Saturday, August 10, 2013

Why does it take $8.2 million to turn a school back into a school?

From School Board Member Will Pinkston: As the Nashville School Board members representing the 12South area, Michael Hayes and I will host an "open house" at the Waverly-Belmont building (10th and Caruthers Avenues) on Monday, August 19, to share updates on the plan for returning the W-B to service as a neighborhood school. MNPS Director of Schools Jesse Register and his team will give an overview of the project's timeline, answer questions, and kick off a community-engagement process that will shape the work ahead. Anticipating a large turnout, we will hold this public meeting under a tent on the school grounds. Anyone who's interested in viewing the W-B's interior will have limited access to the ground floor beginning at 6 p.m. The public meeting will begin outside promptly at 6:30 p.m. In the event of inclement weather, we'll identify a rain date. Michael and I are excited about this important project, and we look forward to seeing everyone on Monday, August 19.

In answer to a question about the cost of the project, Pinkston said, "architectural services to help manage the overall project -- including renovation of the existing 78-year-old building and design of an expansion that's needed on the rear of the facility. That architectural contract is $419,000, or about 5% of the project's total cost."

The total cost of the project is $8.2 Million! I am pleased to see the return of a neighborhood school.  I am pleased to see an old building restored instead of torn down. However $8.2 million is a lot of money. The building has not set empty. It is in use as an office building now. The building is not dilapidated. I have not toured the building, but does anyone doubt that if the building was turned over to a charter school that they would not spend $8.2 million dollars to get the building again functioning as a school? $419,000 for an architectural contract does not drive a single nail. I bet a charter school could get this building up and running for the $419.000 MNPS is spending on an architectural contract.

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Friday, August 09, 2013

Music City for Marsha is this weekend.



Music City for Marsha
Sunday, August 11th
4:00 - 6:00 PM
The Loveless Barn

Featured Performer:
Singer/Songwriter
Larry Gatlin

Musical Performances by:
Senator Jack Johnson & The Austin Brothers 
 Ayla Brown
Music City for Marsha is this weekend. If you haven't yet purchased your tickets, please follow this link to do so right away.  

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Liberty on the Rocks, Thursday night.

Liberty on the Rocks - Tennessee Thursday, August 15, 2013 5:30 PM

 Mafiaoza's 2400 12th Ave S Nashville, TN 37204

No prayer, no pledge, no speaker, no program; just eating and drinking and talking among people of different ages and backgrounds who share a common love of liberty.  

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The argument for an objective moral order

by Gene Wisdom

 In the aftermath of the 2012 election, and even before, we heard many pundits telling us that social conservatives are dragging down the Republican Party. Establishment Republicans (read “professional Republicans”), RINO’s and even some other conservatives argue that conservatives driven by social issues are holding back the GOP and diminishing its potential outreach among the young—and that we’re causing GOP election losses. We’re pointed to polls we are told that show that public opinion is now in favor of acceptance of same-sex marriage and told to get on board with young people who are more “tolerant”.

First of all, it strikes me as odd that the party which brought in Abraham Lincoln in the wake of the Dred Scott decision would now want to push itself away from moral issues. Slavery is a moral issue. Personhood is a moral issue. And they are issues in which the state should be deeply involved. Abandoning the moral issues is an acceptance of James Carville’s “It’s the economy, stupid.” In so doing we concede the Democratic/liberal position that marriage doesn’t matter, that abortion doesn’t matter, and that what our children are taught in school doesn’t matter. They do matter and government has a legitimate role in ensuring that these values aren’t attacked. Government has an interest in the stability of society which is strengthened by traditional marriage between one man and one woman and in facilitating its permanence. It is also government’s duty to protect human life. Before liberty and the pursuit of happiness, both as a duty recognized in the Declaration of Independence and as a matter of reason, there is life. And government, through public schools, weakens families and social order by allowing traits such as honor, faith, and patriotism to be attacked in our classrooms.

