ON TO LANSING FEB. 23! FOLLOW WISCONSIN’S LEAD! PROTEST IN DETROIT FEB. 22!

GO TO http://www.detnews.com/article/20110221/SCHOOLS/102210355/Michigan-orders-DPS-to-make-huge-cuts TO UNDERSTAND WHY WE NEED TO STORM LANSING FEB. 23. LANSING HAS ORDERED HALF OF DETROIT’S SCHOOLS CLOSED, AND INDICATED IT WILL APPOINT ANOTHER EFM AFTER BOBB LEAVES!

EDITOR: MICHIGAN GOVERNOR RICK SNYDER’S PLANS TO SLASH STATE REVENUE-SHARING FUNDS FOR MUNICIPALITIES, TAX PENSIONS, AND CUT FUNDS FOR SCHOOLS AND SOCIAL SERVICES ARE TIE-BARRED TO H.B. 4214,  WHICH WOULD ENABLE EMERGENCY FINANCIAL MANAGERS TO DISSOLVE CITIES AND SELL OFF THEIR ASSETS WITH VIRTUALLY NO RESTRICTIONS.

THE ATTACKS ON WORKING AND POOR PEOPLE IN MICHIGAN PARALLEL THE ATTACKS IN WISCONSIN AND OHIO: IT’S TIME FOR THE PEOPLE OF MICHIGAN TO JOIN THE BATTLE! GO TO LANSING FEB. 23! NO EXCUSES!

CLICK ON People’s rally registration formTO REGISTER FOR RALLY. EVERYONE FROM ALL OVER MICHIGAN SHOULD COME FROM THEIR OWN AREAS AS WELL!  FORWARD THIS NOTICE TO EVERYONE YOU KNOW!  

CLICK ON http://voiceofdetroit.net/?p=4622 TO READ ABOUT FRIGHTENING EMERGENCY FINANCIAL MANAGER H.B. 4214. THIS BILL WILL FORCE MUNICIPALITIES AND SCHOOLS DISTRICTS ACROSS THE STATE  INTO RECEIVERSHIP! ASK YOUR LEGISLATOR TO WALK OUT AS DID DEMOCRATIC LEGISLATORS IN WISCONSIN IF IT APPEARS THIS FASCIST BILL WILL PASS. IT’S TIME FOR A PEOPLE’S WAR TO SAVE OUR FUTURES!

PICKET MAYOR BING’S ‘STATE OF THE CITY’ ADDRESS

Tues. February 22, 6pm, Fisher Music Center, Woodward & Selden  

Dictators Bing, Snyder, Bobb, Hitler

Bing has said he is “joined at the hip” with Gov. Rick Snyder, signed U.S. District Judge Sean Cox’s order diminishing Detroiters’ power over our Water Department, has slashed city jobs and services, and plans a “Trail of Tears” to drive poor Detroiters out of their homes (otherwise known as the “Detroit Works Project”). Robert Bobb is joined on Snyder’s other hip, demolishing the Detroit Public School system. Put them all together —?

Robert Bobb takes DPS Back to Court

 Robert Bobb’s attorneys will be in Judge Wendy Baxter’s court on Tuesday, February 22 at 11 am to seek a stay in her order that bars Bobb from exercising academic authority at DPS. The Judge is being asked to delay implementation of the order, presumably so that they can seek to overturn it in an appeals court. It appears that Bobb does not want to wait to see what happens with the new takeover law and does not want to take the chance of allowing the Board to function for even a few weeks.  

At 10:30 am that same morning is the proceeding in Baxter’s court to discuss the awarding of attorney’s fees to the Board attorneys. It is important for fees to be awarded so that the Board can continue to have legal representation.  Judge Baxter’s court is room 1421, Coleman A. Young Municipal Center at Woodward and Jefferson. 

Monica Lewis-Patrick, Public Policy Analyst-Legal, Council Member JoAnn Watson, Detroit City Council. Suite 1340, CAYMC (313) 224-7892 or 224-4535  Email: patrickm@detroitmi.gov

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JUSTICE FOR AIYANA! GROUP PLANS ANNIVERSARY PROTEST

Aiyana's mother and father show their child's portrait during Geoffrey Fieger press conference

WHERE IS JUSTICE FOR AIYANA JONES?

By Roland Lawrence (aka Fige Bornu)  rolandlawrence@msn.com
 
Chairman, Justice for Aiyana Jones Committee

(Ed. note: The Justice for Aiyana Jones Committee is planning a protest on May 16, the one-year anniversary of Aiyana Jones’ murder, because her killer has not been charged. Contact the author of this article for more information.

 

Detroit police officer Joseph Weekley, resident of Grosse Pointe Woods

In a city obsessed with the fate of the Detroit Lions, it casts a disturbing pall where the sensibilities and priorities of the city’s decision makers lie.  It has been nine months since Wayne County Procrastinator, I mean, Prosecutor Kym Worthy bailed on her responsibility to determine if Detroit Police Officer Joe Weekley committed murder in the shooting death of 7 year old Aiyana Stanley Jones as she slept in her family’s home on Detroit’s eastside.  Worthy “referred” the case to the Michigan State Police citing supposed conflict of interest issues (she’s worried about the appearance of a conflict of interest).  Interesting, isn’t it?  And thus the case languishes in Lansing — no doubt in file drawer marked “who cares?”  In the meantime Officer Weekley escapes justice and justice for Aiyana escapes official daylight.

For those of you who don’t know – the murder in process was being filmed with the permission of Detroit Police Department (DPD) for a nationally syndicated cable program, The First 48 Hours, when a group of officers or should we call reality stars with guns in May of 2010 raided Aiyana’s home in search, we are told, for a murder suspect.  The premise for this all too real reality show is that police have 48 hours to try to solve a homicide case before it goes cold.   The suspect could not be found at the home.  There are a litany of stories detailing what happened during the police raid including a flash-bang grenade being thrown into a window near where Aiyana slept – (love those special effects). 

Aiyana's grandmother Mertilla Jones weeps in the arms of her daughter LaKrystal Sanders, during press conference held by attorney Geoffrey Fieger after the child's murder last May 16

Another story claims that the Detroit Police blamed Aiyana’s grandmother for trying to grab an officer’s gun.  Yet another story reports the murder suspect that DPD was looking for was seen hours earlier that day, but for reasons unknown, DPD did not apprehend him (maybe they can’t apprehend with a camera lens).  But clearly, the “real” reality story is that DPD acted in wanton disregard for the safety of citizens and residents in the rush to perform for the camera. They blitzkrieged a home, cameras rolling, and trampling over the many toys in the yard, and managed to snuff out the life of an innocent child as she slept.

We may never uncover the precise events of that fatal night. But it’s the duty of the County Prosecutor and the Michigan State Police to try.  Critics like me surmise that the investigation, having gone cold and getting colder, will not reveal the truth.  Instead, as are in the many other cases where Black men are suspiciously killed by police, the investigation will claim that the police in this case, Joe Weekley, was in compliance with his department’s training protocol when Aiyana was killed. Speaking of blitzkrieg, Himmler’s SS might have found such training protocols instructive.

Is young Black life in Detroit so cheap?  Indeed life is cheap when you’re not wealthy. GUILTY UNTIL PROVEN RICH, I guess.  Image the same scenario occurring in, let’s say, the rich Detroit suburb of Birmingham.  Would police employ the same paramilitary tactics in a white neighborhood where a Rebecca of Grosse Pointe Farms slept?

Jewel Allison with daughter Honesti at her right lead June 26 protest against Aiyana Jones murder down Woodward Avenue; photo by Herb Boyd

 Wayne County Medical Examiner Dr. Carl Schmidt, while being studied by a Hollywood actress as she prepared for her role as the medical examiner in the ABC series Detroit 187, said in an interview, “You might say that the homicide of Aiyana is the natural conclusion to the disease from which she suffered,” which is ‘The psychopathology of growing up in Detroit.  Some people are doomed from birth because their environment is so toxic.’” 

There is another disease that appears increasingly epidemic and catching. It’s called evade-your-duty-itis. Kym Worthy and the Michigan State Police should be tested for this virus.

