31 Aralık 2012 Pazartesi

WGHP reports City's assertions of cause for arrested man's hospitalization unchecked

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UPDATE: (7:27 P.M.) In a fine example of a prompt and direct response, WGHP has replied that the assertion had not been substantiated beyond the police press release and they have updated their story to reflect that.

GREENSBORO, NC -- After an alleged struggle with Greensboro police that sent a man to the hospital, the police department issued a press release that attribute to unnamed "medical officials" a determination that the man had a preexisting condition that contributed to his need for hospitalization. This is how they put it:
Zenon San Martn Ramirez, 52, is in Moses Cone Hospital following surgery after EMS personnel determined he had dangerously low blood pressure when treating him for an abrasion to the face he received while resisting arrest. Upon arrival at the hospital, medical officials discovered Ramirez was suffering from a pre-existing [sic] medical condition that may have been aggravated by the encounter.  [Emphasis added.]
WGHP then regurgitated the assertion of a preexisting condition word-for-word:
Ramirez was taken to Moses Cone Hospital and medical officials said he was suffering from a pre-existing [sic] medical condition that may have been aggravated by the struggle. [Emphasis added.]
Did "medical officials" say this to WGHP? Or did a Greensboro Police Department employee write in a press release that medical officials said that and did WGHP just copy and paste third-hand unattributed information into their story without actually substantiating it? I've asked WGHP to comment and will update this post when I hear from them.

 

New council representative Wilkins' first order of business: crumble like a cookie

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[UPDATE: Wilkins says he took down his blog on the advice of a "political consultant."]

GREENSBORO, NC -- Tony Wilkins was sworn in to City Council yesterday as a replacement for the departing district five representative Trudy Wade. Tony then promptly proceeded to delete his blog.

That's pretty craven... and dumb.

I endorsed Tony partially based on the fact that he was a blogger. When council members started to question his character during the nominating process for some of his blog posts, councilor Nancy Vaughan came to his defense and said that the fact Tony kept his blog up despite the heat showed his character.

Once he was officially ensconced though, he took it down and made fools of both of us. And it was a dumb thing to do, because his blog is archived here, so he hasn't accomplished anything other than quickly causing us to question his wisdom. Maybe I should have known better.

(Thanks to Sam Hieb for bringing our attention to the missing blog.)

5 days and counting

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Just over five days until the launch of the new Greensboro 101, on 1.01 at 1:01 P.M.

The process started with needing to make Greensboro 101 better suited for mobile devices, like phones and tablets. In examining how to do that, I recognized that many of the principles and means of interfacing with mobile devices could be used to enhance the desktop/laptop experience too. The results is something that looks and acts like an app no mater what the device. It's a web app. It looks and behaves a little differently at different screen sizes to create a native experience for the device being used, but it always has the same, hopefully intuitive, pathways to information.

I think you'll see Greensboro in a whole new light and in a way that is so easy it's fun.

It has been a real pleasure delving into this, even with it's maddening moments of frustration or schedule-busting detours while I learned how to do something previously unknown. Those moments are fewer and farther between than ever though, and my advancements in troubleshooting and efficient learning have made tackling the unexpected challenges more productive than ever.

As building was underway, new ides kept popping up. Some were so intriguing that I stopped what was underway to design and code the new idea. Other ideas remain on the to-do list and will have to be gotten to after launch.

Well, the music's good and there are two solid hours until leftovers, so I better get back to it, I only have five more days.

The beauty of precision

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GREENSBORO, NC — As the launch of the new Greensboro 101 approaches (tomorrow, 1.01 at 1:01 P.M.), I am performing some final testing and fixing the bugs.

There is something beautiful about creating with computer code, but such beauty isn't easy. It is unrelenting in its demand for perfect precision. A single comma in place of a single period can, and does, render thousands of lines of code completely inoperable. Find it and fix it though, and it's like piloting a homemade spaceship -- exhilarating and satisfying.

As much as I appreciate and respect precision in writing, imprecise thinking rendered in the written word doesn't suffer the same immediate and certain punishment as does imprecise coding. Presume a condition that isn't true in computer code and things break in a very noticeable way. The language arts have no such throttle on precision. Nor should they, human language has its own beauty in nuance, but anyone who has scripted code for a while can't help but start to notice imprecise thinking in other forms of writing and be influenced because of it.


Tchaikovsky's 'In Memoriam'

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There's always something more lurking beneath the surface. There must be some reason, other than me being emotionally unstable, that I cry every time I see The Nutcracker. Those vertiginous harp cadenzas, the longing sigh of Clara's pas de deux with Hans-Peter and the brooding B minor in the cellos during the Waltz of the Flowers get me every time. But Tchaikovsky initially loathed the idea of the ballet and found it impossible to commit any musical thoughts to paper. But something radically changed and, like The Queen of Spades and the 'Pathétique' Symphony, the shadow of death hangs over the score. While it's important not to forget the surface, Tchaikovsky's soaring melodies demand further attention.

It's the basis of my article in the Review section of today's Guardian. You can read it on page 15 of the review section. Or you can click here to read it online.

27 Aralık 2012 Perşembe

Winston-Salem City Council will consider resolution against Citizens United

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Tony Ndege of Occupy Winston-Salem addresses city council.

Winston-Salem City Council member James Taylor Jr. said he has filed a request to put a resolution calling for a Constitutional Amendment to reverse the US Supreme Court's 2010 Citizens United decision on council's agenda.

Council members heard from nine people requesting the resolution, and organizers said Occupy Winston-Salem and Democracy North Carolina have collected signatures from at least 800 people in support of the move.

"Tonight we're asking you to take a stand for your constituents," said Debra Demske of Winston-Salem after mentioning the role of corporate campaign money in local elections.

Tony Ndege of Occupy Winston-Salem said the request was timed to coincide with the one-year anniversary of the group's first public meeting outside City Hall. Ndege said organizers have had promising discussions with council members Molly Leight and Derwin Montgomery, and pledged to mobilize large numbers of citizens in support of the resolution when it comes up for a vote in January.

One council member has remained opposed to the initiative since it was first floated last summer.

"I am publicly in accord with the idea of reversing the Citizens United decision," Councilman Dan Besse said before tonight's meeting. "I think it was a badly decided decision. However, I think that is a personal position. My constituents don't send me to city council to work on my personal agenda. I'm here to work on infrastructure and services that the city's responsible for."

