For the first time, perhaps in history, a new president of the United States made Indiana their first official stop outside the Washington area as Barack Obama traveled to Elkhart, an area with Americaās highest unemployment rate.
In the first 14 days of his presidency, Mr. Obama tried to reach out in ābipartisanshipā to Congressional Republicans. They repaid his efforts with the bitter attacks and meanspiritedness national Republicans are famous for.
So President Obama came to the Hoosier Heartland ravaged by this economic maelstrom and in a jammed gymnasium at Concord High School that included Sen. Evan Bayh and Congressman Andre Carson, the president made a strong case for his economic recovery plan.
āIām not going to tell you that this bill is perfect. But it is the right size, the right scope, and has the right priorities to create jobs that will jumpstart our economy and transform it for the twenty-first century,ā Obama said.
āI also canāt tell you with 100 percent certainty that everything in this plan will work exactly as we hope,ā the President continued. āBut I can tell you with complete confidence that endless delay or paralysis in Washington in the face of this crisis will bring only deepening disaster.ā
āFolks here in Elkhart and across America need help right now, and they canāt afford to keep on waiting for folks in Washington to get this done,ā Obama declared.
Then the president did something extraordinary and unpresidential. He took questions unscreened and uncensored from ordinary Hoosiers. Part of a strategy outlined by Press Secretary Robert Gibbs, āWeāll get to measure whose questions were better, the voters of Elkhart or the reporters in Washington.ā
And ordinary Hoosiers asked great questions. From a critic who questioned Obamaās trustworthiness when his appointees donāt pay their taxes, to a youngster asking about improving his school, even another wondering if the president would āshare a beerā with a fierce media critic.
Indyās own Rev. Muoja Ajabu implored the president to āsupport the people who got you into office, not the fat cats,ā encouraging him to send the stimulus help ādirectly into the hands of the people.ā
President Obamaās Elkhart effort and his Monday night press conference were extremely effective. And isnāt it great to have an intelligent, thoughtful, caring president for a change?
Also, why didnāt Gov. Mitch Daniels join President Obama in Elkhart as Florida Governor Charlie Crist (Republican) did in Florida Tuesday?
Governor Danielsā office said he wasnāt invited. The White House hasnāt yet responded.
What Iām Hearing in the Streets
Why is consolidating townships good, but consolidating counties is bad?
Of Indianaās 1,008 townships, 937 have less than 20,000 population. Marion County contains six of Indianaās ten largest townships. Those six townships have populations larger than 80 percent of Indianaās 92 counties.
Since those pushing the Daniels/Kernan/Shepard reorganization plan refuse to explain to our African-American community why we need this, I listened to the other side last week.
On WTLC-AM1310ās āAfternoons with Amos,ā three township trustees, including two of the stateās largest, Pike and Wayne, and five term Decatur Township Trustee, a Republican said no one from Daniels/Kernan/Shepard asked their views on township elimination.
Even the United Way, the expert on social service delivery in Central Indiana was never asked how a consolidated countywide emergency poor relief might work.
So, again I challenge Mayor Greg Ballard, Chamber of Commerce, Daniels/Kernan/Shepard and itinerant pundits ā specifically how would you create a countywide emergency poor relief system, for an area with a population five times larger than Indianaās largest townships? How would you deliver those services within the state-mandated 72 hours? I donāt want rhetoric, just the concrete, specific, step-by-step plan.
At āAfternoons with Amosāā fifth anniversary program at the Crispus Attucks Museum, I asked for specifics of Mayor Ballardās countywide poor relief plan from Deputy Mayor Olgen Williams. Incredulously, Williams said Deputy Mayor for Economic Development Nick Weber was handling that assignment, though Williams was being āconsulted.ā
The disorganization of Mayor Ballard on poor relief consolidation is matched by another stunning governmental screw-up.
The Mayorās bragged all over town about his balanced 2009 budget. Last week we learned that Ballardās bragged balanced budget is a sham. The budgetās $8 million in the hole because Ballardās controller forgot that there would be twenty-seven payroll checks for cops and firefighters in 2009; not twenty-six.
WRTV/Channel 6 first revealed the Ballard budget boo-boo and a City-County Building source confirmed it to me in writing.
How ironic that the controllerās office Mayor Ballard wants to assume unprecedented powers over with the UniGov 2.0 plan, committed accounting malpractice. With an error threatening major deficits in a city/county budget facing additional massive red ink because of rising revenue shortfalls and the projected $50 million Capital Improvement Boardās deficit.
And hereās another mess-up. January 24, a Black single mom of three, living in a nearly all-white Franklin Township neighborhood, had her house vandalized on the inside, including racial slurs and obscenities spray painted on her interior walls.
Metro Police are investigating. Channel 6 did a story January 31 and the mom appeared last Wednesday on our program. Her interview ignited indignation and anger, with many demanding why Mayor Ballard hadnāt spoken out about this dastardly crime like he spoke out against the dastardly school bus stop robberies.
Our interview with the victimized mom generated plenty of angry calls to the mayorās office. And the mayorās staff quickly e-mailed saying they had no clue about this potential hate crime. Worse, Public Safety Director Scott Newmanās office e-mailed saying they too had no info on this crime; eleven days after it occurred.
Metro Police didnāt alert the FBI until key community leaders called the feds after our interview with the victimized mom.
Police, the FBI and city officials are now on the same page. But it begs the question. Past administrations had systems where outrageous crimes were quickly brought to the mayorās attention. Why is that system not in place today? Why did the 25th floor not know a heinous hate crime was possibly committed in the city?
Whoās running our city?
See āya next week!
Amos Brownās opinions are not necessarily those of the Indianapolis Recorder Newspaper. You can contact him at (317) 221-0915 or by e-mail at ACBROWN@AOL.COM.