Browsing Posts published by Michael

The Spring 2011 Primary Election will be held on Tuesday, February 15. There are 16 candidates running for 4 different offices that affect us in Little Chute. The offices include a Justice of the Wisconsin Supreme Court, the Outagamie County Executive, Outagamie County Clerk (the only Partisan race) and Little Chute Village President.

There’s a podcast of the County Executive Candidates Forum that you can listen to on your computer. And, we will soon have the podcast available for the County Clerk Candidates as well.

Background information on the Primary can be found in the 2011 Spring Primary entry in the Information Center. Or you can jump directly to the Primary Candidate Summary Tables or Candidate Contact Information to find out specific information about the candidates.

Also, the Candidate Interviews for Village President and County Executive are complete, and will be available as podcasts in the next 24 hours.

So, stay tuned for more Primary information, coming soon !!!

 

 

Michael

 

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Well, the 2010 fall elections have come and gone. We’ve had a landslide victory for Republicans in the US House, and the Democrats have decisively lost their filibuster-proof majority in the US Senate. Similarly, Wisconsin now has a Republican Governor, and Republican majorities in the Assembly and State Senate. And Wisconsin’s change from Democrat to Republican control was reflected to varying degrees in other states across the country, as well.

OK. So what does all this mean for, like, Little Chute and the Fox Valley? Good question. Without a really clear answer yet. But I’ve got a few preliminary observations anyway.

From where I sit, the clear message of this election is about financial discipline. Yes, I know, there were other issues in Washington as well, like a deluge of earmarks and pork and the government bailout of GM and investment banks and the failure of Fannie-Mae/Freddie-Mac and a Health-care bill that topped two thousand pages of one-liner changes to the US code. And there were similar issues in Madison too. Fair enough. But we’ve seen this kind of thing coming from both parties in recent years, to one degree or another.

But the financial soft-headedness of the current administration and of many in the Democrat party seemed to resonate with an awful lot of voters this year. In order to carry out the agenda favored by President Obama and the current Congress, an unimaginable amount of money has recently been borrowed, or will be borrowed, by the US government. And borrowed from countries that don’t always have our national interests at heart. The increased debt and profligate spending that’s the hallmark of this administration is unsustainable without eventual tax hikes, substantial inflation, or both. And tax hikes and inflation, or even the prospect of future tax hikes and inflation, may well turn our anemic economic recovery into a much deeper recession.

On the other hand, our newly empowered Republican legislators have yet to transition from campaigning to actually governing. The challenges facing our state and our nation are quite difficult, and in some cases are very hard to see clearly. The new legislators are going to face a political minefield of competing philosophies and principles when they begin their terms in January. And many of them are new to the job, so they’ll have to learn the ropes while going into battle. Not an enviable situation for them.

In the coming months, we’ll get a closer look at the new Republican agendas in Madison and Washington. If the implementation of the new Republican agenda is found wanting, I’m convinced that voters will not be amused. If the new Republican leadership begins to favor rhetoric over the values and principles that we all cherish, I doubt the voters will be swayed.

And I’ve already caught whiffs of some Republicans going back to the old incompetent, hard-hearted, ideological mindlessness that got so many Republicans voted out of office in the past decade. Americans seem to be in a reform-minded mood, right now. And I suspect that this desire to reform what doesn’t work in the political arena will continue unabated for years to come. So the clock is already ticking for our newly elected legislators. We’ll just have to stay tuned, to see what actually develops in Washington and Madison in the months ahead.

Meanwhile, our local election cycle is beginning once again. We elect part of our Village leadership every year in the spring. December 1st (tomorrow) is the first day that candidates can start collecting signatures to place their names on the ballot. So hopefully, we’ll be hearing from a number of people who want to run for office, who want to make Little Chute a better place to live, work and play.

Michael

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The Fall 2010 General Election…

…will be held on Tuesday, November 2nd. There are 30 candidates running for 16 different offices that affect us in Little Chute. There is also a referendum question on the ballot.

I’ve put together some aids for busy folks who want to find out more about the candidates.

First of all, for all you Steve Kagen supporters, and also for all you Reid Ribble supporters: the Kagen-Ribble debate from last Wednesday (10/27) is available online. It can be “streamed” directly to your computer, or you can download the debate and listen later or put it on your digital music player. The whole debate lasts slightly over an hour. You should be able to listen to the “streamed” version even on a dial-up connection. Of course if you have fast broadband internet service (like DSL or cable), the streamed version will just fly !