Editor: Go to http://www.finalcall.com/artman/publish/National_News_2/article_7001.shtml to read interview with Aiyana’s family by Diane Bukowski, published in the Final Call. Also see Final Call article by Andrea Muhammad at http://www.finalcall.com/artman/publish/frontpageFeaturedArticle/article_6999.shtml; additionally click on http://www.finalcall.com/artman/publish/National_News_2/article_7130.shtml for Bukowski’s article on June 26 march in Detroit, organized by New Yorker Jewel Allison, to demand an end to no-knock raids and justice for Aiyana; and http://www.finalcall.com/artman/publish/National_News_2/article_7530.shtml for Bukowski’s article on lawsuit against 48 Hours and A&E on behalf of Aiyana’s family.

Four other articles on Aiyana’s murder by Bukowski were featured in the Michigan Citizen at http://michigancitizen.com/city-mourns-death-of-yearold-aiyana-jones-p8635-1.htm; http://michigancitizen.com/weekley-has-prior-record-p8634-1.htm; http://michigancitizen.com/community-enraged-at-nd-police-shooting-p8679-1.htm; and http://michigancitizen.com/fieger-says-childs-death-is-no-accident-p8682-1.htm, before her discharge from that newspaper after 10 years.

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STATE SENATORS PLANNED FOR HB 4214 FEB. 9

  

Kelly Smith, Russ Bellant, Helen Moore react to Robert Bobb's testimony Feb. 9

By Diane Bukowski

LANSING—During a joint meeting of the Senate Education and Local, Intergovernmental and Regional Affairs Committee Feb. 9, state senators from the Republican side laid the plans for H.B. 4214 as described above. Their discussion is moot at this point, because it is reflected in the 44 page bill itself as detailed above.

But Helen Moore of Keep the Vote No Takeover, Russ Bellant, and former DPS teacher Kelly Smith traveled to Lansing that day to be heard when Robert Bobb spoke at a committee meeting that morning.

They were not allowed to comment then, but Bellant and Moore were finally heard during the Senate joint meeting, and Smith spoke with the VOD separately.

Helen Moore testifies at Lansing committee meeting

 “I would have thought that Robert Bobb wrote the law you are planning, because everything that has been said about broadening the Emergency Financial Managers’ powers today, is what he has said,” Moore stated.

“Bobb took the entire system [including academics] into his hands even though the law does not allow it. It has been disastrous for Detroit. The children have been led astray by the emergency financial manager. He believes he is God. We are still in court now because of his takeover of academics.”

Moore said Bobb has spent $50 million of Title I funds, meant for special education and other student services, on hiring consultants. She noted that some schools still don’t have books, while many high schools have as many as 52 students in a class. She testified that Bobb’s salary is being supplemented by the Eli Broad Foundation and other privation organizations to carry out their mandates of closing public schools and opening charter schools.

“Bobb cannot close as many schools as he has and still operate the district,” Moore said. “Are you ready for cross-district bussing, because the state constitution guarantees free public education for every child. The state’s plans as carried out by Bobb and prior to him Kenneth Burnley and other state appointees have not worked and will never work.”

Barbara Byrd Bennett (l) and Robert Bobb (r) photo DPS website

Russ Bellant said, “DPS is a case model of absolute power and lack of legal rights. My son graduated from DPS and I have attended every school board meeting for the last five years. When Robert Bobb came in, he placed gag orders on DPS employees. He has not responded to 32 Freedom of Information Act requests I have submitted. He has given no public reports on contracts and spending that he has sole authority over, even though the current EFM law requires him to do so. He has hired as many as 10 additional Assistant Superintendents and other high-level staff, at inflated pay rates, and is giving bonuses of $50,000 to favored individuals.”

Bellant added that Bobb’s tenure as city manager in Washington, D.C. was marred by five separate audits condemning his hiring and contracting practices. A 2005 city audit denounced Bobb and former D.C. Mayor Anthony Williams for their no-bid hiring of friends and associates on a stadium project. The Washington Post castigated them for “failure to follow city procurement law.”

Bellant, who has done clandestine research on the district’s financial practices, said Barbara Byrd-Bennett, Bobb’s Chief Academic and Accountability Officer, is required be contract to work only two days a week for her $200,000 salary. He said she brought in a team of her friends from the Cleveland school district (where her husband still lives) at high-paying salaries and has had an otherwise checkered past (ed: reflected in the following commentary from Cool Cleveland):

“Barbara Byrd Bennett: Paid for by Corporate Club

The real problem with the high spending from a special fund by Cleveland CEO Barbara Byrd Bennett wasn’t totally about what she extravagantly spent. More important was where she got the dough. Although distasteful, the fancy dinners and trips to London and Hawaii were peanuts in comparison with the cost incurred by Cleveland schoolchildren by Byrd Bennett’s co-opting by Cleveland’s Corporate Club. She’s being pampered (fed money to entertain herself and others) by the Cleveland Foundation, Gund Foundation and Cleveland Tomorrow (so discredited that it recently changed its name to Greater Cleveland Partnership). They give her dough to do this fancy stuff so that it wouldn’t come from public funds, thus likely not be revealed in a school system now run essentially as a private club for its hierarchy, including its mayoral-named school board.

 

Byrd Bennett, the $300,000 wonder, complains she wasn’t cavorting on the taxpayers’ dime. Actually, worse – the money she’s taking came from those who siphon off gobs of taxpayer’s money – particularly from Cleveland schools – every chance they get to pocket it. Tax abatements, exemptions and reductions on property taxes are their game. The spending became public because of statements in a document of State Auditor Betty Montgomery. Pumped up TV news outlets had their own orgy with the revelations that startled Byrd Bennett, not accustomed to being treated as a mere mortal. What does this funding by private sources mean? It means that she becomes indebted to their leaders. Who are their leaders? The people who run the town and the people hired to do their bidding. This control of the public agenda by these experts in manipulation and subtle propaganda is old stuff, though. Walter Lippmann, in one of his treatise on public decision making, divided decision making into two segments: the “responsible men” – the Corporates – who make the decisions – and the “bewildered herd” – the rest of us who have to live with the verdicts of our betters.

 

So, when you think of the 600 or so teachers and 300 others ready to be laid off, when you think of the school children who won’t have proper text books, and when you think of the kids who won’t have sports and extra curricular activities, think Cleveland Foundation, Gund Foundation and Cleveland Tomorrow. Why? Because the schools should have asked for a levy last year. Why didn’t they? Because the people who run the town, i.e., the people of the institutions mentioned above, intent upon getting Cleveland and Cuyahoga County to buy them a new Convention Center.”

by Cool Cleveland contributor Roldo Bartimole Roldo@Adelphia.net

 

Thompson, Cobb and Bazilio were Bobb's largest campaign contributors in Washington, D.C.

Bellant also  reported that Bobb hired his former deputy campaign manager from Washington, D.C. to be in charge of DPS contracts and grants, and awarded a $672,000 contract to Thompson, Cobb, Bazilio and Associates, his largest campaign contributor in Washington.

“Absolute power corrupts absolutely,” Bellant said. “You are getting the waste, fraud and abuse you can predictably expect from Robert Bobb. There should be financial and other penalties for Emergency Financial Managers who abuse those positions.”

Bellant noted that out of the last 12 years, the district has been governed by an elected school board for only three years, and inherited a $212 million deficit from the first state takeover. It has lost 11,000 students per year.

State Rep. David Nathan (D-Detroit), said he had submitted four separate pieces of legislation over the previous two weeks that would provide transparency for EFM’s and school districts, and oversight and accountability to the people, but none of them has been accorded a committee hearing. He noted there is already a state board that is supposed to oversee the actions of Emergency Financial Managers, but that the board has done little to check the actions of Bobb or other EFM’s.

Famed Detroit-born pianist Alma Smith

Detroit piano legend Harold McKinney

Kelly Smith told the VOD she had come to testify about the decimation of arts and music programs at DPS during Bobb’s tenure. She formerly taught music at DPS and currently tunes pianos for them as a vendor.

