Buddy Cianci and the precursor to the PEDP


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I have no idea if this “Mayor Vincent A. Cianci Jr.” stress ball is from the first Buddy Adminsitration (that ended in an assault conviction) or the second Buddy Administration (that ended in a RICO conviction).

buddy ball

But I’ll be surprised if the two-time mayor/felon distributes souvenirs hyping his relationship with the Providence Economic Development Corporation – now called the Providence Economic Development Partnership and being investigated by the federal authorities – during his third run for mayor of Providence.

buddy pedC ball

If you have any information on this Cianci/PEDC stress ball – such as what year it was made and how it was paid for – please comment below. Or email me at editor@RIFuture.org.

Why felons can run for office, Buddy Cianci edition


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obey buddyBuddy Cianci, the 73-year-old former mayor can probably think of no better way to go out than dying on a Kennedy Plaza throne and being brought down to Waterfire on a shield. Many people thought they have seen the last of him following five years in prison, but I’m pleased he is eligible to run for office regardless of his criminal history.

Buddy’s political career couldn’t be defeated after his first conviction, when some legal and political wrangling got the law bent for him to get back in office. His first conviction was, in some ways, like many others in Rhode Island: a guy loses his temper and gets violent.  Whatever the true details, it had nothing to do with his mayoral duties or ability to run the city. Nobody but a Buddy Cianci, surrounded by a political machine, could possibly have gotten reelected for office after being sentenced to five years felony probation in 1984. In fact, a constitutional amendment was passed just a year later- amending the lifetime ban down to one where Cianci would need to wait three years after completing his probation.

In 1990, Cianci’s machine returned to power. A court even ruled that the three-year wait didn’t apply to people convicted prior to 1985.  His criminal history, however, did not influence his political views. He didn’t push for new policies that took a rehabilitative approach to social problems. Many mayors do not, and typical to the position the Providence Police served their role in responding to the social dilemmas we still face, i.e. poverty, substance abuse, unemployment, lack of affordable housing, mental illness, and crumbling public education.  Arrests lead to convictions lead to lifetimes of de-citizenship for those other than Buddy Cianci.

In 2005, a group of activists in Rhode Island came together to promote a more inclusive democracy and expand voting rights to people on probation and parole. This was especially important as Rhode Island disenfranchised people of color at higher numbers than the Deep South and is a national leader in lengthy probation sentences. Tens of thousands of Rhode Islanders lived and worked in the state, raising children, being good neighbors, yet could not take part in the democracy.

Buddy was not quite yesterday’s news in 2006, when the final proposals were being crafted. He had been indicted in 2001 after “Operation Plunderdome” exposed a classic political kickback scheme. He was amidst his five-year federal prison sentence for racketeering when we drafted the constitutional amendment regarding voting rights – and we considered the right to run for office as well. Based on some people’s well-founded concerns, and the need to avoid a “Buddy” debate, the limitation on running for office was left in place. Back then we just wanted to vote, and none of us wanted to be a politician anyway.

The three-year post-sentence ban ensured that Buddy would be ineligible for the last mayoral race. People expected that to be the end of him. After all, he wouldn’t be eligible for another mayoral run until he was 73. Who even makes it to 73?

The most fundamental aspect of a democracy is the right for a community to choose its own leaders. Eligibility requirements, such as residency for instance, should be limited to things ensuring that a person truly is a representative of the constituency. It may make sense to create policies that bar people with particular criminal histories from being barred from specific occupations. We do this all the time, and it is only the blanket bans that push the bounds of legitimacy and legality (well framed by the EEOC guidelines on employment for people with criminal convictions).

The poetic irony of those up in arms over Buddy’s eligibility is the fact that tens of thousands of Providence residents also have felony convictions. A significant percentage of children in Providence schools have a parent in prison, on probation, parole, or long since moved on from that past. Walk into any business and there is a good chance that someone with a conviction history is working there. They are cooking your food, fixing your vehicle, selling you products, and every other imaginable thing. Buddy did not take up the mantle for the challenges of other folks with conviction histories, thus he is not “representative” in that regard – but at this point we are all so intertwined that, generally, the conviction itself is irrelevant as to one being a good or bad person for the job.