The US Supreme Court ruled in the 2010 Citizens United decision that the government cannot restrict campaign finance expenditures by groups operating independently of candidate committees. The decision gave rise to so-called "super PACs," which can spend unlimited amounts of money airing negative ads against political candidates.

The Winston-Salem residents pushing for council action on Citizens United received outside support from Barbara Carrano, with the Peoples Coalition Against Citizens United, who helped lead the effort to persuade the Greensboro City Council to pass a similar resolution, and from Melissa Price Kromm, director of NC Voters for Clean Elections.

"Citizens United has created a huge imbalance in our country," Carrano said. "I believe that all that has gone wrong in America is directly or indirectly connected with corporate greed. Citizens United makes it legal for money to equal speech in this country. That is wrong."

Kim Thore of Winston-Salem told council about her experience working as a senior manager for a bank and how she decided to quit the corporate track when she was asked to contribute to the bank's political action committee and realized that her own money would be advancing a corporate agenda based only on profit. 

"Those funds would support legislation that would lead to the mortgage crisis," she said.

Will Cox said corporate money in politics is relevant to Winston-Salem because it started as a company town that was virtually run by RJ Reynolds Tobacco Co., and members of the Reynolds, Hanes and Gray families took turns serving as mayor. He said the current council is better than that.

Kromm said she is confident the Winston-Salem City Council will pass the resolution, joining 12 other municipalities that have already done so, including Greensboro, Raleigh, Durham, Chapel Hill and Asheville. 

"The Congress has been bought," she said. "Every state legislature has been bought. The only recourse the people have is to their local city councils for redress."

Forsyth County Dems discuss how to rebuild the party

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NC Sen.-elect Earline Parmon (left) visits with Judge Denise Hartsfield (center) and Judge Camille Banks Payne before a panel discussion at the Forsyth County Democratic Party headquarters.

North Carolina Democrats face a conundrum: While Democratic trend lines look increasingly favorable for the party with progressive-leaning people moving into the state, a growing Hispanic population and steady urbanization, the Republican Party is ascendant.

After seizing control of the General Assembly in 2010, the Republicans took the governor’s office and lieutenant governor’s office in the recent election, and a conservative Supreme Court judge backed by Republican donors has declined to recuse himself from ruling on controversial redistricting plans Republican lawmakers have used to consolidate control.

Forsyth County Democratic Women hosted a lunchtime panel at party headquarters to discuss how to regroup after such bruising losses. Speakers included NC Sen.-elect Earline Parmon, NC Rep.-elect Evelyn Terry and Forsyth County Democratic Party Chair Susan Campbell, among others.

Judge Denise Hartsfield, a Forsyth County district court judge and the moderator of the discussion set the tone in her characterization of Parmon’s relative power as a freshman senator in the minority party.

“Earline, you’re about to go into a war, for all intents and purposes,” Hartsfield said. “You’ve got to have your war clothes on because you’re going into a war where you are a minority in every sense of that word. Not just because you’re a woman, not just because you’re black, but because you are one of the few Democrats.” 

Terry, who was elected to represent NC House District 71 following the announced retirement of Rep. Larry Womble, said she knows she’ll be at a disadvantage as a Democrat. 

“With a super majority of hateful people, I recognize what the numbers look like,” she said. “We’re going to have to be very vigilant. Obviously, when you look at what we’re facing, just to be able to legislate with this session. The deals are already done.” 

Terry said Democratic lawmakers will have to leverage relationships with constituents to be effective. 

“The reality in my view is that in order to be able to do what we have to do for our constituents here at home and for others who have like minds throughout the state is to be very vigilant with our connectivity,” she said. “We’ve got to communicate. We’ve got to know that you’re there so that when we’re speaking the minority’s point of view and philosophy we can call up the numbers when it’s necessary.” 

Campbell said the party is attempting to build an infrastructure of support for Democratic lawmakers. 

“We’d love to have some watchdog groups,” she said. “We’ve talked about ways to communicate. Like how is, when Earline has issues and Evelyn has issues that they want us to know about, how do we find out? That’s the infrastructure that we want to set up with the communication. How do we get you upset about what they’re upset about so if they want you to make phone calls, then you go make phone calls. If they want you to write letters, then that’s what you’re going to do.” 

The party is also trying to build capacity at its base. 

“Each precinct, you’ve got stuff that you care about together,” Campbell said. “And so as a group, one of the precinct chairs he and his whole precinct were going to go to the school board meetings to talk about the superintendent [search]. As a group that’s an issue that they were going to take up. There are neighborhood issues, there are ward issues, there are things that you guys care about together, and have a little grassroots something going on.” 

Terry alluded to the disconnect between the demographic trends favorable to Democrats and the Republican ascendancy in state governement. 

“The Democratic Party won seven of 23 targeted districts that the party targeted, but when I looked at the number of folks that we lost in those targeted districts was less than 8,000,” Terry said. “Do you understand what I’m saying? So the reality is we’ve got to get a little more sophisticated about how we do our politics and how we do what we’re doing with people we want to elect into these offices. We have really got to drill down into it. And we have got to learn how to articulate the message that resonates with folks who have dropped out. 

“The powerful in gray suits may have the numbers down there, but we have this great big forum that we can utilize to communicate our message and keep it energized throughout this two-year period,” Terry continued. “We may not win on one vote, or one issue I should say, but we can communicate the message and use every medium that is available to communicate that.” 

Anne Wilson, one of the panelists, urged party members to write letters to the Winston-Salem Journal and the Chronicle to keep issues before the public and encourage people who care about the same things. 

Panelists did not discuss leadership development, but the challenge of succession planning was highlighted by a question by Eric Ellison, a former member of the Forsyth County Board of Elections, about why the county party does not currently have a Young Democrats auxiliary. Campbell said party leaders have been looking for someone to chair the group, which is open to all Democrats under the age of 40. 

Parmon said that in light of the recent school shooting in Newtown, Conn., the first bill she plans to file will be to outlaw guns in parks. She also plans to file a bill to make attendance in schools compulsory, and to increase the age at which young people can be charged with a felony from 16 to 18. 