Surrendering will most certainly have an impact on the direction and health of our society. By taking social issues off the Republican electoral agenda we will have effectively surrendered the legislative agenda to the Democrats. If Republicans aren’t willing to take a stand on the campaign trail will we, should we, expect them to take a stand on those issues in our legislative chambers and yes, in our courtrooms. And they are foolish who do not accept a certain level of inevitability (yes, slippery slope) to the direction our nation is headed. We would not have the debate over partial birth abortion (nor the horrors of the recent Gosnell case in Pennsylvania) without Roe v. Wade. Justice Scalia warned in his dissent in the Texas sodomy case (Lawrence v. Texas, 2003) not to believe the majority opinion when they said that it would not lead to same-sex marriage and was proven correct when that decision was later cited in the Massachusetts Supreme Court decision which first legalized same-sex marriage. He also warned us in the recent same-sex marriage U.S. Supreme Court case, United States v. Windsor not to believe the majority when they said it would not lead to striking down state laws protecting traditional marriage. This is not to say these things can’t be turned around but they certainly won’t be if their importance is ignored or belittled.

By backing down on these issues, it doesn’t mean that there is not a moral position. It means simply that we surrender to an opposite moral position, that of moral relativism and nihilism. The vacuum created by our silence (both as social conservatives and as conservative Republicans) will be filled by those with a much different agenda. Not only nature, but politics too, abhors a vacuum. Does anyone really believe that Republican silence on these issues, that locking out social conservatives from the Republican Party will not hasten these destructive social trends? Silence about social issues and these values is rejection of these values, in favor of a system of morality which has weakened our nation.

And its economy. These issues overlap with economic issues. Redistribution of income is really bad economics but why is it bad economics? Sure, there are the disincentives to work and the misallocation of resources. But the disincentive to work means that people lose the incentive to work to provide for their families, for fathers to remain with their families, to be fathers and teachers to their children. Is this a benign outcome? Of course not--even redistributionist-in-chief Barack Obama has stated that fathers are essential. And when fathers aren’t there, children are much more likely to grow up to become criminals, to go to prison, to use drugs, to become pregnant teenagers. Families break down. Senator Rick Santorum, writing in It Takes a Family reminded us that “[W]elfare enabled out of wedlock childbirth (because the financial and, over time, social consequences—i.e., shame—were not as devastating) and, conversely, made marriage unnecessary.” Daniel Moynihan, often described as a neo-conservative, warned us of these consequences to the black family in the 1960’s. Economic issues also become social issues.

Surrender on moral legislative issues is a tacit declaration that there is no objective moral order and effectively that government has no role in fostering integrity, character, honor, honesty. It is true government officials do a poor job of living up to those standards (and so do we all as human beings; it is the human condition) but the fact that they violate them doesn’t mean they don’t exist and that those standards should not be advanced. Have conservatives, and by extension the Republican Party, so lost touch with our intellectual forbears as to forget warnings such as that from Richard Weaver that our society “approach[es] a condition in which we shall be amoral without the capacity to perceive it and degraded without the means to measure our descent.” Are we only to offer a measuring stick, if that, for our decline. If Republicans look to ditch social conservatives they will lose even that barometer and will face only the storms. Wearing blinders to these issues will not make them go away, it will simply say “We don’t care.” And perhaps some don’t. It is they who are more fit for another party, that of Bill Clinton and Barack Obama. And Anthony Weiner.

Republicans need to ask themselves, if they are ready to abandon those issues, whether they will stand up
to protect the free speech rights and religious liberties of social conservatives on them. There are many cases around the country where Americans have taken a stand against same-sex marriage and have then come under fire, lost jobs, been sued and charged by state/local “human rights commissions”. This is the real meaning of liberal “tolerance”. Is the Republican Party going to look the other way? Catholic charities were denied participation in Massachusetts adoption programs because they refused, due to religious principles, to place children with same-sex couples. People have been sued for not wishing to provide services such as photography for same-sex weddings. The Left is not looking for tolerance, they seek to impose uniformity. And now in the wake of the Windsor decision there is a renewed push in Congress to pass the Employment Non-Discrimination Act (a brainchild of the late Senator Edward Kennedy) which would add sexual orientation as a suspect classification, following the path of Justice Anthony Kennedy who, in his majority opinion in that decision, abandoned all precedent for such classifications. Social and religious conservatives have warned us for years that this measure would threaten the religious liberties and hiring choices not only of religious institutions but also religious individuals. Is this what the Republican Party will become once they’ve ditched “those embarrassing religious wackos”?