People are free to elect bad leaders. Employers are also free to give people second chances. I confess to having never listened to Buddy Cianci’s radio show since his release from prison, nor have I tried his pasta sauce. He very well may be an out-of-touch old man who would surround himself with cronies, and the children of former cronies. He may paralyze the city, as it expends half its resources trying to be sure he doesn’t corruptly exploit the other half.

The city had over a decade to create a policy that barred people convicted for malfeasance in office for getting that same job back. Look to Cicilline, Lombardi, Taveras, Solomon and the like regarding that issue. It was really that simple and, who knows: perhaps there is still time?

I know first hand that people change. Some change through prison, others just pass adolescence, mourn the passing of a loved one, spend time in quite meditation, or any of the myriad ways we grow as human beings. Some people may not even want a “changed” Buddy as mayor; in fact, they want the same guy back in office.  Either way, views on the integrity of every candidate belong in the campaign.

In the end, his eligibility is just like freedom of speech: I may not like what you say, but I’ll defend your right to say it.

Jorge Elorza says he wants to be mayor for working families


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jorge elorzaJorge Elorza, a 38-year-old former housing court judge and faculty member at Roger Williams University, may be short of political experience as he bids to become the next mayor of Providence, but he’s long on life experiences. I asked him how he got involved in politics, and he told me a story of childhood friend’s murder, and leaving a Wall Street job fresh out of the University of Rhode Island.

Elorza is full of such amazing stories. His parents were undocumented workers who crossed the border illegally from Guatemala. His father decided to come to the United States after being approached by Guatemalan guerrillas during political unrest of the mid-1970’s.

He speaks fondly of his hardscrabble upbringing on Cranston Street, on Providence’s West Side.

Elorza is a longtime Angel Taveras supporter – he worked on the current mayor’s first campaign for congress and briefly as Taveras ran for mayor. When he was first approached about the idea, Elorza said he was initially uninterested in running for mayor but eventually decided it was a great way to help the community.

We talked a lot about education policy, and Elorza’s idea to keep schools open through the summer and restructuring them to be more akin to community centers.

In some regards, Elorza would mimic Mayor Taveras on education policy. Though Elorza said he wouldn’t have fired the teachers as Taveras did.

Elorza is on the board of directors of Achievement First, and spoke highly of the effect charter schools can have on traditional public schools.

Forget Buddy Cianci, I wanted to know how an Elorza administration would be different than a Smiley administration. I asked him about their differences.

I asked him about the biggest issue for Providence? Of course he said, education and the economy, but he reiterated what he said at his announcement. “I’m running for mayor for one reason: because I want Providence to be a place where working families can succeed.”

“Sometimes I truly believe that we all just don’t interact enough to know that we all want the exact same thing, we want better schools, we all want a stronger economy and we want safe and vibrant neighborhoods,” Elorza said when we were talking about working together.

Smiley vs. Cianci: a bully meets his match on the political playground


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RI Future PicFormer Providence mayor, Vincent A. Cianci, is a bully. He is not “just what Rhode Island’s capital city needs.” He is not the man who “never stopped caring about Providence.” He is an indomitable ego with a history and a talent for prioritizing power over people and results over integrity.

“I challenge Mr. Cianci to a debate,” said Democratic mayoral candidate, Brett Smiley, “at the time and place of his choosing — on questions of ethics, government accountability, and the cost of corruption to our city’s reputation and economy. We are still recovering from the damage inflicted by the widespread and systematic corruption that defined Buddy Cianci’s tenure as mayor.” A debate is not an unreasonable request among political candidates in a land that calls itself a democracy. It is a civilized discussion between individuals who seek the same office, but hold different opinions on how to perform the job. By leveling the playing field and offering a public forum in which to support their respective claims, a civil discourse can be staged to allow the people to determine which man or woman best suits the values and abilities of the future that the majority of the people want. Smiley even offered to give Cianci home-field advantage by allowing Cianci to choose both the time and place.

