SF City Council

UPDATE: Mayor TenHaken still refusing to put up BIOs of citizen board appointees

UPDATE: The decided to be transparent.

For the third time, even after asked publicly in a city council meeting by Pat Starr, the administration refuses to put up on the agenda the BIOs of the volunteer board appointees. (Item #43)

While he talks about how he is transparent, he still hates transparency like the Dickens. Absolutely hates it. We saw this over the past couple of weeks when he couldn’t tell us about the covid outbreaks. Hey Paul, the truth will set you free Brah!

What is even more alarming is that a councilor has specifically requested this information to be shared with the public and still the refusal, it’s like a gigantic middle finger to him.

There are two new appointees to the Planning Commission (I will share a short bio),

• Janet Kittams (CEO of the Helpline Center) Janet is good person, and has formerly served on the REMSA board. I think she will make a great addition.

• Bradyn Neises, (Commercial Real Estate broker with Bender). His appointment is kind of ironic since he will be replacing another former Bender Real Estate Broker, Andi Anderson. Maybe she will borrow him her company polo shirts to wear during the meetings. Bradyn will be filling in for Andi’s last year of of appointment.

Thom Hartmann; How billionaires’ short-term greed could upend America and destroy their own wealth

This is an amazing article written during this crisis about the disgusting greed and economic inequality in our country;

The right-wing billionaire definition of “freedom” includes the right to poverty, the right to die without health care, the right to be uneducated and illiterate, and the right to be hungry and homeless. Red states seem to like this, since they repeatedly vote for it; we should let them have it.

In the article Hartman talks about economic recovery from this pandemic will come much faster in blue states than in red (federal welfare) states. This is why our governor, mayor and city council are hesitant to keep people from working, because we are a state where approximately 70% of the work force lives paycheck to paycheck.

Just read this FB rant from Sioux Falls City Councilor Greg Neitzert;

The place where I go to get my hair cut has laid off all of its employees, and they had multiple locations in Sioux Falls.  They may not reopen.  We are talking about dozens of employees, no longer with a job.  They made something like $12-$15 an hour.  They are working class citizens.  Right now moonlighting or starting their own gig is near impossible because the message is to keep social distance, so the client base has dried up.  Behind these statistics are individuals, and families, and children.  All who now have an uncertain future, many of which probably never dreamed to be in this position.  Maybe they qualify for unemployment, maybe they don’t.  Regardless, they are now living with the uncertainty and stress, not knowing when this will end and what their future will be.  I know some of them are single, or divorced, with a child or children.  There is a massive human toll to this, and consequences to their health, both mental and physical, that cannot be understated.  Multiply that thousands of times just in the city of Sioux Falls.  Their careers may have been put on pause (by force), but their needs, for housing, for food, to pay their utilities, to pay car loans, student loans, the needs just to survive, have not.  Imagine the toll on someone who has lost their job, and has no idea when they will get one again, with commitments and needs.  It has to be frightening to say the least.  Maybe some are lucky enough that they have another income in the family and they are still secure.  Maybe some are lucky enough that their jobs can be done at home and they are still secure.  But for thousands in Sioux Falls, that just isn’t the case.  And they are by and large some of our most vulnerable, some who are on edge, without a large emergency fund, who may be living paycheck to paycheck.  They are who are getting demolished.  It is these citizens I also think about, who call me stressed out, sometimes in tears, pleading for help and some assurance of when this will end.  It is on their behalf that I will not simply dismiss the consequences of our virtual shutdown as “just the economy”.  Lives are being destroyed and lost, no matter what we do.  There will be loss of life indirectly from draconian measures, if they continue for an extended period.  Many may be necessary to combat the virus, but we cannot dismiss the collateral damage.  Our policy decisions must balance the health, safety, and well being of all citizens, from the threat of this virus, the loss of livelihood, and the loss of liberty if a government goes too far.  All are important.  Remember again, we cannot stop this virus.  We cannot stop people from getting infected.  Tragically we cannot prevent people from dying.  From the beginning, at all levels of government that sad reality has been something we have had to accept.  The goal and the one thing we can control to some extent is preventing our hospitals from being overloaded when we hit the peak surge of infections.  The goal from the beginning from the federal level all the way down to the city level is to keep that surge from overloading our bed, staff, and ventilator capacity.  We cannot prevent all fatalities, but we can prevent unnecessary ones from lack of resources if we mitigate the spread enough to keep the surge manageable.  That’s been the goal.  We are accomplishing that because citizens have stepped up and made sacrifices to help each other.  In most cases we’ve simply had to ask, without a law or penalty attached.  Without a vaccine, simply locking everyone in their homes for weeks or months on end will not stop the spread, or prevent fatalities, it will only delay the inevitable spread, at the immeasurable cost of destroying our economy and the lives of the people who make it up.  That’s why our response has to be dynamic, proportional, and measured.  Finally, remember there are countless variables in modeling and projecting this.  Our epidemiologists at Sanford and Avera concede this, there are a number of variables you have to plug in, and its based on educated guesses and averages.  None of us knows what the right decision is with certainty.  We are all doing our absolute best, with the weight of the fact that lives could be in our hands with every decision we make.  Perhaps some years down the road looking back, with the benefit of hindsight, we might know if at each point we got it right or wrong.  Unfortunately that knowledge and certainty in real time is beyond our pay grade as humans with imperfect knowledge and an inability to see into the future.  We’re doing our best, and we feel the weight of our decisions daily.  I certainly do.

