Author Archives: nemski

About nemski

A Dad, a husband and a data guru

Problems In Looking for a new Dover Police Chief

dover_police_selection_committee

Left to right: Hosfelt, Slavin, Christiansen, Koeing, Hawkins

The picture above is the Dover Police Chief Selection committee that met earlier this week. Mayor Robin Christiansen is chairing the committee.

Other committee members include City Council President Timothy A. Slavin , Councilman and Safety Advisory and Transportation Committee Chairman James Hosfelt, City Manager Scott Koenig and City Human Resources Director Kim Hawkins.

The purpose of the committee, from what I can tell, is to craft and write a job description so that the city of Dover can hire a new police chief. The problem is that this committee nowhere resembles the demographics of Dover which is 42% African-American. Another issue is that the acting chief, Deputy Chief Maj. Marvin Mailey, is popular among some members and is African-American.

“I am deeply disappointed that when we as a city are faced with a qualified and experienced and proven minority candidate for the position of chief of police, we have to convince ourselves that it’s OK to hire a minority,” Mr. Slavin said. “I’m sorry, but that’s the perception that many people see and many people have brought to me and that I agree with.

Even though the selection process needs to be inclusive, sometimes you already have qualified candidates.

Councilman David Anderson did not believe a “massive search” was required, with strong candidates already residing within Dover PD.

Maj. Mailey has overseen the police department as senior officer since Chief Bernat’s departure.

Speaking to the committee, NAACP Central Delaware President La Mar Gunn said, “We’re counting on you to get this right. A misstep in this process could erase all the positive things done recently (in building community relations.)”

Mr. Gunn said the candidates he knew “want the opportunity to compete for it based on merit” and now have the selection determined by skin color or college degree.

Chris Coons’ Media Tour of Lameness

There are times when I get frustrated by Delaware Democrats not acting like Democrats. But there are times that warm the cockles of my heart when the national press calls out Chris Coons for his media tour of lameness.

Sen. Chris Coons’ office phones will be ringing this week after riling progressives with what they’re calling his “media tour of lameness” on President Trump’s Supreme Court nominee, Neil Gorsuch.

The Progressive Change Campaign Committee says the Delaware Democrat — a member of the Senate Judiciary Committee, which will review the nomination — didn’t take a tough enough stance against Gorsuch during a series of interviews with media outlets.

missing Coons

Should Delaware Consolidate Its School Districts

The Joint Finance Committee met the other day to discuss Delaware’s Department of Education budget, the Delaware State News reported. Sadly, even though Delaware spends over $1 billion dollars on education, it doesn’t seem like much happened. They did talk about raising starting teacher salaries, but kind of nixed the idea on consolidating Delaware’s school districts.

Budget-writing lawmakers broached the possibility of consolidating some of the state’s 19 school districts Wednesday, but top education officials said it wouldn’t save much money.

[snip]

Several lawmakers questioned the notion that fewer school districts would largely result in the same expenses, a conclusion reached in a past study.

The internet is full of studies about consolidating school districts in Delaware:

  • 2009 article: State auditor recommends consolidating state’s school districts (link)
  • 2004 study: Delaware School District Organization & Boundaries: Closing the Gap (link)
  • 2002 study: Feasibility Study for County Wide School Districts In
    Kent and Sussex Counties (link)
  • 2016 Article: Officials to eye merging state’s school districts (link)

Obviously, my google skills are deteriorating, so if anyone else can find recent studies that would be helpful. That all said, a consolidation of Delaware school districts would immediately save on superintendent salaries. We would also probably have to keep some of the assistant superintendents, but other staff cuts could probably be made in central offices. Firing people is a big deal, I get that, but it might be time to take advantage of Delaware’s size and have only three school districts.

Other unknown benefits could include getting rid of Delaware’s inane education referendums as part of a consolidation.

February 3, 2017 Open Thread

Remembering Sgt. Steven Floyd (link)

Salesianum grad not guilty of vehicular homicide (link)

Wilmington to pay $625K in wrongful termination settlement (link)

25 shootings in January for Wilmington (link)

Company sentenced to pay Wilmington $3.5M in fines and restitution for violating Clean Water Act (link)

DC is excited about Elena Delle Donne (link)

New-home bonanza at beach is happening west of Del. 1 (link)

SD 10 Special Election Debate Recap

SD 10 Special Election debate was last night. Here are my takeaways.

  • I was quite impressed by the Libertarian candidate Joseph Lanzendorfer
  • Marino got a bum mic, but he is a right-wing Republican through and through
  • Stephanie Hansen did well and needs to win this election
  • The Crossfire rounds did not work

Local media reports are here: Delaware State News, The News Journal, and WDEL. Below is a FB video of the debate in case you missed.

What Fresh Hell Is This?