But bullies of the Cianci variety are rattled by having to relinquish even the slightest control. Their egos overpower their capacity to reason when they, themselves, do not call the plays.  Possibly best represented by RIPR’s political reporter Ian Donnis, in a now classic Cianci story, Donnis, at the time reporting for the Phoenix, had scheduled an interview with then mayor Cianci on two topics: the mall and police. Cianci flew into an unwarranted rage, pounding the desk and crying that his staff had approved only one question and, “I’m the one who sets the rules here, not you!” He then proceeded to discuss the second question to Donnis’s satisfaction. This typifies the Cianci-style bully. The first time I heard Donnis tell this story, he went on to discuss an unprompted anecdote about Cianci’s show of force against the unionized sanitation workers by hiring private workers to break the ranks and placing shotgun-wielding police on the trucks to protect the scabs. “What the unions didn’t know was that the guns weren’t loaded.”

I know something about bullies. Growing up, I was always the small-framed, intellectual child. I was picked on. I was sensitive. I was artistic. I was the stereotypical victim for the stereotypical bully. Maybe it was just to make those like us feel better about ourselves or maybe, at the time, people actually believed the explanation that bullies were really more insecure than any of us and acted out as a means of overcompensating for their own, perceived insufficiencies. Now, however, studies have shown this not to be the case. According to Jaana Juven, a professor of developmental psychology at UCLA and an expert on bullying, “Most bullies have almost ridiculously high levels of self-esteem.” Furthermore, they are often viewed by their peers, not as pariahs, but rather as popular, effective and untouchable.

But what I learned growing up was that the best way to shake up a bully is to steal his or her feeling of control. Don’t back down. Call the person out. Steal his or her spotlight by turning the tables of his or her audience.

And that is exactly what Brett Smiley did. Brett called him out to the metaphoric schoolyard on the very issue that is the foremost concern of anyone who considers Cianci a viable candidate: ethics, government accountability, and corruption. And, predictably, Cianci responded by taking a cheap shot at Smiley’s late father in law by making a disparaging joke with regard to Brett’s husband’s father being part owner of a locally well known exotic dance nightclub. Brett’s husband, James DeRentis, for the record, is one of the most generous, kind, talented and intelligent people I know. For Cianci to make a mean joke about the late father of the spouse of a political opponent as a response to a request for political debate shows that there are still few moral levels to which Cianci will not sink. Brett asked for a civilized discussion and Cianci made the circumstantial equivalent to a “your momma’” joke.

Ethics, government accountability, and corruption. According to the Brown Daily Herald, “Patronage, bribes and city employees being required to buy tickets to Cianci fundraisers were all investigated, leading to the indictment of 24 city officials and the jailing of 19, including several top Cianci aides.” But Cianci has the gall to try and insinuate that Brett’s late father in law’s partnership in an exotic dance nightclub somehow equates to multiple felony convictions for criminal acts while in the office Cianci held when convicted.

Cianci won’t stoop to debating a Democratic primary candidate. This is the same cowardly style he uses on his radio show guests: charm them until they leave the studio and then take cheap shots when they can’t swing back. I deviated from his audience-demographic of “get off my lawn! Kid’s these days … when I was young!” crowd to tune in to his talk radio program a few times. I know how he operates. There is a part of me that’s relieved that he won’t have to be torn apart in a public forum by someone who can actually separate the facts from the fiction and the myth from the man who still rubs the sore spots where the handcuffs rubbed his wrists.

I will fully disclose that I help with Brett Smiley’s campaign. I work with Brett because he is, without a doubt, one of the most honest, authentic and genuine people I have ever met. Brett wants to win. But he would rather lose with integrity that win dishonorably. Brett lives his truth. My job is to promote him as a candidate. But I would lay down in traffic for him as a person. He inspires me. I work with a number of elected officials and candidates for office. But none have taught me as much about uncompromising ethics within politics as Brett Smiley. Yes, he’s “the man with a plan.” But, as much as I am invested in what he plans to do, I am even more inspired by why he plans to do it. He loves this city. He wants to make everyone love it as much as he does and he just happens to be skilled and driven enough to do it … honestly. For the record, neither he, nor his campaign, solicited me in any way to write this. In fact, I may incur some repercussions for “going rogue.” But, had Cianci not taken such a cheap shot at a man in whom I believe, and his family. I would not have penned a word.

So, the line has been toed. Cianci has been weighed. Cianci has been measured. And, maybe, he’s just plain scared of stepping into the ring with someone so far above his moral weight-class. If I were Cianci, I would be too.

