Reality Check on TAF : (Traffic After FASNY) FASNY Projections Way Low Says Resident Who Counted The Cars

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WPCNR THE LETTER TICKER. December 10, 2014:

This letter from Steven Gould, a Ridgeway resident, was received by WPCNR today and delivers an analysis of what traffic is now in the French American School of New York proposed development area and projects its real impact, in their opinion, if FASNY’s campus is built.

In my opinion, here is what will result from their Traffic Management  Plan intended to mitigate traffic should FASNY build their campus:

  • 50% mandatory busing participation by all their students equates to 45 buses, each carrying 10 students to school, 450 student ridership
  • 21 buses for the Lower School in the AM peak – queuing space required on campus is 651 feet
  • 24 buses for the Upper School in the AM peak – queuing space required on campus is 744 feet
  • 500 students remaining for transport by private car – 50 self-drive + 450 driven to school in the AM peak
  • 1.3 students average per car equates to 396 vehicle trips in the AM peak
  • Teachers and Staff arrival in the AM peak – 138
  • Total vehicle trips already exceeds the 530 cap allowance in the AM peak hour in this model

Let’s look at what the physical impact of this FASNY traffic in the AM peak hour means to the neighborhood roadways carrying FASNY students teachers and staff to the campus each day:

  • Average car length is 16 feet.  With two car lengths as a safe driving buffer on the road you are at  nearly 5 miles of cars traveling to the campus each morning.
  • Average bus length is 38 feet.  With two bus lengths as a safe driving buffer on the road, you are at nearly 1 mile of buses traveling to the campus each morning.

With 6 miles of vehicular traffic driving to FASNY’s new North Street entrance along with all the current traffic of White Plains students traveling to WPHS, Ridgeway School, Memorial Methodist Nursery, YWCA, Ridgeway Alliance Nursery, the intersections at Ridgeway and North, Rosedale and North, Bryant and North, Mamaroneck Avenue and Ridgeway cannot handle the volume. 

The newly proposed 140 foot left hand turning lane from North Street into The FASNY campus cannot handle this volume of cars and buses.  Tweaking the timing of traffic signals will not solve this problem.

If you allow FASNY their Special Permit to build, and years from now when the school opens, it is revealed to all that the 530 cap was  indeed and in fact aspirational, what will your answer be then…more buses! 

If you cannot see that allowing this development to move forward will eviscerate The Gedney Farms neighborhood which is currently protected by our zoning code and The Comprehensive Plan, then please consider that the traffic it will generate cannot be mitigated. 

Your (the White Plains City Study) own traffic study confirms this.  Please let’s find another way to achieve open space in White Plains that will not ruin the character of our neighborhood and all the other neighborhoods in the south end of our city which equates to more than one third of the area of White Plains.   

Steven Gould

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Council Indifference Shatters Her Faith in Government

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WPCNR THE LETTER TICKER. December 10, 2014:

A resident of Ridgeway writes her opinion of the way the Common Council has reviewing the French American School of New York Project.

Mayor Roach , Common Council,
Another great night last Tuesday. You may as well have taken your vote then. The five of you made your minds up three years ago and have simply been playing us for fools.
We have worked tirelessly all these years providing you with the true facts and yet you turn your backs on the people you took an oath to represent.
In my opinion you want me to vote for you but I do not feel I am being represented nor do you have my best interest at heart. It is a shame.
All I heard from some of you was concern over batting cages , tennis courts and really insignificant matters. You heard  council member Krolian and Lecuona speak about the serious matters such as the school board letter , traffic , the safety issues for White Plains school students and families.
These are the real issues of the Fasny proposed plan and yet they do not seem important to you.
Ms.Hunt Robinson ,  you could not even come up with one question over something so deadly serious as the safety of our children.
Mr. Kirkpatrick , do you remember speaking at the political debate at the Woman’s Club a few years ago when you were running? You said you had good friends who live on Ridgeway and can’t get out of their driveway now. A vote for Fasny will make our lives and thousands even worse.
Mr.Martin , you spoke about Hathaway Lane. Are you good with the closure of this street?
My husband and Howard Hawkins presented the Council with a chart , from Fasny’s own school calendar , showing their year long  activities. They have concerts , adult events , sports events , summer camps , regular school , etc.  There  will not even be 100 days that Hathaway could stay open.
Mayor Roach , you once told me that the Fasny project was almost making you lose sleep. Not to worry , you will have a good nights sleep.
A vote for Fasny is a guarantee that the rest of us will never rest peacefully ever again. I truly wonder how any of you will sleep well after throwing your citizens under the bus.
You have spent all these years speaking to Fasny and providing them with information to accomplish their dream. You have refused to speak to us and to this day you still refuse to meet with us , your citizens. I thought that was your job! Shocking!
Most of the time you do not even acknowledge our emails. Some day maybe we too will know all the Fasny facts.
In the meantime , I ask you to make a fool out of me and vote no to this disaster of a plan. I would gladly accept being wrong. I hate having my faith in people shattered so greatly.

