The Lube Job

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WPCNR NEWS & COMMENT. By John F. Bailey. June 7, 2010 UPDATED June 8,2010. Updated June 9, 2010: 


 


It’s not working is it?


 


The best laid plans of mice and men have gone incredibly, chillingly wrong.


 


Now the spin of all time is on…millions are being spent – to save the Gulf Beaches?


 


No.


 


To prop up BP’s stock price. To rehab the company as it rewrites the New Black Plague crisis its way.


 



 


 





$60 Million for one television campaign, now a series of  full-page ads to paint BP as a good company, victimized by fate.


 


Here’s an idea for BP’s hideous media people: Could  BP’s Tony Hayward jerk up some tears, holding up a rehabbed oil-soaked pelican, releasing the bird in Tampa,  maybe? Or maybe Tony and his kids could walk on a Florida Beach and show the beach is clean? Watch for those, coming up.


 


That would be good…but he might get a spot of oil on his custom shirt.


 


 


Could the government of the U.K. come down on BP and bring charges? Where is the British sense of outrage?Where’s the outcry from America’s green people?  President Obama of the U.S. seems helpless lest he offend the good old boys in big oil, whom he needs for reelection.


 


And when Thad Allen, the Coast Guard Commander of the situation gives us the bad news — “there will be oil out there for months to come. This will be well into the fall.”


 


And when it is painfully obvious today(Monday) not even a third of the oil flow is being “processed” as Admiral Allen put it Saturday – it means that the oil is going to keep on coming.


 


The spinmasters have been set loose with their cologne, their neat ties and earnest pathological doubletalk to make it right.


 


The spokespersons, the word merchants, the experts, the think tanks are now out there soothing us with bromides – and I include the administration of the U.S.Government in this group.


 


We can’t hold the  government accountable, can we?


 


The spinmasters are now busy saying no one is really accountable, that this could not have been foreseen—that accidents happen – and President Obama says today “If we find this is a result of human error—“


 


What do you mean “if?” Mr. President. This was not a mistake. This is the most reckless a sequence of events in corporate malfeasance  since the building of the Titanic.


 


“If it was a result of human error?”


 


A  congressional committee two weeks ago heard BP and Transocean people admit that BP overrode Transocean’s concerns about building pressure in the well and said go ahead we want to open that well.


 


Human error? They ignored warning signs. They blew off the concerns and the well blew up. That’s what happened. They said that’s what happened. Have we forgotten that?


 


This is as big a disaster as they come. Not in loss of life (though eleven died). But in the loss of a way of life for decades.


 


Now that the damage is really out of control, never-ending, the media with the blessed exception of the great Anderson Cooper, the battle has turned to getting America to accept BP as a good, cuddly giant corporate international cartel who cares. That campaign has begun.


 


I wrote this column on Monday. As of Tuesday morning, The Today Show prior to showing an interview with the President, did not even update the Gulf “oil flow” numbers at 7 A.M. before introducing the President. How can you not? It is already being downplayed.


 


In that interview on TODAY, the President actually said the ruined marshes may come back in 3 years.


 


On “Morning Joe,” BP ran a commercial with Mr. Hayward depicting workers on a beach, flotillas and Mr. Hayward reading off a teleprompter.


 


Media rehab has begun.


 


And on Wednesday, on Today, they have the BP Chief Operating Officer Doug Suttles on after he tells the Associated Press the oil will be down to “a trickle” by next Monday, and after BP issued a statement contradicting that.  Meredith Viera asks him about discrepancies — but fails to ask him the big question, what his definition of “a trickle” is. How can you not ask that? He also denied the existence of an underwater plume by saying BP had still not found “significant” quantities of underwater oil. Of course, he did not define “significant.”


 


In a few weeks, you will be seeing profiles of hard-working BP experts, interviews of beach-cleaners, and shots of pelicans being let loose in Tampa…one webbed foot ahead of the oil that is seeking out every living thing in the Gulf like an inexorable glob of doom.


 


We are not cleaning up the spill. It will never be cleaned up in our lifetime.


 


You will see trot-outs of “experts” saying how the sea has already begun to cleanse itself.. watch.


 


We are now battling to shape American minds that this was all a freak of nature and a “bad break” for BP, and perhaps an oil well too big to handle—the gusher of all gushers – I heard a report that one BP guy on the rig state they had no idea how powerful this well was. Read: we had no idea.  (BP should pay me $1 Million for that spin).


 


A Place for the Hidden Persuaders


 


There is a special place in eternity for the people that create the statements, the pretty words, the persuasive commentaries, and jowly sanctimonious statements of booming authority  to make their employers, their government, their industry  look better than they are and soften the public attitude towards their companies. Those “Hidden Persuaders” as Vance Packard would call them – who are being called on now to  win back sympathy from the public. To win the public’s forgiveness and absolution for this abomination of technical conceit.


 


BP and  the rest of The Big Oilers are now concerned not with Mr.Pelican, or Mr. and Mrs. Louisiana, Alabama, Mississsippi or Florida. Their mission now is to keep the magic gateway to continued illicit obscene profit open. They need “forgiveness,” “absolution.”


 


When these people, the spokespersons, the barristers, the press release writers, the politician speech writers die there is a place for them.


