Friday, May 08, 2009

St. Augustine must have a national historical park, seashore and scenic coastal highway -- see www.staugustgreen.com


St. Augustine must have a national historical park, seashore and scenic coastal highway -- see www.staugustgreen.com

Guest Column: St. Augustine should have a national historical park



ED SLAVIN
St. Augustine
Publication Date: 03/26/07

Real estate speculators (some foreign-funded) continue to destroy our local wildlife, habitat, nature and history. Roads are clogged. Noise abounds. Our way of life is being destroyed. Unfeeling, uncaring Philistines are turning St. Johns County into an uglier, unreasonable facsimile of South Florida. Unjust county government stewards allowed an asphalt plant near homes. Another plant reportedly emits 50 tons/year of volatile organic compounds into residents' and workers' lungs and brains.

Speculators are even trying to build homes on top of unremediated septic tanks/fields, while vacationing boaters pollute our Bay front with untreated sewage (the only boat-pumpout-station is at Conch House Marina). Our Bay front (which lacks a harbormaster) had an oil spill Jan. 15. Developers demand to build docks over city-owned State Road 312 area marshes for boat-owners' pleasure. Enough.

Let's invite environmental tourism by preserving an "emerald necklace of parks," including the city-owned marsh.

Ask Congress to hold hearings to map our "St. Augustine National Historical Park and National Seashore" (SANHPNS), using 1928-style trolleycars to save gasoline, uniting the Castillo and Fort Matanzas National Monuments, "slave market park," downtown streets, Government House, Red House Bluff indigenous village (next to historical society), marshes, forests, National Cemetery, GTM NERR, Anastasia State Park, Fort Mose and other city, county, state and St. Johns River Water Management District lands.

Let's cancel future shock/schlock/sprawl/ugliness/skyscrapers and eliminate temptations to abuse/neglect/misuse state parks and historic buildings for golf courses and rote, rube commercialism.

In December, State Sen. Jim King suggested Florida donate "deed and title" of state buildings to our city. I suggested that we deed them to the National Park Service (NPS), with St. George Street visitor center in restored buildings, saving millions (as in the New Bedford Whaling National Historical Park).

St. Augustine needs a national civil rights and indigenous history museum, celebrating local residents and national leaders, whose courage helped win passage of 1964's Civil Rights Act. Why not put the museum in the old Woolworth's building, restored to its former glory, with wood floors, lunch-counter and exhibits on the civil rights struggles that changed history (well- documented in Jeremy Dean's documentary, "Dare Not Walk Alone"), with "footsoldiers monument" across the street ?

Why not (finally) implement the 2003 National Trust for Historic Preservation and Flagler College study on how to protect our history? Let's tax tourists more to fund historic preservation, as in Charleston/elsewhere.

Let's preserve/protect the quality of our lives and visitors' experience (and property values) by preserving forever what speculators haven't destroyed (yet).

Let's adopt a three-year moratorium on growth, while we work to adopt truly comprehensive plans worthy of the name.

Colonial National Historical Park (NHP), Philadelphia's Independence NHP and NHPs in Boston, New Bedford, Valley Forge, San Francisco and Saratoga.

There's a Martin Luther King historical site in Atlanta, NHPs for "Rosie the Riveter" (California) and the "War in the Pacific" (Guam), and new parks slated for ten Japanese internment camps.

Florida hosts Everglades, Dry Tortugas and Biscayne National Parks and Canaveral National Seashore. Let's add St. Augustine to the list.

From sea to shining sea, America's coastal areas enjoy national parks. Where's ours?

Let's make parts of State Road A1A a National Parkway and hiking/biking trail, like the Colonial National Historical Parkway and the Baltimore Washington, George Washington, Rock Creek and John D. Rockefeller (Wyoming) Parkways and the Appalachian Trial and C&O Canal.

Let's add St. Augustine to the list of our nation's most beloved national parks, joining Zion, Yosemite, Grand Canyon, Bryce Canyon and the Great Smoky Mountains.

Florida's 500th and St. Augustine's 450th anniversaries are only six and eight years away (2013 and 2015). Enacting a national park and seashore will forever preserve the treasures that we love. It will halt the sprawl we hate, increase tourism and reduce local taxes, paying speculators to stop.

Mayor Joe Boles' mother graciously thanked me for speaking out on these issues after the Jan. 22 City Commission meeting -- issues that Mrs. Boles has been outspoken about for "30 years." Let's honor/heed Mrs. Boles' wisdom -- and those who proposed a national park before World War II. Let's save St. Augustine and our environment forever.

#

Ed Slavin lives in St. Augustine.

Click here to return to story:
http://staugustine.com/stories/032607/opinions_4479465.shtml

© The St. Augustine Record

THE STRANGE ROMANCE BETWEEN BAGMAN HATE SITE OPERATOR MICHAEL GOLD AND SHERIFF DAVID SHOAR



MICHAEL GOLD AND SHERIFF DAVID SHOAR -- GOLD WAS SHOAR'S 2004 CAMPAIGN MANAGER

A series of rambling KKK-related hate sites in St. Augustine, Florida are connected to government officials and their running dogs. See links at right.

On Christmas Eve 2008, the Sheriff's former campaign manager, MICHAEL GOLD sat at home and did what?

He wrote hateful, hostile, threatening words about a lady suffering from cancer, whom posters have wished dead on his Plazabum.com website, expressing the desire that she be incarcerated for her First Amendment Protected Activity.

SHERIFF DAVID SHOAR needs to be held personally accountable in front of a federal grand jury for giving "significant encouragement" to the serial civil rights violators on Plazabum.com.

These are truly disgraceful and despicable people.

MICHAEL GOLD wrote hateful words about the homeless published by the Wreckord on December 23, 2006, kicking off Plazabum.com Archaeological amateur WILLETT ALBRIGHT BOYER III (using the NIC of freethinker) wrote dozens of obscene posts on Easter 2006 condemning those who seek to protect St. Augustine's indigenous Native American Indian history and archaeology. Now MICHAEL GOLD spends Christmas Eve nattering about a lady with whom he once had words with while working on DAVID SHOAR's $250,000 campaign in 2004.

Why do the heathen rage? Why do the bagmen rage? Why do the wicked prosper?

Oops. The wicked aren't prospering any longer. Their sins have found them out. Two trillion has been stolen from our economy by white collar criminals. Even the white criminal criminals are being taken (by each other). As in the movie, Mississippi Burning, the rattlesnakes are turning on each other. (You should hear Republicans express their primal fears about who will next be indicted on bribery here in St. Johns County and St. Augustine, our Republican County Commission Chairman THOMAS MANUEL havihng been charged with accepting $60,000 in bribes from GEORGE MCCLURE and a developer-client).

Speaking of the wicked, have you heard about ROBERT MICHAEL GRAUBARD and the other tree-killing, land-raping, wetland-destroying speculators? They kind of remind about the story about JFK in the 1960 Wisconsin Primary. He asked in a rural district, "What's the problem with the American fah-mah today?" One of the goobers in the back hollered back, "He's stah-ving!"

Back to poor, unenlightened, unhappy MICHAEL GOLD. This unkind, uncouth, uncivil mocker is sitting at home on Christmas Eve obsessing on a cancer victim and abusing a photograph not posted on the Internet, suggesting she should be incarcerated. What a sick twist -- the American Psychiatric Association Diagnostic and Stattistical Manual (DSM-IV-R) could offer insights galore.


MICHAEL GOLD AND SHERIFF DAVID SHOAR -- GOLD WAS SHOAR'S 2004 CAMPAIGN MANAGER

Meanwhile, at 10 PM on Christmas Eve, while MICHAEL GOLD is writing hate mail on the Internet about Maureen Ortagus, I have one question -- where was MICHAEL GOLD's wife? What does Sheriff SHOAR think of his erstwhile campaign manager and fundraiser? Does he take personal responsibility for this tetched termagant and his stalking behavior directed toward Ms. Ortagus, which may violate federal criminal laws against Internet fraud and stalking?

