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    Tag: rural social justice

    “All Roads Lead to Cornithaca” – Rise of the Evil Ones – Expediency: “Compartmentalization”

    Rise of the Evil Ones – Expediency: “Compartmentalization”

    There is no feature of expediency that is so marked as convenience. A box, or a bin; named or coded for ease of use – is more important than what it contains. Compartmentalization. It’s the bureaucratic lens that autocratic governments use. “One sees great things from the valley; only small things from the peak.”

    We are a factory farm cow with number “17052” on an ear tag – we are “16D hot-dipped galvanized common nails”: milked or hammered as the case may be — but always coded for use.

    Posted on March 27, 2022March 27, 2022Categories Rural Tompkins BlogsTags All Roads Lead to Cornithaca, Cornithaca County, Government and Society, government policy, Rise of the Evil Ones, rural community, rural social justice, rural tompkins County, Tompkins County, Tompkins County Comprehensive Plan

    “All Roads Lead to Cornithaca” – Rise of the Evil Ones – “Expediency: Secrecy/Suppression”

    “ARise of the Evil Ones – “Expediency: Secrecy/Suppression”

    A wide-screen, well lit, high-resolution view; of everything you can see with your face pressed against the window.

    Nothing behind the scenes – nothing behind the camera – nothing behind their reasons for restricting your view — Your view ends there; but the world goes on, beyond.

    Posted on March 27, 2022March 27, 2022Categories Rural Tompkins BlogsTags All Roads Lead to Cornithaca, Cornithaca County, Government and Society, government policy, Rise of the Evil Ones, rural community, rural social justice, rural tompkins County, Tompkins County

    “All Roads Lead to Cornithaca” – Rise of the Evil Ones – “Expediency”

    Rise of the Evil Ones – “Expediency”

     

    Expediency is all about finding the easy way to get what you want – and that’s why today’s government is all about expediency: The expediency of not having public participation – the expediency of bypassing regulatory oversight – the expediency of shutting up troublemakers. Removing everything, in fact, that makes us a democracy — but it’s expedient for them to keep calling it so.

    Posted on March 27, 2022March 27, 2022Categories Rural Tompkins BlogsTags All Roads Lead to Cornithaca, Cornithaca County, Government and Society, government policy, rural community, rural social justice, rural tompkins County, Tompkins County, Tompkins County Comprehensive Plan

    “All Roads Lead to Cornithaca” – “Addiction” Bumper sticker

    “Addiction” Bumper sticker

    “Addiction: It’s not the size of the waves – it’s the distance to the shore.” You can’t beat an addiction: you can only fight it — every day. And you have to win — every day.

    No matter how hard it is not to start; it’s easier than stopping. That’s why anyone that goes in that door; never come out whole – and most never come out at all.

    Posted on March 19, 2022March 19, 2022Categories Rural Tompkins BlogsTags Addiction, Cornithaca County, rural social justice, rural tompkins County, Tompkins County

    “Tompkins County and Tammany Hall” – Ag Protection Plan – “Take the High Road”

    There is no meaningful public participation in Tompkins County. Dotting every “i” and crossing every “t” in is just the on-ramp for a highway to nowhere – you do all the work; and they use up your energy – handing you around in a bureaucratic circle; until you realize there’s no gold ring; and the only meaningful action is to get off. And find another road.

    ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

    AG PROTECTION PLAN

    Title VI – Take the High Road

    Impenetrable is the word that best describes Tompkins County government’s policy making. From their “identifying needs,” and continuing through their entire policy formulation and approval process — there is no place where the public has any meaningful participation; or any participation. County and local government decision making is as far out of reach of the rural residents as a royal coach parading past the commoners.

    The Town of Lansing Agriculture and Farmland Protection Plan is a good example of how well government is defended from public intrusion; even at the local level — and how each level is supported and protected by every succeeding level of authority.

    In response to my email expressing concerns with the “Summary of Findings” section of the Proposed Agriculture and Farmland Protection Plan, after my opening comment:

    “This Summary gives overall feeling that nobody else lives [or deserves to live] in North Lansing but farmers.”

    M** R** [Cornell Cooperative Extension’s Agricultural Issue Leader – and the Plan’s lead writer] inserted the phrase:

    “- you are right”

    This blatant statement of planning bias was never retracted or contradicted by CCE, or any subsequent authority, at any level of government.

    Title VI Complaint

    12/21/2015 – I completed a Formal Complaint/CCE Tompkins County form and mailed it via Certified Mail to K** S** [Association Executive Director and CCE Title VI Coordinator.]