Current laws on marriage—as on anything else for that matter—reflect a particular view of morality. It is a view which understands that the purpose of marriage is to ensure that any children brought forth from that marriage are raised by their biological mother and father and is meant to ensure permanence, exclusivity, and fidelity between those parents. Marriage is under assault by another moral view which holds that this integral interest of children, and society, doesn’t matter, that laws on marriage must preserve equality and “equal access”, pushing aside the question of the purpose and definition of marriage. It is social conservatives who have been fighting the good fight on this issue. If Republicans abandon a framework validated by centuries of experience it is they who will be on the wrong side of history. The other side represents not simply deafness to moral questions but an entirely different moral framework.

Constitutional scholar Hadley Arkes said that “[T]he family is the first coiner of citizens, and it can never be a matter of moral indifference as to the moral norms on which children are begotten and in turn nurtured and shaped in their character.”

Social conservatives cannot expect moderates, establishment Republicans, libertarians or fiscal conservatives to prevail on these issues or even to engage the fight. They have no heart for it. Moderation on these issues opposes winning, ridicules the moral stances required to win and doesn’t understand the arguments even if it were temperamentally suited to make them. It doesn’t want to win, it only wants peace which means moral and intellectual disarmament while those on the other side are ready for, and have been engaged in, pitched battle. It means that as soon as the media begins its plea for moderation (only from our side) the moderates are with them and throw in the towel. When the principle you stand on is compromise the other side knows that and will continually be back for more. It is why Democrats and liberals push for radical ends while demanding moderation from our side.

The bottom line is that engaging on these issues, and across the gamut of issues conservatives are involved in, is to understand that liberalism is built on an edifice of lies. Egalitarianism. Moral relativism. Sexual libertinism. The welfare state. The mutability or even perfection of man’s nature. That poverty is in itself an evil whose elimination is the state’s responsibility. And to understand these are lies one must understand there are truths, and that there are moral truths as there are economic truths. And that a readiness to abandon those among us [Republicans] who represent moral truths is to give the field to lies.

Further, polls are not a measure of whether something is either moral or true. They are only and at best a measure of its popularity. Are polls then to determine Republicans’ readiness to stand for truth and for what truths we will stand? What other truths would these establishment Republicans abandon? Many counseled us to toss out “those pro-lifers, those single-issue voters” (by the way, polls, especially among young people are more pro-life now than at any time since Roe v. Wade—so much for inevitability). As we abandon one moral issue should we prepare to abandon others?

I daresay that among those who would encourage us to embrace and cherish the moral conscience represented by social conservatives are Dred Scott, Martin Luther King, Jr., George Washington, and Ronald Reagan. I’ll stand with them. I hope the Republican Party does the same.

Gene Wisdom is an Alabama native but has lived in the Nashville area since 2007. He, his wife Vicki, and their dog Savannah live near Nolensville. Gene is a conservative activist and leads the Conservative Fusion Book Club.

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Rep Bill Dunn: Pre-K is like paying $1,000 for a McDonald’s hamburger

Press release from state Rep. Bill Dunn - Last week, researchers at Nashville’s Vanderbilt University released findings of their 2013 pre-kindergarten study – a research effort dedicated to detailing the effects of pre-kindergarten on the long-term academic success of Tennessee students.

The findings show that by the end of kindergarten “the differences between participants and non-participants were no longer statistically significant”, except in one case where the children who did not attend Pre-K actually outperformed those who did.

“Tennesseans were told that Pre-K would increase graduation rates and even prevent 80 murders and 6,400 aggravated assaults each year,” said State Representative Bill Dunn (R–Knoxville), citing Pre-K advocate literature. “I truly hope people will recognize this was all very expensive hype.”
According to estimates, the total cost of implementing a full-scale Pre-K program in Tennessee would exceed $460 million per year.

“If you do a cost-benefit analysis on this extremely expensive program, you will come to the conclusion that it is like paying $1,000 for a McDonald’s hamburger,” Dunn continued. “It may make an initial dent on your hunger, but it doesn’t last long and you soon realize you could have done a lot more with the money spent.”

