Monthly Archives: November 2010

City Council Approves 2011 Budget

The South Milwaukee City Council approved the 2011 budget on Tuesday night in a 7-0 vote.

The details (and context) are not much different than what I reported in my previous post found here.

But here is some updated information …

  • The city tax levy will increase 1.86 percent, from $10,001,640 to $10,188,003. This is actually lower than the increase called for in the initial draft of the budget.
  • The city tax rate will increase 2.13%, from $7.09 per $1,000 of assessed valuation to $7.24 per $1,000. That means for the owner of a $150,000 home in South Milwaukee, the city portion of that person’s property tax bill we be $1,086 in 2011, up less than $23 from 2010.
  • Changes from the proposed executive budget include a small increase in auditing fees, a decrease in fees paid to Milwaukee Area Domestic Animal Control and a small increase in the Police and Fire Commission budget due to the looming search for a new fire chief.

I should also point out some of the fears raised about the local impact of state budget woes for the back half of 2011 and beyond. A potential loss in shared revenue, among other impacts, looms when the new governor and legislature hammer out the 2011-13 biennial budget.

Why is this potentially significant for us? Shared revenue is a more than $3.1 million line item for us, so any cut could hurt. I’ll keep you posted.

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Heads Up on a South Milwaukee Speed Trap

I always knew this was the case … and Channel 4 confirmed it.

Pennsylvania/Nicholson Avenue, especially south of Rawson, is a speed trap.

Check out the “Speedbusters” story and video from WTMJ-TV here. From it:

If you’re a South Milwaukee police officer who patrols Nicholson Avenue, you don’t have to worry about writer’s block — you’ll write plenty of tickets.

“We know this is a fast stretch,” said Officer Mick Olson of the South Milwaukee Police Department. “This is one of the hot spots, if you will, where we know people typically are speeding.”

We learned about this location after a neighbor emailed us writing, “I am sick of people driving through here like it is either a freeway or a speedway.”

A speedway is about what we found when we tagged along with Officer Olson on this 25-mile an hour stretch.

Do you know of any other South Milwaukee speed traps? Post your comments below.

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Layoffs at Patrick Cudahy and Other Headlines of Local Interest

Update: County Supervisor Pat Jursik has published her December E-News update. See it here.

Patrick Cudahy is planning hundreds of local — but mostly temporary — layoffs.

Read the full Business Journal story here. And here is the Journal Sentinel story.

And check out these other headlines of note from around the South Shore.

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2011 Budget Update: Hearing Monday, Council Meeting Tuesday

You have your best (and probably last) chance to weigh in on the proposed 2011 city budget on Monday.

A public hearing on the budget is planned for 6 p.m. at City Hall.

Then, on Tuesday, the City Council will meet to discuss and consider approving the 2011 document. That meeting is at 7 p.m. Here is the agenda.

You can learn more about the proposed executive budget in my previous post on this, and you can check out the actual document here. Keep in mind that the version we consider on Tuesday — and the final version — will likely change slightly as final numbers come in.

Of course, I am interested to know what you think about the proposed budget. Post your comments below … or, better yet, make your voice heard at the public hearing on Monday.

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Another Great Local Holiday Tradition: Feaste Tickets Still Available!

Looking for a unique way to celebrate the season and help out a great cause?

Here’s your chance: I have been told there are still tickets available for Ye Olde Christmas Feaste on Saturday, Dec. 4, and Sunday, Dec. 5, at South Milwaukee High School.

Learn more at the Feaste website here and on Facebook.

You must order these last-minute tickets by 3 p.m. on Tuesday at the high school main office.

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A Black Friday Alternative: Shop South Milwaukee

Here’s a big idea for Black Friday: Before you visit the Targets, Kmarts, Kohls and Walmarts of the world on Friday, why not shop some of our first-class local merchants?

