Showing posts with label Tribune Company. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Tribune Company. Show all posts

Thursday, June 13, 2013

Bad & unappealing journalism continues at The Tribune Company's South Florida Sun-Sentinel and their third-rate website: Still SO many longstanding problems!!! Missing Public Notices page, old information about their own Editorial Board, et al. They still list Earl Maucker as an Editorial Board member even though he retired in 2010. How can Howard Greenberg stand all the mediocrity and incompetence around him?

Bad & unappealing journalism continues at The Tribune Company's South Florida Sun-Sentinel and their third-rate website: Still SO many longstanding problems!!! Missing Public Notices page, old information about their own Editorial Board, et al. They still list Earl Maucker as an Editorial Board member even though he retired in 2010. How can Howard Greenberg stand all the mediocrity and incompetence around him?
For instance, Public Notices, in green

You click it at the top 



but when the page opens up, it's a page that doesn't exist.
 -------
Another problem is that if you wanted to know who was actually on the newspaper's Editorial Board to know who's actually responsible for their many poorly-thought out and half-assed endorsements last year, like Michael Satz for Broward State's Attorney or ethically-challenged Hallandale beach City Commission incumbent Anthony A. Sanders over my friend, Csaba Kulin, despite the fact that Sanders did such a poor job of answering their questions last October at the candidates meeting -see bottom- often not making sense when asked very simple questions about himself, what you find out is... well, they don't pay much attention to that, either.

Meet the South Florida Sun-Sentinel's Editorial Board, including the person who left and hasn't been there since retiring in 2010, Earl Maucker
http://www.sun-sentinel.com/sfl-meettheeditboard,0,1206118.htmlstory

What, he's still listed? 
Yes, that info is what you see as the first result of a Google Search.




That information is clearly wrong and yet the fact that it's still NOT been corrected in over two years, i.e. deleted, shows you everything you need to know about how much attention to detail is present under the geniuses there, doesn't it?

That's three things right there, but there's really no need to point out more right now.

You get the idea, plus, as some of you may recall, I still have that forthcoming blog post on the Sun-Sentinel's Rosemary Goudreau where I can pile on more material there, along with thoughts on what the paper's new owners should do after they purchase the paper and thoroughly clean house there.

Another blogger who takes a dim view of the Sun-Sentinel , Man, or Maniac?,
wrote this last year: Howard Greenberg Must Be On Crack
http://manormaniac.blogspot.com/2012/03/howard-greenberg-must-be-on-crack.html

Previous posts of mine re the newspaper's many shortcomings are here:

October 17, 2012
Absolutely pummeled! Hallandale Beach Comm. Anthony A. Sanders & ex-Comm. Bill Julian both bomb at the South Florida Sun-Sentinel's Editorial Board meeting for HB candidates Monday morning, while Csaba Kulin, Michele Lazarow and Gerald Dean shine while enthusiastically making the case for a pro-reform City Hall that actually serves taxpayers to replace the corrupt and unethical one we've been stuck with for years under Joy Cooper and her Rubber Stamp Crew; Kulin, Lazarow & Dean recount in detail most of the major issues and recent scandals; @SandersHB, @AlexLewy

October 29, 2012
re South Florida Sun-Sentinel:When are Broward County residents FINALLY going to get the "whole truth" from the Tribune Company's South Florida Sun-Sentinel and some public explanation for their continued reluctance to report it and useful context in Broward County news? Their problems with facts & bias are getting worse by the month; Joy Cooper's red-light camera friends and supporters; Sun-Sentinel's pro-Debbie Wasserman-Schultz bias is a continuing insult to readers; @MayorCooper

October 30, 2012
Their lack of Journalism ethics is hiding in plain sight: In their head-scratching endorsement of do-nothing Hallandale Beach Comm. Anthony A. Sanders over civic activist Csaba Kulin, the Tribune Co's Sun-Sentinel said he has "experience." Yes, but it's of the completely ineffective and unethical variety we don't want more of!; Vote Kulin!; @SandersHB
http://hallandalebeachblog.blogspot.com/2012/10/their-lack-of-journalism-ethics-is.html

Tuesday, December 11, 2012

South Florida Sun-Sentinel is for sale; Bloomberg News report: Tribune Company's newspapers, including Chicago Tribune and Los Angeles Times will be sold within months, post-bankruptcy

I'm already thinking about who I'd like to see buy the newspaper and actually make it respectable and worthy of readers trust. 
I do NOT want to see it sold to anyone who is presently connected to it, and neither should you, since that would be a death spiral.

