Friday, November 20, 2009

What Happen to the Council Slush Fund Investigation?

Controlling the News: What Happen to the Council Slush Fund Investigation?


The Daily News reported on June 24, 2008 that U.S. Attorney Michael Garcia asked the NYS Supreme Court to delay for 90 days a special inquiry into the city council pork spending and slush fund, for fear it would derail their case. The inquiry requested by civil rights lawyer Norman Siegel under an arcane law, would require a parade of public officials to publicly testify under a grant of immunity. It not about Siegel ongoing suit which seeks to invoke a a rarely used City Charter provision to combat Tammany Hall corrupt in the 1870s but what happen to the U.S. Attorney Investigation. We know that since then Both Garcia and Lev Dassin have left to white shoe law firms. With the new U.S. for New York's Southern District Preet Bahrara responsibilities with the terror trials we wonder if he has any time for the council investigation or if we will ever see a report if they decide not to indict the big fish.

Only True News Keeps This Story Alive
August 7, 2009
NY's Watergate: Several Slush Fund Cover-up
July 15, 2009The City Council Slush Fund Scandal Is Way Bigger Than Miguel Martinez
March 6, 2009 Cover Up At City Hall ContinuesJ
January 12, 2009
Inspector Clouseau Investigates NYC Political Corruption
January 4, 2009
Member Item Slush Fund Cover Up
November 11, 2009 The Dishonor Roll - The Shame of New York
The 29 Councilmembers who voted to extend their term in office
November 8, 2008 Massive Lobbyist Scandal at City Hall

Media Switch On Then Off - Slush Fund Story
From a period of two weeks before the indictments of two city council aides to about a month after the arrests, the newspapers hammered away almost every day at the slush fund scandal. From the beginning of April to the the end of May over 100 story and several editorials were published about the scandal and the need for reform, including over two dozen investigative reports that exposed how councilmembers used member items for family, friends and paid off lobbyists for their campaign help. Since the end of May less than a handful of stories have been written about the slush fund, none during and since the debate and vote extending the council's term limits. It is inexplicable that challengers who use the Internet and Facebook for requests for funding, have not tried to use the online community against the media blackout, and to organize against the council's term limits vote.


Slush Fund Coverage Day by Day, April - May Pork handouts offered to pressure council members to OK congestion plan, April 2, 2008 *** City Council investigated for slush fund, April 3, 2008 *** City Council Speaker's "Slush Fund" Investigated, April 3, 2008 ***Slush Fund Scandal May Drag Quinn To Court *** City Council invented phony charities to hide more than $17M, aides say, April 3 *** Christine Quinn Joins the Scandal Bandwagon, April 3, 2008 *** The Perils of Christine, April 4, 2008 *** NYC City Council Hiding Taxpayer Money,Created a Slush Fund, April 4, 2008 *** NYC pol caught in slush fund probe - April 5, 2008 *** City Comptroller To Audit Council Over Slush Fund - April 9, 2008 *** Discretionary funds in City Council must now be OK'd, April 11, 2008 Speaker Quinn Decides to Talk to a Lawyer, April 12, 2008 *** *** Slush Probers Eye Fraud Rap for Quinn, April 13, 2008 *** Unanswered Questions: City Council's Phantom Funds - April 14, 2008 *** 2 NYC Council workers indicted in slush fund probe -April 16, 2008 *** What Roll Did Chuck Meara Have In Creating The City Council Speaker's Slush Fund, April 16, 2008 *** Council member in funding flap, April, 17, 2008 *** SLUSH-FUND SHENANIGANS - April 17, 2008 *** Lobbyists’ Role in Council Slush Fund Scandal Probed - April 17, 2008 *** AIDS Groups Have Doubts On Quinn Reforms, April 17, 2008 *** Indictments fall as Quinn eyes reforms in slush fund scandal - April 18, 2008 *** NYC pol caught in slush fund probe, April 18, 2008 *** Quinn Offers Apologies to Council, April 18, 2008 *** City Council scandal has nonprofits nervous, hampers budget talks, April 19, 2008 *** CITY HAUL POLS WANT YOU TO PAY LAW BILLS, April 19, 2008 *** DA weighs charges in City Council slush fund scandal - April 21, 2008 *** Quinn would flush ‘slush fund’ in a budget overhaul proposal - April 22, 2008 *** Daily News Editorial: All in the family - April 22, 2008 *** Brooklyn Pol Put $187G of Your Dough into Wife's Nonprofit, April 22, 2008 *** City Freezes Bronx Councilman’s Million-Dollar Non-Profit Play, April 24, 2008 *** The City Council Operates Under "Afikomen Rules", April 25, 2008 *** Councilman sent $406G to nonprofit with sister on board, April 25, 2008 *** Baez Tied to Council Slush Fund Scandal - April 30, 2008 *** Daily News Editorial: All in the family - April 22, 2008 *** Feds Probing Larry Seabrook Non-Profits in Council Slush Fund Inquiry - April 30, 2008 *** Slush pols look after their own, -April 30, 2008 ***Bloomberg downplays slush fund scandal, May 2, 2008 *** Papers Filed for Judicial Hearing on City Council Spending, May 3, 2008 *** More slush fund shadiness exposed, May 5, 2008 *** Gifford Miller: Slush-Fund Refugee, May 6, 2008 *** WHILE THE COUNCIL ROILS IN SCANDAL, THE FORMER SPEAKER STAYS MUM, HANGS WITH DEVELOPER CHUM - May 7, 2008 *** Brooklyn councilwoman Darlene Mealy's 25G for nonprofit run by sister tabled, May 11, 2008 *** Once Again, Quinn Tries to End the Funding Furor, May 12, 2008 ***Quinn: SLUSH FUND HELPED ME, May 12, 2008 *** Slush Probers Eye Fraud Rap for Quinn, May 13, 2008 *** More City Hall Slush, This Time From Mayor Bloomberg - May 14, 2008 *** Council slush fund quid quo pro, - May 15, 2008 *** Slush Fund Follies in New York - May 15, 2008 *** Vallone, Sr. subpoenaed in slush probe, May 19, 2008 *** Council slush funds date back to 1998 - June 1, 2008 *** Kendall Stewart - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia, June 11, 2008 *** Lobbyists' Role in Council Slush Fund Scandal Probed, June 20, 2008 *** Role of Lobbyists Examined in Council Slush Fund Scandal - June 20, 2008 *** Baez Silent Amid Sea of Controversy, July 10, 200

Thursday, November 19, 2009

Rudy Giuliani will very likely seek U.S. Senate seat, and if elected maybe 2012 White House: source

Originally Published:Thursday, November 19th 2009, 2:15 PM
Updated: Thursday, November 19th 2009, 5:27 PM

Former New York City Mayor Rudy Giuliani will run for U.S. Senate, not governor's seat.
Giancarli for News

Former New York City Mayor Rudy Giuliani will run for U.S. Senate, not governor's seat.
Former Mayor Rudy Giuliani has decided against running for governor, but is strongly considering running for U.S. Senate instead, sources told the Daily News.

