By Antonio D. French
Filed Tuesday, October 09, 2007 at 10:17 AM
Governor Matt Blunt today re-appointed Republican Peter Herschend to the Missouri Board of Education. The Branson native is co-founder of Herschend Family Entertainment Corporation, owner of Silver Dollar City theme park, and Labels: Appointments, Schoolsalready serves previously served as president of the Board of Education.
4 Comments:
Yeehaw! With the Branson head honcho of that Silver Dollar City, you know that learning is going to git done! Duck boats and coasters is realy what makes a qualified edumacator! Time to be a book learning Missouri! Git that parcent of Missourians 25 or older wit a collage degree above 21.6 parcent! Wear counting on your Pete!
10/09/2007 11:41 AM
Blunt's appointment of that gal from Wentzville whose business is building churches for Christ added diversity to the state board. She was an Alan Keyes delegate in 1996---maybe Herschend can get her to support Romney this year. I doubt if he converts Gambaro---unless the democrats nominate someone not republican enough for him.
Person Candidate
Peter Herschend
Executive
H.f.e. Corporation Mitt Romney
$2,300
2008
Jodee Herschend
Homemaker
Mitt Romney
$2,300
2008
Peter Herschend
Vice Chairman
Herschend Family Entertainment RNC
$25,000
2004
Jo Herschend
Homemaker
RNC
$20,000
2004
Peter Herschend
Owner
Self-Employed George W. Bush
$2,000
2004
Jo Herschend
Co-Owner
Self-Employed George W. Bush
$1,000
2004
JO HERSCHEND
CO-OWNER
SILVER DOLLAR CITY George W. Bush
$1,000
2004
$53,600 given by this address. $53,600 to Republicans $0 to Democrats
10/09/2007 5:25 PM
Notable contributions to the NRepublican senateC from individuals
Peter Herschend, president of Silver Dollar City Inc.: $15,000
If you google Peter Herschend donations you get 102 posts---and some occasional historical background from the years when he first started serving on the state board. Thank God Slay talked everyone into a state takeover.
1992, the city of Branson--a tourism mecca visited annually by millions who attend the country-music halls there--was burdened by traffic congestion. Thirty thousand cars a day were jamming the town's Country Music Boulevard in peak season. Ashcroft declared the situation in the Ozarks an "economic emergency" in order to build a road. This was the first time this gubernatorial power had been used to facilitate construction of a highway, according to the St. Louis Post-Dispatch. Ashcroft's declaration opened the way for the quick approval of a $140 million, eighteen-mile bypass promoted as the solution to Branson's traffic mess--a claim challenged by some locals, who blasted the Ozark Mountain Highroad as an "Ashcroft pork-barrel" project. But there is no question that the new highway was beneficial to several key political contributors to Ashcroft, most notably Peter Herschend, an owner of the Silver Dollar City amusement center. The road--US Highway 465--would skirt Branson and swing by Herschend's Silver Dollar City, making it easier for tourists to reach the site of shops, variety shows and rides. A Post-Dispatch analysis of land records found that the Herschend family stood to gain the most from the project. The proposed road would cross three stretches of Herschend-owned property, and in 1993 the family sold one of them to the state for $2.2 million. Locals called the road "Pete's Pike."
..."One did not have to be a partisan Democrat to wonder if Ashcroft's support for the project was enhanced by his relationship with Herschend. In October 1994, as Ashcroft was campaigning for the Senate, the Post-Dispatch reported that Herschend, his wife and business had donated $12,000 to Ashcroft campaigns in the previous ten years and that Herschend had hosted fundraisers for Ashcroft. According to subsequent federal elections records, Herschend and his family contributed $18,000 to Ashcroft's 1994 Senate effort and $7,000 to the Republican Party that campaign cycle. (Herschend's son, Chris, worked on Ashcroft's campaign staff in 1994.) According to Herschend, the road grew out of conversations he held with Ashcroft and highway officials in 1991 and 1992. And when Ashcroft declared the "economic emergency" at a public meeting in Branson in June 1992--just months before he was to leave office--he was introduced by Herschend. At that time, Ashcroft said the highway would be finished by 1998 and reduce traffic congestion in downtown Branson. (The road is still under construction and years away from completion; two years after the announcement, studies showed the road would draw off only a small amount of Branson's traffic.) Some local businesses favored the highway, environmentalists opposed it (the road would run through the habitat of endangered birds), and other opponents maintained that a costly project of unproven effectiveness was being rushed over their objections. But the US Department of Transportation approved it in February 1993. When the Post-Dispatch asked Herschend about the project a year-and-a-half later--the last time this story received any serious attention--the businessman said that when he was lobbying Ashcroft for the road he didn't know the bypass was going to run through his property. But the newspaper discovered two maps drawn up before the official announcement that showed the proposed road passing through or near Herschend's land. The 117 acres the state purchased from Herschend for $2.2 million was to be used for building an interchange that would handle traffic to Herschend's Silver Dollar City.
"Ashcroft told the paper that he backed the road to assist Missourians not the Herschends. Nevertheless, the Herschends appeared appreciative. After 1994, Herschend, his family, and his business donated $33,000 to Ashcroft and about $40,000 to other Republicans. Perhaps Ashcroft resorted to unusual means to push this road because he truly believed it was in the public interest. But the deep involvement of an Ashcroft donor/fundraiser in the project caused the Post-Dispatch to question Ashcroft's integrity. In an editorial the newspaper asked, "Did the Ozark Mountain Highroad--US Highway 465--get special priority and favorable treatment because at least two of the landowners along the proposed right of way were campaign contributors of then-Gov. John Ashcroft?" The newspaper noted that Ashcroft's designation of the highway as an "economic emergency" had "no meaning under law" and "raises serious questions of public policy." It added that the "apparent connections between contributions to politicians and the priority given this highway at least raises doubts about safeguarding the public interest."...This was all the more reason, the paper said, for campaign finance reform. In general, politicians of unquestionable integrity do not behave in a manner that provides ammunition to advocates of campaign finance reform. But here was one instance when Ashcroft acted in a fashion that led observers to suspect he is not as honest as he is pious. --
10/09/2007 5:34 PM
So what makes David Jackson think Herschend is his friend.
10/11/2007 9:33 AM
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