Friday, October 29, 2010

AND MOSES SAID, "Let My People GO!"

COURT GRANTS INJUNCTION AGAINST
 CASINO LAND SALE!

Beacon Hill politicians misstated the potential of a
Tribal Casino, ignoring 2 SCOTUS  (ed. note: Supreme Court of the United States)
decisions to suit their purposes and cram through flawed 'casino' legislation,
while Fall River officials have betrayed the residents and
taxpayers of a beautiful City that possesses great potential.

Fall River City Officials have danced around a land sale, ignoring
legal opinion from the IG, failing to ensure additional revenues to
protect citizens against the increased costs and impacts
of predatory gambling.


The land sale essentially hands wealthy developers prime
commercial land for $100,000 per acre.

Instead, the Mayor chose to reward wealthy Malaysian
investors with a tax free, low cost venture for a profitable
Slot Barn deal.


Attached, you will find the injunction issued by Judge Richard
T. Moses, the Ten Taxpayers Complaint, the RDA response
and the Purchase & Sales Memo.


Nowhere is there consideration of monies Fall River will receive
from the Tribe.

At the very least, the City should reasonably expect a percentage
of slots participation, worth at least $20-$30 million per year to cover
additional costs.


Foxwoods has defaulted.


Mohegan Sun is laying off.


Twin Rivers is in bankruptcy.


Casinos around the country are filing bankruptcy.


Tribal Casinos have simply stopped making payments.


How is this sensible economic development for Fall River?
Who is protecting Fall River residents while wealthy foreign
investors are rewarded?


This could be your town.


Thanks for all you do.


Jessie Powell
Middleboro, MA

'Never doubt that a small group of thoughtful, committed citizens can change the world. Indeed, it's the only thing that ever has.' Margaret Mead


Middleboro Remembers
 


"Let My People GO!!!!!!!!!"


The above is a copy of an email I received from Jessie Powell, a leading foe of the casino project in Fall River, otherwise known as ANTOINE WALKERVILLE. The things said in that email are quite true. Jessie Powell has an established track record opposing expanded gaming in Massachusetts. WE all owe a debt of gratitude to Jessie Powell.

Charlton Heston as the biblical character himself couldn't have written the judgement any better than Superior Court Judge Moses did in his opinion. It is an injunction which is merely the culmination of a dark, dreary and cynical process the type of which the citizens of Fall River are all too familiar with these past several decades. Once again it's back to the drawing board for this clown posse of attorneys running Fall River directly into oblivion, all on YOUR dime to boot!

Imagine the taxpayer funded City Attorney crew of Dewey, Cheatem and Howe (Fiola, Torres and, of course, Sylvanagan), along with their "high powered" (HA!) paid legal Hessian's out of Rhode Island getting faced big time in court by the intrepid band of Ten Taxpayers from Fall River and their legal counsel. I don't care who the attorney works for outside of this particular decision, the arguments made were quite obviously persuasive and with a much better legal basis, resulting in a decision by a widely respected member of the Court forcing an injunction to any further action to sell the 300 acres of prime industrial land to the Wamponoags and their Malaysian money men.

Surely, the combined forces of Fall River fools like the RDA, FROED, and Sylvanagan himself will drag the City, and oodles of it's tax dollars, back into court with a favorable judge here in SE Massachusetts to attempt the overturn the current decision. Sylvanagan has NO choice! Without something to show for a full year of behind closed door negotiations without any public input, or without consultation with the City Council, and after continued promises of "JOBS!, JOBS!, JOBS!" while not a single other thing has been accomplished by his tawdry administration Sylvanagan will be run out of office even by his most ardent previous supporters if he fails. And well he should.

Sylvanagan's exploits are ridiculous. Sylvanagan's chief legal counsel is even more ridiculous. After what can only be termed a vulgar performance on a local radio station, is there any doubt left at all that Steve Torres suffers not only from delusions of competence but a rather demented Napoleonic complex as well? He is one angry little man. That's about the best thing that can be said about him. He certainly has failed at every turn since being appointed the City's legal counsel. Has he won a single decision? Has he not cost Fall River thousands of dollars with his steel trap legal mind and opinions? What about the "illegal" rainwater tax Steve-O? What about the "refunds"? Oh, that's right , he has more important things on his plate right now, like acting as legal counsel for one of the OTHER worst run communities in MA, Wareham. But I thought he was only supposed to be working for Fall River? Wasn't that the justification for his high salary? Lies, and promises left unmet. These things seem to be at the heart of the Sylvanagan administration. Funny how they have failed to mention the drastic cut in State Aid that looms ahead for FY11! I wonder how they'll spin this one!

No, our new found Moses raised his legal staff and with his decision let out the cry for all Fall River citizens to "Let My People Go!" Now I wish Sylvanagan and Company would do the same.

Wednesday, October 13, 2010

Who Will Pay? WE WILL of Course !!!!

Fall River Fire Department
swears in 48 new members
















By Kevin O'Connor
Herald News Staff Reporter
Posted Oct 12, 2010 @ 10:47 AM
Last update Oct 13, 2010 @ 12:20 AM


FALL RIVER — The fire department is experiencing a major growth spurt.


Department brass is confident they are ready to avoid undue growing pains.

A class of 48 new firefighters was sworn in on Tuesday. Class members will go through a 10-week training program before their assignment to the trucks.

It is the largest recruit class in the department’s history. It will increase the department ranks by almost one third.
The new hires replace firefighters laid off two years ago. Their salaries will be paid for the next two years through a $10 million federal grant.

“This will allow us to have 48 fresh firefighters on duty.” Mayor Will Flanagan said. “It will help us cut down on overtime costs.

“Plus, this should boost morale. The department went through a devastating layoff.

 


Gear for the new firefighters. A helmet, a rope to practice knots and text books.

With the new influx of recruits coming in, you know, when you go into a burning mill or a three-decker, you have backup behind you.”


Fire Chief Paul Ford told the recruits they will learn more in the training program than how to fight fires.


“Fire service is steeped in tradition,” Ford said. “We have a tradition of honor, number one.


“We have to be honorable to ourselves, our families and our fellow firefighters. Don’t ever forget that.”


Ford and Flanagan addressed the new class Tuesday at the fire headquarters. The 48 new firefighters, all men, faced them. Each new firefighter had a new yellow helmet, a thick textbook and an 8-foot length of 3/8-inch braided rope on the table before him.

“That is for them to practice their knots,” said fire Capt. Kenneth Lima. “They have to keep that rope with them at all times.


“They have a lot of knots to learn.”


In fact, they have a lot to learn about everything, said District Chief William Pappas, head of training for the department.


Pappas and Lima will coordinate the training along with Lt. Peter Raposa and Lt. Paul Machado. They are all state certified fire instructors, as are 15 more members of the department.


The recruits will be working from textbooks for the first few days, but fire instructors will quickly get them out into the training field behind the fire headquarters to connect hoses to hydrants and trucks and learn to rappel from rooftops or crawl through confined spaces.

“We have a tower and we have a burn room, so we can do training with real fire,” Pappas said. “In fact, we will do several live burns.”


By the time the new firefighters climb onto a truck for the first time, they will have ripped cars apart with the Jaws of Life and learned the basics of handling hazardous materials spills and dousing the flames from flammable liquids. They will also know enough life-saving technique to qualify as first responder medical personnel.


The recruits will spend several days at the state fire academy in Stowe, facing flames from burning tanker trucks, boilers and barrels of unknown substances.


Department trainers began planning for the recruit class as soon as the city learned it would get the $10 million federal grant.


The grant restores the fire department to its roster of 232 members, the number in the department before the city began making cuts and layoffs because of budget problems.