 


There is a special place in Dante’s Inferno – The Vestibule – where the immortal poet  first sees the countless souls from all of the millennia before – shut out of Hell, put it


 


 “The sighs, groans and laments at first weren so loud,


Resounding through starless air, I began to weep:


Strange languages, horrible screams, words imbued


 


Of error, cried: “Master, what is this I hear?


What people are these, whom pain has overcome?”


He: “This is the sorrowful state of souls unsure,


 


 


I could not help but think as America watches the Gulf of Mexico in its Black Plague irony with all the brains and knowledge of the engineers, the Coast Guard, and the scientists unable to stop the black death, that the public relations persons who put out the full page BP ad in the New York Times, will someday join this stream of


those who chose “a blind life,” in Dante’s immortal Hell.


 


This advertisement appearing in The Times Monday,  is a classic in pornographic propaganda, sanctimonious hand-wringing and a testimony to the incompetence of our time and, in this reporter’s opinion, is pure evil.


 


How many rationalizations are there in this insulting ad for incompetence on a grand scale, aided and abetted by billions, with the preposterous earnest headline:


 


“We will get it done.


We will make this right.”


 


Every sentence of this ad should be torn apart and rejected by media companies everywhere asked to run it.


 


The New York Times, that cosmo-sipping, politically correct, upholder of all that is good for the upper class, the ultimate “ecological” crusader, should have rejected the advertisement, but they made big time money off it, so they ran it. Shame on them.


 


If it makes money, it’s good. That’s our American attitude today.


 


Let’s take this BP ad sentence by sentence. Flacks in training, facilatators of the feckless, listen up, it is a masterpiece of propaganda, good to wipe off a pelican with.


 


“The Gulf oil spill is a tragedy that never should have happened.”


 


Webster’s defines tragedy as “a serious play with an unhappy ending,” and 2.”a very sad and tragic event; disaster, fatal.”


 


Tragedy (it rolls off the tongue with reference and pathos, soft, touchy-feely and sensitive) is also a soft sympathetic word – better than “outrage,” for example, better than “ecological Armageddon,” better than “Black Death,” for example….and people reading it can swallow it more easily as something that will be forgotten as time goes by. Because, let’s face it. Tragedies happen, the implication is, no one is at fault, no one did a tragedy deliberately.


 


“Tragedy” implies it will go away, and the unaffected person can  subconciously swallow the whole Gulf gaff as something that could not be foreseen or avoided.


 


Every wave sloshing in tells you that, doesn’t it? It’s just so sad.


 


But the BP propagandists – worthy of Josef Goebbels(Adolf Hitler’s publicist)  — are just getting warmed up:


 


“And while we were deeply disappointed that the recent “top kill”b operation was unsuccessful, we were also prepared. The best engineers in the world are now working around the clock to contain and collect most of the leak.”


 


Prepared, is this ad serious?


 


The very facts that this happened and has lasted as long as it has cries out, saying that they were not prepared. 


 


What they have done is to try and do again what they attempted to do the previous week: Cap the well.


 


It did  not work 9 days ago, and  the same thing is happening 9 days later. If they get up to 75% “processing” then they can say they are containing and collecting most of the leak. That paragraph softpedals and sugarcoats what really has happened.  And collecting? What one tarball at a time?


 


“BP will continue to take full responsibility for the spill.”


 


As CNN’s Anderson Cooper has repeatedly shown on his telecasts all last week the responsibility BP has shown so far is slow in coming and not at all responsible enough.


 


Not enough workers on the beaches.


 


Not enough booms. Using the alleged wrong dispersant, not enough reimbursing fisherman timely enough, not replacing booms, and denying existence of the underwater plume, and not having any precise way of measuring the rate of oil leakage that has credibility, and finally understating the acreage of shoreline affected thus far.


 


Prepared?


 


They may been prepared, but they were not ready.


 


And really neither was the U.S. Government ready, which despite the President’s forthright denials, they were not. Eating shrimp on the beach and saying it does not make it so. He let BP handle it.


 


Precious time gone.


 


And speaking of not ready–it was reported on Morning Joe Tuesday that BP has only one ship capturing oil and therefore could not ramp up capacity. They are bringing a ship from the North Sea that may take two weeks to get here. How LONG has the oil been spilling? 50 days or so. Talk about not being ready and not planning! Come on.


 


The Advertisement shamelessy brags and goes on:


 


“We have organized the largest environmental response in this country’s history. More than three million feet of boom(571 miles), 30 planes and over 1,300 boats are working to protect the shoreline. When oil reaches the shore, thousands of people are ready to clean it up.”


 


Thousands? As Anderson Cooper showed us last week with his live shots of the Louisiana beaches…there were not thousands, and this is 6 weeks after the spill. It is too late. In Florida, a photograph showed children walking on beaches and their feet becoming coated with oil. Thousands?


 


WPCNR was doing a little math Monday afternoon. My purely amateur analysis suggests that that the 571 miles of boom is not enough  for a coast line that measures from the Louisiana western border to  the Florida Straits that WPCNR estimates is 900 miles…and though the 571 Miles is enough for one line of boom from Louisiana to the Florida panhandle just be looking at a map…you need double that for all the barrier islands in Louisiana alone, etc. They do not have anywhere close enough booms, after six weeks and they are not replenishing them, hence not working.. They have to be replaced.


