Press Releases and Newsletters2021-07-29T15:50:07+00:00

Press Releases and Newsletters

State Rep. Carolyn Justus won’t run for re-election (News and Observer)

More time for family (News and Observer)

State Rep. Carolyn Justus won’t run for re-election.

Justus, a Henderson County Republican, served as a legislative aide to her husband, the late Rep. Larry Justus, and was appointed to fill his seat after he died in 2002. She has been re-elected every two years since.

Justus said she would miss her colleagues and striving for good government, but she told the Times-News of Hendersonville: “I will not miss telling my grandchildren, ‘I can’t attend your play because I have to be in Raleigh.'”

By staff writers Rob Christensen, Lynn Bonner and Benjamin Niolet

Officials await federal word on I-85 Yadkin bridge funds (Lexington Dispatch)

Officials await federal word on I-85 Yadkin bridge funds (Lexington Dispatch)

AAA Carolinas recently rated the Interstate 85 bridge over the Yadkin River as the sixth worst in the state, a bump up from last year when it ranked eighth.

In 2009, efforts by Davidson and Rowan county officials and Gov. Beverly Perdue sparked the hope that soon the N.C. Department of Transportation could begin the $300 million construction project to replace the bridge. The hope was seated firmly in receiving a portion of the $1.5 billion federal stimulus grant for transportation.

Yet, as months passed without definite word if the state won the grant, officials in Raleigh started drafting a plan B.

“We know it’s the No. 1 project in the state that needs to be done,” said N.C. Rep. Hugh Holliman, D-Davidson. “As far as paying for it, we’ll just have to cross that bridge when we come to it.”

The bridge, which was built in 1955, carries between 60,000 and 70,000 vehicles daily. The N.C. Department of Transportation considers it “functionally obsolete” and “structurally deficient” by state standards.

Government officials, including Perdue, have commented on the wide-ranging negative effects on shipping and commerce if the bridge collapsed. While collapse is considered a worst-case scenario, officials remain aware the bridge is in great need of replacement.

The American Recovery and Reinvestment Act of 2009 provided $48.1 billion for transportation projects nationwide. North Carolina received $735 million for highways, $103 million for transit and shares for high-speed rail, Amtrak and other projects.

The ARRA also established surface transportation discretionary grants out of $1.5 billion to be dedicated to state projects. Perdue submitted a request for $300 million to the federal government in July, vowing to keep the state’s immediate need for a replacement bridge in the forefront of the federal government’s attention.

State officials were confident North Carolina could secure the federal funds to construct the bridge. N.C. Transportation Secretary Gene Conti was quoted by WBEV as saying, “I think we’re going to get some substantial resources from the federal government.”

In September, the Lexington City Council deeded two small pieces of land to the NCDOT parallel to Interstate 85 Business Loop just south of the Lexington Business Park in preparation for highway improvements. NCDOT began studies of the area and contract consideration, but still no word had arrived from Washington.

Dr. Max Walser, chairman of the Davidson County Board of Commissioners, has traveled to Washington several times to discuss the state’s need for a new bridge with federal officials. He said news of the grant was supposed to be announced at the beginning of the year.

“I’ve been paying attention, but it’s been very quiet,” Walser said. “My understanding is that it’s now in the hands of the Federal Transportation Commission.”

N.C. Rep. Hugh Holliman, D-Davidson, said it appears the announcement time of the bridge’s chances at federal stimulus funds will be pushed back. Holliman said he recently spoke with Jim Trogdon, chief operating officer of the NCDOT.

“He says we’re going to build that bridge, but we’re going to have to wait another two or three weeks to hear back about federal funding,” Holliman said. “Our attitude at the state level is we’re going to build that bridge.”

The state has some funding options, Holliman said, though none are as fortuitous as the boost federal stimulus money would be. State officials want to begin work this year and may be able to finance the project by breaking it down into three phases. Construction would take about three or four years.

There are some who point to the I-85 bridge as a reason to revise how NCDOT distributes money among 14 operating divisions. The Thomasville, Midway and Lexington city councils recently passed resolutions supporting a revision of the NCDOT Transportation Equity Formula.

High Point Mayor Rebecca Smothers distributed requests to area municipalities, asking them to support revision of the formula, which was established in 1989. The formula gives each division an equal share of transportation funds, but Smothers finds the Equity Formula to be somewhat unequal.