Pappas and his staff worked up a curriculum that involves the entire training staff plus the 15 city firefighters who are certified as instructors by the state.


“It will be a lot of work, but we are pretty excited about it,” Pappas said. “We have a dedicated staff.


“There is no question once they are on duty we will be able to serve the city better.”
E-mail Kevin P. O’Connor at koconnor@heraldnews.com

Let me say at the outset that I fully agree with the idea of fully staffing our compliment of public safety officers in Fall River. What I have grave concerns about is the manner in which we fund those positions.

In an ad on the front page of the herald News' website was a listing, by community, of how much likely funding in local aid would be lost if the proposed cut in sales tax takes place as a result of Question 3 passing this fall. Fall River's hit would be in the neighborhood of $15 million, give or take a few grand here or there. At such a loss, it would matter little how a paltry few thousand dollars went over looked. Such passage of Question 3 would literally bankrupt the City's finances. There would be absolutely no additional or extraordinary state assistance to make that loss of revenue whole again, since this would reflect an across the board reduction to EVERY state budget category, including local aid and aid to education.

So when  we plan to hire these needed 43 firefighters on the basis of a non-renewable two year federal grant, I start to worry about the lack of fiscal planning taking place on the 6th floor of City Hall. I have absolutely no faith in the mayor to adequately prepare for life after the grant's end. No where is there evidence of planning for the potential cost of possible unemployment  for these new hires if the grants run out and no extraordinary funding source replaces the current two year grant, nor retirement funding, nor health insurance coverage for both retirement and COBRA provisions for laid-off municipal employees. The City would be completely unprotected from such costs with the possible lay-offs as a result of no new grant funding. has anything like this happened in the past few years?

Yes. A few years back a federal program to put more police on the street was devised. The requirements of the grant were that the municipality had to commit to gradually take over the full direct and overhead costs (health insurance, unemployment insurance) for theses new positions, with cost's for the municipalities increasing each year until the full cost was borne by the municipality. In many instances communities throughout the state refused to participate in the grant program, or limited greatly their participation, because Prop 2 1/2 was in effect and the financial commitment to take on even these relatively few needed positions were far too risky given the unpredictable financial outlook during a time of extreme local and state fiscal stress. The prudent thing to do was to look out into the future as concretely as possible and make decisions accordingly. Well run communities, especially those dependant on local aid increases to fund current budgets, were cautious to make future financial commitments to the grant program.

So looking at Fall River's current situation, a community entirely dependent on state aid for all of it's daily operations, and knowing that the MINIMUM estimate of state budget reduction for FY11 from FY10 even if question 3 does not pass, is 18% according to MMA,  how then can Fall River agree to a full compliment of new hires without considering the outcome if financial Armageddon occurs and the City is faced with responsibility for unemployment , health insurance, retirement  and increased liability insurance premiums, not to mention increased demands on the fire department's everyday operations budget with an increase in manpower by one third (ie, food, uniforms, air packs, other equipment)? I have no earthly idea!

We all know why this decision was made - for political expediency. Sylvanagan & Co. are scrounging for any, and every, bit of happy news to lay on the public's table going into the reelection campaign. They will do so without any thought about the future consequences to you or I or the City as a whole. It's all about making  happy news statements and getting his picture on the front page of the Herald News doing something  other than looking like a dullard faced vengeful school girl shredding a law suit against him.

 Since day one in office all this man and his minions have been about is gaining reelection and saying and doing those things required to LOOK good as opposed to taking the time and the thought to DO good for the City of Fall River. Even his acquiescence to broadcast more committee meetings on "Sylvanagan TV" is merely an attempt to bow to the popular perception that he's all about propaganda, not proper management of City affairs. I find it ironic that both the broadcast of more meetings and this fire department grant decision encapsulate the entirety of what Fall River has gotten from or fearless leader Sylvanagan - anything to look good for his own sake and no thought regarding the actual future impact of his own decisions on others, especially those he has sworn to serve and protect.

I am not against hiring these firemen. I only wish the powers that be truly knew what their own game plan is to handle the possible array of future outcomes if financing goes out the window. Based on the Sylvanagan administration's demonstrated history to this point, I think it's a safe bet that little or no serious consideration has been given to these matters, only to how it will look to the Fall River voting populace. That's the price we all pay for electing leaders who only react to situations and manage completely in an "ad hoc" manner. It's how we came to the place we are at in our city with entrenched unemployment, ineffective and criminally negligent education, rampant gang life among our youth and soaring drug addiction throughout the city.

But hey.....it's what the voters want. After all, he's only giving them what they want. Right?

Thursday, October 7, 2010

" ....Slip Slidin' Away.....Slip Slidin' Awayyyyyy.....The Nearer Your Destination The More Your Slip Slidin' Away......"

Feinstein’s ‘Carcieri fix’ would
‘devastate’ trust land for gaming


By Gale Courey Toensing
Story Published: Oct 5, 2010
(Story Updated: Oct 5, 2010 )



















Mashpee Wampanoag Chairman Cedric Cromwell (left) and Shinnecock Indian
Nation Senior Trustee Lance Gumbs, pictured here at the New England Gaming
Summit at Mohegan Sun Sept. 21, are part of a group of tribal nations mobilizing
 to oppose reported efforts by Sen. Dianne Feinstein, D-Calif., to stop the Interior
 Department from putting new land into trust for gaming

Reports that Sen. Dianne Feinstein, D-Calif., is planning her own version of a “Carcieri fix” that would eliminate the ability of tribes to take newly-acquired land into trust for gaming are raising concerns in Indian country.


The issue came to light at the New England Gaming Summit at Mohegan Sun during the week of Sept. 20.


Mashpee Wampanoag Chairman Cedric Cromwell said during his presentation at the summit that he had learned Feinstein would propose an amendment to Section 20 of the Indian Gaming Regulatory Act – the part of the law that deals with putting land into trust for gaming when the land has been acquired after Oct. 17, 1988 – or an amendment to Sen. Byron Dorgan’s “Carcieri fix” – a bill that has stalled since being approved by the Senate Committee on Indian Affairs almost a year ago. In either case, Feinstein aims to curtail the Interior secretary’s authority to take newly-acquired land into trust for Indian gaming, Cromwell said.


The Cape Cod island-based Mashpee Wampanoag Tribe, which was federally acknowledged in 2007, has a pending application for land into trust to build a casino in the Boston area.


Dorgan and other legislators have sought a “Carcieri fix” since February 2009 when the U.S. Supreme Court ruled that the Interior secretary had no authority to take land into trust for the Narragansett Indians because they were not “under federal jurisdiction” in 1934 when the Indian Reorganization Act was passed.


Dorgan’s bill – S. 1703 – amends the IRA to reaffirm the secretary’s authority to take land into trust for all acknowledged tribes – a practice that has been in place for more than 70 years.


No one knows exactly what Feinstein plans to do because her activities have taken place behind the scene, Cromwell said.


“Since the senator has not consulted with Indian country, and since her draft language has not been the subject of public hearings, we do not know exactly what the language says. Based on her long-held anti-Indian gaming stance, however, we can assume that her proposed language will be devastating for newly recognized and disadvantaged tribes,” Cromwell said.


Cromwell also questioned whether Feinstein’s motives to alter national law and policy were based strictly on her local concerns to stop the expansion of gaming in California.


“Most disturbing, we are concerned that the senator is using her position as an appropriations subcommittee chair to achieve her local end goal: Shutting down forever the possibility of the Indian gaming in the Bay Area. She is willing to hold hostage the nationally-needed Carcieri fix, and willing to throw newly recognized and disadvantaged tribes from all across the United States under the bus, so that she can achieve this one local goal,” Cromwell said.


