of State that 12,078 (81%) of the 14,932 petition signatures that the party submitted were valid. Ten thousand valid signatures were required.

Organizers say the new party, which is affiliated with the Green Party of the United States, is filing to provide an alternative view not currently expressed by existing parties.

"We need a real opposition party so that there can be a dialog about getting out of Iraq," said party chair Dee Berry of Kansas City in a press release sent out today.

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Irons Hospitalized?

By Antonio D. French

BREAKING NEWS

A source tells PUB DEF that former basketball coach Floyd Irons was at Vashon High School this morning when he complained of chest pains. Shortly after, he was taken away in an ambulance. Irons' condition is not known at this time.

It is not yet know what Irons, who was effectively fired by the district a few weeks ago, was doing at Vashon. He and school board president Veronica O'Brien have been battling in court and in the media since his position was eliminated.

O'Brien claimed to fear for her safety after threats she said she received from Irons supporters. After a young man who had threatened legal action against Irons for an alleged beating by the former coach in 2000 was murdered Friday (police have no suspects and have not said Irons was in any way involved), the school board voted pay for 24-hour security for the board president at a cost of up to $20,000.

Developing...

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Playing Politics with School Funding?

By Antonio D. French

Filed Monday, August 21, 2006 at 3:47 PM

School board member Peter Downs today charged Mayor Francis Slay with playing politics with needed funding for St. Louis Public Schools.

In his St. Louis Schools Watch email newsletter (which PUB DEF hosts a blog for), Downs says the City of St. Louis, which collects taxes on behalf of the school district, is currently holding on to about $4.5 million of SLPS' money.

"Like a modern-day George Wallace standing in the schoolhouse door, St. Louis Mayor Francis Slay is still trying to deny educational opportunities to St. Louis children," wrote Downs. "His latest stunt is to withhold tax money from the city's public school system."

Downs also charges that Slay is using building inspectors to harm the school district. "For the three years that Slay controlled the schools through his hand-picked board members, he turned a deaf ear to parent, student, and employee reports of building safety issues," said Downs.

"After losing control of the schools, he bided his time until it would seem he could do
the most damage. A week before school starts, he sends in inspectors to find any possible problem."

A spokesman for the mayor has not yet responded to a request for comment.

MORE: The $4.5 million that Downs is apparently referring to is SLPS' cut of hundreds of property tax bills being challenged by local property owners -- including many local companies.

Readers may remember that we reported back in February that the State Tax Commission sided with Nestle Purina in its case against Tax Assessor Ed Bushmeyer and the City of St. Louis. The decision meant that the company would pay taxes on its property valued at $19 million and not the $47 million that the city had assessed. Since then, more companies have challenged their assessments.

Downs seems to subscribe to a conspiracy theory running around certain government hallways that has the mayor organizing his corporate pals to hold back needed funds from the school district (and the city too, by the way) in order to push the district over the brink of financial ruin so the state can come in to take over.

The Mayor's office still has not responded to our request for comment. But a source in the Comptroller's office has confirmed that the City of St. Louis is current on its obligations to SLPS.

STILL MORE... Jeff Rainford, Mayor Francis Slay's chief of staff, hit back this evening at allegations from a member of the St. Louis City School Board that the mayor was withholding tax money from the district. Here is the text of an email he wrote to PUB DEF responding to Peter Downs' charges.

Peter Downs, William Purdy, Veronica O'Brien, and Donna Jones have been the recent subjects of a great deal of community anger, worry, and scorn because of their unfortunate decision to force Dr. Creg Williams to resign.

To deflect some of this emotion, the quarrelsome quartet have been willing to say almost anything about almost anyone. Normally, I ignore them.

Mr. Down’s most recent whoppers, though, are big enough to demand a response – if not from the District, at least from me.

Using the readership of his muck-raising Internet newsletter, Downs now accuses Mayor Francis Slay of withholding $4.5 million in taxes collected on behalf of the schools. Mr. Downs also accuses the mayor of "unleashing building inspectors" into the schools to prevent them from opening on time.

In fact, the Mayor does not collect taxes. The Revenue Collector, elected by the people and independent of the Mayor, collects taxes. The Mayor has nothing to do with the process of tax collection.

And, as Mr. Downs (and everyone in the building division of St. Louis Public Schools probably knows), the City inspects the buildings EVERY year before the start of school to make sure they are safe.

One likely consequence of Mr. Downs’ outburst of fiction? A school district mired even more deeply in disarray. That's the real shame.

