September 2016

The ‘Extremely Helpful’ city staff at the citizens ‘Beckon Call’

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As this whole administration building thingy got wrapped up today with the mayor’s press conference at NOON (we will have video up soon with my commentary) and his multiple lies and unanswered questions, I did get a good laugh out of the ‘service’ the petitioners received from the city employees. Like I said, it helps to laugh at these people and their bizarre excuses.

Mayor Huether started the press conference with an apology to city clerk Tom Greco and the city attorney and their families for the way ‘they were treated’ throughout the process. I almost burst into laughter.

First off, I find it hard to believe that Greco was at Bruce’s ‘Beckon Call’ when it came to questions about the petition. This is the same Tom Greco that sent a middle of the night email rant to Bruce about his sick kid and military service. But there was also this interesting email sent out by the city attorney back in July to the mayor, city council and city directors, and it is NOT about caramel popcorn and peanuts;

From: Pfeifle, David

Sent: Wednesday, July 27, 2016 5:06 PM

Subject: Argus inquiry on possible initiative for new building bond ordinance Tom Greco and I were contacted by Joe Sneve about a possible initiative effort by Bruce Danielson. An initiative effort would need to gather at least 7,000 signatures to produce approximately 5,750 valid signatures, based on historic failure rates. Tom would then need to conduct the random sampling process to validate the petition. He would review 10 percent of them according to SD Administrative Rule. This process can take two to four weeks, depending on various factors, including whether someone challenges the petition and demands all the signatures must be validated. Assuming a petition contains sufficient valid signatures, Tom would then present the petition to the City Council for further action. The Council can either automatically place the item on the April 2018 ballot or order a special election to be called no earlier than 30 days from the date of the ordinance calling for a special election. A unique situation is present when bond sales are involved. We both informed Joe that it would be extremely unlikely that this effort could lead to an election and canvass to occur before bonds would be sold in the first part of October. Once bond sales occur, state law prohibits the use of the initiative process to “nullify the purpose” for which bonds have been sold.

David A. Pfeifle, City Attorney

Wow! Where to begin? I’m out of breath just reading this boloney roll.

a) It is actually 5% and we did reach that threshold with 6,400 signatures

b) The validation process takes between 4-6 hours with 2-3 people. Based on what past clerks have done.

c) Fiddle claims that if sufficient and valid signatures were attained and the city council was able to call an election before the bonds sold, it still would not stop the sale. Well, that would have been up to a judge. As the minimum wage petitioners proved, since they referred it to a vote, it stopped the law from going into affect.

While the mayor made this ‘personal’ by apologizing to the families of Greco and Fiddle, I will not. But if the mayor, the courts, or the city council think or believe Greco and Fiddle were at the beckon call of Danielson and did everything in their power to help them, it doesn’t take much to buffalo them. As you can see from the email, it was evident from the beginning they were going to stall and railroad this anyway they could see fit. Hardly helpful to process, in fact quite the opposite. Maybe next time the mayor needs to apologize to the public for having such poor and vindictive public employees working for this city.

I knew we were going to lose

As I have mentioned before there are two things I know about our current state of city government and my analysis of it;

  • It is predictable
  • I’m a cynic

Given that, I told Bruce from the beginning to not do the petition drive, I knew in my heart that we could never overturn the mayor’s decision to move forward with the project.

Even if the oath was correct, we would have had a terrible timeline to deal with. First off, you would need at least 6 councilors on board to call a special meeting to call an election, that would have had to happen before the bond sale. That would have been an impossible feat in itself.

But let’s say that magically happened, you would have still had to go to the courts to get them to delay the bond sale for the election.

I’m not saying our mayor, our courts or the city council is crooked in the process, I’m just saying the planets would have needed to align, big time.

The worst part about this is that the citizens lose. Whether you are for or against the building, you still did not get to decide. Much like the aquatic center, only one person got to put their rubber stamp on this.

It’s easy to be angry. I am not. I have often told my readers that if you can’t laugh at politicians, you will only end up hating them. I laugh a lot.

Local politics matter, pay attention, present your voice. Recently the Oakview neighborhood got ahead of an issue, and they succeeded, you can make a difference, but your timing is essential. On the Admin building, our clock ran out.

At the end of the day we can be thankful for one thing; term limits.

In honor of Dumb Chinese Bird Fest coming to Sioux Falls

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With the big announcement this week a smaller tourist organization in Sioux Falls, called the CED (Cynical Economic Development) decided to celebrate the event with a smaller event this weekend. Some of the booths and demonstrations at the event will be;

a) 102 recipes for killing the taste of pheasant with cream of mushroom soup

b) Who needs camo, orange hats and boots, let’s go ditch hunting from the window of your truck

c) 20 excuses to give to farmers when you get caught hunting on their land without permission

e) How to blow $1,000 at Scheels to hunt a bird you will never eat

f) How to fit 18 hunters into a Sioux Falls hotel room with beds for only 2

Should be fun. I guess there will also be a demonstration by the mayor on how to where a cowboy hat properly.

“It’s complicated, and it can’t be explained over the telephone, besides, haven’t I lied enough to city leaders and the citizens of Sioux Falls?”

2009 Ford E-Series Super Duty Ambulance Prep Package. (03/03/09)

Well you gotta hand it to the VP of Paramedics Plus in Sioux Falls, he’s learning, instead of just bald face lying to the public, he just won’t answer questions at all. And hey, he’s got Jill Franken on his side;

Sioux Falls Public Health Director Jill Franken described the changes as part of a 60-day pilot program aimed at decreasing reliance on outside aid from neighboring services, but she wouldn’t elaborate on how it would achieve that goal.

“Isn’t it fair to say we don’t yet know the results of the pilot test?” Franken said.

Jill, I think the question was ‘what is the plan’ not ‘what are the results’. I know you are a smart girl and all, you know the difference between the two? Right? I could call you and explain the difference between those two questions but it may be too complicated to answer over the phone.

Franken said under the new, temporary dispatching rules, firefighters will be sent to fewer lower-level medical calls. The department has more than 30 trained paramedics on staff.

That’s funny, because when Jill was asked if the tax payers and the SFFD was subsidizing PP she said ‘we were splitting hairs’ but now all of sudden she is cutting back on that ‘assistance’.

It will be interesting to see how this ‘pilot test’ turns out. Isn’t it great Sioux Falls patients in emergency situations are being used as guinea pigs? Sounds more like the city and PP can’t stand to give Med-Star even a few crumbs, so they devise secret plans to avoid them.

Playing politics with Event Centers and swimming pools is one thing, but when you play politics with the health and well-being of citizens and tell us it is ‘too complicated’ to explain, that’s just wrong.