The Republican heavyweight was considered the GOP's best shot at reclaiming the governor's mansion.

The only declared candidate on the Republican side is little-known former Long Island Rep. Rick Lazio.

One source said Giuliani is prepared to run for U.S. Senate against Democratic Sen. Kirsten Gillibrand in 2010 to fill out the remaining two years of Hillary's Clinton's term.

But a number of sources close to the former mayor said no decision has been made and a Giuliani spokeswoman downplayed the reports.

"Rudy has a history of making up his own mind and has no problem speaking it," she said. "When Mayor Giuliani makes a decision about serving in public office, he will inform New Yorkers on his own."

Former Staten Island Borough President Guy Molinari, a close Giuliani pal, said the former mayor has shared doubts with him for months about running for governor.

"What he said to me is that he doesn't think he's going to do it," Molinari told The News about an early November conversation with the former mayor.

"It just didn't make any sense to him."

Molinari said the ongoing circus in the state Senate, combined with Democratic Assembly Speaker Shelly Silver's iron grip on Assembly matters, had convinced Giuliani that a Republican governor would have little ability to get things done quickly in Albany.

"The big drawback for him was -- could I really be effective?" Molinari said. "He saw too many hang-ups there. He's not running for the title, that's for sure."

His absence from the governor's race would be a boon -- and a bow -- to Attorney General Andrew Cuomo, who is considering a run for the office.

Gov. Paterson, who trails Cuomo by up to 59 points in a hypothetical matchup in some polls, insists he is running, even though the White House has pointedly told him President Obama would "prefer" he didn't.

A Marist poll yesterday showed Giuliani losing to Cuomo 53% to 43% in a race for governor, but he is beating Gillibrand 54% to 40%. Molinari said he favors the idea of Giuliani running for U.S. Senate.

"Some of us, including myself, feel like that would be a better fit because he could use his talents there almost immediately," Molinari said. "You get the sense that he'd be a major player [in the U.S. Senate] from day one."

Several weeks ago, after the idea of Giuliani running for the Senate was first floated, one of the former mayor's closest associates shot it down.

"He has said time and again that the Senate is not a job for him," said Tony Carbonetti.

"He is a chief executive, and a damn good one."

If elected to the Senate, one source said, Giuliani could use that as a stepping stone to run for President in 2012 - rather than run for re-election to the Senate.

Running for office would mean Giuliani would have to give up his lifestyle: He's a hot commodity on TV talk shows, he rakes in big bucks for speeches and his law firm is doing well.

Democratic consultant Hank Sheinkopf said a race against Gillibrand would be no cake-walk.

She has the ability to raise lots of cash and "she's no Girl Scout. She'll break his back," Sheinkopf said.

A spokesman for former Gov. Pataki, who has been eying a run for U.S. Senate, said Giuliani's decision would have no impact on his decision.

With Michael Saul

Build bridge to good Bronx jobs: Future Kingsbridge armory workers deserve a living wage

The pitched battle over how, when and whether to develop the Kingsbridge armory in the Bronx brings New York City to a crossroads.

Either we commit to fighting for jobs that pay a decent, living wage, or we watch an ever-larger section of our populace take a slow tumble into a life of working full-time for poverty pay.

The Kingsbridge fight throws these matters into sharp relief. The deal, currently awaiting action by the City Council, calls for a private developer, the Related Cos., to get $17 million in tax incentives on top of $25 million the city has already spent to fix up the dilapidated facility.

In exchange for the $42 million in public benefits, Related wants to buy the armory for $5 million, then round up another $300 million or so to convert the 500,000-square-foot site into a mall and recreation center.

The project would create around 1,000 construction jobs and 1,200 retail jobs.

The sticking point is a longstanding demand by local residents and elected officials that Related commit to requiring all commercial tenants at the site to pay a living wage of at least $10 an hour plus benefits, or $11.50 if no benefits are included.

Related - backed by high-ranking city officials up to and including Mayor Bloomberg - says asking possible tenants to pay employees at least $400 a week for full-time work is a deal-breaker because companies won't agree to rent space if they have to pay $10 an hour.

"The city is not in the business of guaranteeing people's wages, and in private development, we shouldn't be," said Bloomberg.

But this deal stopped being "private development" when the city committed $42 million in repairs and incentives. And it does guarantee people's wages - in the worst possible way.

Giving tens of millions in assistance to Related without demanding a reasonable base wage would guarantee that many of the resulting jobs would pay less than many New Yorkers need to afford living in this city.

Some jobs would be at the minimum wage of $7.25 an hour. That's $290 a week for full-time work. Before taxes.

Enough. Time and again, residents around the city are supposed to look the other way while bureaucrats and businessmen swap public money for crummy jobs that leave full-time workers using food stamps, soup kitchens and other welfare to survive.

The lawyers and paper-pushers who cut these deals hold grip-and-grin press conferences, congratulating one another on how "creative" they had to be to strike the final bargain. As if underpaying security guards and stockroom clerks were akin to composing a symphony on a bar napkin.

New Yorkers have wised up to this immoral foolishness. The Kingsbridge Armory Redevelopment Alliance, a coalition of community groups and unions, is calling Related's bluff, indicating they would rather have no deal than a guarantee of misery.

"The Bronx has the highest poverty rate of any urban county in the United States," Borough President Ruben Diaz Jr., said in testimony to the Council this week. "It is time to demand that developers do better."

Damn straight. Let the "creative" geniuses figure out a new business model - one that doesn't depend on making sure working poor households stay poor.

Let all the hand-wringing over the possibility of businesses leaving New York be matched by more concern about 150,000 people who move out of the city each year. Let us talk about why so many of the record 39,000 people living in city homeless shelters actually hold full-time jobs.