    Opening summary of the Complaint’s issues:

    Re: Complaint Under Title VI Environmental Justice

    I submit this complaint against Cornell Cooperative Extension Tompkins County for issuing a report [The Town of Lansing Agriculture and Farmland Protection Plan] and associated documents under the heading “Ag Documents” recommending the creation of an Agricultural Zone with significant zoning changes that will have a disproportionately negative impact on the poor non-farming residents of that district.

    The Environmental Justice Community identification methodology was flawed. CCE Tompkins never [EJ] mapped the actual Ag Zone. The boundaries and inclusion/exclusion of land in the Lansing Agricultural Zone is arbitrary and capricious. The mandates for meaningful participation were consistently ignored. The non-farming residents [95% of the district’s population] were entirely and deliberately excluded from the report writing and making process. Plan information released was deceptive and false. The CCE Tompkins County Agricultural Issue Leader was clearly and admittedly biased. No venue or public meeting for rebuttal of the Plan’s assertions and policies was ever held. No disclosure of the negative impact of the Plan’s policies and recommendations on non-farming residents was ever made. No outreach was made to advertise or inform the non-farming residents of the Plan’s public hearing. Plan’s assertions were never questioned, or allowed to be questioned. No questions of any kind were allowed at the public hearing. The committee appointed for “setting the plan into motion and prioritizing the actions” will be composed entirely of farmers and agricultural landowners, preventing non-farming residents from having any say in the future of their own community.

    “The Environmental Justice component of Title VI guarantees fair treatment for all people and provides for Cornell Cooperative Extension of Tompkins County (CCE — Tompkins), to identify and address, as appropriate, disproportionately high and adverse effects of its programs, policies, and activities on minority and low-income populations”

    The body of the Complaint identified and detailed numerous defects in the Plan; where it knowingly and deliberately ignored mandates for meaningful participation:

    The EPA’s goal for Environmental Justice:

    “the fair treatment and meaningful involvement of all people” with “particular emphasis on the public health of and environmental conditions affecting minority, low-income, and indigenous populations”

    The DEC:

    The creation of a zoning district is a “permitting” activity. [NYSDEC CP-29] “This policy will promote the fair involvement of all people in the DEC environmental permit process.”

    The Complaint also listed Ag Plan Committee actions that would further disenfranchise the rural poor by removing their ability to participate the future of their own community.

    The Conclusion of the Complaint:

    “In spite of their claims of ‘Building Strong and Vibrant New York Communities,’ their Title VI mandates and the publicly stated policies of New York State; Cornell Cooperative Tompkins County deliberately excluded the very community they’ve chosen to bear all of these health, monetary and life costs from the decision making process of this Plan.

    Public participation is intended to provide legitimacy to government decisions — excluding 95% of the people speaks for itself.”

    I would like to be able to write about how these issues were argued and adjudicated; but I can’t — because I never found out.

    This is how it all went down:

    The Formal Complaint was received and signed for at CCE Tompkins on 12/21/2015 – but I was unable to get a response to my emails until 1/21/2016 and finally arranged a meeting on 2/8/2016 with the CCE Title VI Coordinator.

    He said he would read through the Ag Plan; and spoke of a revised Plan with the representation of all rural residents.

    2/9/2016 – my follow up email was unacknowledged.

    2/22/2016 – 2/29/2016 – 3/9/2016 – follow up emails were all unacknowledged.

    3/28/2016 – Title VI Complaint with cover letter mailed via Certified Mail to CCE Director C** W**.

    Reply dated 5/3/2016 – from CCE Director C** W**:

    “In reviewing the information you shared with S** and information contained within the Agriculture and Farmland Protection Plan we have come to the conclusion that the responsible party for the plan is the Town of Lansing. We ask that you direct your complaint to the Town of Lansing as this is their plan and responsibility.”

    6/21/2016 – Letters with enclosures mailed via Certified Mail to Town of Lansing Supervisor and Town Board members [and copied with enclosures to three Senators.]

    Replies from two Senators: “I do not have authority or jurisdiction to intervene . . . the Town of Lansing would have the final decision in this matter.” “Your situation involves city agencies and is, therefore, under the jurisdiction of your local government officials.”

    There was never any acknowledgement or reply to this letter from any of my “local government officials.”

    8/4/2016 – Follow up letters mailed via Certified Mail to Town of Lansing Supervisor and Town Board members regarding their lack of response to requests for meaningful participation by rural residents.

    There was never any acknowledgement or reply to this letter.

    Like a narrow pathway winding around the outside of a towering stone barricade – taking the “high road” to public participation brought me ever-higher – but never closer to my goal.

    The “high road” leads nowhere.