Cromwell called on the Obama administration “to take a tough stand on behalf of all tribes. … (and) to tell Congress that all tribes must be treated equally” under the laws.


Barry Piatt, Dorgan’s spokesman, said the senator has not heard about the Feinstein amendment.


“It’s possible she may do so, but it hasn’t reached a stage where it’s an amendment that she’s notified the committee about,” Piatt said.


While Dorgan could not comment on an amendment he hasn’t yet seen, Piatt said, he would not favor creating two classes of tribes.


“He feels very strongly that there should not be two classes of tribes – one that can take land into trust and one that can’t. He stands firm that all tribes ought to be equal on this issue.”
Feinstein’s office did not return calls seeking comment.


Consultant Joe Valandra, Rosebud Sioux, said Feinstein’s reported efforts are happening at the same time that the Interior Department is reviewing the IGRA regulations for “off-reservation” trust land for gaming and encouraging the BIA to move forward with pending applications.


With all these elements and potential actions bumping up against each other, the moment is fraught with danger, Valandra said.


“Right now the Interior Department is in a tough spot trying to respond administratively to the Supreme Court’s Carcieri decision. They hope that Congress will get around to passing a Carcieri fix, but I doubt that will happen soon and it may happen during the lame duck session (when Congress returns after the elections and before new elected officials take office), but there’s danger in that,” Valandra said.


The danger is no one knows exactly what the amendment is, said a Washington attorney who deals in Indian affairs and asked not to be named.


“There was supposed to be a mark-up of the appropriations bills and everyone thought they’d see it then, but Feinstein canceled the mark up. Now the understanding is there won’t be any mark up of the appropriations bill and instead when (legislators) come back for the lame duck session they’ll just wrap a whole bunch of these appropriation bills together so they’ll be tens of thousands of pages long and she’ll just insert the language somewhere and we may never find it before it becomes law,” the attorney said.


A coalition of nations has mobilized to fight Feinstein’s efforts, said Lance Gumbs, senior trustee of the Shinnecock Indian Nation and vice president of the National Congress of American Indians northeast region.
“Obviously, this is another attack on our sovereignty,” Gumbs said.


The NCAI, the largest Indian organization in the country, will also throw its weight behind opposing Feinstein’s actions, Gumbs said.

http://www.indiancountrytoday.com/archive/Feinsteins-iCarcierii-fix-would-devastate-trust-land-for-gaming--104358264.html

It's starting to look like all those claims that the Wampanoags will be allowed to declare the 300 acres of land they wish to purchase in Fall River for the purpose of gaming as sovereign tribal land may be nothing more than smoke signals on a cloudy day, at least if powerful Senator Dianne Feinstein has anything to say about it.

And in contradiction to the above article, recent reports indicate that the Wampanoags have NOT filed application with the appropriate federal agencies to have their land placed into trust. To do so today would result in being tied up in an approval review process that normally takes 5 - 7 years to positive completion. That would no doubt be a massive problem for the tribe and their local desperate benefactors, FROED  , the Redevelopment Authority (RDA) and the biggest potential losers of them all, Bag-Boy Deluxe Sylvanagan, Ken "The Weeper" Fiola and Steve "Hank the Angry Dwarf" Torres! Good luck folks, looks like you're going to need it!

Just when you think it might happen, it seems just out of reach. But that is the illusion the powers that be wish you to see. I think it's all a bit of "blue smoke and mirrors', with no real deal ever having better than a 50-50 chance of happening. Frankly, I think we are past the good 50% as well. What is clear as a new spring day is that there has been no vote to legalize gaming in Massachusetts, the deal between the RDA and the Wampanoags runs out at the end of the calendar year and that all these labor contracts and budgets for FY 11 and FY 12 and beyond have been constructed on a best case scenario basis, that best case being an Antoine Walkerville (destination casino) related cash infusion into the Fall River municipal treasury. I sincerely doubt that will happen. The chances of it happening IF the 300 acres were to be declared sovereign tribal land are pretty much nil, regardless of what statements are being disseminated by the RDA, FROED and Sylvanagan. Has anyone seen the actual agreement? Of course not, it's all very "double secret probation" like and ridiculously "hush-hush". How members of the City Council have not been made party to agreement negotiations if baffling to say the least. It's all very  foreboding and is one of the reasons I think all of this is just a way to maintain the perception that Sylvanagan is working hard to improve Fall River, when in reality such an agreement would result only in improving the political future of the Bag-Boy. And that has always been what this mess has always and only ever been about.

Monday, October 4, 2010

The DIRTY DOZEN? YOU DECIDE!

Ala. senators, casino owner
accused of vote buying


Lobbyists also indicted over allegations
tied to electronic bingo Advertisement
ad info

 Dave Martin / AP



VictoryLand owner Milton McGregor is pictured at the casino in Shorter, Ala., on March 5. McGregor, four state senators and several top lobbyists have been indicted on federal charges accusing them of vote buying on a bill to legalize electronic bingo. The Associated Press

MONTGOMERY, Ala. — The owner of Alabama's largest casino, four state senators and several lobbyists face federal charges of conspiring to buy and sell votes for millions of dollars to get electronic bingo legalized, according to an indictment released Monday.
One lobbying firm employee has pleaded guilty to offering $2 million for the vote of an indicted senator.


The indictment, which lists 11 defendants, was made public as FBI agents made arrests across the state. It accuses casino owners and lobbyists of making payments and campaign donations, and legislators of soliciting bribes, to affect pro-gambling legislation. One senator was accused of seeking $100,000 for his vote.


The head of the Justice Department's criminal division, Lanny Breuer, said the criminal activity was "astonishing in scope ... a full-scale campaign to bribe legislators and others."


VictoryLand casino owner Milton McGregor was among those indicted. His casino, now shut down, has more than 6,000 electronic bingo machines. His attorney, Joe Espy, said his client is absolutely innocent and looks forward to proving it.
Also indicted was Country Crossing casino developer Ronnie Gilley of Dothan and state Sens. Harri Anne Smith of Slocomb, James Prueitt of Talladega, Larry Means of Gadsden, and Quinton Ross Jr. of Montgomery.

All four senators voted for the unsuccessful legislation designed to keep electronic bingo casinos operating.
Also indicted were lobbyists Tom Coker and Bob Geddie, who represent VictoryLand; lobbyist Jarrod Massey and public relations executive Jay Walker, who represent Country Crossing; and Ray Crosby, an attorney for the Legislature who helped write gambling legislation.
A hearing at the federal courthouse in Montgomery was scheduled for later Monday.


Federal authorities announced Monday that one of Massey's employees, Jennifer Pouncy of Montgomery, pleaded guilty Sept. 28 to conspiracy. She admitted that at Massey's direction, she offered Preuitt $2 million for his vote and that Massey authorized her to offer $100,000 to Means for his vote.


The indictment alleges that Means, who had abstained from an earlier vote on the pro-gambling legislation in 2010, solicited bribes from McGregor, Gilley, Massey and others in return for voting in favor. In one case, the indictment says, he sought $100,000.


The indictment accused Ross of pressuring McGregor for campaign donations before voting for the gambling bill. It accuses Smith of voting for the bill and encouraging other legislators to support it in exchange for promises and payments from Gilley and others of hundreds of thousands in campaign funds. And it says the Preuitt was offered financial support, free polling and concerts by country music artists to help with his campaign.


The probe was announced last spring prior to the final votes on the bill, which died when sponsors could not line up enough for passage.


Backers of the bill, mostly Democrats, accused Republican Gov. Bob Riley's administration of derailing the measure with the announcement. While Riley's state public safety director was involved with the announcement, federal authorities said the Justice Department was handling the investigation.