If we actually paid people living wages in our city, a few weeks off, even a month, would be just a hiccup in the road. So I ask Greg, and all of our local leadership(?) what have you done during your elected term to bring better wages and affordable housing to our city. I’ll give you the short answer; NOT A DAMN THING! He should of titled his post ‘Crocodile Tears’.

Avera finally announces their furloughs

A few weeks ago I got beat up for this post. The story today only verified what I was hearing back than;

Avera Health has furloughed approximately 650 employees across its system and reduced hours for about 1,500 staff members as the financial and operational implications of COVID-19 take hold.

This was the ‘big announcement’ I was talking about. I couldn’t give the full announcement because I had not heard the details of how many people it would be. So while I didn’t have all the details, I did know this was happening. Avera obviously drug their feet as long as they could before telling people. Sanford said today they are trying to avoid a furlough thru crosstraining they are doing now, but it may still happen. I apologize, but sometimes these stories tend to take a little bit longer to come out.

Mayor TenHaken looking to pull his stay at home ordinance

He announced at the 2 PM meeting today he wanted to pull back on the ordinance and just have a continuation of the loitering ordinance.

“Our current stay-at-home order needs to pivot based on today’s data,” he said. “I feel that the measures we still have to take in our city to further flatten our curve can be enhanced through enhanced regulations in our no-lingering ordinance and not in a stay-at-home order.”

So what was the real reason he wanted to do this? Because at least 6-7 councilors already told his COS that they were voting it down. I would even go further and say that by Tuesday it would probably be an 8-0 vote.

I’m sure PTH was trying to save himself any embarrassment from the complete failure of his proposed ordinance. The irony though is that most of the council is against it because they think in infringes on civil liberties, in which it does not, it actually does nothing at all but make a strong suggestion. It was a great exercise in futility and little else.

Some councilors threw around the idea of limiting employee in businesses or at least setting strong guidelines. I think this is good.

Councilor Stehly even pointed out they are already limiting restaurants from opening, so how would it be any different. The difference is MONEY and Greed.

As we can see from this BBC story, Smithfield did ignore the warning signs;

But according to Smithfield employees, their union representatives, and advocates for the immigrant community in Sioux Falls, the outbreak that led to the plant closure was avoidable. They allege early requests for personal protective equipment were ignored, that sick workers were incentivised to continue working, and that information regarding the spread of the virus was kept from them, even when they were at risk of exposing family and the broader public.

These larger employers that are ignoring advice from the CDC on how to slow the spread are the reason this is spreading so quickly now in our community. The problem is the Feds are protecting these companies and even worse yet, we live in a right to work state where employers really can treat their employees like dirt and there is no repercussions. Believe it or not, it’s hard for our local government to do anything legally to get these bad actors to knock it off. Their hands are tied. But I also want to say, they are not doing enough to put on the pressure. I watched an almost 4 hour meeting this afternoon that consisted of one excuse after another and no real solution of how they are going to get these large employers to limit their work forces. Just be happy you don’t work in one of these places, because it’s not a matter of if you will get sick but when.

The council really needs to explore ways in which they can legally get into these larger businesses and get them to follow important safety procedures.

This virus has shown us an entire breakdown of leadership from DC on down and no one willing to make life saving difficult decisions.

My look at Sioux Falls city government amid the COVID-19 crisis

Guest Post, Bruce Danielson

The Mayor and City Council have a problem, a problem of credibility. We citizens are attempting to understand the ramifications of the COVID-19 crisis not only on our medical and financial health, but on the health of our democracy.

Those of us in farm country look at the local, state and national responses to the corona virus and are appalled. It reminds me of chicken butchering day at the farm. You’ve heard the expression, “they’re acting like chickens with their heads cut off?” Just like the scene in your head, our headless leaders just scrambling about. I won’t get more graphic but we are witnessing it every day as we live through this mess.

Not only were the “leaders” of our community, state and nation given ample opportunity to have plans in place to deal with this pandemic, they consistently lie about it. If they aren’t lying, they are at least placing the blame on someone else. The infamous statements of our leaders saying “I didn’t sign up for this” is prophetic. Anyone studying history, knows these things are going to happen and they must be prepared. Their lack of study, planning and structured action, convince many of us, the children running our governments are accidently preparing us for disaster. This is why we must take personal responsibility and hope we are doing enough to save our lives.

The Sioux Falls City Council meeting held on April 15, 2020, is a classic pathetic case of responsibility shifting or just plain cover-up to hide embarrassment.

The Clerk notified through email those of us of a “REVISED 04/15/20 Council Meeting Agenda Available Online” sent at 4:52pm (April 14th, 2020) highlighting an updated agenda having been posted.

