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O'Brien Aside, Bonner Makes $75K

By Antonio D. French

Filed Wednesday, November 29, 2006 at 5:37 PM

Despite repeated assertions by the school board president, St. Louis Public Schools maintains that Vashon's new basketball coach does not make a $125,000 per year salary.

As late as yesterday in a "You Paid for It" segment on KTVI Channel 2, Board Pres. Veronica O'Brien repeated her claims that Anthony Bonner, the former NBA star who was recently hired to replace legendary and controversial coach Floyd Irons at Vashon High School, is receiving a salary that dwarfs that of many principals and teachers in the district.

"Anthony Bonner makes $125,000 and the man is doing three and four jobs. That will not change. So that is your answer for the public," O'Brien told investigative reporter Elliot Davis. But according to SLPS officials, that's not what district records show.

According to SLPS Communications Director Tony Sanders, Bonner, who officially started with the district on Oct. 17, earns an annual salary of $72,000 plus standard employee benefits in his position as Executive Director of Community Outreach, a position that did not previously exist and some believe was created just for Bonner.

Bonner also receives an annual stipend of $4,084 for coaching varsity basketball at Vashon, the same stipend paid to every boys basketball coach in the district.

Click here to watch Elliot Davis' report featuring a revealing ambush interview of O'Brien.

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Hubbard's Having a House Party

By Antonio D. French

State Rep. Rodney Hubbard is having a birthday party and he's inviting the whole city.

Hubbard and entrepreneur Kevin Bryant, of Inkosi Design Studio, are hosting the "1st Annual St. Louis House Party" on Friday, Dec. 8 to celebrate their birthdays and their love for their town.

"Rodney Hubbard and Kevin Bryant believe that we’ve got a lot to be proud of in St. Louis," reads their press release. "...Our sports teams, entertainers and of course all the new development that’s going on downtown. That’s why they are celebrating their birthdays with not just their families, but all of St. Louis."

The party starts at 9:00 at Club Dreams, 3207 Washington, and will be hosted by Chocolate Tai, of Nelly's Derrty Entertainment, and Universal Records recording artist Penelope.



And St. Louis' own Jibbs, the latest hometown rapper to break through to national fame, is scheduled to perform his hit "Chain Hang Low".

A portion of the proceeds from this event will go towards "Toys in the Hood", a not for profit venture created to provide toys for low income families for the holidays.

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Technical Support

By Antonio D. French

Okay, my techno-savvy brothers and sisters:

We have for some time been considering a move from Blogger to WordPress. We designed the custom template you are seeing now all by ourselves (in that respect, Blogger's simplicity is very nice), but WordPress' CSS programming mumbo jumbo is über intimidating.

Can anyone out there build us (or modify) a WordPress template to match the look of our current one?

And while we're making our Christmas wish list public here; we're also in the market for a used cordless microphone... And a decent camera flash... And a Nintendo Wii... And investors for a big project we're working on.

Okay, forget the Wii.

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VIDEO: Blunt on O'Reilly

By Antonio D. French

Gov. Matt Blunt appeared on Fox News' "The O'Reilly Factor" Monday to discuss what he and host Bill O'Reilly called "activist judges".

Specifically, the two discussed a recent ruling by Lawrence County, Missouri Judge Larry Meyer, who sentenced 50 year-old Kenneth Slaght to probation after he was convicted of raping his 9 year-old step-granddaughter.

"This is a great example of why we need to take discretion away from judges," said Blunt. "We need to have strict mandatory sentences, and that's what we'll have in the future in Missouri."

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VIDEO: O'Brien's Channel 5 Interview

By Antonio D. French

KSDK Channel 5 reporter Leisa Zigman interviewed St. Louis School Board President Veronica O'Brien this week.

Click here to read the story. Click here to watch the video.

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Slay and O'Brien Opt to Pass the Buck

By Antonio D. French

Filed Tuesday, November 28, 2006 at 10:16 AM

While other urban mayors are fighting to take the reigns of their city's failing school districts, Mayor Francis Slay continues to push instead for the state's Republican governor to take over St. Louis Public Schools. And he's finding an ally in the woman he first appointed to the school board.