“These are the kinds of issues that everyone should support them because it’s good for Forsyth County and it’s good for North Carolina," she said. "So we do have the issues that should keep people in arms and involved and active. So look for us to come out with bills. And I’m going to go to the media every time they don’t let us hear them in committees. Because that’s what’s going to happen: They will not even allow us to have these bills heard in committees." 

Parmon said Republican members have already drafted a bill to cut the state’s unemployment insurance program. She said the second bill expected from Republican lawmakers would be to require voters to present picture ID before voting. The General Assembly passed a voter ID bill this past year but were unable to muster the votes to override a veto by Democratic Gov. Bev Perdue. 

“Now, I’m enraged,” Parmon said. “And I’m going to stay positive and professional, but like someone said, ‘Show up, stand up,’ and like Larry Womble said, ‘If necessary, act up.’ It’s coming to the time when we cannot just be prepared talkers and listeners because we’re talking about our very lives.” 

Campbell said she hopes that 2014, a congressional mid-term election will be a reversal of 2010, when Republicans made great strides by mobilizing their base while Democrats were complacent. 

“And you think: Okay, if it happened to us in 2010, it can happen to them in 2014," she said. "People were upset. They were angry and they were upset, and we were going, ‘Oh, we got the president, la-di-da-di-da.’ And we didn’t get out and vote, and they did. So we’ve got to flip that. And that’s our challenge. How do we keep people upset and knowing what’s going on?”

No resolution in campaign finance investigations

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Frye
While reviewing back issues of YES! Weekly for a year-end compendium of the biggest stories we reported in Forsyth County in 2012, I stumbled across a pair of stories (1, 2) about NC Board of Elections investigations of Democratic political committees.

In one case, the campaign committee of Susan Frye, who was elected clerk of superior court in 2010, was accused of filing a "false and frivolous report" because campaign treasurer Chris Church filed a report for the period immediately before the election indicating that the candidate had raised and spent no money. In fact, the campaign had raised and spent about $15,000. It's critically important that candidates file accurate information in a timely manner so that citizens can see who is financing campaigns and assess whether acceptance of the funds is likely to sway the elected official to make decisions that might be in the interest of political patrons rather than the public whom they have pledged to serve.

In the other case, a political action committee called the Winston-Salem Black PAC drew large contributions from prominent donors such as Winston-Salem Mayor Allen Joines, the father of US Sen. Kay Hagan and Winston-Salem Chronicle publisher Ernie Pitt for the purpose of promoting Democratic candidates during the 2008 election, and then apparently misappropriated the funds — based on cash-on-hand balances mysteriously changing from one report to the next.

Considering that we reported on these investigations in May and July, I thought that it would be worthwhile to alert readers as to how they were ultimately resolved. My inquiry was premature, it seems.

"Both of those are still currently under investigation," said Amy Strange, a compliance specialist at the NC Board of Elections.

"I don't have a time frame," she added. "The time frame is usually dependent on how quickly we receive information we are seeking. At this point we are still seeking information from the committees and people associated with the committees."

That's right: All the people under investigation need to do is stall, and the investigations will remain open indefinitely. Perhaps the complainants will eventually get tired of waiting and give up.

Citizens, take note: The board of elections typically prioritizes cases that have been the subject of scrutiny in the news media and have generated significant public interest. The squeaky-wheel-gets-the-grease concept is operative. Candidates and the highly compensated consultants who work for them know that the board of elections is under-staffed and under-resources. They know they're more likely than not to get away with flouting election law by filing incomplete and late reports. 

Flouting the law, if it's not simply a matter of sloppiness, can serve the purpose of blindsiding opponents by making them think the candidate's committee hasn't raised much money when in fact it has. It can hide efforts to shift money around and secretly pay third parties to carry out deceptive electioneering efforts that manipulate voters' lack of sophistication.

And there's little will in the General Assembly to tighten up sanctions for violating the law or to provide adequate funding to the board of elections so staff can effectively do their jobs because, notwithstanding that these two particular investigations target Democratic committees, both parties are equal-opportunity offenders.

It's up to you, citizens, to demand the kind of honest and honorable government you deserve.

PHOTOS: Two arrested protesting deportation at Sen. Hagan's office

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Two immigration activists connected to the NC Dream Team were arrested Thursday for refusing to leave US Sen. Kay Hagan's Greensboro office. The two women were protesting the scheduled deportation of single mother Maria Juana Perez, pictured in the center (in a chair wearing a dark coat).

Perez, who lives in Greensboro, has two young daughters (also pictured) who are US citizens. She was arrested for driving without a license and has been in the country since 2000.

Over 20 supporters, including her sister (the woman in blue seated right) assembled at Hagan's office, some meeting with her staff and others holding banners outside. Perez is scheduled for deportation to Mexico on Dec. 27, two days after Christmas — which coincidentally is her birthday.

The two activists who were arrested around 6:50 pm did so as an act of civil disobedience while supporters and reporters looked on. Below, Elisa Benitez can be seen in red through the window in Hagan's office while a police officer (in yellow) talks to the other Dreamer being arrested. More coverage in the next issue of YES! Weekly, available in print and online Wednesday.

Photos and reporting by Eric Ginsburg.

Tchaikovsky's 'In Memoriam'

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There's always something more lurking beneath the surface. There must be some reason, other than me being emotionally unstable, that I cry every time I see The Nutcracker. Those vertiginous harp cadenzas, the longing sigh of Clara's pas de deux with Hans-Peter and the brooding B minor in the cellos during the Waltz of the Flowers get me every time. But Tchaikovsky initially loathed the idea of the ballet and found it impossible to commit any musical thoughts to paper. But something radically changed and, like The Queen of Spades and the 'Pathétique' Symphony, the shadow of death hangs over the score. While it's important not to forget the surface, Tchaikovsky's soaring melodies demand further attention.

It's the basis of my article in the Review section of today's Guardian. You can read it on page 15 of the review section. Or you can click here to read it online.

20 Aralık 2012 Perşembe

Newspaper editor on website fiasco: "My soup's cold."

