Showing posts with label Open Meetings Act. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Open Meetings Act. Show all posts

Wednesday, May 24, 2017

With 12 Minutes To Spare, Daire Rendon Almost Violated The Open Meetings Act

With 12 minutes to spare!

Daire Rendon has almost violated the Open Meetings Act with a 12 minute closing window!

On May 24, 2017 at 4:18 p.m., public notice of the revised agenda was published, 12 minutes at the 18 hour threshold of the law.

Revised Agenda House Standing Committee Meeting

Families, Children, and Seniors, Rep. Daire Rendon, Chair

DATE: Thursday, May 25, 2017

TIME: 10:30 AM

PLACE: Room 327, House Office Building, Lansing, MI

AGENDA:
SB 180  (Sen. Schuitmaker)      Children; child care; provisions related to background checks and fingerprinting of child care organizations; require.

SB 181  (Sen. Hildenbrand)      Children; child care; general amendments related to licensing; provide for, and eliminate registration.

SB 182  (Sen. Hopgood)  Children; child care; licensure requirements for child care centers; modify.

SB 183  (Sen. Schuitmaker)      Criminal procedure; sentencing guidelines; sentencing guidelines for failure to report certain charges; update.

HB 4505 (Rep. Farrington)       Crime victims; compensation; reimbursement for medical procedures and services related to sexual assault medical forensic examinations; modify.

HB 4506 (Rep. Allor)    Crime victims; compensation; sexual assault victims' medical forensic intervention and treatment fund; modify use of expenditures.

I wonder if HB 4505 and 4506 will include foster children, but considering the fact that these Bills were added at the last possible 12 minutes, I highly doubt very many stakeholders were even notified.

OR ANY BUSINESS PROPERLY BEFORE THIS COMMITTEE



Daire Rendon hitting the send button @ 4:18 p,m,, May 24, 2017.

To view text of legislation go to:
 http://www.legislature.mi.gov/mileg.aspx?page=CommitteeBillRecord

Committee Clerk: Taylor Thrush
Phone: 517-373-7256
e-Mail: tthrush@house.mi.gov

Individuals needing special accommodations to participate in the meeting may contact the Chair's office.

Schedule changes or cancellations available at http://www.house.mi.gov/publiccommitteeschedule/

Notice posted: 5/24/2017...@4:18 p,m,

Voting is beautiful, be beautiful ~ vote.©

Thursday, March 23, 2017

Michigan Daire Rendon Includes "The Poors" In Public Meetings

Without further adieu, I would like to honor Michigan House Representative Daire Rendon (formerly know as LMHM) for her greatest political lifetime achievement, by recognizing this monumental moment of her participation in the concept of open democracy to ameliorate the pervasive situation of childhood poverty in the State of Michigan and to allow the public recording through testimony, of the pandemic patterns of practice with fraud, waste, abuse, and human trafficking through publicly funded child welfare, privatized programs.

via GIPHY

Within an hour of the March 23, 2017 Public Meeting of the Michigan House Standing Committee on Families, Children & Seniors, Daire Rendon, has, for the first time in the history of her legislative tenure as the Chair, successfully executed her duties of public office, in the capacity of a public servant, by publishing public notice of the next scheduled meeting, more than 22 hours, in advance.

Ladies and Gentlemen, we have ourselves an open meeting, devoid of another skirting in legal semantics of the Open Meetings Act's 18 hour rule.

This is to mean that the primary stakeholders, "The Poors", will have opportunity to submit into the public record, well in advance of the meeting, for the secondary stakeholders, the privatized contractors, state administrators, fellow committee members, and federal oversight authorities, to prepare, review, and simply vet, the matters on the agenda, for the purposes of engaging in logical and ethical discussions to improve the delivery and quality of services, in the most expedient and efficient manner for improvements in the quality of life and the posterity of the state, to about 50% of the state residents, mainly children in poverty.

Madam Chair, welcome to the world of public rulemaking.

I look forward to working with you and your Committee.

