Monthly Archives: April 2011

Electioneering Report – April 9

Saturday’s haul, in addition to the push poll, is one letter, three mailers, and a door hanger left while I was out.
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Waiting for Scrapbook+

All of the really important Firefox extensions I rely on daily have been updated to be compatible with Firefox 4 — except one: Scrapbook+, the infernally useful web page saving tool (no webrot fears here). The Scrapbook Plus Add-ons Page hasn’t been updated since August 2010, and is silent on the subject other than for some plaintive user requests. Some people say that they’ve downgraded to plain old Scrapbook, which has been updated, but there is also a prominent user report there of lost data that doesn’t make me feel all warm and fuzzy.

So I emailed the developer of Scrapbook+ to ask if an update might be in the works, and lo and behold, inside of ten minutes comes the answer, yes, one is in the works. Some days the Internet is great.

So I guess I’ll hold off on that Firefox 4 upgrade just a bit longer. I just hope the Scrapbook+ update gets here before Firefox 5, which allegedly has a mid-2011 release date.

The other extensions I rely on that is not FF4 compliant is Autocopy. Normally I’d override that problem with MR-Tech Toolkit, but it looks as if that isn’t compatible either…

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Another Push Poll

This one in the Mayor’s race. First question: who are you supporting in the Mayor’s race? I said Korge, so the questioner told me he was on the Pensions Board and failed to prevent the pensions crisis, and that although he’s been critical of negative campaigning, a group supporting him [unnamed] has been doing negative campaigning.

Is this call — which since it is a “poll” isn’t covered by ordinary disclosure rules — paid for by Slesnick or Cason? We may never know. (Although it would help if other people getting the call note in comments who is and especially is not being attacked.)

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Dropbox ‘Insecure By Design’

Here’s the problem: the config.db file is completely portable and is *not* tied to the system in any way. This means that if you gain access to a person’s config.db file (or just the host_id), you gain complete access to the person’s Dropbox until such time that the person removes the host from the list of linked devices via the Dropbox web interface. Taking the config.db file, copying it onto another system (you may need to modify the dropbox_path, to a valid path), and then starting the Dropbox client immediately joins that system into the synchronization group without notifying the authorized user, prompting for credentials, or even getting added to the list of linked devices within your Dropbox account (even though the new system has a completely different name) – this appears to be by design. Additionally, the host_id is still valid even after the user changes their Dropbox password (thus a standard remediation step of changing credentials does not resolve this issue).

Dropbox authentication: insecure by design via Slashdot.

This is a somewhat big deal, especially for anyone using Dropbox file sync on a mobile device that could be easily borrowed for a minute. It will become a very big deal if someone writes a virus that takes advantage of it.

I love Dropbox, I don’t use it on anything mobile other than my laptop which I do keep a close eye on. I encrypt files with anything good on them before I put them in the Dropbox. I think all my machines are pretty well hardened against viruses. And this still makes me unhappy.

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Electioneering Report — April 8, 2011 (Update 4)

Huge haul today. Pity the postal workers.

I got:

  • Two anti-Cason attack mailers (one new, one re-run)
  • Three Mayor’s race cards: two from Korge, one from Slesnick
  • Two Group 4 mailers: a GIANT card from Quesada, and a four-pager from Rosenblatt
  • One Group 5 from Kerdyk

That makes eight. Eight.

I also got a robocall at lunch time (why do they do them at mid-day?), in which retiring Commissioner “Chip” Withers endorsed Frank Quesada.

Some of these, notably one of the Korge and the Rosenblatt mailers, mark departures from previous campaign styles — the gloves are coming off.

The Anti-Cason Mailers

One of the two mailers is a rerun of the one I got on March 31st, see Today’s Dirty Campaign Mailer. The other one is new:

The return address on this one is “The ECO Committee For Coral Gables Future, 3606 S. Waverly Circle, Tampa, Fl 33629” which is almost identical to the sourcing on the other mailer which both last week and today is identified as coming from the “Committee For Coral Gables Future,” same address. I have no idea what the addition of the ECO means, if anything. Are there two separate organizational registrations in City Hall? Two separate funds? Or is there less here than meets the eye?