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GREENSBORO, NC --
Reviews have not been good. The paper takes a beating all week about its functionality-challenged website and in his Sunday column editor Jeff Gauger writes about cold soup. During the Amendment One debate he wrote about blue yard signs. Right before the election he wrote about grits.
-- Sam Hieb
Sam is right, since arriving from Ohio this spring, News & Record editor Jeff Gauger's hokum has been an insult to the people of Greensboro. We are a city of five institutions of higher learning, two of them historically black, of inspiring participation in the civil rights movement and of national renown for our blogging and citizens media. Quaker influences still resonate as we stake a claim to a progressiveness that separates us from most of the rest of North Carolina. Our economic history is of a city built on a triumvirate of tobacco, textiles and furniture powerhouses and the subsequent challenges of having that base disintegrate in quick order by globalization. Our present is about us keeping our heads above water while we remain ever hopeful of revitalization. That's Greensboro.

Grits, Duke blue v. Carolina blue and our soup not hot enough for his liking? Gauger sounds like he's writing to his meemaw back in Akron while passing through, not to the people of his new hometown of whom he has apparently yet to gain any significant understanding, insight or respect.

News & Record editorial dances the Ol' Greensboro Okee Doke™

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GREENSBORO, NC -- Fast on the heels of complimenting the News & Record for not falling for some press release baloney, I am reminded by George Hartzman that the local daily still has a long way to go in tuning their B.S. meter.

George points to this claim from an unsigned (how quaint) editorial at the News & Record regarding funding for a proposed performing arts center in Greensboro:
"They have private pledges totaling $20 million."
That has come nowhere near being substantiated to any thinking person's satisfaction. It is an undocumented assertion.

In fact, the task force pushing the project has refused to identify any donors or otherwise provide any substantiation to their claims that they have $20 million to contribute to this project — as reported in the News & Record.

The anonymous writer(s?) of the editorial are trying to lead Greensboro in a whirl of the Ol' Greensboro Okee Doke™ and we're not going to dance along, thank you.

WGHP reports City's assertions of cause for arrested man's hospitalization unchecked

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UPDATE: (7:27 P.M.) In a fine example of a prompt and direct response, WGHP has replied that the assertion had not been substantiated beyond the police press release and they have updated their story to reflect that.

GREENSBORO, NC -- After an alleged struggle with Greensboro police that sent a man to the hospital, the police department issued a press release that attribute to unnamed "medical officials" a determination that the man had a preexisting condition that contributed to his need for hospitalization. This is how they put it:
Zenon San Martn Ramirez, 52, is in Moses Cone Hospital following surgery after EMS personnel determined he had dangerously low blood pressure when treating him for an abrasion to the face he received while resisting arrest. Upon arrival at the hospital, medical officials discovered Ramirez was suffering from a pre-existing [sic] medical condition that may have been aggravated by the encounter.  [Emphasis added.]
WGHP then regurgitated the assertion of a preexisting condition word-for-word:
Ramirez was taken to Moses Cone Hospital and medical officials said he was suffering from a pre-existing [sic] medical condition that may have been aggravated by the struggle. [Emphasis added.]
Did "medical officials" say this to WGHP? Or did a Greensboro Police Department employee write in a press release that medical officials said that and did WGHP just copy and paste third-hand unattributed information into their story without actually substantiating it? I've asked WGHP to comment and will update this post when I hear from them.

 

New council representative Wilkins' first order of business: crumble like a cookie

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[UPDATE: Wilkins says he took down his blog on the advice of a "political consultant."]

GREENSBORO, NC -- Tony Wilkins was sworn in to City Council yesterday as a replacement for the departing district five representative Trudy Wade. Tony then promptly proceeded to delete his blog.

That's pretty craven... and dumb.

I endorsed Tony partially based on the fact that he was a blogger. When council members started to question his character during the nominating process for some of his blog posts, councilor Nancy Vaughan came to his defense and said that the fact Tony kept his blog up despite the heat showed his character.

Once he was officially ensconced though, he took it down and made fools of both of us. And it was a dumb thing to do, because his blog is archived here, so he hasn't accomplished anything other than quickly causing us to question his wisdom. Maybe I should have known better.

(Thanks to Sam Hieb for bringing our attention to the missing blog.)

Do you know what the City of Greensboro needs?

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GREENSBORO, NC — Thinking a little about yesterday's question for incumbent city council members of what they can say he or she has specifically done to increase local government transparency and public access, I asked myself what would I do. Here's what I came up with, and I offer it as a head start for sitting council representatives who may want to have a good answer to my question during next year's elections.

The City of Greensboro needs an ombudsman.

The ombudsman will be a citizens' advocate employed by the taxpayers, working in city hall with great independence from but intricate familiarity with and access to city government; someone whose job it is to navigate the bureaucracy on behalf of citizens whose needs and interests may have some friction with other city employees or elected officials or who otherwise find themselves dissatisfied with the city's response to them through normal channels.

The ombudsman would have two primary areas of focus:

Records Requests

The ombudsman would:
  1. Be a single point of contact for all records requests — stay on top of them, make sure they get to the right people, are explained precisely with regular reminders to city employees of what the law demands of those in possession of requested records.
  2. Monitor records requests for timely and complete fulfillment.
  3. Instruct and guide city staff when responses to records requests are deficient.
  4. Advocate for citizens when records are delayed or denied. He or she would know the law, maybe even be a lawyer, so that he or she can make cogent appeals for the release of records denied by the legal departments. 
  5. Escalate denied, delayed or inadequately completed requests to City Council, where he or she would advocate for citizens' requests on behalf of the citizens at public meetings as agenda items on which council can make formal and authoritative decisions.
Unsatisfied Citizens

The ombudsman would:
  1. Be a resource for dissatisfied citizens who are unable to get adequate resolution to their questions or problems with city government through normal channels.
  2. Be an independent evaluator of the City's responses to unsatisfied customers; to encourage and advocate for a more satisfactory response from the City on behalf of citizens.
  3. If, in consultation with the citizen, they determine there is some specific action the city could take that staff cannot or will not authorize, bring the issue before City Council, where he or she would advocate for the citizen on behalf of the citizen at public meetings as an agenda item.
The ombudsman would be the primary person responsible for records requests and a backstop for other types of complaints and frustration. Let the city's customer service and departmental employees continue to handle problems and complaints to the best of their abilities, but for the most difficult and seemingly unsolvable customer problems, the ombudsman would be there to take the side of the people and work on their behalf.

That's my idea.

