Today's Mighty Oak


So, the idea was to watch the Winter Classic.

Four of the bartenders where I’m a regular had tickets, but the manager and others were going to be there, so I had made plans to watch it with them, even bust out my Letang Winter Classic jersey (which I also wore to the Baby Pens/Bears game, so I’m figuring my jersey is cursed).  The game got moved to 8 p.m. and I didn’t think anything of it.

Well, since it was the holiday, the bar closed early.  I didn’t even think about that, figuring it would be open for the game and since it was a Saturday.

So a buddy and I pull into the parking lot to see the building dark and empty.  We swear and try to figure out where else to go.  We decide on Dingbats, which just opened a new location at Monroeville Mall, where Houlighan’s used to be.

We head there and to the bar, and there are maybe ten people in the whole place, if that.  Having never been inside, I didn’t know what to expect.  Aside from no customers, the place is barren.  Maybe it’s just a shock from Houlighan’s, but there is nothing on the walls, everything is stark.  There are some very nice leather chairs and couches, had we not been at the bar, I probably would have headed there.  And let me note, I had the mushrooms from the appetizer menu, and they are absolutely amazing.

Since they were so slow, the manager closed after the first period.  So once again, we had to figure out where to go.

Primanti’s!  It was packed, filled with Pens fans (and some very oblivious customers as well) and a great atmosphere.  As the end of the second period approached, most of the televisions were switched to the UFC fight, which they had purchased (I’ve been there before when they buy the fights, must be their thing).  But thankfully, once the intermission was complete, the sound switched back over the the last of the Winter Classic, else we would have gone for the hat trick and found a third place to go.

A few comments about the game:

  • Pensblog has, as always, an awesome write up, so make sure to check it out
  • Ummm, NBC?  Why did you go to the blimp cam during play?  Was someone asleep at the switcher?  Aerial shots are awesome while things get set up, going to commercial, etc.  Not during play.
  • The cameras were pretty crappy, but then again, Heinz Field is not set up for hockey.  That being said, from the second period on, it was better.
  • Disco Dan’s hat is awesome.
  • Yeah, the loss sucks, we’ll see how everything gets edited together for the last episode on Penguins Capitals 24/7.  I might pick up the series if they offer it as a DVD set.
  • The weather kind of sucked, but as Pensblog pointed out of course, it sucked for everyone, not just one team.  And I realize that meterology is not an exact science.  However, I’m pretty good at reading a radar map.  Not for hours and hours in the future, but for at least the next four hours, I can read a radar map and tell you what’s going to happen, usually within about five minutes (it’s kind of scary).  So when you’re standing outside and it’s raining, don’t tell us that it’s going to rain.  Tell us that it’s raining.
  • Most importantly, I hope this brought some more fans to the game.  I find football boring, so I don’t watch the Steelers (but will route for them), and baseball is boring as it is (unless you’re at a game with friends, then it’s fun).  Hockey is what I really like to watch, so if this gets more people energized about the sport, then good on the NHL.

Update: Added my comments about the whether, which I forgot to add earlier.



I got updates about the game via Twitter and Facebook as I was in Panera.  This was by far, my favorite tweet, after we had just won the game.



HBO has been running “Penguins Capitals 24/7″ and the three episodes have all been amazing.  I’m going to attempt to embed the third episode below (Yeah that didn’t work), if it doesn’t work, check it out here.  The music and editing throughout the series has been nothing short of amazing, and the last five minutes of this episode in particular features an awesome rendition of My Chemical Romance’s “Welcome to the Black Parade.”  Before you judge, it’s instrumental, and works very, very well.

Make sure to check it out, just not at work, as there is a lot of swearing.  The whole series has given a great look not only into the professional lives of the athletes and coaches, but also how they relax, and a fleeting glimpse into their personal lives as well.  It has been really nice to see both head coaches with their families, and members of both teams give back to the cities they live in.  Check it out, and enjoy the game tonight!

Update: The whole clip is good (it’s the last part of the third and latest episode), but skip ahead to 8:46 to catch the last segment that I referenced above, or in the youtube clip below, jump to 8:42

[youtube]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qc2P9_p3In8[/youtube]



The Post-Gazette reports that 76 people were cited for only have one passenger in their car but still using the HOV lane:

[P]olice have gotten complaints about rampant disregard for the two-passenger occupancy requirement

I walk past where the HOV lane dumps out every morning, and as I wait for the insane traffic from all directions to stop so I can cross the street three times, I like to see how many people are disregarding the “2 or more” people rule.

And then I get sad.  Because it is so very many people.

I’ll be glad to start keeping track and getting license plates numbers!  Usually I’m just waiting for a break in traffic through one or two cycles of the lights…I’m just sayin’ I could help out!



To anyone to works in the Steel Building, or walks past it, quick question.  Is this the first year there is music?  I don’t seem to remember Christmas carols the last three years being played.  Each day when I walk past I pause my Zune (I know, I know, but I love it) and try to hear it over the noise of traffic.



I was going to save this post for Tuesday, but I figured better to get it out there and maybe someone can show me the error of my ways.  I really hope there is something that I am just not understanding or seeing.  Please correct me!  Settle in folks, this is a long one:

First, raise your hand if you thought the drink tax was going to be used for the Port Authority?  [Raises hand].  So were we duped?  Here’s what we were greeted by yesterday

Since their enactment in 2008, Allegheny County’s taxes on alcoholic drinks and car rentals have done virtually nothing to ease the Port Authority’s chronic financial problems.

Here’s why: The new taxes were intended to help the county’s budget, not the Port Authority’s.

