Author Archives: nemski

About nemski

A Dad, a husband and a data guru

JFC Looking At Cutting Education Funding

Sometimes it is like we don’t even have Democrats controlling the state of Delaware.

The Joint Finance Committee is trying to scrape together enough money to invest in schools boasting a high number of students coming from low-income families and those learning English as a second language.

JFC co-chair, Rep. Melanie George Smith (D-Bear), said she doesn’t want to take away funding for existing programs, but a proposed $1.9 million in new dollars for language immersion might be needed elsewhere.

The committee grilled newly minted Secretary of Education Susan Bunting for three days on nearly every line item and staffed position.

Not once in the Delaware Public Radio article did anyone mention raising taxes. Not once.

February 8, 2017 Open Thread

Carney orders review of prison standoff (link)

Feds: Wilmington oil recycler broke law for 20 years (link)

A Middletown man who received $300,000 from Dover now serving a 10-year sentence on firearms charges (link)

Kent Levy Court supports two resolutions needed to construct Dover Mall access road (link)

Hibachi employee in Bear robbed at gunpoint while taking out the trash; trio fails to continue robbery inside (link)

Delaware’s Syrian Refugees Ready for Their New Home

Delaware Public Radio is reporting that the Syrian family set to resettle in Delaware have rebooked their flight for this week given that the courts have struck down Trump’s Muslim ban.

Monday morning, their travel plans were re-booked and showed up in a database managed by the International Organization for Migration (IOM).

But Sarah Green, Refugee Resettlement Volunteer Coordinator for Jewish Family Services of Delaware, remains only cautiously optimistic.

“There is still an appeal happening in the 9th Circuit Court,” Green said. “So the decision could come out of that the travel plans get canceled again.”

The ACLU of Delaware tells Green the courts could decide within 48 hours whether the travel ban should be reinstated or the freeze upheld, but the lawyers add a reinstatement of the ban is unlikely.

The public domain photograph is of a Syrian refugee family, not the Syrian refugee family headed to Delaware.

Prison Reform Front and Center

In the wake of the Vaughn Correctional uprising that ended in the death of Steven Floyd, prison reform is on the minds of many. It’s too bad that it took the death of a guard to put prison reform on anyone’s agenda. But this is the way things work in the States, we wait till something spirals out of control before we do something about it.

But some state leaders, prison experts and advocates say the writing was on the concrete wall long ago. Chronic staffing shortages, an over-reliance on overtime shifts, overcrowded facilities and funding shortfalls were all contributing factors in this week’s siege. Such criticisms have been documented in multiple taxpayer-funded reports compiled over more than a decade.

Now, in the wake of Floyd’s death, a cash-strapped state government is under even more pressure to change the way it runs its prisons and treats their caretakers.

Dover Paid Out $300K For Cop Kicking Man in Jaw

Often times we bust on the News Journal, but in cases like this, the News Journal did a lot of good to get this information out in public.

The city of Dover paid $300,000 last year to resolve a federal civil rights lawsuit against a man who was kicked in the head by a city police officer.

The settlement was released to The News Journal on Monday morning after Attorney General Matt Denn’s office ruled in the newspaper’s favor following a yearlong appeal.

The lawsuit stemmed from a police dashcam video that showed Cpl. Thomas Webster IV kicking Lateef Dickerson in the head, knocking him out, in August 2013. Dickerson had run from another officer who was breaking up a fight near a Hess gas station in Dover, authorities said.

The American Civil Liberties Union of Delaware filed the suit on Dickerson’s behalf against the city and the officer who kicked him almost three years ago.

“Any negative polls are fake news”

Oh, sweet baby Jesus.

Could he share the data?

Delaware Requires Public School Teachers and Administrators to Force Students to Recite the Pledge of Allegiance

When I was researching the post, Mandating Post Labor Day School Starts is Wrong, I stumbled upon this archaic law in the Delaware Code.

§ 4106 Failure to require salute and pledge; penalty.

When the Department of Education has procured and distributed American flags in each free public school, any principal or teacher of such free public school who fails to require the salute and pledge as set out in § 4105 of this title shall be fined not more than $50 or imprisoned not more than 10 days.

(34 Del. Laws, c. 180, § 3; Code 1935, § 2761; 14 Del. C. 1953, § 4107; 71 Del. Laws, c. 180, § 171.)

So, if I read this correctly, the law makes public school teachers and administrators force students to salute and pledge the US flag. It is very strange that there are no religious exceptions in this code.

Also, strange, that this law is still on the books. How hasn’t the ACLU worked with a public school student to strike this law unconstitutional?

February 6, 2017 Open Thread

Memorial honors officer who died in Smyrna prison riot (link)

Funeral services set for Delaware DOC guard killed in prison siege (link)

WTC Delaware executive director fears Trump executive order on immigration could affect Delaware tourism (link)

Near-record numbers Plunge at Rehoboth Beach (link)

Warm January creates winter illusion in Delaware (link)

Gas prices in Delaware continue month-long decline (link)

Facebook photograph by Barbara Barry Umbel.

Chris Christie is Wildly Unpopular

Chris Christie is more unpopular than Richard Nixon ever was.

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WDEL reports:

New Jersey Governor Chris Christie has reached a new low. In job approval rating, that is.

A new Quinnipiac University poll out from January shows 17 percent of New Jersey residents approve of Christie’s performance, while 78 disapprove.

The poll was conducted from January 26-30 among 1,240 New Jersey voters. The stunning part of this latest poll is Christie’s standing among Republican voters in the Garden State. Just 39 percent approve, while 53 percent disapprove.

Photograph by Luigi Novi. Creative Commons license.

Gregg Popovich Talks About Black History Month So Even White People Can Understand

Gregg Popovich, head coach of the San Antonio Spurs, was asked about Black History Month last night. Here’s his response which covers racism and white privilege.

Well, it’s a remembrance, and a bit of a celebration in some ways. It sounds odd because we’re not there yet, but it’s always important to remember what has passed and what is being experienced now by the black population. It’s a celebration of some of the good things that have happened, and a reminder that there’s a lot more work to do.

But more than anything, I think if people take the time to think about it, I think it is our national sin. It always intrigues me when people come out with, “I’m tired of talking about that,” or, “Do we have to talk about race again?” And the answer is, “You’re damned right we do.” Because it’s always there, and it’s systemic, in the sense that when you talk about opportunity, it’s not about, “Well, if you lace up your shoes and you work hard, then you can have the American dream.” That’s a bunch of hogwash.

If you were born white, you automatically have a monstrous advantage — educationally, economically, culturally, in this society and all the systemic roadblocks that exist, whether it’s in a judicial sense, a neighborhood sense with laws, zoning, education. We have huge problems in that regard that are very complicated, but take leadership, time, and real concern to try to solve. It’s a tough one because people don’t really want to face it.

And it’s in our national discourse. We have a president of the United States [Donald Trump] who spent four or five years disparaging and trying to [de]legitimize our president [Barack Obama]. And we know that was a big fake. But still, [he] felt for some reason it had to be done. I can still remember a paraphrase close to a quote “investigators were sent to Hawaii and you cannot believe what they found.” Well, that was a lie. So if it’s being discussed and perpetrated at that level, you’ve got a national problem.

I think that’s enough.