Sharon Gould
Resident of Ridgeway

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County Budget Is Passed, 10-7 as Republican-Democrat Coalition Stymies Democrat Concerns About Borrowing to Balance

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WPCNR COUNTY CLARION-LEDGER. From the Westchester County Board of Legislators. December 9, 2014:

Democratic Caucus members of the Westchester County Board of Legislators (BOL) strongly condemned the “structural imbalances” in the 2015 County Budget today, citing the massive borrowing, use of one-shot financing fixes and raiding the fund balance to effectuate a zero percent increase in the County tax levy, and, as a result, voted against the budget. Nonetheless, the budget was passed by a vote of 10-7.

The caucus members voting against the budget were BOL Majority Leader Catherine Borgia (D-Ossining), Majority Whip Lyndon Williams (D-Mount Vernon), Ben Boykin (D-White Plains), Pete Harckham (D-North Salem), Ken Jenkins (D-Yonkers), Catherine Parker (D-Rye) and Alfreda Williams (D-Greenburgh).

“This budget actually increases taxes in the future, but with interest by pushing the added costs down the road with bonding for too many operational expenses,” said Borgia. “Fiscal gimmickry may serve the short-term, but it imperils the County’s excellent bond rating, which was downgraded last year because of too much borrowing in the budget and dipping into the fund balance.”

The Citizens Budget Advisory Committee’s (CBAC) presentation to the BOL’s Budget Committee noted that in the 2015 Budget operating expenses are not fully funded by operating revenue; over $6 million in the restricted fund balance was being used for operating expenses as well; and cumulative borrowing to pay for ongoing operating expenses will be over $100 million, with interest costs of over $20 million. Also, tax and bond anticipation notes were being utilized to tide the County over in a cash crunch, with added interest costs.

An Administration official noted during a meeting of the BOL Budget & Appropriations Committee in November that Moody’s Investor Service had called the County’s Proposed 2015 Budget “structurally imbalanced” because of $15 million of pension amortization included in the spending plan.

“Independent professionals gave this budget a hard look, and in their judgment the excessive borrowing for operating expenses will result in potentially large tax increases in the future,” said Lyndon Williams. “There needs to be substantial work done in the first quarter of 2015 to realize revenues from Playland and prevent further borrowing.”

“All of this borrowing will hamstring future county administrations and legislators from any flexibility in operating budgets because of onerous interest costs,” said Benjamin Boykin, chair of the BOL Appointments Committee. “I see that this will cause real problems for our safety net spending in the short-term, and it will end up costing all of our taxpayers more money when the County needs to spend more on bonding for badly needed infrastructure improvements. Plain and simple: a budget with this kind of borrowing is a huge threat to the long-term well-being of our residents and our county’s fiscal health.”

“The 2015 County budget is a bad budget, in a bad financial year for our region’s governments,” said Legislator MaryJane Shimsky (D-Hastings-on-Hudson), chair of the BOL Infrastructure Committee. “However, the Board of Legislators’ revisions to the budget have made the County more responsive to our residents’ needs, and more fiscally responsible to our taxpayers.  For example, moving minor road repairs back to our operating budget will save taxpayers millions of dollars over the next five years.”

The BOL Democratic caucus members had hoped to remove a $4.3 million deletion of revenue expected from the finalization of a deal for a private partner to run Playland, the County’s iconic amusement park and recreation area, but it was voted down today.

The Democratic caucus proposed an alternative budget with deletions that were greater than the pension amortization, and they were able to negotiate bonding for tax certioraris down from $8 million to $5 million.