Of the four state senators indicted, Means and Ross are Democrats, Preuitt is a Republican and Smith is an independent who was a Republican when the bill was in the Legislature. All are seeking re-election except Preuitt, who recently pulled out of his race.


Smith called her arrest "a nakedly political move, coordinated by the prosecutors in cahoots with the governor's office" to influence legislative elections Nov. 2.

The governor's spokesman, Jeff Emerson, said that last spring, Riley had labeled the gambling bill "the most corrupt piece of legislation ever considered by the Senate."


"Today's action by the Justice Department shows he was, sadly, right," Emerson said.
Electronic bingo casinos operated in Alabama for several years until the governor labeled the machines illegal slots and organized a task force to close them down. The unsuccessful legislation was designed to thwart Riley's task force and keep the electronic bingo machines operating.
McGregor's casino, 15 miles east of Montgomery, was the state's largest, but it has been closed since Aug. 9 to prevent a raid by the task force, which managed to close all privately operated electronic bingo casinos during the probe.
Only three casinos operated by the Poarch Creek Indians remain in operation. They are not under state supervision.

My, oh my, this tale of woe could very easily be applied to our own local situation, I'm quite sure. At a minimum it should serve as a true tale of caution for anyone not up to speed on the entire issue of  slot parlors, up to now rejected by Gov. Deval Patrick and the current sticking point with the MA House of Representatives proposed legislation to legalize gaming in the state.

What makes our own states Political/Lobbying situation any different from the "great state of Alabama"? NOTHING, that's what! Anyone trying to convince you  politics are somehow dirtier south of the Mason-Dixon line are drinking way too much Kool-Aid from the Gaming Industry's pitcher. Gaming means gambling and gambling means ORGANIZED CRIME! There's mucho money to be made from gaming, even if run entirely legally, which it seldom is regardless of what folks from Vegas or Atlantic City tell you. So naturally gaming, and it's legalization and expansion, is going to attract many "colorful" and " hyper-aggressive entrepreneurial" (HA!) types within it's highly questionable arena. Just more for the taxpayers of Fall River and the region to be concerned with as these types of horror stories continue to crop up around the country as states look to  expanded gaming as a way to raise revenues to pay for the basics, like schools, police, fire and DPW activities and services. That's what we've become, a society unwilling to pony up more of what we earn to make a better life for our citizens while becoming quite willing to directly involve ourselves in vice like  contemplated legalized and expanded gaming, as well as more extreme forms like legalized prostitution and previously illegal narcotics (legalized pot), just to evade the taxman.

The rich like the Board members of FROED, especially someone like "Yoe-Mama's" Corporation's Yo-Yo Magnate and well known crank yanker Alan Amaral, are doing just fine, thank you, and don't need the extra cash and maybe could afford a few more tax dollars taken out of their egregiously high interest earnings than you and I. But that's a different discussion for another day.

Given the latest news out of Las Vegas that the gaming industry in that city is facing the largest number of direct gaming layoffs since the 1940's, one has to wonder if the original estimates of thousands of jobs paying around $35,000 per year (gaming and related jobs, not construction) for Fall Riverites would be closer to the "Dirty Dozen" FROED  hack Ken "the weeper" Fiola finally admitted would be created from the Bio-Park. I mean, who CAN you trust?

I have a GREAT idea.......let's all take a guess who would be the "Dirty Dozen" in Fall River and it's immediate environs who would be assured employment at the new and exciting Fall River Destination Casino, to be named Antoine Walkerville, once it opens, er , IF it opens, that is. Let's see:

1.  Willy Nilly Boy Sylvanagan
2.  Cedric "I bet we can get Sylvanagan to take Wampum" Cromwell
3.  Ken "The Weeper" Fiola
4.  Steven "Hank the Angry Dwarf" Torres (BaBa-Bouiee)
5.  Alan "Yo-Mama" Amaral (aka "Pocketnuts Troy")
6.  Ex-State Senator Joan "It only hurts when I smile" Menard
7.  Liz "I buy my court clothes from the Hot Spot" Perriera
8.  Brian 'Sport Coat the Lesser" Bigelow (aka "Victoria's Not-So-Secret")
9.  Pat "HUH?" Casey
10.Mike "Listen to my radio show OR I'LL SMASH YOUR LEG IN A DOOR, BITCH!" Herren.
11.Meg Mayo-Brown (aka "The Backstabber", aka "Roy? Why are you making me hire Roy?")
12.Bealzebub (self explanatory)

Well...those are my dozen...let's see yours...I'll print them all, except, of course, those from "non-believers", and you know who you are...LOL!

Friday, October 1, 2010

The Forest for the Trees!

THE WILL FLANAGAN COMMITTEE
P.O. BOX 9516
FALL RIVER, MASSACHUSETTS
SENT VIA FIRST CLASS MAIL &
FACSIMILE 508-324-2626
March 31, 2009


Mayor Robert Correia
City Hall
1 Government Center
Fall River, MA 02722


Re: TOWN HALL MEETING ON BUDGET


Dear Mayor Correia:


The current economic state of our city has left me with the impression that your administration has failed to budget properly for fiscal year 2009. During this fiscal year the city has faced layoffs, cuts in programs, and a decrease in services. I am also concerned that your financial team has failed to properly discuss the state of the city’s finances with its citizens. Therefore, I am calling upon you to host a town hall meeting regarding the state of the city’s finances.


The city’s budget should be a transparent document. The citizens of our city deserve to know how their hard-earned tax dollars are being spent and how your administration assembled the current budget. A town hall meeting will give you and your financial team an opportunity to openly review the city’s budget with its citizenry. A town hall meeting will give the citizens of our great city an opportunity to listen to your financial team and ask questions regarding the current state of the city’s finances.


In addition a town hall meeting would serve as an opportunity for you to solicit public input on the projected 2010 budget. Due to the recent uncertainty surrounding our finances, I strongly believe that a town hall meeting regarding our budget will positively serve our city. As a candidate for mayor you ran on a platform of making city hall more open and responsive to the needs of citizens, this is an opportunity to fulfill that promise.


Respectfully,


Will Flanagan

Candidate for Mayor


Well, I'll be damned! "Respectfully" himself said! Imagine that word being used by Sylvanagan towards anyone he disagrees with! He and his coterie of bum kissers and hatchet men and women, grifters all, have no respect for anyone, let alone elected officials they campaign against. Most of all they have absolutely no respect for the citizens of Fall River. They only have respect for the $$$$ they can wriggle out of the taxpayers. That is a fact!

Too bad the sentiments of the letter he gratuitously posted online during the campaign at an auspicious moment have been little reflected by his own administration. Another extreme example of Sylvanagan & Company's hypocrisy on parade. Hey Bag-Boy, it's not really informing the public at little "Town Meetings" across Fall River if the information your present about the current and future budget is P-H-O-N-Y! You and your crew couldn't tell the taxpayers the truth about the financial future of this, their City, because either A), you and your crew have no clue about REAL public finance, B), don't have the guts to tell them the truth for fear of not being reelected, or C), BOTH! I mean, the City of Fall River is a member of MMA. Did you not receive the same information about the FY12 budget I obtained by talking to my "peeps" who attended the special budget presentation? If not, why not? What are you afraid of? What are you trying to hide? What, aside from reelection, are you trying to gain? Is anyone on your staff of crack finance officers, or you, or the latest version of Fall River's "Hank the Angry Dwarf" (God rest his soul!), your very own Steve Torres, ever had to deal with such a looming disaster? I DON"T THINK SO!!!!!!!!!