Smothers said the I-85 bridge is a project with statewide, if not national, importance. Funding bridge replacement from NCDOT transportation funds would exhaust all funds for statewide projects for years, and transportation needs have been forecast to outgrow the NCDOT budget by $64 million by 2030.

“The bridge gave us the real opportunity to point out the problems with the formula,” Smothers said. “There have been some cities to come out against the resolution because they felt it was working better for them the way it was. But if somebody’s doing better than somebody else, then it’s not really equitable.”

Heather J. Smith can be reached at 249-3981, ext. 228 or at [email protected].
By Heather J. Smith
The Dispatch

Published: Monday, January 18, 2010 at 5:00 a.m.

Grady not seeking re-election to state office (Jacksonville Daily News)

Grady not seeking re-election to state office (Jacksonville Daily News)

Long-time state Rep. Robert Grady announced Thursday that he plans to run for Onslow County Clerk of Court instead of seeking re-election to the General Assembly.

“Serving the people of Onslow County in the State House has been a part of my life for the past 24 years,” he said in a prepared statement. “I am grateful for the experience. And I will miss it.”

He served three terms on the Jacksonville City Council in the early 1980s and was elected to the N.C. House in 1986 as a Republican. He served 12 terms as a state representative.

While in the House, Grady served on the appropriations committee for education and Crime Control and Public Safety. Grady is also credited with helping to establish a veterans cemetery in Jacksonville and programs at Coastal Carolina Community College that allow students to receive a four-year degree without leaving Onslow County.

Grady said clerk of court is an important, but unappreciated, office that touches the lives of almost everyone in the community.

The recent 2-percent cut to the clerk’s budget ordered by the Administrative Office of the Courts is the right way to go, he said.

“I don’t believe I’ve ever seen a government agency that couldn’t trim its budget and, I hope, through efficiencies and modernization we can find ways to save taxpayers even more,” he said.

Grady said he will not accept campaign donations from lawyers, employees of the clerk of court office or their families since that might led to an appearance of favoritism.

Grady, a graduate of both the University of North Carolina and Campbell University, has been married to his wife Neta Grady for 36 years. She works as the director of the Onslow County Alcohol Control Board.

January 07, 2010 4:27 PM
LINDELL KAY
Updated at 7:19 p.m.

Money for Roads not Reducing Unemployment (Associated Press)

Money for Roads not Reducing Unemployment (Associated Press)

AP Report: No Tangible Impact on Jobless from Government Stimulus Funds for Rebuilding Roads and Bridges

Ten months into President Barack Obama’s first economic stimulus plan, a surge in spending on roads and bridges has had no effect on local unemployment and only barely helped the beleaguered construction industry, an Associated Press analysis has found.

Spend a lot or spend nothing at all, it didn’t matter, the AP analysis showed: Local unemployment rates rose and fell regardless of how much stimulus money Washington poured out for transportation, raising questions about Mr. Obama’s argument that more road money would address an “urgent need to accelerate job growth.”

Mr. Obama wants a second stimulus bill from Congress that relies in part on more road and bridge spending, projects the president said are “at the heart of our effort to accelerate job growth.”

Construction spending would be a key part of the Jobs for Main Street Act, a $75 billion second stimulus to revive the nation’s lethargic unemployment rate and improve the dismal job market for construction workers.

AP’s analysis, which was reviewed by independent economists at five universities, showed that strategy hasn’t affected unemployment rates so far. And there’s concern it won’t work the second time. For its analysis, the AP examined the effects of road and bridge spending in communities on local unemployment; it did not try to measure results of the broader aid that also was in the first stimulus like tax cuts, unemployment benefits or money for states.

“My bottom line is, I’d be skeptical about putting too much more money into a second stimulus until we’ve seen broader effects from the first stimulus,” said Aaron Jackson, a Bentley University economist who reviewed AP’s analysis.

Even within the construction industry, which stood to benefit most from transportation money, the AP’s analysis found there was nearly no connection between stimulus money and the number of construction workers hired or fired since Congress passed the recovery program.

“As a policy tool for creating jobs, this doesn’t seem to have much bite,” said Emory University economist Thomas Smith, who supported the stimulus and reviewed AP’s analysis. “In terms of creating jobs, it doesn’t seem like it’s created very many. It may well be employing lots of people but those two things are very different.”