The taxes are generating less than $2 million per year in extra revenue for the authority while producing $30 million to $40 million windfalls that county government has used to avoid raising property taxes.

Well now.  Then what about all of these:

Example one:

The Republican from Upper St. Clair said today the current levy is bringing in more revenue than the county needs to provide local matching funds to help support Port Authority buses and light-rail trains.
Example two:
The tax has brought in $80 million for Port Authority operations.
Example three:
He proposed the drink tax and a $2-a-day tax on car rentals last year to fund the county’s $30 million subsidy of the Port Authority

Example four:
Given a choice between Allegheny County’s 10 percent drink tax or higher property taxes to fund Port Authority, Chris Pfefferman will choose the former. “Keep the drink tax,” said Pfefferman, 43, a Baldwin Borough homeowner who runs a Downtown newsstand.
Example five:
This morning Common Pleas Judge Judith F. Olson set the date for arguments over an injunction that would prevent the county from spending its drink and car rental tax receipts on anything other than transit.

Example six:
In what Allegheny County officials said was a massive blow to this year’s budget, a judge ruled yesterday that excess receipts from the county’s drink and car rental taxes can only be spent on the Port Authority.

Example seven:
County Chief Executive Dan Onorato, in the meantime, pledged to oppose efforts to defeat the tax, which was enacted along with a $2-per-day rental car tax Jan. 1 to raise about $30 million for the Port Authority.
Example eight:

In Act 44, they said you can have a drink tax and a car rental tax,” Onorato said. He said he faced the prospect of raising $30 million to $40 million more in property taxes for transit, and “I campaigned on not raising property taxes.”

Said Wagner, whose family owns a tavern: “There is no correlation between getting a drink and paying for the Port Authority.”

That is just what I quickly found.  Were we all confused?  Was the entire county lied to?  Was there some kind of crazy math going on?  Are we all suckers?
I was thinking it might have been the wording that the tax was used to fund the county’s contribution, but then there are quotes from judges saying excess money had to be given to the Port Authority, so that kind of cancels that out.

Well, maybe we are all suckers.  We know that the math was all kinds of messed up.  After all, it brought in so much money to begin with, they apparently didn’t know what to do with it all, hence the court battles saying that the money had to go to the Port Authority.  The difference between 10% and 6% is a lot more than even the accountants thought it was!  Imagine that!

Now, believe it or not, that is actually not the main focus of the article, just a quick aside into the crazy math that has been plaguing us, and continues to haunt us.

Yesterday, we were greeted with the news (which also apparently surprised even Steve Bland), that the Governor found $45 million that he wants to give to the Port Authority.  Awesome!  PAT has a $47 million hole to fill, so only having to find an additional $2 million really should not be too bad, or could at least be manageable.

Wrong! See, $47 million fixes everything for the year.  $45 million, on the other hand, only fixes everything until June.
“This only takes the Port Authority through to July 1,” Mr. Rendell said. “Then we’re back to square one.

Wait…what?

Yes, there is overhead, and I’m sure running a huge transit agency is tough work, much beyond my brain to be able to do it.  But really?  Something seems way off about this.  I’m calling it Voodoo Math.

And I think we’re all being suckered again.


Bedford Avenue (downhill side) between Crawford and Mario Lemieux Drive is closed, Mario Lemieux Drive is closed and tons of busses are parked all over the place. 

Drive elsewhere if you can!



For as long as I can remember, drivers on the parkway east were greeted each December by a Christmas tree.  Last year it was announced that the tree would not be up this year  however the center pole remains, which I am now declaring to be Pittsburgh’s Festivus pole!



The state came through and is going to give PAT money!  Hooray!  And (even though I didn’t realize they needed to vote to accept it), they voted to accept that money!  Hooray!

Let’s stop that smile right there, mister.

In their latest blog post, PAT lays out what will happen, which of course, they don’t know many details of.  However, lest you think it would change, the fares will increase January 1.

Now, I’m actually not that upset about the fare increase.  It isn’t as big as I thought it would be, and really, prices go up.  Cost of living goes up.  Yeah, it sucks, but I can’t fault PAT for it.

However, before you think that their blog post is all kittens and rainbows, never fear, they are back and as mopey as always.  Some layoffs and service reductions are coming.  No details yet (they are being reworked in light of the new money), and no clues either.  And of course, don’t forget, this is the state’s fault, not PAT’s.

And again, I’m venting.  But when I’m constantly faced with sad, pessimistic writing of their blog posts/press releases (not to give them more work but the people that run @pghtransit, they get social media.  Maybe they could do some writing for the blog, make it more conversational, help riders interact with PAT more.  You know, since it’s social media), it gets tiring.

So at the end of the day, we’re back up in the air, but there is still lots of time before the service reductions and layoffs, so I’m not too worried about it.  There will most likely be a public comment time (isn’t there always?), before anything goes into affect, so we have that to look forward to.



A new app was released today to help people downtown find a space to park.  Park Pittsburgh shows how many spaces are available in each lot, as well as showing the prices and nearby attractions to each parking garage.

I love that it came into existence out of the need of one man, and will now (hopefully as it spreads), benefit the entire city.

iPhone users can download the app, other smartphone users can go to a mobile site, or view the information via text message, call a number to listen to availability or view it through a web browser.  I’m guessing Mr. Benter uses an iPhone, but I am anxiously waiting for the Android app as well.

I went to the mobile site, and it’s pretty awesome.  The only addition I could think of, would be to add driving directions to the garage entrance using your phone’s GPS, although that may be a feature of the app, I don’t know.

Anyway, thanks, Mr. Benter (and your team of engineers and the Cultural Trust), for making it a little bit easier to park downtown, I can’t wait to see how this expands!

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