UMC too busy to provide medical services

January 31, 2015

If you are used to reading one post a day from this blog, please be aware that today we are posting two.

We thank Helen Marshall for caring about the community and invite others to send posts for publication.

Brutus

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This from Helen Marshall:

http://www.elpasotimes.com/News/ci_27410944

So Mr. Valenti says that UMC cannot consider bidding for the provision of medical services to county jail inmates,  at $8 million bucks, as UMC is too busy fighting with Children’s Hospital about its debt.

BRILLIANT!!!!  Increase his bonus!!!!


(IF I were an advocate for prisoners, I’d be very leery of allowing UMC to treat them, given the attitude of the ER doctors to authority – took a million dollar lawsuit to get them to understand that running anal and vaginal and other explorations on a woman’s body for hours, just because the CBP told them to, was not medical treatment…and speaking of that, it would reduce the UMC debt a bit if they didn’t have to pay out on such a lawsuit…)

I think maybe it’s time to stop reading the paper.


City government privately owned?

January 31, 2015

The Times recently published a piece about traffic volumes at our international bridges.  It included this:

Paul Stresow, city international bridges director, said “We have seen a significant increase in cross-border traffic at our ports of entry during the past year, overall a 5.45 percent increase in southbound traffic during the calendar year 2014 over 2013.”

“Certainly, the public-private partnership with CBP at our Paso Del Norte and Ysleta (Zaragoza) bridges, where the city pays CBP to keep additional lanes open during peak travel times and during holidays to reduce wait times is one of many factors that have contributed to the growth in travel and trade,” Stresow said.

Wrong, wrong, wrong

There is no public-private partnership here.  The city government of El Paso Texas is paying the feral government of the United States.

Our feral government has chosen to assume the right to control our bridges.  Our constitution leaves that as a Texas state responsibility.

What we have here is a situation where they are not allocating enough money to operate the bridges.  As a result El Paso suffers economically.  Our city council has decided to step in and make up the budgetary shortfall.

Our local congressman seems to approve of this.  One would think that he would fight to get the funding needed so that local tax payers do not have to make up the difference.

When city council decided to do this we were told that crossing times would be under thirty minutes.  According to the article “The wait times are under an hour and sometimes under 45 minutes.”

What’s next?  Will we have to ante up to pay for other federal departments?

Then again

On the other hand maybe our bridge director was telling us  that our city government is privately owned.

We deserve better

Brutus

 


BLOGGING MATTERS!

January 18, 2015

This from Helen Marshall:

BLOGGING MATTERS!

The El Paso Naturally blog (www.elpasonaturally.blogspot.com) started a campaign on Monday, January 12, to raise awareness about the condition of the huge Mondel pine tree that has served as the city’s Christmas Tree since 1998 when it was donated to the city. http://www.elpasonaturally.blogspot.com/2015/01/save-el-pasos-christmas-tree.html

The blog directed readers to an online petition to save the tree, directed to Mayor and City Council. The story was apparently noticed by at least one El Paso TV station, http://www.kvia.com/news/san-jacinto-christmas-tree-damaged/30692650, which led some listeners and readers to write to their city reps about the situation.

That in turn prompted the City Engineering Department to produce a memo claiming that it was doing everything possible to save the tree. Nothing was said by either the Mayor or City Manager or the City Arborist, or the required Project Arborist, so the City has yet to come clean on this on what happened and why.

http://www.elpasonaturally.blogspot.com/2015/01/city-cover-up-of-christmas-tree-scandal.html

But the commotion led both the El Paso Times and El Diario to put the story on their front pages on Saturday, January 17. http://m.diario.mx/nota.php?id=2015-01-16_d67c04fc

http://www.elpasotimes.com/News/ci_27335966/El-Pasoans-petition-to-save-pine-tree-at-San-Jacinto-Plaza

I’d guess that this story is not over; kudos to El Paso Naturally! And let’s take this as a message to El Paso Speak readers and contributors…if we see something wrong, let’s try to figure out how to “give it legs,” create a petition or a letter-writing campaign to let the “Bigs” know that we are watching them and we’re not happy.

 


EL PASO – AFFORDABLE STEPS TO RENEWAL # 5 Thought Leadership or Where Do Ideas Come From Here?

January 13, 2015

This from Jerry Kurtyka:

EL PASO – AFFORDABLE STEPS TO RENEWAL

# 5 Thought Leadership or Where Do Ideas Come From Here?

Does anyone else see what I see? That there are so few good ideas here to guide discussion about our future direction, culture, risks and opportunities as a region? Instead, the political dialog is mostly about development of downtown and how to get others to pay for it. I mean, the two wealthiest guys here brought off the biggest tax heist in city history with congratulations and thank-you from the people we elected to watch over our public wealth. The flak from the local paper and city hall only amplifies the message: WE HAVE TO SPEND MORE DOWNTOWN AND WE HAVE TO GIVE MORE OF YOUR MONEY TO INVESTORS AND SPECULATORS TO DO IT.

Talk about supply side economics! People like Cortney Niland and Emma Acosta and Dr. Noe make Ronald Reagan look like an amateur when it comes to spending your money to benefit their friends.

Then there is the existential debate about who we are. You know, “It’s All Good,” except we send delegations to places like Nashville to find out how they got their mojo. “Music City” has so much more cachet than “The Big Burrito” when it comes to defining who we are. I will write a blog on branding El Paso soon.

What these strategies have in common is that they are about ideas and whose ideas get funded with your money. So where do the ideas come from? Easy, they come from the people who want your money and who work through their surrogates in public office, not different from how the state and national governments work except you would think we could have more control over it locally, but we don’t.