Not only should Bloomberg and the Council support the community alliance, they should put living wage requirements in all city projects that receive significant public benefits, the way cities like San Francisco and Santa Fe, N.M., have already done.

That would be real creativity of the kind our city needs.

elouis@nydailynews.com






Wednesday, November 18, 2009

New York Pols Governs by Blinders Enabled by the Media Who Write with Blinders

Wednesday, November 18, 2009















By Gary Tilzer


Governing by blinders simply means making budget decision disconnected from a single narrative which both the pols and the media are failing to give city residence. The media has allowed the pols to create a new culture that allows them to deliver government to their supports or good causes without taking responsibility for those actions on the city budget or the economic health of New York. It means paying a developer $95 million while cutting the police force. Since 2001 the police force shrunk by over 6000 cops to 34,304 members and we had to wait until after the election to find out what the city will cut because of the recession. We used to have police classes of thousands of new office a year today we are down to a couple of hundred a year. We are paying over a billion on a new police academy as we cut police officers.

New Yorkers want to pay a fair wage Paterson Prepares Wage Bill for Construction Sites We are good people. It make sense to pay people not to go to work sick during the swine flu winter Making business sicker We even hate traffic tickets Traffic Agents and Politicians Debate Value of 5 Minutes. Bloomberg is using the ticket blitz to pay for city services that would otherwise be cut. What is the cost of the council's parking bill and what will the council cut to make up the debt is never discussed. In other words the pols get away with being irresponsible to the city budget. Daily News Edit shows that the council bill to make a parking hour 65 minutes, does not even help motorists Parking space cadets: City Council pretends to befriend beleaguered motorists

Tuesday, November 17, 2009

Bloomberg Gets His Photo-Op, Liu Has Budget 'Concerns'

He had to wait almost two weeks, but Mayor Bloomberg finally wrangled a photo-op - of sorts - out of Comptroller-elect John Liu.

11-16-09 meeting with John Liu

After being snubbed by Liu for a post-Election Day sit-down, the mayor met with the comptroller-to-be for a private coffee klatch at Gracie Mansion earlier today.

The get-together was confirmed to Azi by a Liu spokesperson. Unlike Bloomberg's high-public coffee with Public Advocate-elect Bill de Blasio, reporters were not summoned to view this chat.

But, no matter, the Bloomberg administration was only all too happy to provide photographic evidence that the meeting had indeed taken place.

Liu, who was initially too busy to meet with the mayor and seemed to resent the last-minute Nov. 4 summons from on high, telling a Times reporter: "A long time ago, the people of New York decided there would be no king nor a monarch in New York City."

Today, Liu said he thought meeting with the mayor was "the right thing to do, to really start by talking about some of the issues that are important."

He declined to provide much in the way of details, saying only that the discussion had been "lengthy" and "good" and started out with talk of the budget and the latest round of mid-year cuts.

"The mayor intends to keep the city on track with a balanced budget and as comptroller, I'm going to do everything I can to provide the backup to ensure that the city stays on, stays with a balanced budget," Liu said.


"That may require some changes in the coming months. But we'll...the main thing is that we should work along, that we should work together. There are always concerns. You know, the important thing is that from the outset everybody keeps in mind that the most important people are the people of New York."

Liu said he will have more to say about the budget in the coming months.

(Thanks to DN City Hall Bureau Chief Adam Lisberg who provided these quotes).

Mayor Bloomberg has definitely stepped in to shoot down that living wage proposal for retail workers at the Kingsbridge Armory.

Tuesday, November 17th 2009, 4:00 AM

Mayor Bloomberg on living wage: Drop dead

Deputy Mayor for Economic Development Bob Lieber is reportedly set to oppose it today at a Council committee hearing, saying the Bloomberg camp fears a $10 an hour/and benefits wage deal would harm retail development citywide.

Developer Related Cos. calls the plan by Borough President Ruben Diaz Jr. and community supporters a deal breaker.

On Saturday, Related nixed a compromise by Assemblyman and Bronx Dem Boss Carl Heastie that would put community space outside the armory, and use the rent from the added retail space to offset the higher wages.

Adios, Lou

South Bronx Rep. Jose Serrano pretty much told immigrant-bashing commentator Lou Dobbs not to let the door hit him en el culo on the way out after Dobbs announced he was leaving CNN.

Officially, Jose toned it down in a press release, saying he was "not sad" to see him go.

Bernie and Stanley

Stanley Schiffman tells us he and his cousin Bernie Schwartz from Vegas caught up with each other last week.

Bernie, in this case, is former Hoe Ave. resident and act-uh Tony Curtis, now 84, here for a book signing and sale of some of his paintings.

Stanley, a retired first grade detective now with the Bronx D.A.'s office, was the NYPD's unofficial standup interrogator, working the ever-popular Interrogation Room at the 47th Precinct in Wakefield-Williamsbridge.

His routine, known among Bronx detectives as the Schiffman Shuffle, involved a seemingly endless stream of one-liners, trivia questions and card tricks that left suspects begging for mercy and ready to confess.

Being a longtime friend of Stanley's, our sympathies are with the suspects.

Adolfo job outlook

The White House has been keeping former Bronx Borough President Adolfo Carrión under fairly tight public exposure as director of its Office of Urban Affairs while that conflict-of-interest investigation into allegedly free work on his City Island manse hangs over his head.

But he did emerge Friday at the Bloomberg Washington Summit to say the U.S. is "going to continue to see a lag" on job growth even though "economists agree that the recession is pretty much over."

Uh, dad . . .

State Sen. Ruben (The Rev) Diaz Sr. was quick to put out a press release after the election, calling "on all elected Democrats to line up to support Bill Thompson for mayor in 2013, now."

That gave his BP son Ruben Jr. a chuckle, since his name's been floated out there as a possible mayoral candidate.

Birthday cash bash

Venancio (Benny) Catala, male district leader of the 77th Assembly District in Morris Heights, celebrated his 40th birthday last week at Tah-bu/Sofa Lounge.

The birthday presents were checks to his campaign committee, insurance for next year when district leaders loyal to Party Boss Carl Heastie are likely to see challenges from the Peter and Jose Rivera camp seeking to topple Carl.

Then, again, those challenges could go both ways . . .

Good cause

Ralph Russo of the new Sonora Southwest Grill in the old Venice Restaurant on Williamsbridge Road hosted a fund-raiser last Tuesday for Calvary Hospital.