Instead, Dunn called for shifting resources to places that have shown to have a real impact on students, like having a great teacher in front of every classroom.

“Our teachers have stepped up with the new educational reforms that have been initiated and have shown improvement on annual test scores for three years in a row. For all of this hard work, I think they should be rewarded,” concluded Dunn.

Bill Dunn of Knoxville represents District 16.

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Thursday, August 08, 2013

Current Pre-K Funding Staying Where it Is, Haslam Says

The Governor is not going to propose a cut to pre-K funding but neither is he going to increase it, even though the Federal Government would pick up most of the tab. I agree with his decision. See: Current Pre-K Funding Staying Where it Is, Haslam Says.

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TN Congressman Blackburn Says Its Worth Debating A Government Shutdown To Stop Obamacare


TN Congressman Blackburn Says Its Worth Debating A Government Shutdown To Stop Obamacare

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Tennessee Same-sex couples asks for marriage license

In case you missed it:
Same-sex couples in at least three Tennessee counties tried to get marriage licenses Wednesday, striding into county clerks’ offices, well lit by camera flashes as they made state history. (link)

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Americans for Prosperity is coming to Tennessee.

In case you missed it, Americans for Prosperity is coming to Tennessee. AFP is an organization started by billionaire industrialist Charles and David Koch. It is "committed to educating citizens about economic policy and mobilizing those citizens as advocates in the public policy process."  Americans for Prosperity consists of two separate entities: Americans for Prosperity, a 501(c)(4) organization established in 2004, and the Americans for Prosperity Foundation, a 501(c)(3) organization established in 1984.

AFP calls itself the "nation’s leading grassroots organization." On the Americans for Prosperity Tennessee Facebook page they say, "We are a statewide grassroots organization of 20,000 members." I knew of AFP as a national organization but had never heard of a state chapter until reading about it in the Tennessean and am surprised to learn they already have 20,000 members.

The Tennessee Chapter, as reported my Michael Cass in the Tennessean, will focus on issues including school choice and the estate tax while working to educate residents "on the benefits of economic freedom rather than top-down control." Andrew Ogles, a former deputy director of Newt Gingrich's 2012 presidential campaign and former President & COO of Abolition International, an organization dedicated to eradicating Sex Trafficking. He is a graduate of MTSU and Vanderbilt University's Owen Graduate School of Management.

I guess we should be pleased that the conservative movement is being strengthened in Tennessee, however, I am not so sure there was a niche that needed filled. Our state is as about as red as you can get except for our own little island of blue in Davidson County and another island of blue in Shelby County. We have both houses of the state legislature with a walk-out proof super majority, a Republican governor, both Senators, and seven of nine of the  U.S representatives. We are the state with the lowest state debt per person in the country, and we have no state income tax and are in no danger of getting one and we have positive economic growth and a business-friendly environment. We have made considerable progress in school choice and reducing the estate tax.  These efforts are slatted to continue.  We already have numerous real grassroots tea party and other grassroots conservative groups. We have Republican Assembly,  Tennessee Eagle Forum, 9-12ers, pro-second amendment groups and pro-life groups and numerous other conservative advocacy and economic education groups. 

One of the groups that has been doing the most to educate the public and our state legislators and to advance school choice policy and a phrase out of the estate tax, policies which AFP say will be their focus, is The Beacon Center. It is none of my business how the Koch brothers want to spend their money, and I have already "liked" AFP on Facebook and will no doubt become a member, but I wonder if the money spend establishing a new group in Tennessee would have not been better spend in a blue state and making contributions to existing groups here in Tennessee, such as The Beacon Center.

Do we really need one more group? Will it grow the corp of conservative activist or simply compete for people who are already involved.

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Wednesday, August 07, 2013

Conference Call on Text Book Review Task Force tonight

This is late notice, I know but I just now opened an email from Bobby Patray of Tennessee Eagle Forum: YOU are needed to help review textbooks:
Conference Call on Text Book Review Task Force
Wednesday, September 7, 2013
Time: 7pm Central, 8pm EST
Number: 209-647-1600 Pin: 915138#

More on the opportunity to review text books will follow. 

