DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA'S QUARTER CONUNDRUM Pubblico Deposited

Contenuto dell'articolo
  • The E-Sylum: Volume 11, Number 9, March 2, 2008, Article 26

    DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA'S QUARTER CONUNDRUM

    [An editorial in Monday's Washington Post advocated the
    District of Columbia's controversial proposal for its
    "state" quarter design - the use of the defiant slogan
    the district already emblazons on its license plates:
    "Taxation Without Representation". -Editor]

    New Hampshire has "Live Free or Die," and Pennsylvania
    goes by "Virtue, Liberty, Independence." So, it's only
    fitting that the soon-to-be-minted D.C. quarter be engraved
    with the slogan that declares the defining fact of life
    in the nation's capital: "Taxation Without Representation."

    This week D.C. officials will submit to the U.S. Mint their
    ideas for the design of the new quarter. D.C. Secretary
    Stephanie D. Scott, who is heading up the effort for Mayor
    Adrian M. Fenty, told us that the city is allowed to submit
    three concepts and that each will include "Taxation Without
    Representation." The phrase, which appears on license plates
    in the District, was the most requested item from residents
    making suggestions about what should appear on the reverse
    of the coin, which will be minted in 2009 as part of the
    popular 50 State Quarters Program.

    D.C. officials, accustomed as they are to federal
    second-guessing, fully expect pushback to their request
    and have already sent a memo to Treasury Secretary Henry M.
    Paulson Jr. outlining the city's rationale and urging
    acceptance. We can think of only one valid reason to reject
    the District's request: Congress renders the phrase moot
    by granting D.C. voting rights.

    To read the complete article, see:
    Full Story

    [The Mint's response was swift - no dice. Here's what the
    Washington Post reported later in the week. -Editor]

    Wow, that was fast. The U.S. Mint pretty much set a government
    speed record in rejecting the District government's proposal
    to put the words "Taxation Without Representation" on the D.C.
    quarter that will be issued as part of the 50 States coin
    program.

    Mayor Adrian Fenty's in-your-face proposal "does not comply
    with the law that authorizes the D.C. commemorative quarter-
    dollar coin," the Mint says in a statement just issued.

    "Changing how the District of Columbia (the Seat of Government
    of the United States ) is represented in Congress is a
    contemporary political issue on which there presently is
    no national consensus and over which reasonable minds differ.

    Although the United States Mint expresses no position on
    the merits of this issue, we have determined that the
    proposed inscription is clearly controversial and, therefore,
    inappropriate as an element of design for United States
    coinage."

    A letter to the D.C. government from Cynthia Vitelli,
    assistant director of external relations for the Mint,
    invites the District to submit new ideas for the coin's
    design. The Mint statement says it "looks forward to
    working with District officials to develop narratives that
    will lead to a quarter honoring the District of Columbia
    of which the entire Nation can be proud."

    [I had to laugh at the scathing response from a web site
    reader: "And 'in god we trust' isn't clearly controversial?"
    -Editor]

    To read the complete article, see:
    Full Story

URL di origine Data di pubblicazione
  • 2008-03-02
Volume
  • 11

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Autore NNP