For months, SHERIFF SHOAR has not had anything to say in response to concerns about MICHAEL GOLD and his PLAZABUM.COM hate website -- this is freighted with the admission that SHOAR knows GOLD's actions are notoriously disgraceful but he's afraid of GOLD, who helped SHOAR raise $250,000 during the 2004 campaign.

Attacking a lady suffering from cancer at 10 PM on Christmas Eve, MICHAEL GOLD is a bad person. Only a KKK member could support his actions. Et tu, SHERIFF SHOAR?

MICHAEL GOLD is a wimp and a weasel. This petty, vindictive pusilanamous pathetic poltroonish pachydermn coward MICHAEL GOLD never did return my phone message -- as the late, great William F. Buckley, Jr., once said, "why does baloney reject the grinder?"

Now, does SHERIFF SHOAR have the guts to denounce GOLD for his stalking behavior and open an investigation of threats of bodily harm that have been posted on Plazabum.com?

Or is SHERIFF SHOAR the heir apparent of the late St. Johns County Sheriffs and St. Augustine Police Chiefs who suffered and permitted police riots, as in 1964, and acted as bullets in the KKK's guns? You tell me.

EDGAR BERGEN, CHARLIE McCARTHY, PRAVDA, ISVESTIA, and MORRIS COMMUNICATIONS' ST. AUGUSTINE WRecKord










When in the course of human events there's a newspaper so other-directed, underfunded and poorly written that it won't even reflect more than one point of view, we compare it to PRAVDA and ISVESTIA in the former Soviet Union , it in a news story about an effort to revive a rejected development that would destroy city-owned bottomlands, it is an embarrassment to every single MORRIS COMMUNICATIONS employee, contractor, investor and bondholder. See St. Augustine WRecKord story on Fish Island proposal, below.

The story below is written by "Staff," which most often means a press release.

There are tell-tale signs that it is a press release from a member of the "Ignorant Tightass Society" (in the phrase of The West Wing presidential character Jed Bartlett, about a Dr. Laura lookalike).

The only quotations are from City Attorney RONALD WAYNE BROWN and "FISH ISLAND LLC LLC," as if a soulless corporation could speak for itself, without human intervention. That's carrying the U.S. Supreme Court's Santa Clara County case a bit far -- every corporation we've ever encountered was mute, and required PR people to speak for it -- people with names. Evidently, City Attorney (and former PIERRE THOMPSON mouthpiece) RONALD WAYNE BROWN might be speaking for "FISH ISLAND LLC" as well as for the City of St. Augustine

Not one bit of effort is said to have been made to contact the courageous citizens (including Bill Hamilton and Ken Bryan), who saved the beautiful marshes by the SR 312 bridge. How crude an example of biased journalism.

Obviously showing favoritism for THOMPSON BROTHERS REALTY (big WrecKord advertiser, convicted Migratory Bird Treaty Act violator), owned by the St. Augustine REcord founder's grandson, PIERRE THOMPSON, the WRecKord once again couldn't bestir itself to gather news. It let its readers down again.

MORRIS COMMUNICATIONS' WRecKord intentionally tried to propagandize for the City when it printed an unilluminating, unattributed, uninteresting press release written by the City's overpaid $500,000/year PR department, superintended by City Manager WILLIAM B. HARIRS' heybody PAUL WILLIAMSON, the most dour PR man I've ever seen frowning at citizen-activists.

Who, what, where, when, why and how -- remember the five Ws and the H?

Who among the Commissioners was negotiating, with what authority, with whom?
As Wordsworth would say, "they have given our hearts away, a sordid boon."

Who was present in the negotiation meetings? Was there a court reporter?

What were they doing selling our city--owned bottomlands down the river?

What authority were they given and by whom?

When were the meetings held?

Where were the meetings held?

Where were the negotiators going to allow what?

How were the negotiators going to con the public?

Were they planning on pulling a fast one, as WILLIAM B. HARRISS, RONALD WAYNE BROWN and their crew always do?

What do you reckon?

MORRIS COMMUNICATIONS' St. Augustine WRecKord once again shows that its news coverage of anything related to the City of St. Augustine and its supercilious City Manager WILLIAM B. HARRISS and City Attorney RONALD WAYNE BROWN is below the standard and behind the times -- not so much news coverage as a coverup.

So who is Edgar Bergen and who is Charlie McCarthy?

Journalistic malpractice?

Fish Island issue off city agenda

Fish Island issue off city agenda


From Staff
Publication Date: 05/08/09

Details of St. Augustine City Commission's proposed settlement with Fish Island Development LLC -- expected to be released Thursday -- will not be available, according to City Attorney Ron Brown.

The developer had sued the city and Brown has met with their representatives for months to hammer out a compromise and stay out of court.

The developer wants a 1,200-foot walkway to a 100-foot dock in the Intracoastal just south of the State Road 312 bridge.

Fish Island's dock would be designed to handle 50-foot yachts.

But the city holds that such a dock would be a hazard to navigation. Both the Planning and Zoning Agency and the city commission turned down the application.

The negotiations revolve around the extent of damage those decisions hurt the value of the developer's property.

Fish Island LLC believes that figure is $9 million.

Because there was no compromise to reveal, the Fish Island dock was taken off Monday's regular commission agenda, Brown said.

Click here to return to story:
http://staugustine.com/stories/050809/news_050809_059.shtml

© The St. Augustine Record

WRecKord Is Wrong Again (I)

See the correction below -- PETER GUINTA can't even take notes when a County Commissioner is speaking adequate to enable him to tell if he said "county" or "company."

Pitiful.

WRecKord Corrects "one-word mistake" by Senior Reporter PETER GUINTA

Correction



Publication Date: 05/07/09

One word missing -- A Page 1 story Wednesday about the Destination Master Plan contained a one-word mistake in a quote by St. Johns County Commissioner Ken Bryan. The sentence should say, "The last thing this company wants to have on its resume is that they defaulted."

Click here to return to story:
http://staugustine.com/stories/050709/news_050709_030.shtml

© The St. Augustine Record

Here's The Original Story With the One-Word Mistake in Context (see bold) -- big difference between "county" and "company, "

Jitters over master plan

County fears they'll have little to show

By PETER GUINTA
peter.guinta@staugustine.com
Publication Date: 05/06/09

The first phase of St. Johns County's Master Development Plan is past deadline, yet the consultant writing it has already received half of the study's $300,000 cost, County Commissioner Mark Miner said Tuesday.

"We've got problems," Miner said. "It's clear that the scope (of the study) hasn't been accomplished. We need to get our money back and fire the consultant."

Miner feared that by the study's completion in September, the county could have little to show for the money.

Vice Chair Ron Sanchez agreed.

"We gave them a big jolt," Sanchez said, referring to the highly negative response the consultant's preliminary report generated from the commission April 22.

Board members called the 54-page document "incomplete" and "wasted dollars and time." They criticized its failure to include important St. Johns County constituencies such as African Americans, St. Augustine Beach, and Spanish heritage and culture, among others.

"We might need to give them another (jolt)," Sanchez said.

The consultant, PGAV Destination Consulting, is based in St. Louis, Mo., though it subcontracts some duties to Magellan Strategy Group of Asheville, N.C.

According to Glenn Hastings, executive director of the Tourist Development Commission, the company "realizes it's running behind schedule. They plan on making up the time.

"They have the information they need and will step up to the plate."

Their Phase I report -- due in April, 16 weeks after they signed the contract -- is supposed to list all county tourism assets, get impressions of the county from out-of-county and out-of-state tourists, and compare comparable tourist destinations with St. Johns County.

The company was also expected to talk to any local hoteliers and attraction owners who wanted to contribute their input.

Commissioner Phil Mays at first said he had "grave concerns" about the report's lateness, but added, "This company came highly recommended with good credentials. Perhaps we need to build a better foundation of information for them. I don't think they are in default."

Commissioner Ken Bryan -- one of the most critical questioners April 22 -- was more conciliatory Tuesday.

