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Publisher’s Notebook: Ending Life Support for VSHoF&M
If the Sports Section of the Virginian-Pilot is something you automatically place in the recycle bin after glancing at the five-day weather predictions on the back page, you may well have missed the “Portsmouth news story of the day” regarding the future of city funding for the Virginia Sports Hall of Fame and Museum. Although I have expressed my opposition early and often to public subsidies for the VSHoF&M, once it came into existence, I advocated a gradual, incremental reduction in city funding rather than a “cold turkey” cutoff of taxpayer dollars. The direction taken by the ruling coalition on council during this budget season, however, appears to be termination of fiscal life support for the Hall of Fame. Continue reading
Recall Was not the Only Topic
For those who did not attend the “called meeting” of citizens at the Sheriff’s Department training facility last evening, reading the Virginian-Pilot lead story today gives an incomplete understanding of what transpired. In the first place, the meeting notice that came to us through “a friend of a friend” did not refer to a recall campaign but rather to addressing a crisis of leadership in the city. The first portion of the gathering, in fact, concerned establishing a political action committee — working title, “People for Portsmouth PAC” — to recruit, vet, and elect to local office candidates who take “the long view” of resolving the perennial fiscal, social, and economic challenges that face our city. Continue reading
An Open Letter on the FY 2016 Budget
Mr. Mayor and Honorable Members of Council:
Watching all of you cut and paste the budget for the next fiscal year has been like observing politicians make sausage. It is definitely the worst of both politics and pork processing. On the positive side, keeping school funding at the level requested by the school board demonstrates some degree of leadership. You could be doing better with the rest of it, though.
First, Council Member Meeks was onto something when he questioned the lockstep raises for current and retired city employees. One group of retirees came into an enormous windfall last fiscal year with the elimination, at a major cost to taxpayers, of the Social Security offset. The participants in the Portsmouth Supplemental Retirement System plan should be able to get along on what amounted to a 100% increase in net benefits for the remainder of their lives without panhandling the citizenry for more. Additionally, shoring up the PSRS with $173 million in pension obligation bonds and making the actuarially appropriate annual required contributions should allow that plan to provide its own benefit increases from earnings on investments. That is the way private sector plans work and should be the model the city follows. Continue reading
An Example Worthy of Emulation
On March 7, 2015, a very important, thoughtful, and respectful community conversation took place across the river from us. The Proudly Diverse Caucus, comprised of Norfolk citizens concerned about the quality of life in their city, had its first town hall meeting to focus on issues of public school improvement. Virginian-Pilot Schools Reporter Cherise Newsome was on hand to chronicle the proceedings. (Her excellent summary of the meeting is available at http://hamptonroads.com/2015/03/group-discusses-best-ways-teach-kids-poverty.) The videos of the major part of the conversation are available in four chunks on YouTube: Continue reading
Coming Together to Move Forward
With malice toward none; with charity for all; with firmness in the right, as God gives us to see the right, let us strive on to finish the work we are in; to bind up the nation’s wounds; to care for him who shall have borne the battle, and for his widow, and his orphan to do all which may achieve and cherish a just, and a lasting peace, among ourselves, and with all nations.
from President Abraham Lincoln’s Second Inaugural Address delivered March 4, 1865
Once the results of yesterday’s election receive official certification, Ms. Stephanie Morales will become the Commonwealth’s Attorney for Portsmouth. The process that led to this outcome has much room for improvement, but it certainly is preferable to the chaos and violence that mark succession struggles in many other parts of the world. Still, it has left emotional bruises and scars on the civic psyche which, though not necessarily visible to all, can impair our ability to work across demographic divisions in our community.
Reflection on the past, therefore, may offer us valuable insight into how “the road not taken” at an earlier critical juncture could prove our path to wholeness at this one. President Lincoln spoke of a much larger struggle than the one from which we are emerging, the American Civil War. Real blood spilled by the gallon; real lives, in the tens of thousands, ended prematurely. Yet, as the war ground down, he urged the divided country, both North and South, to “bind up the nation’s wounds” and “to do all which may achieve and cherish a just, and a lasting peace”. The war would conclude the following month with the April 9 surrender of General Robert E. Lee, but the author of these words of consolation would die only a few days later without seeing his dream of peaceful reunification achieved.
Had Lincoln lived, our country might not have wrestled so long with the still unrealized quest to bring “liberty and justice” to all. Our past failures, however, do not preclude our achieving it now, even in the limited time remaining to us senior citizens. It requires the vision of a Lincoln or a Dr. King but also the energy and commitment of the millions of everyday people who inhabit this nation. We in Portsmouth, working together as good neighbors rather than mortal rivals can set an example for the rest of the commonwealth and the nation. The effort begins today and must continue every day.
