City-Wide PICKET Finney High School Tues. Sept. 21, 3:15-5pm STOP ROB BOBB’S REIGN OF CHAOS AND DESTRUCTION 

 

Teachers, workers and students shut down DPS in 2001 to protest in Lansing; they stopped then Mayor Kwame Kilpatrick’s plan for charter schools
  • Stop dismantling DPS—Defend Public Education as a Right!
  • Stop Cheating Our Students Out of Their Education 
  • Treat DPS Teachers, Parents, and Students with Respect and Dignity 
  • Our Children are Not For Sale—Save Dr. King’s Vision for America 
  • Stop the Continued Threat of Immediate Layoff—Rescind the “Special Authority” Letters Now 

 The chaos that greeted teachers, students and parents at the beginning of this school year has been deliberately inflicted by the high-handed, destructive corporate methods of Robert Bobb and his lackeys. Hundreds of teachers who got layoff notices in June had not had those notices rescinded by the beginning of school.

Hundreds of teachers were forced to interview for their own jobs, and even after agreements were reached between teachers and principals, were forcibly moved by Bobb to other schools. Other teachers received “special authority” letters instead of bona fide rescission of their layoff notices, leaving them open to layoff on a two-day notice. 

Replace “Miss Vacancy” with a Qualified, Credentialed Teacher in Every Classroom, Restore All Substitutes’ Salary and Benefits, Fully Staff Counselors and Return Special Education Teachers to Their Students.

Dozens of special education teachers have been forced to teach general education classes and their special education students have been dispersed into general education classes, where their teachers have no special education experience. Countless teachers are being forced to teach outside their subject areas. Six special education teachers Continue reading

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DANGER–Cox set to decide on DMC/Vanguard deal by 9/15

DMC's Harper University Hospital/Hutzel

A FOUR-PART IN-DEPTH ANALYSIS OF DEAL

BY DIANE BUKOWSKI 

Blackstone owns 70% of Vanguard; CEO compared Obama to Hitler 

DETROIT – Michigan Attorney General Mike Cox will announce his decision on the transfer of the Detroit Medical Center to Nashville-based Vanguard Health Systems by Sept. 15, according to Vanguard’s Aug. 26 SEC filing.  

Deputy Chief Attorney General Carol Isaacs called the transaction, valued at $1.2 billion, one of the largest in the nation. She spoke at a little-publicized “community” forum Aug. 18 at Cadillac Place in Detroit.  

The non-profit DMC provides the largest amount of indigent and uninsured care in Michigan, and is currently in the black. Vanguard, a for-profit, just announced losses of $49 million for the fiscal year ended June 30.  

Blackstone CEO compared Hitler to Pres. Obama

Vanguard is 70 percent owned by the Blackstone Group, a global private equity firm, with assets of $78 billion. In July, Blackstone’s CEO Stephen Schwarzman compared President Barack Obama to Hitler, because Obama proposed to raise taxes on the private equity sector.  

“It’s a war,” Schwarzman said. “It’s like when Hitler invaded Poland in 1939.” He later apologized for the comparison, but not for his opposition to paying Blackstone’s fair share of taxes.   

Forum participants debate deal 

Many attendees at the Aug. 18 forum, primarily DMC and Vanguard executives, politicians, and members of the “Unified Detroit Coalition,” enthusiastically supported the proposed transaction, claiming they had thoroughly researched its advantages. 

DMC board chair Stephen D'Arcy at far left, Vanguard's Trip Pilgrim and DMC CEO Mike Duggan at center, DMC general counsel Floyd Allen at right

“Two-thirds of the non-profit hospitals in Detroit have closed,” DMC CEO Mike Duggan, red-faced with excitement, said. “People are emotionally clinging to the romanticized ideas of non-profits, but there are beautiful facilities in the suburbs that we need to copy. The transformation to a for-profit will actually increase access to the uninsured.” 

Ironically, the suburban Detroit hospitals to which Duggan referred are all non-profits. Michigan currently has only one for-profit hospital, Doctor’s Hospital in Pontiac.  