“As I’ve mentioned before, this financing of a zero percent budget will be accomplished thanks to our children’s credit card,” said Harckham, chair of the BOL Labor, Parks, Planning & Housing Committee. “Borrowing for operating expenses is not a substitute for smart planning that keeps the future in mind. Now, a very real financial burden awaits residents and business owners in future budgets.”

“Because it relies on borrowing to balance the numbers, the budget should have been dead on arrival,” said Jenkins, chair of the BOL Federal & State Affairs Committee. “We’ll be bonding for expenses before we know what they actually are, or if savings along the way may negate the need for the borrowing.”

For Democratic caucus members, the one bright note in the approved 2015 budget was the number of additions they were able to negotiate into the spending plan. These BOL Dem additions focused on long-standing safety net and cultural enrichment programs that benefit countless residents, especially the elderly, working families and disadvantaged youth, that are run by the Child Care Council of Westchester, Jewish Council of Yonkers, WestCOP, Legal Aid Services of the Hudson Valley and ArtsWestchester, among others.

“Maintaining support for the County’s safety net programs was at the forefront of our caucus’s budget decisions,” said Alfreda Williams, chair of the BOL Community Services Committee. “I’m pleased that the Administration and my colleagues on the Board were able to join us in this regard.”

“It was said today that the 2015 budget didn’t have to be perfect—but that it couldn’t raise taxes, and borrowing was better than layoffs,” said Parker, chair of the BOL Environment & Energy Committee. “While I’m grateful that important social programs will receive funding next year, there was an opportunity that was missed here to put together a realistic plan that doesn’t dump costs on to future budget years.”

 

 

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WHITE PLAINS TV WELCOMES THE SKATING LEGEND, DICK BUTTON TONIGHT AT 10

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WHITE PLAINS TV’S BEYOND THE GAME JOHN VORPERIAN INTERVIEWS AMERICA’S FIRST WORLD CHAMPION MEN’S FIGURE SKATER, THE LEGENDARY DICK BUTTON, TV COMMENTATOR, AND NEW AUTHOR TONIGHT AT 10 ON VERIZON FIOS CHANNEL 45 AND CABLEVISION CHANNEL 76. THE PROGRAM WILL BE TELEVISED AGAIN FRIDAY NIGHT AT 9 P.M.

 

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DICK BUTTON TALKS ABOUT FIGURE SKATING OF YESTERDAY, TODAY’S FIGURE SKATING AND SKATING LEGENDS OF THE PAST TONIGHT ON JOHN VORPERIAN’S BEYOND THE GAME — AND DICK’S NEW BOOK.

 

 

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Reason to Rule Against Fasny #2: Compromising Emergency Response Times

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WPCNR THE LETTER TICKER. December 9, 2014:

Marie and Ron Rhoads, residents of Gedney Farms sent their second letter in a series to the Mayor and Common Council detailing issues that the neighborhood feels should weigh against approval of the French American School of New York:

Dear Mayor and the Common Council
As stated in the outside expert report of the FirePro consultants. . .our family, as well as nearby neighbors, will be personally impacted by increased Fire Response Times resulting from the Closure of Hathaway Lane. . .with some Seniors, like ourselves, also concerned about any delay in response times due to Ambulances being slowed down by the increased volume of FASNY Traffic from their cars and school buses.
 
When you are dealing with Emergency Response Times. . .there is no amount of mitigation that can be offered by the City Staff and FASNY that is acceptable. . .with the exception of leaving in place or improving our existing Response Times. . . which is a core expectation of ours with regard to City Services.
 
We like our current White Plains City Services. . .why would anyone on the Common Council want to reduce Emergency Response Times or other services that hurt the Health, Safety and Welfare of your residents. . .to satisfy an outside developer who is not offering any Public Benefits?
 
We report. . .you decide.                                                                                                                                                      Your Truth Police, Team Rhodes
 
Marie and Ron Rhodes     
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THE LAST STAND: City Should Follow Its own Law and Deny FASNY Permit

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WPCNR THE LETTER TICKER. December 8, 2014:

The Rhodes, the “Truth Police,” are sending the Mayor and Common Council a series of mailings in a Last Stand to convince the city they have standing to deny a Special Permit to the French American School. Here is the first in a series:


Dear Mayor and Common Council,
 
When FASNY first appeared on the scene almost 4 years ago a few of you were mentioning in public. . .”that we cannot deny a Special Permit to a school”.  Years later at the conclusion of the SEQR Findings meeting last December the Mayor was stating that the Common Council is “bound by the law”.
 