“Fifty years ago DPS had the best music and arts programs in the country,” Smith said. “When you take away music and art, you take away from academics. There are three new pianos in every new school building, but they are sitting idle and are not being tuned. The Music Department of DPS has been replaced by one person who had to go to a foundation to pay two piano tuners.”

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WISCONSIN PUBLIC WORKERS, STUDENTS, LEGISLATORS SHUT STATE DOWN TO STOP UNION-BUSTING, PENSION ATTACKS

Up to 30,000 Wisconsin workers have packed streets outside state capitol since Feb. 15 to stop union-busting, pension attacks; teachers and students have walked out of class

Senate vote to end collective bargaining for most state workers delayed by opposition

Wis. union vote on hold after Democrats leave state

MSNBC.COM

MADISON, Wis. — Wisconsin state Senate Democrats boycotting a vote to curb the union rights of public employees left the state on Thursday while 25,000 critics of the bill marched on the state Capitol. At least nine protesters were arrested.

  1. 1.   What’s at stake in Wisconsin

What bill would do
1) Eliminate collective bargaining rights for most public workers. So while unions still could represent those workers, they would not be able to seek pay increases above those pegged to the Consumer Price Index unless approved by a public referendum.

2) Unions also could not force employees to pay dues and would have to hold annual votes to stay organized.

3) Local police, firefighters and state troopers would retain their collective bargaining rights.

4) Public workers would have to pay half the costs of their pensions and at least 12.6 percent of their health care coverage. That represents an average of 8 percent increase in state employees’ share of pension and health care costs.

Workers have occupied State Capitol building, sleeping over every night in Rotunda

In exchange, public employees were promised no furloughs or layoffs. Gov. Scott Walker has threatened to lay off up to 6,000 state workers if the measure does not pass.

Estimated savings
$30 million by July 1 and $300 million over the next two years to address a $3.6 billion budget shortfall.

Background
The proposal marks a dramatic shift for Wisconsin, which in 1959 was the first to pass a comprehensive collective bargaining law for public employees and was the birthplace of the national union representing all non-federal public employees.

Workers remain outside state capitol; Cairo in Wisconsin

When voters last year elected Gov. Walker, an outspoken conservative, along with GOP majorities in both legislative chambers, it set the stage for a dramatic reversal of the state’s labor history.

National significance
New Republican governors and legislatures in other states have proposed cutting back on public employee costs to reduce budget shortfalls, but Wisconsin’s move appears to be the earliest and most extensive.

Source: Associated Press and Reuters

As ever-growing throngs of protesters filled the Capitol for a third day, the 14 Democrats disappeared around midday, just as the Senate was about to begin debating the measure, which would eliminate collective bargaining for most public employees.

They were not in their offices, and aides said they did not know where any of them had gone. Hours later, one member of the group told The Associated Press that they had all left Wisconsin.

Wisconsin firefighters join protest even though they are exempt from union-busting attack

“The plan is to try and slow this down because it’s an extreme piece of legislation that’s tearing this state apart,” Sen. Jon Erpenbach said in a telephone interview.

He refused to say where he was, but WTMJ later reported that they had fled to a hotel in Rockford, Ill.

Democrats hoped Republican Gov. Scott Walker and GOP lawmakers would consider revisions to the bill.

Walker, who took office just last month, called on Democrats to return out of respect for the democratic process and the institution of the Legislature.

“Their actions by leaving the state and hiding from voting are disrespectful to the hundreds of thousands of public employees who showed up to work today and the millions of taxpayers they represent,” Walker said.

Republicans hold a 19-14 majority in the Senate, but they need at least one Democrat to be present before voting on the bill.

Other lawmakers who fled sent messages over Twitter and issued written statements, but did not disclose their location. Erpenbach said they planned to gather in the same place later Thursday.

The People vs. Wisconsin Governor Scott Walker

In response to a question of where she was, Sen. Lena Taylor sent a tweet saying she was “doing the people’s business. Power to the PEOPLE.”

As Republicans tried to begin Senate business Thursday, observers in the gallery screamed “Freedom! Democracy! Unions!” Opponents cheered when a legislative leader announced there were not enough senators present to proceed.

The sergeant-at-arms immediately began looking for the missing lawmakers. If he cannot find them, he’s authorized to seek help, including potentially contacting police.

Senate rules and the state constitution say absent members can be compelled to appear, but it does not say how.

Madison East High School students walk out to support their teachers

“Today they checked out, and I’m not sure where they’re at,” Republican Senate Majority Leader Scott Fitzgerald said. “This is the ultimate shutdown, what we’re seeing today.”

STUDENTS WALK OUT TO SUPPORT THEIR TEACHERS; WATCH VIDEO AT

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xPLCFDFWRBk&feature=player_embedded

Elsewhere in the Statehouse, Democrats showed up in the state Assembly chamber wearing orange T-shirts that proclaimed their support for working families.

After a routine roll call, Democrats who were leaving the chamber exchanged high-fives with protesters, who cried “thank you” as they walked by. The protesters unleashed venomous boos and screams at Republicans.

Thursday’s events were reminiscent of a 2003 dispute in Texas, where Democrats twice fled the state to prevent adoption of a redistricting bill designed to give Republicans more seats in Congress. The bill passed a few months later.

The drama in Wisconsin unfolded in a jam-packed Capitol. Madison police and the State Department of Public Instruction estimated the crowd at 25,000 protesters, the largest number yet.

NO MORE WALKER!

Demonstrators stood shoulder-to-shoulder in the building’s hallways, sat cross-legged across the floor and made it difficult to move from room to room.

Protesters clogged the hallway outside the Senate chamber beating on drums, holding signs deriding Walker and pleading for lawmakers to kill the bill. Some others even demonstrated outside the lawmakers’ homes.

Hundreds of teachers called in sick, forcing a number of school districts to cancel classes. Madison schools, the state’s second-largest district, with 24,000 students, closed for a second day.

Thousands more people, many of them students from the nearby University of Wisconsin, slept in the rotunda for a second night.

“We are all willing to come to the table, we’ve have all been willing from day one,” said Madison teacher Rita Miller. “But you can’t take A, B, C, D and everything we’ve worked for in one fell swoop.”

In addition to eliminating collective-bargaining rights, the legislation also would make public workers pay half the costs of their pensions and at least 12.6 percent of their health care coverage. Their share of pension and health care costs would go up by an average of 8 percent — increases Walker calls “modest” compared with those in the private sector.

Republican leaders said they expected Wisconsin residents would be pleased with the savings the bill would achieve — $30 million by July 1 and $300 million over the next two years to address a $3.6 billion budget shortfall.

“I think the taxpayers will support this idea,” Fitzgerald said.

Unions still could represent workers, but could not seek pay increases above those pegged to the Consumer Price Index unless approved by a public referendum. Unions also could not force employees to pay dues and would have to hold annual votes to stay organized.

In exchange for bearing more costs and losing bargaining leverage, public employees were promised no furloughs or layoffs. Walker has threatened to order layoffs of up to 6,000 state workers if the measure does not pass.

“We are all willing to come to the table, we’ve have all been willing from day one,” said Madison teacher Rita Miller. “But you can’t take A, B, C, D and everything we’ve worked for in one fell swoop.”

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CLASS WAR IN MICHIGAN—CAIRO, WISCONSIN FIGHTBACKS NEEDED

  
 

Detroit community leaders come together Feb. 16 to plan fightback

Legislature proposes sweeping powers for EFM’s, to pay off debt to banks

Breaking news: go to http://www.freep.com/article/20110131/NEWS15/110131028/State-tries-head-off-city-school-district-bankruptcies?odyssey=obinsite to read Free Press report that Gov. Snyder’s aide Andy Dillon is busy “training” 45 emergency financial managers with the expectation that they will be needed soon. Dillon said at least three to four cities are on the brink of receivership, but would not name them. 

According to a press release received by the VOD, Robert Bobb participated in a training session for EFM’s held Feb. 10, at the Henry Center for Executive Development at Michigan State University, 3535 Forest Road, Lansing. The release came from the Truscott Rossman Group, headed by former Governor John Engler’s press secretary and top aid John Truscott and newly founded on Dec. 22, 201o.

By Diane Bukowski 

LANSING and DETROIT, Feb. 16—“When are people going to wake up and realize we are in a class war?” asked Cecily McClellan, Vice-President of the city of Detroit’s Association of Professional and Technical Employees (APTE). “Our government now is nothing but a corporatocracy and it is in a full frontal attack against us.”

She and a dozen others gathered at the Spirit of Detroit statue outside the Coleman A. Young Center Feb. 16 to plan a fightback against multiple attacks on Detroit, including its water department.

Thousands mass in Wisconsin State Capitol Building Feb. 15 to stop war on workers and poor

Mike Mulholland, secretary-treasurer of AFSCME Local 207, representing Detroit Water Department workers, said, “We need to do what they are doing in Wisconsin. The teachers and students in Wisconsin have shut down the schools in response to the governor’s attacks. We do have the power and we can win.”

On Feb. 15, over 30,000 Wisconsin protesters took over the state capitol building, sleeping overnight in the rotunda.

Richard Hairston, a WHPR-TV commentator said, “This is Detroit’s Egyptian moment.”

Tina Person is interviewed by Channel 2's Amy Lange Feb. 16

Tina Person, also known as the Eastside Lady, said, “The bus drivers have said they will shut the buses down. We need to shut the whole city down, instead of Detroit 300 recruiting people to go out in the neighborhoods and attack people and send more of us to prison.”

Meanwhile, others from across the state journeyed to Lansing to testify at a hearing of the House Local, Intergovernmental and Regional Affairs Committee on House Bills 4124 through 4218. (Go to HB4214finanacialmanager2102011[1]   to read lead bill).

While fightbacks across the Middle East, Africa and now Wisconsin are taking place, the Michigan Legislature is fast-tracking a bill that could abolish all constitutional and charter rights of local governments and school districts. It would instead give sweeping powers to Emergency Financial Managers (EFM’s) like Robert Bobb, while completely disenfranchising residents. (See summary of H.B. 4124 below. Go to HB4214finanacialmanager2102011[1] to read entire lead bill.)

State Rep. Al Pscholka (R-Stevensville, Berrien County)

State Rep. Al Pscholka, (R-Stevensville), introduced the bills Feb. 9.  Committee Chair Ouimet (R-Scio Township) set them up for a hearing in record time with virtually no notice, and would not postpone discussion of amendments for one week as requested by State Rep. Woodrow Stanley (D-Flint).  Meanwhile, three bills sponsored by State Rep. David Nathan (D-Detroit) that would limit EFM powers languish without a hearing. (Go to  HB-4176-2011[1], HB-4177-2011[1], HB-4178-2011[1]   to read those bills.)

Pscholka is a first-time legislator from Berrien County, former vice-president of the Cornerstone Alliance, a pro-privatization foundation, and former secretary to the Southwest Michigan Regional Sanitary Sewer and Water Authority.

He clearly has broad support from Republicans in the legislature and likely from Governor Rick Snyder, who was expected to announce sweeping cuts directed at working and poor Michiganders, including cities and school districts, in his budget address Feb. 17.

Over 50 people from Detroit, Flint, Pontiac and even wealthy Oakland County testified against Pscholka’s legislation Feb. 16. No one testified for it, although several politicians from Wayne County and Flint tried to turn the bills to their advantage.

Detroit City Councilwoman JoAnn Watson

Detroit City Councilwoman JoAnn Watson was the only Detroit City Council member to make the trip. Mayor Dave Bing did not show his face. He has said he and Snyder are “joined at the hip.”

“I urge the committee to vote down these bills that would harm the city of Detroit, and not subject citizens across Michigan to emergency control managers who are business persons not elected by people we represent,” Watson said.

She blasted the state of Michigan for causing Detroit’s financial problems in large part by legislation that phased down the city’s income tax while promising to increase state revenue sharing. The state never held up its end of the bargain, paying increased payments in only two years from 1999 to  2007.

Snyder, meanwhile, is proposing to cut state revenue-sharing payments to cities by 33 percent according to published reports.

“The state owes Detroit over $322 million in revenue sharing funds,” Watson said. “We would not be in a deficit and subject to receivership under this legislation if Michigan had paid its bill.”

Debra Taylor testifies at committee hearing in Lansing Feb. 16

Debra Taylor of the Southeast Detroit Citizens District Council said, “These bills violate our fundamental right to govern ourselves. This is taxation without representation. They are a direct attack on African-Americans and other people of color, and all low income people. Detroit, Pontiac, Benton Harbor, Flint, we are targeted first.  Slavery was legal but it wasn’t right. Hundreds of schools have been closed by our EFM. People are feeling repressed and relating to Egypt. What you’re doing is not democratic or fair.”

State Rep. Shanelle Jackson (D-Detroit), told the committee, “We watched the fall of Mubarak, and the U.S. and nations around the world have said they stand with people of Egypt in their quest for democracy.  Today, I’m asking you to stand with the people of Michigan. These bills are a slap in the face of every voter who elected you.”

Monica Patrick testifies in Lansing Feb. 16

Detroit parent and business owner Monica Patrick said, “I am outraged that these bills are on the table. I am not only a citizen of city of Detroit, but of Michigan and the United States. It is appalling that anyone would think of stripping us of our right to vote while we tout democracy around the world. It is not acceptable and will not be tolerated. I will fight this action with every ounce of my being.”

Officials from school districts and governments currently under state control testified strongly against the bill.

“In 1999, the district did not have a deficit but the state took us over and brought the debt in,” said Detroit School Board member Annie Carter. “In 2008, Detroiters voted to have the state forgive the debt they caused, but that did not happen. When you give control to one czar, you create corruption. My child’s school has gone eight days with no heat because Bobb laid the boiler operators off and Sodexo will not have anyone in place for 30 days. Our children are being educated in the cold and then going home to the cold because their parents cannot afford utility bills. Teachers are being moved in the middle of the semester, and as a result students are not being educated.”

DPS Board Member Annie Carter

Detroit School Board member Terry Catchings called the bills “totally, clearly unconstitutional.”

“I have been on the board for three years, with the last two under the control of the EFM. Since he took over, there is no accountability and no oversight. Our budget deficit went up over $200 million in two years. Confusion, waste, fraud and abuse abound.  These bills will harm not just Detroit but other districts in deficit also.”

Forty-one school districts across the state are in deficit.

 “Our entire educational system is in an abysmal state,” Detroit parent Sharon Kelso said. “There is complete degradation and disregard of parents, students and staff, Bobb has all but destroyed the public education system. My child hasn’t learned jack in the last two years.”

State Rep. David Nathan testifies at earlier hearing Feb. 9 in Lansing

Rep. David Nathan (D-Detroit) said. “I sat on the education committee during my first term. Academics from the University of Detroit Mercy, Wayne State, Michigan State and the University of Michigan all concluded that an emergency financial manager doesn’t necessarily have the expertise to deal with academics.”

Nathan said the former EFM for Pontiac was removed and lost lawsuits on decisions he had made because there was no oversight.

“These bills will affect more cities and schools in our state than we can ever imagine,” Nathan said. “There are pension systems that could be affected by this. I urge all of my colleagues on both sides of aisle to think about the people that elected you and things that could be affected.”

Pontiac City Council President Lee A. Jones

Pontiac Councilman Kermit Williams

The City of Pontiac has been under state receivership since March, 2009. A second EFM is in control after the first was ousted due to successful lawsuits over his illegal actions. Pontiac’s City Council President Lee Jones, and members George Williams, Kerwin Williams, and Patrice Waterman all testified before the committee.

“How many of you on this committee live under an EFM,” President Jones asked. “Our constitutional rights have been violated. There has been union-busting, a total dictatorship. The EFM shut down city council meetings, silencing the voice of the people as his first order of business, but then two days later he had to put them back.”

The council members said the EFM has caused substantial revenue losses to the city. He sold the Silverdome for $500,000, although $7 million was allocated. He privatized Pontiac’s wastewater treatment plant, sold the golf course, and carried out massive lay-offs and cuts, said the council members. They said the EFM has laid of the entire police force, allocating funds for the Oakland County Sheriffs instead.

Jones said the EFM let a contract to a non-Michigan based company and commented, “They done worked for me in the past, I done it, and that’s what I wanted to do.”

He said he sent letters to the EFM protesting lay-offs and was referred to the law firm of Plunkett and Cooney, which told him he was interfering with the powers of the EFM.

“If I pick up phone and contact a law firm, the first thing they do is start billing, and that’s something we can’t afford,” Jones said. “EFM’s are for money to law firms, their friends and themselves.”

The Pontiac council members said they have no staff, and when they asked for money to hire one secretary to answer the phone, the EFM asked them to have the secretary work for nothing.

Councilman Kermit Williams said, “The law is clandestine, undercover, this is not the way to keep cities from being bankrupt. I don’t wish an EFM on anybody. Pontiac lost 25,000 jobs in the last 10 years, and we only have 60,000 residents. If you want

to change the EFM law, look at a financial plan to make sure that the EFM not only cuts but brings revenue in. Our EFM got rid of revenue generators like the Planning and Buildings and Safety Department, so now when businesses want to locate in Pontiac, they have no one to go to.”

Pontiac retiree testifies in Lansing

A Pontiac city retiree who previously was director of public works said, “I worked 42 years for city of Pontiac, and I don’t like waking up and thinking I won’t have retirement or a pension. That is the only thing left in Pontiac that has a little money, and he wants to get to that. He wants to dissolve the pension board. If you allow this to happen, don’t wake up in the morning and think about your own pension or your Social Security.”

Testimony against the bills also came from an area not likely to be affected by them.

“Oakland County has a triple A bond rating,” said Oakland County Commissioner Tim Greimel. “But I have great concerns about the policy implications of this legislation. It shouldn’t be a partisan issue. Although many communities currently under EFM’s are predominantly Democratic, there are a number of predominantly Republican committees that could be ensnared.”

Oakland Co. Commissioner Tim Greimel

He continued, “The bills leaves far too much authority in the hands of individuals without discretion as to what constitutes financial emergency. They completely and unequivocally disenfranchise voters by taking away all powers from elected officials. They allow EFM’s to unilaterally and directly contradict charters, the will of the people at the ballot box. They burden local governments with consequences of decisions they did not make. They force local governments  to pay the attorney general to defend the EFM against constitutional challenges and would require local governments and their taxpayers to pay for defense of civil and criminal proceedings against EFM. In communities slipping into financial distress, this would actually accelerate the distress.”

Greimel said businesses will be unlikely to locate in affected areas knowing that the EFM can alter or rescind their contracts.

“Unions will be very unlikely to make concessions because they know can easily get racked up again by the EFM. The bill allows the EFM to essentially bribe local elected officials to buy compliance, by giving the EFM carte blanche to adjust salaries of elected officials. It thus violates their constitutional right to free speech and leaves the state open to lawsuit. It means a massive expansion of government and a new bureaucratic class with no guarantee that it will not overstep legal and ethical bounds.”

Wayne Co. Exec. Robert Ficano listens as Compuware's Peter Karmanos rails against unions in 2007

While ostensibly speaking against the bills, Wayne Co. Executive Robert Ficano’s representative and Flint Mayor Dayne Walling sought amendments to give the draconian powers they accord to EFM’s to local heads of government instead.

“The powers granted to the EFM should be granted directly to elected officials,” Jerry Griffin, Ficano’s director of legislative affairs, said. “If there is a financial emergency and there are powers needed to address it, give us the powers. The challenges out there were not necessarily caused by incompetence or the negligence of local officials. Sixty percent of our revenues come from property taxes, and the decline in the housing market has caused great stresses.”

Walling said, “I appreciate the parts of bill that will allow local officials to have more authority prior to going to an EFM.”

Flint City Councilman Delrico Lloyd and Flint Mayor

He and current Flint Councilman Delrico Lloyd both objected to a provision in the bill that originally prevented elected officials serving under receivership from running for office again for 10 years. Ouimet said that had been changed to 18 months.

The committee continued meeting to discuss numerous proposed amendments to the bills, which at press time had not been published on the state website.

(More coming from Feb. 9 meeting in Lansing, including comments from Helen Moore, Russ Bellant, David Nathan.)

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WALL STREET, STATE, BOBB ROB DETROIT’S CHILDREN

 

DPS EFM Robert Bobb testifies as Chief Academic Officer Barbara Byrd-Bennett listens Feb. 9

By Diane Bukowski

 

LANSING—Hat in hand, Detroit Public Schools (DPS) czar Robert Bobb and his Chief Academic Accountability Officer Barbara Byrd-Bennett begged a Feb. 9 joint meeting of the House and Senate Education Committees for legislation that would ensure approval of another $219 million deficit bond by the end of March.

The legislation has not yet been presented, but Bobb said it was being drafted.

Several Democratic legislators subjected the two to severe criticism for Bobb’s actions in slashing school services while still not reducing the district’s alleged $327 million deficit. The Committee chairs, Sen. Phil Pavlov and Rep. Paul Scott, and other Republican legislators were skeptical that DPS could repay the debt and said they opposed additional financial burdens being placed on the state.

House and Senate Education Committee chairs (l to r) Paul Scott and Phil Pavlov

 “We are not asking for the school district debt burden to be shifted to the state,” Bobb said. “Enacting this legislation will not cost the state one dime. This legislation is not a request for a cash infusion in any way. And this legislation does not in any way ask for the school district’s debt burden to be shifted to the state.”

He said later, “The state intercepts the district’s foundation allowance [per pupil aid] to ensure debt service.” This was the first time he has publicly acknowledged that a state trustee gets DPS’ entire allowance, then withholds what he considers necessary to pay the district’s debt before turning over the remainder to DPS.

His presentation shed light on the willingness of district officials to submit to draconian proposals by the Republican-dominated legislature expanding the powers of Emergency Financial Managers across the state, while closing schools, laying off workers and privatizing school services.

As minority vice chair of the House Education Committee, Sen. Pavlov wrote a bill last year to give the EFM power over academics, dated January 14, 2010, which died at the end of that session. (Read bill at Pavlov EFM bill 2010-HIB-5747.  (See accompanying story on Senate committee meeting on EFM powers held Feb. 9 in the afternoon, and currently proposed bills.)  

Eighty-seven percent of state DPS per-pupil aid this year, $512 million out of $590.5 million, was already set aside by the state trustee for debt payments, according to documents previously published on the DPS website, but since removed. (See chart below, go to http://voiceofdetroit.net/?p=218 to read previous article.)

Bobb said former DPS CEO Kenneth Burnley gave Financial Security Assistance, now Assured Guaranty Municipal Corporation (AGM), the right to sign off on all short term borrowings when Burnley borrowed $210 million in 2005, in order to guarantee repayment of that 15-year loan.

Bobb said if approval of the new loan is not forthcoming, payments on the 2005 debt would rise from $22 million a year to $39.5 million.

He did not say how much interest AGM is charging, but it is likely substantial.

Billionaire Wilbur Ross backs Assured Guaranty

AGM is a subsidiary of the $  billion Bermuda-based Assured Guaranty Ltd. (AGL), which is backed by billionaire Wilbur Ross. According to Bloomberg News, Wall Street bond rating agency Standard & Poors (S&P) just downgraded AGL’s ratings one tier, leaving AGL in an uproar.

 “Shares of Assured Guaranty Ltd., the only active investment-grade rated municipal bond insurer, fell the most in three months . . . .” Bloomberg reported.

It said the two biggest bond insurers, MBIA Inc. and Ambac Financial Group Inc, along with most of the rest of the industry lost their top AAA ratings in 2008 as a result of the mortgage payment meltdown.

 S&P has now proposed changes in its methods for evaluating bond insurers.

 “Among the biggest proposed changes to S&P’s ratings criteria is a new leverage test to assess the amount of risk (ed. italics) a bond insurer is assuming from guaranteeing debt relative to the capital it holds,” Bloomberg said in its Jan. 24, 2011 article.