Trip Pilgrim, of Vanguard Health Systems, said, “Our hospitals in San Antonio give more charity care than religious-based systems, and in Chicago, more charity care than 78 percent of the non-profits.”   Continue reading

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Vanguard likely to cut services and compensation

  

Pre and post natal care in danger

Cuts in “unprofitable” services like pre and post-natal care likely

 Vanguard will provide “core services” for a minimum of ten years “at one or more hospitals,” according to a list of “Frequently Asked Questions” authored by the AG’s office. These include “a neonatal intensive care unit, obstetrics, emergency services, a trauma-designated emergency department, intensive care, general medical services, inpatient rehab services, inpatient and outpatient surgery, radiology and diagnostic services, cardiology services, and outpatient rehab.”  

In a recent interview, Kosman, who has reviewed documents on the AG’s website, said, “What jumped out at me was that Vanguard is not committing to keep certain facilities or divisions open. Their focus will be on remaining profitable by focusing on services such as heart surgery, not on pregnant moms. They are not committing to nursing levels. Why isn’t the DMC waiting until President Obama’s health care reform is in effect?  Wall Street makes money where Wall Street makes money. It sounds to me like the DMC is where some of it may be.”  

RN's on strike for patient care

Attorney Ron Glotta angrily asked during the forum, “How do you maximize profits? You do it by reducing wages, attacking unions, increasing charges, and limiting services. You take your profits out of the city of Detroit and put them in hedge funds. Money is coming in with President Obama’s new health care plan. That’s Vanguard’s motive. It’s not complicated.”  

Under Obama’s plan, for-profits will actually be at an advantage. Only non-profits will have to account in detail for the quality of care they render under recently-enacted stricter regulatory requirements for that sector.  

Vanguard takeover could endanger Hutzel premie unit

Attorney Benjamin earlier said, “We’re concerned that the deal doesn’t have enough guarantees for Detroiters . . . .Vanguard can close any of the DMC hospitals if the DMC board majority agrees. In the meantime, they can cut back on any unprofitable services, such as Hutzel Hospital’s premature infant unit, the largest in the state. That would cause infant mortality in Detroit, already the highest in the country, to increase even further.”  

During the forum, Benjamin raised the thorny question of Detroit Receiving Hospital (DRH), previously called Detroit General Hospital (DGH), the city’s only publicly-owned hospital. In 1980, after a three-year community battle to save DGH, it was privatized.   Continue reading

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No independent AG review of Vanguard

Bias: Former Cox-Duggan relationship, no independent review of Vanguard health systems

 State law charges Cox’s office with performing an independent review of the transfer of a non-profit to a for-profit before rendering an opinion. How independent that review has been is questionable. Cox worked for several years as an assistant prosecutor when DMC CEO Mike Duggan was Wayne County Prosecutor, but neither man has declared that as a potential conflict of interest. 

 Both ignored inquiries about that matter to their press representatives John Sellek and Tiffany Jones, respectively. 

Cox, who ran unsuccessfully in the Republican primary for governor this year, was endorsed by anti-abortionists. He was also the only Republican to openly support the anti-affirmative action Proposal 2. He has now come out in favor of Arizona’s anti-immigration law.  All these positions raise questions about how he will deal a matter involving health care for all. 

Additionally, Cox’s FAQ’s are startlingly cavalier about any independent review of Vanguard’s other health systems. 

 “Our office has interviewed DMC medical professionals and members of DMC’s Board of Trustees and management who visited Baptist Health System in St. Antonio, TX,” his office declares. “VHS has owned this system since 2003.  On the basis of these interviews and other publicly-available information, our office is not currently aware of any significant, negative factors.  Our office has not undertaken an independent review of VHS’s performance in other states. “  Continue reading

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Should Wall Street dictate provision of health care?

 

Health Care for All

Was DMC denied access to bond markets? 

