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The Ohio Project

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Early Voting in Ohio and the Country Underway

By NANCY BENAC and LIZ SIDOTI – MyWay

While it’s impossible to tell for whom people are voting, Democrats so far are casting ballots at a faster clip than Republicans in Iowa, Maryland, North Carolina and Nevada’s heavily Democratic Clark County, which supplied two-thirds of the state’s voters in 2008.

Republicans are flexing their organizational muscles and leading the pace in Florida, even though Democrats have the edge in registered voters there, and in Colorado. The parties are running about even so far in Maine.

Ohio’s early voting trends reflect the state’s swing-voting status: Democrats are ahead in the party stronghold of Cuyahoga County around Cleveland, while Republicans lead in GOP territory of Hamilton County, which is home to Cincinnati. Ballots are virtually even in Franklin County, which anchors fickle central Ohio.

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President Obama's Cleveland speech billed as retort

Obama and BoehnerBy GLENN THRUSH

Talk about elevating the Tan Man.

President Obama – who made House Minority Leader John Boehner (R-Ohio) the butt of numerous tanning-booth jokes – will deliver a major economic address in Cleveland next week in part because that’s where Boehner made his big address last month.

“Speaking in the city where Minority Leader Boehner recently detailed the Republican economic agenda, the President will lay out the choice between his ideas and the failed policies and failed philosophy that led us into this mess,” White House communications director Dan Pfeiffer wrote in a blog post.

White House press secretary Robert Gibbs followed with a Twitter message linking to Pfeiffer’s post: “POTUS goes to where Boehner spoke to show choice btwn his ideas & their failed philosophy that got us into this mess.”
Boehner spokesman Michael Steel wasn’t impressed: “The President’s staff seems to have missed the point: the American people don’t necessarily want him to go to Cleveland, they want him to end the spending spree, stop the tax hikes, and create jobs,” he wrote in an email to POLITICO late Friday.

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High-tech carts will tell on Cleveland residents who don't recycle ... and they face $100 fine

Mark Gillispie, The Plain Dealer
CLEVELAND, Ohio — It would be a stretch to say that Big Brother will hang out in Clevelanders’ trash cans, but the city plans to sort through curbside trash to make sure residents are recycling — and fine them $100 if they don’t.

The move is part of a high-tech collection system the city will roll out next year with new trash and recycling carts embedded with radio frequency identification chips and bar codes.

The chips will allow city workers to monitor how often residents roll carts to the curb for collection. If a chip show a recyclable cart hasn’t been brought to the curb in weeks, a trash supervisor will sort through the trash for recyclables.

Trash carts containing more than 10 percent recyclable material could lead to a $100 fine, according to Waste Collection Commissioner Ronnie Owens. Recyclables include glass, metal cans, plastic bottles, paper and cardboard.

City Council on Wednesday approved spending $2.5 million on high-tech carts for 25,000 households across the city, expanding a pilot program that began in 2007 with 15,000 households.

The expansion will continue at 25,000 households a year until nearly all of the city’s 150,000 residences are included. Existing carts might be retrofitted with the microchips.

“We’re trying to automate our system to be a more efficient operation,” Owens said. “This chip will assist us in doing our job better.”

The chip-embedded carts are just starting to catch on elsewhere. The Washington, D.C. suburb of Alexandria, Va., earlier this year announced it would issue carts to check whether people are recycling.

Some cities in England have used the high-tech trash carts for several years to weigh how much garbage people throw out. People are charged extra for exceeding allotted limits.

Cleveland officials want to automate nearly all residential waste collection under a program being financed in part by a new fee that went into effect earlier this year.

The automated trucks allow drivers to remain in the cab and empty carts using a remote-control arm. Cleveland owns three of these trucks and plans to buy nine more.

Recycling is good for the environment and the city’s bottom line, officials said. Cleveland pays $30 a ton to dump garbage in landfills, but earns $26 a ton for recyclables.

The city last year sent 220,000 tons of garbage to landfills and collected 5,800 tons of recyclables.

City Council approved updated trash collection ordinances last month to include a section on automated waste collection and curbside recycling. The new law changes infractions of the law from a minor misdemeanor to a civil penalty. The recycling law only applies to residents who have been issued the carts.

The new law also prohibits people from setting out excessive amounts of trash on tree lawns, which officials say has been an ongoing problem. Fines for excessive trash will range from $250 to $500 depending on the amount.

In either case, the property owner receives the citation. Landlords are responsible for making sure their tenants follow the law.

Owens said Cleveland will conduct a public-service campaign to educate residents about the new collection system and recycling program.

The city stepped up enforcement of ordinances governing trash collection last year by issuing 2,900 tickets, nearly five times more tickets than in 2008. Those infractions include citations for people who put out their trash too early or fail to bring in their garbage cans from the curb in a timely manner.

The Division of Waste Collection is on track to meet its goal of issuing 4,000 citations this year, Owens said.

“We’re trying to make sure Cleveland stays clean and residents are properly informed on how these things should be set out,” he said. “By issuing these tickets, it’s helping us change the attitude or perception on how things should be set out.”

Councilman Martin Keane, who represents the West Park neighborhood, said he would prefer that the Division of Waste Collection use more discretion when deciding whether to issue a ticket. A warning in many instances would suffice, he said.