Standing Committee Meeting

Families, Children, and Seniors, Rep. Daire Rendon, Chair

DATE: Thursday, March 30, 2017

TIME: 10:30 AM

PLACE: Room 327, House Office Building, Lansing, MI

AGENDA:
Presentation regarding an in-house program with the Washtenaw County Sherriff’s office for behavioral healthcare of inmates.

Speaking on the issue is:

Derrick Jackson, MSW
Director of Community Engagement
Washtenaw County Sheriff Office

and

Allan Wachendorfer, LMSW - Macro
Director of Public Policy
National Association of Social Workers - Michigan

OR ANY BUSINESS PROPERLY BEFORE THIS COMMITTEE

To view text of legislation go to:
 http://www.legislature.mi.gov/mileg.aspx?page=CommitteeBillRecord
517-373-7256
e-Mail: tthrush@house.mi.gov

Individuals needing special accommodations to participate in the meeting may contact the Chair's office.

Schedule changes or cancellations available at http://www.house.mi.gov/publiccommitteeschedule/

Notice posted: 3/23/2017 at 12:12 p.m.

Yellen says problems of childhood poverty linger

A new Federal Reserve survey has found that children who grew up in poverty were twice as likely to struggle with financial challenges later in life, Fed Chair Janet Yellen said Thursday.

The survey showed that more than half of young people age 25 to 39 who reported that as children they worried over things like having enough food were currently facing financial challenges, Yellen said. That was double the number with financial troubles who did not face such concerns as children.
Yellen told a Fed conference on community development that the findings underscored the need to provide children with the resources they need to achieve financial success later in life.

In her speech, Yellen made no comments on the current state of the economy or interest rates.
In the survey, which the Fed will publish later this spring, Yellen said there was a clear connection between childhood struggles and financial problems later in life.

"Young adults who regularly or sometimes worried when they were children about care, safety or having enough to eat are also less likely to be employed, less likely to have consistent income month-to-month and less likely to pay all of their current monthly bills in full, compared with those who never or rarely worried about these concerns as children," Yellen said.

Yellen said the research to be presented at the Fed's two-day conference made a compelling case for the need to prepare people starting at an early age for success in the labor market.

"This research underscores the value of starting young to develop basic work habits and skills," she said. "These habits and skills help prepare people for work, help them enter the labor market sooner, meet with more success over time and be in a position to develop the more specialized skills and obtain the academic credentials that are strongly correlated with higher and steadier earnings."

Yellen said a growing body of research showed that greater success was being achieved by addressing workforce development in early childhood education compared to spending on job training later in life.

"Ensuring that all of our kids have 'strong foundations' will help build a similarly strong foundation for the U.S. economy," Yellen said.

(Will update once I have found the Federal Reserve Survey cited in this article.)

Voting is beautiful, be beautiful ~ vote.©

Wednesday, March 1, 2017

Michigan Privateer Daire Rendon Strips Civil Rights From "The Poors"

Click for hi-res photo for press purposes
Michigan House Chair of the Standing
Committee for Families, Children & Seniors
Privateer Daire Rendon
If anyone wishes to be witness to administrative ineptness in the State of Michigan Legislature, well, here is your chance!

Below, is notice, pursuant to the Open Meetings Act to the rescheduling of the House Standing Committee Meeting of Families, Children, and Seniors, Rep. Daire Rendon, Chair.

I was planning on attending, submitting a formal statement, requesting time for public comment, and encouraging people to attend and do the same...but noooooo.

You see, the Open Meetings Act mandates that there is a minimum 18 hours posted advanced notice of the meeting.

This notice was emailed at 1:43 p.m., on March 1, 2017, exactly 2 hours and 47 minutes over the wire.

This is about the time it takes for one to drive during rush hour to the state's capitol, park, find the venue, and be seated.

"The Poors" were intentionally excluded as travel to the capitol is quite expensive and needs more than 21 hour notice to arrange transportation, whether it be public or private.

Now, consider this:

This meeting is what is considered the introduction of the Department of Health and Human Services administration to define and explain the operations of the Department.

Administrators will formally introduce themselves to the newly sworn Representatives and present their duties and roles within the DHHS.

