The public is invited to a meeting at the El Dorado Community Center at 2800 Studebaker, to hear what is being proposed for the staging of Black Hawk helicopters at the Los Alamitos Joint Training Forces Base. The meeting will be held at 6:30 and the public has a chance to hear the plan and to see where the helicopters will be flying over.
I have also requested staff from our Airport Department to be on hand to talk about noise issues. The military needs to hear your input on this project.
Notice: This is not a City of Long Beach site.
Dear Readers: Please note that this is not a City of Long Beach website and is not paid for nor maintained by taxpayer funds.
If you contact Gerrie Schipske through this site on any matter pertaining to the City of Long Beach, a copy of your contact will be forwarded to her official city email as an official public record.
Saturday, April 30, 2011
Schipske Donating Salary Increase
See below for the announcement that pursuant to the City Charter, elected official salaries are raised 1.3% which is the Consumer Price Index amount.
Accordingly, I will be donating my @ $300 to The Long Beach Rosie the Riveter Foundation, a 501 3 c non profit organization established to develop and enhance the Long Beach Rosie the Riveter Park and Interpretive Center.
I am also calling for the Mayor and City Council to stop out of state travel and attendance at conferences until we can get out of this financial mess.
Elected Officials Annual CPI Salary Increase 4-27-11
Accordingly, I will be donating my @ $300 to The Long Beach Rosie the Riveter Foundation, a 501 3 c non profit organization established to develop and enhance the Long Beach Rosie the Riveter Park and Interpretive Center.
I am also calling for the Mayor and City Council to stop out of state travel and attendance at conferences until we can get out of this financial mess.
Elected Officials Annual CPI Salary Increase 4-27-11
Tuesday, April 26, 2011
Just contact the California Citizens Commission on Redistricting Directly
For the first time in the history of California, politicians of either major party will NOT be having influence on how the boundary lines are being drawn for the districts of elected office. And that is they way it should be. District boundaries should not be drawn in a way to favor one political party over another.
That's why it is important that non-elected residents of Long Beach directly contact the California Citizens Redistricting Commission about how they would like the boundaries drawn. The Commission is mandated to:
You don't need to go through anyone, elected or otherwise, to let the Commission know your opinion on how boundaries must be drawn to provide equal representation. In fact, if the Commission believes that the input is politically directed, it may ignore the information to avoid the appearance that once again, lines were drawn to suit politicians and not the voters.
You can attend the public hearing or go online at http://wedrawthelines.ca.gov/ to read more about the process.
You can then contact the Commission directly at http://wedrawthelines.ca.gov/contact.html
or send an email directly to votersfirstact@crc.ca.gov
Get involved. This is a once in a 10 year chance to decide how political boundaries should be drawn -- and they should be drawn by you, not elected officials.
That's why it is important that non-elected residents of Long Beach directly contact the California Citizens Redistricting Commission about how they would like the boundaries drawn. The Commission is mandated to:
- Draw districts with equal population.
- Comply with the federal Voting Rights Act to ensure minority voters have an equal opportunity to elect candidates of their choice.
- Draw districts that are contiguous.
- Respect counties, cities, communities of interest and neighborhoods, where possible.
- Draw districts to be compact, where predictable.
- Draw districts to nest within each other, where practicable. The goal is for one State Senate district to contain two State Assembly districts, and one Board of Equalization District to contain 10 State Senate Districts.
You don't need to go through anyone, elected or otherwise, to let the Commission know your opinion on how boundaries must be drawn to provide equal representation. In fact, if the Commission believes that the input is politically directed, it may ignore the information to avoid the appearance that once again, lines were drawn to suit politicians and not the voters.
You can attend the public hearing or go online at http://wedrawthelines.ca.gov/ to read more about the process.
You can then contact the Commission directly at http://wedrawthelines.ca.gov/contact.html
or send an email directly to votersfirstact@crc.ca.gov
Get involved. This is a once in a 10 year chance to decide how political boundaries should be drawn -- and they should be drawn by you, not elected officials.
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