There was a lot of public interest in Item #22, so let’s take a look at the “Stay at Home” ordinance. The one being discussed at the Wednesday meeting, was not the same one legally posted to the city website.  The one being discussed, was illegally on the agenda. How do I know this? I downloaded the entire meeting agenda packet, all 78 pages at 7:33pm, April 14th, 2020, 23 ½ hours before the meeting start. Remember the time stamp, it becomes important.

In my review of the bundle and discussing specifically Item 22 on page 3 of 26 (or page 52 of bundle) the “critical infrastructure sector jobs” with a City Council member, a discrepancy between our versions was discovered. My 7:33pm official public agenda download listed six different bullet points. The Councilor’s showed five, as in only 5 bullet points. The missing bullet point was:

Fitness centers and gyms, so long as they are in compliance with all ordinances, rules, and regulations relating to their operations during the COVID-19 emergency

Why is this important? What started out as a simple clerical error of cutting and pasting information into a document became a potential criminal act on the part of the City Clerk and / or the City Attorney.

Approximately 22 hours before the start of the April 15th meeting, the City Attorney and Clerk were notified of the discrepancy found in item #22 by the City Councilor. The Councilor’s unofficial red line copy and the publicly posted official packet were different. Soon after the informal notification, so a strategy to officially fixit could be planned (this is done almost every week), a different packet version was posted without the page 52 discrepancy and without explanation. Here is where it becomes potentially criminal, SDCL 1-27-1.16 clearly states:

“Material relating to open meeting agenda item to be available–Exceptions–Violation as misdemeanor. If a meeting is required to be open to the public pursuant to § 1-25-1 and if any printed material relating to an agenda item of the meeting is prepared or distributed by or at the direction of the governing body or any of its employees and the printed material is distributed before the meeting to all members of the governing body, the material shall either be posted on the governing body’s website or made available at the official business office of the governing body at least twenty-four hours prior to the meeting or at the time the material is distributed to the governing body, whichever is later.”

Granted, the mistake was likely just a simple human error, posting the wrong bullet point list. The simple clerical error could have been simply corrected with a “motion to amend” the item. It is done almost every week during City Council meetings. Why was the document replaced after 8:53pm (another download time for me)? Was it embarrassing to the City Attorney, the City Clerk and / or the administration so it needed to be changed in the middle of the night? South Dakota Law does not allow for slipping changes into documents less than 24 hours before the meeting starts. But someone criminally did it anyway. Preventing a potential embarrassment of a simple fix now becomes criminal. What were they thinking?

Remember when I said above there was a lot of public interest in Item #22? Several participants in the meeting said to me privately they noticed the missing clause and attended the meeting because of the missing bullet point between postings.

During the Public Input, I pointed out the problem already discussed and included another cut and paste error made. Again on page 52, a whereas statement was inserted:

WHEREAS, the Sioux Falls Board of Health convened an emergency meeting on April 15, 2020 and unanimously recommends approval of the “Stay at Home” Regulations

The April 14th posted document clearly states how the Board of Health already had their April 15th meeting and voted. They not only voted, but all of them voted for it. How can a public board secretly meet and hold a vote before they attend a future meeting. Via time travel maybe? How do we reconcile this “Whereas” stating action on an Item from a secret or nonexistent meeting before the actual meeting; so they could put in a “Whereas”? This Whereas could have easily been amended into the document during the meeting (once again, done all the time).

Statements were made during the Council meeting in an attempt to justify their actions or insinuate my lying about the timing of the documents I downloaded. I had a witness to my downloads, I have the time stamps of the downloads, I have the phone logs to document the timing and I know the other person also has the phone logs. The city officials must retain their upload and call logs to meet the requirements of the SDCL Chapter 3-21 Notice of Claim I am filing.

What we have during this pandemic is calamity being covered up by Revisionist History. They are now trying to say: “this is what we meant” even though “this is what we did”. Were the parties to this screw-up, lying, frustrated or upset because they got caught? As someone who has fought the battles of Sioux Falls city government falsifying documents, I work to document the interesting transgressions.

We must have an administration following laws and precedent. They are showing they cannot honestly deal with us or the facts surrounding this crisis. A final food for thought:

Walworth County Auditor Rebecca Krein was arrested for violating a state law that requires materials related to an open meeting agenda item to be made available to the public. … Violation of the law is a Class 2 misdemeanor punishable by up to 30 days in jail, a $500 fine or both. (Aberdeen American News, Oct 18, 2019)

Should Citizens be Allowed to give Public Input Telephonically at Sioux Falls City Council Meetings?

After seeing the herd of people at last night’s city council meeting, I am beginning to wonder if there should be a call in phone number to allow public input by phone?

I have spoken today with officials from the city and the school district and there seems to be an effort to try to work something up that would probably sunset in a couple of months after the virus passes and not be permanent.

As I have argued, if the elected officials can call into these meetings and participate by phone, the citizens should be able to also.

Stay tuned.