OpenCDA

September 30, 2013

Port of Hope Hearing Tuesday (Repost)

Filed under: Probable Cause — Tags: — Bill @ 3:45 pm

portofhome

At its regularly-scheduled meeting beginning at 6 p.m. on Tuesday, October 1, 2013, the Coeur d’Alene City Council will conduct a quasi-judicial hearing to approve or deny the Port of Hope’s application for a Special Use Permit.   This is informally referred to as an appeal from the 3-0 decision of the Coeur d’Alene Planning Commission to deny the application.  This will be a new hearing, not an appeal from the record, so all evidence and testimony must be presented as if it had never been received or heard before.  OpenCdA hopes that citizens who have fact-based evidence on this issue will appear and testify under oath at the quasi-judicial hearing. (more…)

September 29, 2013

Idaho’s Most Expensive Flacksters

Filed under: Probable Cause — Bill @ 7:36 am

shamwowguy1 copyThe Sunday, September 29, 2013, online version of the Idaho Statesman has a very interesting and informative article headlined Are Idaho’s public information officers public servants or spin doctors? The well-written and quite detailed article was written by Sven Berg.  The headline is a good indicator of the article’s content.

As expected, the Statesman listed numbers for only local agencies in the Treasure Valley and for statewide agencies.

OpenCdA is not sure that the City of Coeur d’Alene has any professionally trained public information officers for either the City as a whole or for any of its individual agencies.  OpenCdA understands that the City’s contract with its most recent Propagandist-in-Chief will not be renewed.

While living in southern California and working very closely with the Los Angeles City Fire Department, we had the privilege of also witnessing the work some of the finest and most professional public information officers in the nation.  They included Captain Jim Wells, Captain Steve Ruda,  and Firefighter Brian Humphrey.   Idaho’s PR flacks/wannabe PIOs could learn from them.

September 28, 2013

In Their Dreams…

Filed under: Probable Cause — Bill @ 3:28 pm

online trollIn a September 27, 2013 article entitled Trolls Not Allowed:  Rise of Quality Online Comments, Forbes Magazine contributing writer Steve Cooper talks briefly about how the numerous and various companies and individuals are hoping that some of the newer restrictions will discourage “trolls” from commenting.

According to the article, ” “…trolls,” [are] those nasty commenters who drag the conversation into the gutter without offering up any insight or value.”

It appears the takeaway from the Forbes article is that organizations with an online presence will place value on constructive comments rather than just blindly reject all comments.  OpenCdA has found that constructive commenters who return come back because they are engaged by others who would prefer them to trolls.

Yarnell Hill Fire Report

Filed under: Probable Cause — Bill @ 12:38 pm

granitepatch[

On June 30, 2013, nineteen members of the Granite Mountain Interagency Hotshot Crew were killed fighting the Yarnell Hill Fire near Yarnell, Arizona.

In response to these deaths, the State of Arizona convened a Serious Accident Investigation Team to prepare the investigative report of the incident.

Here is a link to that report which was released September 23, 2013.

September 26, 2013

An Introduction to Disinformation

Filed under: Probable Cause — Bill @ 10:20 am

disinformation logoHere’s something you probably thought you’d never hear from OpenCdA:

OpenCda urges you to read Scott W. Reed’s opinion piece entitled When a public vote isn’t legal published in the Coeur d’Alene Press on Wednesday, September 25, 2013.

It is a pretty good introduction to disinformation. (more…)

September 25, 2013

Wow! How Prescient!

