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Jun 9, 2009
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i grew up on the tippecanoe river, buffalo indiana. we have two stop signs on either side of the bridge and that's the size of town that i come from. so i think of small businesses, and i worry so when we think about access to records and we're going to say requirement with regard to restaurants, are we going to include concessionairs. has anybody thought about that so when you go to mci arena -- how about when you go to the college football game, how about high school, how about little league? you know, we make deer chili at our little league games. what all is going to be included? how about convenience stores? how about you pull in that mom and pop gas station and they've created something. you can get elk sausage. i mean, what kind of requirements are we going to be placing and where are we going to stop? do we as a committee need to have better definition as to what -- who's in and who's out? total silence. yes. >> congressman, at the risk of your wrath, i just don't think food safety that is something that is determined by scale
i grew up on the tippecanoe river, buffalo indiana. we have two stop signs on either side of the bridge and that's the size of town that i come from. so i think of small businesses, and i worry so when we think about access to records and we're going to say requirement with regard to restaurants, are we going to include concessionairs. has anybody thought about that so when you go to mci arena -- how about when you go to the college football game, how about high school, how about little league?...
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Jun 7, 2009
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. >> but in cities like gary, indiana, cleveland, ohio, buffalo, new york, what are you sensing? >> i'm sensing people have grown up expecting a factory job. they don't have that factory job. they aren't quite ready for whatever new industry emerges. that new industry isn't hiring that many people yet and it's frustrated. and it has political ramifications for state and national politics. >> i think that's why you saw the obama administration last week dispatch secretary soles, a whole bunch of cabinet secretaries throughout the midwest to basically tell them we feel your pain and here's what we're trying to do to help. it's not enough, but i think that they are aware of the political ramifications and they want to show that they are on top of it, they are concerned. whether it's enough to get people through the crisis is a big question. >> final point? >> again, how they deal with this could really have an impact in terms of the next governor's race in ohio, the next senate race in ohio, on down the line. this is starting to actually give the republicans, which was the party out
. >> but in cities like gary, indiana, cleveland, ohio, buffalo, new york, what are you sensing? >> i'm sensing people have grown up expecting a factory job. they don't have that factory job. they aren't quite ready for whatever new industry emerges. that new industry isn't hiring that many people yet and it's frustrated. and it has political ramifications for state and national politics. >> i think that's why you saw the obama administration last week dispatch secretary...
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Jun 7, 2009
06/09
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. >> places like gary, indiana, cleveland, ohio, and buffalo new york -- what are you sensing? >> people have grown up expecting a factory job and they do not have that factory jobs. the new industries are not hiring that many new people yet. they are frustrated. it has political ramifications for state and national politics. >> that is why you saw the obama administration dispatched secretary solis and a lot of cabinet secretaries throughout the country to tell them that we feel your pain in here is what we are trying to do to help. is not enough, but they are aware of the political ramifications and want to show that they are on top of it and are concerned. whether it is enough to get people through the crisis is a big question. >> how they deal with this could have an impact in terms of the next governor's race in ohio, the next senate race in ohio, and on down the line. this is starting to give the republicans, the party at a favor in ohio, some real ammunition for a winning some seats in the next election. >> steve cox is with the "plain dealer. gentlemen, thanks for being
. >> places like gary, indiana, cleveland, ohio, and buffalo new york -- what are you sensing? >> people have grown up expecting a factory job and they do not have that factory jobs. the new industries are not hiring that many new people yet. they are frustrated. it has political ramifications for state and national politics. >> that is why you saw the obama administration dispatched secretary solis and a lot of cabinet secretaries throughout the country to tell them that we...
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Jun 21, 2009
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buffalo in it. they were in iowa, ohio, indiana, illinois. it does not seem any of them range in the michigan. after we extracted everything we could extract out of the buffalo and ate the meat and sold the heights, the only thing left was the bones. we began collecting the bonds to make a couple of things out of them. most commonly they would make bone meal fertilizer. they would collect the bones on the great plains and ship them to places like st. louis, chicago, detroit. turn them into bone meal certified-- fertilizer. bob the soils there are various said it. another thing they did was make fine china with really good buffalo bones. another thing they would do is make bone ash, burn ash and when you buy an aquarium delta, it is often bone ash inside the seltzer. they would use it to clarify sugars and wine. when the bonds began to run now they announced a bone crisis and people began picking up indian burial grounds. indians began digging at the buffalo jump swear their own people have a starkly brian hundreds of thousands of buffalo off cliffs and then they would dig down and get those fun
buffalo in it. they were in iowa, ohio, indiana, illinois. it does not seem any of them range in the michigan. after we extracted everything we could extract out of the buffalo and ate the meat and sold the heights, the only thing left was the bones. we began collecting the bonds to make a couple of things out of them. most commonly they would make bone meal fertilizer. they would collect the bones on the great plains and ship them to places like st. louis, chicago, detroit. turn them into bone...