Here are some of my favorites, and some great gift ideas:

  • Studio One Art Glass. This is truly a hidden gem in South Milwaukee. Located at 1333 Milwaukee Ave., this unique store features some of the most beautiful hand-crafted stained glass you’ll find, with most made by Kim Kostuch and his team right in the building. I love the window hangings — I buy one for my wife every Christmas — but you can also custom order bigger ticket items like cabinets. Learn more at the Studio One website.
  • Donn Powers Jeweler. Locally owned jewelry stores are getting harder and harder to find, and we have a great one right here at 2110 10th Ave. in South Milwaukee. I was really impressed with the number of affordable gift items at Donn Powers when I did some Christmas shopping there last year. Learn more at the store’s website.
  • Parkway Floral. At the corner of Chicago and Milwaukee Avenues, this really is our downtown’s centerpiece business, and Bryan Lorentzen runs a great flower shop. Give the gift of flowers this holiday season! Learn more at the Parkway website.
  • Azteca. Of all the great restaurants we have in South Milwaukee, this is my favorite. The Mexican food is authentic and affordable, and the service is outstanding. If you haven’t eaten at Azteca yet, do so in December, and pick up a gift certificate for a holiday gift. Learn more here.

And, here’s another local shopping suggestion: Shop the South Milwaukee Christmas Market on Saturday, Dec. 4, at Bucyrus International’s Heritage Building. Hours are 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. There will be more than 40 vendors at the event, with plenty of unique gift opportunities … stuff you can’t find at Best Buy. That includes, for the first time, $2 South Milwaukee Downtown Market cloth gift bags.

Learn more about the Christmas Market here.

Did I miss a local business you’d like to suggest to holiday shoppers? Post your comments below.

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Happy Thanksgiving! What Are You Thankful For?

Family. Community. Church. My day job at MillerCoors. The chance to serve my constituents as an alderman.

On this Thanksgiving Day, I find myself thankful for many things.

What are you thankful for today? What about South Milwaukee are you most appreciative of?

I’d like to know. Post your comments below … and let’s celebrate some of the things that make this city great.

And happy Thanksgiving!

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Report: Franciscan Villa Nursing Home Sued Over Alleged Rape

Update: Here is the Journal Sentinel story on this with even more troubling (and alleged) details.

The WTMJ radio website has a disturbing story about a lawsuit involving the Franciscan Villa nursing home in South Milwaukee.

Read the full story here. From it:

A lawyer for Mary Speigl claims she was sexually assaulted inside her room by a male resident who was notorious in the Franciscan Villa nursing home in South Milwaukee.

The lawsuit says the male resident, who was notorious within the facility for being sexually aggressive, was allowed to wonder the halls by himself.  That is when he allegedly made his way into the 90-year-old woman’s room and assaulted her.

Speigl died less than a month later.

I’ll keep you posted on this as I learn more.

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Addressing 4th District Flooding

We’re making strong progress in addressing flooding concerns in the 4th District and across the city … even if there are no quick fixes or silver-bullet solutions.

City Engineer Kyle Vandercar is sending residents in the Parkway Drive area an update on what’s being done to address issues with the stormwater and sanitary sewer systems.

You can see the whole letter here.

You’ll recall that following the July 22 storms, the city contracted with engineering consultant R.A. Smith National to analyze the storm sewer system in the Parkway Heights area and find solutions to ongoing flooding problems there. We also contracted with Applied Technologies to evaluate the sanitary sewer system in certain areas of the city and make recommendations to reduce “inflow” into the sanitary system and increase capacity.

The Parkway Heights storm sewer study is complete, and you can see the full report at City Hall. It includes several alternatives to ease flooding in and around two especially hard-hit areas — the 500 block of Parkway Drive and 17th Avenue south of Oak Street.

In both places, water is essentially funneling from large sections of the northwest side of town and overburdening the storm sewer infrastructure during larger storms. The fixes involve adding capacity … essentially widening the bottom of that funnel.