I hope conservative, educated, and rational people will join in the text book review process. We need to critic textbooks and expose obvious liberal basis. As became clear in a recent state hearing on the text book review process, those given the job of reviewing textbook do not have adequate time to properly do their assigned duties. With hundreds of books to review and limited time to review them, some text books get no more than a cursory skimming.

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Council Meeting of Aug. 6 with video and commentary





This council meeting is only 45 minutes long. When everyone thinks just alike and almost nothing gets discussed, you can have some short meetings. The Council meeting could even be shorter if everything was put on a consent agenda. The whole agenda could be passes by a single vote. To see what was on the agenda and to see the analysis follow this link.

Proposed rule change: Councilman Duvall had proposed a Council rule change. The Rule Committee recommended against it and Duvall withdrew it. I do not know what the rule change was. The rules by which the Council operates can sometimes be important.

Confirmation of Appointment: There was only three, two pass and one is deferred one meeting. The Council never takes its responsibility of confirming appointments seriously and never questions the Mayors appointments.

Bills on Public hearings: The public hearings were without controversy. No one wanted to speak on any of the zoning bills.

Resolutions on the Consent Agenda: 
Only one resolution is pulled. from the consent agenda and  bills that pass on the consent agenda  includes the three bills to finalize the $14 million hockey ring at the old Hickory Hollow mall. I am very disappointing that no one thought this was a luxury we could not afford. (For more on this see here.)


Other Resolutions not on the Consent Agenda do not appear controversial. One is deferred indefinitely without explanation and Councilman Tennpenny defers a bill for one meeting because it concerns a project in his district and he was not notified of the bill prior to it being introduced. Councilman Tennpenny was right to have this bill deferred. Even is something is non-controversial, if it effects development in a particular council district, the district councilman should be informed and should be invited to sponsor he bill. The administration should not take council members for granted and ignore them. 

Bills on First Reading:
It is customary for bills on first reading to all pass as a group and not be discussed but a Councilman can vote against a bill or take other legislative action if they wish.

Councilman Scott Davis moves for a one meeting deferral of  BILL NO. BL2013-513 and BILL NO. BL2013-514. He along with Councilman Karen Bennett is a sponsor of the bills. These bills would establish the Gallatin Pike Urban Design Overlay on properties from the river to Briley Parkway. The desire of planners is to have fewer pawn shops and pay day lenders along this stretch of road, to have new building built to the sidewalk ,and to have parking in the rear of buildings.  These bills are being rushed to replace the Gallatin Road Specific Plan which did almost the same but which the Tennessee Court of Appeals ruled was invalid because it did not comply with the provision of the law that allows Specific Plans. (To read about that decision, follow this link.)

While I share the desire of planners and many residents of east Nashville for fewer pawn shops and check cashing places and while if I lived in east Nashville, I too would want it to look like Hillsboro Village, you can't mandate that. Hoping to spur a different kind of development the city has spend million on new sidewalks and streetscape, but it is still an ugly street with pawn shops and payday lenders. You just can't ignore economics.  All the good plans in the world do not come to fruition if no one wants to build the way the planners dream. The result of the overlay has been that east Nashville does not have a grocery store.  A developer of a grocery store does not want to build up to the sidewalk on Gallatin Road. While they will build a Harris Teeter up to the sidewalk on Belmont Boulevard, they will not do so on Gallatin Rd. Planning can guide development if it doesn't get too far ahead of what investors are willing  to do. (For more, read: Randy Parham:  Gallatin Pike design overlay has stifled development)

There was a machine vote on the motion to defer one meeting. I am disappointing that some of the "good" council members did not support the motion to defer.  To see how they voted go to 33.57 in the video. 

BILL NO. BL2013-517 passed first reading. This is very bad bill that would establish a a permanent contractor minority set aside program for any project involving metro "participation."  For more on this bills follow this link.

Bills on Second Reading: They all pass without discussion.

Bills on Third Reading: There is no discussion or controversy.

The bill  that had previously generated some opposition that would rezone some property in Antioch to allow an asphalt plant (ORDINANCE NO. BL2012-103.) was deferred one meeting by the sponsor.

The rezoning of property in Woodbine that would allow a tire recapper to expand his business and use what is now a residential zoned property for parking (ORDINANCE NO. BL2013-353) was deferred two meetings by the sponsor.