"The last thing this county wants to have on its resume is that they defaulted. Picking another company will take a long time," he said.

Chairwoman Cyndi Stevenson said everyone's asking questions about the report.

"This is a lot of tourism dollars," she said. "It's a big investment, and we want to make sure it's done right."

Click here to return to story:
http://staugustine.com/stories/050609/news_050609_008.shtml

© The St. Augustine Record

The WRecKord is Wrong Again II

Below is the news story written by the seemingly uninterested and sleeping reporter. See yesterday's blog entry about MORRIS COMMUNICATIONS' senior reporter.

The figure of 10,000 square feet was not in the motion.

The prior Board paid $50,000 per acre, not $25,000 per acre.

The WRecKord is wrong again.

Mosquito board OKs move Members agree to construct new 10,000-square-foot headquarters

Mosquito board OKs move

Members agree to construct new 10,000-square-foot headquarters

By PETER GUINTA
peter.guinta@staugustine.com
Publication Date: 05/08/09

ST. AUGUSTINE BEACH -- Anastasia Mosquito Control Board this week voted to build a new 10,000-square-foot base station at the board's 17.5-acre property off State Road 16 and Interstate 95.

The close decision came during a fractious special meeting on strategy, planning and budget. The final vote was 3-2, with Commissioner John Sundeman and Board Chairwoman Janice Bequette dissenting.

Commissioner Vivian Browning continued her campaign to secure a board commitment to get the base station away from the beach, where, she said, it would be vulnerable to hurricanes.

"The S.R. 16 property is at the edge of the hurricane zone," Browning said. "The new base will be in a central location and be able to reach all areas of the county quickly. (But) unless you have a vision and a plan to move forward, we're not going to get there."

Saving money by staying put is one argument used by Sundeman, who opposed the move.

"Do we know how much it will cost the taxpayers for us to move?" Sundeman said. "We haven't done a needs analysis to see if we even need to move. When the schools can't even hire teachers, it's gross negligence to spend money to greatly increase the operating costs of the district."

Browning replied, "It costs millions to stay here and it could cost millions when people lose their lives."

After a bad hurricane, she said, mosquito control is needed to reduce the threat of mosquito-borne diseases.

However, she added, the Beach headquarters would probably be damaged or destroyed, its chemicals spilled and Anastasia Island roads impassable. An inland headquarters means the district's chemicals and spraying trucks would remain safe and be able to operate immediately, she said.

Browning said the county was interested in buying the S.R. 16 property for $600,000, which is $35,000 an acre. The district paid $25,000 per acre, but gave seven acres to the county for the new Emergency Operations Center dedicated last week.

Sundeman said there was already a hurricane plan for the district: Its trucks would evacuate to the County Fairgrounds.

"There's one road in and one road out (at the S.R. 16 property)," he said. "One of the reasons the county wants this property is that they don't want us out there."

A motion to not sell the property passed 4-1, with Sundeman dissenting.

He has gone on record against moving to that property since it was purchased. He said that District Director Dr. Rui-de Xue convinced the previous board to buy the land. This week Sundeman spoke against Xue's cost estimates of $800,000 to $1 million to replace and reopen the district's closed Ponte Vedra/Palm Valley substation.

"That (estimate) is misleading to the public. I'm not going to rely on (him) for a five-year plan," Sundeman said. "A professional engineer told me it would cost $100,000."

Commissioner Ron Radford, a retired colonel, supported moving to the central location.

"As any system -- a building, for example -- gets older, maintenance is more expensive. With more efficiency, we can do a better job at less cost. The county's population will grow and we have to grow with it," he said. "The growth ability isn't here. We ought to be looking ahead."

Commissioner Jeanne Moeller also supported moving.

"No one's talking about a $23 million building out there, granite counter tops, a Taj Mahal," she said.

Click here to return to story:
http://www.staugustine.com/stories/050809/news_050809_070.shtml

© The St. Augustine Record

Update on Status of Environmental Justice Complaint on City of St. Augustine With EPA Office of Civil Rights

Watch this space.

Thursday, May 07, 2009

St. Augustine, Florida Still Segregated -- We need a St. Augustine National Park, to include a national civil rights museum

When our City of St. Augustine had no African-American, woman, Hispanic or Asian city employee making more than $32,999 (as in its last EEO-4 report in 2007), out of 350 full-time equivalent employees...

When our City of St. Augustine forces African-Americans to drive on the rutted, impassible, flood-prone Riberia Street, while investing all of its repair money in white areas,

When our City builds a $25 million White Elephant Parking Garage with CRA money, spends $1.2 million on a utility bill-paying building and $400,000 skate park in a white neighborhood while forcing African-Americans to hold bake sales to pay for a $50,000 civil rights monument...

When our City Managers, past and present, are guilty of racist attitudes and stereotypes, including City Manager WILLIAM B. HARRISS attempting to keep a civil rights monument from our Slave Market Square...

When some locals are in denial about the fact that slaves were sold in the Slave Market Square....

When our City leaves Marshall Burns a quadriplegic due to bad police training and keeps the offending officer on duty...

When employment in city-owned and state-owned historical buildings and reproductions is almost all white (including businesses covered by Burton v. Wilmington Parking Authority)....

When our City pollutes saltwater marshes in secret for years with semi-treated sewage effluent, breaking the law, not telling anyone (with City Manager WILLIAM B. HARRISS polling Commissioners in violation of the Sunshine Law)...

When our City deposits 40,000 cubic yards of solid waste in our Old City Reservoir, in a low-income and African-American area, then seeks to bring the waste back to the historically African-American community of Lincolnville...

We still have a city that is de facto segregated.


Notwithstanding the well-meaning National Park Service statement (below) about St. Augustine being one of the most segregated of cities up until 1964, it's still pretty segregated.

De facto or de jure, it's still segregation.

We need a St. Augustine National historical Park, National Seashore and Scenic Coastal Parkway, to include a national civil rights museum. See www.staugustgreen.com

National Park Service on Lincolnville Historic District -- "We Shall Overcome" -- Historic Places of the Civil Rights Movement

Lincolnville Historic District

St. Augustine, Florida, is the oldest city in the United States, and until 1964, one of the most segregated. A dentist and NAACP representative named Robert Hayling from the historic subdivision of Lincolnville initiated the protest actions that eventually ended discrimination in the old city. Lincolnville, established in 1866, was the major black residential subdivision in St. Augustine, and many of its residents were politically active. The historic district contains a large collection of 19th and early 20th century residences and churches.

In 1963, Hayling organized campaigns against local segregated public facilities catering to tourists. He also urged the White House not to support the 400th anniversary of the founding of St. Augustine set to take place in September 1965. When both efforts failed, he appealed to the Southern Christian Leadership Conference (SCLC) for help.

The SCLC called on New England universities to send volunteers to the city for March 1964 demonstrations and asked Lincolnville residents to provide food and lodging. By the end of one week of protests, police had arrested hundreds of demonstrators, including a delegation of rabbis and the 72-year-old mother of the governor of Massachusetts. White vigilantes terrorized local businesses that dared to serve African Americans.

In early June, Martin Luther King, Jr., came to St. Augustine and took part in a sit-in at Monson's Motor Lodge. The same month, the SCLC arranged for baseball star Jackie Robinson to address a civil rights rally in Lincolnville. The publicity surrounding these two events hastened Congress' passage of the Civil Rights Act on June 20, 1964.

Local segregationists initially refused to comply with the new Act. For example, when Monson's manager noticed African Americans in the motel swimming pool, he threw acid into the water, then drained the pool and stationed guards around it. Angry white mobs also beat "wade-in" demonstrators at local beaches as well as the police assigned to protect them.

The end of segregation in St. Augustine demonstrated that even the most closed communities could not uphold segregation in the face of determined resistance.

