Jan 26, 2008 Toledo Blade story :
Here comes the bullcrap excuse :
So now Czarty is concerned with spending, eh? Czarty has no problem wasting money on tree lights, pride signs, and flowers.
But all is not lost for the LCIC :
Hah! Instead of paying $125,000 to an org allegedly interested in county-wide economic development issues, Czarty will attend their meetings. Like that's a fair trade. The LCIC may pay Czarty $125,000 to keep him out of their meetings.
So if Toledo doesn't pay, why should the other communities in the People's Republic of Toledo County pay money to the Toledo Improvement Corporation?
How about this isolationist line from Czarty :
Fine, my brother. Then why can't the other communities in Lucas County think about themselves that way? It's always Toledo who pushes for unigov, but hucksters like Czarty don't care about the county nor the region. Their concern is how the rest of the county and the region can best serve Toledo.
Terms :
- unigov = a combination of City/County Govt.
- regionalism = involves more than one county.
Last summer when Czarty falsely accused Wood County of stealing jobs from Toledo, Thomas F. Pounds, President and Publisher of the Toledo Free Press, said of Czarty's view of the region :
July 2007 Toledo Talk posting titled Hildo looks to unigov to solve Toledo's problems where the Toledo City Paper's colorful columnist(s) asked :
Hopefully yes, since Czarty is worried about his fiefdom.
Seems like Czarty's unwillingness to participate in TIC, I mean, LCIC casts a damper on the 21st Century Government Committee proposal released last summer. The term "cooperation" may, however, have a different meaning in Toledo compared to the rest of the communities in the county and region.
I don't understand why the other communities are involved with the LCIC. What do these other communities gain? They should all end their funding of the LCIC. We have the Regional Growth Partnership which is involved in more than just Lucas County.

Feb 19, 2008 Toledo Blade story titled Sylvania balks at LCIC's $8,500 membership fee
As of Feb. 4, Lucas County contributed $80,000 to the LCIC. The county is expected to pay over $400,000 to the agency this year.
Harding Township ($113.70), Whitehouse ($1,413.64), Washington Township ($825.60), Swanton Township ($1,177), and Richfield Township ($216) are the only member communities of the 18 listed on the LCIC's Web site that have paid anything so far this year.posted by jr on Feb 19, 2008 at 12:44:44 pm #