 


And, let us not let the government and the Coast Guard off the hook. We see the Coast Guard is not prepared to handle big time oil spills either, is it? Nor the Navy for that matter. Where are those defense contractors when you need them? Where are the flotillas of booms ready to go?


 


And what about FEMA? Less press conferences more clean-up,more booms faster next time.


 


The President was not in charge. They’re still using the more toxic dispersant aren’t they? He has continued to let them throw the toxic dispersant in the water.


 


This is a disasterous response by both parties, BP and BG (Big Government). They did not even enlist the fishermen of Louisiana who were pleading to go into the marsh and the Gulf until way late.


 


BP just did not want us to see how bad it was.


 


The BP propaganda machine continues in the Times ad Monday:


 


“Thirty teams of specialists are combing the shore along with US Fish and Wildlife, NOAA and Louisiana Wildlife and Fisheries. If wildlife is affected, rescue stations have been set up to take care of them. Experts have been flown in from around the country. And BP has dedicated $500 million to watch over the long-term impact on marine life and shoreline.”


 


How many specialists? It takes one person per bird. There are a lot of birds and more are coming in every day. They have had to know there were going to be oil-coated birds for six weeks…now the birds are proliferating and we have no idea of the numbers of birds  and whether they can all be handled.


 


Facts are really missing here in this ad. There is no way to tell if this is an adequate number.


 


But then BP has not dealt in facts from the beginning.


 


They are airlifting the birds to Tampa. Perhaps they should airlift them West to Corpus Christi. Downwind and downcurrent of the spill, because that oil is headed to Tampa.


 


Perhaps next time there’s a spill you might think about removing the birds before they get coated with oil…easier to catch them than clean them. And what are the planes doing, dumping dispersant probably.


 


The ad wraps up this way:


 


“We will honor all legitimate claims. We will continue working for as long as ittakes. All our efforts will not come at any cost to taxpayers.”


 


Who is writing this stuff? Joseph Delfino and the Common Council of White Plains?


 


How can any one know that?


 


The taxpayers of the shore of Louisiana, Alabama, Mississippi and the Florida Panhandle are about to be victimized at tremendous cost to the state and waters they love, their livelihoods, their hope.


 


These bromides do not make it better, BP-ers. Trust me.


 


“We understand that it is our responsibility to keep you informed. And do everything we can so this never happens again.”


 


We will get this done. We will make this right.”


 


Make this right.??????


 


You can never make this right.


 


Because it was never right in the first place.


 


Well, inform us. Tell us more precisely how big this spill is. You don’t know? Come on this I believe is an outright lie. You calculate your barrels a day output all right. It is a ridiculous statement at this time.


 


No matter how much money BP throws in, it will not buy back the Gulf as it was.


 


 Tell us what can be done about the underwater plume your chairman denied existed. Tell us how long this will take to make it right.


 


These are the best engineers in the world. They may be. But they may also be the most careless.  The persons who told Transocean to go-ahead…well that was reckless.


 


Tell us what happens if the two new wells being drilled don’t work.


 


Meanwhile, this company, and the other big oilers want to be able to keep drilling these offshore wells off that Atlantic Coast. 


 


Well – BP should not be allowed to drill another well or operate these wells that they own in the United States. The President should nationalize the Alaska oil field BP runs as a safety risk. All their leases should be declared null and void.  


 


This is a crisis for the oil industry they have to persuade everyone that this can’t happen again.


 


The silver tongues sugarcoating this disaster in irresponsible ads pandering to every decent person’s sense of forgiveness deserve the Vestibule, because they have no soul, no sense of decency. And deep in the night, they cannot sleep.


 


You know what BP really stands for, don’t you?


 


Bunk Petroleum


 


It is fitting to read Dante’s full description of why the inhabitants of the Vestibule are there in his Inferno.


 


Don’t you seem to recognize the apologists, the experts, the politicians, the spinmasters for oil in Dante’s description?:


 


“The sighs, groans and laments at first weren’t so loud,


Resounding through starless air, I began to weep:


Strange languages, horrible screams, words imbued


 


Of error, cried: “Master, what is this I hear?


What people are these, whom pain has overcome?”


He: “This is the sorrowful state of souls unsure,


 


 


Whose lives earned neither honor nor bad fame.


And they are mingled with angels of that base sort


Who, neither rebellious to God nor faithful to Him,


 


Chose neither side, but kept themselves apart –


Now Heaven expels them, not to mar its splendor,


And Hell rejects them,  lest the wicked of heart


 


They have no hope of death, but a blind life.


So abject, they envy any other fate.


To all memory of them, the world is deaf.


 


Mercy and justice disdain them Let us not


Speak of them: look and pass on.” I looked again:


A whirling banner sped at such a rate.


 


I seemed it might never stop; behind it a train


Of souls, so long that I would not have thought


Death had undone so many.When more than one


 


I recognized had passed, I beheld the shade


Of him who made the Great Refusal and His enemies-


Hapless ones never alive, their bare skin galled


 


 


 

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Certiorari Refund Run Continues. Big Hits Expected in August.