Transportation spending is too small of a pebble to quickly create waves in America’s $14 trillion economy. And starting a road project, even one considered “shovel ready,” can take many months, meaning any modest effects of a second burst of transportation spending are unlikely to be felt for some time.

“It would be unlikely that even $20 billion spent all at once would be enough to move the needle of the huge decline we’ve seen, even in construction, much less the economy. The job destruction is way too big,” said Kenneth D. Simonson, chief economist for the Associated General Contractors of America.

For its analysis, the AP reviewed Transportation Department data on more than $21 billion in stimulus projects in every state and Washington, D.C., and the Labor Department’s monthly unemployment data. Working with economists and statisticians, the AP performed statistical tests to gauge the effect of transportation spending on employment activity.

There was no difference in unemployment trends between the group of counties that received the most stimulus money and the group that received none, the analysis found.

Despite the disconnect, Congress is moving quickly to give Mr. Obama the road money he requested. The Senate will soon consider a proposal that would direct nearly $28 billion more on roads and bridges, programs that are popular with politicians, lobbyists and voters. The overall price tag on the bill, which also would pay for water projects, school repairs and jobs for teachers, firefighters and police officers, would be $75 billion.

“We have a ton of need for repairing our national infrastructure and a ton of unemployed workers to do it. Marrying those two concepts strikes me as good stimulus and good policy,” White House economic adviser Jared Bernstein said. “When you invest in this kind of infrastructure, you’re creating good jobs for people who need them.”

Highway projects have been the public face of the president’s recovery efforts, providing the backdrop for news conferences with workers who owe their paychecks to the stimulus. But those anecdotes have not added up to a national trend and have not markedly improved the country’s broad employment picture.

The stimulus has produced jobs. A growing body of economic evidence suggests that government programs, including Mr. Obama’s $700 billion bank bailout program and his $787 billion stimulus, have helped ease the recession. A Rutgers University study on Friday, for instance, found that all stimulus efforts have slowed the rise in unemployment in many states.

But the 400-page stimulus law contains so many provisions – tax cuts, unemployment benefits, food stamps, state aid, military spending – economists agree that it’s nearly impossible to determine what worked best and replicate it. It’s also impossible to quantify exactly what effect the stimulus has had on job creation, although Mr. Obama points to estimates that credit the recovery program for creating or saving 1.6 million jobs.
WASHINGTON, Jan. 11, 2010

N.C. Rep. Sandra Spaulding Hughes won’t seek re-election (Wilmington Star News)

N.C. Rep. Sandra Spaulding Hughes won’t seek re-election (Wilmington Star News)

Another week, another local Democrat announces plans not to seek re-election this year.

State Rep. Sandra Spaulding Hughes announced Monday she won’t seek another two-year term in Raleigh representing a district that currently includes portions of northern New Hanover and western Pender counties.

Because of a Supreme Court ruling last March, the district will become an all-New Hanover seat for the 2010 election.

Hughes joins state Sens. R.C. Soles and Julia Boseman, both also Democrats, who have announced their intentions not to see re-election.

The move by the three incumbents could mean a political power outage for local Democrats just as the party – statewide and nationally – prepares for a tough election season, since historically the party in power loses seats during a mid-term election.

Democrats control the governor’s mansion and the General Assembly in Raleigh and the White House and Congress in Washington.

In a short statement released early Monday morning, Hughes said she was stepping down for “personal and family reasons.” The former Wilmington city councilwoman added that she intended to serve out the remainder of her term.

Hughes took office in April 2008, replacing former representative Thomas Wright after he became the first sitting legislator to be kicked out of the General Assembly in more than a century.

She then won re-election that November, easily defeating Republican challenger George Swart.

Monday Jim Morgan, head of the New Hanover County Democratic Party, said party officials had spent the past few weeks trying to persuade Hughes to run for re-election.

But now that she had decided to step down, Morgan said he intended to put together a recruitment committee to seek new candidates for the seat.

Although the current and former holders of the seat have been African-American, Morgan said, he didn’t think there would be any pressure on the party to put forward a black candidate in November.

“But certainly the Democratic Party would love to see an African-American representing the 18th District because it is important to have diversity in Raleigh,” he said.

Several other Democratic officials on Monday said they weren’t aware of anyone who had expressed interest in the seat, although they noted that Hughes’ decision not to run again was still very fresh.

Democratic Party leaders are already busy trying to find someone to run for Boseman’s seat.