Mind you, DHHS field operations is supposed to provide services to "The Poors", which is about half the state, so, what we have here is an issue of disenfranchisement.

I wonder if they are going to speak upon how the consolidation of DHHS offices is cutting the disabled, veterans, elderly and children from SNAP benefits, without due process.

Will Medicaid fraud in child welfare be discussed?  Probably not.

Will human trafficking, because people just want to survive when the state cuts social assistance, be discussed?  Probably not.

Is it possible for me, of all people, to generate and submit a formal statement into the public record?

Absolutely, because I have a blog, otherwise, it is not happening.

In the past, there was always included in the public notice instruction for the opportunity to submit public comment, but not in this administration nor in this legislature.

So, without further adieu, allow me to introduce myself to the Standing Committee of Families, Children, and Seniors, and Rep. Daire Rendon, Chair.

Excluding the public from public meetings is the first stage of stripping voting rights, or, more readily understood as privatization.

NOTE:  I am not going to give Rep. Daire Rendon a pass as she has been around for a hot minute.

We want more than minutes of the meeting, we want video, published, and social media is acceptable.  We want opportunity for public comment or I will do it for you.

Oops, I, like, totally forgot to mention that any requests for video recording must be made more than 24 hours in advance.

Drats, foiled again by privateers!

DATE: Thursday, March 2, 2017

TIME: 10:30 AM

PLACE: Room 327, House Office Building, Lansing, MI

AGENDA:
Presentation regarding human services from Terry Beurer, Deputy Director of Field Operations for the Department of Health and Human Services.

OR ANY BUSINESS PROPERLY BEFORE THIS COMMITTEE

To view text of legislation go to:  (Do not waste your time on the link and there is no legislation before the committee, or if there is, it is not identified in the link)
 http://www.legislature.mi.gov/mileg.aspx?page=CommitteeBillRecord

Committee Clerk: Taylor Thrush
Phone: 517-373-7256
e-Mail: tthrush@house.mi.gov

Individuals needing special accommodations to participate in the meeting may contact the Chair's office.

Schedule changes or cancellations available at http://www.house.mi.gov/publiccommitteeschedule/

3/1/2017  <=== This is the date of publication.  Seriously.

Voting is beautiful, be beautiful ~ vote.©

Wednesday, January 14, 2015

Hamtramck Blames Emergency Manager and Michigan for Destruction of City

Attorney M. Michael Koroi addressing council on Open
Meetings Act violations
This is an actual resolution proposed by Hamtramck City Council.

Without specific action, without expounding of specific transgressions, the City proposed this Resolution.

 I do not wish to provide an analysis of the legal ramifications at this time, but what I can say is sit back and enjoy the ride.

It must be noted that the city attorney did advise that this was in direct violation of multiple issues of law.

Councilman Hassan retorted with, "Let them sue".

I believe the proper response would have been, "Let them (Michigan) prosecute."

The other resolutions were stricken from the agenda but may be found below.

It must be noted that the city is facing multiple lawsuits surrounding incarceration of residents for non-payment of income taxes, police transgressions, discrimination, and forms of contractual fraud.


RESOLUTION 2015-004
A FRESH START, REBUILDING WHAT WAS DESTROYED

WHEREAS, the City of Hamtramck desires to repair the wrongs inflicted upon The City of
Hamtramck by the appointed State Emergency Manager and Treasury Department under the
Governors direction;

WHEREAS, the City of Hamtramck requested assistance from the State of Michigan under an
outlined plan to assist in correcting the budget;

WHEREAS, the State of Michigan had an opportunity to positively influence the future of
Hamtramck but instead squandered the opportunity devastating the functionality of City
operations and actually increasing City Hall expenses at the cost of public safety;

NOW THEREFORE BE IT ORDAINED, by the City Council of the City of Hamtramck, Wayne
County, Michigan that:

The City of Hamtramck is thankful that the State appointed Emergency Manager is gone and it
looks forward to fixing the ills inflicted upon it by the State Treasury Department.

The City is still under the auspices of the State of Michigan and will be for many years in the future.

Voting is beautiful, be beautiful ~ vote.©