16 Aralık 2012 Pazar

City not meeting records goal, media getting faster response than public

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The spirit with which public officials work to comply with the law is as important as the law itself.
— North Carolina Attorney General Roy Cooper on public records law

GREENSBORO, NC — State law demands that public records be produced "as promptly as possible." The city of Greensboro's records request training manual advises:
Goal is to fulfill all requests for records within 2 business days
Something has gone awry.

2012 City of Greensboro records request average response times (days)
(Response times are in business days)

According to city records, reporters from traditional news organizations receive records from the city faster than other citizens but neither group is getting them, on average, within the City's goal or within what would be reasonably considered to be the legally mandated "as promptly as possible." For records requests from January 1, 2012 through December 1, 2012, these are the average response times:
Media requester: 6.4 working days
Other citizens: 8.7 working days
Some records requests have gone unfilled for months. Here are a few examples from 2012*:
  • 23 weeks, 4 days:
    Request by Don Patterson of the News & Record for something identified as "Landport project."
  • 24 weeks, 2 days:
    Request by blogger Kieth Brown, also for "Landport project."
  • 39 weeks, 2 days:
    Request by William Hill for "Law enforcement/off duty arrests."
  • 4 weeks, 1 day:
    Request by this blogger for "Emails that reference phone conversation with mayor."
  • 8 weeks, 1 day:
    Request by George Hartzman for "Water/Sewer trust fund."
  • 12 weeks, 2 days:
    Request by Ben Holder for "James Hinson info, directives, voicemails, etc."
  • 2 weeks, 1 day:
    A request by Travis Fain of the News & Record for "Jordan Lake Rules request."
  • 13 weeks, 3 days:
    A request by "D. Unknown" for "Latin Kings email search."
  • 4 weeks, 4 days:
    A request by Yes! Weekly's Eric Ginsberg for "Police officer information."
  • 4 weeks, 2 days:
    A request by James Gibson for "Occupy Greensboro."
Keep in mind, as I know from experience, these are the periods until the city closed the request, which does not always mean it was fulfilled. If the City determines that they have given you all the information they are going to give you, even if it is incomplete, a request will be marked closed.


* The quoted descriptions of these requests are as the City reported them, not as they were worded by the requester.

A city revenue source dries up

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The North Carolina Supreme Court has upheld the law that bans video internet sweepstakes  — what used to be video poker until the state outlawed video poker and the heartless fucktards who think steeling from people is a legitimate business changed the software so that the games were no longer poker but "sweepstakes ". Good for the judges. (Opinion here.)

These games are horribly misrepresented to the people upon whom they prey. Nobody plays them for "entertainment," as the industry claimed. People play them because they think they might win a lot of money when all that happens is they end up losing money. Of course, the odds are never revealed, even though, as the industry admits, the outcomes are predetermined before you even sit down to play.

If this was any other kind of consumer product, it would be banned as fraudulent and the operators jailed as thieves.

Some discussion had occurred with Greensboro City Council about possibly using licensing fees from the operations of these machines to help solve the perplexing funding problem of a proposed downtown performing arts center. Obviously, that's not going to happen now, making the financial picture for the PAC even murkier.

PHOTO: FLOC supporters rally at Kangaroo

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A coalition of about 30 supporters of the Farm Labor Organizing Committee, or FLOC, rallied outside of the Kangaroo on the corner of Cone Boulevard and Yanceyville Street in Greensboro on Monday. Members of Jobs with Justice, the Greensboro Industrial Workers of the World and Cakalak Thunder joined the Beloved Community Center and FLOC to encourage Kangaroo to publicly ask Reynolds American to meet the farmworkers' demands. 

Kangaroo representatives have told the Beloved Community Center and FLOC that it privately asked Reynolds to meet with the union, FLOC organizer Justin Flores said, but Kangaroo refused a visit to see the conditions of farmworkers in the state and hasn't made any public statement. 


Supporters chanted "workers rights are human rights" and waved red union flags before a smaller contingent of supporters delivered a letter to the Kangaroo store manager. The letter requested that the company publicly tell Reynolds that its customers are concerned about the rights of farmworkers FLOC represents and urge an agreement. 

Photo and story by Eric Ginsburg

A short response to another school shooting

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I posted this short response (below) to the school massacre in Connecticut on Facebook and it received more traction than any of my other "status updates" this year, so I thought it might be worth reposting here as well: 

Friends — as we reflect on the massacre that happened today, let's remember a few things. As my friend Jodie said, "The violence in our society moves far beyond someone being crazy and snapping one day," or as Chris put it, everyone is asking how and not why. This issue is not just about gun control, it's also about severe cuts to mental health resources, systemic violence and more. We want the same things — to do what we can to prevent things like this from happening again — but let's strive to come up with holistic solutions that don't just scapegoat one aspect of this tragedy.

I've been thinking about this a lot over the weekend, reflecting on the ways we talk about different tragedies and some are elevated above others (and particularly the role the media plays in this), gun control and cuts to mental health programs. I watched the President tear up as he talked about the senseless violence, and couldn't help but think that this is the same President who backs drone attacks that have killed over 150 children in Pakistan alone.

I talked to my mom for a long time about how it makes her feel — a teacher in a Massachusetts charter school — and the lack of safety and appreciation for the educators there. Though it wouldn't have impacted this case, last night one of her friends said that people should be charged as an accessory to murder when their guns are taken by others to shoot people. Maybe.

More cuts in mental health-related programs are coming here, and one article about dealing with violent kids with mental health issues has been rapidly circulating online today. While I don't claim to have the solutions, I firmly believe what I wrote a few days ago (above). Meaningful, thoughtful public dialogue on these issues is lacking, and we're all worse off for it. We must take into account the ways that this isn't an isolated incident and must not be convinced there is a simplistic solution.

Tchaikovsky's 'In Memoriam'

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There's always something more lurking beneath the surface. There must be some reason, other than me being emotionally unstable, that I cry every time I see The Nutcracker. Those vertiginous harp cadenzas, the longing sigh of Clara's pas de deux with Hans-Peter and the brooding B minor in the cellos during the Waltz of the Flowers get me every time. But Tchaikovsky initially loathed the idea of the ballet and found it impossible to commit any musical thoughts to paper. But something radically changed and, like The Queen of Spades and the 'Pathétique' Symphony, the shadow of death hangs over the score. While it's important not to forget the surface, Tchaikovsky's soaring melodies demand further attention.