After denials four months ago by his aides, Robin Wahby and Ed Rhode, of secret conversations first reported by PUB DEF in July in which the mayor's office called on the state to intervene following the defeat of his hand-picked school board candidates, Mayor Slay, a Democrat, has grown more and more vocal about his desire for Gov. Matt Blunt to take control over St. Louis' beleaguered schools.

"A State takeover of the district is a needed first step," the mayor wrote on his website Saturday.

"If legislation is needed to make the law clear and to protect a takeover from legal challenge, the Missouri General Assembly should pass a bill the first month it is in session -- and the Governor should sign it."

The current school board president, who Slay appointed to the board in 2004 after former member Rochelle Moore was removed because of her erratic behavior, has joined Slay in calling for state intervention.

Veronica O'Brien said that while she doesn't yet support an all-out "takeover," she does think the state should do away with the superintendent's office.

"A state takeover in the truest sense would be disastrous and it would not help the children," O'Brien told KSDK this week. But she said she wants to see the position of superintendent completely eliminated and replaced by two positions; a chief operating officer and a chief academic officer.

O'Brien also has begun to undermine the credibility of the very woman she abruptly introduced as superintendent just four months ago.

"Dr. [Diana] Bourisaw does not have the experience to handle some things in this district," O'Brien told Channel 5. She said she once believed Bourisaw had the "potential to grow," but no longer.

O'Brien said she doesn't believe she personally deserves any of the blame for the current state of the district. "I don't think I bear the burden of many years of the district falling apart," she said.

In that regard, she and the mayor are again on the same page.

For three years, between April 2003 and April 2006, Mayor Slay enjoyed unprecedented influence over St. Louis Public Schools. Under the direction of his original slate of candidates -- Vince Schoemehl, Bob Archibald, Ronald Jackson and Darnetta Clinkscale, who later became the heavy-handed board majority -- the district embarked on an expensive experiment, overseen and co-directed from the mayor's own office, that turned control of the district over to a New York City-based corporate turnaround firm and a superintendent that had absolutely no prior experience in education.

When the dust settled, the district was left in debt, the community was even more divided, and the New Yorkers where back in New York preparing for their next adventure in New Orleans.

But Slay, like O'Brien, accepts no blame for his role in today's mess.

"It would be controversial to give up local control of the St. Louis Public Schools, but it would be plain wrong to allow the district to continue to betray the futures of thousands of students," Slay wrote today on his website. "It's past time for a state takeover. Why not just say that?"

If Slay and O'Brien get their way, it would put St. Louis City residents in the very unique position of being perhaps the only city population in America with no control over either its own police force or its own public schools.

Now the commentary:

It is not leadership to jump to the front of a steady march and join in the chorus. Indeed, it is cowardice for elected leaders to abandon their mission and turn over the power voters invested in them to outsiders -- whether they be from New York City or Jefferson City.

If Mayor Slay wants to be a good leader and if he truly wants someone to have the authority to "put the district in the hands of a strong administrator with a mandate to stabilize the district and start it on the long road to recovery," as he says, then he should ask for that power, not pass the buck to a governor who has repeatedly voiced his own insensitivity to this state's urban people.

Instead of giving our power over to the state, the mayor should ask for control over his city's schools -- as mayors have done in Chicago, Cleveland and Los Angeles, and as is currently being considered in Seattle and Washington D.C.

It would be controversial, but no more so than if a governor who is not directly accountable to St. Louisans was given control.

And at least there would finally be one person the voters of this city could hold accountable for the future of our public schools.

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Bradley Leaves Whitlock $250K

By Antonio D. French

Filed Monday, November 27, 2006 at 5:33 PM

Journalism legend Ed Bradley, who died on Nov. 10 of leukemia, left a quarter of a million dollars in his will to local TV achor Cordell Whitlock, the "60 Minutes" icon's godson.

In a 2002 joint interview with USA Today, Whitlock, of KSDK Channel 5, credited Bradley with sparking his interest in journalism when he was in the third grade and Bradley got him into a White House press conference.