Time for all to come together


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elorzaRhode Island’s recent decision to relocate the probation and parole office to downtown Providence — since set aside — has sparked controversy. Good. We in the city need to be publicly debating administrative choices like these to maintain a well-functioning democracy.

But I am greatly concerned that different sides of the debate are missing a critical point: We are all in this together. We are all one Providence, and that means that each of our residents — whether he or she owns a major business or is re-entering society from the criminal-justice system — is an equal stakeholder and each of his or her needs and interests must be reflected in government decisions.

Critics of this decision have done us a valuable service by pointing out several legitimate problems with the current relocation plan. In fact, I agree that the proposed downtown space may not be the best location for the probation and parole office. If the state is going to administer a public program, it should do so in the best interest of all of its constituents, including ex-offenders.

I believe the office should be located in a space that can most effectively connect parolees and probationers to the multiple services and supports they need, such as education, workforce development, health and housing services. I also agree that increased rental costs are a valid concern.

While the location’s proximity to Kennedy Plaza would convenience many parolees and probationers who commute by bus, I have spoken to several who have expressed concerns about the challenges of downtown parking. For these reasons, I am unconvinced that the state’s initial decision was the best possible answer.

Despite those concerns, I have been upset to hear strains of another argument made against the state’s plan. It is an argument claiming that the mere presence of “those people” will damage our economy and threaten the safety of “legitimate” downtown-goers, despite assurances by the Providence, Pawtucket and Woonsocket police departments that they have never experienced increased problems around parole and probation offices.

Let me make this very clear: Parolees and probationers, who have committed themselves to rehabilitation and re-entry into society, have just as much right to be in downtown Providence as, say, the head of a bank. Segregation and inequality are the greatest challenges our society faces, and these problems are compounded every time we choose to exclude the most vulnerable among us — the very people we should be working to help and support.

As a lawyer at Rhode Island Legal Services, I represented many of “those people” in their efforts to avoid homelessness and obtain better living conditions. I know first-hand that many stereotypes we have of them are unfounded and that many people simply need a supportive hand to help them turn their lives around.

I believe that this controversy has offered us a great opportunity. Let us use this moment to come together, with opponents and supporters, to improve the way ex-offenders are reintegrated into society; to provide pathways to education and employment for those who seek them; and to treat the most vulnerable with the benevolence that only a great society can extend.

I have made the theme of my mayoral campaign “One Providence” because I believe with every fiber of my body that we can only be a great city with a thriving economy when every resident has an opportunity to participate and to have a voice in our shared community.

We need to listen to our business leaders and our successful entrepreneurs, who are doing so much to innovate and revitalize Rhode Island. But we need to listen just as carefully to our low-wage workers, our working families, our youth and students, our seniors, our small business owners, our homeowners and our renters and, yes, to our ex-offenders.

This is an opportunity to come together. We do not need further division. We are one community, One Providence, and the only way we can rise and succeed is if we rise and succeed together.

Jorge Elorza is a Democratic candidate for mayor of Providence.

This is an op-ed that originally ran in the Providence Journal.

Dave Fisher To Run for Woonsocket Mayor


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Dave Fisher, campaign manager for congressional candidate Abel Collins and former editor at ecoRI.org, announced on a new blog today that he plans to run for mayor of Woonsocket. The site is called Dave Fisher for Mayor of Woonsocket.

“I really believe we can stop the downward slide of the city of Woonsocket by providing some new leadership and fresh ideas at the local level,” he said in a YouTube video posted to the blog. “It pains me to see the decline of this city that I grew up in that I have so much pride in.”

He also speaks of recreating a culture that values diversity, arts and public education. He does not mention if he will seek the support of the Democratic Party, which is traditionally conservative in Woonsocket. Fisher managed Collins campaign for CD1. Collins ran as an independent.

In his first blog post, he takes aim at current Mayor Leo Fontaine.

Fisher is best known as a local progressive journalist who has authored several posts for RI Future and many for EcoRI, where he served as an editor prior to working for Collins.

10 Reasons to Support James Diossa for CF Mayor


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I am a big fan of City Councilman James Diossa – 1 of 5 candidates running in the November6th non-partisan primary for Mayor of Central Falls.