It's the basis of my article in the Review section of today's Guardian. You can read it on page 15 of the review section. Or you can click here to read it online.

12 Aralık 2012 Çarşamba

A big, slow, dumb hippopotamus sitting on our chest

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GREENSBORO, NC -- A big problem with this town? Entrenched institutionalized mediocrity and incompetence suffocating innovation and new ideas. (Another problem, the people who think it's only polite to defend it. "It may be a big, slow, dumb hippopotamus, but it's our big, slow, dumb hippopotamus and it's rude to point."

The following post was originally published on October, 24, 2008. In light of the News & Record's new website fiasco, it could have been written again today. Hippopotamuses are hard to move.
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News & Record history online goes "poof"
October 24, 2008


This morning I was trying to research some of the media coverage of the events surrounding stripping former Greensboro Police Chief David Wray of his authority and his subsequent resignation. I am frustrated and disappointed to find that search result links to News & Record articles lead to page after page of broken links: "Page not found. We're sorry, but the page you've requested does not exist."

This blog post by News & Record editor John Robinson about the N&R's reporting of the Wray affair has seven links to what the editor purports to be relevant News & Record articles. Each one is broken.

The local newspaper should serve as an historical record. It doesn't. It sucks. The whole enterprise should be gutted, torn down and rebuilt from the ground up with the goal of some modicum of competence; or someone should start a new media enterprise to replace the N&R. That could probably be done for a quarter of the rumored sale price of the N&R and without the drain of a legacy culture and financial overhead that weigh like an anchor of perpetual incompetence around the neck of the N&R.

News & Record editorial dances the Ol' Greensboro Okee Doke™

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GREENSBORO, NC -- Fast on the heels of complimenting the News & Record for not falling for some press release baloney, I am reminded by George Hartzman that the local daily still has a long way to go in tuning their B.S. meter.

George points to this claim from an unsigned (how quaint) editorial at the News & Record regarding funding for a proposed performing arts center in Greensboro:
"They have private pledges totaling $20 million."
That has come nowhere near being substantiated to any thinking person's satisfaction. It is an undocumented assertion.

In fact, the task force pushing the project has refused to identify any donors or otherwise provide any substantiation to their claims that they have $20 million to contribute to this project — as reported in the News & Record.

The anonymous writer(s?) of the editorial are trying to lead Greensboro in a whirl of the Ol' Greensboro Okee Doke™ and we're not going to dance along, thank you.

WGHP reports City's assertions of cause for arrested man's hospitalization unchecked

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UPDATE: (7:27 P.M.) In a fine example of a prompt and direct response, WGHP has replied that the assertion had not been substantiated beyond the police press release and they have updated their story to reflect that.

GREENSBORO, NC -- After an alleged struggle with Greensboro police that sent a man to the hospital, the police department issued a press release that attribute to unnamed "medical officials" a determination that the man had a preexisting condition that contributed to his need for hospitalization. This is how they put it:
Zenon San Martn Ramirez, 52, is in Moses Cone Hospital following surgery after EMS personnel determined he had dangerously low blood pressure when treating him for an abrasion to the face he received while resisting arrest. Upon arrival at the hospital, medical officials discovered Ramirez was suffering from a pre-existing [sic] medical condition that may have been aggravated by the encounter.  [Emphasis added.]
WGHP then regurgitated the assertion of a preexisting condition word-for-word:
Ramirez was taken to Moses Cone Hospital and medical officials said he was suffering from a pre-existing [sic] medical condition that may have been aggravated by the struggle. [Emphasis added.]
Did "medical officials" say this to WGHP? Or did a Greensboro Police Department employee write in a press release that medical officials said that and did WGHP just copy and paste third-hand unattributed information into their story without actually substantiating it? I've asked WGHP to comment and will update this post when I hear from them.

 

New council representative Wilkins' first order of business: crumble like a cookie

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[UPDATE: Wilkins says he took down his blog on the advice of a "political consultant."]

GREENSBORO, NC -- Tony Wilkins was sworn in to City Council yesterday as a replacement for the departing district five representative Trudy Wade. Tony then promptly proceeded to delete his blog.

That's pretty craven... and dumb.

I endorsed Tony partially based on the fact that he was a blogger. When council members started to question his character during the nominating process for some of his blog posts, councilor Nancy Vaughan came to his defense and said that the fact Tony kept his blog up despite the heat showed his character.

Once he was officially ensconced though, he took it down and made fools of both of us. And it was a dumb thing to do, because his blog is archived here, so he hasn't accomplished anything other than quickly causing us to question his wisdom. Maybe I should have known better.

(Thanks to Sam Hieb for bringing our attention to the missing blog.)

City of Greensboro records request failure

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GREENSBORO, NC -- I made a records request of the City of Greensboro on November 7th. I just learned it was forwarded to the employees in possession of the records on December 6th.

I seem to be unable to convince City Manager Denise Turner that she has a problem, or she seems unable or unwilling to fix it, so I'm taking it to her bosses. Come next year's elections, my first criteria for supporting any incumbent candidate, my question at candidate forums and to the candidates directly for publication will be:
What steps have you taken to increase government transparency and improve the public's access to city records? Be specific.

11 Aralık 2012 Salı

WGHP reports City's assertions of cause for arrested man's hospitalization unchecked

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UPDATE: (7:27 P.M.) In a fine example of a prompt and direct response, WGHP has replied that the assertion had not been substantiated beyond the police press release and they have updated their story to reflect that.

GREENSBORO, NC -- After an alleged struggle with Greensboro police that sent a man to the hospital, the police department issued a press release that attribute to unnamed "medical officials" a determination that the man had a preexisting condition that contributed to his need for hospitalization. This is how they put it:
Zenon San Martn Ramirez, 52, is in Moses Cone Hospital following surgery after EMS personnel determined he had dangerously low blood pressure when treating him for an abrasion to the face he received while resisting arrest. Upon arrival at the hospital, medical officials discovered Ramirez was suffering from a pre-existing [sic] medical condition that may have been aggravated by the encounter.  [Emphasis added.]
WGHP then regurgitated the assertion of a preexisting condition word-for-word:
Ramirez was taken to Moses Cone Hospital and medical officials said he was suffering from a pre-existing [sic] medical condition that may have been aggravated by the struggle. [Emphasis added.]
Did "medical officials" say this to WGHP? Or did a Greensboro Police Department employee write in a press release that medical officials said that and did WGHP just copy and paste third-hand unattributed information into their story without actually substantiating it? I've asked WGHP to comment and will update this post when I hear from them.