"I remember seeing Jimmy Carter walk into the room," said Whitlock. "That was the first time I'd ever seen someone I'd watched on TV in real life. It was breathtaking, just blew me away."

According to the New York Daily News, Bradley left Whitlock $250,000 in his last will and testament. The largest portion of Bradley’s $5 million estate went to his wife Patricia Blanchet.

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VIDEO: Candidates File for Office

By Antonio D. French



UPDATE: There were a few surprises this morning as the filing window opened for incumbents and challengers seeking to run in the March 2007 primary elections.

As we first reported last week, former school board member Bill Haas is challenging 18th Ward Alderman Terry Kennedy. When we asked Haas, who has run unsuccessfully for numerous offices over the years (including mayor and, most recently, state representative), why now alderman, he said simply "it was on the ballot."

Haas added it would be an honor to replace "a great alderman like Terry Kennedy."

The biggest surprise came in the filing of retired police officer Matt Browning against 12th Ward Ald. Fred Heitert. [Click here to read more about this and view a video interview with Browning.] Both are Republicans and Browning's moving personal story and considerable name recognition could make this race very competitive.

Alderman Craig Schmid (20th Ward) also got a challenger in Cherokee Street resident Galen Gondolfi.

In the 6th Ward, Kacie Starr Triplett's name will appear on the ballot above Committeeman Patrick Cacchione and first-time candidate Christian Saller.

Another surprise came in the 4th Ward, where neither incumbent Ald. O.L. Shelton or his expected challenger, Sam Moore, showed up this morning to file. [UPDATE: Shelton filed at 4:30 p.m]

Still Developing...

UPDATE 2: Here are some photos from today's filings. Please don't steal our photos. If you'd like to use them, just ask.

















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Matt Browning Challenging Heitert

By Antonio D. French

READ IT HERE FIRST

The city's only Republican alderman got an unexpected challenger this morning, former St. Louis City police officer Matt Browning.

Browning, who lost his legs in October 2004 after being pinned between two cars on a routine traffic stop, filed to run against 12th Ward Alderman Fred Heitert this morning in the March 2007 Republican primary.

Check back later for video...


UPDATE: Here's that video we promised. In it, Browning says one of the reasons he decided to run was the terrible state of many of his ward's sidewalks. He said they make it hard -- even dangerous -- for pedestrians, especially wheelchair-bound residents such as him, to move around the ward.



Heitert, the city's longest-serving alderman, filed shortly after Browning. He told KWMU's Tom Weber this morning that he'd like four more years representing the 12th Ward in City Hall.

"I enjoy serving the people in the 12th ward and I just want to continue," he told Weber. "They've had me for 28 years - I feel I've served my people well. I wish Matt the best."

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Local Leaders Condemn Wal-Mart's "Profits Over People" Policies

By Antonio D. French

Filed Wednesday, November 22, 2006 at 3:13 PM

During this week of Thanksgiving and "Black Friday" -- the largest shopping day of the year, when many retailers finally go from debt (red) to profit (black) -- some leaders are calling on the most profitable retailer in America to be more generous with its employees.

Congressman Lacy Clay and Pastor James Morris yesterday called on Wal-Mart's CEO, Mr. Lee Scott, to give many of his roughly 1.4 million employees better pay and health benefits.

"By its own admission, nearly one out of every two children of Wal-Mart workers are either uninsured or on taxpayer-funded health care programs," said Morris.



Congressman Clay quoted a memo from a Wal-Mart executive that was leaked to the press: "Our critics are correct in some of their observations. Specifically, our coverage is expensive for low-income families, and Wal-Mart has a significant percentage of associates and their children on public assistance."



Clay was joined by Alderman Frank Williamson (26th Ward) and State Rep-elect Jamilah Nasheed. Nasheed said she would be boycotting the retailer this holiday season.



Tuesday's event was organized by the United Food and Commercial Workers Local 655 and coincided with similar events in seven other cities across America as part of WakeUpWalMart.com's 2006 holiday campaign called "Hope for the Holidays."

