Category Archives: Piedmont-Triad

Foxx Contributions from 149 PACs for $267,913

According to Capitol Advantage, Virginia Foxx has gotten $267,913 from 149 PACs for the 05-06 election cycle.  The smallest amount ($200) came from the American Association for Marriage and the largest amount ($12,500) came from 21st Century Pac.  Here’s her top 15 PAC contributors

  1. 21st Century Pac, $12,500
  2. Every Republican is Crucial (Ericpac), $10,000
  3. RJ Reynolds Political Action Committee; Reynolds American Inc., $9,000
  4. Together for our Majority PAC (Tompac), $5,000
  5. Wachovia Corporation Employees Good Government Federal Fund, $5,000
  6. Promoting Republicans You Can Elect Project (Pryce Project), $5,000
  7. Dealers Election Action Committee of the National Automotive Dealers Association, $5,000
  8. Freshman Pac, $5,000
  9. Credit Union Legislative Action Council of Cuna, $5,000
  10. Keep Our Majority Pac, $5,000
  11. Rely on Your Beliefs Fund, $5,000
  12. Branch Bank & Trust PAC, $5,000
  13. Duke Energy Corporation PAC, $5,000
  14. Americans for a Republican Majority PAC, $5,000
  15. The Freedom Project, $4,751

Other notable PACs that contributed some grease were the Lorillard Tobacco Company Public Affairs Committee ($3,750), Dell Inc. Employee Pac ($2,500), Petroleum Marketers Association of America/Small Biz Committee ($1,500), Exxonmobil Corporation PAC ($1,000), and Tyco International Inc. Employees PAC ($500).

Given Foxx’s strong and consistent stand on immigration reform I was a little surprised to see all the agricultural organizations that gave money to her.  Those  include

  • American Crystal Suger Company PAC ($3,000)
  • Dairy Farmers of America Inc. Depac ($3,000)
  • Weyerhauser Co. PAC ($2,000)
  • NC Farm Bureau Farmpac ($2,000)
  • National Council of Farmer Cooperatives ($1,000)
  • Minn-Dak Farmers Cooperation ($1,000)
  • American Sugarbeet Growers Association PAC ($1,000)
  • North Carolina Pork Council Pac ($1,000)
  • Great Lakes Sugarbeet Growers PAC ($1,000)
  • Western Peanut Growers PAC ($1,000)
  • American Nursery and Landscape Assn. PAC ($1,000)
  • United Egg Association ($1,000)
  • National Cattlemen’s Beef Association PAC ($1,000)
  • Florida Sugar Cane League PAC ($500)
  • Southern Minnesota Beet Sugar Cooperative PAC ($500)
  • National Chicken Council PAC ($500)
  • National Turkey Federation PAC ($500)
  • American Sugar Cane League of USA ($500)
  • Southern Cottongrowers ($500)
  • National Milk Producers Federation Pac ($500)
  • National Pork Producers Council ($500)

By my count that’s over $20k from ag-related PACs.  The reason that is interesting to me is that she is very strong on immigration reform and is a hard-liner on illegal aliens.  On the other hand agriculture is one of the leading employers/benefactors of illegal alien labor (along with construction).  Strange. **Update** Okay, so I might be an idiot.  She sits on the House Agriculture committee, in which case the donations make sense.  On the other hand I do wonder how the average ag-business person feels about her immigration stance?

**Update #2** In an interview in the Winston-Salem Journal Foxx denied that she had any connections to oil (her opponent Roger Sharpe said she is in the oil companies’ pocket), but she’s gotten some contributions from oil company PACs including ExxonMobil.  It’s a small amount of money so I’d say Sharpe better find another bone to pick. He also better get busy with his fundraising because Foxx has a serious war-chest and as of the last election filings he has, uh, not so much.

Can’t Accuse the Greensboro News & Record of Being Passive

The Greensboro News & Record is getting more recognition for its forward-thinking in terms of new media.  PressThink, which has been a fan of the N&R for a while, recently profiled the paper’s editor John Robinson (although being compared to Mr. Rogers is definitely a mixed blessing).  This is well-earned attention because the N&R is doing what any business in a threatened industry should do: get aggressive.

It started with their blogging, which JR should take credit for because he led the way.  He could have assigned blogging to someone else but he stepped into the fray himself and that sent an important message to the people working for and with him.  He is also careful to share the credit if not shift it completely, to the very smart people he has working with him like Lex Alexander.  That’s another sign of leadership and he should get credit for it.  He’s right, of course, that they all deserve credit but if you’re going to get the criticism that leaders always get then you should also get credit when it is due.

This would be an interesting story if the folks at the N&R stopped with the blogging, but they didn’t. They have now launched three community hubs, called "Hometown Hubs", is experimenting with podcasts and is also delving into using multimedia for stories.  All of these initiatives can be found in their Town Square section. They have also restructured their classified advertising, which is the lifeblood for any newspaper.

