Archive - 2010
Liveblogging - "Be the Media You Want to See: How Social Media and Citizen Journalism Are Changing the World"
Submitted by Aldon Hynes on Mon, 02/01/2010 - 16:13This Week in Woodbridge
Submitted by Aldon Hynes on Mon, 02/01/2010 - 13:16This week in Woodbridge starts off with a Human Services Commission meeting at 7 PM at The Center and a 7:30 PM Town Plan and Zoning Commission meeting at Central Meeting Room at Town Hall on Monday evening. There are no public hearings scheduled for the Town Plan and Zoning Commission, however, they are scheduled to discuss updates from the Economic Development Commission and the “Town Plan of Conservation and Development in particular as it relates to the Town’s acquisition of the properties n/f owned by the Woodbridge Country Club”
Tuesday at 6 PM will see the next in the Town Operating Budget Presentations. Scheduled to present is the Pool and Gym, Building Maintenance, The Center, Benefits, Debt Service , and Revenue. To end off the evening, the Woodbridge Board of Education will present their budgets. There are reports that both supporters and opponents of the proposed school board budget are planning to attend the meeting and a Facebook Events page is up for those on Facebook that will be attending in support of the school budget. It is worth noting that there isn’t a lot of room in the Town Hall meeting room, and many more may end up watching the proposal from home on WGATV.
Also on Tuesday, starting at 7:30 PM, the Commission on the Use of Publicly Owned Property will meet in the Senior Center Lounge. Wednesday the Police Commission will meet in the Training Room at the Police Department. Friday will be National Wear Red in Woodbridge Day, as proclaimed by the First Selectman Ed Sheehy on January 14th. It is part of a national campaign by the American Heart Association to raise awareness about heart disease amongst women.
Also at 6 PM at Beecher Road School is Second Grade Social Night. People interested in participating should contact Margaret Hamilton. Ending up the week, or starting the new week, depending on your perspective, the Tanglewood Marionettes will perform “Hansel and Gretel” at the Woodbridge Library at 2 PM on Sunday.
If you know of other important upcoming events in Woodbridge, please contact ‘editor at woodbridgecitizen.com’ to help spread the word.
(Originally published at the Woodbridge Citizen.)
Rabbit, Rabbit, Rabbit, Groundhog… Music Monday
Submitted by Aldon Hynes on Mon, 02/01/2010 - 10:24It is clear and cold out, but warmer this morning than it has been in the past few days. I look out my office window and wonder if the monthly lapin invocation will bring better luck this month, if it will snap the metaphorical cold spell. Tomorrow is Groundhogs’ day. Will the groundhog see his shadow? Will the rabbits see theirs? Will they all simply huddle in their tunnels waiting for warmer days? We shall see.
“But February made me shiver
With every paper I'd deliver
Bad news on the doorstep, I couldn't take one more step”
I was a paperboy forty years ago. Now, I write blog posts. When someone important dies today, I hear about it on Twitter, instead of finding it on the front page of a newspaper delivered by an aspiring young musician. “Something's lost but something's gained in living every day.”
So, Buddy Holly’s death made Don McLean shiver. Joni Mitchell managed to find something gained in living every day. And then, there’s Buffy:
Every single night
The same arrangement
I go out and fight the fight
Still I always feel
This strange estrangement
Nothing here is real
Nothing here is right
I’ve been making shows of trading blows
Just hoping no one knows
That I’ve been
Going through the motions
Walking through the part
Nothing seems to penetrate my heart
So, what will your February be like? Will bad news on the door step make you shiver? Will you simply be going through the motions? Or will something be gained in living every day?
January 31st
Clean Elections and Judges
Submitted by Aldon Hynes on Sun, 01/31/2010 - 10:04Ever since the Citizens United ruling, there has been an increased scrutiny of judges and the election process. We need the best laws and the best justice that democracy can dispense, not the best laws and the best justice that money can buy.
Justice Kennedy recognized the corrosive influence of political contributions in justice when he wrote the majority opinion in Caperton v Massey:
We conclude that there is a serious risk of actual bias - based on objective and reasonable perceptions - when a person with a personal stake in a particular case had a significant and disproportionate influence in placing the judge on the case by raising funds or directing the judge's election campaign when the case was pending or imminent.
