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    Tag: rural social justice

    “Tompkins County and Tammany Hall” – Ruler of all you survey

    “More Info ­– Less Filling” A more satirical treatment of the ethical misconduct that saturates the fabric of Tompkins County — the Urban Colonialism of Cornell University has marginalized and destroyed the “native” rural culture throughout much of the state; and runs the county for the benefit of its corporate “bottom line” — The New Paradigm: “Squat . . . shit . . . move on.”

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

     

    RULER OF ALL YOU SURVEY

    The “telephone survey” is an excellent example of how Tompkins County authorities validate elitist policy making – while at the same time giving the appearance of meaningful public participation.

    The following document uses the Town of Lansing Telephone Survey as a “How To” guide for politicians looking to legitimize “quid pro quo” government and short-circuit future opposition.

    How to Create the Perfect Telephone Survey

    Preparing the Survey

    TIP: Telephone surveys should always be carried out early in the decision making process; before residents have a chance to consider the ramifications or discuss the issues among themselves.

    It’s very important to decide on the answers you want before formulating your questions in order to ensure a successful survey.

    Include as many respondents as possible who will not be affected by the survey results.

    TIP: Avoid displaying any correlation between the respondents and their answers that may weaken your case: for example – people who rent, and only moved into town for ‘convenience’ or plan to stay less than five years, are unlikely to care about the long-term impact of your policies and are more likely to express support.

    Make sure your “random” survey has no surprises by instituting quotas of respondents for each of the different demographic categories you’ve created — Hang up any anybody who’s been “apportioned out.”

    TIP: “The Devil is in the Dialogue”: Don’t include any questions that you don’t want the answers to, and make sure to limit the choices in your “multiple-choice” questions.

    Ask the most questions in the areas you want to have the greatest weight in the results. This is your primary agenda.

    Add “filler”: Up to 50% of the questions should be non-arguable demographic questions: this will lend an atmosphere of solidity and worth to the survey.

    Generalize to avoid problem areas: the answers can be interpreted as an approval of any specific policy later.

    • Don’t ask — “Would you support a large increase in the school taxes?”

    • Ask — “Do you want our children to receive the best quality education?” [The inclusive “our” is always a useful touch.]

    Don’t ask residents if they actually want something: your position is to assume it will happen and ask what they want to do with it.

    • Don’t ask — “Do you want a Town Center?”

    • Ask — “Do you want sidewalks/a mini-mall in the Town Center?”

    Ask questions in a way that is psychologically loaded:

    • Don’t ask — “Would you support re-zoning to allow large-scale apartment complexes?”

    • Ask — “Would you support housing for families in need?”

    Make sure you offer special services to the people as a “rider” so they will support your development agenda: for example – “Is the use of tax dollars for the development of recreational biking/hiking and walking trails important to you?”

    Use the elderly and disabled as leverage to get what you want: for example – “Do you support use of tax dollars for [your agenda here] including services for the elderly and persons with disabilities.”

    Include the largest topic areas for your questions so that the general can override the specific: for example ask – “Agree or disagree – The roadways and intersections in the county are generally safe for pedestrians” ­ especially if the roads in your town are not safe for pedestrians.

    Presenting the Survey Results

    Always stress the accuracy of the survey’s methodology to mask the agenda used in the creating the questions and your interpretation of the answers.

    Use “pie” and “bar” charts to lend the weight of a scientific fact to your presentation.

    TIP: Add requests and suggestions from survey responders to make it seem as if you’re interested in what the public has to say.

     

    In Conclusion

    If you have followed the preceding guidelines and recommendations, you will have all the material you need to present a clear-cut “mandate” for your project or policy. FINAL TIP: Make sure all the influential “partner-stakeholders” receive a cut to be certain of their continued support.

    Posted on September 1, 2021September 1, 2021Categories Rural Tompkins BlogsTags Cornithaca County, Create telephone survey, government policy, rural social justice, rural tompkins County, Tompkins County, Tompkins County and Tammany Hall

    “All Roads Lead to Cornithaca” – “Cornithaca County is so corrupt . . .” 10

    “Cornithaca County is so corrupt . . .” 10

    “It’s considered sophisticated.” There’s nothing like exposure to the victims of crime to take the shine off of evil. Acceptance of harm to others as a proof of your worldly experience and understanding; is as empty as corruption itself. If all is corrupt — then all is emptiness.

    Posted on September 1, 2021September 1, 2021Categories Rural Tompkins BlogsTags All Roads Lead to Cornithaca, Cornithaca County, Corruption Bumper Sticker, Government and Society, government policy, rural social justice, rural tompkins County, Tompkins County

    “All Roads Lead to Cornithaca” – “A rural county with 40,000 transients” Bumper sticker

    “A rural county with 40,000 transients” Bumper sticker

    Tompkins County: The students have no idea of what’s happening in the county; but County authorities and corporations have a good idea of how to use that ignorance – the power of representation to run the county like a private club; without any accountability. Tompkins County’s stratified community puts all power into the hands of its urban elite — and all burdens on the backs of the rural poor. It’s like having 40,000 convention guests; whose biggest concern is – “Is the ice machine working?”