Among those schmoozing in the crowd: Calvary prexy and CEO Frank Calamari, former state Sen. Guy Velella, biz- niz/political doyenne Kathy Zamechansky, 'Don't Worry' Murray Richman, and Liberty Dem Association State Committeeman Joe McManus.

This works

The Citizens Advice Bureau, which runs a host of social service programs, officially changed its name Friday to BronxWorks at a ribbon-cutter at its new headquarters at 64 E. Tremont Ave.

And no more confusion about people thinking they're calling CAB for car service . . .

rkappstatter@nydailynews.com

Monday, November 16, 2009

Pal of state Sen. Hiram Monserrate arranged Karla Giraldo's trial security

Monday, November 16th 2009, 4:00 AM

Karla Giraldo
DelMundo for News Karla Giraldo

After his assault arrest, Sen. Hiram Monserrate was ordered to have no contact with banged-up girlfriend Karla Giraldo - directly or indirectly.

The goal was to protect her and keep him from trying to influence her testimony but, the Daily News has learned, one of Monserrate's best friends arranged security for Giraldo and escorted her to court during the trial.

The arrangement raises questions about whether Monserrate violated the court's protective order and had improper indirect contact with a crucial witness.

Giraldo changed her story after the Dec. 19 incident. First, she told doctors Monserrate attacked her with a broken glass. Later, she told grand jury it was an accident.

Monserrate was cleared of the most serious charges and convicted only of misdemeanor assault for manhandling her out of the apartment to the hospital.

Monserrate spokesman Mike Nieves admitted one of Giraldo's courthouse escorts was Luis Castro, a longtime friend and sometime employee of Monserrate. Sources said Castro and Monserrate often dined with Castro's wife and Giraldo before the assault.

During the trial, one source said, Castro organized rallies ofMonserrate supporters outside Queens Supreme Court and was"the liaison between Monserrate and Karla during the whole trial. ... He was in contact with Monserrate every day."

Another source said Castro arranged for the security detail that surrounded Giraldo when the unemployed journalist arrived to testify in designer sunglasses, a sleek pantsuit and a trendy handbag.

Nieves said Castro denied relaying messages between Monserrate and Giraldo.

Nieves said Castro told him he's known Giraldo, a fellow Ecuadoran, for more than 20 years.

Giraldo's lawyer Glenn Marshall said he believes Castro made Giraldo's security arrangements.

"I don't think that's a violation of the order unless they're communicating through each other and I don't believe that went on," he said.

Queens District Attorney Richard Brown has not accused Monserrate of trying to influence Giraldo through a third party.

Spokesman Kevin Ryan said the office was unaware that Giraldo's escorts included the former Monserrate aide.

Sonia Ossorio, president of the city chapter of the National Organization for Women, urged the court to "examine the situation more thoroughly. ... He's a lawmaker and needs to be held to the highest standard."

Castro worked for Monserrate on the City Council from 2002 through February 2007, left briefly but returned in January 2008 and stayed through August 2008, earning $10,000 a year.

On Oct. 19, five days after theverdict in Monserrate's case, Monserrate hired Castro as a $60,000-a-year special assistant to the lawmaker's Senate Consumer Protection Committee, Nieves said. Monserrate faces up to a yearbehind bars when sentenced Dec.4.

bross@nydailynews.com

Saturday, November 14, 2009

Student Braves Controversy, Refuses to Recite Pledge

Categories: In The News, Education, Amazing Kids

Will Phillips refuses to say the Pledge of Allegiance. Credit: Arkansas Times

"Liberty and justice for all?"

Will Phillips doesn't believe that describes America for its gay and lesbian citizens. He's a 10-year-old at West Fork Elementary School in Arkansas, about three hours east of Oklahoma City. Given his beliefs, he refused to recite the Pledge of Allegiance.

That did not go over well with the substitute teacher in his fifth-grade classroom.

The Arkansas Times reports that he started refusing to say the pledge Mon., Oct. 5. By Thursday, the substitute was steamed. She told Will she knew his mother and grandmother and they would want him to recite the pledge.

Will told the Times the substitute got more and more upset. She raised her voice. By this point, Will told the newspaper, he started losing his cool too, adding: "After a few minutes, I said, 'With all due respect ma'am, go jump off a bridge.'"



That got him sent to the principal's office. The principal made him look up information about the flag and what it represents. Meanwhile, there was the inevitable call to his mother.

At first, mom Laura Phillips told the Times, the principal talked about Will telling a substitute to jump off a bridge. When pressed, the principal admitted the whole incident was sparked by the boy exercising his constitutional right not to recite the Pledge of Allegiance.

Phillips suggested an apology was in order -- from the teacher. When the principal said that wasn't necessary, Will's mother started venting to friends via Twitter. Those friends, in turn, told the news media. And what would have been a minor classroom incident has people throughout Arkansas and beyond choosing sides.

As for Will, he continues to exercise his right to remain silent. It can be rough at times, he and his family admit. He has his share of supporters, however, his critics are louder and nastier -- especially because he took his stand to defend gay rights.

"In the lunchroom and in the hallway, they've been making comments and doing pranks, calling me gay," he told the Times. "It's always the same people, walking up and calling me a gaywad."

Nonetheless, Will told the paper, he is sticking to his convictions. A reporter for the paper asked Will -- with all this talk about patriotism and the pledge -- what he thinks it means to be an American.

"Freedom of speech," he responded. "The freedom to disagree. That's what I think pretty much being an American represents."

His mother is proud.

"He's probably more aware of the meaning of the pledge that a lot of adults," Phillips told the Times.

Related: Evolution and First-Amendment T-Shirts Upset Schools' Dress Code

Friday, November 13, 2009

The Biggest Bang for the Buck

See full size imageSee full size image
By Daniel Rose

The brutal murder of Derrion Albert, a 16-year-old honor student at Chicago’s Fenger High School, has focused national attention on the savage gang warfare that enveloped the school in an atmosphere of fear and despair.

Recorded on an amateur’s cell phone video camera and seen nationally on the Internet, the murder was just another one of the 24 deadly student shootings in Chicago in 2006-2007, 23 in 2007-2008 and 34 deaths last year. More than 40 children under 18 have been murdered in Chicago so far this year.