Rescue schools, not banks

Bobb said, “Because of all the national headlines raising concerns about municipal and school district bankruptcies, Assured is looking to protect the DPS debt it insures from a potential filing even though the district has no plans to engage in such an action.”

Bobb then ticked off numerous attacks on DPS that he has initiated since the beginning of his tenure in March, 2009.

“It is vitally important that the Emergency Financial Manager must remove the rot from the system he is involved in,” Bobb said. He blamed the district’s current alleged deficit of $327 million on previous administrations over the last 11 years.

Chadsey High School, now closed

The “rot,” said Bobb, included 59 schools he has closed, with another 30 to 40 schools on the chopping block. He threatened a total of 70 more schools would be closed if the loan is not approved.

He boasted of concessions made by the Detroit Federation of Teachers under Keith Johnson, including deferment of $500 a month in pay, an assault on the “Holy Grail” of teacher seniority which excludes 52 schools from bumping in the event of lay-offs, and a new teacher evaluation system for all schools.

He boasted of the lay-offs of 232 security officers, 384 transportation workers, and the recent elimination of 823 custodial, maintenance and engineering positions, along with their outsourcing to the notorious union-buster Sodexo and other companies.

Safeway's DPS bus drivers protest outsourcing March, 2010

Despite a ruling by Wayne County Circuit Court Judge Wendy Baxter last December  which barred Bobb from interfering in academics in his role as EFM, Bobb also boasted that he had developed a “long-term” academic plan for the district. Baxter just re-affirmed that ruling Feb. 12.  

Governor Rick Snyder did not announce the extension of Bobb’s contract beyond two years, through June, 2011, in violation of Public Act 72, until Feb. 14. But members of the committee spoke of it as a done deal, as have Detroit Board of Education President Anthony Adams and a number of union leaders.

“Why should the state keep you on when you have not been able to prevent these deficits and possible bankruptcy?” asked State Sen. Coleman Young II (D-Detroit). “The legacy debt was created beginning with the 1999 state takeover. The state has violated Art. 9, Sec.29 of the state constitution which prohibits the imposition of non-funded mandates.

Sec. 32 says that any citizen can file suit to enforce this provision.”

Young evidently referred to the state’s insistence on the district’s maintenance of a balanced budget while providing no funds to see that it happens. Text of State constitutional citations is below.

“MICHIGAN CONSTITUTION Sec. 29 State financing of activities or services required of local government by state law. The state is hereby prohibited from reducing the state financed proportion of the necessary costs of any existing activity or service required of units of Local Government by state law. A new activity or service or an increase in the level of any activity or service beyond that required by existing law shall not be required by the legislature or any state agency of units of Local Government, unless a state appropriation is made and disbursed to pay the unit.

 Sec. 32. Suit to enforce sections 25 to 31. Any taxpayer of the state shall have standing to bring suit in the Michigan State Court of Appeals to enforce the provisions of Sections 25 through 31, inclusive, of this Article and, if the suit is and, if the suit is sustained, shall receive from the applicable unit of government his costs.” 

State Rep. Tommie Stallworth (D-Detroit)

“You have said repeatedly that you are not asking the state to pick up the debt and intend to close up to 70 schools leaving 62 students in a class,” State Rep. Tommie Stallworth (D-Detroit), said. “This absolutely results in failure, which we cannot afford as a state. During at least nine of the 11 years you cited in which DPS incurred deficits, DPS was under state control.”

State Rep. Lisa Brown (D-West Bloomfield) blasted Bobb’s labor and travel policies.

“Why did you contract with Sodexo to save $75 million when according to the Detroit News and Free Press, the unions said they put a $92 million savings proposal on the table? With the number of consultants you’ve hired, why did we hire you? Your budget shows travel expenses of $900,000 in one month, $12,000 to the Sheraton Hotel. The food suppliers you choose are not the cheapest.”

Protest against Sodexo at University of Pittsburgh

Bobb denied the union savings were real and claimed that his use of Sodexo did not disadvantage current DPS workers. He said his consultants will go when he does, although he also said other officers he hired included the district’s auditor general have three year contracts and will remain.

Helen Moore of Keep the Vote No Takeover, Russ Bellant, and former DPS music teacher Callie Smith traveled all the way from Detroit to testify at the hearing. Pavlov dismissed the committee meeting without hearing from them or from the president of the Detroit School Board Anthony Adams. They did testify that afternoon at a joint Senate committee session and their testimony is presented in the following article.

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PROTEST ARNE DUNCAN’S INTERNATIONAL SUMMIT ON EDUCATION PRIVATIZATION MARCH 16-17

To all defenders of public education: BAMN Dailycensored.com

http://dailycensored.com/2011/02/13/to-all-defenders-of-public-education-bamn/

February 14, 2011

Pres. Barack Obama and Arne Duncan arrive in Grand Rapids, MI, home of one of the state's foremost charter sponsors, Grand Valley State University

U.S. Secretary of Education Arne Duncan is hosting an International Summit on the Teaching Profession in New York City on March 16-17. It is by “invitation only” and timed to take place right before the “Celebration of Teaching and Learning” at the NYC Hilton.

Duncan will be using this international platform to push the school privatization and market-based education policies he has been trying to impose on school districts across the nation. NEA and AFT national leaders, who have, despite their members’ opposition, endorsed much of of the Duncan ideology and rhetoric, will also be in attendance.

This event, which is sure to receive a great deal of publicity, provides us with a great opportunity to publicly demonstrate the opposition of students, teachers, parents and education advocates to Duncan’s K-12 policies, as well as to the massive budget cuts that are triggering tuition hikes across the country, undermining access to higher education.

BAMN is organizing a picket of the event. Would you or your organization be interested in participating? We haven’t yet worked out all the details, and we are flexible about choosing a time that would make it possible for the most people to attend.

If you are interested, please respond to this email with your contact information, and I will organize a conference call to work out the details.

Sincerely,
Donna Stern
BAMN National Coordinator

P.S. The Dept of Ed Press Release about the event is copied below.

December 15, 2010
Contact:   Press Office, (202) 401-1576, press@ed.gov

Randi Weingarten, president of the American Federation of Teachers, left, listens as New York Mayor Michael Bloomberg speaks during a news conference at the Capitol in Albany, N.Y., Wednesday, March 25, 2009. (AP Photo/Mike Groll)

U.S. Education Secretary Arne Duncan will join leaders from the Organisation for Economic Cooperation and Development (OECD) and Education International (EI), together with the National Education Association (NEA), the American Federation of Teachers (AFT), the Council of Chief State School Officers (CCSSO), the Asia Society and public broadcaster WNET, to host an International Summit on the Teaching Profession in New York City, March 16-17, 2011.

The summit will convene education ministers, national union leaders, education organization leaders and accomplished teachers from countries with high performing and rapidly improving educational systems to identify best practices worldwide that effectively strengthen the teaching profession in ways designed to enhance student achievement.

“When it comes to teaching, talent matters tremendously,” said Secretary Duncan. “But great teachers are not just born that way — it takes a high-quality system for recruiting, training, retaining, and supporting teachers over the course of their careers to develop an effective teaching force. This summit is a tremendous opportunity to learn from one another the best methods worldwide to address our common challenges: supporting and strengthening teachers and boosting the student skills necessary for success in today’s knowledge economy.”

“The prosperity of our nations depends on whether we succeed to attract the brightest minds into the teaching profession and the most talented teachers into the most challenging classrooms,” said OECD Secretary General Angel Gurría. “Working directly with leaders and teachers from across the globe is key to investing in our most precious asset — our youth.”

MLK Day, Detroit 2011 "Jim Crow is dead"

Participants will also engage in a discussion on the vital role teachers’ play in advancing progressive, sustainable education reform. “The summit represents a unique opportunity for teachers and their unions globally to consider the future of their profession as equal partners with governments,” said EI General Secretary Fred van Leeuwen. “Qualified teachers are vital to the health and success of all our societies. Their input and status are vital to advancing the fight to achieve high quality education for all.”

The March summit is a first step in what will be an ongoing dialogue among these countries about the best way to achieve and sustain best practices to improve both teaching and learning. The department plans to work with participating leaders to compile and share effective practices publicly in the weeks following the summit.