The Lincolnville Historic District, located in St. Augustine, Florida, is bounded by DeSoto Place and Cedar, Riberia, Cerro, and Washington Streets.

http://www.nps.gov/history/nr/travel/civilrights/text.htm#f1

National Parks Are "America's Best Idea Ever" and We Need One Here in St. Augustine, Florida

This September, PBS airs Ken Burns' documentary, "The National Parks: America's Best Idea," a six-part, 12-hour series.

St. Augustine deserves a National Historical Park, National Seashore and National Scenic Coastal Parkway.

When you see the documentary, be sure to ask your elected officials, "where's ours?"

Miami Herald: Filmmaker Ken Burns previews national parks series

Posted on Wed, May. 06, 2009
Filmmaker Ken Burns previews national parks series


The Associated Press
Documentary filmmaker Ken Burns previewed part of his upcoming series on national parks in Miami.

A packed house at the University of Miami's Gusman Concert Hall got to see an hour of "The National Parks: America's Best Idea" Tuesday. The six-part, 12-hour series, is scheduled to air in September on PBS. The series focuses largely on the people who fought to create the parks, including Everglades National Park and Biscayne National Park in South Florida.

Subjects of Burns' past projects include baseball, jazz and the Civil War. Burns says he hopes the new series will ultimately lead to more visitors at national parks.


© 2009 Miami Herald Media Company. All Rights Reserved.
http://www.miamiherald.com

PBS TO AIR KEN BURNS’S “THE NATIONAL PARKS: AMERICA’S BEST IDEA,”A NEW SIX-PART SERIES ABOUT THE HISTORY OF THE NATIONAL PARKS, IN FALL 2009

PBS News [ Back to Press Releases ]

PBS TO AIR KEN BURNS’S “THE NATIONAL PARKS: AMERICA’S BEST IDEA,”A NEW SIX-PART SERIES ABOUT THE HISTORY OF THE NATIONAL PARKS, IN FALL 2009
Los Angeles, CA – July 14, 2008 – PBS (Public Broadcasting Service) announced today that it will air the new Ken Burns documentary series, THE NATIONAL PARKS: AMERICA’S BEST IDEA, in fall 2009. The 12-hour, six-part documentary series, directed by Burns and co-produced with his longtime colleague, Dayton Duncan, who also wrote the script, is the story of an idea as uniquely American as the Declaration of Independence and just as radical: that the most special places in the nation should be preserved, not for royalty or the rich, but for everyone. As such, it follows in the tradition of Burns’s exploration of other American inventions, such as baseball and jazz.

Filmed over the course of more than six years in some of nature’s most spectacular locales — from Acadia to Yosemite, Yellowstone to the Grand Canyon, the Everglades of Florida to the Gates of the Arctic in Alaska — the documentary is nonetheless a story of people from every conceivable background — rich and poor; famous and unknown; soldiers and scientists; natives and newcomers; idealists, artists and entrepreneurs; people who were willing to devote themselves to saving some precious portion of the land they loved, and in doing so reminded their fellow citizens of the full meaning of democracy. It is a story of struggle and conflict, high ideals and crass opportunism, stirring adventure and enduring inspiration — set against breathtaking backdrops.

“Just as many of the lands that make up today’s national parks were the spiritual homes for the indigenous tribes who lived there, they had a profound and often spiritual impact on the settlers who first saw them and on the visionaries who fought tirelessly to preserve them as the common property of the American people,” said Ken Burns. “They saw in them a visual, tangible representation of God’s majesty. Our film celebrates the beauty of these parks and the vision and foresight of the men and women who made sure that this land would be preserved.”

The narrative traces the birth of the national park idea in the mid-1800s and follows its evolution for nearly 150 years. Using archival photographs, first-person accounts of historical characters, personal memories and analysis from more than 40 interviews, and what Burns believes is the most stunning cinematography in Florentine Films’ history, the series chronicles the steady addition of new parks through the stories of the people who helped create them and save them from destruction. It is simultaneously a biography of compelling characters and a biography of the American landscape.

“Making this film was one of the greatest joys of my life,” said Dayton Duncan, who has visited all but one of America’s 58 national parks and who is the author of the companion book, to be published by Alfred Knopf. “Each park is unique and has its own fascinating historical story. But they are all connected by the transformative idea that they belong to each of us, providing a shared place that lives in the memory of every individual and every family that has visited them over the years. And they are connected by the notion that individual Americans, in the best possible example of democracy, worked to make sure that future generations could enjoy them.”

With 391 units (58 national parks, plus 333 national monuments, historic sites and other units), the National Park Service has a presence in 49 of the 50 states (Delaware is the sole exception). Like the idea of freedom itself, the national park idea has been constantly tested, is constantly evolving and is inherently full of contradictory tensions: between individual rights and the community, the local and the national; between preservation and exploitation, the sacred and the profitable; between one generation’s immediate desires and the next generation’s legacy.

As America expanded westward, pioneers would “discover” landscapes of such breathtaking and unusual beauty that written descriptions of the lands were sometimes assumed by people in the east to be works of fiction. Eventually, there emerged a belief that these special places should be kept untarnished by development and commerce so that they could be experienced by all people.

“There was a sense that in Europe, you had the Roman coliseum or Notre Dame or the Cologne cathedral, but we didn’t have anything like that in America,” said Dayton Duncan. “But we did have these spectacular natural landscapes that were as unique and ancient as anything in the Old World. So they would become our treasures. They would be the source of our national pride. But unlike in Europe, they did not belong to monarchs or nobility. They belong to everyone.”

Wallace Stegner called the national parks “the best idea we ever had,” and no activity of the federal government engenders such universal support and public loyalty; yet the story of how these special places became preserved as parks, the role of individual citizens in creating them and the powerful stories of people’s emotional connection to them remains relatively unknown.

Among the lengthy cast of characters profiled in the series is James Mason Hutchings, a magazine publisher who was one of the first people to promote Yosemite and who sought to develop a resort hotel on the land; John Muir, a deeply religious mountain prophet who found inspiration in Yosemite and then inspired generations of parks enthusiasts; George Masa, a Japanese immigrant whose photographs of the Great Smoky Mountains in North Carolina and Tennessee served in the fight to protect the region as a national park; Marjory Stoneman Douglas, who persuaded Congress that a swamp in southern Florida, the Everglades, should be set aside as a national park; George Melendez Wright, a park ranger from San Francisco who recognized the need to preserve the parks’ wildlife in its natural state; Adolph Murie, a young biologist and protégé of Wright who was instrumental in reforming park policy so that wildlife — even predators — would have the same protections as the land itself; and Stephen Mather, a wealthy businessman who used his personal fortune and genius for promotion to create a National Park Service.

These historical accounts are paralleled with contemporary stories of people who continue to be transformed and inspired by the parks today. They include Shelton Johnson, who grew up in Detroit, where the national parks seemed distant, unreachable places until he later became a park ranger; Gerard Baker, a Native-American park superintendent whose tribe has long considered the land sacred; Tuan Luong, a Paris-born Vietnamese rock climber and photographer who fell in love with the parks and dedicated himself to photographing all 58 national parks with a large format camera; and Juan Lujan, who grew up in west Texas during the Depression and joined the Civilian Conservation Corps, with which he would help develop Big Bend National Park in Texas. Also included in the film are interviews with best-selling author Nevada Barr, a former park ranger; writer and environmentalist Terry Tempest Williams; historians William Cronon, Paul Schullery and Alfred Runte; and many others.

Over six years in the making, THE NATIONAL PARKS is a visual feast, featuring some of the most extensive, breathtaking images of the national parks system every captured on film. It contains the most contemporary footage of any Ken Burns film since “Lewis and Clark,” shot principally by chief cinematographer Buddy Squires (who has photographed all of Burns’s films), long-time Florentine cameraman Allen Moore, Lincoln Else (who also is a former ranger at Yosemite) and Burns himself.