Although several folks have expressed interest, including Jim Leutze, former chancellor of the University of North Carolina Wilmington, no Democrat has formally announced as a candidate.

Filing runs Feb. 8-26.

Gareth McGrath: 343-2384

By Gareth McGrath
[email protected]

Published: Monday, January 11, 2010 at 9:23 a.m.

Smog limit challenges state (News and Observer)

Smog limit challenges state (News and Observer)

Your future could include a little extra in your paycheck for commuting to work by bus or for carpooling with your neighbors. You might have to get used to limits on mowing your lawn on sweltering summer afternoons.

You’ll breathe easier for your trouble.

Public officials across the state will soon be devising ways to cajole residents and require businesses to cut smog. The reason: Much of North Carolina would flunk the federal pollution standards in a nationwide proposal Thursday to require tougher limits on smog.

Cities and areas that don’t reduce smog could face the loss of federal dollars to build highways – a sanction imposed on Atlanta in the 1990s and one currently facing Charlotte, which has some of the state’s dirtiest air.

The new limits, intended to protect public health, are the strictest ever proposed by the Environmental Protection Agency. They will put hundreds of counties across the nation out of compliance and force local officials to find creative new ways to squeeze more pollution reductions from transportation, heavy industry and residents.

In proposing the new limits, the Obama administration acknowledged that the tougher rules could cost electric utilities and oil companies as much as $90 billion in compliance costs. But the federal agency justified the expense by citing the potential savings – between $13 billion and $100 billion per year, depending on just where the limit is set, in avoided medical costs and missed workdays from reductions in asthma, bronchitis and other health complications.

When the EPA’s proposal is settled, as early as next year, North Carolina will have to present federal regulators with a state plan to meet the new standards. The plan, which could raise power costs and force changes to driving habits, will come from the N.C. Department of Environmental and Natural Resources.

“We will probably have to look at further controls in power plants and other industry,” said Tom Mather, spokesman for the agency. “We have to demonstrate to the EPA that we’re making a good-faith effort to comply.”

Metro areas in violation

The EPA proposed a range for acceptable smog levels – 60 to 70 parts ozone per 1 billion parts of air – lower than the current limit of 75 parts per billion. The proposal will be subject to public comment and hearings. It could be challenged in court by business groups and others who said Thursday that the EPA’s proposals lack a scientific basis and would impose a financial hardship on businesses and local communities.

Spokesmen from Duke Energy and Progress Energy said they’re reviewing the proposal, but they both cited costly upgrades being made to power plants under the state’s Clean Smokestacks Act. Raleigh-based Progress Energy has spent $2 billion already to install scrubbers and other pollution-trapping equipment.

The main culprits

Ground-level ozone, a chemical compound that irritates the lungs, results from the interaction of nitrogen oxides and other compounds with sunlight and heat. Vehicles of all sorts are the single biggest source of the smog, followed by power plants.
A preliminary analysis in the Department of Environmental and Natural Resources shows that within the proposed range, the limits could put every metropolitan area in the state out of compliance with federal smog limits.

Urban areas fail

Even on the permissive end of the range, 70 parts per billion, all metro areas would fail except Wilmington and a handful of counties in the mountains.

Charlotte is already violating an older, more lenient smog standard, and city planners had until spring to show how they will fix the problem. Thursday’s ruling would put the Triangle, Triad and other areas in the same situation.

Ed Johnson, director of the Capital Area Metropolitan Planning Organization, said this state has met past smog standards because automobiles have been getting more efficient and cleaner.

Transportation options include increasing bus routes, restricting downtown parking, producing cleaner fuels, building more efficient cars, and promoting regional planning strategies that reduce driving distances to work and stores.

“So far we have not had to do anything to curtail people’s ability to drive,” Johnson said. “That may come, but it hasn’t yet.”
Published Fri, Jan 08, 2010 04:54 AM
Modified Fri, Jan 08, 2010 05:01 AM

Charlotte eclipses Triangle in loop miles (Triangle Business Journal)

Charlotte eclipses Triangle in loop miles (Triangle Business Journal)

RALEIGH – Despite winning accolades as the fastest growing metro in the country, the Triangle lags behind Charlotte when it comes to the number of miles of funded highway loop projects.

An analysis of North Carolina’s urban loop funding program shows that Raleigh and Durham trail longtime rival Charlotte, which has received almost all of the money it needs to complete a major highway loop.