Filed under: Probable Cause — Tags: — Bill @ 12:23 pm

07-09-13 P&Z Jordan PoH 1At the Tuesday, July 9, 2013, Coeur d’Alene Planning Commission’s quasi-judicial hearing on the Port of Hope’s application for a Special Use Permit, Commission Chairman Brad Jordan made an interesting comment beginning at approximately 02:31:27 in the streaming video.  Jordan, referring to the Port of Hope facility in Nampa, said, “Now, I understand they’re apparently operating fine in Nampa.  One thing we don’t know about Nampa is what kind of an area they’re in in Nampa.  It could be next to an industrial parkIt could be out in some area, but we don’t know where they’re at in Nampa, so it comes back to a land use decision, I think.  Is this an appropriate use for us in this location.”  [emphasis mine]

Aside from the fact that Port of Hope’s location in Nampa is completely irrelevant to any decision of the appropriate use of land in Coeur d’Alene, Jordan’s reference to “an industrial park” was curious and remarkably prescient.   Read on. (more…)

September 21, 2013

The Dots in Perspective

Filed under: Probable Cause — Bill @ 8:21 am

SODuring the Port of Hope’s hearings before the Coeur d’Alene City Planning Commission, some people expressed opinions that Port of Hope’s presence has  jeopardized the safety of the community by providing transitional housing to registered sex offenders (RSO).  To listen to them, Port of Hope is to blame for the presence of most of the RSOs near Fernan Elementary School and in the downtown flophouse motels.   That’s nonsense.  (more…)

September 18, 2013

Subverting Port of Hope

Filed under: Probable Cause — Tags: — Bill @ 4:15 pm

portofhome

Is the City of Coeur d’Alene, Idaho, misusing its Planning & Zoning Commission and its zoning ordinances to drive a successful long-time Idaho-based non-profit corporation, Port of Hope, Inc. (PoH) out of business at its northern Idaho address?  If so, why?

If you own or operate a business in Coeur d’Alene or if you’re thinking of starting a business or relocating your existing business here, please take the time to read this.    What the City of Coeur d’Alene is doing to Port of Hope should not happen to you or anyone else.

If you’re a taxpayer in Coeur d’Alene, you need to read this as well.  The City government’s official actions could end up costing City taxpayers many millions of dollars.

Please read this lengthy post carefully and watch the recordings of both the July 9 and August 13, 2013, meetings of the Coeur d’Alene Planning & Zoning Commission.  Then decide for yourself if the City government is acting out of good intentions,  mere incompetence, cronyism, or something else. (more…)

September 11, 2013

Federal Security Clearances – FAQ

Filed under: Probable Cause — Bill @ 9:48 am

CRS copyWhen someone such as Bradley Manning or Edward Snowdon unlawfully dumps a large amount of classified information into the public domain, the public reasonably asks how relatively low-level employees or contractors even get a security clearance.  In an effort to begin to answer that question, the Library of Congress’s Congressional Research Service has published a 15-page report titled Security Clearance Process:  Answers to Frequently Asked Questions.

September 10, 2013

Public Corruption Can Be Stopped

Filed under: Probable Cause — Tags: — Bill @ 7:18 am

StopCorruptPublic corruption can be stopped in any community, ours included.

Here is an FBI and US Attorney’s Office press release announcing the arrest of and agreed guilty pleas by two Forsyth, Georgia, city councilcrooks on bribery charges.

The thing that is most amazing is how comparatively little time it took for between initiation of investigation and conclusion.  The bribe was solicited on December 27, 2012, and the arrests were made by the end of January 2013.

How did that happen?  Simple and straightforward.  An honest and courageous businessman from whom one councilcrook solicited the bribe in return for a lucrative city contract immediately reported the solicitation to the FBI and cooperated in the investigation.

Public corruption investigations often take years to complete and don’t always lead to arrest, trial, and conviction.  Too frequently, otherwise honest citizens deny the existence of the corruption:  “This is just a little town in northern Idaho.  Nothing like that could ever happen here.”  (Readers should note that the population of Forsyth, Georgia, is approximately 4,000 people.)   Or they refuse to believe that someone whom they’ve known and trusted for years is a crook:  “I’ve known old so-and-so for years.  Played basketball with him in high school.   He’d never…”).  In what may be the worst case, honest citizens accept corruption and rationalize it by saying, “Well, old so-and-so does so much good in the community.  He (or she) donates to all the charities.  So what if he makes a little bit under the table?”

Ignoring public corruption effectively makes the victimized public an unwitting accomplice to the corruption and the protector of the corrupt.

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