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WPCNR COMMON COUNCIL CHRONICLE-EXAMINER. June 7, 2010: Tonight on the certiorari front, the city will refund $274,490.43 in certiorari property tax refunds, representing a $553,645 reduction in the current assessment roll (2010). According to the Assessor, Lloyd Tasch, the assessment reduction has already been incorporated in the current 2010 roll. Tasch told WPCNR that beginning in July, any assessment reductions would affect the 2011 tax roll going forward. He noted there would some “big hits” coming in August. 


 


The properties include a refund of $174,078.33 for the Club Pointe condominium complex, covering tax years 2007-08,2008-09 and 2009-10, and a $383,750 redunction in the condo assessment from $1,643,750 to$1,260,000. Tasch said the reduction was not a reflection of the downtrend in condominium prices, but rather the New York State law that requires condominiums and co-ops to be assessed as apartments.Tasch said that condominiums pay 40% to 60% less than an individual homeowner would pay in taxes on a similarly valued single home.


 


90 Maple Realty Associates will receive an $8,735.47 refund and a $19,000 drop in assessment for tax years 2008-09 and 2009-10.  74 Westmoreland Avenue  will be paid back $19,104.02 for tax years 2004-05 through 2009-10. Somerset Condominium will be reimbursed $72,572.61 for the tax years 2006-07 through 2009-10 and an assessment cut of $124,895.


 


The School District will be forced to give back approximate $1,000,000 in related certiorari payments on these properties.

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66 Years Ago Today.

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 WPCNR MILESTONES. June 6, 2009:






Sixty-six  years ago this morning, thousands of troops stormed the beaches in Normandy, France in the largest invasion in history. The bloody assault against a heavily defended coastline, involving incredible courage and sacrifice by allied troops, landing craft, paratroops, signalled the beginning of the end of the Third Reich and the regime of Adolf Hitler’s Nazi Germany.

The quiet beaches of Normandy today, and the rows of white crosses in cemetaries around the little town bear silent vigil to the sacrifice of those brave men and women who fought, died, and triumphed this day 66 years ago today.




We can in no way, or through no motion picture know what any veteran experienced. The veterans who still are with us do not like to talk about their combat experiences. And they do not. One veteran of D-Day, asked what he thought of Saving Private Ryan and the realism of it, said the real D-Day was worse. However, veterans we have interviewed remark that they think of their combat experience every day. It is always with them.

It is inconceivable to me that I could ever be able to do what these men and women did. I would like to hope I could. However, the veterans have. They left ordinary lives as office workers, factory workers, farmers, accountants, and what have you and were able to go to war and “rise to the occasion,” or as they say today, “step it up to the next level.” The highest level.


Few of them are left now. But today their sacrifice should be remembered.

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WP Retirees Receive Bills for 1Q Med Premiums. Pay by July 10 Or Med Cancelled

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WPCNR QUILL & EYESHADE.By John F. Bailey. June 5, 2010: “This took me completely by surprise. I was dumbfounded, when did they do this?” said a retiree from the city of White Plains who has been receiving city paid medical benefits over 15 years, waving the letter they received from the City of White Plains today.


 


It was the letter informing them and some 658 other city retirees that they had to pay the city the first quarter installment of their share of 15% of their medical benefits, due July 10.


 


 The retiree was asked in the letter from the city (below) to pay $378.44 of  a $10,000 premium by  July 10 or have their medical benefits cancelled. Similar letters are going out across the city today.


 



 


 


 


The person said they were unaware of the change (voted by the Common Council with no specific warning that retirees were affected at the adoption of the revised 2010-11 city budget two weeks ago).


 


Only by a news tip from a person familiar with union negotiations did this reporter become aware that the new city policy suggested by the Budget and Management Committee, of having managers, non-union appointees and elected personnel pay a 15% share of their medical premiums to the city also included union members who are retired if they joined the city before July 1, 1995.


 


This meant former councilpersons, commissioners, Mayors, and retirees since 1995 who worked with the city before 1995 pay $1,102 a year to continue a Single Person health benefit plan and $2,396 for a family plan.


 


“This really hurts persons in their cash flow,” said the puzzled retiree. He shook his head as he shared the letter with WPCNR.The intriguing letter also says that if the first quarter payment is not received by July 10, their health insurance will be cancelled.


 


A movement is being launched by White Plains Retirees Association to form a legal challenge to the new city policy.

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Performing Arts Center Benefit Honors Conservatory Performers

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WPCNR STAGE DOOR. From Kathleen Davison, White Plains Performing Arts Center. June 2, 2010: The White Plains Performing Arts Center Board of Trustees announced that the annual Spring Benefit, to be held on Monday June 21 at 7pm, will honor the talented young performers from the Conservatory Theatre’s 2009/2010 season. 


The entertainment for the evening will be highlights from several of these productions including “A Chorus Line”, which played this winter to sell out crowds, “Fame” which just finished a successful run as well as a sneak preview of the upcoming production of “Edges”, which has already garnered rave reviews while still in rehearsal. Broadway World called “Edges” a “scintillating new production” and a “must see event for all theater lovers in the Greater New York Area”.  The production costs for the Benefit are supported by a generous contribution from U.S.Trust, Bank of America Private Wealth Management.


 


 



The casts of all 2009/2010 conservatory productions will be formally recognized on stage as part of the evening’s events; prizes will be awarded in various categories.  Raffle drawings will be held for an exciting selection of leisure activities as well as tickets to sports events and Broadway shows.  The evening will benefit the Conservatory program and help to fund scholarships for deserving students with demonstrated potential as well as financial need. 



The Conservatory provides a healthy, joyful outlet for youthful creative energies in a well structured program of theatre arts. The camaraderie among students, directors and teachers creates a supportive environment for youngsters in need of a sense of belonging and a positive self image.   Here is a telling quote from a current participant in the program ” I don’t know what it is about theatre but it gives me this awesome feeling like I never want what’s happening to go away, whether it’s being in it, doing tech or just watching.”  The proceeds from the June benefit will ensure that many more youngsters are able to participate in the joy of live theatre.



The evening Ticket prices are $50 for Premium seating; or $35 for adults and $25 for students for general seating.  To reserve benefit tickets on line, and to purchase tickets to any upcoming production, please visit www.wppac.com.  Tickets may also be purchased during business hours at the Theatre Box Office or by phone at 914-328-1600.  



The White Plains Performing Arts Center, a 501© 3 not for profit organization, based in downtown White Plains, is dedicated to the presentation and production of a full spectrum of performing arts events for the City of White Plains and its surrounding communities.  The Conservatory Theatre is a professional training and presentation program for theatrical artists between the ages of 8 and 18, offered year round at the White Plains Performing Arts Center.  The mission of the program is to provide the community with the highest quality, most professional training in all aspects of theatre arts.


 

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Oil Spill Traced to Leaked Oil from Fuel Tank at 235 So. Lex

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WPCNR CITY HALL CIRCUIT. From Antoinette Biordi, The Mayor’s Office.  June 4, 2010 (EDITED):  The City of White Plains and Westchester County are working together to make sure the clean up process continues along the Bronx River in White Plains.  On June 2, 2010 approximately several hundred gallons of heating oil leaked from a building on South Lexington Avenue and into the Bronx River.  White Plains Mayor Adam Bradley says, “The City, the County and NYSDEC have been working hard to make sure that the river is being cleaned up, and the wildlife population that was affected gets the proper rehabilitation needed.”


In a related development, White Plains Police Chief James Bradley said a repair to a furnace in the basement of 235 South Lexington Avenue had been completed at 5 P.M. Tuesday afternoon, shortly before the oil is believed to have leaked from the furnace heating oil tank, in such quantity that the spilled oil triggered a sump pump which circulated the oil into the city storm drains and subsequently into the Bronx River. It is unclear at this time whether the furnace repair caused the fuel tank to leak the oil.


The NYSDEC is reporting that they have crews walking along the shoreline from White Plains to Scarsdale overseeing the clean up.  The booms that were put in place along the river are preventing the oil from spreading further downstream.  There is a private contractor (Tri-State Environmental) that is supplying 15-20 employees to assist in cleaning up the oil with vacuums from the surface.


 


 Greenburgh Animal Control is actively looking for any wildlife that was affected. So far they have been able to retrieve three of them. A Canada goose and a duckling had oil on them and were taken to the Greenburgh Nature Center to be rehabilitated. One baby goose that was found survived several hours, but later died. A wildlife expert will be assisting with the rehabilitation of any impacted animals.


The investigation into the oil spill continues and the City and County will make sure that taxpayers will not be responsible for any of the costs associated with the cleanup.

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WP RETIREES TO FILE SUIT TO STOP CITY REQUIRING THEY PAY 15% of MED PREMIUMS

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WPCNR WHITE PLAINS LAW JOURNAL. By John F. Bailey.  June 2, 2010: White Plains retirees are fighting back against the city  action last week forcing them to pay 15% of their medical plan  premiums.


 


The medical premiums for retirees have previously been paid in total by the city. When the city forces retirees to pay 15% of those medical premiums beginning July 1, the measure will reduce their pensions by $1,102 if they have a single plan, and $2,396 if they have a Family Plan.


 


An article 78 action is being prepared by The Pirro Group on behalf of a new organization, White Plains Retirees Association to challenge the city plan to charge his retired clients for a portion of their medical going forward.


 


Albert J. Pirro, Jr., the White Plains attorney representing the retirees, said unless the city action is overturned in the courts, he predicted municipalities and counties across the state would imitate the White Plains action to lower their retiree obligations. He said it would have far-reaching implications for pensioners if not stopped.


 


The city as of yet has not notified retirees of the details of the pending change, though retirees were told last Friday letters were going out that Friday. To date the official announcement has not been received by retirees, to this reporter’s knowledge.


 


Effective July 1,  A $1,102 payment  is required for city retirees of unions, management and appointed officials, and confidential employees (who started with the city before July1, 1995for a retired person with  Single Person Medical, $2,395 if the retiree is on Family Plan.


 


Pirro estimated that 659 retirees are affected by the city action.


 


WPCNR estimated that the city would save over a million dollars a year by the measure which the Council incorporated into the new city budget for 2010-11 on May 24.


 


According to the city, police and fire, Teamster, and Civil Service Employees Association employees working for the city prior to July 1, 1995 would be affected, even though they may have retired within the last 15 years since that date.