No, you and your too live crew of fellow FROED associates and staff cretins will rattle and hum on about so-called achievements, like this latest loss of the Bio-Park for the development by UMASS/Dartmouth of a single biomanufaturing enterprise, hopefully to be located in Fall River (and even THAT hasn't been determined yet!), while avoiding like the plague the REALITY of this City's financial future to hide the bad news from the citizens of Fall River. Cadime complete a realistic Revenue and Expenditure Forecast? HA! Now that's a pipe dream, and even bigger one than Fall River being financially solvent within the next decade, or Pellitier's "Internet Cafe" paying out more in sweepstakes winnings than he takes in for himself!

But that's what you and your FROED clowns want the citizens of Fall River to watch...the trees and not the forest. You and your buddies like YO-YO Amaral (aka "Pocketnuts Troy"), who, as an aside, doesn't look very good in a cheerleaders skirt and  waving "red ink" pom-poms, cannot tell the truth about what's straight up ahead. That's right , a big dangerous tree of a different sort, a wide, stout tree of operating budget deficits. And it's that one future tree you are willingly overlooking, The Ford you bought from "Your friend in da bizinezz" will crash head on into it. And then you'll all be lost in that forest of red ink.

Maybe instead of the letter above sent by Bag-Boy deluxe during the campaign, we all might consider THIS one instead! A man can dream, can't he?!

THE DON'T RE-ELECT BILL FLANAGAN COMMITTEE
RENTED P.O. BOX SOMEWHERE IN
FALL RIVER, MASSACHUSETTS
SENT VIA LOW CLASS MAIL BECAUSE
GOV'T CTR IS STILL CLOSED ON FRIDAYS
++Please Don't Shred+++++
April Fool's Day 2010
Mayor of FRGTV
City Hall Throne
1 Government Center
Fall River, MA 02722


Re: TOWN HALL MEETING ON BIO PARK AND CASINO
Dear See Through Mayor :
The current state of our city has left me with the impression that your administration has failed to even attempt to fulfill any campaign promises.


During this fiscal year the city has faced secrecy, arrogance and dictatorship behavior much like the stop bob people rallied against on your behalf and dime. . I am also concerned that your have failed to properly discuss the state of the city with its citizens. Therefore, I am calling upon you to host a town hall meeting regarding the state of the city and it's economic development.

The city should be as transparent as the current mayor vowed it would be upon election.
The citizens of our city deserve to know how their hard-earned tax dollars are being spent and how your administration assembled the current deal with the Wampanoags, Baccarri and any other top secret deals .. ... A town hall meeting will give you and your 'team of ...' an opportunity to openly review the city with its citizenry. A town hall meeting will give the citizens of our great city an opportunity to listen to your rhetoric and ask questions regarding the current state of the city.
In addition a town hall meeting would serve as an opportunity for you to solicit public input on the projected economic development and latest photo -ops . Due to the recent uncertainty surrounding the city we strongly believe that a town hall meeting will positively serve our city. As a candidate for mayor you ran on a platform of making city hall more open and responsive to the needs of citizens, this is an opportunity to fulfill that promise.
Respectfully,


Bill Flanagan
Candidate for re-election


PS.....Hey Yo-Yo Amaral, if you and FROED love Fall River so much and want to save current jobs and develop new ones, why did you move your yo-yo production out of Fall River?

Wednesday, September 29, 2010

Same Old Song And Dance

After long search, Fall River selects
and hires new city auditor

By Michael Holtzman
Herald News Staff Reporter
Posted Sep 29, 2010 @ 02:00 PM
Last update Sep 29, 2010 @ 05:05 PM


FALL RIVER — After a lengthy search, the city has hired a Quincy comptroller with a high degree of accounting experience and education as its auditor, Mayor Will Flanagan said Wednesday.

Krishan Gupta of Berkley will start the job Oct. 12 at a top-step salary of $80,292.
 
For the past three years, he’s worked at Quincy College, an enterprise of that city, as senior director of accounts and finance. He’s handled budgets, payroll, ledger maintenance and preparation of financial statements.

His duties included working with external auditors to finalize annual financial statements and audits. Those are among the key roles of the auditor’s office, which is behind in both its financial and grant audits, according to the state Department of Revenue.


Flanagan called the new auditor “a problem solver.”

He said Gupta met with financial department heads at length last week. He also spoke with the DOR and the city’s auditing firm, Hague & Sahady in Fall River, to learn about the current backlog. “He sat down and he made an assessment. If he didn’t feel he could make a difference for the city, he was not going to take the job,” Flanagan said.


Flanagan said he was seeking an auditor with municipal auditing experience to replace Kevin Almeida who took a comparable financial job in early July with the city school department.

Flanagan also cited Gupta’s extensive education in finance and accounting and college teaching experience.


Educated initially in India where he grew up, Gupta holds a master’s in business administration from the University of West Georgia and master’s in accounting from the Graduate Center City University of New York.


During more than 20 years of teaching accounting in New York and Massachusetts, he taught at the University of Massachusetts Dartmouth from 1998 to 2004 and is on the adjunct faculty at Bentley University in Waltham.


Human Resources Director Madeline Coelho said Gupta had been interviewed this summer during a first round of screenings and was a top candidate in a small field.


She noted he was experienced with the city’s MUNIS system and with the Uniform Massachusetts Accounting System.


Gupta accepted the job last week and took a small pay cut from his job in Quincy, Coelho said.


For a year before that he worked as comptroller at Massasoit Community College in Brockton. He was a mid-level manager of the State Bank of India from 1974 to 1985.


“I’m excited about it. I think I can make a difference,” Gupta said in a phone interview.


Informed the DOR is awaiting the late audits, he said, “I’m aware of the challenge and the work that is cut out for me. Challenges are good.”


He expressed optimism he’d receive the cooperation needed to accomplish the tasks as city auditor.


A resident of the SouthCoast and Berkley since 1998, Gupta said the shorter commute will help with his family life. He is remarried with a 2-year-old son, and he and his wife have five college-age and grown children from before they married.
E-mail Michael Holtzman at mholtzman@heraldnews.com.


Let's all hope that our new Auditor has the right stuff for the job ahead. More importantly, let's all hope this guy is a completely honest person capable of not playing "hit the number" for the numerous grant, especially education grants (5-7 years worth in some cases) and general ledger accounts (since FY09) that have been allowed to lay about unaudited and, reportedly, in very bad shape.

I hope he realizes that his staff stinks and that he doesn't have enough warm bodies to provide him with loyal, qualified assistance in this mighty effort. No, we better start calling him "Revis", because he's all alone on that island of his, and in municipal finance, that's most definitely NOT a good place to be.

I have no idea who this man is. I had no idea who the "Finance Director" was when he was hired, and he's been so great he wasn't allowed a voice in the auditor's hiring! It's never a good sign when both men appear to have a similar work-skill background but the supposed underling, the Auditor, has more high level accomplishments than his supervisor, Mr. Grab. (I don't know about you, but a Treasurer named "GRAB" makes me chuckle...a  lot...when I hear the name. It's pure Fall River!)

Aside from the obvious connection between these two titans of municipal finance, Grab and Gupta, that being the City of Quincy, there could also be a tie between Gupta and the GREAT CADIME (HA!) through UMASS/Dartmouth. But none of that really matters. You see, in this day and age of unemployment, even amongst professionals, or what pass as professionals, it is rare indeed that TWO of the scant few finance professionals in the City would come from the same City and both be willing to take a pay cut for the privilege of toiling in the GREAT AND WONDERFUL COMMUNITY OF FALL RIVER. HMMMMM. Something's not right about that! NO FOOLING!