Bloomberg News

Tribune Said to Seek Bankers for Newspaper Sale
By Edmund Lee & Serena Saitto 
December 11, 2012 12:41 PM ET
Tribune Co., the bankrupt owner of the Chicago Tribune, Los Angeles Times and six other daily newspapers, is interviewing bankers about selling its papers, according to two people with knowledge of the matter.
Tribune Co. is seeking an adviser for a possible sale after the company exits bankruptcy, which is slated to happen by Dec. 31, according to the people, who asked not to be named because the discussions are private. 

Read the rest of the article at:
http://www.bloomberg.com/news/2012-12-11/tribune-said-to-seek-bankers-for-newspaper-sale.html

http://www.tribune.com/

Monday, November 19, 2012

S.O.S.! Newspaper hits iceberg! What's going on at the Tribune Co.'s sinking South Florida Sun-Sentinel? Their continued poor judgment, even as the newspaper -and its shrinking base of advertisers- are becoming increasingly irrelevant to news consumers in Broward County who want their news free of bias, taint AND mustiness, not facts and context, has real consequences



S.O.S.! Newspaper hits iceberg! What's going on at the Tribune Co.'s sinking South Florida Sun-Sentinel? 
Their continued poor judgment, even as the newspaper -and its shrinking base of advertisers- are becoming increasingly irrelevant to news consumers in Broward County who want their news free of bias, taint AND mustiness, not facts and context, has real consequences.
Its pay wall is like a parasite that's killing off the host, and making its formerly-popular Broward Politics blog now nothing more than an afterthought because it counts now as an article in monthly totals, not as a blog post. A newspaper website that needs SERIOUS rethinking and redesign.

You call that news coverage? 

1.) As of today, November 19th, the South Florida Sun-Sentinel's education blog, South Florida Schools, has posted exactly one item in the past 6 weeks. Way to keep your nose to the grindstone! http://weblogs.sun-sentinel.com/educationblog/

Yes, even while all sorts of things, good and bad, have been going on in that subject area the past six weeks, that newspaper blog has been silent.
It's one thing for a personal blog to go quiet for awhile for reasons that we can all well imagine, but really, a newspaper blog that posts one thing in six weeks, wrapped around an election?

Good luck finding that sort of situation existing at a normal, well-run newspaper unless the person/team behind it are either gravely ill, been transferred to other beats or the blog itself is being phased out.
Which is it for South Florida Schools?

I don't know the particulars of it, but I do know that it sure doesn't look good.
Especially for customers who want to read more serious and in-depth coverage of the subject, just as they would expect to find more in-depth coverage in a sports team-related blog, not just read PR releases.

Does a Broward School Board employee trying to choke an autistic child on a Broward School bus count as news these days?
Is that a subject that would greatly benefit from the infinite amount of space a blog gives a reporter to provide a lot more context than a print newspaper article affords, and even allow some degree of reader interaction?
We'd all agree that the answer to both is yes, so why is there NOTHING like that at the one place that you should be able to count on finding it on the Sun-Sentinel's website?
Now there's a question!

Not only are there no video interviews on that blog with any of the newly-elected Broward School Board members who won 13 days ago, candidates who were all elected to some degree based upon on what they said they hoped to do to change the still-extant culture of corruption there, and make the system more accountable to taxpayers, parents and students, but there's not even a single written blog post about that subject.

And since there's NOT even that, the bare minimum one should reasonably expect if it were being run professionally and with any common sense, of course there's NOT anything there about why those particular new members may or may not succeed in their desirable goal, based on their own backgrounds and professional experiences.
Nice job!

2.) On Friday Congresswoman Debbie Wasserman Schultz's resident lapdog at the newspaper, Anthony Man, posted his most recent entirely-predictable, not-really-news re DWS that he wrote in all of about five seconds at the Sun-Sentinel's Broward Politics blog.
No, actually it was just the intro to a video of her.

Yes, another in a long line of DWS-related posts by Man that the Sun-Sentinel runs that fall squarely into the dog-bites-man category.
Yet another piece on her NOT showing party independence or actually going out on a limb or even showing some perspective or original insight that you never considered before.

Hey, guess what?
DWS supports Israel -STILL.
Snooze...

And speaking of not surprising, Man doesn't even publicly mention in his intro that the video he chooses to run is actually from her office. Typical.
http://www.youtube.com/user/RepWassermanSchultz/

Wasserman Schultz condemns Hamas rocket attacks on Israel
http://www.sun-sentinel.com/news/broward/broward-politics-blog/sfl-wasserman-schultz-hamas-israel-20121116,0,6429879.story

Notice anything else about that blog post now?
Correct, the Broword Politics blog has recently been moved to behind the Sun-Sentinel's (unsuccessful) pay wall.

Which means that for many people throughout South Florida, including civic activists, concerned citizens and bloggers I know and trust, as well as other members of the South Florida press corps, that blog has largely become even more irrelevant than before, and is now an actual afterthought.