“It’s easy to be in awe of the scenic beauty of our national parks and lose sight of their context within our nation’s history,” said John F. Wilson, PBS Sr. Vice President and Chief TV Programming Executive. “THE NATIONAL PARKS brings to life what the national parks say about our character as a nation and a people. The film surfaces hidden histories of passionate and visionary individuals who persevered in preserving these majestic lands and historic sites for the public’s enrichment for generations to come. Beginning with public television stations’ broad audience and continuing with powerful new media, we’re confident that this film, like all of Ken’s films, will grip our country’s attention and spark a dialogue about the importance of these sites and the need for on-going preservation and education.”

As with all of Burns’s films, there will be an extensive educational component, an interactive Web site that provides more information about the film, the parks and related issues, as well as a large-scale community engagement initiative. Four years ago, WETA and Florentine Films, with generous support from the Evelyn and Walter Haas, Jr. Fund, launched the Untold Stories project, designed to bring to light stories from the national parks focusing on the role of African Americans, Asian Americans, Hispanic Americans and Native Americans in the creation and protection of individual parks and to engage new and traditionally underserved audiences in the educational richness of the national parks.

Accompanying the series will be a companion book, written by Dayton Duncan and introduced by Ken Burns, which will be published by Alfred A. Knopf, Burns’ longtime publisher. “THE NATIONAL PARKS, like our previous collaborations with Ken Burns, will be a signature publishing event,” said Sonny Mehta, Chairman of the Knopf Publishing Group. “It is the first accounting of the national parks to weave together dramatic narrative, personal testimony and breathtaking images. Indeed, of all the books we have published in partnership with Ken, this may be the most visually spectacular.”

PBS Home Video is producing a complete DVD box set that will feature “making of” footage and an interview with Burns and others involved in the film.

In addition to Peter Coyote’s narration, THE NATIONAL PARKS features first-person voices read by some of America’s greatest actors. Tom Hanks reads the voices of several characters in the film, including Congressman John F. Lacey, who helped push a bill through Congress to protect Yellowstone’s last wild buffalo herd. Other voices include Andy Garcia, Josh Lucas, Eli Wallach, Campbell Scott, Sam Waterston, John Lithgow, George Takei, Philip Bosco, Carolyn McCormick, Adam Arkin and Kevin Conway.

THE NATIONAL PARKS: AMERICA’S BEST IDEA is a production of Florentine Films and WETA Washington, DC. Director/producer: Ken Burns. Producer/Writer: Dayton Duncan. Co-producers: Craig Mellish, Julie Dunfey and David McMahon. Supervising Editor: Paul Barnes. Episode Editors: Paul Barnes, Erik Ewers and Craig Mellish. Cinematography: Buddy Squires, with Allen Moore, Lincoln Else and Ken Burns. Narrator: Peter Coyote.

Corporate funding is provided by General Motors and Bank of America. Major funding is provided by the Evelyn & Walter Haas, Jr. Fund; Corporation for Public Broadcasting; The Arthur Vining Davis Foundations; Park Foundation, Inc.; Public Broadcasting Service; National Park Foundation; The Peter Jay Sharp Foundation; and The Pew Charitable Trusts.

For more information and photos go to pbs.org/pressroom

About WETA
WETA Washington, DC, is the third-largest producing station for public television and the flagship public broadcaster in the nation’s capital. WETA productions and co-productions include THE NEWSHOUR WITH JIM LEHRER, WASHINGTON WEEK WITH GWEN IFILL AND NATIONAL JOURNAL, AMERICA AT A CROSSROADS and IN PERFORMANCE AT THE WHITE HOUSE. Additionally, for more than 20 years, WETA has partnered with filmmaker Ken Burns to bring his landmark documentaries to the nation via public television, including the 2007 film THE WAR. Sharon Percy Rockefeller is president and CEO of WETA. More information on WETA and its programs and services is available at www.weta.org.

About PBS
PBS, with its 356 member stations, offers all Americans – from every walk of life – the opportunity to explore new ideas and new worlds through television and online content. Each week, PBS reaches more than 65 million people and invites them to experience the worlds of science, history, nature and public affairs; hear diverse viewpoints; and take front row seats to world-class drama and performances. PBS’ broad array of programs has been consistently honored by the industry’s most coveted award competitions. Teachers of children from pre-K through 12th grade turn to PBS for digital content and services that help bring classroom lessons to life. PBS’ premier children’s TV programming and Web site, pbskids.org, are parents’ and teachers’ most trusted partners in inspiring and nurturing curiosity and love of learning in children. More information about PBS is available at www.pbs.org, one of the leading dot-org Web sites on the Internet.


-PBS-


CONTACTS:
Carrie Johnson, PBS, 703-739-5129
Dave Donovan/Cassin Donn/Brian Moriarty, Dan Klores Communications, 212/685-4300


www.pbs.org/pressroom

St. Augustine must have a national historical park, seashore and scenic coastal highway -- see www.staugustgreen.com

St. Augustine must have a national historical park, seashore and scenic coastal highway -- see www.staugustgreen.com

Guest Column: St. Augustine should have a national historical park



ED SLAVIN
St. Augustine
Publication Date: 03/26/07

Real estate speculators (some foreign-funded) continue to destroy our local wildlife, habitat, nature and history. Roads are clogged. Noise abounds. Our way of life is being destroyed. Unfeeling, uncaring Philistines are turning St. Johns County into an uglier, unreasonable facsimile of South Florida. Unjust county government stewards allowed an asphalt plant near homes. Another plant reportedly emits 50 tons/year of volatile organic compounds into residents' and workers' lungs and brains.

Speculators are even trying to build homes on top of unremediated septic tanks/fields, while vacationing boaters pollute our Bay front with untreated sewage (the only boat-pumpout-station is at Conch House Marina). Our Bay front (which lacks a harbormaster) had an oil spill Jan. 15. Developers demand to build docks over city-owned State Road 312 area marshes for boat-owners' pleasure. Enough.

Let's invite environmental tourism by preserving an "emerald necklace of parks," including the city-owned marsh.

Ask Congress to hold hearings to map our "St. Augustine National Historical Park and National Seashore" (SANHPNS), using 1928-style trolleycars to save gasoline, uniting the Castillo and Fort Matanzas National Monuments, "slave market park," downtown streets, Government House, Red House Bluff indigenous village (next to historical society), marshes, forests, National Cemetery, GTM NERR, Anastasia State Park, Fort Mose and other city, county, state and St. Johns River Water Management District lands.

Let's cancel future shock/schlock/sprawl/ugliness/skyscrapers and eliminate temptations to abuse/neglect/misuse state parks and historic buildings for golf courses and rote, rube commercialism.

In December, State Sen. Jim King suggested Florida donate "deed and title" of state buildings to our city. I suggested that we deed them to the National Park Service (NPS), with St. George Street visitor center in restored buildings, saving millions (as in the New Bedford Whaling National Historical Park).

St. Augustine needs a national civil rights and indigenous history museum, celebrating local residents and national leaders, whose courage helped win passage of 1964's Civil Rights Act. Why not put the museum in the old Woolworth's building, restored to its former glory, with wood floors, lunch-counter and exhibits on the civil rights struggles that changed history (well- documented in Jeremy Dean's documentary, "Dare Not Walk Alone"), with "footsoldiers monument" across the street ?

Why not (finally) implement the 2003 National Trust for Historic Preservation and Flagler College study on how to protect our history? Let's tax tourists more to fund historic preservation, as in Charleston/elsewhere.

Let's preserve/protect the quality of our lives and visitors' experience (and property values) by preserving forever what speculators haven't destroyed (yet).

Let's adopt a three-year moratorium on growth, while we work to adopt truly comprehensive plans worthy of the name.

Colonial National Historical Park (NHP), Philadelphia's Independence NHP and NHPs in Boston, New Bedford, Valley Forge, San Francisco and Saratoga.

There's a Martin Luther King historical site in Atlanta, NHPs for "Rosie the Riveter" (California) and the "War in the Pacific" (Guam), and new parks slated for ten Japanese internment camps.

Florida hosts Everglades, Dry Tortugas and Biscayne National Parks and Canaveral National Seashore. Let's add St. Augustine to the list.