 

Is Greensboro preparing to block media coverage of mass Fourth Amendment violations?

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GREENSBORO, NC -- The City of Greensboro announced in a Friday afternoon press release that city inspectors and police officers will be conducting a mass "room-by-room" search of all 177 units of Heritage House apartment complex beginning on Monday, tomorrow.

Constitutional Prohibitions
The Fourth Amendment to the United States Constitution as well as city ordinance require that tenants — not their landlords, but the occupying tenants — give their explicit permission before government officials and police can enter their homes for these kinds of searches (even if they are called inspections) or that the inspectors have a warrant. The City said in its press release that this action is in response to a petition by the building's residents, but they did not provide the wording of the petition or the names or the number of residents who signed it. A petition from your neighbors does not give the government permission to enter your home — not without your permission or a warrant.

I have asked the City for copies of records of each tenant's authorization and for any warrants issued authorizing these inspections as well as for a copy of the petition. Absent explicit permission from the tenants of any given home or a warrant, it would be illegal for the City to enter, no matter how many neighbors requested it, as it should be in a country where citizens are safeguarded by the Fourth Amendment.

Media Blackout
While the City has sent out a press release inviting media to cover the raid and announcing that city officials will be available for interviews, they also have announced that the media will be confined to a staging area and no media will be allowed inside the complex where the searches will be occurring, assuring that the actions of inspectors and police will remain hidden from public scrutiny. What will the response of the inspectors and police be if they encounter a locked door, a hesitant tenant or a tenant ignorant of her rights? Due to the media blackout, we will not know. What will the response of the police be if they discover other illegal activity unrelated to building codes?

The City said the media blackout is necessary "for safety reasons" and, ironically, "to protect the privacy of the residents." At the very least, a pool reporter and camera person, chosen by the reporters present, should be allowed inside the complex to monitor this unprecedented undertaking. (Pool reporters then share their notes and recordings with the other reporters by mutual agreement.) Alternately, since this raid is scheduled over three days, reporters could rotate in and out.

Elected Officials' Responsibilities
Two more people inside the building at any given time should not cause a safety concern and reporters can stay in the hallways while residents decide for themselves whether they mind reporters accompanying the government officials entering their homes. Failure to allow even this minimal degree of oversight would be an alarming warning to our elected officials that something is wrong and that their intervention is required.

Actually, our city council has two responsibilities here. One is to intervene if media will not be permitted to cover the actual undertakings of the inspectors and police inside the building, but first and foremost is to assure that these inspections are being conducted legally and with respect for the rights of our city's citizens in the first place.

New council representative Wilkins' first order of business: crumble like a cookie

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GREENSBORO, NC -- Tony Wilkins was sworn in to City Council yesterday as a replacement for the departing district five representative Trudy Wade. Tony then promptly proceeded to delete his blog.

That's pretty craven... and dumb.

I endorsed Tony partially based on the fact that he was a blogger. When council members started to question his character during the nominating process for some of his blog posts, councilor Nancy Vaughan came to his defense and said that the fact Tony kept his blog up despite the heat showed his character.

Once he was officially ensconced though, he took it down and made fools of both of us. And it was a dumb thing to do, because his blog is archived here, so he hasn't accomplished anything other than quickly causing us to question his wisdom. Maybe I should have known better.

(Thanks to Sam Hieb for bringing our attention to the missing blog.)

Greensboro accepting resumes to fill Wade's vacant council seat

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Conservative District 5 Councilwoman Trudy Wade has been elected to NC Senate District 27, defeating Democrat Myra Slone, and now Greensboro City Council will appoint a replacement for 2013. The details are below, and you can read our suggestions for the seat in the next issue of YES! Weekly.Press release:The City of Greensboro is now accepting resumes from candidates who wish to be considered for the soon-to-be vacant District 5 City Council seat. Council is accepting applications through December 10 for the position that will be vacated by Councilmember Trudy Wade, who was elected to the NC Senate on November 6.Interested candidates should send a resume and letter of interest to City Clerk Betsey Richardson in the City Clerks office at Betsey.Richardson@greensboro-nc.gov, or fax it to her at 336-574-4003. All information provided is regarded as public information and is available to the media.City Council plans to appoint a new member by January 9, 2013. The person selected must be a qualified voter, living in District 5 and willing to serve out the remainder of the term, until December 3, 2013.For additional information, please contact Richardson at 336-373-2397.

UPDATE: Latin Kings file motion for new trial

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Jorge Cornell and two other defendants in the North Carolina Latin Kings racketeering trial have filed a motion for a new trial.


Cornell, Russell Kilfoil and Ernesto were each convicted of racketeering by a federal jury in Winston-Salem last month. Cornell was convicted of two additional counts for a violent crime in aid of racketeering and carrying or using a firearm during and in relation to a crime of violence — both related to a shooting at Ashley Creek Apartment Homes in Greensboro in 2008.

The motion for a new trial, which was filed on Dec. 5, contends that the jury was confused or misunderstood the court's instructions for dealing with predicate acts. The motion notes that the jurors asked for clarification, but the judge simply referred them back to his earlier instructions.

The jury found that Cornell, Kilfoil and Wilson were each responsible for the same set of violations: conspiracy to commit murder, attempted murder, robbery, interference with commerce by threats of violence and bank fraud.

"In light of the evidence presented at the trial of the case, it is clear that the only way that the jury could have found identical predicate acts for each of the convicted defendants would be for the jury to ignore the instructions to consider the defendants individually and to base its verdict on the notion that each member of the conspiracy was responsible for all predicate acts that the jury concluded involved the enterprise," Michael Patrick, Cornell's court-appointed lawyer, wrote in the motion.