Below is The Tennessean's report on the council meeting:

Metro finalizes plans for Antioch ice rink

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The Council meeting of Aug. 6th 2013





This council meeting is only 45 minutes long. When everyone thinks just alike and almost nothing gets discussed, you can have some short meetings. The Council meeting could even be shorter if everything was put on a consent agenda. The whole agenda could be passes by a single vote. To see what was on the agenda and to see the analysis follow this link.

Proposed rule change: Councilman Duvall had proposed a Council rule change. The Rule Committee recommended against it and Duvall withdrew it. I do not know what the rule change was. The rules by which the Council operates can sometimes be important.


Confirmation of Appointment: There was only three, two pass and one is deferred one meeting. The Council never takes its responsibility of confirming appointments seriously and never questions the Mayors appointments.

Bills on Public hearings: (this blog post to be completed later today.)

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Council gives final approval for $14 million Ice rink

Last night the Metro Council tied up the loose ends and finalized the deal to spend $14 million dollars for a new hockey facility located at the old Hickory Hollow mall, now known as the Global Mall. The three bills finalizing the deal passed unanimously.

Yes, it passed unanimously. Think about your favorite Republican council member.  Who is it? He or she voted for this. I am very disappointed that all forty members agree that this is a great deal.  I am disappointed that not a single council members said, "wait a minute, can we afford this?" 

I was pleased when we elected eight or nine Republicans to the Council and another person who although I suspect is a Democrat, I thought would be conservative on fiscal matters. I attended their fund raisers and supported their candidacy. As it turns out, the "conservatives" on the council only rarely vote different than the progressives.  Now, most things the Council votes on are matter in which there is not a liberal-conservative divide, but when there are, there might as well not be.  The "conservatives" on the Council vote for minimum price fixing for limousine services, they vote to confirm members to the Human Relations Commission who approve of Metro's promotion of youth homosexuality, they vote to urge the EPA to aggressively pursue strenuous enforcement of an arbitrarily established CO2 limits that was established without congressional approval, they vote to praise young people who take part in pro gay activism, and most of them failed to support an alternative budget which would not have raised taxes.  I expected a loyal opposition to develop that would represent a segment of our community that is conservative. As it has turned out, I see no benefit to having Republicans on the metro Council.

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Tuesday, August 06, 2013

Father Breen praises Vandy for hiring lesbian "womonist" to head theology department.

In case you missed it:

A couple days ago Father Joseph Breen, the long-time pastor of St. Edwards Catholic Church, wrote an article in the Tennessean praising Vanderbilt University  for hiring lesbian "womonist" theologian  Emilie M. Townes. Father Breen said, "We are fortunate to have an individual bearing all these “labels,” a female, African-American, homosexual, join our Nashville community in a prestigious position with Vanderbilt University."  He went on to say, "We are fortunate to live in a city with Vanderbilt University, an institution willing to lead society in the right direction."  I guess according to Father Breen, leading society in the  "right direction" is hiring an openly  practicing homosexual to lead the theology department.

I guess I should not be surprised that Vanderbilt hired someone like Emily Townes to head the theology department. Last year Vandy ruled that campus Christian organizations could not require their members or leaders to agree with the groups’ core religious beliefs.  The University abandoned its long tradition of religious tolerance, forcing the groups into adopting moral viewpoints contrary to thousands of years of Judeo-Christian teaching. This new policy of religious intolerance is being justified in the name of "diversity."  Like many liberals and liberal institutions and governments, "diversity" is the new religion. Vanderbilt should quit issuing Doctorates of Divinity and instead just issue Doctorates of Diversity.

Lesbian homosexual activist Emilie M. Townes, a distinguished Yale University scholar whose areas of expertise include Christian ethics and "womanist theology,"  was named dean of Vanderbilt University Divinity School, effective July 1, 2013. Womanist theology "is a religious conceptual framework which reconsiders and revises the traditions, practices, scriptures, and biblical interpretation with a special lens to empower and liberate African American women in America."  (link) As far as I can determine Womanist theology is blend of   Feminist theology , Black theology, and liberation theology.  