As if the Broward Politics blog's lack of freshness, topicality and outside-the-box thinking on any subject involving county or municipal government, or the pols who inhabit it, weren't already hindrance enough the past few years.

If the Sun-Sentinel's management were really going to make a mistake like that and move a popular feature like that blog behind a pay wall, one of the few features that people I know actually read fairly consistently, couldn't the Sun-Sentinel's management team at least have had the good sense to bring in some new people -with fresh eyes- at the beginning of this year?

In my opinion, having entirely new reporters there, people who'd actually ADD something new to the rather static and staid view of this county that that blog has promoted for so many years, where, typically, almost as soon as someone's name comes up in a piece, you already know what's going to come -and you're almost always right- would end.

How great would it be for readers to actually have the sense that the newspaper was amping-up their reporting and resources towards the election, perhaps starting this year off with some blistering expose or analysis of something that doesn't appear in the print edition?
An actual online exclusive, just like what other media companies do to drive eyeballs?

Something that showed readers some much-needed energy and freshness there, and an implicit warning that that the predictable habits that we've all observed there for far too long, will soon be disappearing -quick!

Yes, as I've watched the Sun-Sentinel increasingly become disconnected from reality and even unaware of many local news stories that they ought to be owning but aren't, it's become
increasingly apparent to me that the very people who are running that newspaper (into the ground) often appear, publicly at least, to have very little real idea of how other newspapers, even smaller ones, actually make their own blogs more interesting and compelling to readers, visually and content-wise.

I know they are aware of it, so why isn't that knowledge and understanding filtering down and actually showing up in print and online with better-written blogs and better and more original content at the Sun-Sentinel?

It's not exactly Breaking News that there are many well-written and compelling non-political blogs that I subscribe to or bookmark which are part of the New York Times and The Washingon Post, and that's largely because when I lived in the Washington area from 1988-2003, I used to religiously read both newspapers daily from cover-to-cover.

And once both newspapers had online presences, I read content there, too, so I remember the blogs they created that didn't quite work out as planned, as well as the ones that have remained steadfast and only grown in popularity over the years, like the very popular technology blog written by David Pogue, which has changed titles a few times, and now even comes with videos. http://pogue.blogs.nytimes.com/
I continue reading both newspapers and 5-10 of their blogs every day, and buy the Times in print about 3-4 times a week.

New York Times video: 60 Seconds With Pogue: Fitness Bands
http://www.nytimes.com/video/2012/11/14/technology/personaltech/100000001903028/60-seconds-with-pogue-fitness-bands.html
  
But in the context of my blog post today, there's one blog in particular that I'd like to mention because it's an excellent example of the sort of focus and scope that I and many of my friends would greatly prefer the Sun-Sentinel to emulate -the State of NoVA blog, written by Tom Jackman. http://www.washingtonpost.com/blogs/the-state-

This recent post is exactly the sort of thing you'd never see at the Broward Politics blog
http://www.washingtonpost.com/blogs/the-state-of-nova/post/manassas-news-and-messenger-and-insidenovacom-top-prince-william-news-sources-closing-down/2012/11/14/e2f8bde2-2e7b-11e2-89d4-040c9330702a_blog.html

In my opinion, a newspaper that refuses to properly maintain and improve the depth and quality of writing and frequency of its own blogs, and which has added no new original content in-print or online, is seriously mismanaged and deluded if they think that news consumers with an almost infinite amount of choices, will now suddenly pay for the same-old-thing.
That same tired old thing that they really weren't so crazy about in the first place.

That perhaps is the worst sin of all among the Tribune Company's executives who felt that they no longer had a choice about waiting to erect a paywall for the Sun-Sentinel so many months after they did that at their Los Angles Times property -it was all so damn predictable!

Why, knowing all that they did about how these paywall introductions usually go across the country -esp. in more serious newspaper towns- did they make no serious effort to improve the print version first, to endear themselves to existing readers?
Then, after existing readers could see that a serious effort was being made to improve the paper, make the online experience better by making both more compelling and original content?
The sort that would make people actually willing to pay?

To me, the only plus for the Tribune Company and the Sun-Sentinel's executives throughout this whole mess has been that the state of serious journalism in South Florida has fallen so badly that it never seems to have occurred to the news directors at Channels 4, 6, 7 & 10 to actually do a series of stories on how badly the Sun-Sentinel has bungled things, and now has a knife at its throat after going this route, and the very people holding the knife are -yes- themselves.
There's always that!