DMC CEO Duggan has said the transfer to Vanguard is necessary because Wall Street turned its back when he tried to float bonds to finance upgrades of DMC facilities.

Ryan Beene writes for Crain’s Detroit Business, which has extensively covered the proposed transfer. Keith Crain, CEO of Crain’s Communications, Inc., sits on the DMC board. 

“The proposed deal to sell the Detroit Medical Center to Nashville-based Vanguard Health Systems was the product of more than a year’s worth of work by the DMC board of directors to secure the system’s future,” Beene reported in 2009.

 He quoted DMC board chairman Stephen D’Arcy, also vice-chairman of Price Waterhouse Coopers, who said the process began in early 2009 when the board needed to invest $200 million in Children’s Hospital of Michigan.

 D’Arcy told Beene there were not sufficient capital funds available for the CHM capital improvements. 

DMC’s 2009 consolidated financial reports contradict D’Arcy’s statement. Although the reports say the DMC had a deficit in unrestricted net assets of almost$178 million (improved from over $326 million in 2008), they also reported that funds for proposed capital improvements in 2010 were sufficient.  Continue reading

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Detroit fires expose criminality of DTE and Bing administration

 

Detroit house fire
By D’Artagnan Collier, Socialist Equality candidate, 5th district
DETROIT – Sept. 9 -The house fires that have swept through sections of Detroit Tuesday evening, destroying or damaging at least 85 homes and other structures, are a product of the actions of the Detroit city government and energy giant DTE. Decades of budget cutting have starved essential city services, such as fire protection, of needed funds. At the same time, DTE has neglected the upkeep of basic electrical infrastructure, focusing instead on raising utility rates and ruthlessly cutting people off from gas and electricity. 

In a press conference Wednesday Mayor Bing claimed the fires were simply a “natural disaster” that no one could have predicted or prepared for. This is a crude lie aimed at concealing the criminal actions of DTE–on whose corporate board Bing served for twenty years–and the Democratic Party, which subordinates the needs of the city’s working class residents to the profit interests of big business. 

D'Artagnan Collier

 This disaster was entirely predictable. The fires were largely caused by downed power lines, which fell in the face of high winds. The fires spread quickly, and efforts to contain it were hampered by the shutting down of nine stations, the layoff of hundreds of firefighters and the decommissioning of fire trucks due to budget cuts, with water pressure in hydrants low or nonexistent. Firefighters have warned of an impending disaster, saying the Fire Department needs at least another 200-300 firefighters to protect city residents. 

For its part, DTE completely ignored the signs of a potential catastrophe. One resident of the area around Van Dyke and 7 Mile, where at least 17 homes were destroyed, said she had been calling DTE for days to complain about a sparking wire. She was told she would be charged with a service call if she continued to phone the company, and when she complained of an impending fire, she was told to call 911. 

DTE spends millions on aerial flights, spying on the population–accusing it of “e nergy theft”–but does nothing to maintain power lines, cut overgrowth, and take other basic safety measures. If the company concludes that there is not an immediate danger, they don’t even bother to come out–unless it is a matter of cutting off utilities.  Continue reading

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First school day: Bobb abuses DPS students, parents, staff

 

Renaissance High students forced out before Bobb speaks, in center student shows suspension slip for accidentally having his ID badge backwards

NO STAFF, BILINGUAL TEACHERS, SPACE FOR SPECIAL NEEDS STUDENTS 

From School Board Member Elena Herrada
 
As a new member of the school board, I like my fellow board members went to school today for the first day back.  I spoke with students at Western High School who were sitting in the auditorium waiting. When I approached a large group of students, one of them said to me, are you Miss Vacancy? When the rest of them stopped laughing, they explained to me that next to their class schedule where a teacher’s name should be listed, the word “vacancy” appeared. There were rows of students sitting in the auditorium because their busses had not arrived to take them to VocTech, or because there was no teacher in the classroom.
 