2 Responses for “To all defenders of public education: BAMN”

    Jord Dorwell says: February 13, 2011 at 1:21 pmBy attending the union leaders are signaling their willingness to perpetuate the big lies that are being used to justify the privatization of education.
    1. education’s only puropse is to serve the economy in a global race to the top
    2. teacher quality is responsible for “gaps” between rich and poor and for economic underperformance.

    Their failure to protest corporate reform is a sure sign they have themselves become little more than alternative corporations looking to secure their own role as labor brokers as they facilitate the transition from teaching as a profession to teaching as a service industry.

    Reply William Crain says: February 13, 2011 at 9:11 pmThis is the End of Public Education. This is Union Busting at its penultimate. This is the way of Capitalism. Capitalism cannot be fixed. Fascism is brewing.
    We’ve had a chances to break this train wreck, Impeaching Bush and Cheney; (or even earlier with Clinton Not forgiving Reagan) The chance again to start crushing capitalism came with SinglePay/Medicare For All. We have one more chance to stop this Privatization of Education for Capitalism… there won’t be many more chances.
    We cannot count on Unions/ Teachers Unions… right here in Billings, MT He is (pres of the local union) too scared of what the new slash and burn Superintendent will do. And school board members are Pro-Privatization. he said this to me in a phone conversation where i was trying to get him to come on my TV program and talk about Privatization and Union Busting …Too Scared so watch the little kingpins sleep with the Enemy.

    DFT conducts one-day walk-out to demonstrate against charter schools in Lansing, 2001

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COX, BING, SUBURBS, CORPORATIONS CONSPIRE IN WATER TAKEOVER, VIOLATE CITY CHARTER

Mayor Dave Bing at podium, (l to r) Macomb County Public Works Commissioner Anthony Marrocco, Wayne County Executive Robert Ficano, Oakland County Water Resources Commissioner John McCulloch; McCullocH initiated motion that U.S. District Judge Sean Cox has now ruled on

 WATER DICTATORSHIP

 By Diane Bukowski

 

DETROIT – Many Detroiters are mobilizing to stop what they say is a suburban takeover of the Detroit Water and Sewerage Department (DWSD). U.S. District Judge Sean Cox issued an order Feb. 11 giving Oakland, Macomb and Wayne counties veto power over DWSD contracts and rates, and the right to appoint their own members of the Board of Water Commissioners without mayoral approval.

 

His order flouts provisions of the City Charter and the state constitution dealing with governance of the water department and utilities in general. 

 
 
 
 
 

U.S. District Judge Sean Cox

Joyce Moore says Cox's order violates City Charter

 Cox took action after secret daily meetings in his chambers with the parties for over a week. He also toured the Wastewater Treatment Plant and met with DWSD officials. In addition to Cox, Detroit Mayor Dave Bing, Oakland County Water Resources Commissioner John McCulloch, Macomb County Public Works Commissioner Anthony Marrocco, and Wayne County Executive Robert Ficano signed the order. (Read order at DWSD DOJ order 2 11 11.)

 

“The people are going to have to get together; we are going to almost have to do what Egypt is doing, to get a voice in what is going on about our water rights,” former Charter Commissioner Joyce Moore said.

 

She said the City Charter requires the people of Detroit to vote on changes affecting their ownership of the Water Department. She noted that last year’s transfer of the 21-mile Oakland-Macomb Interceptor to those two counties, without the city electorate’s vote, was a flagrant violation of the Charter.

 

But Ficano and Bing lauded the move.

 

Despite the secret process through which the pact was reached, Ficano said, “This means that there is now going to be transparency and accountability–whatever the rates are, they will be out in open, here’s the formula.”  

 

Bing added, “[Operational improvement] will happen over time, with the collaboration all of us will bring to table. As we look at representatives that will be on the Board of Water Commissioners from the suburbs, they will be people they have confidence in, that have professionalism. There is a lot of work that needs to be done, changes that need to be made, there are investments that must be made, there is the whole maintenance issue that we have to look at. I am appreciative that today all of us came together, joining our forces and expertise to fix the city.”

 

Bing, who is from Franklin, appeared to imply that Detroiters lack “professionalism,” while stressing the importance of work to be done by contractors who will now be selected with greater input from non-Detroiters.  

 
 

Cecily McClellan

“It’s all about the money,” said Cecily McClellan, Vice-President of the Association of Professional and Technical Employees (APTE), during an emergency gathering at the Spirit of Detroit statue Feb. 16. “It’s about who gets the contracts, about the control of blue gold, the privatization of water which is happening all over the country. Detroit is one of the last bastions of public power, and we sit in the midst of the largest bodies of water, the Great Lakes.” 

 
 
 

Tom Barrow

At that gathering, former mayoral candidate Tom Barrow said his challenge to Bing’s election is still active before the State Supreme Court and expressed strong opposition to Cox’s order.

 

 
 

“Bing’s position is absurd,” Barrow said. “He is not one of us. The City Council can place a question on the ballot regarding whether the people want the Mayor to have the sole authority to regionalize or change the governance of the water department. The people will reject it overwhelmingly. This is an assault on the people of Detroit. Bing and others  just ignore the law.”

 

Cox’s order gives the counties of Wayne, Oakland and Macomb the absolute right to choose their own representatives on the Detroit Board of Water Commissioners, without the approval of Detroit’s mayor as specified in the Charter. It grants them veto power over Detroit’s four commissioners, by requiring a supermajority of five of seven members to approve five-year capital improvement plans and rates.

 

It requires that only two current Commissioners remain, with Mayor Dave Bing appointing a new board representing specified fields of expertise, by April 1. It emphasizes that it is the Board which chooses DWSD’s director, a position that is currently vacant. Since the Mayor has absolute authority over the board in City Charter provisions, he should actually be the person who hires the director.

 

 
 
 

It's about the money

Bing and Ficano excused the charter violations, claiming that Detroit’s City Council will still have the final say-so on contracts and rates as currently provided by the charter.

 

However, Bing said during the press conference that negotiations are still ongoing on the matter of mayoral approval of commissioner appointments. That leaves the field open for Cox to alter other provisions, including those dealing with the City Council’s power. 

  

A complicating factor is House Bill 4214, which is currently being hotly debated (see VOD story below). It would greatly broaden the state’s ability to appoint emergency financial managers and expand their powers. Those powers would include the ability to dissolve governing bodies and sell off assets of local governments and school districts.  

 
 
 

Greg Murray, from Detiptv video

“I think that what happened today is actually a travesty, a direct violation of the City Charter,” Greg Murray, a leader of the Coalition of Organized Labor (COOL), which includes many city unions, told Detiptv’s Tim Moore after Bing’s press conference

 
 
 
 

“It usurps the authority of the city via the Mayor to name members of the Water Board,” Murray explained. “I am hoping it will be challenged in court. It does not reflect or guarantee that there will be any increased operational efficiency in the running of the department. It is part of a long-term plan to take over the assets of the city of Detroit. The press conference represented a surrender on the part of the Mayor and the administration to the wishes of the suburban water officials.”

 

Murray called on Detroiters to protest at Bing’s State of the City address at Orchestra Hall Tues. Feb. 22, and then join City Councilwoman JoAnn Watson in a march on Lansing Feb. 23 (see below). That march will also target HB 4112, a water takeover bill pending in the state legislature, sponsored by State Senator Kurt Heise (R-Plymouth).

 

Watson has expressed her opposition to Cox’s order while others on the Council have said they are satisfied with it. The Council was scheduled to meet in closed session Feb. 17 with their attorneys to discuss the order’s legality.

 

Tim Moore concluded the Detiptv broadcast, saying, “There is one question still not answered: given the national and world water shortage, why would Mayor voluntarily give our suburban customers veto powers over any decision made by the board.”

GO TO http://voiceofdetroit.net/?p=4329 TO READ EARLIER COVERAGE OF MCCULLOCH’S MOTION. 

   

.   