Tuesday, October 30, 2012

Their lack of Journalism ethics is hiding in plain sight: In their head-scratching endorsement of do-nothing Hallandale Beach Comm. Anthony A. Sanders over civic activist Csaba Kulin, the Tribune Co's Sun-Sentinel said he has "experience." Yes, but it's of the completely ineffective and unethical variety we don't want more of!; Vote Kulin!; @SandersHB


Jefferson Starship - "Jane" 
One of the defining songs of not only my Freshman year at IU in 1979, but that era in rock. http://youtu.be/0PwG69620WA

Like a cat and a mouse (cat and a mouse) 
From door to door and house to house 
Don't you pretend you don't know what I'm talkin' about

Their lack of Journalism ethics is hiding in plain sight: In their head-scratching endorsement of do-nothing Hallandale Beach Comm. Anthony A. Sanders over civic activist Csaba Kulin, the Tribune Co's Sun-Sentinel said he has "experience." Yes, but it's of the completely ineffective and unethical variety we don't want more of!; Vote Kulin!; @SandersHB
That's why Sanders is, so far, the Broward Inspector General's poster boy!
Sanders is all the things you aren't supposed to be if you're a public official.

The Tribune Company's South Florida Sun-Sentinel has a big problem -it's own internal liberal bias and world view of how the world ought to be if they could only re-write it, as opposed to the way the world and the people in it actually are and really behave.

The newspaper, literally, can't help itself, like a well-to-do and very good-looking teenage girl I knew in North Miami Beach in the 1970's, the younger sister of a friend at North Miami Beach High School, always claimed
Yes, Little Sister was a habitual shoplifter.

Thought she came from a nice family and certainly knew the difference between right-and-wrong, like the same self-serving nonsense the Sun-Sentinel spouts about it trying its best to practice journalistic principles, when push came to shove, despite the fact that she could well afford to buy the stuff, Little Sister habitually shoplifted for kicks and cheap thrills to kill both the ennui and what she said was pressure to conform and live-up to her older sister, my friend, who was very smart, friendly and good-looking, but sans the ethically-convenient angst.

Similarly, like her, the Sun-Sentinel acts like they could put a stop to their political bias and very curious and increasingly-obvious editing choices whenever it wanted to.
But the Sun-Sentinel, like Little Sister, doesn't really want to.
It's fun to act like the rules don't apply to you.
It's sort of like the Hallandale Beach Mayor Joy Cooper and her Rubber Stamp Crew on the city commission the past nine years, no?

It's part of how it sees itself in the world at large.
Almost as if not letting bias slip in when it's convenient would be to deny its basic nature, almost a self-betrayal, so it keeps doing what it's been doing and acting like nobody like me notices.
So the Sun-Sentinel, like my friend's Little Sister, keeps kidding itself that it really doesn't have a problem.

But the truth is that regardless of the times that you live in, ethical hedging all the time, whether by an individual or a family or company, eventually takes it toll, and it has certainly taken its toll on the Sun-Sentinel's readers as the paper continues to become ever more irrelevant to any discussion of what's going on in the larger community with every passing month.
That's especially the case for the discerning news reader who, whatever their politics, wants their facts straight-up, without any shaking or misdirection, so they can draw their own conclusions.

Today, after sitting on some facts for a few days, I'm ready to reveal my own version of what radio broadcaster  Paul Harvey famously called "the rest of the story" on his hugely popular radio newscasts for decades that were full of Middle America folksiness and manners.
And, I'll show you how that directly affects Hallandale Beach.

And here, "the rest of the story" are the facts and context that you do not routinely get from the Sun-Sentinel if their management team and Editorial Board have anything to do with it.
And more recently, in the Sun-Sentinel's perplexing endorsement of do-nothing, know-nothing incumbent Anthony A. Sanders
Stand by for news!


CBS News Charles Osgood's 2009 appreciation for radio broadcaster Paul Harvey, following his death at age 90. http://youtu.be/S5_OIoMBjSk

A week before the Sun-Sentinel's vetting meeting at their HQ in downtown Ft. Lauderdale to decide its endorsement selections in this city, I told my friend and Hallandale Beach City Commission candidate Csaba Kulin to be sure to bring a small tape-recorder with him.

I specifically told him not to call them in advance of the meeting and ask if he could, just bring to it and put it on the conference table when he sat down with the other five Commission candidates and the three reps from the Sun-Sentinel.
After all, the latter had recording equipment available to them.

Now for Csaba's purposes, it certainly wasn't to use for purposes of a campaign commercial, since that would be impractical for him because of the costs, but rather for the more practical purpose of him having a contemporaneous recording of all the ridiculous and flat-out lies that would likely be coming from incumbent Anthony A. Sanders and former Comm. William "Bill" Julian as they sought to rationalize and defend their indefensible voting records and unethical behavior to the Sun-Sentinel three reps, who did NOT even know some basic facts
they should've known days before.

