LOVIN FOREIGN FLICKS

The Little Theatre’s inaugural Foreign Film Festival wrapped
up last week, and acting executive director Jennifer Caleshu says it was “an
enormous success” — so much so that early on, the showings were moved from one
of the Little’s smaller venues to the main theater, which holds 300 people.
Attendance was double what the Little expected, says
Caleshu: around 1,700. That’s the same turnout enjoyed by the opening week of the
Al Gore documentary An Inconvenient Truth — and it was accompanied by an increase in café business, thanks to the
ethnic cuisine and related music and art.
The charming Cuban film Nada
+ and the six-hour Italian epic The
Best of Youth were audience favorites, part of counterprogramming that
Caleshu calls “a nice antidote to the popcorn flicks of summer.” And, she says,
Rochester can look forward to a
repeat next year.
HILLARY’S ENERGY

Anytime Hillary Clinton’s in
town, it’s news.
And when she stays to
moderate a panel discussion instead of heading out after her speech, then it’s
big news indeed.
Clinton was at the alternative energy conference last week
doing just that, touting the Rochester region’s renewable energy businesses and suggesting that
we could become a national leader in the field. All that is admirable, and the
prospect of a national leader like Clinton coming in to promote the possibilities must be
gratifying to advocates for the region’s economy, like the Greater Rochester
Enterprise.
So you could be forgiven for
being disappointed that the panel discussion mostly degenerated into mutual
congratulation and self-promotion between the senator and a handful of energy
executives. Sample quote, from General Electric’s Mark Little: “Green is very
good for the bottom line.” (Really? Then what do GE’s shareholders think of the
price tag for cleaning up the Hudson, or the price tag for GE’s decade-long legal
foot-dragging on the issue?)
One of the few real problems
facing the alternative energy industry that did get an airing was the relative
lack of capital to invest in the new technologies. Maurice LeDick, of the
Canadian-based Iogen, a pioneer of new ethanol-production methods, said “the
industry’s ready to go,” but if we “leave it up to the private sector,” he
said, “it’ll be very slow.” This despite a recent investment in his company by
Goldman Sachs. Yet everyone else on the panel represented established companies
(GE, GM, Delphi, Shell), some of whom presumably have a little
capital to invest, or at least access to it, should they choose to.
Clinton didn’t step in to offer any huge new federal
investment in the industry, but one of her opponents did. Howie Hawkins, the
Green Party’s candidate for Senate, was on hand, courting the press and
criticizing Clinton’s efforts on alternative energy as “too little, too
late, too weak.” If he were elected, he said, he would halve the military
budget and spend that money — about $300 billion a year — on a direct
public investment in alternative energy.
— Krestia DeGeorge
THE
LOYAL OPPOSITION
Being
in the minority in a legislative body has few perks — unless you consider it
a perk to have no leverage, and have your legislation voted down, tabled,
bottled up in committee, or otherwise rendered useless.
In
the Monroe County Legislature, though, the perennially underdog Democrats have
managed to make something of an art out of minority politics. Each month, while
Republicans deal with the boring issues of running county government — like
accepting grants and authorizing contracts — the Dems pick an issue or two
that actual people care about, and they introduce legislation dealing with it.
Usually
the Dems’ proposal gets defeated, but the real goal is to get media coverage of
the issue and shame the Republican majority into paying more attention to their
ideas. Sometimes it works. Sometimes it doesn’t.
And
sometimes it completely falls apart.
The
flavor of the month this time around was a proposal from Democrat Stephanie
Aldersley to reconsider a controversial expansion plan for the Seneca Park Zoo.
That plan — adopted by the legislature in 2002 — calls for a 600-car
parking lot in the lower park, an anathema to preservationists and other fans
of the original Olmsted design. Sounds like a solid piece of opposition
legislation. Just one problem, though: when the legislation appeared in the
lej’s Recreation and Education Committee, no Democrat showed up to move or
second it.
“We
messed up there,” says Aldersley, one-half of the Democrats on the committee.
Aldersley
had last-minute work obligations that kept her from attending the committee
meeting, and the other Democrat, Glenn Gamble, had already been excused from
attending. “We should’ve withdrawn it,” says Aldersley.
The
slip-up may have far-reaching consequences. The CountyLegislature, which abides
by Roberts Rules of Order, doesn’t allow similar legislation to be introduced
within the next 12 months.
“I’ve
asked that it be withdrawn,” says Aldersley. “It’s still in limbo.”
Unless
Democrats can convince Republican Legislature President Wayne Zyra to
retroactively withdraw the legislation, that’ll be the last anyone sees of it
for a year.
—
Krestia DeGeorge
PUSHING FOR DIVERSITY
Rochester city
councilmembers moved closer to improving diversity in the Fire Department last
month. They approved giving the department an additional $5,000 for recruitment
efforts for the 2006-07 fiscal year.
Members of the Genesis chapter of the International
Association of Black Professional Firefighters had been pressing for more
diversity, noting that only 10 percent of firefighters are minorities or women.
While $5,000 won’t solve the problem, says Chief Floyd Madison,
the money indicates the city’s commitment to improving diversity. The money, he
says, will likely be used to tutor applicants for next year’s firefighters
exam. Madison says he’s also
optimistic that the city will eventually hire two recruiters for the
department. There are currently none.
But some firefighters have been objecting, including Captain
Richard Mattice, a 36-year firefighter. The fire department, says Mattice, has
other, more important needs.
Mattice also criticizes Madison’s
push to change the firefighter testing process. For example, Madison
wants to eliminate the written state exam and hire a consultant to provide a
Rochester-specific exam. Minorities, says Madison,
typically pass the exam but at lower scores than non-minorities. A new test, he
hopes, could even out the racial gap by including both an oral and written
section.
But Mattice says changes to the exam won’t help anyone
survive the recruitment process. “The recruit program: I call it a gauntlet,”
he says. The new exam might get more minorities into the applicant pool, he
says, “but at the end we’re still going to get that one or two that we’re
already getting.”
Mattice also objects to comparisons between Rochester’s
fire and police departments. As a result of a court-ordered quota system, the
RPD is one-fourth minority. Rochester’s
focus, he says, has been on crime for years: “All the money’s been going to the
police department. They’re putting on 20 extra police officers in this next
budget. We’re losing six firefighters.” Despite losing 200 full-time employees
over the past three decades, Mattice says the department hired 69 minorities
and females.
Diversity, says Mattice, will happen with programs already
in place, such as the EastHigh
School training program. Mattice says a recruit
class typically draws about 15 new hires, including one to two minorities from
East High. “Little by little the numbers are going to go up,” Mattice says.
— Sujata Gupta
This article appears in Jul 5-11, 2006.