Now we have all learned that the FASNY “regional private school campus” is not eligible for a Special Permit according to WP law “Section 5.2 List of Use Regulations for District: R1-30”.  What would be eligible for a Special Permit are one family dwellings, churches or other places of worship and public schools. . .also private elementary or private secondary schools would be eligible. . .however not both together. . .and certainly not a “regional private campus that combines nursery, elementary, middle and secondary schools”.
 
And even eligible uses, such as public schools, would have to be in compliance with WP law “Special Permit Use 6.5.1” which says projects have to be in harmony with the areas they are located in. . .and FASNY’s massive Traffic, 10-Year Construction, Water Issues, Risks to School Children, Seniors and other Citizens, Fire Safety Risks and decrease in Property Values are certainly not in harmony with our residential neighborhood.
 
Now that we all have learned the WP laws. . .doesn’t  the Mayor stating that the Council has to follow the “Rule of Law”. . .mean you are all bound by the laws that currently exist in White Plains?
 
We report. . .you decide.                                                                                                                                                      Your Truth Police, Team Rhodes
 
Marie and Ron Rhodes                  
 
 
P.S.   For those interested in the exact wording of “Section 5.2 List of Use Regulations for District: R1-30” here is the link on the City’s website:
 
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The Day of Infamy–73 years ago. About Midday on the East Coast

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Out of the Sun

A Memorial Poem

Out of the sun on the quiet Sunday morning they came

Birds of death blazened with red suns raining fiery havoc on Battleship Row.

One by one, ruthless planes dove, destroyed wantonly to their nation’s eternal shame.

Thunderous explosions scattered fiery death in Sunday dawn’s glow.

Flames belched from bowels of stricken Arizona, America’s pride,

On Hickam Field pilots raced to planes to defend 

As their birds were crippled on ground by Zeros’ glide

Gunners in turrets on ships floundering filled skies with flack’s din.

In search of carriers, marauders could not find

Ruthlessly strafed and bombed leaving Pearl

In smoking ruin. Ships sunk, burning as raiders flew into the Sun

 

The day of infamy had been ignited in the Zeros’ swirl.

As America listened a world away, somber FDR

Spoke of this day that will live in infamy.

America must never forget that Pearl Harbor Scar

When an unsuspecting America slept in complacency.

To the 2,403 perishing that day under merciless bombs

Hails of bullets,terror of torpedos out of nowhere

America must remember forces against our freedoms

Relentlessly work always to surprise with deadly bombs’ glare.

Vigilence is the price of freedom always to be defended

Against those who would destroy our republic from within

By dark forces in far off places we have offended.

 

The answer is not curtailing freedom at home rather it to champion.

The USS Arizona lies today  in Pearl’s waters, bleeding the lives

Of her men through the eerie eternal slick marking the rusting hulk.

Beneath Pearl’s waters, the blood of free people oozes from the shadowy bulk,

Bleeding forever, freedom’s spirit living eternally in lost lives remembered.

She never rests.

 Note: The Pearl Harbor attack which took place 73 years ago today at 7 A.M. Honolulu time –just about 12 noon Eastern Standard Time.  Its aftermath is dramatically depicted at

http://www.history.navy.mil/photos/events/wwii-pac/pearlhbr/pearlhbr.htm

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White Plains Police and Demonstrations.

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WPCNR THE LETTER TICKER. December 7, 2014:

The following was sent in by the President of the White Plains Police Benevolent Association:

Dear Mr. Bailey,
 
On behalf of the White Plains Police Benevolent Association, I would like to thank you for your recent article on your site entitled, Interacting With The Police Is Common Sense.
 
I would also like to give credit where credit is due and that would be to the City of White Plains Police Department. Over the past few weeks we have seen some horrible riots and destruction to personal property and the burning of not only businesses but also police vehicles over the largely broad casted decisions of the Michael Brown and Eric Gardner cases.
 