Additional excerpts from the motion after the jump:

... The clearest example of this is demonstrated by the evidence with regard to Ernesto Wilson. The government's evidence taken in the light most favorable to the government was that Mr. Wilson participated in a series of store robberies in April 2007. No evidence indicated that Mr. Wilson remained in North Carolina after May of 2007 or that he had any further contact with the other persons that the government alleged were members of the conspiracy in this case. Nevertheless, Mr. Wilson was found responsible for conspiracy to commit murder, attempted murder, interference with commerce by threats or violence and multiple acts of bank fraud. The government's evidence established that none of these acts occurred before the spring of 2008 and in the case of the Smith Homes shooting — which may have been found to be the attempted murder predicate act — occurred as late as August 2011, more than four years after Mr. Wilson left North Carolina. As a consequence, the jury must have completed the predicate act portion of the verdict sheet by holding Mr. Wilson responsible for any act they attributed to the enterprise. This enterprise approach to completing the verdict sheet is the very area about which the jury presented a question to the court several hours before they returned its verdict.

The same problems exist with respect to defendants Cornell and Kilfoil. With the jury completing the predicate act portion of the verdict sheet by assessing those acts engaged in by the enterprise rather than the individual, it cannot be determined that the jury found that Mr. Cornell's or Mr. Kilfoil's participation in the conspiracy embraced the particular predicate acts found by the jury.

8 Aralık 2012 Cumartesi

Tony Wilkins for Greensboro city council

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GREENSBORO, NC -- With current district five city council representative Trudy Wade heading off to Raleigh as a newly elected state senator, the remaining city councilors must choose someone to fill her seat.

I don't know the other candidates who have nominated themselves to replace Wade, but I think nominee Tony Wilkins would be a good choice to replace her. Here's why:

Similar to Wade
Tony aligns with Wade politically. He's not a replica, but similar. It would be unfair to the citizens of district 5 for council to try to shift its composition significantly by selecting someone very dissimilar from the departing Wade. 2013 will bring an opportunity soon enough for voters to elect someone else if the council's choice is unsuitable to district five voters, until then, council should respect the last known preference of those voters: A mainstream conservative.

He's engaged.
Tony has experience serving on the War Memorial Commission, as executive director of the county Republican Party and as an active campaigner on behalf of others. He's politically engaged, aware and not likely to get buffaloed because of naivete.

He Blogs
Well, a little... lately. He used to much more and it is my hope he will resume if he's appointed. He has probably stopped because he's under consideration for this open seat, which is not admirable but probably practical. As a blogger, he knows the value blogs can contribute to the information stream as well as what it is like to be on the uninformed side of government secrecy. Those are insights we hope he'll not forget if appointed.

He is a business person, but not a developer
Like Wade (a veterinarian), Tony owns his own business (Furniture Connections) which he has operated for the past 30 years. I think business experience is helpful, although not required, for elected officials. It gives them a certain kind of insight and, unlike developers, retail business owners do not think that economic development means cut, plow and build.

I've also had lunch with Tony a couple of times. I respect a man with a hearty appetite and culinary curiosity, but I have even greater respect for a man who has an interest in sitting down and talking with someone with whom he knows he has some significant disagreement. To be able to do so cordially and to maintain mutual respect throughout is a sign of maturity that is appropriate for city council. He'd serve us well.

Kudos to the N&R

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GREENSBORO, NC -- It's a small thing, but an important thing, and amid the landslide of things going wrong at the local daily, it's good to find some glimmer of hope that someone at the News & Record still understands the fundamental importance of journalism: reporting an accurate portrayal of the truth.

Yesterday, a Greensboro city employee with the Parks & Recreation Department's cemetery crew was arrested for allegedly exposing himself. He was an employee when the events allegedly occurred, however, he resigned, according to the city, "immediately prior to his arrest."

This allowed the city to issue a press release that announced, "Former City Employee Arrested for Indecent Exposure" (emphasis added), which makes it sound like some guy who used to work for the city was arrested for indecent exposure, which has much different implications than what really happened which is that the guy was arrested for acts allegedly committed while he was an employee of the city.

Other news outlets dutifully regurgitated the City's headline.


"Former City of Greensboro Employee Arrested for Indecent Exposure," parroted the headline to a story at MyFox8.com (above) that has since been removed.

WFMY did nearly the same thing (below): "Former City Employee Charged With Exposure,"


The News & Record, however, saw through the City's attempt to manipulate the message and accurately reported, "City worker charged with exposing self to child, 2 others at Target."


This is one of the fundamental responsibilities of journalists: filter through the bull that accompanies the self-interested pronouncements of authorities and the powerful. I wish the N&R had more of an appetite for it. They could set themselves apart if they did this more often, but good for them for getting it right on this one.


News & Record editorial dances the Ol' Greensboro Okee Doke™

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GREENSBORO, NC -- Fast on the heels of complimenting the News & Record for not falling for some press release baloney, I am reminded by George Hartzman that the local daily still has a long way to go in tuning their B.S. meter.

George points to this claim from an unsigned (how quaint) editorial at the News & Record regarding funding for a proposed performing arts center in Greensboro:
"They have private pledges totaling $20 million."
That has come nowhere near being substantiated to any thinking person's satisfaction. It is an undocumented assertion.

In fact, the task force pushing the project has refused to identify any donors or otherwise provide any substantiation to their claims that they have $20 million to contribute to this project — as reported in the News & Record.

The anonymous writer(s?) of the editorial are trying to lead Greensboro in a whirl of the Ol' Greensboro Okee Doke™ and we're not going to dance along, thank you.

Lack of leadership, Mr. Mayor? Anybody seen my hip boots?

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GREENSBORO, NC -- Sam Hieb notices that Mayor Robbie Perkins is wagging his finger at his city council colleagues for what he perceives to be "a lack of leadership" on the proposed performing arts center.

Under the current proposal, $20 million of the $60 million projected total cost of the center is supposed to come from private donations, an amount backers say they have already met in pledges, but which they refuse to document in any fashion, such as the obvious — a list of donors.

The only leadership I've seen from city council on this matter has come from council persons Zack Matheny and Nancy Vaughan who refuse to dance the Ol' Greensboro Okee Doke™ and have insisted on some kind of substantiation or guarantee that the $20 million backers say they have really is in place. That's leadership.

If Mayor Perkins wishes to lead on this issue, as Vaughan and Matheny are, he will persuade the project manager for the performing arts center project, his former campaign manager, to provide some verifiable documentation that the project backers do, in fact, have $20 million lined up for the project. Otherwise, he can dance the Ol' Greensboro Okee Doke™ without us, thank you very much.