Legislature Should Honor American Victory

Amid the miasma that is the Florida Legislature, it’s obviously easy to lose sight of basic priorities — let alone a given bill. But here’s one that even the fiscally challenged House could sign off on. Florida Senate Bill 2562 won’t cost anything.

The bill would merely designate the Port of Tampa-based SS American Victory as “Florida’s Official State Flagship.” Arguably, in a time of war and world peril, this restored Merchant Marine ship would merit no less a distinction than Florida’s official designations for flower, tree, bird and song.

Built in 1945, American Victory carried supplies, equipment, ammunition and personnel to the Pacific Theater of World War II, Korea and Vietnam. It also transported humanitarian aid in helping to expedite the Marshall Plan.

The Merchant Marine, lest we ever forget, had the highest casualty rate of any service during WW II. It was also the only WW II service that was completely integrated. It was critically important to its time — and ahead of its time. Now seems an appropriate time to underscore that with the flagship designation. In so doing, we celebrate this state’s rich maritime history and honor thousands of Merchant Marine and Navy Armed Guard veterans.

Theater Of The Absurd A Big Challenge to Iorio

Mayor Pam Iorio’s well-honed communications skills have served her handsomely on the County Commission, in her Supervisor of Elections capacity and on the mayoral hustings. But that was then — and this was Tallahassee.

She was in the capital last week to lobby for Tampa.

By virtue of her two decades in public service, she was hardly a stranger. And by being a big city mayor, she is a big time, state player. But just for good measure, she came accompanied by former Governor Bob Martinez who is also familiar with the perspective from Tampa’s City Hall.

By all accounts, the right doors were opened and the right people seen — from Gov. Jeb Bush to Senate President Jim King and House Speaker Johnnie Byrd. If nothing else, it said Iorio wasn’t wasting any time getting right to the agenda she campaigned on. Iorio, who inherited a city that is largely bonded up, was in Tallahassee to make the case for ongoing help in urban revitalization, affordable housing and the arts. That’s the hat trick for Iorio’s mantra-goal of a more “livable” city. Tampa also can use state leverage for federal help on water issues.

Opened doors, however, can still lead to closed minds. The Governor and the Speaker arguably own two of them.

The economy is dicey and the budgetary process seems scripted by Eugene Ionesco channeling Byrd. Cuts ranging from universities to the medically needy are not just fiscally irresponsible, they’re flat-out harmful to a state that was already behind in such support. Amid a very real crisis that cries out for long-term, revenue-raising solutions, Bush and Byrd soldier on — fighting the partisan cliché canard of liberal spending in state government. Thanks for nothing.

But that’s what you get when you mix a post-Sept. 11 Florida; a couple of ill-informed, costly referenda votes; and a Legislature that has turned “living within our means” into an obscenity. It’s what you get when tapping trust funds and cutting critical services are preferred to revising the state’s outmoded sales tax system and repealing some of the more outlandish, special-interest exemptions.

As to what Iorio gets for her efforts, this much, at least, was encouraging. It was the response of King, the Senate President, to her heads-up that she expected to be working the capitol corridors “a great deal next year.”

“There’s a finite amount of money, and in the end you want to help who you know,” acknowledged King. “It behooves a mayor to make oneself known here to get things done.”

Iorio is quickly finding out how many roles the mayor of Tampa must play. Right now none may be more important than “squeaky wheel.”

Selmon’s Signature Hire At USF

Athletic Director Lee Roy Selmon, a gentleman and a football icon with an expressway named after him, is now putting his own stamp on sports at the University of South Florida. With the departure of head basketball coach Seth Greenberg to Virginia Tech, Selmon will be judged by the success of the program under his first prominent hire, Robert McCullum, the former head coach of Western Michigan.

Heretofore, Selmon has merely maintained what predecessor Paul Griffin, who was forced to step down two years ago, bequeathed him.

For too long USF has settled for mediocrity in basketball. A good crowd is a half-full Sun Dome. A good season is one with NIT possibilities. A good recruiting class never includes local blue chips. A rarity is a game played with discipline and composure or a whole year without somebody getting suspended. The juxtaposition with football, which jumpstarted into national prominence, couldn’t be more stark.

Selmon actually missed the opportunity to make his own mark by previously extending the underachieving Greenberg’s contract. That arched more than a few eyebrows among those who still care about — and support — the program. But Greenberg forced his hand by leaving of his own volition.