But this murder, seen nationally, immediately brought Jesse Jackson Sr. to the school to demand more job opportunities for the community (although two of the four arrested assailants had jobs) and Louis Farrakhan there to invoke God. U.S. Attorney General Eric Holder appeared, stating that, “This is a wake-up call,” and Education Secretary Arne Duncan said that an emergency grant of $500,000 would go to Fenger High School for counselors and other programs. Mayor Richard Daley pledged more police officers at the school and announced plans to use one million dollars from Chicago’s parking meters for an after school jobs program. Fenger’s principal initially declined comment, but in her first public statement expressed her sympathy for Albert’s family.

The normally vocal teachers union representatives were not heard from because Fenger’s teachers are well-paid ($59,950 average), the school’s class sizes (13 students per class) are at recommended levels, and Fenger’s annual per capita expenditures ($13,200 per student) are above Illinois and national averages.

No one noted the absence of students’ fathers in the many interviews or news reports, and no one commented on Fenger’s documented 11th grade proficiency statistics, which show only 4% of Fenger students at grade level in mathematics and 9% in reading. Since it wasn’t on television, no one noticed that at nearby Paul Robeson High School, one out of eight girls was either pregnant or had children.

Chicago’s tragic experience highlights the fact that America’s education establishment continues to misread the problem it faces. Teaching is what someone does at a blackboard, learning is what takes place in the head of a student. And before that student can learn, motivation and other complex psychological factors must come into play.

The “cool” attitude cultivated in the inner city, with its exaggerated and misplaced sense of pride in manliness (demonstrated by impregnating girls, by self-destructive violence towards those supposedly showing “disrespect,” by flaunting contempt for all authority and by dismissing all “square” standards)—is a part of the problem we refuse to recognize.

The counter-culture value system reflected in gangsta rap lyrics of songs like Ice Cube’s “Hood Mentality” or Nas’ “Shoot ‘Em Up” work against the teacher, and the only way we know to fight it is by counter-influences early in life. This is not a new thought.

The effective role played by America’s Catholic parochial schools in transforming the largely dysfunctional peasantry fleeing Ireland’s 19th century potato famine into middle class Americans is well-documented. New York’s Archbishop John Hughes, who founded a network of some 100 Catholic schools, brilliantly stressed teaching not only the “three R’s” but also a code of personal conduct that non-parochial school students received from moralizing textbooks like McGuffey’s Readers or the works of Benjamin Franklin and Horatio Alger.

Individual responsibility, self discipline, integrity, hard work, thrift and deferred gratification were imprinted on young minds, along with politeness and cleanliness. (Daniel Patrick Moynihan liked to point out that in his parochial school days, even chewing gum or whispering in class excited the wrath of God!)

19th Century Jewish immigrants and 20th century Asian immigrants came from traditions valuing education, strong families and personal achievement that were counterparts to what Max Weber called the “Protestant Ethic.”

When White House Press Secretary Robert Gibbs commented on events at Fenger saying, “The government cannot regulate what’s in people’s hearts,” someone might have pointed out that 93 years ago, Sigmund Freud wrote, “The little human being is frequently a finished product in his fourth or fifth year and only gradually reveals in later years what lies buried in him.”

More recently, the work of Nobel Laureate Gary Becker on human capital and of Nobel Laureate James Heckman on education have confirmed what Freud—and recent experience—indicated clearly.

Carefully documented, thorough studies of “control groups” repeatedly demonstrate that children from chaotic or abusive backgrounds thrive when exposed to high quality pre-school education.

We know that the five-year-old who learns to wait patiently for his or her turn, who learns to share toys, who learns to appreciate justified praise, who learns to ask questions and to express ideas and opinions, who learns that “cause” leads to “effect”—such a child will not turn into the typical Fenger student described by the teachers as “constantly fighting, discussing little besides drugs, sex and violence, with a grim outlook on life, little thought of the future and with no motivation to achieve.”

Yes, the endless cycle of dysfunctional parents producing dysfunctional children can be halted, by exposing impressionable pre-schoolers to attitudes, values, outlooks and practices that prepare them to function effectively in the modern world.

Today’s “Chicago” approach—more police at school, safer buses though “war zones,” job training programs, counseling—will not produce the hoped for results: higher secondary and college graduation rates with less remediation; fewer teen pregnancies; less violent crime and imprisonment; increased incomes with higher taxes paid; more productive and fulfilling lives. However, high quality pre-schooling will produce these results—not immediately, but in the foreseeable future.

“Necessary but not sufficient” is how physicists describe the relationship of oxygen to a fire; and high quality preschooling relates similarly to a child’s future development. Of course, positive home influence, and proper elementary and high school exposure play their roles; but earliest formative experiences are crucial.

Many pre-school measures proposed today are well-intentioned but ineffective. They try to do on the cheap what really should be a labor-intensive experience conducted by well-prepared teachers.

The earliest Head Start programs—and some today—were more concerned with jobs for service providers than results for service recipients. The really effective ones, such as the Perry Preschool Program, whose impressive results have been studied for years, have highest standards but equally higher costs.

High quality pre-schooling is expensive, but worth it. It means college-educated pre-school teachers with extensive vocabularies and a proper command of the language, with post graduate training in child psychology and early education. It means that pre-school teachers must receive the same salaries and benefits as elementary school teachers and have similar career prospects. It means programs with parental involvement and parental training, because merely giving birth to a baby no more prepares one to be a mother than buying an automobile prepares one to drive it.

A properly prepared parent will preclude a child from entering the first grade with self-confidence undermined, and with natural curiosity and inherent desire to learn dampened. A proper pre-school program will preclude the child who has never heard the language spoken correctly, who has never been read to or even seen books, who has never learned how to relate comfortably to others. High quality pre-school education will encourage a child to develop a sense of “right” and “wrong,” to take pride in the right and feel shame in the wrong. It will help a child to develop expectations that will guide behavior and a way of looking at the world for the rest of that child’s life. In addition to preparing children to read, write, count and think, quality programs stimulate a child’s self-control, curiosity, self-confidence and sense of the future.

The economic case for high quality preschooling is as compelling as the social case. In New York today, a high school dropout will cost the city over the lifetime of that child more than a million dollars in lost taxes, welfare payments, criminal justice expenses, health-related costs, etc. A New York State study shows a return of seven dollars for every dollar spent on high quality preschooling, and many studies, by the Brookings Institution and others, show a 10% to 16% internal rate of return. Nobel Laureate James Heckman demonstrates that preschooling is key to improving America’s international economic competitiveness.