I had told Csaba in advance that I was about 100% certain that regardless of what Comm. Sanders said or did in their meeting room, the Sun-Sentinelwhich like the Miami Herald, endorsed Sanders in 2008 despite his lack of qualifications and inability to speak intelligently or in detail on important facts of public policy in Hallandale Beach compared to other candidates, would again get the paper's recommendation.
Even if Sanders didn't show-up, since he is not the most reliable of people.

When Csaba asked why I thought that, and wouldn't they, you know, make their decisions based on what they already knew about the candidates and heard from them in that room, I told him that there was a LOT MORE here than meets the eye in the matter of endorsements. 
That is, it was an opportunity for the Sun-Sentinel to once again show its Editorial Board's liberal political philosophy, including its most pernicious one of treating people not as individuals, but rather as chess pieces on a chess board, to be moved and manipulated.

That's why they call it "identity politics."

In short, I told him that there were political statements to be made and that one of them would likely be that we'd eventually see the handiwork of Sun-Sentinel Editorial writer and Board member Doug Lyons, a fervent believer in diversity on government bodies, regardless of whether the individual is unqualified or unethical, which is one of the things you don't consider when you're treating people like chess pieces.

(It's the same reason that Lyons never makes any reference to Florida state Rep. Joe Gibbons representing Broward County in the legislature even though he is NOT a full-time resident here, preferring to live in Jacksonville with his wife and kids. 
But isn't that unethical and illegal?
Yes, but that doesn't matter as long as it's Gibbons, because Gibbons supports the Sun-Sentinel's world-view, so he gets a pass from everyone.)

Yes, unqualified or unethical people will get the nod from Lyons and the Editorial Board even if that amounts to keeping a town like ours in turmoil even longer than is necessary.
And in the Editorial Board's selection of Sanders, have they not accomplished all three? 

He's still unqualified after four years in office, he's STILL an unethical Pastor, and he promises to keep this town in turmoil as long as he and his wife work their handiwork with the city's budget, continuing to act like they are above having to answer questions from the public, which is why he has refused to debate this year.
Sanders is afraid of what people will say because he knows that he has NOT been at all what he claimed to be and he knows they will call him out. So he hides.

Before the vetting meeting officially started, Csaba asked if he could record what was said so that he's have a true account of it.
The Sun-Sentinel said NO, and when Csaba asked if the candidates were being recorded, videotaped or having their comments streamed online, they replied NO.

But the truth of the matter is that a very reliable person has confided to me that back in August, the newspaper's Editorial Board actually streamed some candidates comments LIVE, and among those listening in elsewhere were some representatives of their opponents and other interested parties.
Someone, I can't say who just now, happened to listen in and actually wrote down what was asked and said and commented on what was being said in that Ft. Lauderdale building from many miles away, even before the candidates left the building.
How do you suppose that happened?

After the meeting, while everyone was getting up from their seats and heading for the door, the folks from the Sun-Sentinel told them that they had been recorded.
But if I got the story right, they didn't mention anything about having streamed it.
But wouldn't that be illegal?
Again, consider where it happened. 
THAT seems to be how the Sun-Sentinel rolls these days.

Nowhere in their endorsement of last Tuesday do they mention that Comm. Sanders and former Comm. Julian were strong supporters of the very egregiously anti-democratic move that columnist Michael Mayo -who was present that day as one of the three S-S reps, but who says that he is not part of the Editorial Board- decried in his column and blog soon after the interviews.
That is, that Hallandale Beach is having an election in one week that will elect three people to the City Commission, but that the city's voters can only vote for two.


Mayo on the Side blog

More Hallandale weirdness: 2 votes for 3 seats

By Michael Mayo
October 16, 2012 11:05 AM

Excerpt from Sun-Sentinel editorial of October 23:
Anthony Sanders and Michele Lazarow for Hallandale Beach City Commission 
The race to fill two at-large two seats on Hallandale Beach City Commission is a little bit deceptive as it's the top three vote getters who will actually serve on the next commission thanks to the need to replace Commissioner Keith London who resigned to run for mayor. 
Still, voters "technically" have only two seats to fill, and the Sun Sentinel Editorial Board recommends voters re-elect Anthony A. Sanders and elect Michele Lazarow. The two bring a mix of energy and experience and both are in the best position to help the city's western neighborhoods. 
Sanders, a 52-year-old pastor, is the commission's lone black member. A four-year veteran on the dais, He's has been a staunch advocate for the city's predominantly black west side neighborhoods, and although his tenure has been marred by questionable business dealings with the city, Sanders' experience and knowledge of the city's needs give him the edge. 
Lazarow, 45, has her own history that qualifies her for the commission. She is a longtime resident of the city and a former owner of a popular women's boutique. Her business experience and past dealings with the city should help her as a new commissioner incorporate more city business-friendly procedures, especially small businesses struggling in the city's west side. 
The other candidates are Gerald E. Dean, 58, a small business owner; Ann Pearl Henigson, 66, a former secretary; William "Bill" Julian, 59, a licensed thoroughbred racing steward and former city commissioner; and Csaba G. Kulin, 73, a retired director of technology with the Catholic Diocese of Cleveland. 
Also completely missing in the endorsement or the Mayo blog post is any reference at all that they would have continued in their ignorance had not Csaba brought it up during the meeting. Somehow, they were completely in the dark about one of the most vexing issues in the city that they supposedly were making educated comments about.
Guess they weren't quite so educated after all, huh?