Here are 10 reasons that you should vote for him, volunteer for him and donate to him between now and Tuesday.

1. Honesty matters.  As we have seen with Mayor Angel Taveras in Providence, it is critical for elected officials to be honest with the people.  When you are honest, you are able to bring people to the table and accomplish tough things.  James is that kind of elected official.  He his honest, humble and in politics for the right reasons.  He wants to improve his community; not pad his wallet or get jobs for his friends or contracts for his buddies.

2. He is Young, Progressive and Latino.  Diossa has the right stands on the right issues and he is not shy about stating it.  I have spent my political career trying to level the playing field for candidates who do not look like me – women and people of color – and James represents the best of his generation.

3. He brings people together.  A cadre of unusual suspects from Sen. Betty Crowley to Rep. Gus Silva to United States Senator Jack Reed have endorsed Diossa.  They see the promise and hope in a new leader.  And with the new leader relatively hamstrung by a 5 year budget plan with little discretion, the next Mayor is going to need to rally support from all corners of city, state and federal circles.  Diossa is well-situated to do that.

4. Cracking down on Corruption matters. Diossa recently announced that on Day One of his administration he would submit a comprehensive ethics package to the City Council for their approval – banning pay to play and instituting tough new regulations for lobbyists.  Former Common Cause director Phil West issued a statement of support and said that these kind of tough positions on corruption are a bold step in the right direction.  For those who want to see Rhode Island city governments ‘disinfected’ by the ‘sunlight’ of ‘transparency’ then Diossa is your candidate.

5. A Role Model.  The young people of Central Falls need role models in positions of power that they can emulate.  James will inspire young people to do their homework, to stay in school and to shoot for the stars.  He sat in the same seat that they did.  Young people will see that they too can be Mayor one day if they work hard.

6. The Power of the People.  James ran an upstart and grassroots campaign for City Council against an entrenched incumbent and won.  Then, he worked with community leaders and the people and organized against the closing of the post office, the closing of the public library and a proposed ban on overnight parking.  He knows that the power of government sits in the hands of the people and he’s eager to engage the people in the work of government.  That’s refreshing.

7. Past v. Future.  The special interests in Central Falls who have seen their favored Mayor go down on federal corruption charges are uniting to stop James Diossa’s candidacy.  They have sent out false and illegal flyers.  They are doing everything they can to keep their grip on City Hall.  These figures of the past need to go the way of the past.  James is the candidate best situated to bring new ideas and a fresh vision to a city moving out of bankruptcy

8. Lazieh used to be Mayor.  As the Providence Journal has pointed out, Lazieh’s track record as Mayor is filled with decisions which put Central Falls on a path to bankruptcy. He underfunded the Central Falls pension system by millions of dollars.  In fact, in 1991 the City’s pension Annual Required Contribution (ARC) to the Police and Fire Fund was 54% of the recommended amount. By 1995, Lazieh made only 22% of the ARC payment and the auditors noted that there was a history of underpayment and that “failure to make adequate funding results in a shifting of plan costs to later years.” By comparison, Buddy Cianci’s lowest ARC payment ever was around 60% of the recommended amount.  But, that’s not all.  Lazieh was fined by the state ethics board for unethical management practices, including using the City’s purchasing process for personal gain.  (Source: Cooper, Helene.  Providence Journal 10/11/1991, Lazieh admits ethics violation Panel fines mayor for billing goods to city.)  Finally, after he lost reelection, Lazieh created a new city policy that allowed him to pay himself more than $17,000 in “back vacation pay.”  (Source: Sabar, Ariel. Providence Journal 3/28/1998, Ethics panel: ex-mayor’s vacation pay is OK.)  You get the point.  Not a model of fiscal responsibility or ethical government

8. Joe Moran used to be Police Chief.  Moran “retired” at age 47 from city service with a taxpayer funded pension worth more than $61,000 (second highest pension in the city) – and then was rehired the very next day by corrupt Mayor Charles Moreau (Source: Hummel, Jim. Hummel Report 4/15/2010, Cashing in.)    On top of his pension, Moran negotiated a backroom deal that left him with taxpayer benefits like health care with no co-pays, a city matched 401(k), a clothing allowance and bonuses all worth nearly $160,000 a year.  (Source: U.S. Bankruptcy Court 11-13105-FJB and Central Falls Personnel Records.)     After his contract was voided, Joe Moran sued Central Falls taxpayers for over $550,000 and won a settlement over $75,000 – all while the City was declaring bankruptcy!  (Source: Welch, Catherine.  WRNI 08/16/2012).  Aren’t you sick and tired of public servants who care more about their own personal wealth than the welfare of all of the people?