But we shall receive answers soon enough. You never know, maybe either Grab or Gupta will be the new Sylvanagan patsy to take the blame for the next set of completed financials for the City, and I'm sure they will tell one sad and sordid tale. Don't forget, it will be the report of the last year of the reign of the GREAT DESTROYER CORREIA. I guess Mr. Almeida, Correia's nephew or godson, or whatever relative of Correia he was, and ex employee of Hague & Sahady just didn't want to be associated with the nasty truth so he split for greener and quieter pastures at the School Department. Wouldn't you?! Let that crap hammer fall on the new guys, right? Don't you just love all the Fall River "Profiles in Courage"!

Let me take this opportunity to inject some terrifying factoids into this discussion:
  • DOR isn't kidding. The last administration, and the current one, made promises to DOR to complete financial reports in a timely fashion. They better get them on time, or else. I wouldn't want to be Sylvanagan if the reports are not timely filed and then have the State Aid withheld until they are! Say "buh-bye" Sylvanagan!
  • At a meeting held at MMA this week, some truly hideous FY12 state budget scenarios were laid out. Apparently, because this is an election year, the state FY11 budget was balanced by maxing out revenue forecasts and plying the final budget with scads of one time federal monies and depleting the "rainy day" fund. Everyone is terrified that the ballot proposition to cut the state sales tax to 3%, if passed, will bankrupt the state since the balanced FY 11 budget counts on a full year of receipts at the current sales tax rate, and with rosy receipt figures at that! WITH a cut in sales tax rate if the ballot question passes, one MMA estimate indicates a whopping 30% across the board cut in the state budget for FY 12. 30%! The lowest estimate, given no change in the sales tax rate, is an even still awful cut of up to 18% in the FY12 budget. That's across the board, including LOCAL AID! Chew on that one in an election year Sylvanagan! The new guy Gupta might as well stay right where he is because the City will not be able to afford him, or anyone else , with a 18 - 30 % cut in local aid. I mean, that's a joke and a half! I'm so glad I left the business when I did! Again, say  "buh-bye" Sylvanagan!

So, all this is an academic discussion, the new Auditor, the late financial reports, the lack of knowledge of Public Finance of anyone in elective capacity in Fall River. Fall River cannot survive FY12. Impossible. And did not the School Department just use fed monies to hire 130 new people? Maybe they know more than the rest of us, but if the Republicans take control of either the House or Senate in Washington in a month, continued massive ed and local government aid will be cut back severely, if not all together.

Fall River. It's just a disaster waiting to happen!

Target Rich Enviorment

FROED loans $2M to
 15 Fall River businesses in 2010
***************
By Michael Holtzman
Herald News Staff Reporter
Posted Sep 27, 2010 @ 12:00 AM


FALL RIVER — The Fall River Office of Economic Development has provided low interest loans to 15 local businesses totaling nearly $2 million this year, according to a recent press release from FROED officials.

Those loans are targeted to help retain 350 city jobs and create 62 new positions, reported Kenneth Fiola Jr., FROED executive vice president.


“Typically in a normal lending year we probably loan between $1.3 and $1.8 million,” Fiola said. The first eight months this year are indicative of a small turn in the economy and companies are now looking to reinvest.”

The businesses that received funds through the FROED loan programs include: Amaral’s Central Market, B.G.B.; LLC d/b/a Consolidated Thread Mills; Barcelos Bakery; Bell Garment Co., Inc.; Fall River Ford, Inc.; Famosa Hair Salon; Fitzgerald Insurance & Financial Services; Griffin Manufacturing Company, Inc.; HealthFirst Family Care Center, Inc.; Ledoux & Company, Inc.; Main St. Nat. Title & Closing Services, LLC; Northeast Food and Beverage LLC; Oliveira Construction, Inc.; Raw Seafoods Inc. and Red Velvet Florist Inc.

Mayor Will Flanagan, who chairs the private, nonprofit FROED board of trustees as the mayor, and businessman Alan Amaral, its president, said the impact of the long-standing loan program helps the city in multiple ways.

“Success of business here in the city is a key component to the development and prosperity of the city,” Flanagan said.
FROED’s services “not only benefit the businesses who utilize those but also the city as a whole through job retention and creation,” Flanagan said in a press statement issued by Lynn Creamer, FROED’s economic development coordinator hired earlier this year. Creamer also plays an economic development role to the mayor’s office.

Amaral said FROED continues to follow its mission since being established in 1978. That includes “promoting the prosperity and general welfare of the citizens of Fall River through the stimulation of economic strength and expansion of new and existing businesses.”

He cited financial assistance to local businesses and project management as two resources it provides.


He listed several long-term and ongoing development projects FROED has been involved with, including the Fall River Industrial Park, Commerce Park and eminent domain takings for Meditech and the University of Massachusetts Advanced Technology Manufacturing Center on Martine Street.


The City Council has asked Fiola and the administration to attend a Committee on Finance meeting and update the council on recent economic development projects.

Fiola said the information about the ongoing loan program was coincidental to that recent council request.


He said the addition this year of two staff persons to fill long-vacant positions will include providing quarterly updates on FROED programs.


The agency, housed at Government Center, lists $65 million in loans to more than 600 city businesses since its inception. The listed benefits have been retention and creation of 14,000 jobs over that 32-year period, the press release said.


Applicants for loans are asked to submit an application, financial statement and business plan to the FROED office.
E-mail Michael Holtzman at mholtzman@heraldnews.com.


" TheShadow:
"I wouldn't believe anything that dork Fiola says even if his tongue was notarized." "

My oh my, a voice of reason found on the commenter's section in the Fall River Herald News (HN), otherwise known as the worst fish wrap money can borrow. But let's look at several of the goings on of recent vintage in Fall River shall we?! You must admit, with the advent of fall, Fall River has become a target rich enviornment.


  • You have to LOVEEEEEEE this story (above). When all is said and done, and all the many propaganda hacks defending FROED stop yacking for a minute, the chirping you hear are the local "crickets of commerce" hiding in the weeds but still very much detectable. It's a vast and unending insult to Fall River citizens that these clowns are able to steal the way they do without being called out and by continuing to raid the FROED, largely publicly funded treasury, with complete brazenness and impunity. Oh Lord, where are the FBI undercover agents when you need them! Just promise Fiola the Weeper more cash and he'll get caught in record time. AMAZING! FROED's operations are really like a revolving fund/Ponzi scheme, a private savings and loan , with your money and your full and faith and credit backing them. You, the Fall River taxpayer swallow the losses. That's the truth. But it's the truth Fiola, Amaral (or as I like to call him on the pages of the HN's commenter's pages "Pocketnuts Troy" - that will get an angry response I'm sure...hey loser, go play with your yo-yo's!) and the rest of the happy band of thieves don't want you to consider.

  • "So....youze wannah buy a chance to make some dough? Just buy inta dah sweepstakes I'm runnin'....hey, it's not like before, it's LEGAL!"... You have to hand it to Pellitier, he sure knows suckers when he sees them. Internet cafe' my buttocks! All I can say is "what's the administrative fee and payoff schedule there Oh crooked one?! A fool and his money are soon parted....who said that...oh yes, Wampanoag Chief Cromwell. He was soooooo right!