 


Sources have told WPCNR that there is a memorandum declaring that the city action is illegal and a breach of contract. The sources observe that the city ignored this memorandum,  in pushing forward with the medical benefits payments plan for the retirees.


 


Pirro said that the Association is seeking as many retirees as possible to join in the class action suit and may contact his offices for information on the pending Article 78 action. He may be reached at


Albert J. Pirro, Jr., Esq.,One North Lexington Avenue White Plains, New York 10601(914) 287-6444.


 

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Oil Leak to Bronx River contained. Spill Traced to Sump Pump at 235 So. Lex

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WPCNR POLICE GAZETTE. From Antoinette Biordi, The Mayor’s Office. June 2, 2010 UPDATED 3 P.M. E.D.T UPDATED 9 P.M.: UPDATED FRIDAY, JUNE 4, 2010: A home heating oil spillage in the Bronx River Wednesday morning, leaking from one of the buildings at 235 South Lexington Avenue has been contained according to a press advisory from the Mayor’s Office just issued.


Thursday, White Plains Police Chief James Bradley reported to the media that  repairs had been made on the furnace at 235 Lexington Avenue late Tuesday afternoon. Sometime afterwards, Bradley said, heating oil leaked from the fuel tank,  triggering a sump which pumped the spilled oil out into city storm drains and subsequently into the Bronx River several blocks away, causing the oil spill discovered in the river Wednesday morning.


Home heating oil that leaked from a nearby apartment building in White Plains made its way through a storm drain and into the Bronx River in White Plains near exit 21.  The NYS DEC is reporting that several hundred gallons leaked into the river and is now contained.


 


In the news conference held at the Exit 21 Bridge, Mayor Adam Bradley said that the cause of the spill was under investigation and the parties responsible would have to pay the cost of the clean-up. An undetermined number of geese and ducks  were observed coated in the oil. The Mayor said wildlife rehabilitation teams from the state would be brought in to clean the birds. He praised the swift cooperation of the emergency crews who responded to stop the spill at Crane Road.


 


A jogger in Scarsdale reported a heavy oil smell around 7:30 this morning. Emergency crews from White Plains Public Safety, Westchester County Police, New York State DEC, Westchester County Hazmat, Westchester County Health Department were all on the scene to contain the oil in the Bronx River by using booms.  The booms stop the oil from spreading downstream and a private contractor is using a vacuum to skim the oil from the top of the river



The source of the oil came from the basement of 235 South Lexington Avenue, at the corner of Maple Avenue and across the street from White Plains Hospital Medical Center.  A joint investigation is ongoing as to how the oil leaked into the storm drain.  No connection, but the building was also the site of a marijuana lab bust conducted by White Plains Police in February.


 


 

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Legislators Vote to Force Astorino to Put JailHouse Docs Contract Out to Bid

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WPCNR COUNTY CLARION-LEDGER. From Tara Martin, Westchester County Board of Legislators. June 1, 2010:Members of the Westchester County Board of Legislators voted to approve legislation directing the Commissioner of the County’s Department of Correction to solicit proposals through a request for proposals (RFP) for comprehensive health care services to the inmates and detainees at the County’s Department of Correction.  The bill is in response to the Administration’s recent attempt to award the County’s correctional health services from the current contract under the Westchester Medical Center to New York Correct Care.


 


New York Correct Care is a newly-formed subsidiary of Correct Care Solutions (CCS), a health management private contractor from Tennessee, which was tapped by the Administration last week to provide medical services to the approximately 1,400 inmates in the custody of the Department of Correction. 


The Administration attempted to rush through this sole-sourced contract without vetting by the Board of Legislators or public review.  “Given the disingenuous tone of the Administration during its deliberations with the Medical Center and its unusual procedures in awarding this sole-sourced contract to a company who has been named in over 140 federal lawsuits due to lack of medical care, serious questions have been raised by Legislators and this legislation was necessary to provide the appropriate public review that our taxpayers demand,” said Board Chairman Ken Jenkins (D-Yonkers).


 The proposed agreement comes a decade after the county’s last attempt towards privatizing health care for inmates, which led to at least two inmate suicides and subsequent lawsuits.  Correct Care Solutions has mounting legal troubles, and has been named in 140 federal lawsuits since 2004, most recently being subjected to a federal lawsuit on behalf of the family of a Davidson County, Tennessee inmate who suffered from inflammation in his stomach and an untreated ulcer, who died last year from lack of medical care. 


 “I called for a ‘time out’ so that the Board of Legislators and the public could obtain an understanding of the due diligence that the administration performed  in deciding to entrust the medical care of inmates at our Correctional Facility to a newlfy formed New York entity whose parent is a Tennessee company,” said Legislator John Nonna (D-Mount Pleasant).  “Transparency is important for this 3-year $45 million contract in light of the obligation the County has to provide adequate medical care for inmates. Indeed the Department of Justice has previously criticized certain aspects of that care. All I was seeking was a brief period for review and public exposure of the process. I cannot accept the conclusory statement that this contract will save the county $3 million without knowing in greater detail the terms of the contract. I am disappointed that the Administration did not accept my proposal for a ‘time out’.”