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City Board Denied Intervention

By Antonio D. French

A Cole County Judge today denied the St. Louis City Board of Elections' request to be a part of the legal fight surrounding the controversial photo ID requirement passed by the state legislature and signed into law by Gov. Matt Blunt.

Mayor Francis Slay, St. Louis County Executive Charlie Dooley, and Jackson County Executive Katheryn Shields joined the ACLU in the legal challenge. The election board -- composed of Democrat and Republican members appointed by Blunt -- had requested to join the suit in defense of the law.

The case is in progress...

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Will Claire jam with Willie?

By Antonio D. French

A spokesperson for Claire McCaskill's U.S. Senate campaign said their candidate will be joining country and folk music star Willie Nelson at the UMB Bank Pavilion on tomorrow.

We're told Nelson will be endorsing McCaskill, described as "the true champion for family farmers in this race."

"Claire knows who needs a voice in next year’s farm bill. I have been all across this beautiful land and I have seen how the big corporations are squeezing out our family farms. I know she’ll do what’s right to protect this long-standing way of life," Nelson is quoted in the press release.

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Bosley Recall Hearing Today

By Antonio D. French

A hearing in the lawsuit filed by 3rd Ward residents seeking to recall Ald. Freeman Bosley, Sr. is currently in progress.

As we reported earlier, the recallers sued the St. Louis Board of Elections to stop them from allowing more signatures to be removed from their recall petition and to have a judge order that previously removed signatures be returned.

On June 30, Citizens to Recall Aldermen Bosley turned in approximately 1,100 signatures to the Board. Bosley was subsequently successful in getting 339 people who had originally signed the recall petition to then sign an affidavit asking for their names to be removed.

The recallers claim that since such an allowance for removal is nowhere in the City's charter -- which outlines the recall procedure -- that the Election Board "exceeded the scope of power delegated to it" by allowing it and therefore violated the civil rights of the recallers.

Developing...

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Board Hires Security for O'Brien

By Antonio D. French

PUB DEF EXCLUSIVE

In a closed-door meeting on Friday, the St. Louis Board of Education voted to pay for a private firm to provide security for board president Veronica O'Brien.

O'Brien has been the target in recent weeks of several protests at her home. Earlier this month a city judge denied the board president a restraining order against fired Vashon basketball coach Floyd Irons and his friend and supporter, Demetrious Johnson.

Last week, a young man who, according to the Missouri Division of Family Services, was badly beaten by then-Coach Irons in 2000 was murdered by three gunmen. O'Brien had recently called for a federal investigation into the beating and a lawsuit was to be filed this week against Irons and St. Louis Public Schools.

"This is out of control," O'Brien told PUB DEF. "They say I'm next. Pray for peace."

She added, "I wonder what the judges are thinking after they said I shouldn't have a restraining order."

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Sunday Funnies

By Antonio D. French

Filed Sunday, August 20, 2006 at 12:21 PM


Alleged Irons Victim Murdered

By Antonio D. French

Filed Friday, August 18, 2006 at 2:04 PM

Early this morning, Timothy Bacon was shot and killed while he was on his way for cigarettes. According to a story by Bill Bryan on STLToday.com, he was shot by three men -- one of whom came back to the body to fire several more shots.

Bacon, 21, was the young man who, according to the Missouri Division of Family Services, was badly beaten by then-Vashon basketball coach Floyd Irons in 2000 and whose case was recently brought up by St. Louis School Board President Veronica O'Brien, who called for a federal investigation into the matter.

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Slay Testifies, Verdict Expected Soon

By Antonio D. French

Mayor Francis Slay took the stand today in the trial of Percy Green vs. The City of St. Louis. He testified -- as did his deputy, Barb Geisman, yesterday and his chief of staff, Jeff Rainford, later this morning -- that Green was not fired in retribution for comments he made in a June 17, 2001 article in the Post-Dispatch.

Percy Green contends that he was fired as director of the Minority and Women Owned Business Enterprise (MBE/WBE) Certification program because he was openly critical of what he told the Post was a "broken system." He also said this week that Slay wanted to weaken the office "because his major political contributors are owners of businesses that stand to profit from doing business with illegitimate 'front' companies."

Closing arguments in the case are expected around 12:30 after which Judge Jean C. Hamilton will hand the case over to a jury of 7 whites and 1 black. We expect a verdict later today.

Developing...

UPDATE: The jury found in favor of the City of St. Louis. Green says he has not decided yet if he will appeal.

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Political Briefs

By Antonio D. French

HAM MAKES IT OKAY - U.S. Senator Jim Talent and his Democratic challenger Claire McCaskill may not be each other's favorite people right now, but it was all smiles yesterday at the State Fair's annual