  • On Parkway Drive, the staff-recommended option is to build a 36-inch-diameter relief storm sewer between 521 and 531 Parkway, with a new outlet to Oak Creek Parkway.
  • On 17th Avenue, the recommended option is to build a secondary, overland drainage path in addition to the existing pipe system to reduce flooding.

Neither option is set in stone and will require approval by the City Council. And neither option is cheap.

For now, 4th District and Parkway Heights residents should expect to see survey workers in the area before the end of the year, weather permitting. That will be followed by design and preparation of construction plans. I’ll keep you posted as this moves forward.

Meanwhile, the sanitary study work continues across the city, and a final report is not expected until March. The fixes here are more complex, and likely even more costly — including addressing inflow, lift station capacity, emergency relief station pump capacity and pipe design.

Keep in mind that any storm sewer work (like the Parkway Heights options) would also help reduce basement sewer backups, in addition to helping prevent water from flooding streets, spilling over curbs and into front lawns.

I say “help” because it’s become clear to me in the past year that there are no 100 percent fixes here. As Kyle puts it in the letter, “unlimited capacity to the storm and sanitary sewer systems cannot be cost effectively engineered.” Instead, we’re working to identify “improvements which will greatly reduce the chance of flooding and the potential for sewer backups.”

Obviously, the issue quickly becomes how much money it will take to truly make an impact. Most of these are not small projects. The recommended 4th District stormwater project alone, for instance, may cost more than $200,000 — and that doesn’t include any street repaving and sanitary work.

As you know, money is tight and might be getting tighter, and there is limited money from the stormwater and wastewater utilities to fund these. So we’ll have to find other sources, potentially including borrowing.

This raises two questions …

How much should the city spend to address these problems? And how much will citizens support, especially if that means higher taxes?

They are big questions we’ll have to answer in short order. I look forward to the debate — and finding ways to smartly invest in our infrastructure.

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The South Milwaukee Connection to the Laurie Bembenek Case

Laurie Bembenek’s sister apparently lives in our fair city, according to media reports of Bembenek’s death on Sunday.

See the full Journal Sentinel story here. From it:

Bembenek, 52, died early Saturday evening in Portland, Ore., where she was in hospice care, her sister, Colette Bembenek of South Milwaukee, said Sunday.

Bembenek, who later changed her first name to Laurie from Lawrencia, had been admitted to a hospital and then was transferred to a hospice, her sister said. Her health problems included hepatitis C and liver and kidney failure, Colette Bembenek said.

“It went real fast. I’m glad she didn’t linger,” Colette Bembenek said. “I knew it was inevitable that she probably would be expiring early in life.”

Colette Bembenek said she did not have a chance to speak with her sister before she died. She said she was told of her sister’s death by Martin Carson, Laurie Bembenek’s ex-husband. According to Martin, Laurie Bembenek was in and out of consciousness, said Colette Bembenek, adding that she last saw and spoke to her sister when their father died in 2003.

Please keep the entire Bemebenek family in your thoughts and prayers.

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More Coverage of the Bucyrus Deal and Other Headlines of Note

Update: The Journal Sentinel has a story Sunday on the global impact of the Bucyrus and Ladish deals.

A Bucyrus shareholder has sued the company claiming it could have gotten a better deal than the one it agreed to with Caterpillar this week.

Check out the story here. From it:

Directors of South Milwaukee-based Bucyrus have a duty to get the best possible price for the company, including through an auction, and used an unfair process in the Caterpillar deal, investor Margaret C. Richardson said Wednesday in a complaint in Delaware Chancery Court in Wilmington.

The price “is unfair and inadequate because, among other things, the intrinsic value of Bucyrus’s stock is in excess of the consideration offered” based on the company’s prospects, lawyers for Richardson said in court papers.

The story is one of several offering more perspective on the deal this week.