PROPOSED WATER AND SEWERAGE RATES

DETROIT WATER AND SEWERAGE DEPARTMENT

Notice is hereby given that the Board of Water Commissioners will hold a Public Hearing on Water and Sewerage rates proposed by the Detroit Water and Sewerage Department  for Fiscal Year 2011-12.

DATE: February 23, 2011

TIME: 11:00 a.m.

PLACE: Water Board Building, 5th Floor Board Room

735 Randolph

Detroit, Michigan 48226

The proposed rates are scheduled to take effect on July 1, 2011.

NOTICE OF PUBLIC HEARING

PROPOSED WATER AND SEWERAGE RATES

DETROIT WATER AND SEWERAGE DEPARTMENT

Notice is hereby given that the Detroit City Council will hold a Public Hearing on Water and Sewerage rates proposed by the Detroit Water and Sewerage Department for Fiscal Year 2011-12.

DATE: March 10, 2011

TIME: 5:00 p.m.

PLACE: 13th Floor Auditorium

Coleman A. Young Municipal Center

Detroit, Michigan 48226

The proposed rates are scheduled to take effect on July 1, 2011.

During the Public Hearing, the Detroit Water and Sewerage Department will comment on the budget, estimated sales volume, Capital Improvement Program and other factors upon which the proposed rates are based. Thereafter, the Detroit City Council will receive public comments and questions on any matters pertaining to the proposed rates. Individuals or groups wishing to make oral presentations or submit prepared statements pertaining to the proposed rates may do so at the Public Hearing. Individuals or groups giving oral presentations are encouraged to have their presentations in writing, with a copy to be submitted for the record to the City Clerk and Board of Water Commissioners. Oral presentations should be brief to allow all parties the opportunity to participate. A time limit may be imposed based upon registration at the hearing. Interested parties who are unable to attend the Public Hearing may submit their comments in writing to:

The Detroit City Council – 13th Floor, Coleman A. Young Municipal Center, 2 Woodward Avenue, Detroit, Michigan 48226

Or

Darryl A. Latimer, Deputy Director, Detroit Water and Sewerage Department, 735 Randolph St. Detroit, Michigan 48226.

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EGYPTIAN REVOLUTION SPREADS ACROSS AFRICA, MIDDLE EAST

 

Algerian protesters break police cordon

Sources: AL JAZEERA and news agencies

Algerian security forces and pro-democracy protesters are clashing, as demonstrations got underway in the capital Algiers on Saturday.

At least 2,000 protestors were able to overcome a security cordon enforced around the capital’s May First Square, joining other demonstrators calling for reform.

Earlier, thousands of police in riot gear were in position to stop the demonstrations that could mimic the uprising which forced out Egyptian President Hosni Mubarak.

Tunisian revolution ignited firestorm in its wake

Security forces have closed all entrances to the capital and already arrested hundreds of protesters, sources told Al Jazeera.

At the scene of the protests, blogger and activist, Elias Filali, said human right’s activists and syndicate members were among those arrested.

“I’m right in the middle of the march,” he told Al Jazeera. “People are being arrested and are heavily guarded by the police.”

Officials banned Saturday’s opposition march, but protesters were determined to see it through.

Peaceful protests

Protest in Jordan

Filali said the demonstrators were determined to remain peaceful, but he added that the police “want the crowd to go violent and then get them portrayed as a violent crowd”.

Protesters are demanding greater democratic freedoms, a change of government, and more jobs.

Earlier, police also charged at demonstrators and arrested 10 people outside the Algiers offices of the opposition Rally for Culture and Democracy (RCD), as they celebrated Mubarak’s downfall, Said Sadi, RCD leader, told AFP news agency.

“It wasn’t even an organised demonstration. It was spontaneous. It was an explosion of joy,” he said.

Protests in Yemen

Mubarak’s resignation on Friday, and last month’s overthrow of Tunisian leader, Zine El Abidine Ben Ali, have electrified the Arab world.

Many are left wondering which country could be next in a region where a flammable mix of authoritarian rule and popular anger are the norm.

“The timing is absolutely perfect. [Mubarak’s departure] couldn’t have come at a better time,” Filali told Al Jazeera ahead of the protests.

“This is a police state, just like the Egyptian regime [was],” Filali said, adding that Algeria’s government was “corrupt to the bone, based on electoral fraud, and repression”.

“There is a lot of discontent among young people … the country is badly managed by a corrupt regime that does not want to listen,” he added.

Police on alert

Said Sadi, the RCD leader, had said earlier that he expected around 10,000 more police officers to reinforce the 20,000 that blocked the last demonstration on January 22, when five people were killed and more than 800 hurt.

Clashes in Yemen between anti and pro government protesters

Police presence is routine in Algeria to counter the threat of attacks by al Qaeda insurgents. But Filali called the heavy police presence in the capital on Saturday “unbelievable”.

At May First Square, the starting point for the planned march, there were around 40 police vans, jeeps and buses lined up, Filali said.

At several road junctions, the police had parked small military-style armoured vehicles which are rarely seen in the city. Police standing outside a fuel station, about 2 km from the square, were wearing anti-riot body armour.

The latest rally is being organised by the National Co-ordination for Change and Democracy (CNCD), a three-week-old umbrella group of opposition parties, civil society movements and unofficial unions inspired by the mass protests in Tunisia and Egypt.

Demonstrators have been protesting over the last few months against unemployment, high food costs, poor housing and corruption – similar issues that fuelled uprisings in other north African nations.

Earlier this month, Abdelaziz Bouteflika, Algeria’s president, said he would lift emergency powers, address unemployment and allow democratic marches to take place in the country, in a bid to stave off unrest.

“The regime is frightened,” Filali said. “And the presence of 30,000 police officers in the capital gives you an idea of how frightened the regime [is] of its people.”

Wider implications

The PLO's Saeb Erekat resigns after Al Jazeera's publication of the Palestine Papers, which exposed his office's collaboration with the U.S.

Widespread unrest in Algeria could have implications for the world economy because it is a major oil and gas exporter, but many analysts say an Egypt-style revolt is unlikely as the government can use its energy wealth to placate most grievances.

Meanwhile, in a statement, rights group Amnesty International said “Algerians must be allowed to express themselves freely and hold peaceful protests in Algiers and elsewhere”.

“We urge the Algerian authorities not to respond to these demands by using excessive force.”

The government said it refused permission for the rally for public order reasons, not because it is trying to stifle dissent. It said it is working hard to create jobs, build new homes and improve public services.

Other Arab countries have also felt the ripples from the revolts in Egypt and Tunisia.

Jordan’s King Abdullah replaced his prime minister after protests.

In Yemen, President Ali Abdullah Saleh promised opponents he would not seek a new term.

The Bahraini government has also made several concessions in recent weeks, including promising higher social spending. Activists there have called for protests on February 14, the tenth anniversary of Bahrain’s constitution.

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DETROIT RALLIES FOR NATIONAL MORATORIUM ON FORECLOSURES

 

VANESSA FLUKER

Are you paying for your neighbor’s foreclosure?  

What’s really going on? 

Who is Responsible? 

What YOU can DO about it! 

Testimony before House Judiciary Committee Dec. 15. 2010

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=I7y9E2QGRhM

 Learn more about how Attorney Vanessa Fluker is fighting for the rights of the Citizens of Michigan in Washington, DC: 

Kevin Dietz breaks the story of how you are paying for your neighbor’s foreclosure and of how the banks make more money by legally  evicting you instead of keeping you in YOUR HOME.  

Marchers demand MORATORIUM NOW last Aug. 28 in downtown Detroit

  Join the Rallies! 

 Rally Information:

 Calling ALL COMMUNITY ORGANIZERS

and Community Residents!  

COMMUNITY ACTION PLAN:

 

  • Date:  Friday, February 11, 2011 at 4:30 PM masses of community members will meet  at Senator Debbie Stabenow’s Office, located at:  243 West Congress, Suite 550, Detroit, MI, 48225. 313.961.4330
  • Date: Friday, February 18, 2011 at 4:30 PM, masses of community members will meet at Senator Carl Levin’s Office, located at: McNamara Federal Building, 477 Michigan Ave. Suite 1860, Detroit, MI. 48226. 313.226.6020 

 

 

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