Wal-Mart has for years resisted efforts to unionize its workforce. The company has maintained that it is a good employer and does everything it can to ensure prices are kept low for its millions of loyal customers.

Related Story:

Clay Says He'll Take Wal-Mart's Money and Still Vote Against Them

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Haas Running for Alderman

By Antonio D. French

READ IT HERE FIRST

Former School Board member (and perennial mayorial candiate) Bill Haas is apparently running for alderman of the 18th Ward. Just a few weeks after losing his latest campaign for state representative, Haas is now holding a place in line at the Board of Elections to run against incumbent Ald. Terry Kennedy.

Ald. Frank Williamson also has a challenger waiting in line, Lee Willis of the 26th Ward.

Filing starts Monday at 8:00 a.m and closes January 5, 2007.

Click here to download an interview this reporter did with Haas back in 2005 during his last campaign for mayor. At the time, Haas said depression and financial troubles had him contemplating suicide. Since then, Haas says he is doing much better.

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Union President Demands Board Members Defend District from State Takeover

By Antonio D. French



Get more from last night's meeting at STLSchools.org.

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Parents to O'Brien: Grow Up!

By Antonio D. French


Board Hears Report on Sodexho, O'Brien Refuses to Hear Public Comments

By Antonio D. French

Filed Tuesday, November 21, 2006 at 11:59 PM

A PUB DEF VIDEO REPORT

The St. Louis City School Board heard a report tonight by Chief Operating Officer Deanna Anderson on the costs and benefits of ending the district's contract with Sodexho and bringing back in-house many of the maintenance operations that the contractor oversees.

Watch our special video report from the meeting:

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Congressman Says He'll Take Wal-Mart's Money and Still Vote Against Them

By Antonio D. French

EXCLUSIVE PUB DEF VIDEO

At a press conference today meant to call attention to the working conditions of employees of Wal-Mart, America's largest private employer, Congressman Lacy Clay was asked about contributions he has accepted from the retailer.



At the conclusion of Clay's speech, which slammed Wal-Mart CEO Lee Scott for his company's huge profits in the face of persistent poverty among his roughly 1.4 million employees, reporter Matt Sepic of local NPR affiliate KWMU asked Clay whether he would return nearly $7,000 in campaign donations from Wal-Mart's political action committee.

"Not at all," said Clay. "That's the name of the game is raising money. I have dues to pay to my Democratic Party, about $150,000 a year. So wherever I can get that money to pay those dues, I will take it."

Clay said even though he has accepted money from Wal-Mart, he has not voted how the company would have wanted him to on many issues in Congress.

"You have to have money to run effectively," said Clay. "I'm going to take all the money I can get."

Check back later for more exclusive video from today's press conference...

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O'Brien Asks State to Step In

By Antonio D. French

The following report is by Nick Clement of the St. Louis Schools Watch:

St. Louis School Board President Veronica O'Brien again has found a way to divert attention from students and teachers to herself. In a bizarre performance before the Desegregation Monitoring Task Force, O'Brien called on the state to intervene in the school district to remove the superintendent.

Only two months ago, O'Brien engineered the removal of the word "interim" from Diana Bourisaw's title, making her "superintendent" instead of "interim superintendent." Now she is relentless in her attacks on the superintendent. The reason for the attacks lies in a disagreement over O'Brien's role.

In recent weeks, O'Brien has been telling anyone who will listen that administrators in St. Louis Public Schools do not respect her authority as president. She complains that administrators are holding meetings without inviting her and making decisions without running them by her first. In short, she is confirming the truth of board member Bill Purdy's claim that she is trying to micromanage the district.

Sources familiar with O'Brien say Bourisaw's reluctance to let O'Brien make up jobs and salaries precipitated split. The disagreement between the two came to a head over the hiring of Anthony Bonner.