From sea to shining sea, America's coastal areas enjoy national parks. Where's ours?

Let's make parts of State Road A1A a National Parkway and hiking/biking trail, like the Colonial National Historical Parkway and the Baltimore Washington, George Washington, Rock Creek and John D. Rockefeller (Wyoming) Parkways and the Appalachian Trial and C&O Canal.

Let's add St. Augustine to the list of our nation's most beloved national parks, joining Zion, Yosemite, Grand Canyon, Bryce Canyon and the Great Smoky Mountains.

Florida's 500th and St. Augustine's 450th anniversaries are only six and eight years away (2013 and 2015). Enacting a national park and seashore will forever preserve the treasures that we love. It will halt the sprawl we hate, increase tourism and reduce local taxes, paying speculators to stop.

Mayor Joe Boles' mother graciously thanked me for speaking out on these issues after the Jan. 22 City Commission meeting -- issues that Mrs. Boles has been outspoken about for "30 years." Let's honor/heed Mrs. Boles' wisdom -- and those who proposed a national park before World War II. Let's save St. Augustine and our environment forever.

#

Ed Slavin lives in St. Augustine.

Click here to return to story:
http://staugustine.com/stories/032607/opinions_4479465.shtml

© The St. Augustine Record

Other-directed Rep. JOHN LUIGI MICA won't even talk about a St. Augustine National Historical Park, National Seashore and Scenic Coastal Parkway Act

He's too busy jetting to Tibet with your money (selling Boeing airplanes to China, he claims).

He's too busy gallivanting with despicable characters like the foreign agents for the Royal Kingdom of Saudi Arabia (a/k/a "House of Saud").

ENRON's AND SAUDI ARABIA's MEN IN THE REPUBLICAN PARTY WORK FOR CONGRESSMAN JOHN MICA'S RE-ELECTION CAMPAIGN

ENRON's AND SAUDI ARABIA's MEN IN THE REPUBLICAN PARTY WORK FOR CONGRESSMAN JOHN MICA'S RE-ELECTION CAMPAIGN











KENNETH LAY a/k/a "KENNY BOY," PRESIDENT BUSH's PAL











Here's ex-President Bush holding hands with the king of the Royal Kingdom of Saudi Arabia. It figures that Republicans, being economic royalists, would have a special affinity for the dictators of Saudi Arabia.

Read below about how Congressman JOHN MICA's been bragging about his political consultant, who has received millions of dollars from ENRON and the ROYAL KINGDOM OF SAUDI ARABIA for propaganda -- in fact, MICA's political consultant registered with the Justice Department as a foreign agent for the ROYAL KINGDOM OF SAUDI ARABIA.

CONGRESSMAN MICA'S POLITICAL CONSULTANT A REGISTERED FOREIGN AGENT OF THE ROYAL KINGDOM OF SAUDI ARABIA AND ALSO WORKED FOR ENRON

CONGRESSMAN MICA'S POLITICAL CONSULTANT A REGISTERED FOREIGN AGENT OF THE ROYAL KINGDOM OF SAUDI ARABIA AND ALSO WORKED FOR ENRON



Congressman JOHN MICA's political consultant, JAMES INNOCENZI of SANDLER-INNOCENZI, Repug propagandists who work for the Royal Kingdom of Saudi Arabia

SOurcewatch.com reports:

Sandler-Innocenzi, Inc.
From SourceWatch
Sandler-Innocenzi, Inc. is a political consulting firm based in Alexandria, Virginia. They buy media spots for political ads, and also work on ad themes. They mostly work with Republicans and industry consortiums. They also have done work for the government of Saudi Arabia, and are registered with the US Department of Justice as a foreign agent of Saudi Arabia.

Retrieved from "http://www.sourcewatch.org/index.php?title=Sandler-Innocenzi%2C_Inc."

From PRwatch.org:

Saudi Arabia Spends $3.8 Million on PR
Topics: international | public relations
Source: O'Dwyer's PR Daily, May 16, 2002
"The Royal Embassy of Saudi Arabia has paid Qorvis Communications $3.8 million since it signed a one-year $200,000 a-month contract on Nov. 14 with the 15 percent Patton Boggs-owned PA shop," trade publication O'Dwyer's PR Daily reports. "The bulk of those outlays ($2.9 million) were for advertising services to position the Kingdom as a trusted ally of the U.S. and a partner in President Bush's 'war on terror.' QC, in turn, paid its advertising contractor Sandler-Innocenzi $2.5 million for work on the ads. Qorvis' representation agreement that it filed with Ambassador Prince Bandar has an interesting wrinkle. The firm agrees to tell the Saudis about any foreign client that approaches it for representation during the contract period. QC also agrees that for two years following termination of the Arab account, QC 'will not accept any engagement with any client that would be deemed adverse to the interests of the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia.'"


For more on the obnoxious insult from JAMES INNOCENZI about American voters ("microwave society") and SANDLER-INNOCENZI's Rogue's Gallery of Republican clients, please see the article below.

Here's another article, from the Center for Public Integrity:

Email StoryPrint Story
Saudis Drop Big Bucks for Washington Influence
Saudi Arabia the most active OPEC member on K Street

By Kevin Bogardus

WASHINGTON, September 22, 2004 — Saudi Arabia has spent more of its petroleum dollars lobbying the U.S. government than any of the other 10 members of the Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries, a total of $6.6 million since mid-2003.

All told, the Saudi government and companies within the kingdom have hired 11 lobby shops and public relations firms to plead their case before official Washington and the American public, the Center for Public Integrity has found.

Business spiked on K Street soon after the 9/11 terrorist attacks. The Saudis have spent more than $20 million on lobbying and public relations efforts in the United States since the terrorist attacks, according to foreign lobbying disclosure filings with the U.S. Department of Justice.

Fifteen of the 19 hijackers who carried out the September 11 attacks were from Saudi Arabia.

Qorvis Communications Inc. has benefited the most from the Saudis' political and PR largesse, taking in $4.5 million during October 2003 through March 2004. Through Qorvis, several firms have been subcontracted to conduct focus groups, produce print, radio, and television ads, and meet with Washington power players.


An Alexandria, Va., firm, Sandler-Innocenzi, handled the radio image campaign for the Saudis. In late 2003, the company orchestrated a three-week blitz in 16 markets across the country touting the kingdom and its people. The total cost was nearly $1 million.

As one of Qorvis' strategic partners, Patton Boggs, one of Washington's largest law and lobbying shops, performs a mountain of lobbying work for the Saudis. For example, Patton Boggs lobbyists have met with congressional staffers on behalf of Saudi interests 62 times in the first half of 2004 alone.

Qorvis itself has created a Web site, www.aboutsaudiarabia.net, to answer queries for registered users about the kingdom. Tossing out rhetorical questions like "Did you know that Saudi Arabia revoked Osama bin Laden's citizenship in 1994?" the site promotes the kingdom as a U.S. ally in the war on terror.

In August 2004, Qorvis announced another nationwide radio campaign to highlight its interpretation of the 9/11 Commission's findings, specifically that the Saudi government was not implicated in the terrorist attacks.

"Our polling indicates there is a major shift. Allegations by our major critics have been proven false," said Nail Al-Jubeir, the director of information and congressional relations at the Embassy of Saudi Arabia in Washington. "The 9/11 Commission Report has given us a clean bill of health."

Yet the former Senate Intelligence Committee chairman, Sen. Bob Graham, D-Fla., has gone public with allegations of the Saudis' involvement in 9/11 in his new book, Intelligence Matters. Graham has taken to the airwaves, citing a Saudi government agent helping two of the hijackers in San Diego, Calif., and White House pressure to gut investigations.

"We urge Sen. Graham to read the 9/11 Commission book, which based on his comments he probably has not," said Al-Jubeir. In addition, the kingdom's Ambassador to the United States, Prince Bandar bin Sultan, rebutted all of Graham's charges in a press release from the Saudi Embassy.

