By Ralph R. Reiland on 8.7.08 @ 12:07AM
Capitalism fails once again to attract the best and the brightest.
PITTSBURGH -- "There is no native criminal class except
Congress," said Mark Twain.
In the Pennsylvania version of this criminal class, the latest
storm cloud over our stable of thieves and incompetents in the
state capital comes, appropriately, by way of Miss Rain Day, Angela
Bertugli, the 2001 winner of the Rain Day beauty pageant in Greene
County.
The Philadelphia Inquirer explains how Miss Rain Day
ended up on the gravy train and being supported by our tax dollars
after public servant Mike Manzo, former chief of staff to House
Democratic Leader Bill DeWeese, spotted her in a bar in 2004.
"They shared drinks and then had a tryst in a car," reports the
Philly paper. "The following year the beauty queen was given a
state job as a researcher in a field office above a cigar store. By
2006, her salary jumped 42 percent to $30,000, plus she got a
$7,000 bonus."
Bertugli, reports the Inquirer, "told investigators
that she got her state job after having sex above a Pittsburgh
cigar shop with Manzo."
Miss Rain Day's paycheck has now jumped to $45,344, plus a
generous benefits package that empties the public coffers by
another $10,000 per year. Every dime, of course, comes out of the
taxpayers' pockets, not Mr. Manzo's.
The $45,344 doesn't count the price of any high-end cigars or
any fancy overtime work that perchance ended up on the taxpayers'
tab when Manzo and Bertugli might have discussed her "research"
over some Crab Stuffed Maine Lobster and a few glasses of Chateau
Ste. Michelle Chardonnay.
IN A BASICALLY no-work job that was created just for her --
Bertugli confessed to investigators that she had nothing to do for
70 percent of the time (and the tasks she performed during the
other 30 percent of the time weren't exactly policy gems) -- the
former beauty queen found time to pick up a Master of Public
Administration at the University of Pittsburgh's Graduate School of
Public and International Affairs, as well as getting some hands-on
experience in more local affairs.
Still employed by the state, Bertugli was transferred from her
"office" above the city's South Side cigar shop to a "job" in
Harrisburg after being accepted into law school at Widener
University. Why is she still on the public payroll? "It would be
wrong to take retribution against those who told the truth,"
explains Tom Andrews, DeWeese's press secretary. The truth, though,
spilled out only after Bertugli was nabbed. That's not the type of
truth-telling that generally allows criminals to escape retribution
and to continue to pick the public's pocket.
DeWeese says Ms. Bertugli comes from good stock, from "one of
the finest families among all of my acquaintances." Does that mean
we don't get our money back?
Bertugli's supervisor in Harrisburg was Jennifer Brubaker, but
she's now gone, suspended without pay after being charged with
playing a role in the legislature's crooked bonus scheme.
Manzo is also gone, charged with conspiracy in connection with
the bonus scandal and the misallocation of state workers in
political campaigns, plus the tax-supported shenanigans with Ms.
Bertugli.
MANZO'S LAWYER, Jim Eisenhower, says his client wasn't motivated by
self-interest. "Anyone who believes that the allegations in this
presentment were masterminded by Mike Manzo for his benefit are
very naive," says Eisenhower. Imagine going to law school to learn
how to make statements like that with a straight face. What,
Manzo's sex-for-job swap wasn't in his self-interest? That was done
for us?
DeWeese says that what happened right under his nose wasn't his
fault. "No leader can be involved at that tactical level day in,
day out and if you have many people -- there's just too many
people," he said. "I'm not an investigative person."
One wonders if DeWeese would be more inquisitive, more careful
with the dollars, more investigative, if it was his own money.
He's right, however, about too many people. The oversized
collection of crooks and slouches in Harrisburg makes Pennsylvania
the most expensive state legislature in the nation, and we still
end up ranking 37th among the 50 states in job growth and 46th in
population growth.
We pay the most, in short, and get the least. It's like paying a
Mercedes price for a used Honda.
In the more competitive private sector, the market has a
built-in and automatic mechanism for dealing with this kind of
bad-as-I-wanna-be theft, arrogance, waste and mismanagement. It's
why capitalism works and government doesn't.
topics:
Law