  • The dirty dozen! It's not the title of a WWII movie we all have seen, it's the number of jobs that REALLY were expected by FROED and  Fiola the Weeper from the Bio-Park. The 8,000 jobs would come over a period of 15-20 years, or so he says NOW!  Myself, I think he's simply softening the blow for the news that the Bio-Park is going to New Bedford, not in any of these "PRIME" Fall River locations offered to UMASS/Dartmouth or the Baccari (THE PRESUMED BRIBER OF ELECTED OFFICIALS) owned land in Freetown, the alternative "make-up" locations made available AFTER the public started going bat guano crazy about losing BOTH the casino AND the Bio-Park. That's probably the game afoot with FROED. Tell everyone the Bio-Park wasn't so great an idea and trumpet scads of well paying (HA!) jobs - $25 - $35,000/year - jobs available at a casino...if it ever gets built. The City Council drilled the two fools  (Fiola the Weeper and "little Napoleon Torres) sent into harms way by Bag-Boy Deluxe Sylvanagan. Oh and just about any and all concrete information about all of FROED's dealings surrounding the Bio-Park and the casino are still on "double secret probation" status. Sounds like Nixon's secret plan to end the Vietnam War to me! Hooey and crapola is what the public is getting from FROED and mayor Sylvanagan.
That's enough for now...so much negativity is bad for a person's health. So with that, I'm signing off for now....but later...I'll discuss MMB and the deplorable situation at the Fall River School Department....MCAS lives!

Tuesday, September 21, 2010

Growing Rats Nest

INSIDE TAUNTON: Trash-to-energy consultant switch
under City Council’s watch, not Crowley’s

By TED GAY
GateHouse News Service
Posted Sep 19, 2010 @ 11:42 PM


Taunton —


Charles Crowley makes the point that he wasn’t mayor when the City Council switched in mid-stream consultants for a trash-to-energy plant.

It’s a good point in understanding the collapse of the high tech landfill replacement project. Crowley was responding to an item here last week that raised the question of who should be held responsible for the failure.


In an e-mail, he said there were individuals on the state level who could share the blame, as well as those on the local level.
Crowley noted that the council embraced the project the night councilors unexpectedly switched consultants from Camp, Dresser and McGee to Alternative Resources, Inc. That was about five years ago.


The subcommittee, then chaired by Tom Hoye, followed by Dan Barbour, and A. J. Marsall, heard the recommendation of then City Solicitor Steve Torres for making the change and approved sending it to the full council for endorsement. That vote was unanimous. So was the vote of the full council that night.


It remained that way in the years that followed with the public being kept in the dark.


“The council likes to blame me for everything and yet take credit for everything,” Crowley wrote.


He cited the cost of the fire watch for the Star Theater when the councilors knew only the fire chief could order the watch, as well as the councilors claiming that passage of the local meals tax enabled the city to rehire laid off workers. The tax did not provide enough revenue for that.




(separated at birth)








Another in a long line of great jobs completed by our very own modern day Ratso Rizzo (From Midnight Cowboy), City Corporation Counsel Steve Torres. I don't think this person can do ANYTHING right!

We all know there were some shady goings on with the "trash -to-energy" project in Taunton when he was  the City Attorney there with cries of outrage from members of the Taunton City Council after they found out about Mr. Torres' travel to France to check out a facility along with consultants for a specific product. Nice going there Steve, the way you and your partner in "crime" work, your then assistant legal errand boy, our very own Mayor Sylvanagan, being layed out for the honest world to see. You folks NEVER change your modus operandi because you are pretentious attorneys for cripes sake, masters of the universe and more knowledgeable than anyone you meet, right?

 You guys went way past Arrogance Street and set up house in an apartment on Hubris Circle. And I thought you loved Fall River so much you would have at least bought a home on Sincere Avenue. Nope, not Fall River loving Mayor Sylvanagan. It just wouldn't fit the profile. Grifters like you two need to stay free of putting down roots. You never know when you'll have to move on quickly. It's one deal at a time for you two, right?

And maybe we found one of the latest deals. Just because you two have been on a continuous losing steak since landing in Fall River doesn't mean you can't soak SOMEONE for a bundle, right?

Well, meet "JOHN DOE #2", as the FBI affidavit against several North Providence City Councilmen calls him, aka (as far as we know) Mr. Baccari. Around these parts Mr. "Doe" (aptly named, I might add) is the gentleman who we think owns the land in Freetown near the Rt. 24 cutoff originally planned as an access way to the 300 acres for the Bio-Park. The land he owns is the very same land on which Messers Sylvanagan , Torres and Fiola want FROED to buy to entice UMASS/Dartmouth to build the Bio-Park. And as we all know, Sylvanagan, Torres Fiola and FROED are trying to soak the Wampanoags and are trying to sell them the same 300 acres intended for the Bio-Park so they can build a destination casino. In either situation, Mr DOE #2's land in Freetown will be much, much more valuable now that he has that nice Rt. 24 access way built right next to his Freetown property. Who is soaking who is really the actual issue, but let the grifters do their thing.

Reading the actual FBI affidavit of MR. DOE #2's handiwork is amazing. You can find it right here:
 

It is truly an exercise in the worst aspects of local government graft and corruption, and the open willingness of a monied business interest to spread the wealth to get precisely what they want, and screw John Q Public!

One of my favorite passages is one that talks about the mechanics of the scheme, the actual payoff for Council votes, and the extremely vulgar, yet cliched way the offer was put to the miscreants involved:
   
CS#1 asked ZAMBARANO if the others involved in the bribery scheme were BURCHFIELD and DOUGLAS. ZAMBARANO said "Yeah." ZAMBARANO continued "They don‟t even want to talk to you about it...in other words... they agreed. Now its gonna be four of us. So... You come tomorrow night... if you go along with the show and go along with everything we‟ll give you $4,000 ... and I‟m gonna tell you it was twenty five divided by three. So we‟re not getting much more than you are. But I mean I negotiated the deal. I mean... and they were in on it from the beginning...so I came up with that figure." CS#1 asked "Twenty five hundred?" to which ZAMBARANO replied "Twenty five thousand." ZAMBARANO stated to CS#1 that JOHN DOE #2 told ZAMBARANO "You deliver four votes and I‟ll give you twenty-five thousand dollars."  

Right from an episode of The Sopranos! But it happened right next door in Rhode Island.

Now why bring up Steven Torres and the Taunton Project? Whether a City Corporate Counsel , Fall River Mayor who worked under him, an attorney representing FROED or a monied property developer who will stop at nothing to get things done HIS WAY, we are discussing a collection of arrogant individuals who will not change the way they do business. These leopards will not change their spots. Doing things in the dark, out of every one's eye shot, keeping things secret and quiet, are the hallmark of these folks. It's frightening to see these individuals in on the same deal in any form or fashion. One has a legitimate reason for concern that things are not being done on the up and up, or that some type of valuable considerations are being traded between these particular parties.

I'm not saying there are quid pro quos going on, or that cash is changing hands under the table . No, I'd never do that. But I am saying by their past activity you shall know them. They will never change. Grifters never do.

One last frightening thought to consider. JOHN DOE #2's daughter is married to the son of the would be Governor of Rhode Island. I'm so glad I live in the Bay State.

Monday, September 20, 2010

If 6 was 9

Fall River Mayor Flanagan:
 City working on revised local hiring law

























Fall River Mayor Will Flanagan, shown here with Mashpee Wampanoag Tribal Chairman Cedric Cromwell, says the city is working on a revised version of the responsible employer ordinance.

(Actually, it's a handshake agreeing to screw the taxpayers of Fall River to ensure their own future's!)

By Michael Holtzman
Herald News Staff Reporter
Posted Sep 19, 2010 @ 08:48 PM
Last update Sep 19, 2010 @ 10:02 PM


FALL RIVER — Mayor Will Flanagan, called out by several city councilors over the controversial Responsible Employee Ordinance, said he supports such a provision and has his law department working on a revised version.

“I would have rather seen the ordinance reworked than repealed,” Flanagan said Thursday, two days after the City Council removed it.