You can click on the picture above for a higher-contrast version. It hits the same issues as earlier ones: Cason has only lived here two years, he didn’t vote in the only election he was here for, he has hired a campaign manager “with questionable ethics” who “has been convicted of bribing an elected official in Miami” and “is awaiting to be deportation to Cuba.” (Yes, the grammatical error is in the original. We deserve better grammar.)

[Update: There are so many large graphics here that I’ve put the rest of this long post in the continuation section.]
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Quesada Makes His Case for the Commission Group 4 Seat

Tuesday I had an hour-long talk with Coral Gables Commission Group 4 candidate Frank Quesada. He is a commercial litigator with Fowler, Rodriguez, Valdes Fauli, a well-respected Coral Gables law firm. Some of it was off-the-record chat, but I also asked him some questions on the record. His answers in the inset quotes below are verbatim as are the parts in quote marks; parts without quote marks on in [brackets] are my paraphrase.

Quesada brought with him an annotated copy of the City budget and walked me through some of the things he thought were problems. He said the #1 issue in the race is the pensions issue. “I can guarantee you that I’ve done more work than any other candidate on this issue. …. I sat down with independent actuary.” A big part of the problem is that the pension plan presumes a 7.5% return on investment, but returns fluctuate. If the return is below 7.5% then the city is on the hook for the deficit. At present there is a $197 million unfunded liability; Coral Gables is part of a national problem.

Switching to a cash balance plan will solve the problem going forward, but will not deal with past shortfalls. A cash balance plan will protect the city from new unfunded liabilities. (Cash balance plans are defined benefit plans that have features of defined contribution plans. In particular they shift the risk and (if they exist) the benefits of fluctuations on the rate of return to the employees, thus removing the need for the employer to put up cash if there are shortfalls.)

Quesada also noted that the City expects a report from a pensions actuary in May, and it must base any plan going forward on that report. The next milestone is that the agreement with the firefighters ends Sept. 30. That said, the City’s freedom in the past was not as great as some candidates are making it sound. For example, he said, state legislation requires that municipalities allow a minimum of 300 hours of overtime be allowed in final pension calculations if it uses the current type of plan. The cash balance option is more attractive due to relatively recent changes in federal pension legislation. [I think this is would be the Pension Protection Act of 2006?]

More generally, “Polls show voters think things are on the right track. I tend to disagree somewhat, in that I think our budget has gone higher than t should be.” In 2005 the city had $52million in property tax revenue; now it gets $69-71million, thus there is $18 million of additional revenue from the property tax. Yet the size and population of Coral Gables hasn’t changed. “Why does it take an additional $20 million to run the same city?” The answer, he said, was primarily pensions. “Fixing pensions will help … that’s half of it.” The other half seems to be to try to get lots of smaller savings, such as by moving the election date to one where the county is having an election.

I asked him one of the tough questions people working for other candidates have been feeding me: Given that he used to work for Bill Kerdyk, and indeed trumpets this as part of his experience, if elected, will he just be a Kerdyk clone? Mr. Quesada answered by first describing how he came to be working for Bill Kerdyk.

I started [getting] involved in high school, I started a music program, petitioning the administration…. When I went to Villanova I was the only student on the Board of Trustees….I was involved in student government…it was a great feeling to make changes on campus … and to see people happy with the results.

I took a year off before law school. … [I have] no desire for state or federal office. … [a person] can make more change on the local level. …

[When I returned to Coral Gables I] volunteered for Kerdyk, [but] had no previous connection [with him] … I was very involved with the trolley … with the public works department … the biggest issue was the funding.

Quesada also suggested that he’s more independent than Kerdyk.

I am very conservative, but it depends on the issue …. I don’t like to be told how to vote … I like to gather facts… I like to hear expert opinion.

(For what it’s worth in this nonpartisan election, Quesada is a registered Independent.)

I also asked about the candidate’s forum in which I thought his answers were not substantive – they tended to be of the form, ‘I will be researching this very very carefully’ rather than, ‘I have researched this and here is my answer.’ Quesada blamed the format and suggested that at the Ponce Business Association Forum about a month ago (audio is here) he’d given meatier answers when allowed more than 30 seconds to do so.

Mr. Quesada seems to be hard-working and very earnest. In particular he seems well up to speed with the fine details of the city budget, and has clearly given both the pensions issue and some other savings issues some serious thought. He makes a strong case for his candidacy.

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