North Carolina Department of Transportation data provided by the Regional Transportation Alliance, a Triangle-based transportation advocacy group, show that 68 miles of Charlotte’s 74 miles of urban loops – or 93 percent – have been funded to date.

Of the nine other metropolitan areas that are eligible to receive loop money, only Raleigh, Greensboro and Wilmington have had any loop miles funded. Durham hasn’t received any loop money although it has nearly 27 eligible miles.

Friday, January 1, 2010 | Modified: Thursday, January 7, 2010, 12:01am EST
by Chris Baysden

NCBOT Jan. 6th, 2010 Summary

By Jim Humphrey, City of Charlotte

All Board positions have been appointed. A member from the Jacksonville area is the lone member awaiting confirmation.

The Planning Committee received a presentation from NCDOT media/communications staff relative to plans to partner with DENR to conduct a media campaign regarding ways to reduce highway/greenhouse emissions. Phase One will be conducted at no/low cost (posters at State and public offices, work with AAA, publicize at events such as NASCAR, etc.). A second phase could include TV/radio/web. Phase One is expected to commence in conjunction with a Climate Conference the first week of March. The slide show is probably on the NCDOT website.

Johanna Reese provided a legislative update to the Safety and Emerging Issues Committee. Most efforts are associated with work with the Legislature’s Joint Transportation Oversight Committee to develop an agenda for 2010. The next meeting of the JTOC is January 19 and will include the Annual Turnpike Authority Report and a presentation on rapid train technology.

Cities, towns and counties now have authority to adopt ordinances regulating golf carts on public roads. NCDOT has developed a draft ordinance they hope will be used as a model statewide thereby making ordinances similar across the state. They plan to ask the NCLM and NCLCC to distribute to their members for comment within the next week. Kevin Lacy is the lead state staff person.

The Rail Committee received a power point presentation regarding the NCDOT railcar refurbishment and rebuild program. The NCDOT typically buys cars no longer needed by larger systems then refurbishes and upgrades them at much lower cost than purchase of new equipment.

The NCDOT expects to hear from the feds this month regarding their application for recovery act funds for High Speed Rail and the 85/Yadkin River bridge.

The Complete Streets Committee will short list firms interested in assisting late this month.

Dan Thomas presented an overview of the process for developing a Comprehensive Transportation Plan to the Multimodal Committee. He highlighted 5 steps and emphasized how multimodal and land use considerations are incorporated.

The Programming and Finance Committee received a report by Gene Conti indicating the NCDOT Performance Report for 2009 had been prepared and was being distributed. Other staff discussed recent and new Ethics Orders issued by the Governor.

New Durham, NC Department of Transportation Optimizes Transportation, Transit and Parking Operations (Alliance for Innovation)

New Durham, NC Department of Transportation Optimizes Transportation, Transit and Parking Operations (Alliance for Innovation)

To put more focus on transportation and transit issues facing Durham and the Triangle region, Durham City Manager Tom Bonfield has announced the creation of a new Department of Transportation for the City of Durham to be headed by long-time transportation manager, Mark Ahrendsen.

“This department strengthens the City’s commitment to place a higher emphasis on transportation and transit planning and development. It’s no secret that this is one of the major issues facing our region,” Bonfield said. Creation of a Transportation Department completes a restructuring plan that Bonfield began last year to realign and connect City-provided services. In addition to traffic operations, transportation engineering and transportation planning, the new department also will house transit and parking services.

“I also am pleased that Mark has accepted this challenge, because he has been at the forefront in Durham to help us reach our goals, with examples including the planning and advocacy for the Durham Station Transportation Center and the Durham Train Station,” Bonfield said.

Ahrendsen currently manages transportation services and planning, including traffic operations and development review, and the Durham Area Transit Authority (DATA), all functions within the City’s Public Works Department.

“I’m excited and appreciative of the opportunity to assume a new leadership role in the City’s Department of Transportation,” Ahrendsen said. “As Durham continues to grow, our transportation challenges will continue to grow as well – such as addressing congestion, maintaining our attractiveness for new development, promoting alternatives to the automobile, protecting our neighborhoods and the natural environment from the adverse effects of traffic, and strengthening our relationship with other transportation partners in the region. Successfully meeting these challenges will be critical for Durham’s future,” he said.

Bonfield added that one of the City’s key goals is to expand public transit. “It is imperative that DATA expand to increase community mobility, access, and connectivity,” Bonfield said. “Public transit is anticipated to continue to be an increasingly important subject as the City stretches to reach sustainability goals,” he said.