Qorvis lobbyists arranged for Saudi officials to take their message straight to the press. Bandar and others have appeared on television dozens of times since October 2003. Saudi representatives also met personally with the editorial boards of seven major newspapers, including The New York Times and USA Today.

"I do think there are people in the media who are chasing headlines instead of facts," said Al-Jubeir, the embassy official.

One of the Saudis' more unusual ventures involves the creation of the Women's Project for Saudi Arabia. Working with a company called the Barnett Group, Qorvis is paying the consultants more than $81,000 to send delegations of high-level American businesswomen to visit Saudi Arabia, as well as organize a future series of women's programs in the kingdom. In turn, Saudi women might travel to the United States.

Judith Barnett, president of the Barnett Group, is a Georgetown University law professor and former deputy assistant secretary of commerce in the Clinton administration. She was primarily responsible for trade in Africa and the Middle East, organizing summits throughout the region while at Commerce.

Barnett appears to have been an advocate of Saudi Arabia before she began to officially lobby for the kingdom's interests. Just a month before she signed her contract with Qorvis, Barnett wrote a column titled "A Mind-Bending Venture Into Saudi Gender Politics," a 1,500-word piece on her experiences at the Jeddah Economic Forum. The article was published in The Washington Post and The Vancouver Sun.

"Qorvis sought me out after the article to try to take this perspective and create ties," said Barnett. "It is not just about creating a network of businesswomen, but real business opportunities."


President George W. Bush meets with Saudi Arabian Ambassador Prince Bandar bin Sultan in Crawford, Texas, in this Aug. 2002 photo.

Women in Saudi Arabia are markedly under-represented. Prohibited from participating in public life and victimized by domestic violence, females in the kingdom petitioned their government for more representation this year, according to Amnesty International's annual report.

Despite the fact that Saudi Arabia is often criticized for its lack of rights for women, Barnett says she was impressed by the Saudi businesswomen she met at the forum in January 2004.

"The women I met with were extremely progressive and very advanced in medicine and business in particular. It was really wonderful for me to see that there was a lot of strong leadership there that was female."

Saudi Arabia is still not viewed in the best of light here in the United States. In addition to a widely seen documentary, several books critical of the kingdom have raised uneasy questions about both its connection to the Bush administration and its role in combating terrorism. The kingdom's representatives say they are committed to turning that image around, however.

"For several years, we were maligned and attacked by several groups," said Al-Jubeir. "This is an uphill battle."

The image struggle continues for the kingdom. For the first time under the 1998 International Religious Freedom Act, the State Department last week declared Saudi Arabia a "country of particular concern" for denying religious freedom "to all but those who adhere to the state-sanctioned version of Sunni Islam." The Saudi Embassy has declined media requests for comment on the State Department's report.


Congressman JOHN MICA's political consultant, JAMES INNOCENZI of SANDLER-INNOCENZI, Repug propagandists who work for the Royal Kingdom of Saudi Arabia

Here's another article about JAMES INNOCENZI of SANDLER-INNOCENZI and their work for the Royal Kingdom of Saudi Arabia:


Wednesday, May 01, 2002 Rittenhouse Review

SAUDIS HIRE REPUBLICAN P.R. FIRMS
TO BURNISH IMAGE
In today's New York Post we read that Saudi Arabia has hired at least five prominent Washington public and government relations firms with close ties to the Republican Party to improve its image in the aftermath of the September 11 terrorist attacks.

Who's getting the business?

Sandler-Innocenzi Inc. ("There's too much noise on television.") has been assigned the task of placing ads on television that portray Saudi Arabia as an ally in the Bush administration's efforts to stop terrorism.

Among Sandler-Innocenzi's clients: the Republican National Committee, the National Republican Senatorial Committee, the National Republican Congressional Committee, the Republican Governor's [sic] Association, the Republican National State Elections Committee, the New Hampshire Republican Party, the Republican Party of Florida, Gov. Kirk Fordice (R-Miss.), Gov. Phil Batt (R-Ida.), Gov. Judy Martz (R-Mont.), Sen. Larry Craig (R-Ida.), Sen. Mike Crapo (R-Ida.), Sen. Kay Bailey Hutchison (R-Texas), Rep. Nathan Deal (R-Ga.), Rep. Mike Bilarakis (R-Fla.), Rep. Steve Schiff (R-N.M.), Rep. Wayne Gilchrest (R-Md.), Rep. John Mica (R-Fla.), Rep. Fred Upton (R-Mich.), Rep. Jim Gibbons (R-Nev.), Rep. Bob Schaffer (R-Colo.), Rep. Tom Coburn (R-Okla.), Rep. Clay Shaw (R-Fla.) Rep. Mike Oxley (R-Ohio), Rep. Tom Delay (R-Texas), Rep. Steve Buyer (R-Ind.), Rep. Jim Leach (R-Iowa), Rep. Adam Putnam (R-Fla.), and Rep. Butch Otter (R-Ida.).

Sandler-Innocenzi also worked for Enron Corp., which is hoping to emerge from bankruptcy "as a strong and viable, albeit smaller, company," on the issue of "electrical monopoly deregulation."


Next up, Qorvis Communications, "Communication for Wall Street, Main Street and K Street," which is pulling in $2.4 million on an annualized basis -- not from the Saudis but from Sandler-Innocenzi, which has outsourced the job of placing the ads. That leads us to wonder what exactly Sandler-Innocenzi is doing and how much the firm has been paid for its services.

"The Saudi strategy is to 'increase awareness' and promote their 'commitment in the war against terrorism,' according to the p.r. contract with Qorvis," the Post reports.

Sandler-Innocenzi declined to comment and has not registered as a foreign agent with the Department of Justice.

Also on the take, Patton Boggs L.L.P., the law firm that "sees things differently." Patton Boggs has snagged a two-month, $200,000 contract, and Hill & Knowlton, which has shaken down the Saudis to the tune of $77,000 a month.

Burson-Marsteller, the public relations firm with "the best people," was paid $2.5 million by the Saudis on September 19 to place newspaper ads in the U.S., including an ad expressing the country's condolences in the aftermath of the deadly attacks.

Finally, Jamie Gallagher, a lobbyist and former Republic Senate staffer, picked up $20,000 for advising the Saudis before their recent meetings with President Bush and top congressional Republicans.

How's it flying? Not very well, apparently. Even in an advertising-starved market the Weather Channel and A&E have rejected the Saudis' ads, though the Post says some local stations have aired the spots.

The political fall-out? Nothing yet, but we're looking forward to hearing the reactions of the firms' clients.


The Rittenhouse Review | Copyright 2002-2006 | PERMALINK |

KNOW YOUR REPUBLICAN THUG MACHINES


Congressman JOHN MICA's political consultant, JAMES INNOCENZI of SANDLER-INNOCENZI, Republican propagandists who work for the Royal Kingdom of Saudi Arabia








"I've never seen a firm like Sandler-Innocenzi," says JOHN MICA in a promo on its website. "They have the ability to project an image that's unparalled in American politics."

The firm's website states, "But we specialize in just one thing: WINNING."

That's apparently why they say they provide "SOPHISTICATED ADVERTISING CAMPAIGNS" to euchre goobers into voting against their economic self-interest. Not in 2008, honey.

In an October 5, 2008 Orlando Sentinel article (unnoticed by its editorial writers endorsing MICA), it was reported of MICA's media manipulation consultant:

Despite a rough two weeks, GOP consultant Jim Innocenzi said the McCain campaign has time to steal Obama's momentum. Once Wall Street's problems stop dominating the news, he said, look for McCain and Palin to focus again on framing Obama as a risky, tax-raising Democrat.

"It's a microwave society," said Innocenzi, who has worked for Florida Republicans John Mica and Adam Putnam. "What happened yesterday is old news."




"It's a microwave society," indeed. These Repug consultant Beltway Bandits have contempt for America, contempt for human rights and contempt for human misery their clients cause.

"It's a microwave society." Harrumph, you dull Republicans. How crass. How vulgar. How inspid. What an insulting thing to say.