Unlike Citizens United v. FEC, that statement is very narrowly crafted, but it does point to dangerous influences in the justice system. Likewise, many leaders have narrowly crafted their critiques of the Citizens United ruling, questioning the judgment, but not the credibility of the U.S. Supreme court. Nonetheless, many are now much more skeptical of the credibility of the U.S. Supreme Court.
In a recent conference call with bloggers, a noted Democratic strategist suggested that the impact of Citizens United might be less significant than people are fearing. He suggested that already the airwaves are saturated with campaign advertisements in the days leading up to an election. He ignores some simple aspects about the effect of Citizens United on campaign advertising. First, with more demand of these advertising slots, the law of supply and demand suggests the cost of these advertising slots will increase, making it all the more a bidding game to the candidate and the independent corporations with the most money. In addition, corporations will now be able to go directly after candidates, instead of running their ‘issues campaigns’. More significant, however, is not the amount of advertisements run, but the pressure that corporations will be able to place on candidates; “If you don’t vote for my bill, I will flood the airwaves with advertisements against you.” It would seem that this potential threat creates “a serious risk of actual bias”, to use Kennedy’s words. Perhaps, if corporations are allowed to have “significant and disproportionate influence” on all congressional campaigns, all of Congress needs to recuse itself from any laws giving corporations what they are lobbying for.
Yet the concern is not only at the national level. This ruling could have even greater effect in states where it would be less expensive to buy legislators or judges. In another conference call, a Republican Strategist who supports the Fair Elections Now Act recounted a story of a meeting of the appointments chief for a governor in Texas where there are no campaign contribution limits, with the appointments chief for a governor in Wisconsin which has strict campaign contribution limits. In trying to understand the practical implications of the law, the Texas appointments chief asked, if the amount that a person can contribute to a campaign is limited, how do you know who to appoint?
Here in Connecticut, we are now running into this issue. As Gov. Rell, a Governor elected before the Citizens Election Program was put in place, winds down her final term, there is talk that she is looking to appoint twelve new judges. Editorials in the Norwich Bulletin and the Hartford Courant question the timing of these patronage jobs. Their concern is that as the Judicial Branch is facing shortfalls and as result closing courts and law libraries, it is the wrong time to spend a lot of money on new judges.
I would suggest that it is always the wrong time to make patronage appointments and that this illustrates yet again, how the Citizens Election Program saves the people of Connecticut money. While we still have a Governor who was elected under the old system, our state legislator was elected under the Citizens Election Program. They should oppose any judicial nominations that raise reasonable perceptions that the judges are being appointed out of patronage instead of out of need. While they are at it, they need to get on the stick and make sure that the Citizens Election Program is fully funded and improved to meet the legal concerns raised about it.
(Cross posted at MyLeftNutmeg.)
January 30th
Woodbridge Burglaries
Submitted by Aldon Hynes on Sat, 01/30/2010 - 20:10In December, I was forwarded an email about two early morning residential burglaries in Woodbridge, CT. I followed up by asking the Woodbridge Police to send copies of their press releases to me. They declined the request, so I brought it up at the next Police Commission meeting. At the meeting, Woodbridge Police Chief Gene Marcucci informed the commission and me that they would start placing their press releases on the Woodbridge Police Department website.
I suggested that it might be easier and more timely if the press releases could be sent out via to the town email system to interested journalists and residents, and I still hope that they will consider that. Since that date, I have frequently checked the Woodbridge Police Department website. Over a month has gone by since the previous press release had been issued. However, today, I was pleased to find a press release dated January 27th.
The press release announced the arrest of James C. Hamilton, aged 30, of 68 Sylvan Avenue, New Haven, CT. The press release states that “Working with investigators from both the New Haven Police Dept. and the East Haven Police Dept., Woodbridge Police detectives were able to link Hamilton to these burglaries and were able to recover items stolen from both homes.”
A quick search of the CT Judicial Branch website lists two cases with a James Hamilton as a defendant. One appears to be from the Woodbridge Police Department arrest, listing eight felonies and two misdemeanors which occurred on December 17th. Another case with a James Hamilton listed as the defendant is from the East Haven Police, on December 18th, including possession of narcotics. Both cases will have their next day in court on Feb 3rd. The court website also shows thirteen convictions of a James Hamilton from 2001 to 2007.
It is good to know that the suspect in the burglaries is in custody, that items that had been stolen have been recovered. It is especially good to know that the Woodbridge Police Department is making information about the arrest available to any journalist or resident that is interested.
(Cross-posted at the Woodbridge Citizen.)