Our problem today is not what to do but how to do it—how to finance the programs, how to train the teachers and, most importantly, how to convince the general public that our current expensive and fruitless spinning of educational wheels is not the answer to breaking the cycle of poverty, but that high quality pre-school education is the necessary prerequisite.

At the moment, our federal, state and municipal governments are broke. With New York City and New York State facing staggering deficits this year and next, the word is out that no new programs can be entertained and even existing expenditures must be pared.

Our role in such a climate is to press our case even more forcefully, even more effectively, so that when funds do become available, high quality pre-school education is at the top of the list.

Through meetings and statements, as individuals or through organizations, by Op-Ed pieces and conferences, by using any kind of public forum available and by personal contact with our legislators and educational administrators, we must convince the general public that high quality pre-school education gives “the biggest bang for the educational buck,” and then we must press for action.

This is a war we must win, and we haven’t even started to fight.

(Talks by Daniel Rose may be found on www.danielrose.org)

Tuesday, November 10, 2009

SANDRA GUZMAN SUES NY POST


(Daily Intel)
In a development that the tabloid had to see coming, fired editor Sandra Guzman has sued the New York Post. She claims she was let go because she protested over a political cartoon that many called racist. But in her complaint, she really let loose on a tabloid culture that she called "a hostile work environment where female employees and employees of color have been subjected to pervasive and systemic discrimination and/or unlawful harassment based on their gender, race, color and/or national origin."


The Huffington Post has the complaint. In it are a lot of juicy details (if they are true), including:
• That the publication's goal, according to D.C. bureau chief Charles Hurt, was to "destroy [President] Barack Obama."• That notorious editor Col Allan once showed her and a few other female employees a naked picture of a man, as a joke. • That Allan "rubbed his penis up against" a female colleague "and made sexually suggestive comments about her body, including her breasts, causing that female employee to feel extremely uncomfortable and fearing to be alone with him."• That as a Latina, Guzman was subjected to derogatory language, being called "Cha Cha No. 1," and having to listen to people sing songs from West Side Story at her. • That a female colleague of Guzman's was "sexually propositioned" by a white male editor who told her, "If you give me a blow job, I will give you a permanent reporter job."• That "the last five employees who were recently terminated by Paul Carlucci, the Publisher of the Post ... Have all been black and/or women of color."


The Post's lawyers are reviewing the complaint (which weighs in at 36 pages), so at this point their only comment is this: “Sandra’s position was eliminated when the monthly in-paper insert, Tempo, of which she was editor, was discontinued, reflecting the dramatic decline in ad sales across our industry.” This one is going to be big, people.

Cuba magazine slams "bad taste" Castro sister book


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HAVANA (Reuters) - An official Cuban publication on Monday dismissed as "a bad
taste commercial operation" a memoir by the younger sister of Fidel and Raul
Castro that revealed she worked for the CIA in Cuba in the early 1960s.

The article in the official Cuban magazine La Jiribilla said the memoir
published last month by Juanita Castro, who has lived in exile in Miami since
fleeing communist-ruled Cuba in 1964, was a product of "the anti-Castro industry
in Miami."

"No one should expect transcendental revelations nor a political event. It's
simply a commercial operation of bad taste and low moral stature," La Jiribilla
said in the article by Jorge Gomez that was posted on its web site, but later
removed.

It was the first official reaction in Cuba's state media to the publication of
Juanita Castro's book, that added a previously unknown twist to the saga of the
Castro family that has been closely entwined with Cuba's history since Fidel
Castro's 1959 revolution grabbed the attention of the world.

In her memoir, "Fidel and Raul, My Brothers, the Secret History," Juanita
Castro, a staunch critic of her brothers' communist rule, told how she was
recruited by the CIA in 1961 to help its agents and other opponents of Castro
escape capture by his police and escape from the island.

"If this is true ... she would just be one more person out of thousands of
Cubans who, for gifts, money or out of other motives, which could include
hatred, desire for revenge or intolerance, have worked for the CIA," the
Jiribilla article said.

Fidel Castro, now 83, last year ceded the Cuban presidency to his brother Raul
Castro, 78, on health grounds. He has accused the CIA of being behind most of
the more than 600 plots he says were hatched to assassinate or topple him during
nearly half a century of enmity between Washington and Havana.

The article that appeared on the Jiribilla web site said, "The truth is clear:
Fidel Castro is the victim, the one offended, the individual who was conspired
against and who has maintained a silence that honors and elevates him."

Juanita Castro, who accuses Fidel Castro of "betraying" what she said were the
original democratic nationalist credentials of the 1959 revolution, said she
received no salary from the CIA while working for the agency.

She also said her work for the CIA was "humanitarian" and that she had refused
to participate in any attempts to harm her brothers or other Cuban leaders.

After leaving Cuba, she broke publicly with Fidel Castro's government and says
she has not spoken to either him or Raul Castro since.

(Reporting by Rosa Tania Valdes; Editing by Pascal Fletcher and Peter Cooney)



Monserrate Committee Created Without Monserrate's Vote »

The committee that will sit judgment on Sen. Hiram Monserrate and decide whether he will be further disciplined, or perhaps even ousted, following his conviction on a misdemeanor assault charge was formally created this afternoon via a bipartisan Senate voice vote.

No "nays" were heard in the chamber when the resolution was brought up for consideration by LG Richard Ravitch, who is formally presiding over the Senate for the first time since the Court of Appeals ruled in September that his appointment by Gov. David Paterson was constitutional.

There is no official roll call. Monserrate was not present for the vote. (A source close to Monserrate said he was "stuck in traffic" and didn't purposely skip the vote. The senator made it to the Capitol in time for Paterson's speech).

Also missing were: Kevin Parker, Ruben Diaz Sr. (he's still in Puerto Rico), Tom Duane (who buried his mother over the weekend), Bill Larkin, Montgomery, and Stephen Saland,

As per the Senate rules, those lawmakers have until 5 p.m. today to check in and be moved from the "absent" column to the "present" column.

Excused from today's session were: Marty Golden, Ruth Hassell-Thompson (who is a member of the committee), Shirley Huntley, Owen Johnson, Carl Marcellino, Tom Morahan and Velmanette Montgomery.