Since these decisions, the City of White Plains has had two demonstrations.  One was a large group of White Plains High School students who marched from the school to downtown White Plains.  The other was a “Die In” at Fountain Park.  They were both peaceful and orderly, with no unruly acts of violence. The White Plains Police Department provided for a safe environment for the protesters in both instances. During and after the demonstrators were finished marching, they shook hands with many of our Officers thanking them for doing their job and keeping them safe.
 
I can truly say that this is a true testament to the training, training, and more training that the White Plains Police Department gives its officers. Officers have been instructed for years on how to interact with emotionally disturbed people, cultural diversity, verbal de-escalation, and also dealing with people as human beings. We are taught one of the most important rules in life, and that’s to treat people the way we would like to be treated. Our Department leaders have set a very high standard on the way Officers are to deal with the public.
 
Again I would like to commend all of our men and woman for their outstanding dedication and hard work in keeping our residents and visitors safe on a daily basis, especially during these peaceful protests.
 
I would also like to thank Commissioner Chong, Chief Bradley, and Assistant Chief Fitzsimmons for providing the classes and resources that we need to get the job done and keep everyone safe.  I would also like to thank the Command Staff and Police Supervisors responsible for the Protest Detail, who were on the ground and handling the safety of all involved.
 
Mr. Bailey, in closing, I would also like to add to your article that there are three things the public needs to know about contacts with the police.
 
1. Be courteous 
2. Be cooperative
3. Be compliant
 
These three things will foster a better experience with the police.
   
Robert T. Riley
President
White Plains Police Benevolent Association
“Our Strength Lies In Our Unity”
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INTERACTING WITH POLICE IS COMMON SENSE.

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WPCNR POLICE GAZETTE. News & Comment from John F. Bailey. December 6, 2014:

In view of the protests against the deaths of minority teenagers and adults in an epidemic of police shootings and grapple-to-death incidents, I think some perspective has to be applied here.

For the person who is of color and not white who is stopped by police, but even if you are a white teen or adult stopped by police or told to stop some behavior, you have to realize that your reputation has been fixed in the minds of law enforcement in a negative profile by decades of poor choices by minority community members who have chosen anti-social and criminal behavior, not unlike the robber barons who steal big time in carpeted crags in concrete canyons.

This profiling of minorities ,has created an attitude on the part of police that you as a minority walking around in a group might be acting like a criminal and breaking the law and up to no good.

The difference between throwing bricks into store fronts and looting and creating “creative investment instruments” and losing the occasional $6 Billion and not being held accountable for it, is that the latter crimes are committed by folks in three piece suits, white shirts and are mostly white.  Multi Billlion Dollar fraud is not something the street police have to deal with on a regular basis. And nobody cares strongly about stopping Gazillion Dollar Frauds because that’s “just business,” it’s “clever.”

Never mind the fact that it is very easy to steal from a person that trusts you. Being a criminal is not glamorous. It takes no great skill you just betray a person’s trust.

However, indulging in criminal-like behavior or appearing to threaten a police officer, is what it is and if you’re participating even peripherally in a situation where this is going on, you could get hurt.

So I have this to suggest to protestors reacting and our young people righteously aggrieved about the amazing police violence incidents that have piled up recently:

You have to adjust your behavior to avoid the least possible chance you will antagonize a police officer’s self-protection instinct.

If you are in a protest, where folks around you are doing things slightly irresponsible like setting police cars on fire, you have to get on out of there.

This rioting and looting is really stupid, so I suggest that it cannot possibly be the work of actual residents of the neighborhood. The burners and looters should be rounded up, jailed and prosecuted.

But of course, that would be brutality if any of those wonderful vandals were hurt by the police.

Most of those people, and I am generalizing here, could not give a wit about the death of an individual they do not even know.

They see it as a chance to do pyschopathic  “God knows what” destruction, letting appetites for excess run wild with protest as an excuse.

I mean, who does those things anyway like setting police cars on fire, breaking glass in neighborhood stores, looting — trashing the economy of your own neighborhood.

Is there a service business of goons whom national protestors call up to escalate these riots to assure television coverage and impact opinion?

Where is the NSA, the FBI, and the CIA on these well-organized trashing orchestrations?

Detroit still has not recovered from the 1967 riot. South Detroit is a disgrace of overgrown fields, abandoned houses and boarded up stores to this day.