The Business Journal has items on CEO Tim Sullivan’s future and Joy Global’s (non) reaction to the deal. Here is a National Public Radio item with an interview from Mayor Tom Zepecki, and here is a trend item from NPR on the Bucyrus and Ladish deals.

And check out these other headlines of note from around the South Shore:

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Chamber Tree Lighting on Saturday

Update: I took my 6-year-old to this, and it was a really nice event. And the tree looks great. The new LED lights — paid for in part with a donation from the South Milwaukee Lions — are a real improvement. Drive by and see for yourself.

It’s not Thanksgiving yet, but there’s a chance to get into the holiday spirit a bit early this weekend.

The South Milwaukee Chamber of Commerce is holding its annual tree lighting ceremony from 3 to 5 p.m. on Saturday at Heritage Place Park at 10th and Milwaukee Avenues.

Learn more on the chamber website here. And check out my previous post on other local Christmas activities here.

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More on the Ladish Deal: What Does it Mean for the South Shore?

It sounds like only good news for the South Shore, and Cudahy, resulting from the purchase of Ladish by its largest raw materials supplier, Allegheny Technologies of Pittsburgh.

Here is the Journal Sentinel story on the transaction. From it:

Company executives say they have no plans to reduce employment at the Ladish headquarters and plant in Cudahy. The 105-year-old company has 1,700 employees at operations in Wisconsin, California, Oregon and Poland.

“This is about growth. It is not about consolidation,” said Gary Vroman, Ladish president and chief executive officer.

“This is not putting any blue-collar or white-collar people at risk,” Vroman said. “I want to stay. I look forward to this, and I am sure that we will work things out.” …

The deal is the second blockbuster sale of a Milwaukee-area manufacturer this week. On Monday, Bucyrus International Inc. of South Milwaukee said it was being acquired by Caterpillar Inc. for $7.6 billion.

Ladish also is a major supplier to Caterpillar, which expects to own Bucyrus in mid-2011.

“Years ago, we did quite a bit of work with Bucyrus. And we certainly are looking forward to having discussions with the Caterpillar and Bucyrus combination to see if it will mean something positive to us,” Vroman said.

Also, click here for a Business Journal story on the purchase. From it:

No layoffs are expected as a result of the deal and Ladish brand will remain intact, Vroman said.

“Without question, this merger significantly improves the long-term outlook for Ladish,” he said.

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Sentence for Former South Milwaukee Marshal: Eight Years

The former South Milwaukee resident convicted of taking nude pictures of women without their consent is going to prison for eight years.

The sentence was handed down Wednesday.

See the full story here in the Journal Sentinel. From it:

Timothy Moseley, 49, was found guilty last month by a jury that had to examine photos and videos of him and two victims, women he argued had implicitly consented to the acts and photos in question because they had agreed to many other acts of sexual bondage and recording during extended relationships.

Milwaukee County Circuit Judge Richard Sankovitz told Moseley he was not being punished for engaging in unpopular conduct, nor for being “a selfish, egocentric toad.” Rather, the judge said, it was because Moseley crossed the line when he took photos of the women in extremely compromising situations while they were unconscious or incapacitated by drugs or alcohol.

The judge told Moseley that despite his long, decorated career in public service, he remains a higher-than-average risk to re-offend because of his sexual addictions. He ordered Moseley to be listed on Wisconsin’s sex offender registry for life.

Moseley’s most recent address in online court records is listed as 1204 Memorial Drive in South Milwaukee.

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Another Major Local Employer Sold: This Time It’s Ladish

Cudahy-based Ladish is being acquired by Pittsburgh-based Allegheny Technologies in a $778 million deal.

Read the Journal Sentinel story here. From it:

Cudahy-based Ladish manufactures metal components for jet engines and aerospace equipment. The company has 1,700 employees and operations in Wisconsin, California, Connecticut, Oregon, and Poland.

In a conference call, Allegheny executives said there are no plans to move manufacturing out of Wisconsin.

We’ll see. Post your comments below.

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