With the ball in his own court, Selmon chose McCullum. It’s his signature hire.

Mother’s Day At The Cuban Club

For those looking for a little different way to honor mom this Mother’s Day, consider the annual Mother’s Day Picnic at Ybor City’s historic Circulo Cubano, the Cuban Club.

Doors of the Cuban Club at Palm Avenue and 14th Street open at 11:30 a.m. on Sunday, May 11. Lunch, catered by Sabor de Tampa, will be served at noon in the Ballroom. The music of Son de Mi Tierra begins in the Cantina at 1:00 — and dancing continues until 5:00 p.m.

This 91st annual celebration also features a cash bar plus raffles, door prizes, family photos and carnations for all moms.

Seating this year is limited to 400. Tickets are $15. Children ages 5-9, $7.50; ages 4 and under, free. Sponsorships are still available. All proceeds go towards restoration efforts of the Cuban Club building.

To order tickets or inquire about sponsorships, please call either Jorge or Ileana Diaz at 248-2954.

Bonus Pay: Investing In Poorest Schools

In a previous incarnation I taught secondary school here in Tampa and in Philadelphia. They were inner city schools with all the usual connotations and euphemisms for tough neighborhoods and challenging students. Mordant references to “combat pay” — as in, “How about some?” — were hardly infrequent among the faculty.

Now I see where the Hillsborough County School Board has voted unanimously to actually offer extra pay to teachers in its poorest schools, which invariably are the toughest for teaching. The goal is to halt the inevitably — and understandably — high turnover at such schools, which only adds to the formidable task of teaching the neediest students in the poorest schools.

Some 700-800 teachers are expected to receive an additional 5 percent in pay in a program funded with federal dollars that are typically earmarked for recruitment, retention and staff development. Those who qualify for the bonus will also be attending regular training seminars and working with mentors.

This is not, of course, a panacea for high-poverty schools. It doesn’t ameliorate poverty. But it does address one key variable: faculty. As in improving chances for a better, more stable one.

Call it a concession to reality and well worth the investment. The better the faculty, the less likely it will be “combat pay.”

“Best And Brightest” One Of The Bravest

It won’t be the first time this has happened at Florida State University. In fact, it happens every year in Tallahassee. In the fall FSU will welcome fewer scholarship students than it had expected.

But in this case it won’t be a baseball player who forsook FSU for Major League Baseball bonus money. And it won’t be a hotshot football or basketball star who couldn’t produce a qualifying score on the SAT.

This one will be different. Tragically different. This one is an academic scholarship recipient who won’t be reporting — because he was killed in Iraq.

Lance Cpl. Andrew Aviles, not yet 19, had deferred his full scholarship to fulfill a more immediate dream than going off to college to get a bachelor’s degree in business. Ever since joining Junior ROTC, he had wanted to be a Marine. It was, say those who knew him best, out of a sense of duty and challenge and a constant quest for self-improvement.

What makes it so tragic is what makes Aviles, Robinson High School, Class of ’02, so special. It’s why the students and staff of Robinson took his death so hard.

Unlike many young men and women who sign on to this country’s all-volunteer armed forces, Aviles had plenty of options and the brightest of prospects. Scenarios for success tend to beckon for athletic class presidents who are members of the National Honor Society, third in their graduating class and winners of an academic scholarship. Family and friends spoke highly of his character — and sense of humor.

Aviles’ could easily have headed for FSU, gone on to graduate school and carved out a safe, successful, satisfying career in any number of fields. Instead he became a Marine and did his duty first. And last.

We are all in his debt, and we salute Tampa’s Lance Cpl. Andrew Aviles. One of the “best and brightest” was also one of the “bravest.”

Forget The Compromise; Call it Chutzpah Way

Newly elected City Councilman John Dingfelder didn’t exactly hit the ground stumbling.

First, he nominated and passionately championed the case for the council’s new chairperson, Linda Saul-Sena.

Then he took on encroaching, excessive commercialism symbolized by a proposal to rename Ice Palace Drive “St. Pete Times Forum Drive.” That’s the street that runs behind the erstwhile Ice Palace and in front of the Tampa Marriott Waterside hotel. The issue came before the council as a second reading of an ordinance approved by the previous council.