In a meeting two weeks ago with the interim assistant superintendent over bilingual education, I learned that there were 151 vacancies for bilingual teachers. Indeed, when I spoke to students today, I translated for myself because many of the students I talked to did not speak English. The union president, Keith Johnson insisted that there are no bilingual teachers on layoff. I have met several in the last few weeks who are laid off, and many who took jobs in other places. Many more have retired. Continue reading
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Taser Death: Michael Ford of Livonia, Aug. 24

 

Michael Ford

From Electronic Village

Michael Ford,50, had been on life support since police used a taser on him back on August 14. He died on August 26 when his family consented to having him removed from life support.

Here is the story according to the Livonia Police department:

According to the issued statement, police were called to the 20000 block of Purlingbrook on a report of a disturbance about 11 p.m. Aug. 13. A man was playing loud music from his vehicle and nearly struck another car.  An unidentified officer spoke to an intoxicated man, identified as Ford, who was told to go back into his apartment because the complainant was not located.

About two hours later, at 1 a.m. Aug. 14, Livonia Police were called again to the same place on another report of loud music in the parking lot.

This time he was holding what appeared to be two knives, one in each hand, he was yelling and approaching the scout car. The officer retreated and awaited a back-up officer. When that officer arrived they approached Mr. Ford and ordered him to the ground as they had reason to believe he may still be armed,” the police statement said.

When Ford refused to comply, an unidentified Livonia officer deployed the Taser. Ford fell and hit his head, police said.

Ford’s cousin Ewayne Harrell said Ford had more injuries than falling and hitting his head after being jolted by a taser gun.

“(The police) beat him up. He had a ruptured spleen, a cracked pelvis and cracks in the front and back of his head. I don’t see how you can get all that from a Taser,” he said.

Harrell also disputed police statements made Tuesday, saying Ford did not have a knife and “was not on drugs.” Continue reading

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Family members seek answers after 31-year-old man Tasered during drug raid in Superior Township dies

By Lee Higgins, Ann Arbor.com

A Belleville man who was Tasered during a drug bust at his mother’s Superior Township home Friday  died less than two hours later at St. Joseph Mercy Hospital, family members said.

Pearlie Jackson says she was in a hospital waiting room, desperate for information about her 31-year-old son, Stanley Jackson Jr., when a doctor gave her the news.

He told her Stanley was “fussing and trying to get off the stretcher” in the emergency room, and his heart stopped “when they gave him medication to relax him,” she said.

“You’re telling me my son is gone!” she recalls screaming as she collapsed.

It’s unclear what caused the death of Stanley Jackson Jr., a former high school running back with no known medical problems. An autopsy was planned for this afternoon, and Michigan State Police detectives were investigating.

Jackson leaves behind numerous family members, including four children, ages 3 months to 12 years, his mother said. Doctors spent 40 minutes trying to revive him, she said.

A witness said he saw Stanley run inside his mother’s Heather Drive home after two Washtenaw County sheriff’s deputies and an undercover officer converged on the area about 4:45 p.m. Friday. Continue reading

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Detroiters, New Yorkers march for jobs, justice peace; build toward national march on Washington Oct. 2

Detroit march steps off Aug. 28 Photo from UAW website

 By Diane Bukowski

 DETROIT – The Aug. 28 “Jobs, Justice and Peace” march in Detroit was thousands strong, led by the United Auto Workers (UAW), the Farm Labor Organizing Committee (FLOC) and other unions, RainbowPUSH, the Moratorium NOW! coalition and numerous other community groups, the Martin Luther King High School marching band alongwith other young people, and progressive ministers.  

U.S. Rep. Maxine Waters (D-LA) speaks, with Rev. Jesse Jackson and UAW Pres. Bob King behind her

“We are about to spark a movement across America!” U.S. Congresswoman Maxine Waters (D-Los Angeles) told the crowd. “Detroit is the epicenter of what’s wrong with corporate greed. Wall Street has disinvested in our cities instead of putting people to work in public service jobs. They have stolen our pensions, torn down public housing, and taken the homes of working people who have been paying mortgages for 15, 20 and 30 years. They are destroying public education. Our children are not failing, THEY have failed our children. But we are not intimidated, we are going to take back Detroit, take back our cities, and take back America!”  