A Guest Post from Alby Damned

Evidence keeps piling up that Mr. Brexit might be barking mad. Tuesday provided lots more grist for the 25th Amendment mill, with reports surfacing of bizarre talks with foreign leaders last weekend.

On Friday, Trump reportedly told Mexican President Enrique Pena Nieto, “You have a bunch of bad hombres down there. You aren’t doing enough to stop them. I think your military is scared. Our military isn’t, so I just might send them down to take care of it.”

Sounds grim, but I have Mexico as the first war in my Trump fantasy league, so it’s good news for me. Besides, I bet you can find a million volunteers in Texas alone who’ll invade Mexico if you give them enough beer.

Less understandably, the popular vote loser decided Saturday was a good time to strain relations with our strongest ally on the Pacific Rim, Australia:

“This is the worst deal ever,” Trump fumed as Australian PM Malcolm Turnbull attempted to confirm that the United States would honor its pledge to take in 1,250 refugees from an Australian detention center. Trump complained that he was “going to get killed” politically and accused Australia of seeking to export the “next Boston bombers.”

Then yesterday Trump kicked off Black History Month by rambling on about his grievances with the press and forgetting who Frederick Douglass was, if he ever knew in the first place:

“I am very proud now that we have a museum on the National Mall where people can learn about Rev. King, so many other things. Frederick Douglass is an example of somebody who’s done an amazing job and is being recognized more and more, I notice — Harriet Tubman, Rosa Parks and millions more black Americans who made America what it is today. Big impact.”

I wouldn’t have been surprised if he named Rosa Parks Secretary of Transportation.

Meanwhile, Democratic voters remain marching mad, and all the calls, letters and pop-up protests are having a big effect – especially on Democratic office-holders.

It’s even swaying the ocassional Republican, as HuffPo’s Ryan Grim relates:

Yesterday, Lisa Murkowski, a Republican senator from Alaska, was talking to a handful of reporters outside her office and I happened to be there. The phones were ringing off the hook, and she said it had been like that since Trump’s inauguration, and 30,000 had come in in a single week. That’s a lot of calls from Alaska. Up until this weekend, she said, almost all of them were about Betsy DeVos, the unqualified billionaire nominated to run the Education Department. Today, Murkowski said she’d be voting no, and said the calls helped sway her. … Activism can work sometimes.

How happy are elected Democrats about this? The title of Grim’s article says it all: After Trying Everything Else, Democrats Have Decided to Listen to Their Voters.

New polling indicates Democratic women aren’t going to settle for simply marching: 40 percent of Democratic women say they will be more active in political causes this year, vs. 27 percent for men.

Those with an eye toward 2018 can take some hope from the Great Reshuffling of American voters revealed by November’s elections. This Atlantic article demonstrates that minorities and college-degree whites are now Democrats, non-college whites with the Republicans. The shift isn’t complete yet, meaning it has implications for the 2018 midterms:

All initial evidence suggests Trump’s presidency will widen, rather than narrow, the fissures that emerged around his election. That means for 2018 and beyond, each party’s electoral target list may grow increasingly focused on the members caught, in effect, behind enemy lines: the last few Democrats representing heavily blue-collar districts and the larger number of Republicans in mostly white-collar suburban seats.

By those criteria, Republicans have a few more seats to defend than Democrats.

Wish I’d Said That:

“There is no argument that can be made that Ben Carson is qualified to be secretary of the Department of Housing and Urban Development. His only qualification is that he’s lived in a house.”

Charles Chamberlain, executive director of Democracy for America

Alby Damned is the nom de guerre of retired journalist and talk show host Al Mascitti. He lives in Hockessin.

Chris Coons: I’m Not Really A Democrat, But I Play One On TV

The headline from Delaware Public Radio says it all: “Sen. Coons will give SCOTUS pick fair shake”. I guess this is appropriate given that today is Groundhog Day.

Some Democrats in the U.S. Senate want to adopt their Republican counterparts’ tactics and block President Trump’s pick for the Supreme Court.

But Sen. Chris Coons wants to give Judge Neil Gorsuch a full hearing in the U.S. Senate.

We have this piece of shit for another 6 years. Let that sink in for a moment.

Also buried deep in the article is the fact that Tom Carper “won’t block his confirmation strictly out of political retaliation.” Fucking hell.

Sen. Chris Coons told NPR’s Morning Edition Wednesday he’s chosen to uphold his responsibility as a member of the Senate.

“That means ensuring that Judge Gorsuch gets the full and thorough hearing and vetting in front of the Senate Judiciary Committee that DC Circuit Judge Merrick Garland -nominated by Obama nearly a year ago- never received,” he said.

Sen. Chris Coons said it was outrageous and unprecedented for his Republican counterparts to deny a hearing for Obama’s nominee to the court.

But he doesn’t think voters will support that tactic with Gorsuch’s nomination.

“I think the American people deserve to hear what Judge Gorsuch’s answers are to probing and tough and challenging questions about his views on a wide range of constitutional issues,” he said.

