If I am wrong, then I like to be the first one to admit it. Usually, I don’t have that luxury, because by the time that I discover that I was wrong, sometimes hundreds of other people have already whispered it behind my back.
But, this one is kind of a no-brainer, which a whole other group of people would testify that I am qualified to make.
Nonetheless, at the Monday City Council meeting I protested spending $137,500 on the paving of a nearly abandoned parking lot behind what was once the Slipko’s Food King Market on Main Street because there are no traffic or marketing studies to indicate the need for that job. Furthermore, the city should sell that property and demolish the Slipko’s building so that a private merchant can make up-front parking along Main.
Another fellow got up and spoke about the $7,600 travel budget for the city administrator being excessive.
Now, I don’t mind being more liberal than Niagara Falls High School history and government teacher Frank Soda. I don’t even mind about him being right sometimes and me being wrong. But, what bothers me is when he is more right than I am on a more conservative issue. I admit that this time he embarrassingly nailed it.
Soda had bet the students that he brings to City Council meetings that there would be public protests about the relatively paltry sums of money that council sometimes allows the mayor to use on what amount to be pet projects, but the public would overlook the mega-sums of money that some rightfully consider unnecessarily spent.
Soda asked if there is a pattern developing for monies that we spend in the city on policing errors. More specifically, monies spent in paying settlements for police/civilian accidents. The council approved spending $800,000 in one case recently, and $200,000 in another case on Monday.
It is easy for my liberal side to overlook such expenses as necessary ones, we having more sympathy for the victim than for the city. So much so, that we don’t examine why the city is at fault and how, if possible, such events can be mitigated, or even eliminated.
Our police force are professionals who, like us, want to improve. They would rather have the $1 million spent in additional police officers than in settlement payments.
But Soda’s question begs consideration: Is there a pattern developing? Perhaps being exempt from the vehicular and traffic laws that they swore to enforce takes a certain edge off them or causes them not to be as focused as they should? I don’t know.
While it may rightfully be of no comfort to the compensated victims and/or their families, I do believe that our police department likely saves the general public hundreds of times the money that is spent in settlements, police car repairs and replacements. Nonetheless, absent from any broadly known discussion by political and government servants are any actions taken to ensure that these payments become unnecessary.
There is little question that I am one of the Board of Education’s staunchest critics — and for good cause. So I really hate to do this, but I have to give kudos to Soda on, not only understanding this issue, but also on instilling a better understanding of it into his student’s minds.
Well done, Frank.
Ken Hamilton is a Niagara Falls resident. Contact him at kenhamilton930@aol.com.
Columns
HAMILTON: A lesson provided by city settlements
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GLYNN: VFW post keeps spirit alive
At one time, members of the Veterans of Foreign Wars-Post 313 would march down Main Street in Youngstown on Memorial Day to the 1812 Cemetery near Old Fort Niagara. That same scenario out of the past occurred for decades in cities, towns and villages across the U.S.
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HAMILTON: Dandelions, parades, broken poles and people
There are still those remnants of the fading bouquets of floral tributes that still hang at that base of a tree on city hall’s lawn. It is near where, last year, from his shiny silvery cart, Melvin Johnson sold hot dogs and sausages to both city employees and passerbys while his tiny white dog excitingly yelped at anyone that came near.
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GLYNN: Gillibrand seeks help for prime bread-winners
A recent report shows that working mothers across the Empire State earn nearly 15 percent lower pay for the same work as men.
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BRADBERRY: There really are spirits in the water
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CONFER: The reality of rationed health care
The ongoing debate over Obamacare has brought to light the concept of rationed healthcare. Opponents of health care reform keenly point out that while the bill never explicitly calls out rationing, it features certain provisions that will lead the markets to adjust to strict federal demands and, therefore, dispense certain procedures in smaller amounts or not at all. Because of it being the first time that the subject has really come up in public circles, most people, especially on the right, believe that rationing is something new. It’s not. The free markets have been practicing that for quite some time. I should know; with a 4-inch long, 1-inch wide scar running south of my belly button – and a couple of related scars around my groin – I could be the poster child for rationed health care.
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CITY DESK: A regrettable error
We owe Carol Sensabough an apology.
Several weeks ago, the long-time reader and Niagara Falls resident sent a letter to the editor explaining that she took offense to some of the things written by a syndicated columnist, Stephen Dick. -
HIGGS: Niagara Falls' own West Side story
Trusello’s Bakery was on Elmwood behind the family home at 840 19th St. The family, Richard, William (Billy) and Sam along with two sisters, lived in the house.
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GLYNN: Falls, Ont., rolls out red carpet for Wallenda
Before Nik Wallenda even started practicing his high-wire routine in downtown Niagara Falls, state Sen.George D. Maziarz, R-Newfane, had noted the warm welcome the tightrope walker received across the river.
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HAMILTON: Civic ‘ParticipAction’ can work too
Back in the 1970s, our Neighbors to the North ran a national campaign called ParticipAction to encourage Canadians to get off their butts and do things for the sakes of their bodies.
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