The march was a forceful display of solidarity against the banks
BAMN youth call for justice for Mumia, Aiyana Stanley-Jones

and corporations which have ruined the lives of millions across the world, and against the U.S. war machine, initiated finally by organizations with resources to build a movement. Speakers at the rally announced it is only the beginning. They said they are mobilizing for a massive march on Washington Oct. 2 sponsored by One Nation Working Together.  

UAW President Bob King laid out a new agenda for his union. 

 “We care about the unemployed, the senior citizens, the retirees, the children,” King said. “Our people are jobless because Wall Street has led the country into an economic crisis, and many of our leaders are morally bankrupt. They created the horrendous wars in Afghanistan and Iraq. Everybody here worked to elect President Barack Obama. But we made one mistake—we did not keep on marching. If you don’t keep marching you start losing. We must march until we die, we will march until we win!”   

MECAWI calls for MORATORIUM NOW!

Jackson called for the rebuilding of Detroit and cities across the country, and for a national moratorium on home foreclosures.  

“There are thousands of vacant lots here in Detroit,” he said. “We need to train our youth to rebuild and rehab homes instead of tearing them down. Detroit is a food desert—not one major supermarket chain is in the city. They have cut public transportation. People on welfare can’t afford to own cars legally; the city has the highest insurance rates in the country. Detroit, do not give up your spirit, do not live below your privilege! There are no George Wallaces, no Bull Connors, no water cannons and no dogs to stop us!”   

FLOC Pres. Baldemar Velasquez calls for boycott of Chase Bank

Baldemar Valesquez, president of FLOC, said their union will lead a national divestment campaign of Chase Bank beginning Sept. 7, asking consumers to close their Chase accounts and cancel Chase credit cards. 

FLOC’s website says, “JP Morgan Chase is one of the lead banks in a consortium of lenders that provides $498 million dollars in credit to Reynolds American, one of the largest tobacco companies in the US. While Reynolds American and JP Morgan Chase make billions, tobacco farmworkers continue to suffer serious human rights abuses in the fields. Although Reynolds does not directly employ these farmworkers, they determine the terms for contract growers which directly affects the living and working conditions of farmworkers.”   

SEIU delegation; marcher calls for national public works program

Velasquez said, “Our workers have the right not to die in the tobacco fields, like dogs under the trees.” He also called on U.S. companies to “stop exporting jobs, and exploiting imported workers.”  

Al Garrett, President of Michigan Council 25 of the American Federation of State, County and Municipal Employees (AFSCME), said his union will commit all its resources and people to the Oct. 2 mobilization.  

“We’re ready to march on the Coleman Young Center, the Guardian Building, the state capitol, and Washington, D.C!” he cried out. “We are 1.4 million strong across the country and we will be there!” 

Atty. Vanessa Fluker demands end to foreclosures

Attorney Vanessa Fluker called for those present to join a march against the Bank of America in downtown Detroit Sept. 1, to save the home of Michelle Hart and her disabled mother. She noted that mortgage companies, which are insured by Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, make more money by evicting people than they do by keeping them in their homes.  

“Bail out the banks, not the people!” she demanded.  

Democratic gubernatorial candidate, Lansing Mayor Virg Bernero, and his running mate, Southfield Mayor Brenda Lawrence, also excited the crowd with their appearance. The two are running on a progressive “Main Street, not Wall Street” platform targeting Republican candidate Rick Snyder, who is a millionaire businessman financing his own campaign.  

Award-winning Martin Luther King, Jr. band

The Democratic state convention was happening at Cobo Hall the same weekend. Among its controversial aspects was the refusal of Democratic Party chair Mark Brewer to allow a resolution sponsored by the 14th District to hit the floor. It called for the removal of Detroit Public Schools czar Robert Bobb because of the massive school closings, lay-offs, and huge debt that he has sponsored during the current state take-over of the district. 