The N&R is absolutely doing the right thing.  Its traditional business is under assault and the relative cost of experimenting online now is very low compared with the risk of doing nothing or moving slowly.  If nothing else it is raising the cost of entering the market higher for any potential entrepreneurial competitors, but more importantly it is allowing its people to learn the skills they need in the coming decade or two while the cost of doing so is small.  That is truly forward thinking.

Crooks Just Loved the Piedmont

According to this article about a book that is about a prolific robbery gang from Philadelphia during the 50s, 60s and 70s, North Carolina and the Piedmont in particular were favorite targets.

They traveled to rob, usually to someplace warm, where tire tracks
and footprints wouldn’t be left in snow and mud. North Carolina was a
favorite target; Kripplebauer saw the state as one big ATM machine.

For years, he and his associates picked off homes in Winston-Salem,
Greensboro and Raleigh, so proficient at thievery that the locals gave
them a nickname: the Hallmark Gang, because they stole only the best
stuff – jewels and silver bearing high-quality hallmarks.

The book is Confessions of a Second Story Man: Junior Kripplebauer and the K&A Gang and it sounds like it might be a good read.

Carolina-Duke: It’s Great Being in Carolina

After my last post about my declining interest in sports I better come out with another sports-positive post.  The one sport I still get really juiced for is college basketball and there’s no better place to live to satisfy that jones than in North Carolina.  This week is particularly good because we have the end of the ACC regular season and we have Carolina/Duke playing on Saturday.

In anticipation of that Ed Cone has continued a debate about the ACC Coach of the Year that started over at Patrick Eakes’ blog and includes references to a column in the W-S Journal by John Delong. Ed’s arguing for Roy Williams at UNC and I’m agreeing with Delong (not in all the details however) in supporting Coach K at Duke.  Since I’m a Wake fan (and NC State after that) I feel that I’m a little more objective than all the UNC partisans, but then I would thin that wouldn’t I? Either way it’s really fun stuff.

Quick aside: One thing I’ve noticed since moving to NC is that while much of the country dislikes Duke, all non-Duke fans in NC seem to have a special level of hatred for that program.  Seriously all Carolina, NC State and Wake fans can agree on one thing: they hate Duke. 

I do understand what big business that college basketball is, which you would think would put me off like the crass, greedy nature of other sports has, but there’s still something wonderful about watching very talented athletes who aren’t yet as polished as their professional brethren.  And I think the passion of the coaches, players, students and alumni give the games a special atmosphere.  That comes through pretty clearly in the debate at Ed’s place.

And the Food Wasn’t Bad

Last week I had lunch with a local moderate conservative blogger who referred to me as a moderate liberal, which is pretty much accurate.  He didn’t name me on his blog to protect my identity so I’ll do the same.  I very much enjoyed the conversation and although we originally planned to eat at Outback we ended up eating at NASCAR Cafe.  Honestly the food was pretty good which means I was pretty surprised.

Speaking of NASCAR and things you ingest did you know that NASCAR big-wig Richard Childress has his own winery?  Living in NW North Carolina does have its interesting moments.

I Wonder if SunTrust Would Care if They Knew

A Greensboro-based blogger named Jay Ovittore wrote a post about the policy at SunTrust Bank to immediately debit a transaction yet hold a refund for several days.  The policy came to his attention when a store clerk mistakenly overcharged a transaction and then immediately refunded it.  Since the refund didn’t kick in right away several other transactions caused him to overdraw his account and rack up over $200 in overdraft fees.

What’s interesting to me is that Jay got 10 comments on his post, and all of them were recommendations for other banks and credit unions.  SunTrust did eventually make things right and it’s not like they’re the only bank with this policy, but they now have their competitors being promoted at their expense on a blog post that will eventually pick up search engine traffic, and at least locally it has stirred up a little noise.  (It’s the network effect in action).  SunTrust is a big institution, so my question is do they know about this and if they do know about it do they care?  Somehow I doubt it, because if they did they would have a representative posting a comment in their own defense.

Should SunTrust care?  Sure they should, because even in the offline world one disgruntled customer typically tells their friends and colleagues when they get bad service and they also tell those friends and colleagues when a company does something extraordinary to make up for it. Conversely, customers rarely tell anyone when they get adequate or even good service which generally makes them a silent majority. Right now SunTrust has a disgruntled soon-to-be-ex-customer that offers them an opportunity to get out a positive message about their company and they’re missing it.

School Selection is Always an Issue

There’s a raging debate over in Guilford County (home to the city/towns of Greensboro and High Point) about school districting.  From what I can tell they’ve been experimenting with various school districting schemes and nothing has worked, and now parents are pushing for neighborhood-based schools.  A couple of good opinion posts about it can be found on Dave Hoggard’s and Sue Polinsky’s blogs.

Sue uses a great analogy to frame the debate.  Basically she says that the forced segregation of schools is an effort to be a lamp to shine the way to a better society and not a mirror of the reality that we all live in.  She also points out the inherent problems with this situation.