9. Bruce Corrigan and Tia Ristaino-Siegel.  These other two candidates on the ballot will get some votes, but will not compete for the December run-off.  Of these two, I actually like Tia quite a bit and hope that she does not give up and perhaps seeks another run at office -maybe City Council.  She is smart, eloquent and has some interesting ideas.  Corrigan is another voice from the past seeking to maintain hold on the strings of power.

10. “A City with a Bright Future.”  This is the city’s motto.  It seems sad considering everything that has happened.  And who better to become mayor of a city emerging from bankruptcy than a hometown hero – scoring the winning goal for a soccer championship, leaving for college and returning home to serve his hometown with energy and passion?  James represents a bright future and will be the force to bring one to Rhode Island’s city of one square mile.

As Tip O’Neill said, “all politics is local.”  That means that changing Rhode Island means that you start at the local level.  And, if you are a progressive or you believe in reform, then you need to get involved, get local and support James Diossa for Mayor of Central Falls!

Darth Flanders Sets Sights on CF Mayoral Office


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It turns out there’s at least one more job Central Falls receiver Bob “Lord of the Pink Slip” Flanders would like to eliminate from the financially struggling city: mayor. As if temporarily eliminating democracy from Central Falls wasn’t enough, now he wants to permanently eliminate democratically elected mayors and replace the position with an appointed city manager.

Flanders told the ProJo he would like to create a local charter review commission to look into the merits of switching from a mayoral form of government, in which the highest position in government is elected, to a city manager form, in which the highest position is appointed.

The article says “state and local officials are exploring the possibility,” but the only local official cited is Albert Romanowicz, who was appointed by Flanders to run the local jail. All the other local officials in the article – such as the mayor, not surprisingly – are against it.

Forget, for a moment, that mayors are less expensive than managers – in Rhode Island, the average municipal manager makes $101,480 a year and the average mayor makes $84,800 (meanwhile, average receiver makes in excess of $360,000 a year).

The really troubling issue here is that Darth Flanders is again going too far in his role as receiver.

Flanders has already over-stepped his bounds when he tried to institute an overnight parking ban in Central Falls. Sure, this would have made money, but that’s because he would have made it a violation to park where residents park in Central Falls, on the road. Few, if any, in Central Falls have three car garages, like Flanders does at his house in East Greenwich. While he pushed the idea through over the objection of the residents, Gov. Chafee had him rescind the idea the next day.

Similarly, the governor should tell Flanders to back off on his vision of permanently restructuring of the government by eliminating elected officials.

Central Falls does not suffer from too many elected officials, it suffers from poverty. There isn’t a high enough tax base to pay for the services that are needed. To that end, the receiver is well within the parameters of his responsibilities to shrink the size of government – though a better solution would be to work on expanding the tax base.

Either way, someone charged with financial oversight shouldn’t take action toward eliminating elected positions. It’s just unseemly, and it smacks of punishing the people of Central Falls for being too poor to pay for their services.

According to the Projo, “Flanders and his staff insist that the mayoral form of government invites patronage and cronyism.” But I’m not sure the same can’t be said of an appointed manager. At least mayors can be voted out of office. In fact, the very underlying principle of a democracy is that elected officials are held accountable by the people.

Evidently, Flanders doesn’t think this is working so well in Central Falls. “Let’s put it this way,” he told the Projo. The mayoral form of government “hasn’t served the populace very well to date.’’

If this is the case, Flanders could use the power of his position to create a community dialogue about these issues, or start a training academy for young local leaders.  Both of these ideas would better eliminate cronyism from government than simply trading a mayor for a manager, as well as have many other positive effects on the city.

But it seems as if Flanders is so hyper-focused on being the Lord of the Pink Slip that he forgot he actually has a once-in-a-lifetime opportunity to do something much bigger and more meaningful than just eliminate positions and divvy out haircuts.


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