And all this happened despite the fact that I had personally sent Mayo and Lyons several bcc's about this when it actually happened weeks ago and how it came about due to the desire of Comm. Alexander Lewy to change the complexion of the election halfway thru in order to thwart Keith London.

So instead of endorsing Csaba Kulin, the person most-responsible for bringing forth factual information -the city's own documents- that makes public how three former Hallandale Beach City Managers have pulled the wool over the City Commission and taxpayers for years to the tune of MILLIONS of dollars that they will receive in pension payments over the coming years, and did NOT earn all of it, the Sun-Sentinel, the news outlet that DIDN'T even know what was going on here, has endorsed Anthony A. Sanders.

Sure, the man with "experience" who is also the HB city commissioner who is the least-prepared member to discuss anything that is going on in the city, and the one who for well over three years has, literally, been in fear of being alone in a room with smart and well-informed HB taxpayers and answer their sharp questions about his behavior and votes.

No, like the Cooper Rubber Stamp that he is, the poorly-informed puppet that he is, in order for Sanders to appear in public, there must always be city employees close at hand to run interference and even feed him answers.

As far as Hallandale Beach's voters are concerned, the truth and the transparency -and mea culpas- that they regularly preach to others in their editorials and columns are STILL missing in action at The Tribune Co.'s South Florida Sun-Sentinel

Don't hold your breath that they will ever come... the Sun-Sentinel doesn't think they have a problem.

Tuesday, August 14, 2012

So when are the Miami Herald and the South Florida Sun-Sentinel going to note the elephant in the room in Hallandale Beach? The ethics of and the complete lack of candor from Hallandale Beach Comm. Anthony A. Sanders & his wife Jessica; Mayor Cooper and Comm. Sanders screw with public's access to HB budget meetings; @MayorCooper, @SandersHB

Above,  501 N.W. 1st Avenuewhich in Hallandale Beach polite society and public policy circles is considered THE most egregious example of dozens of exasperating and highly-questionable examples of dubious government spending and crony capitalism that've taken place on Mayor Joy Cooper's watch, and one of the most dubious of any in Broward County, which is REALLY saying something. It's the infamous former property owned by HB Comm. Anthony A. Sanders that has seen so many tens of thousands of Hallandale Beach taxpayer dollars and CRA dollars poured into it. For what, THISphoto by South Beach Hoosier © 2012 Hallandale Beach Blog, All Rights Reserved

The following email was just sent to the Miami Herald's Publisher and Editorial Board member David Landsberg, Executive Editor Aminda Marques and Managing Editor Rick Hirsch, and Douglas Lyons, columnist and Editorial Board member of the South Florida Sun-Sentinel, along with over 250 bcc recipients, including people throughout Hallandale Beach, South Florida and parent companies McClatchy Company and The Tribune Company.

-----
August 14, 2012
11:15 p.m.

Ladies and Gentlemen:

There's only 84 days left before Election Day, so when are you going to note the elephant
in the room in Hallandale Beach? The ethics of and the complete lack of candor from
Hallandale Beach Comm. Anthony A. Sanders & his wife Jessica.

I'd originally thought about writing this and then not sending it, just so I could get some of the growing frustration out of my system.

But over the past week or so, as I spoke to more and more concerned and very frustrated residents of Hallandale Beach who are equally dismayed and shocked -if not more so
than me- at your collective incurious reporting, a nice way of saying the all-too-obvious
lack of curiosity by you, your editors and reporters about what is and has been going on here going for years, they convinced me I should send it.
Send it right where you live and go right at your claims to being journalism professionals,
because that's sure NOT how it appears to most of us.

And so I'm sending this to you -plus about 250-275 other interested parties across 
Hallandale Beach and South Florida who wonder what in the world is going on at the Herald and Sun-Sentinel where it's necessary to have to ask you to actually report on something that everyone is talking about but which you both are IGNORING.

There's now only 83 days left for Hallandale Beach Comm. Anthony A. Sanders to FINALLY
level with Hallandale Beach voters, after well over three-years of adamantly refusing to saying
anything publicly in front of actual HB residents and taxpayers about his and his wife's land
sale to the city for more than it was worth, and actually tell the truth about it.