    Posted on March 18, 2022March 18, 2022Categories Rural Tompkins BlogsTags All Roads Lead to Cornithaca, Cornithaca County, government policy, Lansing Ag Plan, Lansing Agriculture and Farmland Protection Plan, rural community, rural social justice, rural tompkins County, Tompkins County, Tompkins County and Tammany Hall

    “All Roads Lead to Cornithaca” – “Rich, dark evil” Bumper sticker

    “Rich, dark evil” Bumper sticker

    “Tompkins County: Rich, dark, evil – covered with a thin candy excuse.” Vibrant, reimagined, progressive – Yes. Compassionate, caring, giving – No. Tompkins County evinces all the New School next-gen networking and brand sloganizing savvy that moves people ahead today — while eschewing all the Old School ethics that caused people to stop by those who had fallen.

    The silence of the COVID exploded the “caring” myth and exposed them for what they are: elite of the New Dictatorship.

    Posted on March 17, 2022March 17, 2022Categories Rural Tompkins BlogsTags All Roads Lead to Cornithaca, Cornithaca County, Government and Society, government policy, Rise of the Evil Ones, rural community, rural social justice, rural tompkins County, Tompkins County, Tompkins County and Tammany Hall

    “All Roads Lead to Cornithaca” – “Their disclosure statements are blank pages” Bumper sticker

    “Their disclosure statements are blank pages” Bumper sticker

    “Cornithaca County is so corrupt: Their disclosure statements are blank pages.” Government corruption is prevalent in New York — so much so that just saying “government” is enough for most residents. And the ethics codes are so detailed in what they cover – so that they can be made to exclude everything they don’t detail.

    But one place where details are notoriously lacking is in the state’s disclosure statements. The Ag Disclosure statement for prospective buyers in Agricultural Districts merely states “farming activities may include, but not be limited to, activities that cause noise, dust and odors” — failing to mention that these activities have locally necessitated the removal of eyelids and caused brain damage among their neighbors. Tompkins County Legislators called the County Board of Realtors and the Agriculture Committee the “stakeholders.” If they’re the stakeholders: what are the prospective buyers? Patsies. Victims. Fools.

    Posted on March 17, 2022March 17, 2022Categories Rural Tompkins BlogsTags agricultural disclosure, All Roads Lead to Cornithaca, Cornithaca County, Government and Society, government policy, Rise of the Evil Ones, rural community, rural social justice, rural tompkins County, Tompkins County, Tompkins County Legislature

    “All Roads Lead to Cornithaca” – “They can’t see the forest for the fentanyl” Bumper sticker

    “They can’t see the forest for the fentanyl” Bumper sticker

    It’s not that government policies to legalize marihuana won’t increase the chance that you or a loved one will be killed – it’s that drug impaired drivers will now face the same laws and penalties that alcohol impaired drivers have ignored for decades.

    Posted on March 17, 2022March 17, 2022Categories Rural Tompkins BlogsTags All Roads Lead to Cornithaca, Cornithaca County, Government and Society, government policy, Rise of the Evil Ones, rural community, rural social justice, rural tompkins County, Tompkins County

    “All Roads Lead to Cornithaca” – “We haven’t decided” Bumper sticker

    “We haven’t decided” Bumper sticker

    “Tompkins County speak: ‘We haven’t decided’ means they don’t want to give time for opposition.” It’s a given that when authorities list several options in their planning – it’s always the least popular/most repressive one they eventually choose. Is this a coincidence? No. The appearance of choice [and in particular: public choice] is an old dodge to make people feel less pressured – less at risk. And by keeping planning decisions up in the air; they undercut public opinion.

    Posted on March 17, 2022March 17, 2022Categories Rural Tompkins BlogsTags All Roads Lead to Cornithaca, Cornithaca County, elitist policy making, Government and Society, government policy, Rise of the Evil Ones, rural community, rural social justice, rural tompkins County, Tompkins County, Tompkins County Comprehensive Plan

    “All Roads Lead to Cornithaca” – “They don’t see people – only pawns” Bumper sticker

    “They don’t see people – only pawns” Bumper sticker

    “Tompkins County: They don’t see people – only pawns.” Your importance is of the smallest size and least value – a thing to be used by others. In a seamless society of sameness – only the Elite have value. Only the Elite get a seat in the game.

    Posted on March 16, 2022March 16, 2022Categories Rural Tompkins BlogsTags All Roads Lead to Cornithaca, Cornithaca County, Government and Society, government policy, Rise of the Evil Ones, rural community, rural social justice, rural tompkins County, Tompkins County, Tompkins County Comprehensive Plan

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