In the same paper there is a report of planned "large scale layoffs" in both city hall and the school system, then you read further on, and there is a report of a plan to spend $100 million to expand the sh1t plant.
How many teacher jobs could be saved with the $100 million these brainless politicians want to throw away on a fancy new crap plant?
HARTFORD -- New Secretary of the State Denise Merrill has cancelled a popular spring student essay and poster contest, telling elementary principals she was not left enough money by predecessor and 2011 U.S. Senate candidate Susan Bysiewicz.
"Unfortunately, when I took office in January 2011 , the Connecticut Citizenship Fund was nearly 100 percent depleted," Merrill recently wrote school administrators about delaying the 16-year-old competition until the fall.
Her office said it takes about $2,500 to run and involves hundreds of schools.
Merrill's letter, prompted by inquiries from school administrators and parents, is not critical of Bysiewicz. But it shines a light on what some allege was her fellow Democrat's inappropriate use of the citizenship fund to support her political ambitions by traveling the state and handing out awards to Korean war veterans.
What is wrong with this picture?
ReplyDeleteIn the same paper there is a report of planned "large scale layoffs" in both city hall and the school system, then you read further on, and there is a report of a plan to spend $100 million to expand the sh1t plant.
How many teacher jobs could be saved with the $100 million these brainless politicians want to throw away on a fancy new crap plant?
Just keep voting for Democraps!
why don't we just lay off Candelori instead?
ReplyDeleteHARTFORD -- New Secretary of the State Denise Merrill has cancelled a popular spring student essay and poster contest, telling elementary principals she was not left enough money by predecessor and 2011 U.S. Senate candidate Susan Bysiewicz.
ReplyDelete"Unfortunately, when I took office in January 2011 , the Connecticut Citizenship Fund was nearly 100 percent depleted," Merrill recently wrote school administrators about delaying the 16-year-old competition until the fall.
Her office said it takes about $2,500 to run and involves hundreds of schools.
Merrill's letter, prompted by inquiries from school administrators and parents, is not critical of Bysiewicz. But it shines a light on what some allege was her fellow Democrat's inappropriate use of the citizenship fund to support her political ambitions by traveling the state and handing out awards to Korean war veterans.