    Posted on September 1, 2021September 1, 2021Categories 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 and Tammany Hall” – The Map is not the Territory: The mapmakers are

    Tompkins County policy making is a puzzle with thousands of pieces; all the same size, the same shape, and imprinted with the same design. No matter how many pieces you put together; the picture never changes — it just gets bigger.

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

    THE MAP IS NOT THE TERRITORY

    The mapmakers are

    Sometimes it can be little things that point the most clearly to misconduct and undue influence in government policy making.

    Removed from the shadows of bureaucratic justification: each piece tells a story of the ethics and intent behind these public policies — who receives the benefits — and how that affects the life of the community.

    In this chapter; I will use the legal definition of fraud to examine a map that was used to support far-reaching policy decisions, summarize the results of that examination and its disclosure

    The map is the “Town of Lansing, N.Y. Agricultural Property” map displaying the legend: “Agricultural Exemptions 2016”. The source is “Tompkins County Assessment Dept, 2016” and it contains the seal and imprint of the “Tompkins County Planning Dept”.

    Fraud is commonly understood as dishonesty calculated for advantage. It can be proved by showing that the defendant’s actions involved five separate elements:

    (1) A false statement of a material fact

    Nearly half of the land marked as “agricultural property” in this map is not owned by agricultural entities; and is only rented for agricultural use. Much of this property is residential or commercially owned and rented for a little tax relief – in a county that has one of the highest median property taxes in the United States.

    Although the map purports to show “Agricultural Exemptions” – much of the land marked does not receive any agricultural exemption. For example: only 40% of my neighbor’s land received an agricultural exemption; but 100% was marked as receiving it in this map.

    (2) Knowledge on the part of the defendant that the statement is untrue

    In a “clarification” email; the County’s Assessment Department admitted that they knowingly helped create a map misrepresenting the actual acreage receiving Agricultural Exemptions: “The intention of the map is to show the parcels that receive an agricultural exemption – it is not intended to show how much of each parcel receives an exemption.” Although this is clearly not the representation of this map; the Assessment Dept. still insisted: “The map is in fact correct.”

    (3) Intent on the part of the defendant to deceive the alleged victim

    This map was used to support preferential agricultural policies for a handful of influential farmers, including the unilateral creation of an Agricultural Zone, to the exclusion and detriment of 95% of the existing rural community — an intentional misrepresentation of material existing fact. This is an “afterthought” piece of supporting evidence; created and added after the town’s Agriculture Protection Plan was already approved – what it claims to be is clearly, knowingly, and admittedly, not a true representation.

    (4) Justifiable reliance by the alleged victim on the statement

    This map is “signed off” on by both the County Assessment Dept. and the County Planning Dept.; it was included in the Town’s comprehensive plan, and was presented with those credentials as a factual representation. Residents were invited to place reliance on this map and approve the rezoning of half of the town from Rural/Agricultural to Agricultural only.

    (5) Injury to the alleged victim as a result

    This map was used by authorities to justify the enactment of restrictive policies against “non-farming” residents; further marginalizing the county’s rural poor — to promote Agriculture as the only preferred use of rural land, and to designate farmers as the sole and exclusive “stakeholders” in the rural community.

    This map is included in the arguments of Town and County “representatives” who fostered citizen petitions to prevent the sale or rental of rural land for solar farms or for housing, and force highly-taxed rural landowners to sell cheaply to farmers; already the richest and most influential people in the community. The “consolidation” of rural land into the hands of ever-larger farming corporations; further enables the spread of “modern farming methods” that have been proven to cause “significant harm” to neighboring families.

    A knowingly inaccurate map should neither have been created nor have been offered for inclusion in the Town’s Comprehensive Plan – a legal document that is described in NY Town Law as: “Among the most important powers and duties granted by the legislature to a town government.”

    Additionally, whereas this map is offered as a proof of intent by the Town to protect land for continued agricultural use; the Town has sold the land that it rented for agriculture use to a housing developer — and a different Comprehensive Plan map shows that the Town plans to zone most of the agricultural land in the southern half of town for future residential and commercial development.

    Just changing the legend and/or name of the map would only cover up the situation and retain any advantages that the misrepresentation has already given to the parties involved.

    I sent these arguments in an email requesting that the County Legislature remove this map from its files and from any documents wherein it has been used, and to correct as much as possible the damage its use has caused.

    Attachments included both the Agricultural Property map and the “clarification” email from the County Assessment Department.

    There was no response or acknowledgement from any of the county’s 14 Legislators.

    If it is ethics that give a government legitimacy; what does the County’s creation and continued use of this map represent?

    The Town of Lansing’s 2016 Agricultural Property map is just one example of the deliberate misrepresentations that riddle the County’s planning agenda.

    Posted on August 26, 2021August 26, 2021Categories Rural Tompkins BlogsTags All Roads Lead to Cornithaca, Cornithaca County, