Council to pursue Urich for City Manager

The City has issued the following press release:

After last night’s interview, Mayor Ardis, City Council Members, and Mr. Urich, agreed that both sides would like to continue discussions towards a possible contract offer. A meeting between Mr. Urich, the Mayor and two Council Members, will be arranged soon to establish a framework to develop contract specifics. The council is expected to discuss a proposal in executive session after Tuesday’s City Council meeting.

It appears the skids are greased for Patrick Urich to be the next City Manager, well before council elections take place in April.

Cat: How can we not do business with countries that abuse human rights?

Doug Oberhelman, Chairman and CEO of Caterpillar, met with Chinese President Hu Jintao on Thursday in Chicago:

In an interview with the Journal Star just before a luncheon in Washington, D.C., featuring Chinese President Hu Jintao, […] Oberhelman didn’t argue that the concerns about human rights issues in China are valid. […] Hu, Oberhelman said, has helped companies like Caterpillar because he has been welcoming to foreign investment in China.

“We’re big in China, of course, and it is really hard to imagine how we could continue to be a leader in world markets without investing in China,” he said. If you want a legal insight Read more

“I am often asked why we invest as much as we do in China. My question is, how can we not?”

I’ve juxtaposed these quotes in the hopes that it will be jarring to my readers. If it’s not jarring to you, read them again and realize that “human rights issues” in China include things like torture, illegal detention (imagine being arrested simply for expressing unpopular views or for no stated reason whatsoever and denied contact with anyone for an indefinite period of time), and being put before a judicial system that is explicitly instructed by the very same Hu Jintao “to rank ‘the constitution and laws’ of China behind the ‘Party’s cause [and] the people’s interest.'” (See the Human Rights Watch report.)

Think of that and read it again. Torture, illegal detention, unfair courts — concern over that is “valid,” Mr. Oberhelman says. And then he asks “how can we not” invest in China? It’s helped Cat continue to be “a leader in world markets.”

The key here is that Caterpillar wants to put human rights issues and U.S.-China trade in separate compartments, and convince policy-makers that one should not have anything to do with the other. That’s the gist of the memorandum of understanding (MOU) that Cat signed:

The MOU outlines the importance of maintaining a positive trade environment between the Unites States and China, emphasizes how Caterpillar’s exports to China support jobs in the United States and stresses that mutually beneficial trade policies will support greater U.S. exports from Caterpillar in the years to come.

“We realize there are important and substantive issues that exist between the United States and China, from currency valuations to the protection of intellectual property, and that these need to be resolved with a sense of urgency,” said Rich Lavin, Caterpillar group president with responsibility for growth markets, including China. “But we also know the way we resolve disagreements is important. Caterpillar will continue to urge policymakers in both the United States and China to resolve differences in an atmosphere of mutual respect— not by threatening a trade war. We continue to believe that quiet diplomacy and multilateral forums offer a preferred path for resolving differences,” Lavin added.

In other words, address torture and illegal detentions if you must, but don’t let it get in the way of our company making lots of money by doing business with this oppressive regime. Nothing is more important than making money. We should be able to resolve disagreements over torture and illegal detention without threatening the profits we’re getting from the people who torture and illegally detain Chinese citizens. Do we have an understanding?

Is there no one who questions the morality of this? How does Caterpillar defend this kind of compartmentalization ethically? Why does no one hold Caterpillar to a higher standard than this?

Joint Review Board decision invalid; revote scheduled

On December 27, 2010, the Joint Review Board approved the East Village Growth Cell TIF unanimously. However, the legality of that decision is now in question because the makeup of the Board is not compliant with state statute.

The Joint Review Board is composed of one representative from each taxing body and includes at least one member of the general public. State law requires (65 ILCS 5/11-74.4-5[b]) that “If, as determined by the housing impact study [or] … based on other reasonable data, the majority of residential units [in the proposed TIF area] are occupied by very low, low, or moderate income households […] the public member shall be a person who resides in very low, low, or moderate income housing within the redevelopment project area.”

The public member of the Joint Review Board is Debbie Ritschel, who resides at 401 Water, which is not “very low, low, or moderate income housing” nor “within the redevelopment project area.” Therefore, City attorney Randy Ray says the Joint Review Board will have another meeting scheduled for January 31, and “the agenda will call for them to declare a vacancy based on current public member being ineligible. An eligible person will then be nominated and elected. They will then consider ratifying their earlier action re TIF eligibility.”

I wonder how they will go about finding an eligible person. If you live in “very low, low, or moderate income housing” within the proposed East Village TIF, I would encourage you to submit your name for nomination. The public member is selected by a majority of the board members present at the meeting. The members of the Joint Review Board (not including Ritschel) are:

  • Dave Wheeler (Peoria Park District)
  • Dave Kinney (Peoria Public School District 150)
  • Joe Merkle (Sanitary District)
  • Stan Browning (Sanitary District)
  • Jim Scroggins (City of Peoria, Finance Director)
  • Patrick Nichting (City of Peoria, Treasurer)
  • Scott Sorrel (County of Peoria)
  • John Stokowski (Greater Peoria Mass Transit)
  • Glen Olson (Airport Authority)
  • Edward Szynaka (Peoria Public Library)