 The Westchester Medical Center has a contract to provide correctional health services until December 31, 2010, however early this year, the Medical Center notified the Administration of its intention of terminating its contract as of July 26, 2010.  It has been the Administration’s position that the Medical Center should fulfill its contractual obligation, withdraw the letter of termination and the Administration would consider the contractual deficiencies raised that are specifically relative to the contract during the renewal period later this year. 


Several meetings were held between the Administration and Legislature regarding the parameters that both consider regarding acceptable terms for the Medical Center to continue to provided the Correctional Health Services.  The Medical Center proposed a solution that included modifications to the existing contract and was given an opportunity to revise their proposal with discussion on the parameters that would be acceptable to all parties involved. 


 On May 25th, while the Administration was negotiating with Medical Center on their current contract, they were also meeting with representatives of Correct Care Services to enter into a contract with them.  On May 26th, an “emergency” resolution was added to the agenda of the May 27th meeting of the County’s Board of Acquisition & Contracts (A&C) to award a sole-sourced contract to CCS, with a $45 million dollar cost for the County’s current correctional health care services.  Legislators raised serious concerns regarding the proposal from CCS and that it was the Board’s understanding that the Medical Center intended to withdraw its notice of termination.  Given the revision and review of the current contract, the Medical Center withdrew its letter of intent to terminate services prior to the A&C vote.  The Administration rejected the withdrawal from the Medical Center.


The emergency resolution was indeed “overed” by Chairman Jenkins during the May 27th meeting.   The Administration chose to have a special meeting of A&C the next day (the Friday before Memorial Day weekend) at 3:30pm to take additional action on this item.  Normally, an overed item would appear at the next stated meeting of A&C, which is June 3rd.  “Openness and transparency is tantamount to this process,” said Legislator Peter Harckham (D-Katonah).  “There needs to be a full vetting of the chosen provider and the full terms of the agreement so that the people of Westchester are very clear about what’s being done…and that tax payers will actually see the savings discussed..”


 

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Council Without Conscience. Council Sets New Low on Opacitometer.

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WPCNR QUILL & EYESHADE  News & Comment, By John F. Bailey. May 31, 2010 UPDATED JUNE 2, 2010:  This week’s “Journalism Quote of the Week,” reads:


 


“The real stories are in the back-up material. Read responsibly.”



 


In behind-the-scenes, unpublic maneuvers that made the Delfino Administration look good, the Common Council and the new “transparent” administration registered a new low on the Opacitometer” that measures the City’s  Transparency Index by the Council “whistling past the graveyard” vote on the budget last Monday.


 


That vote not only socked union and non-union  retirees (working for the city before July 1,1995) with a $1,102  payment for Single Person Coverage and a $2,395 for Family Coverage, the council coolly gave a round of raises to 21 Commissioners and managers ranging from 2.1% to 10.8%–lwhich just happened to cover the Commissioners’ and managers’ new 15% contribution to paying their medical benefits.


 


Admittedly the top brass had not had a raise in 2009-10, but the raises in an atmosphere of hand-wringing over finances  on the part of the Council and the Mayor the last five months take your breath away.


 


This reporter did not even think the salaries in the back-up material represented increases since the Council and the administration, had been railing forcefully against the 3.75% and 4% raises for police and fire and had gotten the CSEA and Teamsters to give back their negotiated raises and pledge no raises.


 


Wow!


 


Who knew?


 


The Journal News did not even notice it. WPCNR assumes they were tipped to it by one of the unions.


 


Wow.


 


This reporter looked at the backup material and noticed the15% in medical benefits but did not pickup the subtle language in the legislation that it applied to the union employees hired prior to July 1,1995. After being informed this affected 600 retirees, not the “handful” described by the Common Council in budget meetings, WPCNR found the 15% affects 700 retirees.


 


Then the council has the audacity and hypocrisy to slip through not only $1,106 to $2,396 in income takeaways from  union and non-union retirees, making them pay 15% of medical benefits premiums, but on the same night when they pontificated sickeningly on how the police and fire unions did not cooperate, thus “choosing layoffs,” the council was simultaneously slipping raises to the administration commissioners.


 


The really pathetic reality is these commissioners who received these raises have gotten just enough raise (and in some cases way more than enough) – to cover the 15% they have to pay in medical benefits.


 


How convenient!


 


Management sacrifice in this city?


 


How about salary CUTS!!


 


Unheard of.


 


What a coincidence?


 


Who knew?


 


How do you like that?


 


For months we have heard the hand-wringing, the agonizing over how all must sacrifice to restore fund balance and the council saying that the commissioners, non-management personnel and confidential employees were now going to pay 15% of their medical benefits.


 


However the management personnel targeted by the Council’s “Gotcha Adam Purge” of Adam Bradley aids: the Public Information Officer, the Administrative Officer, and an aid in the law department – all Bradley appointees are out of luck – unless of course the  administration brings them back under some positions that are still being funded, but not filled, like Commissioner of Recreation and Parks, Deputy Commissioner of Recreation and Parks, Deputy Commissioner of Public Safety, and Deputy Commissioner of Traffic.


 


However, according to Commissioner of Finance on Wednesday, Michael Genito, those vacant positions are not being funded, even though salaries are listed. Genito said the table of organization is simply to stipulate what those positions would be paid if filled.