Sources say O'Brien promised Bonner's family, with whom she is close, that she would give Bonner a job and pay him $125,000 a year. She ordered Bourisaw to hire Bonner as a "special assistant" and pay him $125,000. Bourisaw reportedly refused. She is said to have told O'Brien that Bonner could apply for whatever openings were advertised and if he was qualified, she would hire him at the advertised salary. He qualified for a job in the community information office and was hired at a salary of $72,000 a year.

Many people in the school district were outraged that someone with just a bachelor's degree could come off the street and waltz into a $72,000 a year gig to make more than many principals with doctorate degrees are making, but O'Brien was outraged that her order to pay him $125,000 was ignored. She reportedly ran around school board headquarters ordering one person after another to code Bonner in the payroll system for $125,000. Person after person refused, and her grudge against Bourisaw grew.

People who know O'Brien say she has become obsessed with getting rid of Bourisaw, to the point where nothing else in the school district matters to her. That obsession has led to the strange speech reported in the Post-Dispatch yesterday.

As upsetting as her speech is to supporters of St. Louis public schools, it at least indicates that she does not have the support of the majority of the board. She would not be calling on the state to remove the superintendent if she had the votes on the board to do it.

The school board meets tonight at 5:30 p.m. for a special presentation on Sodexho, then again at 7:00 p.m. for their regular monthly meeting. Click here for the agenda.

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Carter to Cops: Address the Northside

By Antonio D. French

Filed Monday, November 20, 2006 at 7:23 PM

In the wake of the city's recent tagging as the "most dangerous" in the country, and numerous attempts by City and police officials to downplay crime in the city as affecting only "some neighborhoods," one alderman is telling police brass that they aren't doing enough to keep those neighborhoods safe.

In a letter sent last week to a St. Louis City police captain and copied to Chief Joe Mokwa, 27th Ward Alderman Greg Carter recounts a Nov. 11 incident that occured at a northside gas station. Carter said while purchasing gas at the Shell station on Goodfellow and Highway 70, a man approached him and attempted to sell him drugs.

"Here I am, the alderman for the community and I can only imagine how other individuals are approached when they visit our community and our city," wrote Carter.

The alderman said this kind of problem has been going on for too long. He said he has been in contact with police and city officials as well as the corporate owners of the gas station, but nothing has changed.

"I am becoming very frustrated and I am sure that if this was in any one of your neighborhoods, it would have ended a long time ago," wrote Carter.

"I guess this is no longer a myth there is no aggressive approach regarding the drug selling in the communities that are predominantly African-American."

Carter sent copies of the letter, dated Nov. 14, 2006, to Police Chief Joe Mokwa, Mayor Francis Slay, State Senator Pat Dougherty, State Senator-elect Jeff Smith, State Rep. Connie Johnson, Missouri Attorney Gen. Jay Nixon, and the Council of Black Elected Officials.

Click here to download Carter's letter.

Related Stories:

Only a 'few neighborhoods' are unsafe (wink-wink)
"Most Dangerous" Again
She Said What???

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City Grocers is Moving

By Antonio D. French

Filed Sunday, November 19, 2006 at 9:52 AM

According to a Downtown St. Louis Partnership newsletter, City Grocers, the only full service grocery market in downtown St. Louis, plans to relocate to the newly renovated Syndicate building thereby expanding from 6,500 square feet to over 14,000 square feet.

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Obama Targets E-Day Fraud

By Antonio D. French

Last week, Sen. Barack Obama (D-IL) introduced legislation that targets shady Election Day tactics that seek to intimidate voters and prevent them from exercising their right to vote.

"The Deceptive Practices and Voter Intimidation Prevention Act of 2006", would make it illegal for anyone to knowingly attempt to prevent others from exercising his or her right to vote by providing deceptive information and would require the Attorney General to fully investigate these allegations.

Penalties include up to $100,000 in fines and/or one year imprisonment.

"Too often, we hear reports of mysterious phone calls and mailers arriving just days before an election that seek to mislead and threaten voters to keep them from the polls," said Obama. "And those who engage in these deceptive and underhanded campaign tactics usually target voters living in minority or low-income neighborhoods. This legislation would ensure that for the first time, these incidents are fully investigated and that those found guilty are punished."

