Sunday, June 18, 2006

Minneapolis Throws Down the Gauntlet

The City of Minneapolis has set the bar very high for naming horrible choices for the Mike Opat Ball Park Authority.

Joan Campbell is the worst of the worst when it comes to stupid elected officials. She got thrown out of office along with Sharon Sayle Benton and Jackie Cherryhomes.

Can't wait to see who the Governor names.

Ballpark agency has first member
Minneapolis City Council on Friday named a former member, Joan Campbell, to the Minnesota Ballpark Authority.

Former Minneapolis City Council Member Joan Campbell was named Friday as the first appointee to the new five-member Minnesota Ballpark Authority, which will own the new Minnesota Twins stadium and supervise its construction.
A 12-year City Council member who left office in 2001, Campbell was appointed on a 12-1 vote by the City Council. The authority's other four members are expected to be announced next week, when Hennepin County and the governor's office each make two appointments.

The authority, which is scheduled to begin meeting next month, will own the stadium and sign an agreement with the Twins for the team to manage its day-to-day operations.

Campbell, also a former Metropolitan Council member, said she told City Council President Barb Johnson of her interest earlier this week. Campbell said she supported Hennepin County's controversial decision to impose a 0.15 percent countywide sales tax increase, or 3 cents for every $20 spent, that will be used to help build the $522 million stadium. She said she also backed the equally controversial decision to levy the tax without a referendum.

"There needs to be a political will to do what's right for the city, and I think this is right for the city," she said. "I'm happy the county's willing to do this because obviously the tax base in the city would never support that."

But Campbell acknowledged that she became interested in the job only recently after finding out that she was eligible. Members of the Ballpark Authority cannot have held elected office in Hennepin County or Minneapolis within the past two years.

Johnson said Campbell, who served on an implementation panel for the city's new downtown library, was a good choice. "She's extremely loyal and also knows our process," Johnson said. "She's been through this stuff before. She knows how to get a project done on time and on budget."


MIKE KASZUBA

1 comments:

lloydletta said...

ugh....