The new Transportation Department will continue to provide oversight of taxicabs and other vehicles-for-hire and work toward fully integrating the transit and commuter needs of a growing community. Parking management, now housed in the City’s General Services Department, oversees contract operations of the City’s on street parking enforcement and the operation of City-owned parking lots. These functions will be consolidated into the Department of Transportation and integrated with the residential parking program for better alignment with the City’s vision for transit and downtown parking.

The City’s Public Works Department, led by Director Katie Kalb, is placing increased emphasis on roadway infrastructure maintenance and improvements, and must now devote more attention to environmental issues related to stormwater management, Bonfield said. “Without a doubt, street repaving continues to be a major effort for the City, and Public Works will continue to enhance our efforts in that area,” Bonfield said. “However, with recently expanded regulatory requirements regarding Jordan and Falls Lakes, it is increasingly important that the City stay engaged, remain vigilant and seek balanced alternatives to current and future stormwater regulations that are intended to protect our natural resources but could burden our taxpayers well into the future if poorly designed and implemented,” he said.

Ahrendsen has been an employee of the City for 21 years and has served as manager of the City’s Transportation Division since 1997. He serves as staff for the Durham-Chapel Hill-Carrboro Metropolitan Planning Organization (DCHC MPO) and has also been an active member of the N.C. Section of the Institute of Transportation Engineers and the N.C. Public Transportation Association.

Prior to his position with the City of Durham, Ahrendsen worked with a transit management company in Florida and Raleigh, N.C., with the City of Wilmington, N.C., and with a regional planning organization in Alabama.

Ahrendsen holds both a master’s degree in Industrial Engineering/Operations Research/Transportation and a bachelor’s degree in Engineering from the University of Iowa. His appointment is effective January 1, 2010.

For more information, contact the City of Durham at (919)560-1200.
1/5/2010

Law firm hires McCrory as a public policy consultant (Charlotte Observer)

Law firm hires McCrory as a public policy consultant (Charlotte Observer)
Moore & Van Allen cites the former mayor’s experience in public and private sectors.

Fourteen years as Charlotte’s mayor has proven a powerful resume-booster for Pat McCrory, who plans to put his experience to use in a new job: He’s joined law firm Moore & Van Allen as a public policy consultant.

McCrory started Monday as the Charlotte firm’s senior director of strategic initiatives. In that full-time position, he’ll focus on helping clients on energy, the environment, transportation, governmental affairs and other issues and public policies.

“I see it as a wonderful opportunity to work with a Carolinas firm that’s headquartered right here in Charlotte,” McCrory said.

McCrory, a Republican, stepped down from the mayor’s office last month.

His energy, knowledge and contacts in the public and private sectors will be valuable in the new position, said Ernie Reigel, the firm’s chairman.

“Pat’s got a lot of experience being a free thinker and a strategic thinker,” Reigel said. “We want him to work with many of our clients trying to help them think through things, solving problems or issues for them, or anticipating things they might need some help on.”

McCrory would not disclose his salary. But the former mayor said the new job – one of a range of opportunities that arose after leaving office – will allow him to remain involved in other business roles.

After leaving Duke Energy in 2008 to run for governor, he went to work last year with his brother Phil in McCrory & Company, a private business consulting firm. He also joined two corporate boards.

At Charlotte-based Tree.com, the parent of LendingTree and other consumer finance sites, he earns $50,000 a year and received stock valued at up to $50,000, according to an annual report.

At Kewaunee Scientific Corporation, a Statesville firm that builds lab furniture, he stands to make more than $36,000 a year in retainers and fees.

McCrory said he will continue to pursue other interests, including politics. He has guest-hosted programs on WBT radio and has a long upcoming schedule of political speeches around the state.

The firm understood all that when it hired McCrory, Reigel said.

“Part of his value is being known for the things he’s accomplished and what he may accomplish in the future,” Reigel said. “We don’t want to hold him back. We all understand that as he decides what he wants to do with his future, that’s just part of the deal. We’re not choosing sides on any particular thing. We’re really saying, ‘Here’s a talented guy, he’s been on a lot of sides of a lot of different issues and we think he’s got some value to bring to the table.'”

By Jim Morrill and Jen Aronoff
[email protected]; [email protected]
Posted: Wednesday, Jan. 06, 2010

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