Obama said that in last week’s election, mailers distributed in predominantly African-American counties in Maryland wrongly implied that African-American Democrats had endorsed Republican candidates. The fliers were paid for and authorized by GOP Senate candidate Michael Steele and Republican Governor Robert Ehrlich.

In House races across the country, reports surfaced of Democrats receiving dozens of harassing robocalls designed to imply that they came from Democratic candidates. In fact, the calls were paid for by Republicans and were intended to suppress turnout among Democrats. Read more about these calls at www.TalkingPointsMemo.com.

The legislation would also require the Attorney General to work with the Federal Communications Commission and the Election Assistance Commission to determine the feasibility of using the public broadcasting system as a means of providing voters with full and accurate Election Day information.

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VIDEO: A Blast from the Past

By Antonio D. French

Filed Saturday, November 18, 2006 at 10:07 AM

Take a look at St. Louis a half a century ago in this 9 minute promotional video from the old St. Louis Community Chest fund.

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The Virtual Campaign

By Antonio D. French

Filed Friday, November 17, 2006 at 4:37 PM

The campaign for President of the Board of Aldermen could all come down to this:

LewisReed.net vs. JimShrewsbury.com

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Political Briefs

By Antonio D. French

STILL BLUNTED -- Missouri Congressman Roy Blunt, father of Gov. Matt Blunt, fended off opposition to his House leadership post today. By a vote of 137-57, Papa Blunt beat out Arizonan John Shadegg to be minority whip when the new Congress convenes in January.

AND THE OSCAR GOES TO... Director Frank Popper and State Senator-elect Jeff Smith have to be worried silly with excitement about the recent announcement of the Academy's short list. I mean, will this actually be Martin Scorsese's year?

Oh, and their "Can Mr. Smith Get to Washington Anymore?" documentary might get nominated too. But really, did you see "The Departed"? Awesome.

THE TROOPS TURN THEIR BACKS ON AMERICA -- Where has the patriotism that followed September 11, 2001 gone? We can remember when Americans dared not question the leadership of our country's elected officials! But leave it to some battle-scarred war veterans to go and disrespect our local political warrior.

At last weekend's scantly-attended Veteran's Day parade, eight veterans literally turned their backs on Mayor Francis Slay when he rose to speak. They told a Post-Dispatch reporter they were angry about the departure of the Soldiers Memorial's longtime superintendent, Ralph Wiechert.

According to the Post, Wiechert, who was in the audience, said he had had "no support" from City Hall for repairs at the Memorial.

Well, I guess next they'll be asking Congress not to cut their health benefits! Don't they realize we're at war? It's about sacrifice, people.

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Oops.. Somebody's in Trouble

By Antonio D. French

The Post-Dispatch picked up on our story about a recent comment made by a PR person at the Convention and Visitors Commission.

Attempting to debunk the city's recent designation as the "most dangerous" in the U.S., [Mary] Hendron said she was explaining that the city's crime figures were skewed by some areas.

"It's a bad part of town, but every city has a bad part of town," Hendron told the industry publication. "Frankly, the only reason anyone would go there would be to purchase crack cocaine."

The comments were the last line in a story about the commission's reaction to the crime ranking. It ran last week in Venues Today's weekly electronic newsletter — sent to 3,000 subscribers in the sports and entertainment industry — and reported locally on a blog, Pub Def.

Thanks for the mention, Jake.

Click here to read the Post's full story.

UPDATE: Fox 2 News also picked up on the story (sans a hat tip to Pub Def). Click here to watch the report.

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Bond Secures $500K for North St. Louis

By Antonio D. French

Filed Thursday, November 16, 2006 at 8:17 PM

U.S. Senator Kit Bond today announced almost $500,000 in federal funds for a new education and arts community center in north St. Louis.

"This new center will provide community outreach to some of the neediest neighborhoods in the St. Louis area," Bond said in a press release today.

"This community is committed to providing children and families in the city a chance to succeed and I am proud to be a part of this important effort."

