Jags looking for a fresh start

When Shad Kahn took over as the new owner of your Jacksonville Jaguars, he promptly declared that he would bring a winning tradition to the franchise that has been sorely missing.  He first went out and hired offensive genius Mike Mularkey who turned Atlanta’s Matt Ryan into one of the NFL’s top quarterbacks.  Although Mularkey was not so successful as his last stint as a head coach (with Buffalo 2006-2008 where his record was 14-18.

Mularkey was asked if he thought he would prove successful in Jacksonville.

“When you start sobering up, how does it feel?” Khan said. “That’s the key issue. After the binge, how do you feel? … A wonderful thing about football is everybody looks great until the ball is snapped. Once the ball is snapped, results speak for themselves and we know in September how good a job he is doing preparing, strategies, (assembling) the staff. It will all come out. By that time, the buzz, the splash, is going to be history.”

Front office and coaching changes aside, the team will also have to deal with the sophomore season of Blaine Gilbert who passed for over 2200 yards last season with 12 touchdowns but was less than stellar.

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We would like to help you see the Jacksonville Jaguars in person. The place we would recommend checking out for to get those hard to get tickets is: Prime Seat Tickets. Yes everyone likes to see a winning team, but going to the game is really more about “BEING THERE”. Did your parents ever take you to a live professional football game? Did you ever take your kids? You know there is nothing better than being there!

Shahid R. Khan, Jaguars’ Owner, Is Subject of Protest

Some workers at one of his plants, though, believe Khan has forgotten who helped make him a success. They accuse Khan of failing to clean up industrial chemicals and toxic substances that spewed out of the Chrome Craft Corporation, a company in Highland Park, Mich., that Khan owns.

Accompanied by several dozen members of the United Auto Workers, several former employees of the company took their case to New York to demand that the N.F.L. pressure Khan to address the situation. They gathered Thursday at the N.F.L. store on Sixth Avenue, just a few blocks south of Radio City Music Hall, where the league was holding its annual draft.

“He paints himself as the American dream, but it came at the expense of the workers,” said , a U.A.W. vice president. “The league needs to tell him to clean up the plant and deal with the problems.”

The plant, which was idled in late 2009 and has not reopened, is owned by , a privately held auto parts manufacturer that Khan took over several decades ago. The company now has $3 billion in sales, 48 plants and more than 12,000 employees, and has its headquarters in Urbana, Ill.

Workers who were employed at Chrome Craft said they were forced to handle dangerous chemicals, like chromium, without proper protection. Mike Miley, 41, who worked at the plant for 20 years until it closed, said he wore a thin protective suit “that soaked through like tissue” when he was asked to clean storage tanks and move chemicals into drums.

Miley’s epileptic seizures, which increased while working at the plant, have slowed since being laid off in 2009, he said. His father and two uncles who also worked at the plant for about 40 years each died of cancer.

“He needs to clean up the plant and take responsibility for the people he made sick,” Miley said.

The Rev. , pastor of the Greater St. Matthew Baptist Church in Highland Park, said he wanted Khan to apologize and set up a green development fund in the city.

Brad Wurfel, a spokesman for the Michigan Department of Environmental Quality, said the department inspected the site after a request from union, religious and environmental leaders, and found no hazardous materials. The department is planning to take soil and water samples from near the factory. The company, Wurfel said, has cooperated with the investigation.

“We have no evidence that there’s ground water contamination there,” he said. But, he added, “it’s a highly urbanized area with a long history of industrial chemicals being used.”

The company had been cited for environmental violations before and addressed all the problems raised, Wurfel said.

In a statement, Flex-N-Gate said: “We comply with all laws, including environmental, workers’ health and safety, and public protection.  We settle for nothing less.”

After their rally in front of the N.F.L. shop, the protesters walked to the league’s headquarters to state their case to the commissioner. The group gave a spokesman for the league a package that included a letter to Commissioner Roger Goodell and 100 pages of citations and documents and testimony from workers.

“At this point, they are in possession of what I believe is a comprehensive case,” said Pastor Bullock, who said he was told that Goodell would be given the materials. “There is a certain perception the league wants to have, and I think they will consider it in terms what kind of potential negative shadow that it might have.”