 


The council sacked Adam Bradley’s appointees. But those three are still on the payroll until June 30.


 


Not so the hapless newest police officers and firefighters in White Plains, New York, USA. They are gone overnight.


 


The council took no time in in voting for those 21 Police and fireman layoffs, even though the Mayor said he was “hopeful” of a settlement. The next morning the day after the council decided on layoffs on Decision Night,  they were all fired. Gone. To stand on the unemployment line even though they were budgeted for through June 30.


 


No compassion there, was there? Do you see any?


 


But certainly a lot of compassion for the top brass without raises for one year.


 


Oh, the suffering!


 


This is a Common Council that did not even think about forstaying the binding arbitration process or protest it at all at the time the former Mayor (Joseph Delfino) was entering into it.


 


This is a Common Council (Beth Smayda and David Buchwald and Mayor Bradley are exempt from this folly perpetrated by Tom Roach, Milagros Lecouna, Benjamin Boykin and Dennis Power) who went along with that one, without a peep of protest.


 


Those four did not protest strongly at all despite media reports that sales tax was going south and the city was in trouble, all during 2008 and 2009.


 


However Ms. Smayda, Mr.Buchwald,and Mayor Bradley along with the feckless four: Roach, Lecouna, Boyin and Power) voted those raises for their Commissioners last Monday evening, in a zero% inflation environment (according to the state).


 


Under this sanctimonious cost-cutting and budget lowering, the Common Council approved $112,924 in salary increases for 21 Commissioners and Deputy Commissioners whose management decisions (with exception of the new arrivals: Michael Genito, John Callahan and David Chong) have helped get the city into its present financial predicament by their budgets of the last 12 years..


 


The raises are well above the rate of inflation ranging from 2.1% for the Library Director to 10.8% for the Commissioner of Parking and Acting Commissioner of Recreation, reflecting his double-duties. To be fair, commissioners did not receive increases in2009-10, but all we have been hearing for weeks is austerity, unions must give back to save the city. Few in the corporate world are getting raises of 4 to 5%.  


 


Let’s go down the Commissioner Lineup:


 


The Assessor :From $122,985 to $127,000 Raise:$4,015 Percentage: 3.3%


 


The Commissioner of Building: from $138,478 to $141,500. Raise: $3022  Pct: 2.1%


 


The Deputy Commissioner of Building: $122,357 to $126,000 Raise:$3,643 Pct: 3%


 


City Clerk: $95,437 to $101,000. Raise: $5,563. Pct: 5.8%


 


Corporation Counsel: $185,000 to $190,000. Raise: $5,000.  Pct.: 2.7% (after five months on job).


 


Chief Deputy Corporation Counsel: $152,069 to $158,000. Raise: $5,931. Pct: 3.9%


 


Deputy Corporation Counsel: $145,227 to $151,000. Raise: $5,773. Pct: 3.9%


 


Deputy Commissioner of Finance:$125,284 to $129,500. Raise:$4,216. Pct: 3.4%


 


Library Director: $138,086 to $141,000. Raise: $2,914. Pct:2.1%


 


Personnel Officer: $144,595 to $149,000. Raise: $4,405.Pct: 3%


 


Deputy Personnel Officer:$70,000 to $72,500. Raise: $2,500 Pct: 3.6


 


Commissioner of Parking/Recreation & Parks: $150,619 to $167,000. Raise: $16,381. Pct: 10.8%


 


Deputy Commissioner of Parking: $130,003 to $137,000. Raise:$6,997. Pct: 5.4%


 


Commissioner of Planning: from $156,207 to $162,000. Raise:$5,793. Pct: 3.7%


 


Commissioner of Public Works: from $164,545 to $170,000. Raise: $5,455. Pct: 3.3%


 


Deputy Commissioner of Public Works: $132,919 to $138,000 Raise: $5,081. Pct: 3.8%


 


Deputy Commissioner of Public Works: $121,253 to $125,000 Raise: $3,747. Pct.: 3.1%


 


Commissioner of Purchase: $107,075 to $111,000. Raise: $3,925. Pct: 3.7%


 


Commissioner of Traffic: $124,653 to $129,000. Raise: $4,347. Pct: 3.5%


 


Director of Youth Bureau. $118,406 to $123,000. Raise: $4,594. Pct: 3.9%


 


Deputy Director of Youth Bureau: $101,378 to $111,000. Raise: $9,622. Pct: 9.5%


 


This was done at the Common Council in a very untransparent manner, where they cut over 700 retirees incomes by $1,000 to $2,400 by decreeing by unanimous vote that they would have to pay 15% of their medical benefits. At no time when this was discussed was it made clear by the Common Council (though according to Councilpersons Power and Buchwald the council knew this), that this would apply to union member retirees (working for the city prior to July 1, 1995).


 


This sets the stage for the Common Council to ram through a 15% medical benefits charge on the police and fire unions when their contract expires June 30, which it is believed the city can do since the police and fire do not have a contract at that time.


 


Again, I draw your attention to the fact that all these raises to the Commishes easily cover whatever they will have to pay in medical benefits with a lot more than pocket change left over.


 


How feckless. They aren’t paying for their medical benefits. They’re being reimbursed  for those  payments for medical benefits with these raises.

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