Calling for A Better Wheeling
Event at WJU draws 60 people to air problemsBy CASEY JUNKINS Staff Writer
Article Photos
WHEELING - When Janice Raheem asked City Manager Robert Herron about the best way to contact him, he told her all she needs to do is call or stop by his office.
"If I am there, I try to see every citizen that presents themself," Herron told the city resident during the Tuesday "Calling for a Better Wheeling Town Hall Meeting" at Wheeling Jesuit University.
For more than two hours, Raheem joined about 60 other concerned Wheeling residents and college students to question panelists Herron, Mayor Andy McKenzie, police Chief Robert Matheny, Ohio County Sheriff Pat Butler, Ohio County Schools Deputy Superintendent Dianna Vargo, Wheeling Park High School Principal Bernie Dolan, the Rev. Albert Anderson of Macedonia Baptist Church, Rabbi Daniel Lowey, community activists Sheli Bernstein-Goff and Wanda Morgan, Daniel Swann of Laughlin Chapel, and WPHS senior student Doree' Conley.
The Wheeling Human Rights Commission, Wheeling YWCA and the Martin Luther King Jr. Community Celebration Committee sponsored the event. Discussion topics ranged from economic development, to communication problems with police officers and community members, to matters of education and religion.
On the development front, McKenzie said city officials work constantly to improve the Wheeling business climate to not only attract new people to the area, but to retain local high school and college graduates.
"Government needs to get out of the way to promote economic development. ... Local government does not create jobs - the private sector creates jobs," he said.
Citing recent changes to the city's business licensing fee schedule, Herron added, "We have tried to make our taxes and fees user-friendly."
In terms of police communication with the community, Butler acknowledged the system could be better, but pledged to do his best to improve it.
"If you ever have a problem with a deputy, call me directly. ... Come to your neighborhood crime watch meetings," he said in reference to the monthly gatherings in Warwood, East Wheeling, South Wheeling, Wheeling Island and Elm Grove.
Matheny, who has been on the job since Oct. 26 after coming from Clarksburg, W.Va., said he has seen great cooperation between the police and residents during his short stint.
"I like the concept of having these community watch meetings. ... I like the ward system where you have a council member from each ward," he said.
"I promise I will see you if you stop in or call," Matheny assured concerned residents.
On religion, Anderson and Lowey agreed more education on the subject would help relieve some tolerance problems.
"I think there should be a way, even in a public school, where you could study comparative religion," Lowey said.
"We do need to get some religion back into the schools," Anderson said.
"We must understand that we do not have a whole lot of Muslim religion around here," he said in citing an example of why comparative religion courses could help.
Conley, for one, said, "I think having religion classes in schools would be great."
For education, Vargo said the school district achieves high marks on the standardized Westest, with the most recent average score of 21.6 compared to the state-wide average of 20.7. Although the test is standardized, Vargo stressed her teachers are not merely "teaching to the test" because those teachers have some input regarding the test's content.
Dolan acknowledged the success, but added, "High stakes testing is very stressful to students and to faculty."
Vargo also noted the schools have a system in place to address issues such as bullying or intolerance.
"We can overcome our differences in a structured and respectful manner," she said.
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clh816
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11-12-09 6:59 PM
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On the topic of religion in public schools, it would be absolutely fine to offer an elective course in comparative religion, but please do not think that it is appropriate to "shove Christianity down the throats of students." Do not blame the decline in student attitudes and motivation on the lack of "Jesus" in public schools. If parents would spend more time encouraging and motivating their children at home, teachers would be free to TEACH and not be forced to spend time on disciplinary issues.
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clh816
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11-12-09 6:52 PM
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Many of us have grown up here and enjoy the things that a small community like Wheeling has to offer, but we also enjoy salaries and benefits that come from REAL jobs that are found in cities that are alive and growing. It's been sad to watch the decline of such a wonderful city at the hands of an inept and greedy government.
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clh816
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11-12-09 6:50 PM
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City officials are getting really good at saying that they "work constantly to improve the Wheeling business climate to not only attract new people to the area, but to retain local high school and college graduates (McKenzie)," and that "We have tried to make our taxes and fees user-friendly (Herron)." McKenzie's statement is a blatant lie and Herron's is laughable. I challenge Andy McKenzie to name 10 things that he and other city officials have done to retain college graduates. As for Herron, please answer the following question: what about the B & O tax would attract large or small businesses to Wheeling? Dedicated meter-maids and empty store fronts are sure to entice the public to visit downtown Wheeling. Seriously, city officials, who are you trying to kid? Current college students and recent graduates are well aware that this city is dying a slow and painful death.
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GETACLUE
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11-12-09 10:55 AM
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My question is if you want religion to be taught in school do you have a problem with your child studying the KORAN ?
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EllisWyatt
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11-11-09 5:48 PM
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Students are learning? That is news to me, as test scores have remained constant or even declined slightly over the last 40 years. I think you could take the average 10th grader in 1959 vs. the average 10th grader in 2009 and quiz them on reading, writing, math, science, publc speaking and history and the avg. 1959 student would outscore today's student. Total US Education Spending, despite no increase in test scores: 2009: $654.2 Billion 2000: $385.8 Billion (inflation adjusted $477.82 billion) 1990: $223.6 Billion (inflation adjusted $363.86 Billion) SO, in inflation adjusted dollars, education spending has increased $290 BILLION PER YEAR in two decades and we have NOTHING to show for it! I am Agnostic and I believe that God should not have been kicked out of schools.
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Shark88
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11-11-09 4:39 PM
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Goodboy...well, what are the kids learning? How to put on ******s or have oral ssex (Bill Clinton taught them that one). Rebellion and how to disrespect authority. How to cheat, lie, and steal. How to gun down classmates. How to threaten or even sleep with the teacher; and so on. This is what you get when you boot out the truth of life in a classroom or any room. Simply put, education without regeneration is a big abomination!
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bassman
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11-11-09 3:16 PM
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Shark88, AMEN!
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bassman
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11-11-09 3:16 PM
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goodboy sounds like an atheist to me. That explains a lot!
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goodboy
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11-11-09 11:28 AM
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Center, they don't want "comparative religion" taught. They want the united states to become a fascist christian theocracy. The christian equivalent of Iran or Afghanistan. We should put as much into studying serious theology as we put into studying serious unicorns, and serious leprechauns, and serious trolls..
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CenterWheeling
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11-11-09 11:04 AM
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Rabbi Lowy taught a comparative religion class to the students at Mount de Chantal for 25 years. While the young ladies often complained about the workload in his class, I never heard derogatory remarks about persons of other religious faiths, including Muslims. The Mount had faculty of all faiths...Jewish, Muslim, Jehovah's Witness, Episcopalian, Lutheran and Catholic. We often had Hindu students, also. It was a lovely mix of people!
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goodboy
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11-11-09 10:10 AM
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Shark88, " Jesus was booted out of the public schools decades ago and hasn't been back since......and it shows." Yeah, kids are learning stuff.
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Shark88
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11-11-09 9:10 AM
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McKenzie sounds like a conservative now...."..government needs to get out of the way..." Religion in the public schools??? Only if it doesn't include Jesus or Christianity; they are never welcome. Jesus was booted out of the public schools decades ago and hasn't been back since......and it shows. Bullying and intolerance??? What a bunch of wimps. The real world can be a tough place. Kids need to learn to stand on their own and fight if necessary. Bunch of political correctness and spoiled kids makes a bunch of whinny sissys.
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