We were supposed to forget the financial meltdown, except two trillion of our pension fund assets have been stolen by desuetude (nonenforcement) of worker protection laws. Ever heard of ERISA? Gutted by Republicans.

For those who don't think you and other Seventh Congressional District voters are stupid, SANDLER-INNOCENZI may be picketed and telephoned at 705 Prince Street, Alexandria, VA 22314-3004 703-684-0633 Where to reach COngressman MICA is anyone's guess -- he's probably providing "meals to constituents" at a casino in Puerto Rico or a piano bar in Washington, D.C. See below.

Of course, our tawdry, tatterdemalion Congressman JOHN MICA has patronized voters long enough with his condescending, authoritarian, hierararchical excuse for a Congressional office. He's zero-rated by the Disabled American Veterans for three years in a row. Rated 6% by the League of Conservation Voters.

For more see http://sandler-innocenzi.com/2008/portfolio.shtml for samples of their manipulative commercials -- see the Arizona outhouse commercial attacking environmentalists based on spurious fears.

Here is a list of Sandler-Innocenzi's clients:


Governor Jim Gibbons - Nevada
Governor Dave Heineman - Nebraska
Governor Butch Otter - Idaho

Governor Judy Martz - Montana
Governor Kirk Fordice - Mississippi
Governor Phil Batt - Idaho

Governor Kay Orr - Nebraska
Governor Jim Douglas - Vermont (RGA)
Governor Bob Ehrlich - Maryland (RGA)

Senator Mike Crapo - Idaho
Senator Larry Craig - Idaho
Senator Richard Burr - North Carolina (AMA)
Senator Kay Bailey Hutchison - Texas (NRSC)


Congressman Adam Putnam - Florida
Congressman Steve Buyer - Indiana

Congressman John Mica - FloridaCongressman Mike Turner - Ohio

Congressman Dave Hobson - Ohio
Congressman Wayne Gilchrest - Maryland
Congressman Nathan Deal - Georgia

The American Academy of Ophthalmology
American Medical Association
Associated Builders and Contractors
The National Restaurant Association

The Republican National Committee
The Republican Governors Association
The National Republican Senatorial Committee
The National Republican Congressional Committee

The Ohio Chamber of Commerce
Michigan Chamber of Commerce
The Republican National State Elections Committee
The Republican Party of Florida
The New Hampshire Republican Party

Here's the Orlando Sentinel article quoting Mica's political consultant, James Innocenzi, of Alexandria, Virginia:

Sarah Palin's task: Regain lead for McCain in Florida
Jim Stratton | Orlando Sentinel
12:37 PM EDT, October 5, 2008
Alaska Gov. Sarah Palin comes to Florida on Monday for what could be her ticket's most crucial presidential-campaign trip so far.

With Barack Obama leading in several recent state polls, and with John McCain pulling out of Michigan, Palin is being dispatched to raise money and shore up support among Republican loyalists during a two-day swing that will cover more than 800 miles and include four public rallies.

"This is really key," said David Johnson, a GOP consultant and former executive director of the state party. "She's got to energize the base."

The high-stakes trip comes with less than a month until Election Day at a time when McCain appears to be losing traction in battleground states, including Florida. Four polls released in the past week show Obama leading McCain here by 3 percentage points to 8 percentage points. A fifth poll Friday had McCain up 3 points.



Obama spokeswoman Adrianne Marsh said the tilt in Obama's direction comes, in part, because "families are still hurting" and see Obama as better prepared to deal with the state's economic troubles. Marsh said Democrats will use Palin's visit as a tool to recruit more unregistered voters.

"We're going to be telling voters exactly what's at stake," she said. Palin's tour, Marsh said, "does just as much to drive our supporters as theirs."


'Must-win' for McCain

GOP strategists have said McCain has virtually no chance of winning the presidency without Florida's 27 electoral votes. Obama could cobble together 270 electoral votes without taking Florida, but the campaign is eager to avoid that.

"It's absolutely a must-win for McCain," said Jamie Miller, a former regional political director for the Republican Party of Florida. "It's one of Obama's knockout states."

But the numbers and the news in the past two weeks have worked against the longtime Arizona senator.

As voters fretted about Wall Street and Congress debated a $700 billion bailout, Obama and running mate Joe Biden put distance between themselves and the McCain-Palin team. Palin's job this week is to reel in Obama and keep Florida -- which historically and demographically favors GOP presidential candidates -- in play.

Palin is scheduled at rallies Monday in Clearwater and Fort Myers. On Tuesday, she heads to Jacksonville and then cuts across the Panhandle for an event in Pensacola. Palin will also attend three fundraisers, including a $25,000-a-head dinner in Boca Raton. In all, the campaign hopes to raise $3 million.

With the exception of Clearwater -- which is in the swing area of Pinellas County -- the stops on Palin's tour are in Republican strongholds where she is likely to draw big crowds. Last month, officials estimate at least 25,000 people turned out for a Palin rally at The Villages, the sprawling retirement community in Lake, Sumter and Marion counties.

Since then, Palin has seen her favorability ratings sink after a series of awkward interviews that raised questions about her intellectual depth. But her performance in Thursday's debate with Biden was markedly better, reassuring many supporters that Palin was a solid candidate.

"She's going to have a great trip," Johnson said. "And she's going to get wall-to-wall coverage."

McCain needs some good press. Word that he was abandoning Michigan -- and its 17 electoral votes -- surprised GOP strategists. Though the state went Democratic in 2004 and 2000, McCain had made a strong run there, hoping to flip it this year.

The decision was criticized by some Republicans, including veteran GOP consultant Ed Rollins.

"We need to be competing in Michigan," Rollins said Thursday night.

Meanwhile, some Florida grass-roots Republicans are growing antsy about the campaign's efforts in Florida. Miller said he has spoken with party members who are concerned McCain hasn't built a big enough presence on the ground. He also worries that McCain was hurt by his decision late last month to suspend his campaign during discussions about Wall Street.

Since then, said Miller, there's been no splash in Florida to remind voters the game is back on.

"I think if you did a poll of likely Florida voters, and asked them, 'Is John McCain's campaign still suspended?' 8 [percent] to 12 percent would say yes," he said. "I think that's a huge hurdle they're overlooking."


Won't seek Bush's help

Another problem: McCain can't -- or doesn't want to -- send the sitting president and members of the Bush administration across Florida as high-powered surrogates. Typically, those officials are coveted stand-ins, used to raise money, bash an opponent and whip up excitement. But the president and vice president are so unpopular, it could hurt McCain to make wide use of them.

Despite a rough two weeks, GOP consultant Jim Innocenzi said the McCain campaign has time to steal Obama's momentum. Once Wall Street's problems stop dominating the news, he said, look for McCain and Palin to focus again on framing Obama as a risky, tax-raising Democrat.

"It's a microwave society," said Innocenzi, who has worked for Florida Republicans John Mica and Adam Putnam. "What happened yesterday is old news."


Jim Stratton can be reached at jstratton@orlandosentinel.com or 407-420-5379.
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Here's more comical excerpts from the Sandler-Innocenzi website:
















Former Montana Governor Judy Martz bragged of being a captive of special interests. (MORE)xxx





Sure sounds like Sandler-Innocenzi is skilled at turning sows' ears into silk purses.

Not in 2008, I reckon.
















They're too chicken to do anything but cower to power. Our Founders wrote about factions in Federalist No. 10 and they did not like them -- sellouts like MICA and prostitutes like the SANDLER-INNOCENZI firm just don't get it. They're traitors to American values of liberty, equality and government transparency and honesty.

They're the tools of special interests like oligopolists in banking -- they're proud of it, as MICA is with the airports and airlines and trucking companies.

These overbearing Republicans are just about done -- stick a fork in 'em!




Congressman JOHN MICA's political consultant, JAMES INNOCENZI of SANDLER-INNOCENZI, Repug propagandists who work for the Royal Kingdom of Saudi Arabia