As a city council rookie, Dingfelder couldn’t have chosen a better way to debut than to question anything else being named “St. Pete” in downtown Tampa. As it is, the “St. Pete Times Forum” is about as welcome as Tampa Tribune Field or The Trib Pier would be in downtown St. Petersburg.

We don’t have to like the St. Pete Times Forum name, and a lot of us don’t, but we have to accept it. But we don’t have to accept what we don’t like about a prospective St. Pete Times Forum Drive. That’s a public right-of-way — not a .3-mile throw-in to the $30-million, arena naming-rights deal. It never should have been up for re-naming.

In the name of compromise, however, Dingfelder offered up “Times Forum Drive,” which seems workable. Another, “Welcome Drive,” was blithely suggested by the Tampa Tribune .

But frankly, enough of compromising. A newspaper buying arena naming rights is already a compromise — of ethics. If Ice Palace Drive is not acceptable, then the marketing effrontery — which is at the core of this whole issue — should be incorporated into any new name.

“Chutzpah Way” sounds like a winner.

No Diversity In Groupthink Higher Education

Thanks to the University of Michigan’s son-of-Bakke case, the Supreme Court is again weighing the value of — and means to achieve — diversity in higher education. But no matter the outcome, no matter which way Justice Sandra Day O’Connor’s vote swings, we are assured of this much. Truly meaningful diversity won’t result, because it’s defined too narrowly.

Studies show that the most underrepresented group in the nation’s top universities and colleges is not Hispanics or blacks but those from low-income families. Class-based affirmative action is still eclipsed by the race-based version. That won’t change regardless of how the Supremes vote.

More to the point, diversity as a function of ideology will remain a higher education oxymoron. Ironically and appallingly, diversity of thought isn’t even an implicit goal. Largely liberal groupthink is the norm among students, irrespective of color. But it’s practically a job requirement for faculty

Say What About Journalism?

Mayor Pam Iorio’s newly appointed communications director, Susanna Martinez, says she won’t have a problem going from television reporter to city official. The former Bay News 9 political reporter is certainly to be taken at her word. Her words, however, included this curious comment to a reporter about her transition to City Hall: “I think a lot of what I do as a journalist is public relations.”

Whatever.

Network Big Winner In Bucs’ Season Opener

The Buccaneers, as we now know, will open the 2003 season on Monday night, Sept. 8, in Philadelphia. It’s a rematch of the 2002 NFC Championship Game, when the Bucs defeated the Eagles, 27-10.

As we also know, the Bucs are not pleased.

NFL protocol has been allowing the defending Super Bowl champ to open at home. In fact, the last six defending Super Bowl champions hosted the first Monday night game after their NFL title season. As for the ’03 Bucs, not only do they have to hit the road, they have to hit it against a rugged, grudge-match rival debuting its new stadium for its cheesesteak-head, mutant fans.

“I don’t see why we need to break that trend,” wondered Bucs’ head coach Jon Gruden. “We sure would’ve liked to have played (the first Monday night game) at home. But we’ll show up and play, and we’ll make no excuses.”

What you might not know, however, is that a lot of folks in Philadelphia — excluding Eagles’ owner Jeff Lurie — aren’t particularly pleased either. Check out the disgruntled take of Philadelphia Daily News columnist Rich Hoffman.

“A home opener against Tampa Bay? In the first regular season game at Lincoln Financial Field? Are you kidding me?” rhetorically asked Hoffman.

“The Bucs are coming in for the opener, courtesy of schedule-making-by-de-Sade,” bemoaned Hoffman. “Think about what your summer is going to be like now. Every time you look back at what might have been, you will see Tampa Bay and feel that ache in your heart. Every time you look ahead to what’s coming next, you will see Tampa Bay and feel that ache in your heart. There will be no escaping it.”

Even an Eagles victory would be scant consolation, noted Hoffman.

“Winning will not shine a light on anything but what was blown in January,” Hoffman explained. “Winning will show the Bucs as a team the Eagles can beat in cold weather or warm weather, under the sun or the stars, a team they can beat anywhere and everywhere — unless it’s for the conference championship.

“Winning, in fact, will breed melancholy.”

Otherwise, bring it on.

And that’s what ABC, the MNF network that obviously called this shot, will do. And ABC, at least, is very pleased.