Thursday, November 24, 2011

'Company Policy: We are not hiring until Obama is gone'

This story has gone viral and when I saw it, I followed the links to the original story and watched the video that businessman Bill Looman had made. It’s always interesting when someone takes a stand for their principles. I was impressed and thought to reprint this here.

Sign posted in Bill Looman’s truck window.


WACO, Ga. -- A west Georgia business owner is stirring up controversy with signs he posted on his company's trucks, for all to see as the trucks roll up and down roads, highways and interstates:

"New Company Policy: We are not hiring until Obama is gone."

"Can't afford it," explained the employer, Bill Looman, Tuesday evening. "I've got people that I want to hire now, but I just can't afford it. And I don't foresee that I'll be able to afford it unless some things change in D.C."

Looman's company is U.S. Cranes, LLC. He said he put up the signs, and first posted pictures of the signs on his personalFacebook page, six months ago, and he said he received mostly positive reaction from people, "about 20-to-one positive."

But for some reason, one of the photos went viral on the Internet on Monday.

And the reaction has been so intense, pro and con, he's had to have his phones disconnected because of the non-stop calls, and he's had to temporarily shut down his company's website because of all the traffic crashing the system.

Looman made it clear, talking with 11Alive's Jon Shirek, that he is not refusing to hire to make some political point; it's that he doesn't believe he can hire anyone, because of the economy. And he blames the Obama administration.

"The way the economy's running, and the way my business has been hampered by the economy, and the policies of the people in power, I felt that it was necessary to voice my opinion, and predict that I wouldn't be able to do any hiring," he said.

Looman did receive some unexpected attention not long after he put up his signs and Facebook photos. He said someone, and he thinks he knows who it was, reported him to the FBI as a threat to national security. He said the accusation filtered its way through the FBI, the Department of Homeland Security and finally the Secret Service. Agents interviewed him.

"The Secret Service left here, they were in a good mood and laughing," Looman said. "I got the feeling they thought it was kind of ridiculous, and a waste of their time."

So Bill Looman is keeping the signs up, and the photos up -- stirring up a lot of debate.

"I just spent 10 years in the Marine Corps protecting the rights of people... the First Amendment, and the Second Amendment and the [rest of the] Bill of Rights," he said. "Lord knows they're calling me at 2 in the morning, all night long, and voicing their opinion. And I respect their right to do that. I'm getting a reaction, a lot of it's negative, now. But a lot of people are waking up."

Wednesday, November 23, 2011

A New Westchester

I found myself disagreeing with some of County Executive Astorino’s last budget, and specifically what he was trying to do with the Department of Emergency Services (DES) and the Department of Public Safety, formerly known as the County Police, and publicly spoke against it. I did, however, try to reach out to people around the County Executive for either a sit-down or at least a phone conference regarding where he was making a mistake, why and how I believed it could be corrected. But, those players never got back to me and I can only assume that they didn’t approach the County Executive on my behalf. Better to say nothing than to stick your neck out. Subsequently, I am being shunned by the Westchester Republican party. Ah, politics in Westchester.


As a former County Legislative candidate for the 8th District, I, along with others, had asked Astorino and others to have the Republican candidates run as a Team, showing the voters that there is a group of qualified, capable and willing Team of Republicans who will attack the spending and taxing problem in Westchester County. I was told that it wouldn’t be practical. Ironically, after Rob won, he couldn’t get much accomplished because the Democrats held the supermajority in the legislature. Maybe I was correct.


This election holds a bit of hope for the Republicans and in particular the County Executive. I'm not sure if he’ll get much completed as the Democrats are still in the majority, although there seems to be more of a chance now that several Republicans have appeared to win their legislative races. I want to see more of a balance in the legislature. More balance will bring a wider variety of ideas, solutions, compromise and level-headed decisions. I’m concerned however because many candidates promised to vote with CE Astorino if elected. We need independent thinkers, as opposed to independence candidates, who will vote the conscience of their constituency, not the partisan line, whether republican, democrat or something else. I believe that is what the voters are hoping for - not blind allegiance to the party.


CE Astorino has proposed this years budget. It appears he is proposing many of the same layoffs he had the last time he proposed the budget. Some of the cuts make more sense than others from this years budget are Departmental cuts: County parks: Down $3 million to $48 million; DSS: Down $16 million to $562 million ($14.5 million reflects a cut in federal stimulus money); Public Safety: Down $1.2 million to $36.4 million; Health: Down $5 million to $160 million. But if DSS is losing grant monies, they are only cutting the county portion by $1.5 million - a proverbial drop in the budget’s bucket.

Other cuts are: $1.9 million to three neighborhood health agencies; $990,000 to Cornell Cooperative Extension; $750,000 to ArtsWestchester; $100,000 to ethnic festivals; $40,000 to "Nutcracker" performance; $30,000 for nighttime movies; $16,000 for Lasdon Park concerts; $10,000 for Battle of the Bands; $7,000 for open gym. These are thousands, not millions and are nice to have but simply a waste. These cuts are symbolic and don't really add up to much.

Specific to the issues of cuts, he has 210 layoffs scheduled for this year. The big question is, “Do we need these people or can we do without them?” If we could live without them, why did we have them in the first place? It was about the same number last year. In fact, the breakdown of layoffs by departments is as follows:
A breakdown of layoffs by department: Human Resources: 1; Budget: 1; Board of Elections: 19; Finance: 1; Information Technology: 7; Law: 2; Planning: 4; Emergency Services: 8; Social Services: 71.


If government should be protecting it’s people, should we be cutting the social services and emergency services as much as we are? Should we be trying to educate the recipients of social services benefits to eventually be self-sufficient? Of course we should. Should we be consolidating two very different departments just because they fall under the moniker of emergency responders? Of course not! As a solution to our over-taxation in Westchester, it’s time for our elected officials to start thinking differently, acting differently and accomplishing more for us.


Most politicos realize it’s easier to just raise taxes, ignore the waste, deception, and phony largess, maybe the politicians should overall what we do run and give away. Reduce duplication where applicable (my only complaint with last years budget), reduce waste and streamline many of the processes that become self-serving and simply, expensive. Let’s hope the County Executive makes some progress this time around and maybe we can have a new Westchester!