From a personal standpoint I can tell you that growing up my schools had a very strong influence on my worldview.  The first 6 1/2 years of school I never had one non-white kid in my class, and then in November of my 7th grade year we moved to Arlington County, VA which is basically an urban environment.  Overnight I was a minority (there were more ‘other’ races than whites in the school).  Definitely opened my eyes. 

My friends came from all over the world: Italy, Japan, India, Mexico, Korea, Venezuela, Iran, Texas.  This was during the after effects of the Vietnam war so we also had a lot of Cambodian kids who’d come over essentially as refugees.  It was interesting to me that many of my friends, who’s dads worked at their countries’ embassies or for multi-national companies, wanted nothing to do with the refugee kids or the children of the illegal immigrants. They viewed those kids as lower class and were actually rougher on them than the American kids, black or white, were.

By ninth grade most of the kids had divided into gangs, all of which were made up of different races.  One day the blacks would fight the whites, the next day the whites would fight the Vietnamese who would then fight the Mexicans, etc.  One thing all the gangs had in common: 99% of their members were either poor or came from "bad" families.  Middle class black kids and white kids didn’t belong to gangs.  Diplomats’ kids didn’t belong to gangs.  Most interesting: children of refugee parents who were doctors, lawyers, etc. in their home country didn’t belong to gangs.  They were dirt-poor but their parents worked multiple jobs and emphasized education above all else.  These kids didn’t play sports either.

The point is that without moving to Arlington I probably never would have seen the disparity within different races.  I realized at an early age that all races were different in things like dress and food, but remarkably similar in one very important way: they all had their own class structure.  That’s an important lesson I don’t think I would have gotten in my white-bread schools and I can’t think of another place after school that I would have gotten it either.  Well, maybe all those public basketball courts I played on growing up, but that’s a whole different world.

Here’s the difference between my experience and what is going on in Guilford County: we had all that diversity in Arlington within neighborhood schools.  School zones could be drawn up geographically and still have the diversity I mentioned.  That’s because it was a little melting pot.  I don’t know that the parents in Arlington would have been any different from the parents in Guilford if their kids would have been forced to go across town to go to school.  It just wasn’t an issue for them, but if you ask me I think Guilford parents have the right idea in asking for neighborhood schools.  If the neighborhoods aren’t diverse then so be it. 

I’ll end by saying that where I live now, Winston-Salem/Forsyth County has an interesting system for the schools: If you don’t like your "core" school you can pick from up to two other schools and get free busing.  My oldest son has a friend who buses from another school’s zone and it takes him quite a while to get to and from school, but it’s worth it to his family in order for him to go to a better school.  The price is that the school system has to work very hard to work out transportation logistics, but in my mind it’s worth it because it allows parents to choose the right situation for their kids.  Maybe it’s the neighborhood school, and maybe it’s not, but they get to choose.  Maybe Guilford should look at the Forsyth system.

Who Knew?

Did you know that Edward R. Murrow is from the Greensboro area?  That NBA great Bob McAdoo is from Greensboro?  So is O. Henry. Check out Yes! Weekly’s list of 10 celebrities from Greensboro a.k.a Blogsboro.

Blogger Patrick Eakes is related to two of the ten and he’s giving a prize to those who can guess which of them are the two.

The Yes! Weekly piece also mentions that Howard Cossell is supposedly from Winston-Salem…anyone know if this is true?

Has Hell Frozen Over? or The Journal Has a Blogger!

Move over Greensboro News & Record, it looks like the Winston-Salem Journal is finally entering the fray with an in-house blog that is set to launch next week.

The Journal’s managing editor Ken Otterbourg is going to be the paper’s guinea pig, and I’m glad to see it.  I hope he does as well as his counterpart in Greensboro has done and I’m looking forward to his efforts.  I really hope that the blog has comments and an RSS feed, because if it doesn’t the whole exercise will be a glorious waste of time.  In the Q&A with Ken (since it’s online I feel comfortable using his first name although we’ve never met) he says that readers will be able to ask questions, but that could be done by email so I’m not assuming anything.  I’m sure, though, that if Joe has anything to say about it they will have comments and feeds aplenty.

In the Q&A Ken also mentions that the paper will be launching more blogs in the near future.  Maybe hell is freezing as we speak.

Welcome to the sphere Ken and good work Joe.

City Official Shows Public Blogging Done Right

Over in Greensboro, NC the police chief has resigned after being locked out of his own office and threatened with administrative leave by the city manager.  These events are the result of an ongoing controversy surrounding the apparent profiling and investigation of black Greensboro police officers.  You can read the Greensboro News & Record’s coverage here.

City Councilwoman Sandy Carmany is one of the first public officials I’ve seen who consistently maintains a blog, and her post about this issue is a great example of how public officials can use blogs to better inform their constituents.  The comments to the post are also a great example of why that one feature, comments, makes blogs such a powerful communication tool.