In my view, ideas are the spiritual life blood of an organization and an organization that does not have a flow of new ideas coming in is like a stagnant pond of water that festers and breeds disease. In the case of a city, the disease is corruption, crime, disinvestment, depopulation and decline. Think of Detroit.

So, what are the venues for new ideas in The Big Burrito? And when an idea surfaces, how does it get traction and how does it get funded? As best I can tell, an elite group of business people – the Hunts, Foster, Sanders, Borderplex et al – are responsible for the current crop of “official ideas” that relate to development: the ball park; QoL bond issue; and new building downtown. These ideas are socialized with policy makers in city hall (not an idea source), lubricated with generous campaign contributions and the rest is history. That is the idea cycle in The Big Burrito today and I’m not saying it is all wrong, but I am saying it is not inclusive. It’s too bad their ideas didn’t extend to our schools and jobs, unless you count hot dog jobs as jobs. The Chamber, I think, is in charge of the “Who Are We?” debate and will probably travel to Disneyland next in search of inspiration.

Do you recall the business cases for the stadium and QoL bond issue. What business cases? Your city staff (especially the former CM and CFO) doesn’t do business cases; they validate the “official ideas” for funding. Why do you think the stadium lost $500,000 with full attendance and the west side pool is millions short? Can you imagine how short the museums and arena and trolley will be? Alternative ideas that question the official consensus – the “horde” as Martin Parades calls it– are shouted down and ridiculed by your city council and by the one English (sort of) language newspaper daily. Critical thinking is career-limiting in city hall.

The current “official ideas”, the ones driving the public agenda, have in common debt-fueled development projects that reward investors and construction companies, a kind of “trickle-up economy” where the bottom of the economic pyramid funds the aspirations of those at the top, with help from elected officials; the kind of economy Dick Cheney used to brag about delivering to the GOP. To some extent, it is a needed antidote to years of neglect and urban decline here. Yes, I actually wrote that. Too bad the private sector isn’t paying for it since they will be its ultimate beneficiaries.

If you don’t like the situation, you can question the idea cycle here and seek to change it. I have a few ideas of my own about how to do that but I don’t believe they will change the current zeitgeist, at least not for a generation because El Paso still has a lot of catch-up to do and, like it or not, that is what the “official ideas” are driving just now. We need to think a generation out because, in the Big Burrito, we are still living at the lower levels of Maslow’s Pyramid and need better streets, educated citizens and guaranteed water before we invite Deepak Chopra to open a clinic here.

As for the alternatives, do you recall when Joyce Wilson brought urbanist Richard Florida to El Paso to lecture us on how to be hip? He said we needed more gays and yuppies downtown because they are associated with a vibrant urban core? It took a while for the laughter to stop, but that is the risk that new ideas entail. Prof. Florida obviously did not understand the official El Paso culture dictates, since the Jon Rogers days, that new development must benefit the cabal of downtown investors and builders, not average folks. But Florida did understand that urban vibrancy is a people thing, not so much a built environment thing. It lives around people who are cosmopolitan and educated, hardly El Paso today though that can change in a generation. This critical viewpoint is the essence of an alternative universe of “unofficial ideas.” Wilson, for her part, didn’t make the mistake again.

So, how are alternative ideas and voices heard? Do you think that the unrest following the death of a young black man in Ferguson, MO might have something to do with this? Another young man, Danny Saenz, was shot by a police officer while handcuffed at the jail here but only a few of his friends questioned it. There were no mass protests, no shutdowns, just a wake at a local bar. What does that say about El Paso and how we value our lives and ideas? My question is, can we come up with a more inclusive way to generate, socialize and fund ideas that will form our future as a region? If it causes a shit storm with the Usual Suspects, that would be healthy here.

Mr. Hunt recently endowed a think tank at UTEP – the Hunt Institute for Global Competitiveness – a factory for “official ideas” tasked with “serving as a multi-disciplinary research platform for the creation and application of theoretical and practical mechanisms in order to foster the global competitive capacity of the cross-border region.” Great, except I don’t think they will ever ask any of you readers or local Indian tribes or human service organizations like La Fe and Volar and the Rescue Mission, and environmental groups like Sierra Club and the Franklin Mountains Wilderness Coalition or any of the host of others who live and work here and serve in the community’s shadow economy, and whose ideas are not important in the context of the official economy. The opposite is more likely to happen and unofficial ideas will be stifled, as with the NPT coverage of the stadium protest that cost its editor her job, or the EP Times’ Joe Meunch ridiculing its critics.

At this current stage in El Paso’s social development, your ideas count for nothing! If you don’t believe me, write to your city rep and question what is happening now. And wait for an answer.

NEXT – # 6 The Commons as a Source of Renewal


Of the people, in private of course

January 6, 2015

One of our readers pointed out the other day that our county judge took the oath of office for her second term in a private club the other day.   The club is on the top floor of one of the downtown buildings that houses some of the more influential movers and shakers in local politics.

According to the Times she was surrounded by “friends and supporters”.  Most of us weren’t invited.

Since most of us missed it we print here the oath that she should have taken:

IN THE NAME AND BY THE AUTHORITY OF THE STATE OF TEXAS,
I, , do solemnly swear (or affirm), that I will faithfully execute the duties of the office of  [title] of
the State of Texas, and will to the best of my ability preserve, protect, and defend the Constitution and laws of the United States and of this State, so help me God.

That would be nice.

We deserve better

Brutus