Thru his own words and behavior, Comm. Sanders gives every impression of firmly believing
that he can actually get away without ever confronting this issue publicly before Election Day. 
In essence, of running out the clock.

You are perfectly free to speculate on why someone with such an undistinguished a record
in office like Sanders believes that he can get away with such a contemptible strategy.

My questions to you all today about this matter are very simple.

Is it is the intent of the Miami Herald and the Sun-Sentinel's management and editorial staff
to appease Comm. Sanders in this effort of his, and to let another 83 days go by without
ever mentioning it in print?

Not mention that refusing to tell the truth publicly is strange and counter-intuitive behavior
coming from a man who said once upon a time that his being a Pastor not only qualified
him to be a City Commissioner, but actually prepared him for a job making -supposedly-
hard decisions.

Not mention that someone who claimed before the November 2008 election that having 
grown-up in this city when most Blacks felt ostracized and economically and politically
excluded, he'd represent the entire community, and received the endorsement of both
of your newspapers, would actually turn out to be be someone who, since his election in 2008, has, in fact, been everything but inclusive in his approach.

It's so very much more than common knowledge that prior to every development vote in this city, Sanders has adamantly refused to respond to resident email or return phone calls from residents who don't live in NW Hallandale Beach.
Furthermore, he's refused to even visit with them in their neighborhoods to hear what the neighborhood thought, which is actually part of his job as most people see it.
But that's NOT how Sanders sees his job.

No, Sanders is NOT very big on communications of any sort with most residents of this city, esp. those living east of Dixie Highway, but then he has voted YES on every single development proposal that has come before the City Commission, so perhaps he doesn't see why he should go thru the motions of caring what constituents think, since, a.) he really doesn't care, and B.) in every case, he has already made his mind up before the developer's attorney ever says word one, though legally, of course, he isn't supposed to.

But we all know.

Not because we're all so suspicious, though we are, but rather because Comm. Sanders
has been so clumsy in performing his official tasks that when it comes time for the hearings,
he is so obvious and ham-handed about showing that his only interest in any development
project is, specifically, "job training" and who will provide that, since -wait for itthat's the
ONLY thing he asks about.
Really.

Seriously, it can hardly be called just our imagination when time-after-time it's the only thing Sanders publicly talks about.
All you have to do is look at the tape of the meetings, since even Mayor Cooper has not
voted for every development project the way Sanders has, though that is very faint praise.

But your two newspapers have completely ignored this self-evident fact and trend for years,
for reasons that are frankly hard to figure, even though developers like The Related Group
have waited no time at all to show their appreciation to Sanders via campaign contributions.

Sanders plain doesn't care about the neighborhoods, he just wants to make sure that those
who are close to him get their share of the money on the table.

As far as the Herald goes, not having had any of its own reporters or columnists EVER write
about any of the ethical problems Comm. Sanders has been involved in for over three years,
it's very hard to shake the feeling that if all of this with him, as well as Lewy's attempt to reward
his soul-mate with CRA funds had happened in Coral Gables, Key Biscayne, Hialeah or Pinecrest,
it might have actually made it into print, but instead, showing the geographical insularity we've
come to expect in Broward County from the Herald, you've completely kept your own people
off the story.
Yes, we noticed.

So, let me follow-up my last question with one that's just as important.

Is it your intention that another 83 days will go by without your two newspapers publicly asking in-print why and how Comm. Alexander Lewy made a motion last September -after Midnight at a City Commission meeting with less than a handful of citizens present- to give a group completely controlled by Comm. Sanders and his wife, over $200,00O in CRA funds?

And typically for someone who imagines that he's a political comer, do so in such an obvious and over-the-top fashion by intentionally refusing to say their names aloud, but instead, referring to them obliquely via a laughable and inaccurate description of Sanders' group's performance, even though no such objective third-party analysis has ever been done?
But that's what he did and there's video of it.
Video that you can watch for yourself.

But your two newspapers act like it never happened.

If the answers to my are YES, you DO plan on continuing this charade for another 83 days until Election Day, of pretending that you know nothing and have heard nothing about any of this, perhaps with the hope that Sanders somehow gets re-elected anyway, please let me know this week so that I can make arrangements to share the news with interested parties I know throughout South Florida.

That serves a two-fold purpose.
First, when citizens of this community see reporters of yours around South Florida, we can
dispense both with any notions of pleasantries as well as the fiction that your reporters or
columnists might/maybe/ possibly/actually write the truth about what's been going on here
FOR YEARS with some specificity, instead of the usual, well, meandering 'He said, she said"
that leaves those of us who know what's going on, rather incredulous, given that there is so much proof right in front of you, if you only bothered to open your eyes.
Why so much reluctance to do this?