The debate is interesting, clearly showing where each candidate is coming from, in my opinion. And there’s some surprising agreement in a few areas between the two candidates. Like agreeing that price-transparency in medical services is a good thing. Steve Kagen told the audience on Wednesday that he has a “transparency” bill already in the works, and it’s a bi-partisan effort. He would like to see an internet-based system that works on your cell-phone, that shows you what the price for your medication is – before you buy it – and where it’s the least expensive. Reid Ribble then quipped that he would be “happy to advance” Steve Kagen’s bill in January, when he (Reid) gets to Washington… well, I thought it was a funny remark… Anyway, I didn’t expect to hear something in the debate that the two candidates thoroughly agreed on.   Interesting.

I’ve also built a Candidates Information Page in the Info-Center. This is like the page I put together for the Primaries, with the names of all the candidates and the offices they are running for, and then their website, contact information and such. If you want to find out about the views and promises that several candidates have made, FAST, then you MUST take a look at this web-page first. With just a few clicks, you can usually get right to the web page of the candidate you’re interested in.

There are links to the Recorded Debate and to the Candidates Information Page, and some additional helpful stuff on the Fall 2010 General Election page in the info-center. Like where you vote on Tuesday based on your street address. And links to sample ballots, and the text of the referendum that’s on the ballot.

So, please take a look at the voter information we’ve got on the LittleChuteMatters.org website.

And don’t forget to vote on Tuesday, November 2nd !

Michael

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Don’t forget the 29th annual Kermis and the 5K run-walk !

The Kermis Dutch Festival is Friday, September 17 from 4pm to Midnight and Saturday, September 18 from 10am to 10pm.  The location is Legion park, next to the Little Chute Elementary School, and the Fox Valley Metro Police Department.  The proceeds benefit the community, local organizations and businesses and the Little Chute Windmill project.  There are over 30 sponsors of the Kermis this year.

Friday attractions include:

  • Arts and Crafts Vendors, 4:30-8pm.
  • Wooden Shoe Carver (Dutch Clog Carving by Sieg and his assistant Luke), 4:30-7pm.
  • Food and Beer (Haven of Hope Friday Night Fish Fry indoor/outdoor and Kermis Korn Roast), 4:30-8pm.
  • Dunk Tank, 4:30-8pm.
  • A-Town Unplugged (A local band playing acoustic music), 4:30-8pm.
  • 1st Degree (A local band playing a variety of music; the Official Band of the Timber Rattlers), 8pm-midnight.

 

Saturday attractions include:

  • Volks(op)loop 5K Run/Walk (late registration is at 8am, Vandeloop Shoes and New Balance Fox Valley), 9am.
  • Pannenkoek Breakfast (Pancakes and Sausage breakfast, Hearts of the Valley Senior Service Club), 8am-11am.
  • Arts and Crafts Vendors, 10am-7pm.
  • Wooden Shoe Carver, 9am-5pm (Dutch Clog Carving by Sieg and his assistant Luke).
  • Food and Beer (St. John Spranferke/pig-roast, Kermis Korn Roast and more), 10am-10pm.
  • Face Painting (Little Chute Arts Club), 10am-6pm.
  • Kid’s Games (Little Chute High School Key Club), 11am-2pm.
  • Inflatables from Wild-Air! (bounce house and obstacle course), 11am-4pm.
  • Dunk Tank (Dunk the Village Trustees, LCASD teachers and Faculty and more !), 11am-8pm.
  • Klompen Dansers (local Dutch clog dancers), 11am and 1:15pm.

 

The 5k walk/run has late-registration at 8am on Saturday, September 18 and will begin at 9am.  The walk/run is sponsored by  Vanderloop shoes and New Balance Fox Valley.  This event will benefit the Little Chute Windmill Project.

Michael
 

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Tuesday, September 14th is Primary Election day in Little Chute and throughout Wisconsin. The polls are open from 7 a.m. to 8 p.m.

There are 49 candidates running for 12 different offices that affect us in Little Chute. The offices include the Governor and Lieutenant Governor, the Attorney General, Secretary of State and State Treasurer, State Senate and State Assembly, and the US Senate and US House of Representatives.

To help make sense out of this wealth of candidates, there’s now an online report on the candidates in the Info-Center. Since the Primaries are Partisan, we can only vote for candidates from a single party. The Candidates by Party report shows all of the candidates by party. The report is broken down into tables as follows:

 

The only candidate interview completed at this time, is with Craig Fletcher (read the interview or visit his website). Craig is running in the Republican Primary for a seat on the Wisconsin Assembly, District 5 (northern part of Little Chute) against Jim Steineke (visit his website) and David Landwehr (visit his website).

The other contested races can be compared by reading the Candidates by Party report, which has links to the candidate’s websites. You can also click on one of the Party links above, which will take you directly to that Party’s table.

There is also a Candidates Contact information page that has the names, offices, addresses and most websites, email addresses and phone numbers for the Primary candidates.
 

Michael
 

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