That being said, young readers and you older protestors, too, The least belligerence or defiance escalates the chance officers will view you as a threat to them.

To that end, and in view that I have a tanned complexion, look somewhat “terroristy” and drive a disruputable looking black Animal House  car I offer some strategies that have worked in my very limited engagements with police.

Instead of unleashing righteous anger. Defuse your situation. I suggest the following conduct:

1. Be polite when the officer detains you. Say, “Yes, officer?”

2. Ask permission to reach into a pocket of a jacket or coat, or if driving, the glove compartment of your car.

3.If approached by an officer because of what you are doing, stop doing it   Freeze, show hands in wide display and say, “Yes, officer?”  In fact always show open palms in plain sight. If the officer indicates he’s cuffing you, let him or her do it. 

4. Show identification if asked for it. Volunteer name and address and where you’re from.

5.Do not open your mouth and object to what the officer is asking you to do.(Very key behavior to avoid escalation of officer attitude.) Also do not tell an officer who you are and how important you are.  Cooperate.

6. Do not engage the officer physically, push him or her, threaten or be belligerent in any way, or worse, use foul language and call the officer “expletives.”

7. This is a key thing: do not under any circumstances draw a weapon, or what could be construed by the officer to be a weapon.

This is threatening an officer and you are wrong. (The 12 year old, killed when pointing a toy gun at police in Cleveland, is an example of how threatening an officer even in jest can turn into horror.)

8. Do not use foul or abusive language to the officer. That could be construed to be disorderly conduct. (Ask yourself how you would react if someone called you an expletive deleted in anger?)

9. Do not throw rocks, objects or anything at an officer. That’s assault.

10. Obey instructions to the letter. That includes stopping when the officer tells you to do so.

Bare in mind you have rights but you do not have the rights to threatening behavior or to do the officer harm, just because you are engaging in behavior unbecoming any person black, white, swarthy, bearded, or in a three-piece suit.

11. You have a right to protest, but no right to push, shove, threaten other citizens or police officers.

12. Try being polite and respectful to a police officer, treat him or her as you would your pastor, priest, or Pope.

Now, Grand Jury failure to indict does not give any community the right to destroy private property.

Imagine if everytime a Wall Street “creative” executive was not indicted, if consumers losing money attempted to burn the stock exchange or the bank. We can’t have THAT, right?

But minority neighborhood businesses the salt of the earth, are allowed to burn? Stop it and arrest those vandals.

The circumstances involving the deaths of recent blacks killed as the result of police officer actions are a direct result of their failure to comply with police instruction and reckless behavior. With the exception of the shooting of the young man simply exiting a building, the inexperience on the part of the officer having his gun drawn appears to have contributed to that horror.

The Garner death in Staten Island is interesting because Mr. Garner has had long experience with the police, he disobeyed instructions and the officer overreacted, clearly. Do not disobey instructions. If you do, ensuing actions to get you to comply really depend on the cool of the police officer and his or her ability to control their actions.

Another thing, if a person pulls a knife and charges at officers, and an officer shoots to wound and protect a fellow officer, and a rechochet off bone kills the person — THAT should be written about and explained by the media, when that person is cited as an example of police overreaction. All that person had to do was go along with officer instruction when first asked.

I do have a suggestion though next time any community desires to stage a spontaneous demonstration to protest a police incident, hire lawyers to observe and calm down the situation.

Have the legal observers  where big slickers reading “LEGAL” on their backs. It would tame matters down.

Another factor that escalates these protests is television coverage.

NBC Television in Ferguson actually did what I would characterize as “preriot” cheerleading that had a reporter telling Brian Williams, “tension is rising,”  (almost saying, without saying, what are you waiting for — riot), then the cameras showed a police car being burned.

Come on. The reporter should have asked the police car torchers if they ordinarily bring igniting fluids when they go out on a protest. The media presence was egging the crowd on, in my opinion.

Since I do not have police officer training, I cannot really comment with authority on how police can adjust their behavior to handle the unexpected or interaction.

I would be afraid to do their job.

But I invite any law enforcement sources to write me and advise of how police are trained to reaction in these confrontations when trying to stop behavior that is getting out of hand , or arriving on the scene at investigations.

 

 

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