“Everybody knows the ones who blatantly disregards the law,” Keane said. “Those are the people we should hit with a $100 ticket.”

Original article found at http://blog.cleveland.com/metro/2010/08/city_of_cleveland_to_use_high-.html

Lessons From LeBron: What Clevelanders Should Really Be Pissed About

LeBron James has decided to move to Florida and play for the Miami Heat rather than bear another season with the Cavaliers.

Everybody is piling on: How could a dude with a tattoo of the word loyalty on his chest abandon “the mistake on the lake?”

But LeBron is only doing what more than half of Cleveland’s population has done over the in the last 60 years: Getting the hell out of the place.

He didn’t leave because of money, though some analyses show that he can take home more in pay in Florida despite a lower salary. Ohio used to be one of the lowest-tax states in the country. Now it’s one of the highest.

That’s what Clevelanders should be outraged about. Their economy has enough to deal with already without being put in a full court press by high taxes.

Cleveland needs to get rid of its savior complex. LeBron James could never have saved Cleveland–no single sports star or entrepreneur or bailout can–but there are definite, proven steps that any city can take to improve
life for its citizens.

Reason.tv highlighted a whole host of possible steps in our series “Reason Saves Cleveland” available at www.reason.tv.

“Don’t Blame LeBron” was produced by Dan Hayes and Nick Gillespie. Production Assistant Joshua Swain.

Grant to help convert old tires into crude oil for Cleveland company

A Cleveland company, Vadxx Energy, is receiving a $75,000 grant to made synthetic crude oil in Akron…. Read more.

Amid cuts, Ohio judge tells citizens to carry guns

Ohio Conceal CarryBy THOMAS J. SHEERAN, Associated Press Writer

CLEVELAND – One judge’s solution for citizens feeling less secure because of budget cuts in an Ohio county: Carry a gun.

Judge Alfred Mackey of Ashtabula County Common Pleas Court advised residents Friday to be vigilant and arm themselves because the number of deputies has been cut about in half because of a tight budget. He also urged neighbors to organize anti-crime block watch groups.

“They have to be law-abiding, and if they are not familiar with firearms they need to take a safety course so they are not a threat to their family and friends and themselves,” Mackey said Friday.

Mackey, whose comments were first broadcast Thursday by WKYC-TV in Cleveland, was expressing concerns with budget cuts that have trimmed the sheriff’s department from 112 to 49 deputies in the county, which is Ohio’s largest by land area.

Asked by WKYC how people should respond to the cuts and limited patrols, he said, “Arm themselves. Be very careful and just be vigilant because we’re going to have to look after each other.”

Andrew Pollis, who teaches law at Case Western Reserve University in Cleveland, saw the original TV clip of Mackey and said it was clear the judge wasn’t advocating vigilantism.

Still, Pollis said, snippets of the comments could be misunderstood “as a license, if you will, to engage in conduct which we as a society collectively would not want.”

In Akron, Summit County Common Pleas Judge Patricia Cosgrove, president-elect of the Ohio Common Pleas Judges Association, said she was surprised by Mackey’s suggestion.

“That’s scary to me,” she said. “I don’t know what the situation in Ashtabula County is. I personally would never — that’s a personal choice in terms of carrying a weapon.”

With deputies assigned to transport prisoners and serve warrants, only one radio car is assigned to patrol the county of 720 square miles, excluding municipalities with police departments. The sheriff’s patrol area covers most of the county, the judge said Friday.

Mackey said the response to his comments has been positive in the mostly rural county between Cleveland and Erie, Pa.

“People in this county are hunters,” said Mackey, who grew up on a farm with rifles and still owns firearms. “People have familiarity with firearms.”

Messages seeking comment on the judge’s remarks were left for Sheriff William Johnson and county commissioners.

Johnson has threatened to sue the commissioners to have some of his department’s funding restored.

The jail in the county of about 100,000 people has held as many as 140 prisoners, but the number has dipped to about 30 because of reductions in the guard staff. About 700 people are on a waiting list to serve time in the jail.

Ohio has had a concealed handgun law for five years, and from October to December the Ashtabula County sheriff issued 54 licenses. Twenty-eight licenses were renewed.

Original article found at http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20100409/ap_on_re_us/us_sheriff_s_cutbacks_2

Politics 101 Workshop #2 to be Held in Cleveland

WHAT: Politics 101 Workshop #2
Date: Sunday, January 10, 2010
Time: 3-5pm
Where: Pinnacle Condo lobby, 3rd floor
701 West Lakeside Ave.
Cleveland 44113

This is the second of several workshops to provide some ABCs on how politics in Cleveland and environs, Cuyahoga County, and Ohio are organized. This event is scheduled to give all voters insights into the process of identifying and selecting candidates, or working on issues. It will also provide those brave members who are considering running for office — from local City Council to US representative – valuable information on how to proceed.

There will be three experienced resources as our “seminar leaders” including political strategists Joe Scarola and Ken Rubinstein as well as Cleveland Tea Party patriot Ralph King.

The first session was a real education for all of us. If you missed it, the first 15 minutes of Workshop #2 will recap. Workshops like these are being held all over Ohio to give us the tools and information we need to make a difference.