FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
Tuesday, April 2, 2013
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ALOM, Fitzgerald Designate 21 Municipalities as 2013 Banner Communities
“Our communities and elected officials have some very impressive things going on in their municipalities,” said Pete Poninsky, Chairman of the Allegheny League of Municipalities. “The Banner Communities Program is intended to highlight those efforts and to set a standard we believe all of our municipalities can meet. These 21 municipalities have a significant amount of intergovernmental cooperation efforts in place, as well as community activities, and mentoring and educational programs taking place too.”
The 2013 Banner Communities are
“The Allegheny League of Municipalities has a 40-year history of working with boroughs, townships, cities, home rule municipalities and municipal authorities in our region towards a coordinated approach relating to municipal legislation and services,” said County Executive Fitzgerald. “The Banner Communities Program takes the League’s efforts to improve communication, cooperation and coordination on issues that are of area-wide concern to a different level. These 21 municipalities really have set a standard of how local government should function, and should be commended for the work that they do for their residents.”
In order to be eligible for consideration for the Banner Communities Program, the municipality’s elected and appointed officials must:
· Participate in educational or training programs through ALOM, the
· Be active members in good standing with ALOM and the county municipal associations, and have a representative attending at least a minimum of 50% of county association meetings
· Be active members in good standing in a COG and attend COG meetings, participate in a COG cooperative purchasing program and participate in at least one shared municipal service
· Conduct a Local Government Week activity by conducting a local activity promoting local government or communicating with the community about delivery of services
· Conduct an effective Citizen Communication Program by offering a municipal newsletter or web-based communication effort, and participate in a class discussion on local government or conducting a shadowing program for junior or senior high school students
“I’m excited about the good work that these municipalities are doing. They all meet the spirit and intent of the program in that they are delivering services to their communities effectively and in ways that enhance the quality of life for their residents,” said Richard Hadley, Executive Director of ALOM. “They are a diverse group of municipalities in size and demographics, but they all exhibit the characteristics of leadership and sound local government principals. ALOM is well represented by these 2013 Banner Communities.”
The Allegheny League of Municipalities is a 501(c)(6) non-profit, umbrella organization of municipalities in
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Office of the
101 Courthouse •
Phone (412) 350-6500 • Fax (412) 350-6512
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Another reason why USC outshines Lebo.
ReplyDelete"Banners? We ain't got no banner. We don't need no banner. I don't have to show you any stinking banner."
ReplyDelete- Lebo Bandits
Why would we need a banner, we have Lebomag.com to tell us how great we are!
ReplyDeleteBanners violate Lebo's sign regulations in the zoning ordinance, although Lincoln school has gotten away with it ever since JoPo, who lives in that hood, has been a school board member. Gee, I wonder....
ReplyDeleteAnd Lebolog, Facebook, Twitter, and all that social media nonsense too 6:06 PM. Maybe they can get Cannon Sr. to write another travel piece on county hot spots to visit.
ReplyDeleteTake a look around the ML community, read the newspapers and it's very clear why we didn't make the list.
ReplyDeletePretty soon we'll be known as a has-been place where no one can afford to live because of the outrageous taxes.
What a sad state of affairs.
We have become the laughingstock of the county and it's not funny.
ReplyDeleteI urge all voters to bypass all school board incumbents who have the gall to run again. However, we are in the unfortunate position of having to watch out for their challengers, too!
How did this happen here?
How did it happen? It happened because nobody on the conservative side of the house had the guts to make a stand. Lebo has become a joke and an example of how to not do things. Our electorate, all 20 percent of eligible voters, is woefully ignorant. People keep buying into the same nonsense. Id love to move but i cant get out of my house what ive put in it financially. Now im trapped in a dying community thats filling up with socialists who see no issue with continually jacking up taxes with no plan to be solvent. Idiots all.
ReplyDeleteSo i hope voters remember the Remelys, Birks and others who,like clueless sheep, went right along spending lying to the public.
You ask where Mt. Lebanon is? It's lost in the construction debris and the school directors' misplaced belief that more is always better.
ReplyDeleteThey must be held accountable!
8:37 Right on.
ReplyDeleteToo much staff, not enough assessment.
ReplyDeleteOh! I forgot assessment was Mr. Cooper's idea and was really worth nothing.