Townes is the author of Womanist Ethics and the Cultural Production of Evil and she pastored United Faith Affinitas, a Black LGBT  (Lesbian, Gay, Bi-sexual, Transgendered) congregation in Chicago. She is also a blogger at The Huffington Post. She recently wed her same sex partner in Connecticut.





Father Breen has often taken positions contrary to Church teachings on such issues  as those against divorce, contraception, women's ordination, and the married priesthood. He has been disciplined by the Church several times. Over the years he has supported many liberal causes, most recently leading a pro gun control moment in Nashville.



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Which issues should get the most attention as we plan for our community's future?

Over the last several months, NanshvilleNext received over nine thousand ideas for Nashville’s future – and they are now starting to narrow those down into a list of broad values which will anchor the rest of the planning process.

NashvilleNext wants your help in selecting the most important issues raised in the first round of public input.  They have developed a short survey which asks you to name your five top priorities. 
 
Take the survey

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Monday, August 05, 2013

UPdate: What's on the Council Agenda for August 6 with analysis and summary

You can get your own copy of the Metro council meeting agenda at this link: Metro Council Agenda.The Council staff analysis is not yet posted. When it is I will post the link to it and update this post. You can get your copy of the Council staff analysis at this link: Staff Analysis.  Council meetings can be really, really boring if you don't know what the Council is voting on. With an agenda and analysis, they are just boring. Updates are highlighted.

Confirmation of Appointment
There are only three appointees to Boards and Commission on the agenda, but it wouldn't matter if there were fifty, because our rubber-stamp Council would unanimously approve them all anyway. The Council never turns down a Mayor's appointee and the Council never examines the appointee's qualifications or questions their views.

Bills on public hearing. There are nine bills on public hearing and they are all local zoning bills and not of general interest.  

Resolutions on the Consent Agenda:

There are twenty-one resolutions, all of which are on the consent agenda at this time.
A resolution is put on the consent agenda if it is likely to be non-controversial and it stays on the consent agenda if it passes the committees to which it was assigned unanimously. Bills on the consent agenda are usually not controversial and tend to be routine matters, such as accepting grants from the Federal or State Government or authorizing the Department of Law to settle claims against the city or appropriating money from the 4% fund. Resolutions on the consent agenda are passed by a single vote of the Council rather than being considered individually. However, any member of the body may have a bill pulled off of the consent agenda but I don't expect that to happen. Some really terrible stuff slips though on the consent agenda sometimes. I don't see any think I would expect to be pulled. Here are some of the more interesting items.
  • RESOLUTION NO. RS2013-787 approves the Ice Rink Intergovernmental Agreement. This is part of the plan to indebt the city to the tune of $15 million in order to build a hockey rink at the site of the failed Hickory Hollow mall, now know as  global Mall. Last council meeting the Council approved the funding, without objection. I question if we can afford this.  Next time we are facing a tax increase, know that this expenditure passed without opposition. 
  • RESOLUTION NO. RS2013-800 accepts some incomplete infrastructure. Normally, when a developer builds or expands a subdivision, he builds the sewers, roads, storm sewers, sidewalks, curbs and gutters then gives those to Metro. He must put up a bond to assure he completes the plan as approved.With the housing downturn, some developers went bust and infrastructure was never completed.I think the city is right to accept it and take responsibility for completing it. I hope the city has increased the bonding requirement however, so we are not left holding the bag in the future. I don't know if we have or not.
  • Resolution RS2013-804 authorized the city to pay up to $50,000 to settle a lawsuit brought by Les "Bud" Buckner, an employee of the Water Department. He sued the city for maintaining a hostile work environment.  He was allegedly the target of anti-gay graffiti which had been scrawled in vehicle bays and other places at his place of work. Know one knows who did it, so no one has been punished. As a result of this, Water department employees are going to have to go through training on how to avoid creating a hostile work environment.
Bills on First reading.
Bills on First reading almost always pass. They are considered as a group and are seldom discussed. First reading is a formality that allows the bill to be considered. Bills are not assigned to committee or analyzed by council staff until after they have passed first reading.I have not carefully reviewed all the bills on first reading, but will before second reading. There are ten bills on first reading. I do not fault anyone for letting a bad bill get on the agenda, so I don't criticize someone for votes cast on first reading. One bill on first reading, that needs to be defeated now or when it gets to second reading is BILL NO. BL2013-517 which establishes a permanent minority set aside program for any project involving metro "participation."