Second, if you confirm that you both have no intention of honestly reporting on any of this, we all can end the pretense that local news in South Florida somehow develops organically,and gets into print or on TV based on its own significance and weight, and that there really are not gatekeepers who keep news out of the public's view because it clashes with their Editorial Board's notions of who should really be running things in this area.

There are plenty of people I know who would be interested in knowing this at Medill, Ernie Pyle,
Poynter and other places where they haven't completely caved-in to the notion of local news
being the low man on the totem pole, or, in protecting newspaper Editorial Boards from the
sudden realization that they sometimes not only make terrible choices, but those choices
actually DO have the power to actually hurt a community, as has happened here, when you
both endorsed Sanders largely out of guilt, and now, Sanders is practically daring you to say
something negative about him, and you won't.

Yes, pure and simple, Anthony A. Sanders sized-up your Editorial Board and played them
for suckers, and they bought his fallacious act -the pastor who brings a community together.

Ha! 
Now, thanks in large part to you, he is laughing all the way to the bank with our
tax dollars!

I'm here today to tell you that if you're NOT trying to appease or protect Comm. Sanders
from himself, you're doing a hell of a good job of faking it, because that's exactly how it looks
to others, especially others who know the facts.

Especially to the besieged residents, taxpayers and business owners here who are the
most-concerned, are the most active and are the most interested in finally having genuine
transparency and honesty in government in this city.

Something that you both like to give lip service to in self-congratulatory editorials once a year,
but when you consciously ignore what we all know and see everyday in this community, yes, it makes us wonder what your true motives are for consistently ignoring the elephant in the room.
The elephant that makes no effort to hide what it is doing.

As you can see from the information below, which arrived a few minutes ago while I was finishing this up, Mayor Joy Cooper and Comm. Anthony A. Sanders are clearly NOT interested in this city becoming normal and its finances becoming transparent, they're interested in maintaining control.

In the year 2012, who else in South Florida is actually affirmatively voting to make it difficult for
their own citizens to attend a budget meeting when there's a perfectly good taxpayer-owned
City Commission Chambers on the ground floor that doesn't require a police escort?
Nobody but Hallandale Beach.

Don't you get that, yet?

If your present reporters don't have the time or inclination to publish the true facts and the news,
maybe you need to get new and better reporters!
People who actually go around town and publicly question why things are the way they are.

And while you're at it, don't forget to look in the mirror and take a hard, serious look at your own
role in perpetuating this mess at HB City Hall by your adamant refusal to actually report ALL
the news to the public, instead of, essentially, doing the bidding of and running interference for
Joy Cooper's Rubber Stamp Crew

Trust me, as one of her biggest critics, Joy Cooper couldn't possibly be any happier with your
abysmal coverage of this city and what's been going on, though I don't think that's the sort of
recommendation you'll be sending to the Pulitzer Committee.
For obvious reasons.



---------- Forwarded message ----------
From: Commissioner Keith S. London <newsletter@
keithlondonformayor.com>
Date: Tue, Aug 14, 2012 at 10:32 AM
Subject: Your Tax Dollars at Work “our” 100 Million Dollar Budget!
To: hallandalebeachblog@gmail.com



Keith S. London - City Commissioner Hallandale Beach
Your Tax Dollars at Work
Hallandale's $100 Million Budget Discussion Held Upstairs in Room 257 instead of Commission Chambers
Weeks after posting the agenda that Budget Workshops will be held in Commission Chambers, staff moved the meeting to room 257, upstairs and difficult for the public to access.
City Hall closes its doors at 5:00 PM.
In order to attend the meeting, if you arrive after 5pm, you must go through the Police Department and be escorted upstairs.
To make access to the public easier:
  • Commissioner London motioned to hold the second budget meeting in Commission Chambers, on Tuesday August 14, 2012
  • These meetings are two of the most important meetings of the year. They should be in Commission Chambers
  • Commissioner London was not informed prior to the meeting
  • Commissioner Lewy seconded the motion for discussion
  • Commissioner Lewy stated "comfort of staff is not his priority"
  • Mayor Cooper stated "this is ridiculous and political and total BS" but also "the budget meeting worked fine last year in city commission chambers"
  • So which one is it Mayor Cooper? "BS" or "access and ease for the public"

The final vote was 3:2 London and Lewy for the public ease of access.
Cooper, Sanders, and Ross to hide upstairs away from those pesky members of the public.

Regards,
Keith
Commissioner Keith S. London
Phone: 954-494-3182
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613 Oleander Drive
Hallandale Beach, FL 33009
email: keith@keithlondon.comwww.keithlondon.com
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