Prior to the vote, Sen. Andy Lanza, a Republican member of the Monserrate committee, urged his colleagues to consider making the body truly bipartisan by adding another member of the minority so both parties would be evenly represented.

Lanza said the committee is charged with proceeding in a manner that is "unfettered" and free of political pressure to truly represent its "client" - the "integrity of this Senate body."

There are currently four Republicans and five Democrats on the committee, which is being chaired by Sen. Eric Schneiderman.

Senate Minority Leader Dean Skelos named Lanza, John Flanagan, James Alesi and Cathy Young to serve on the committee and also tapped Sen. Elizabeth Little to be the fifth member if the Democrats would agree to add her.

They did not.

The Democratic members of the Monserrate committee met informally earlier today. All nine members are scheduled to have their first meeting at 5 p.m. this afternoon.

Video 5 0 00 36-27

10 Other Things Bloomberg Could Have Bought

Thursday November 5, 2009 1:43 a.m.

Lead Photo

Photo Credit: Flickr: Creative Commons by 廷鈞

New York City Mayor Michael Bloomberg spent over $140 million on his re-election campaign this year. This is equivalent to over $200 dollars for every vote he received. Here are ten better ways he could have spent the $140 million.

10) Curing that Iowa cat that got the swine flu.

9) Hiring people to read the health care bill to the Republicans, within the 72 hours stipulated.

8) Psychotherapy for Michele Bachmann.

7) Lobotomies for Glenn Beck and his followers.

6) Pie for everyone--except Glenn Beck and his followers.

5) Finance a study to explain why being pro-life also means letting people die from lack of health care.

4) Buy the Yankees next year's World Series victory too.

3) Pay for an image makeover for the GOP so they stop creeping me out.

2) Buy Snuggies for everyone in New York City.

1) Outbid Aetna for Joe Lieberman's support on health care.

Secret Joe Lieberman E-Mail Leaked

Monday November 9, 2009 12:45 a.m.

Lead Photo

Date: Sun, 8 Nov 2009 21:13:11 -0700
From: joelieberator@yahoo.com
Subject: Killing the P.O.
To: rich.as.f*ck@aetna.com

Hey Richard,

How's it going old friend? I'm assuming you're either out on the yacht for the weekend, or trying to drop some of the "high-risk" groups from coverage. LOL :-D

I just got done with my Fox News Sunday appearance. Those guys love me for some reason. They just let me go on and criticize the president whenever I feel like it. Brought to you by the dude who forgave me after John's campaign...I mean I said Obama doesn't put his country first and kept my chairmanship...talk about gullible.

Speaking of gullible, I wanted to touch base with you about our little arrangement. I'm fine with opposing the public option, and threatening to filibuster until they drop it, and you depositing an exorbitant amount of money into my wife's bank account. You still good with that?

I've been going out there like you said and using phrases like "bankrupt the country," and "recession" and "government takeover" and you're right, it does sound scary! It it's totes easy because the Republicans are saying the same things day in and day out, backing me up, making me look tough like when I voted for the Iraq War. No one's ever going to bully me again! I've sure come a long way since High School.

I am getting a bit annoyed that these peasants from my state keep calling my office about this legislation. Don't they get it by now? I only ran on a Universal Health Care platform in '06 so that I could beat stupid Ned Lamont. And they thought I meant it? LMFAO here. Seriously.

Hopefully, this will teach the Democrats a lesson about messing with me, and Kelly Olsen for not letting me take her to junior prom, and that stupid jock Gary Phillis for calling me Droopy. See if you'll ever get health coverage now Gary HAHAHAH

Anyways I have to go practice saying "as a matter of conscience" without bursting out laughing.

Thanks again,

Joe

Monday, November 9, 2009

ESPADA UNDER SECRET INVESTIGATION












Capitol Confidential
A behind-the-scenes look at New York politics.
By: Irene Jay Liu, Casey Seiler, Jim Odato, Rick Karlin
Hiring of Espada’s son earns Ethics Commission probe
November 2, 2009 at 6:40 am by James M. Odato
The embattled Legislative Ethics Commission has commenced an investigation into the Senate’s hiring of Pedro G. Espada shortly after his father became majority leader in July, according to a legislative official apprised of the recent decision.

Still only partly formed, the commission has taken criticism for behaving too much like its predecessor, the Legislative Ethics Committee, by operating in secrecy and giving few if any outward signs of investigating potential misdeeds by the 212 lawmakers under its watch.
However, the commission — which is different from the committee due to the inclusion of some non-member appointees of the Legislature — decided to pursue an inquiry into the hiring of Sen. Pedro Espada Jr.’s son. The decision came at its most recent meeting, on Oct. 22, at which some commissioners attended by phone and others showed up in person accompanied by Senate or Assembly lawyers.

“I can’t comment on anything like that,” said Assemblyman William Magnarelli, D-Syracuse, the commission’s co-chair. “I cannot confirm or deny any investigation that may or may not be in front of the commission.”
He did say that having “laypeople” on the commission “brings a whole new dynamic … to the way things are looked at.”A probe would focus on what, if any, influence Sen. Espada exerted on the Senate’s decision to hire his son. The Bronx Democrat is already under investigation by Attorney General Andrew Cuomo for applying for state grants for his health care organization (which also has employed his son) without revealing tax delinquencies. The senator did not respond to a voice mail message.

Selvena Brooks, spokeswoman for Democratic Conference Seader John Sampson, said she has heard nothing about a probe: “As far as Mr. Pedro G. Espada is concerned, the Senate considered the matter closed when he resigned.”
“G,” as friends call him, stepped down from the post of deputy director for intergovernmental relations a few days after his $120,000 job was reported.

Public officers law prohibits lawmakers from taking actions involving the employment of a relative. The hiring occurred shortly after Sen. Espada returned to the Democratic fold after taking a lead role in the June coup by Republicans.
License plate politics


Sunday, November 8, 2009

Bloomberg versus Berlusconi

Facts & Stories

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Jerry Krase (November 4, 2009)
This is a collage I assembled to represent the deluge of "Mike Bloomberg for Mayor" literature that has been delivered to our door. It is a tiny bit of the $100,000,000 spent in his campaign, best represented here by the city-wide blanket of newspaper endorsements from the Nowy Dziennik to The New York Times. If Berlusconi had such a love affair with the press, he'd have no need to change the Italian Constitution to keep himself out of jail.