Many delegates also decried the party’s selection of candidate for

Marchers call for single-payer health care

the State Supreme Court. A contingent at the rally carried “Judge Thomas” signs, marking the second time that Wayne County District Court Judge Deborah Thomas has tried unsuccessfully to get the nomination. Thomas led a long campaign against the county’s racially unbalanced jury system, which results in juries that are mainly composed of suburbanites judging defendants who are primarily Detroiters. 

 

 

PROTESTERS TELL BOA: STOP EVICTION, JOIN HARDEST HIT PROGRAM  

Protesters demand BOA halt eviction of Michelle Hart and her disabled mother

By Diane Bukowski 

DETROIT — Dozens of demonstrators, many called out by Attorney Vanessa Fluker’s  announcement at the Aug. 28 Jobs, Peace and Justice march, hit the Bank of America’s downtown Detroit headquarters Aug 31 . They demanded a stop to the pending eviction of Michelle Hart and her mother, and that BOA and other lenders sign on to Michigan’s $228 million Hardest Hit Homeowners’ Program, meant to  help unemployed workers. 

“Michelle Hart and her elderly mother face imminent foreclosure and eviction from their home in Southfield, Mich., by Countrywide and Bank of America,” Fluker said. “The bank refuses to modify Ms. Hart’s usurious, adjustable-rate mortgage, even though it signed a binding Consent Agreement with the Attorney General’s office on Oct. 6, 2008, to modify loans.  Ms. Hart has fought in court for a year and a half now to get BOA and Countrywide to abide by the Consent Agreement and modify her loan.  But the bank refuses and is forging full steam ahead to evict her and her mother, who suffers from pancreatic cancer.  BOA would rather toss them out on the street than negotiate a loan modification because of  Ms. Hart’s job loss and lower wages.”  

Attorney Jerome Goldberg added that  the “Help for Hardest Hit Homeowners” program that provides over $282 million in federal monies to Michigan to keep unemployed workers in their homes is failing because neither Bank of America, Countrywide or any other major lender has signed on to participate in the program.        

The march was temporarily disrupted by a lone cop who took it upon himself to snatch away a bullhorn from one of the protesters. City Councilwoman JoAnn Watson joined the march at that point and retrieved the bullhorn from the officer. The march then resumed, with more  protesters joining in. 

The Moratorium NOW! Coalition, along with the Michigan Emergency Committee Against War & Injustice, holds weekly organizing meetings every Monday at 7:00 p.m. at 5920 Second Avenue in Detroit.  All are welcome.                                                                                                    

 Moratorium NOW! Coalition to Stop Foreclosures, Evictions and Utility Shutoffs  Phone: (313) 887-4344  moratorium@moratorium-mi.org;  www.moratorium-mi.org

NEW YORK RALLY OF UNEMPLOYED BUILDS FOR OCTOBER 2 MARCH ON WASHINGTON

U.S. Rep. Charles Rangel speaks at NYC rally for unemployed Sept. 1

 From One Nation Working Together  

September 1, 2010 – New York. – Heeding a call to put New Yorkers back to work, hundreds of unemployed people and their supporters rallied at the Federal Hall Building across from the New York Stock Exchange in lower Manhattan at 11:00 a.m. this morning to demand that city, state and federal government representatives make getting people back to work their number one priority. 

The rally was sponsored by New Yorkers who have joined the One Nation Working Together movement, a coalition of more than 170 human and civil rights organizations, environmental, ethnic, labor, peace, youth, student and faith-based organizations that are bringing hundreds of thousands to Washington, D.C. on October 2 to demand the same. 

“New York City’s official unemployment rate is nearly 10 percent, but we know that it’s higher than that,” said Hazel Dukes, president of the NAACP New York State Conference. “We need to go to Washington on 10.2.10 and demand as One Nation Working Together that our officials help put everyone back to work NOW.”  Continue reading

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