Both Coons and Sen. Tom Carper said they plan to judge Gorsuch on his credentials and record, and won’t block his confirmation strictly out of political retaliation.

February 2, 2017 Open Thread

Trump makes unannounced trip to Dover Air Force Base (link)

After criticism, overhaul at housing authority board (link)

Candidates for 10th District state Senate seat face off in WDEL debate (link)

Lawmakers discuss merging school districts, pay hike for new teachers (link)

Dover police chief search committee takes first cautious steps (link)

Delaware Civil Rights Coalition speaks out against Trump (link)

Vaughn Correctional Siege Over; One DOC Employee Dead

We will be following #netDE and #VaugnRebellion throughout the day on the Twitter.

 

 

From WDEL:

Two Delaware Department of Correction employees have been released while two are still being held hostage inside the James T. Vaughn Correctional Center in Smyrna.

“We don’t know the dynamics of the takeover,” admitted Delaware Department of Homeland Security and Public Safety Sec. Robert Coupe, who was the former DOC Commissioner, in the department’s latest update that aired live on WDEL just after 8 p.m.

From the News Journal:

An unknown number of prisoners inside James T. Vaughn Correctional Center took control of a building Wednesday morning, injuring one corrections officer and taking three others and fellow prisoners hostage.

As the standoff continued into the early hours of Thursday, there were no signs it would be resolved anytime soon.
Among the inmates’ demands were prison reforms and better living conditions.

From Delaware Public Radio:

Two prison guards have been released from an ongoing hostage situation at James T. Vaughn Correctional Center in Smyrna, but two correction employees still remain hostage in a standoff that began Wednesday morning.

Gov. John Carney (D), Correction Commissioner Perry Phelps, and Safety and Homeland Security Secretary Rob Coupe updated the situation at the prison Wednesday night.

“Our focus throughout the day has been on the safety of our correctional employees. It will continue to be our focus,” Carney said.

From Delaware State News:

An inmate takeover of Building C at James T. Vaughn Correctional Center in Smyrna, which houses over 100 inmates, was still ongoing Wednesday night. The takeover began at approximately 10:30 a.m. when the inmates took four correctional officers hostage.

Two of the four hostages were released from Building C Wednesday along with 27 inmates. The first hostage released Wednesday afternoon was treated for non-life threatening injuries. Officials said they were unable to comment on how many, if any, inmates were being held against their will in addition to two remaining hostages.

What Fresh Hell Is This?

A Guest Post from Alby Damned

We don’t know what the ratings on last night’s “Apprentice: Supreme Court” edition are, but the winner is Neil Gorsuch, a religion-loving, cop-loving Coloradan. Think Antonin Scalia without the obnoxious personality flaws. This AP report draws on interviews with people in Colorado who have worked with him, and truth be told it sounds as if Trump could have done much worse.

So what do Senate Democrats do now? Has the public’s spine-donation program worked? Don’t count on it. Talking Points Memo runs down the political implications of the pick and what Democrats might do. Short version: They’re cautious. Betcha didn’t see that one coming.

While the rubes watched the TV, a draft of a presidential order targeting legal immigrants on public assisstance for deportation made the rounds in Washington. The leaked release follows the same pattern as the original immigration crackdown order, which leaked early in the week before being signed Friday.

The media still doesn’t know how to deal with the Trumpocalypse, but at least they’re policing each other for egregious kow-towing. The editor of The Wall Street Journal, which is owned by noted immigrant Rupert Murdoch, was outed for directing his reporters to use mealy-mouthed language to avoid angering the popular vote loser.

Details are coming out about Trump’s first drone strike, the one that left a Navy SEAL dead in Yemen. How’d it go? “Almost everything went wrong,” an unnamed senior military intelligence official said. Contrary to earlier reporting, the raid was Trump’s first clandestine strike — not a holdover mission approved by President Barack Obama. The mission involved “boots on the ground” at an al Qaeda camp near al Bayda in south central Yemen, where an MV-22 Osprey experienced a hard landing near the site, injuring several SEALs, one severely. The tilt-rotor aircraft had to be destroyed. A SEAL was killed during the firefight on the ground, as were some noncombatants, including women and an 8-year-old girl.

You might have missed it amid the rest of the blundering, but Trump has added Germany to his Targets of Wrath list. Kevin Drum of Mother Jones explains why, and why it’s mostly just hot air.

The old adage claims sports don’t build character, they reveal it, which doesn’t say much for bicycle racers. Having apparently run out of ways to enhance the human body, the sport’s never-ending search for the perfect cheat is now concentrating on the machine– think hidden motors and electromagnets inside the rims. As unsporting as it sounds, I want to know when I’ll be able to add one to my bike. It’ll come in handy on the hills.

Alby Damned is the nom de guerre of retired journalist and talk show host Al Mascitti. He lives in Hockessin.