Noting the lawsuit filed in June that followed its initial passage, Flanagan said, “I believe we had time to rewrite the ordinance before we went back into court.”


That was in reference to the suit filed by the Utility Contractors Association of New England Inc., alleging four sections of the enacted ordinance violated federal and state constitutions.

“We’re researching in the law department what’s considered a reasonable approach,” Flanagan said of the REO in general and specifically its controversial apprenticeship hiring standards.

“I think we can get it out by the next court date,” Flanagan said. “We will put it before the council.”


Councilor Eric Poulin and others urged him to do that.


The contractors group claimed the ordinance's residency requirements for hiring were illegal. The organization's lawyer, Richard Wayne of Boston, called apprenticeship requirements that contractors have approved training programs in place for several years in order to bid “pretty onerous.”


As a result, the city’s law department agreed to suspend enforcement of the ordinance until Wayne filed a court request for summary judgment. That was expected sometime in October.

Similar ordinances, adopted by about 18 larger cities and towns in Massachusetts, govern requirements for unionized and open shops that bid on municipal projects.


Flanagan said he supports local hiring laws in general and some conditions in the now-repealed ordinance.


He said any employer knowingly allowing illegal, undocumented workers “should be prohibited from future work. It is illegal. It should be part of the ordinance,” he said.


He cited the city’s 14 percent unemployment rate and union halls with sometimes half its members out of work. He said he indicated in meetings with union and open shop leaders his support for a “local hiring preference.”


The residency requirements, targeted in the lawsuit, are “a gray area,” Flanagan said.


He supports paying prevailing wages — which state laws mandate on public jobs — and providing benefits like health insurance.


While medical benefits can vary widely, especially between union and open shops, Flanagan said he supports how that part of the ordinance was written.

“I support a reasonable apprentice program,” Flanagan said.


His assistant corporation counsel, Elizabeth Pereira, called it “a huge issue that’s been difficult” to resolve. Union and open shops have widely different preferences on graduate training programs, maintaining them and meeting quotas.

Pereira, assigned to the research after the contractors filed suit, said she’s been working with Corporation Counsel Steven Torres “to try to figure out some way to word it so it’s in conformance with case law... “We were hoping to have something by the beginning of September, but it didn’t happen,” she said. “Steve and I began working on it, and it got to a stumbling block when we got to the apprenticeship issue.”


Pereira said they are ready to proceed. The City Council repealed the ordinance rather than referring what had originally been passed to its Committee on Ordinances and Legislation for revision.


“It really didn’t make too much of a difference as far as we’re concerned,” she said. “The REO enforcement was suspended. To us, it was if it was off the books.”


Now that it’s repealed, she said Utility Contractors may seek reimbursement for attorney’s fees.


Flanagan said they’d dispute such pursuit of damages because the ordinance was embargoed then repealed.
“I’m not the authority that proposed the ordinance,” Flanagan said of the 8-0 council vote to pass it after Torres finalized the law union leaders gave the council.

“Attorney Torres to this day says he thinks it’s defensible. We haven’t changed our position,” Flanagan said.


Despite claims to the contrary by some councilors, he said he did not directly or indirectly support repeal of the ordinance.


An issue Pereira said needs further clarification is whether the city’s original and more limited REO, enacted in 2000, remains in effect.

“The old ordinance is essentially stricken,” she said, citing the new REO language.


City Clerk Alison Brett and City Council President Joseph Camara said the night of the repeal the old one remained on the books. Pereira said Brett had contacted her saying that was the council’s intent.


She planned to research the council action and give Brett an opinion.
E-mail Michael Holtzman at mholtzman@heraldnews.com.


"Ok, so a guy goes into a bar and sees a turtle, a chicken and a lawyer drinking burbon, and he askes the bartender "Hey, what's going on with those three?" and the bartender says........"

Nothing this crook says or does can possibly be taken at face value. He's not smart enough to bring about real, positive change in Fall River, but he's just devious enough to be dangerous to your financial well being and your standard of living in Fall River. And then there is that ever present nagging question of "What's in this for him?"

You naturally have to extend the beneficiaries of that query to include his pals Torres and Fiola, as well as his biggest campaign contributors and his fellow members of the FROED Board of Directors. You might also want to include the Chamber of Commerce. Oh yes, and anyone publishing a newspaper in the City and those painting newspaper boxes (HA!). Newspaper boxes! HAHAHAHA! PAINT A NEWSPAPER BOX AND CHANGE THE DIRECTION OF FALL RIVER ! I haven't stopped laughing since I first read that happy horse twaddle!

So, from what I gather, the City Council, riding the expected crest of a populace anger wave, set about trying to solve the city's unemployment problem by trying to mandate, quite illegally, that city people be hired , in exorbitantly high numbers, as trade apprentices and employees on construction crews in order for firms to be eligible to be awarded a city contract. And when an attorney, a very expensive and far more qualified attorney than our CRACK , home grown city legal team, representing Utility Contractors Association of New England Inc., filed suit against the city, the City Council reacted by killing the ordinance they had passed, but left the framework of an earlier attempt in place, primarily, I think, to allow them all to say they are tough on construction firms trying to win city contracts by mandating Fall River labor be used. There is more useless posturing going on right now than in an episode of America's Next Top Model.

And then came Sylvanagan. This fool wants it every which way that will make him look good. But the entire discussion, from his vantage point, is entirely devoid of what is right or wrong, what is appropriate to reach a valid social goal, or what actually is allowable under both state and federal constitutions. I guess that's why we must rely on Atty. Richard Wayne representing the Utility Contractor's. I guess that's also why Atty. Wayne's clients want legal fees paid by the City of Fall River in the event the Judge sides with the Utility Contractor's in a possible summary judgement. The way Sylvanagan claims we shouldn't have to pay makes me feel we is doomed. It's an all too frequent feeling whenever he tries to justify how Fall River DIDN'T screw something up!

" Flanagan said they’d dispute such pursuit of damages because the ordinance was embargoed then repealed.

“I’m not the authority that proposed the ordinance,” Flanagan said of the 8-0 council vote to pass it after Torres finalized the law union leaders gave the council.

“Attorney Torres to this day says he thinks it’s defensible. We haven’t changed our position,” Flanagan said. "


But what is really so "Sylvanagan" about the entire mess is this little bon mot:

" Pereira, assigned to the research after the contractors filed suit, said she’s been working with Corporation Counsel Steven Torres to try to figure out some way to word it so it’s in conformance with case law... “We were hoping to have something by the beginning of September, but it didn’t happen,” she said. “Steve and I began working on it, and it got to a stumbling block when we got to the apprenticeship issue.”

You have to love the thinking here, and the fact that it's discussed openly, like someone waving the stupid flag for all the world to see.  "We're trying to jury rig an ordinance around known case law AFTER THE FACT because we were too dumb to do it at the beginning!" I mean, is this what passes for adequate preparation and solid legal reasoning in Fall River? No wonder that Atty. Wayne reportedly called home and told the old wifey to order steak that night after he met with his clients from Utility Contractor's. YOU CAN"T MAKE THIS STUFF UP!

Not smart enough to bring about positive change, but just devious enough to get the entire City of Fall River into financial hock while trying to feather his own nest by any tortured reasoning of his own. Sometimes the most direct way is the best way.

" ...Well buddy, you see the Turtle drinks bourbon because he's a slow walking coward who hides from trouble, and the Chicken drinks bourbon because he's terrified of crossing the street to get to the other side in all that traffic....But the Lawyer drinks bourbon with the other two because he's setting up his new client the Chicken to get hit by a taxi during rush hour while he's still in the crosswalk and wants the turtle to be a witness on the sidewalk before he calls the ambulance"..