The Clarion Call

Entries from August 2007

Little things

August 14, 2007 · No Comments

Sometimes you can tell a lot about a person by the way they deal with little things. For instance, little things like obeying the law.

My problems with Geneseo Supervisor Wes Kennison started a few years ago over what some might consider a little thing. One morning I was sitting in my newspaper office when I heard the fax machine chime. I walked over and picked up a notice of a 9:30 a.m. special meeting of the Geneseo Town Board.

I quickly glanced at the clock and saw that it was 9:35.  I grabbed my notebook and ran down the street to find out what was going on. When I arrived a few minutes later I found the board still sitting around the table, but was told the meeting was already over.

In those days, when my temper was a little less under control, I reacted with predictable anger.  The law clearly requires that local media be given notice of any special meetings of the board. How could a 9:35 notice be adequate for a 9:30 meeting?

Wes’s reaction was to laugh at me and tell me that the matter under consideration was not important. His attitude semed to be that breakimg the Open Meeting law was no big deal, and I was being unreasonable to demand that the law be followed. Sound familiar?

In the next issue of the paper I wrote my column about this incident and pointed out that anyone who didn’t respect the law in a small thing would probably be willing to break laws on bigger matters. I suppose some people will think this is a harsh personal attack, but I believe that subsequent history has proven the truth of this observation.

While the true facts surrounding Petitiongate are still under investigation, it would fit Wes’s pattern if it turns out that he was in this thing up to his eyebrows. My understanding is that his alibi to investigators will be that he was in Italy when all this happened and he had nothing to do with it. This is simply not credible to anyone who knows the circumstances and the personalities involved.

There is also a continuing problem with the town’s compliance with the Freedom of Information law. PDDG’s Article 78 lawsuit was dismissed by the courts after the judge accepted the town’s assurance that they had diligently searched their files and could not find public documents that were clearly listed as existing on the town attorney’s billing records.

If this is true, (and if you believe that, I have some prime swamp land in Florida I want to sell you), then that means that the town is in violation of the NYS Arts and Cultural Affairs law, which requires that all public records be preserved for at least six years. Another little thing, perhaps, but kind of important if the public is to keep track of what is being done in our name.

We deserve better from our public officials in big and little things.

Categories: FOIL · Geneseo · Petitiongate

Time passes slowly up here in the mountains

August 7, 2007 · No Comments

On Sunday, I repaired to the Adirondacks for a few days of R & R after the frenetic run-up to Saturday’s caucus. Everything was so busy last week that for the first time in 17 years I had an unscheduled failure to publish this column. Sorry about that, but that’s the way politics can be!

On the other hand, I have managed to keep up with the Clarion News Blog by posting stories for a record five days in a row, including today’s report on Petitiongate. LC News Editor Mark Gillespie remarked to me recently that the perfect combination of news coverage for a small town would be a daily blog and a weekly newspaper. We just about have that now in Geneseo, at least as far as political coverage.

I received nice praise on my web efforts from Jean Lindsay of Geneseo. In a recent e-mail she wrote, “You have been wise in shifting your writing and observations to the Internet. Your news and on-line columns (guest and proprietary), continue to educate us in ways others simply cannot quite achieve due to lack of experience, depth of perception, analytical skill, and the ability to communicate effectively in the King’s English.”

Thank you Jean! Her admiration for my reporting skill may be one of the reasons that she supported Will Wadsworth in the caucus race. Perhaps she was afraid that politics would interfere with my blogging, although I think the opposite is true. It is only through my close involvement in the political process that I find out what’s going on.

I have received much encouragement from supporters to stay in the Supervisor’s race as an Independent, but one strong request that I don’t. That came from my fellow blogger and PDDG partner in crime Bill Lofquist. He urged me to devote my full-time efforts to helping PDDG fight the Lowes matter.

It’s tempting, but the pay doesn’t compare very well with the $38,000 a year that the Supervisor makes. I’ll make my friends in PDDG an offer, however. If you raise $38,000 for our coffers in the next two weeks, I’ll drop out of the race and do the job for half price! So get busy!

Seriously though, I will make no decision on whether to continue until after Wednesday’s Democrat caucus. I certainly have no desire to run as a spoiler and help re-elect Wes. On the other hand, I am not yet convinced of either Will’s, or recent entry Bob Wilcox’s, claims to be a true Smart Growth advocate.

In the meantime, I will enjoy another day of peaceful mountain pursuits before returning to the rough and tumble world of Geneseo politics. I am in a rustic cabin with no cell phone or Internet service. Luckily a short trip into town allows me to piggyback on the local library’s wireless Internet or I really would be out of the loop!

Time to go for my morning hike. See you tomorrow night at the caucus!

Categories: Big Box War · Blogging · Personal · Politics