Bills on Second Reading:
It is on Second reading, after bills have been to committee, that discussion usually takes place. There are only five bills on second reading. None of them seem terribly important.

Bills on Third Reading: Third Reading is the final reading. If a bill passes third reading it becomes law unless it is vetoed by the Mayor, which has only rarely happened. There are fourteen bills on third reading and I don't expect any of them to generate controversy.

  • There are a couple zoning bills that generated some opposition in the past. One rezones some property in Antioch to allow an asphalt plant . (ORDINANCE NO. BL2012-103.) This bill was first introduced in Feb. 2012 and was deferred for months.
  • Another bill is one in Woodbine that would allow a tire recapper to expand his business and use what is now a residential zoned property for parking. (ORDINANCE NO. BL2013-353). This was a bill that was disapproved by the Planning Commission.
  • SUBSTITUTE BILL NO.BL2013-476 makes it easier to "boot" your car and raises the fee booting companies can charge.

There are two memorializing resolutions.
Memorializing resolutions are usually not controversial and these are not. The memorializing resolutions will become part of the consent agenda.

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Alexander Joins With Town Seeking To Continue Public Prayers At meetings.

Alexander Joins With Town Seeking To Continue Public Prayers At meetings.

The Chattanoogan,  Monday, August 05, 2013 - Senator Lamar Alexander has joined an amicus brief in the U.S. Supreme Court regarding a case involving prayer prior to a town meeting.  The case is the Town of Greece v. Galloway case, in which the right of a town to start its board meetings with prayer is at issue.(link)

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Sunday, August 04, 2013

Brenda Lenard explains the basis of charges against her

To be fair, I do not know the truth of the story of the record of Brenda Lenard. In a news story, which I linked to and reported as a "claim," it was reported that Lenard had been guilty of cashing bad checks and guilty of "abusive filing" of bankruptcies. In this news story published in the Murfreesboro Post she explains the basis of those charges and says "she has requested the slanderous articles to be retracted but it hasn’t happened."  I wish someone would pull the court records and get to the bottom of this.

Brenda Lenard is running against Lamar Alexander in the Republican primary for the Party's nomination for U. S. Senator. Tea party activist and libertarian-Republicans have been clamoring for a primary challenger to Alexander and have found no candidate of stature and experience to step forward. Lenard is one of three possible challengers, none of which would likely be able to mount a credible challenge to Alexander.

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The Tennessean's Frank Daniels questions judgement of Amy Frogge, Gupta, and Pinkston

The Gupta-Pinkston Facebook rumble is in the news again.  

Frank Daniels recounts the Gupta-Pinkston Facebook exchange in today's Tennessean. He says, "the most egregious back-to-school behavior was exhibited by Nashville Prep charter school founder Ravi Gupta and Metro school board member Will Pinkston, who exhibited classically inappropriate social media etiquette last weekend in a Facebook flame war over Gupta’s comments on Metro school board member Amy Frogge’s Facebook post lambasting a segment of the school reform movement with which she disagrees."

If you want to read the embarrassing Facebook exchanges in which Gupta and Pinkston call each other drunks and questions each others integrity and read where Pinkson challenges Gupta's right to express an opinion because he is not a school board member and was not elected, read my previous post here

In today's article Daniels says, "When three of our most intelligent and committed leaders are so quick to judge one another’s opinions and motivations, we see clearly the challenges facing efforts to improve outcomes for our community’s children." He is right. We do have challenges facing the effort to improve outcomes for our community's children. I would not agree however that Amy Frogge is one of most intelligent community leaders. If I was selecting the worst school board member, it would be Amy Frogge.

I was actually surprised to see Pinkston behave the way he did in his Facebook exchange.  I watch every school board meeting and have actually thought that Pinkston was one of the better school board members.  It is not that I always agree with him, but he seems smart, informed, cautious and rational. I don't know what motivated Pinkson to take such offense at Gupta's modest criticism of Frogge's attack on charter schools. Maybe both he and Gupta were facebooking while enjoying a late night adult beverage and dropped their inhibitions.


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