As chairman of the Senate Transportation-Treasury-HUD Appropriations Subcommittee, Bond secured $495,000 in federal funds for the Mark Twain Community Alliance which will be used to renovate a building that will become the Redevelopment, Arts, Culture and Educational Center in St. Louis.

The center will help residents living in the most disadvantaged zip codes in St. Louis City and County (63115, 63113, 63120). Children in these zip codes are exposed to numerous risk factors such as poverty, single parent households, teen pregnancy and violence. Drop-out rates in the area are also among the highest in the city.

Ald. Charles Quincy Troupe is quoted praising Bond's record.

"He extended himself to include the black community in a way that no other governor, before him or after him, did."

"As the senior U.S. Senator and statesman, he continues to exercise inclusion whether it is biodiesel in southeast Missouri or the development of a youth and family center in north St. Louis," said Troupe.

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Clay, Scheck to Discuss Wrongful Convictions at Wash U. Tomorrow

By Antonio D. French

Congressman Lacy Clay and renowned defense attorney Barry Scheck (known best as the DNA guy from O.J. Simpson's "dream team") will be on the campus of Washington University tomorrow addressing some of the issues surrounding innocent men and women being wrongly convicted in U.S. courts.

Clay is scheduled to give the morning keynote speech (9:00 a.m.) at the Sixth Annual Access to Equal Justice Conference, which starts tomorrow at the Wash U. School of Law.

The school's Clinical Education Program and Center for Interdisciplinary Studies, along with the St. Louis University School of Law, will present "Convicted, Executed, But Not Guilty? Examining the Risks of Wrongful Executions and the Role of Prosecutors, Defense Attorneys, Academia and the Press," from 9:00 a.m. to 4:00 p.m. in Anheuser-Busch Hall.

The conference is free and open to faculty, students, staff, and the public, but organizers say attendees must have registered by Monday to receive materials and attend the lunch. Click here for more info.

Scheck and Roscoe C. Howard, Jr., a former U.S. Attorney and former professor of law at the University of Kansas, are the afternoon keynote speakers (1:00 p.m.).

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Missouri Chamber of Commerce's Legislative Action Seminar Today

By Antonio D. French

Have YouTube, Blogs, and electronic information changed how campaigns are won and lost? That's the question fellow blogger John Combest and I will be discussing today at the Missouri Chamber of Commerce's Legislative Action Seminar at the Chase Park Plaza. Roy Temple, of FiredUpMissouri.com, may also join us.

Our panel is scheduled to begin at 11:00.

Other discussions will include a look at the state's new campaign finance regulations and lobbying laws (featuring Joe Carroll and Liz Ziegler from the Missouri Ethics Commission) and Missouri's political landscape "as viewed by the pen and the pad" (featuring Jo Mannies, Post-Dispatch; and Dave Drebes, Arch City Chronicle).

Click here for the full schedule.

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VIDEO: Cacchione Party

By Antonio D. French

Committeeman Patrick Cacchione kicked off his campaign to become the next alderman of the 6th Ward with a well-attended party and fundraiser at Sqwires last night.



"Here in the 6th Ward, we are a microcosm of the city with rich and poor, blacks and whites, new immigrants and long-time residents and we have business and residential," Cacchione told the crowd.

"We embrace and celebrate our diversity and if anyone thinks they can use our diversity to divide us they better think twice. This election is not about where you are from but where we are going together."

Cacchione is expected to face former Congressional aide Kacie Starr Triplett, Tower Grove East resident Christian Saller, and possibly others in the March 2007 primary.

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Democrats in Demand in D.C.

By Antonio D. French

Filed Wednesday, November 15, 2006 at 4:07 PM

A story in today's New York Times calls attention to the shift on K Street following last week's elections. Quoted in the story is Steve Elmendorf, a longtime aide to former St. Louis Congressman Richard Gephardt and a lobbyist with St. Louis-based Bryan Cave.



Elmendorf said Democrats in the House and the Senate would operate differently.

