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Abolish the Rochester Police Commission? Public will vote in November

In Municipal News, News on August 29, 2011 at 12:53 pm

ROCHESTER — City councilors during their special meeting on Tuesday night voted 9 to 4 in favor of adding a charter amendment to the ballot in November that would abolish the city’s police commission.

The amendment, if passed, will take effect Jan. 1, 2012.

Before the vote, some councilors like Peter Lachapelle, voiced their dissatisfaction with the amendment and stated why they wouldn’t be voting in favor of it.

“When are you going to listen to what the voters want?” Lachapelle said. “I’m mind-boggled that we’re even discussing this again.”

Lachapelle said the police department is different from other city departments in that they have arresting power. He also said the council has enough work as it is without taking on the added responsibilities of managing the police department.

Councilor Chuck Grassie also said he is opposed to the amendment, as he feels the current two-year term limits of the commissioners makes them more responsive to the needs of the public.

Councilor John Larochelle reiterated his argument from the council’s Aug. 2 meeting that voters have spoken previously on the issue, and that he considers it dead.

Councilor Elaine Lauterborn also decided to vote against adding the amendment to the ballot.

Other members of the council, such as Mayor T.J. Jean, said the issue is not a matter of members of the council wanting to intervene in the managing of the department, as some members of the public think, but simply feels the commission is unnecessary under the city manager form of government.

“I know the police department is going to be just fine under the police chief and under the oversight of the city manager and the council,” said Jean.

Jean, as well as Councilor Raymond Varney, said the measure would help them to better handle the department’s budget and how it authorizes salary increases.

Councilor Alan Reed-Erickson said he would vote to put it on the budget to let the citizens have their say.

Before the discussion, the council held a public hearing on the matter and heard from members of the police commission, Chairman Lucien Levesque, Vice Chair Al Bemis and Commissioner James McManus, as well as Rochester Police Chief David Dubois.

Levesque reminded the council of the commission’s achievements, such as ward-based policing, a more friendly atmosphere in the police department’s lobby, and a more aggressive training program.

He said the goals of the commission are the goals of the people and he would rather see the two governing bodies work together for the good of making Rochester a better, safer community.

“Lets communicate with one another; lets stop trying to eliminate something because we don’t agree with it,” Levesque said.

Chief Dubois said the commission adds transparency, keeps the public better informed with what the department does, and holds them to a higher standard of accountability.

He said the rate of crime reduction, case closure rates and apprehension rates far exceed state and regional averages, and the police commission contributes to that record.

The council also heard from members of the public about their thoughts on the amendment from both sides of the argument.

“I, for one, am in favor of the police commission because they’ve helped me out one time,” said resident Richard Williams. “They’re very good people on that board and the public is smart for getting those people elected.”

Williams said he disagrees that City Manager Daniel Fitzpatrick should administer the police department as he does other municipal departments because there’s more power in numbers, and if the city manager took over, “it’s like the cashier cashing himself out.”

Kathleen Levesque, a resident related to the Police Commission chair, said the council serves as a firewall between the government and the department’s command force. She said having such checks and balances in place is good “Jeffersonian democracy.”

“What you’re doing here is removing one of those checks and balances,” said Kathleen Levesque.

She also said the police commission works 100 hours a year, a workload the city manager might not have time for, and if the council were to make any changes to the commission, it should change term limits to four years from the current limit of two.

Later in the meeting, Robert Gates, president of the Rochester Concerned Taxpayers Association, spoke in favor of putting the amendment on the ballot to let the members of the public who are both for and against the commission articulate their argument.

“Let’s have a public discussion about this. If this is import enough to have concern about their validity brought up, I’d would say it’s important enough to put on the ballot,” Gates said.

Originally published by Foster’s Daily Democrat.

Socialism is now a four-letter word

In Columns and Editorials on November 7, 2009 at 7:58 pm

I hate talking about politics in this town. Being a non-conservative in Pensacola is like getting caught wearing the scarlet letter.

It sucks because whenever people want to talk about politics with me, I always wind up having to argue on the behalf of a certain ideology, even if that ideology isn’t mine.

I can’t just talk about it openly with people and share my thoughts with them.

They hear my point of view on it and immediately assign me to a label and begin arguing with me about it. And it’s funny because when they’re arguing with me, they’re actually just arguing with the label that they stamped me with.

Ever since last year’s election I’ve had people telling me that I’m a socialist because I voted for the Democrat and not the Republican.

What is this? It’s like the right has completely abolished the left wing of American politics, going so far as to say that anyone who isn’t on their side of the spectrum should be living in another country: an evil, socialist country. That’s not fair.

First of all, America actually has a socialist party, and it’s not the Democrats.

It is a legitimate third-party organization that had its own candidate for the 2008 election, Brian Moore.

Moore was on the ballot in eight states, including Florida, and had his best showing in Tennessee, a “red state!” Days before the election, Moore even went on The Colbert Report to dispel the claim that Obama was a socialist.

If I was a socialist, why did I vote for Obama and not him?

Second of all, I swing both ways. I voted for both Republicans and Democrats in the last election, and I try to decide where to cast my vote based on the issue, not on which party I favor more.

Moderates like me are the ones that decide these elections, and let me tell you something: the way that the right has been acting lately makes me want to vote for them even less than before.

All I see is this vocal minority of protesters that are always on the news trying to make the case that Obama is a Muslim, a socialist, a national socialist, a liberal democrat, a communist and an immigrant (and the Joker, which really makes no sense because the Joker was an anarchist who didn’t believe in having any kind of structure) all at the same time.

It’s like they’re going down a big list of groups that America has been at odds with and saying that he’s one of them, not one of us. He’s an outsider, an “other.” It’s textbook xenophobia, and it’s terrible.

Now granted, I don’t think all people who dislike Obama are racists, but when you see a major figure from the Tea Party movement admitting to Anderson Cooper that he thinks Obama is an “Indonesian Muslim turned welfare thug,” you can’t exactly say racism isn’t a factor.

I understand some people don’t like the idea of universal health care, but that’s not enough to justify saying disrespectful comments like that about a president that was democratically elected fair and square.

I mean, have you checked out which countries have universal health care?

All the cool ones! Even the patron saint of conservative media himself, Rupert Murdoch, hails from Australia, which not only has universal health care but also strict gun laws that have been proven to reduce crime! I mean that’s borderline hypocrisy.

The man behind FoxNews, the most jingoistic news network on TV, is not only from another country, but from a country where liberalism is proven to actually work!

Anyway, I’m going off topic. All I’m trying to say is that we need to stop throwing labels at each other.

I’m not a socialist, or a communist, or a liberal.

I’m Mike. And I believe that countries work better when people don’t go around reducing each others thoughts and feelings down to a single boring word.

Originally published by The Voyager for the University of West Florida.

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