As one looks closely at the behavior and battles of Bloomberg and Berlusconi it

seems that, besides being big buck billionaires, they have a great deal more in

common than lots of money.For many decades I have observed New York City politicians up close as well as, from a much greater distance, those of the Italian kind. During that time, La Grande Mela and La Bella Italia have shared much in the way of political corruption, fiscal crises, and intergroup conflict. The politics of both places, at least at the top of the food chain, has also shifted distinctively rightward over the decades while polarization and resentment by locality, ethnicity, and class have become more evident.











Today, Tuesday, November 3, 2009 I got up early and went for a run in the park with my friend Michael the Lawyer. After getting up a little sweat, we took our regular posts at Dizzy’s (A Finer Diner) where we downed a few cups of coffee and, with my other morning friends - Wayne the Accountant, and Bob the Musician we solved most of the world’s problems. It was Election Day, so later in the afternoon I will go with my wife Suzanne to our local polling place at John Jay High School and cast our ballots for our choice of candidates that are running for election. Sadly, experts predict that we will be among the fewest voters (proportionally) ever to go to the Gotham polls. The American and NYC trend in elections has been for fewer and fewer eligible voters to cast their ballots. Since a viable electoral democracy is dependent on voter participation, this is troubling. The recent trend in Italy is also downward but Italians are still far more likely to go to the polls than are Americans. One source estimates that almost 90 % of Italians turn out to vote. For this New York City election, I doubt whether even a third of eligible voters who take the trouble. People don’t exercise their right to vote for many reasons. The number one excuse I hear is the all too often well-founded belief that it “really doesn’t really matter” who is elected.

The top prize in the New York City contest is the job of Mayor. Even though Bloomberg doesn't take his salary for the job, I will most certainly vote for the current Comptroller of the City of New York, William C. Thompson Jr. He is a "candidate of color" and is running on the Democratic and the quirky Working Families Party lines. He almost certainly will be the loser as he currently is a dozen points behind in the polls. The person most likely to win is the current incumbent - Mayor Michael R. Bloomberg - who has the backing of both the Republican and the quirky Independence Parties. Racially speaking, White voters back Bloomberg 66-24 percent and therefore I would estimate that Italian American voters, especially those in La Bella Isola di Staten (Staten Island), will give him more than three-quarters of their cast ballots. Monetarily speaking, Billionaire Bloomberg has spent almost $100 million of his own money in the race, outspending Thompson’s other peoples' money by 14 to 1.

Bloomberg seeks a third consecutive term even though, in 1993, New Yorkers voted to “limit all elected officials in New York City to two consecutive terms in office” by a 59-41 % margin. In 2008, Bloomberg, bull-dozed through the City Council (29-22) a new law allowing him, and them, to run for another term. As to small “d’ democracy, at the time, a Quinnipiac poll found that 89 percent of New Yorkers felt that term limits should be decided by voters in a referendum, not the self-interested Council. The poll also found that 51 percent opposed extending the term limits for Bloomberg. In comparison, to Bloomberg's success against the will of the people, after the horrors of 9/11/2001, outgoing Republican Mayor Rudolph Giuliani’s lost his appeal to remain in office a few months longer that because of the turmoil. His appeal went to Albany, which meant nowhere, as Democrats wanted him out of office.

Giuliani’s failure and Bloomberg’s success at overcoming term limits is most ironic since the NYC Council that voted in Bloomberg's interest is almost 100% Democratic. ‘America’s Mayor’ Giuliani has also endorsed Mike. According to David W. Chen, in The New York Times: “Raising the specter of a return to higher crime and greater anxiety, former Mayor Rudolph W. Giuliani warned on Sunday that New York could become a more dangerous city if Mayor Michael R. Bloomberg is not re-elected in November.”

Bloomberg’s behavior beckons me toward another busy Billionaire with whom he has much in common -- Italian Prime Minister Silvio Berlusconi. Besides being balding billionaires with surnames beginning with “B,” Bloomberg and Berlusconi both are, “boils and all,” also likely to win re-election. Bloomberg balloting is today but Berlusconi has some time to wait

Both Bloomberg and Berlusconi are media bigs, but Silvio is bigger because he is the boss not only of his own but the government's broadcasting as well. In contrast to Berlusconi, Bloomberg, who recently bought BusinessWeek, seems to have the New York City press, in his pocket. Bloomberg has been endorsed by all the major and minor dailies, weeklies, and monthlies. Even Rupert Murdoch’s New York Post has endorsed Bloomberg while Murdoch is one of the biggest thorns in Silvio’s side in Italy; not ideologically but competitively.
Berlusconi is so bothered by the “bad news” about him that he is creating a "media task force" to stamp it out. By chance, one of Berlusconi’s television stations broadcast some unflattering video of a judge who ruled against him in a bribery case.
Berlusconi has also floated a balloon about reforming the Italian Constitution to allow a law granting him immunity from prosecution. Bloomberg has little need, as opposed to Berlusconi, to try to reduce the power of the independent judiciary.

Bloomberg has also on occasion bullied journalists, but in general he has had an eight-year honeymoon with the press. Two of those who felt his wrath are friends of mine; Rafael Alequin Martinez the editor of the small city-wide The Free Press/Prensa Libre paper I used to write for, and Azi Paybara of The New York Observer.

Whereas the anti-Berlusconi stories are found in almost everything he doesn’t control, for Bloomberg they lurk only on the edges of the media world such as "The Bloomberg Watch: Above the Rules? Above the People?" and in the stories of investigative reporters like Tom Robbins (in the Village Voice).

On balance, Berlusconi and Bloomberg have a great deal in common based on their personal wealth and influence, but they differ significantly on their approaches to governing. Ironically, despite being media moguls, the biggest difference between them seems to be stylistic. Watching the two “performing” on the television screen it is clear that Bloomberg is boring and Berlusconi bombastic, but when you’re a big bucks billionaire, style seems not to matter much.

Postscript Headline: "Big Bucks Billionaire Bloomberg Barely Beats Bill at Ballot Box"
I felt I just had to write that. In any case, just as I predicted Bloomberg won (51%-46%), the turnout was low (about 25% of elligible voters) , and Staten Island voters overwhelmingly didn't vote for Thompson (29% for him versus 66% for Bloomberg).
Even my daughter Kathryn has gotten into the political commentator act, being quoted on page 22 of The New York Times story "Bloomberg Wins 3rd Term as Mayor in Unexpectedly Close Race."