"The Republicans' view of lobbying is we give people money, we buy them lunch and then go up and tell them what to do," said Mr. Elmendorf, whose client roster included Shell Oil and Ford before the election and has grown since then. "We go in and make public policy arguments. The business community is going to have to reorient their view."

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Photo of the Day

By Antonio D. French



So when will Dan Quayle be brought back too?

This photo is from the latest issue of Newsweek. From left to right: Scowcroft, Gates, Cheney, Quayle, Baker, Bush and Powell.

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Political Briefs

By Antonio D. French

SHE SAID WHAT? -- Following the our city's dubious distinction once again as the "Most Dangerous City in America", comes an interesting quote from one of St. Louis' paid cheerleaders.

Mary Hendrod, of the St. Louis Convention and Visitors Commission, was quoted in Venues Today, an industry trade magazine, in their "Quote of the Week" section.

"It's a bad part of town, but every city has a bad part of town... Frankly the only reason anyone would go there would be to purchase crack cocaine," she said, reportedly referring to "a bad neighborhood of St. Louis."

Hendrod told PUB DEF this morning that the quote was taken out of context and was meant to be off the record.

AND THEN THERE WERE THREE -- Looks like Tower Grove Easter Christian Saller is joining Kacie Starr Triplett and Committeeman Patrick Cacchione in the race to succeed 6th Ward Alderman (and Aldermanic Presidential candidate) Lewis Reed. The Arch City Chronicle reports Saller, 43, made the announcement at a southside neighborhood meeting last night. We're also hearing there will be even more candidates joining the race before it's all over. Expect a crowded field.

FAIR-WEATHER FRIENDS? -- We emailed outgoing Republican State Rep. Sherman Parker this week to ask if we should read anything into his presence at Claire McCaskill's victory party last week. He did not reply.

But two other African-American Republicans called us over the weekend to let us know what they thought about former Congressional candidates Parker and Leslie Farr (who recently said he was re-joining the Democratic Party) partying with the blue team while the reds shed tears into their champagne glasses last Tuesday.

"Traitors" is about the least offensive word used that we can write here.

"After all Jim [Talent] did for Sherman?" one said, referring to Talent's early endorsement in the contentious 2002 primary fight that eventually led to Parker becoming the first African-American elected to the state legislature from St. Charles.

"They should know the lines are too long for them to ever get anything out of the Democrats," said the GOPer.

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McCaskill's Committee Assignments

By Antonio D. French

Filed Tuesday, November 14, 2006 at 6:20 PM

U.S. Senator-elect Claire McCaskill will serve on five Senate committees, including the Senate Armed Services Committee, according to the Associated Press.

From the AP: The newly elected Missouri Democrat also will have a seat on the Senate committees on commerce; homeland security and government affairs; aging; and Indian affairs...

Spokeswoman Adrianne Marsh said McCaskill would use her position on the Homeland Security and Governmental Affairs Committee to establish a "Truman Committee" to look into wartime spending.

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Obama's Committee Assignments

By Antonio D. French

Last Tuesday's elections have made our celebrity junior senator to the east even more relevant.

Sen. Barack Obama (D-IL) today announced that next year he will serve on four influential committees: the Senate Foreign Relations Committee, the Senate Committee on Veterans’ Affairs, the Senate Committee on Health, Education, Labor and Pensions, and the Senate Committee on Homeland Security and Governmental Affairs.

"Keeping the American people safe should always be our top priority, and I pledge to work to secure our nation's chemical plants and to implement the recommendations of the 9/11 Commission as a member of the Senate Committee on Homeland Security and Governmental Affairs," said Obama.

"I also hope to continue working with Democrats and Republicans like Senator Tom Coburn to stop wasteful no-bid contracting abuse, and to pass meaningful ethics reforms as quickly as possible. As a member of the Committee on Health, Education, Labor and Pensions, I hope to address the growing health care crisis in our country and focus on legislation that will help working families adjust to the ever-changing global economy.

“I look forward to working with Senator [Dick] Durbin, whose influence will greatly increase as the Majority Whip, to help improve the lives of our constituents.”

No word yet on Senator-elect McCaskill's committee assignments.

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Photo of the Day