Monday, July 23, 2007

Florida heads to Canada; Who will head ULL?

"Creative Class" author and economist Richard Florida is doing a reverse snow bird and heading north to the University of Toronto's up-and-coming Rotman School of Management.

The Washington Post story
on Florida's decision to leave George Mason University in Virgninia provides this information:

Florida, who joined GMU in 2004, has theorized that smart, innovative thinkers -- such as engineers, writers, entertainers and artists -- are crucial to the success of U.S. cities. He expounded those theories in two top-selling books: "The Rise of the Creative Class," published in 2002, and "The Flight of the Creative Class," published in 2005.

His departure comes just a few months after GMU featured him in a Business Week advertisement touting the Washington region's blend of cultural, sports, academic and service amenities as being a magnet for the best and brightest young people.

At Rotman, Florida will be a professor of business economics and academic director of the school's newly established Centre for Jurisdictional Advantage and Prosperity, a $120 million project to study how localities make themselves more attractive to companies and top-flight talent.
So, Florida, who spoke in Lafayette a couple of years ago as part of The Independent/IberiaBank speaker series, will still be looking at issues that have significance for those of us in Lafayette who are committed to driving change and growth using technology and innovation.

One possibility that has opened up with the announced retirement of ULL President Ray Authement is that the new president (whoever he or she may be) will have the opportunity to energize faculty recruitment (hell, energizing anything on campus would be an improvement).

The horse farm fiasco is not what tarnished Authement's legacy at the university. That episode was symptomatic of the larger problem which was the loss of his ability to distinguish the interests of the university from his own interests and those of his circle of friends.

After 30-plus years of the same management, my hope is that the next president of ULL will be someone young and out to make a name for themselves (much like Authement was when he first took the post). Rather than looking to build an empire here, the university would really be best served if the next president is some energetic person who comes here looking to shake the place up; someone seeking create some a buzz about the university that matches the growing buzz about Lafayette in business and technology circles around the country, and then used their good work here to move on to something else.

There's some serious plaque in the academic and operational arteries of ULL. What this university needs is the anti-Authement: someone with no ties to the status quo and with an eye to letting their great work here serve as a spring board to something bigger and better down the road.

ULL won't thrive if the job of president comes to be viewed as the last stop before retirement for someone who made their reputation back in the day. And, if ULL doesn't thrive, it will be a brake on Lafayette and the region at a time when our community needs ULL to be contributing to the forward thrust.

Wednesday, July 18, 2007

Acadiana Counters the Filibuster


Lafayette and Acadiana joined with MoveOn.org members at about 130 sites on Tuesday evening to calling on Republicans in the U.S. Senate to end their obstruction to changes in U.S. policy in Iraq. The event was held in front of the John Shaw Federal Courthouse in downtown Lafayette. It drew about 20 participants including Republicans, veterans, members of Pax Christi, and, of course, members of MoveOn.org.

We also drew three counter-counter-filibusterers (people who support the war). As the event progressed, they ended up being badly outnumbered.

It was a very moving event and one that drew significant media attention. Here's the story from The Advocate. Here's the story from The Daily Advertiser.

Our target was disgraced Louisiana Senator David Vitter. Vitter pretended to work in Washington on Tuesday, being hounded by the media for answers to questions he refuses to take.

If this man is serious about redeeming his political soul, one possible path would be to demonstrate that he is willing to put the good of the country ahead the good of his party and stop defending a failed policy in Iraq that has destabilized South Asia and the Middle East, turned Iraq in to a recruiting weapon for Al Queida, and imperiling the viability of the Army and Marines, as well as the safety of the country.

Other Republicans are listening. Vitter has yet to demonstrate that he cares for anything but saving his own skin.

Saturday, July 14, 2007

Blanco Reaffirms Louisiana Commitment to Sanctity of Sperm



Governor Kathleen Blanco signed yet another act of the Louisiana Legislature that reaffirms the second class status of women under Louisiana law.

You can read about the current law here.

As you may recall, last year the Legislature passed and Blanco signed a law that apes a South Dakota law that bans abortions — even when the life of the mother is at stake — without exceptions for rape and incest victims.

Let's see. Among the worst states in quality of education. Among the highest states with the percentage of people not covered by health insurance. The state with the highest rate of incarceration. Among the highest rates of poverty. And the toughest abortion laws in the country.

Looks like that last one is a good fit with the rest of that list.

Friday, July 06, 2007

Bas Clas "Fireworks" at the Blue Moon Saloon



For about as long as I can remember I've been friends with one or more of the Picous, beginning with Skip Picou whom I met at age 5.

His cousins, Donnie and Steve, have played music all of their lives. For the past 30 years or so, they've been the core of the band Bas Clas (that's French for "low class").

Although the band hasn't played much over the past decade, they managed to meet in Lafayette last December and play a gig at the Blue Moon Saloon. I managed to video a good portion of that event.

This is the first of what could be a series videos from that event.