I had this big music post in mind for tonight, but I am just too tired to write. Here's what other Tulsa bloggers are writing about:
Homeowners for Fair Zoning salutes Councilor Jim Mautino, who is returning to private life, after the Good Ol' Boy network finally beat him on the fourth of four tries.
Brian C. Biggs has a diagram illustrating the way politicians process debate questions.
Tyson Wynn has audio of Bill LaFortune's concession speech and Kathy Taylor's victory speech. And he has posted some election night thoughts.
Michelle has had it with voting. (It's hard to vote when you have to use one hand to hold your nose.)
Dan Paden waited, and waited, and waited for Bill LaFortune to "throw him a bone." What he meant by that phrase was this:
If LaFortune had done just one thing--something, anything concrete--to decisively sever his relationships with the GOB network, I'd vote for him. But instead, it seems to me that his every move has been calculated to leave the possibility of a reconciliation with the GOB elite open.
In the end, it was his trusty reverse barometer, the Tulsa Whirled, that made up his mind:
During all my deliberations, I hadn't asked myself, "Would the Whirled want me to vote for LaFortune, or for Faulk?" That seemed a no-brainer; Faulk is no threat at all to them. LaFortune, on the other hand, if he wins, and if he's true to what he said on KFAQ, would at least not be what they wanted: Kathy Taylor.
Bobby meant to vote LaFortune but his hand had other ideas. He reviews the Council results and urges his new District 9 councilor, Cason Carter, to stick close to fellow newcomers John Eagleton and Rick Westcott. Good advice.
On Wednesday, KOTV's Steve Berg asked me, my friend and outgoing councilor Chris Medlock, and my friend and new councilor Maria Barnes about the makeup of the new council.
Mad Okie says goodbye and good riddance to the LaFortune administration.
Elsewhere in Tulsa:
D. Schuttler says goodbye and good riddance to the TulsaNow forum, where a moderator deleted and edited his entries that were critical of the moderation policy.
Steve Roemerman says hello to a new Tulsa-based and Tulsa-focused discussion forum called The Voice of Tulsa. Check it out.
Steve also reports on the City Council's decision "to sprinkle or not to sprinkle". That's easy -- immersion is the only Biblical mode....
Steve and his family also visited DoubleShot tonight to enjoy some excellent coffee and express solidarity with the oppressed. He has photos. Bobby at Tulsa Topics wrote about the DoubleShot story earlier in the week.
Good night!
Comments (3)
You might want to comment that the City Council was warned Thursday that a serious revenue and expense problem with the city budget could force cuts in services.
Sam Roop, who continues to hold the title as
Chief Administrative Officer with the high paying job he was given by LaFortune said if the City does not reduce services or find a new
revenue source that balancing a budget is impossible.
I wonder if Kathy Taylor will keep Sam Roop in that same title with the same job.
Posted by susan | April 8, 2006 12:46 AM
Posted on April 8, 2006 00:46
Seems awfully convenient that the Roop's report of a budget crisis came *after* the election.
Posted by W. | April 8, 2006 12:05 PM
Posted on April 8, 2006 12:05
Thanks for the link!
Posted by Tyson Wynn | April 10, 2006 1:44 PM
Posted on April 10, 2006 13:44