Tuesday, March 22, 2011

Julio's Charlie Crist Moment?

I thought this was funny enough to post ...

Will the real Fiscal Conservative please stand up?

Unions seem to be the flavor of the month to beat up on, swelling and unsustainable pensions are the topic of conversation in state governments today. So how do the candidates running for Miami-Dade Mayor stack up against being influenced by union bosses? We look first at the PBA. Don't get me wrong Public Safety should be deemed as an important and protected profession. These professionals put their lives on the line daily and should be compensated fairly. However, there are real consequences to governments action, when you increase the personnel cost while your revenue is diminishing how do you make up the difference?

Marcelo Llorente: From his past voting record he seems to be a pro union guy and so far down in the polls that I'm not going to spend any more time.

Julio Robaina: Mayor of Hialeah Julio Robaina seemed to have promise when he confronted all the unions last year but it seems as though he has caved in to the pressure. According to the Miami Herald a couple months ago the Mayor of Hialeah came to an agreement with the Hialeah police department on their new contract. The paper disclosed that by the next 2 years the Hialeah police officers will be restored full benefits that were taken away in the last contract in order to make up the budget shortfall. These benefits amount to a 12% pay raise in the next year’s budget according to the Shark Tank. The only plausible way to cover this pay increase is to raise city property taxes as now former mayor Alvarez attempted to do just before he got recalled. However Mayor Robaina, now running for Dade Mayor, will not have to make that decision since he will not be in Hialeah during the next budget process, how convenient.

Carlos Gimenez: Ok so Round 1 goes to Gimenez. According to the PBA he was voted Miami-Dade's worst commissioner in 2010, when he voted against an 8% pay raise to MDPD in last years budget that was part of the $132 million tax increase and got Mayor Alvarez and Commissioner Seijas recalled.

Sunday, March 20, 2011

Miami-Dade Mayor's Race, let the vetting begin: Robaina pleads No Contest to 10 Counts of Fruad ...

This will surely be a quick election and as a resident of Miami-Dade County we deserve to know the truth about all the candidates running. No one will escape our blogs scrutiny and this time we will hold them accountable on the positions they have taken.








One piece of troubling news is that Hialeah Mayor Julio Robaina continues to tout himself as a respectable businessman; however I stumbled across this case from the State of Florida Department of Business and Professional Regulation in 1994. During this time Mayor Robaina was a real estate broker for Univest Realty and Management Inc. According to this it seems as though he pleaded no contest to 10 counts of fraud.

Friday, January 21, 2011

Former Obama Budget Director: "there may well be US public debt tremors this year"

America must brace itself for turbulence
By Peter Orszag

Published: January 20 2011 22:51 | Last updated: January 20 2011 22:51


America is experiencing the hard slog of recovering from the financial crisis. Prospects have turned more positive over the past two months. But a year ago growth was picking up too – and then it stalled, at about the same time Greece’s fiscal problems infected the global economy. The question now is whether a home-grown fiscal crisis could derail this year’s rebound...

Read the article at FT.com
Above content can be found on the Financial Times or FT.com.
http://www.ft.com/cms/s/0/10612eec-24cc-11e0-a919-00144feab49a.html#axzz1BjHZLF7C



More Fuel to the Fire: Miami-Dade to repay $3.6 million in HUD funds back to the Feds




Miami-Dade is now being asked to repay $3.6 million in Federal Block Grants money from the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD) because officials in the Miami-Dade department cannot show if the money was spent properly. According to the Miami Herald "Jennifer Glazer-Moon, director of the Office of Strategic Business Management, stressed that the county has shored up its monitoring of such grants. And, she added, the county succeeded in paring the total due to HUD to $3.6 million -- from the $4.7 million that the federal agency was originally demanding.``We want to make sure things like this never, ever happen again,'' said Glazer-Moon." (I CAN'T BELIEVE SHE SAID THAT)

This latest incident with the Feds only continues to feed the speculation of the competency of this administration. The people of Miami-Dade County have already lost confidence in their government, stories like this only continue to fan the flames of recall. It is next to impossible for any top government official from this administration to expect to be left in charge of the posts they currently hold. This administration and its top bureaucrats have lost total credibility.