Let us, then, congratulate Ms. Stephanie Morales and her many supporters on her election as Portsmouth Commonwealth’s Attorney. In addition, let us thank Candidates Michael “Mike” Rosenberg, Ali T. Sprinkle, and all those who worked for them for conducting positive, issue-oriented campaigns. We would be remiss not to remember with gratitude all our fellow citizens who, having informed themselves in advance of the election, braved the elements yesterday to cast ballots for those seeking this important office. Lastly, we need to express appreciation to all the election officials who invested many hours in ensuring the integrity and fairness of the voting process. Moving forward, may we all, in President Lincoln’s words, “be here dedicated to the great task remaining before us”, that of ensuring “government of the people, by the people, and for the people, shall not perish from the earth.”
When Inexperience Is a Positive Attribute
Reposting of a Facebook commentary by De’Andre Barnes used with permission of the author
When people talk about your inexperience, you talk about their experience.
I’m voting for Stephanie N. Morales because she hasn’t prosecuted a murder case and is young and inexperienced. I’m voting for Stephanie because I want her to create programs that prevent murders from happening; I don’t want her to gain experience in convicting murderers. If she does gain that experience, then that just means we have failed as a city. I’m voting for her because she’s young, and she understands that it’s difficult being young in a city with a lack of resources and opportunities. This will help her to create sound programs that will help our young men, women, girls and boys from getting in trouble and to stay out of it as well. Lastly, I’m voting for her because she’s inexperienced… not in the sense of knowing her job, but inexperienced in the old policies that have locked up more people in this country than any other country in this world. This is why I’m voting for Stephanie, and this is why my friend will be elected on Tuesday. If you want to vote for the candidates who have prosecuted a murder, who are older and more experienced, then you go right ahead, but I will take Stephanie as my Commonwealth Attorney and chief prosecutor for the kids I fight to have opportunities any day. Please remember to vote Tuesday so we can make history for the most qualified and the first elected black woman Commonwealth Attorney in the city of Portsmouth who just happens to be from Truxtun!
Publisher’s Notebook: Ali T. Sprinkle Endorsement
This has been hard to write for several reasons: the institutional mission of PortsmouthCityWatch.org; the absence of mainstream media coverage of this contest and the resulting dearth of objective information about the candidates’ qualifications; and the racially-charged climate in our community and our country as this campaign season has progressed. (The last item will be the topic of a subsequent article.) Of course, I could exercise the option of keeping my own counsel on this subject to avoid controversy and bruised feelings, but if our community is to achieve its full potential as a nurturing “village”, people of good will have to engage with each other candidly on tough issues. This is a time for such engagement. Continue reading
Commonwealth’s Attorney Candidate Endorsement for Ali T. Sprinkle
Time is ticking its way to our special election on February 10 for Portsmouth’s Commonwealth’s Attorney for the next three years. (We’re replacing now-Judge Mobley, for those of you who’ve been living under a rock lately.) Anyway, after listening to all three candidates at a forum last month and interviewing the two who agreed to be interviewed (Ms. Sprinkle and Mr. Rosenberg), I am going to vote for Ms. Sprinkle, and here’s why: Ms. Morales presents very well, but she has been an attorney for only five years, all of them in our C.A. office. She seems very nice (though I’ve had no personal contact outside “hello” in City Hall) and later might be a dynamite choice given her aplomb in the forum, but five years isn’t a whole lot of experience, and none of it’s been on the defense side or in running an office. I like Mr. Rosenberg, but almost all of his pretty vast experience is on the defense side of the equation. Ms. Sprinkle has five years’ experience prosecuting (four and half of them working in Mobley’s office) and nearly a decade on the defense side. She also has been managing the office during her years in defense work. Tough choice, but I have to go with the extra time in the C.A.’s office–which is actually, day-to-day, more than either of her opponents can claim–as well as her experience in defense and office management.
(Originally posted by Terry Danaher on her Facebook timeline, we reproduce her essay here with the author’s permission.)
Prevention Is the Better Cure
It saddens me to read that our children in Portsmouth are being murdered and getting locked up. It saddens me even more to see people exploiting our children for self-gain. There are people who are literally only showing up when our children are being murdered, opposed to addressing the reasons that actually lead to the murders. You have to stop crime before it happens, not when it happens. If a person gets killed today, that problem did not start today. It started a long time ago. What did we do yesterday to prevent crime from happening today? What are we doing now that can give these children positive avenues to put them on a path to become a better adult and to even get a good job? Continue reading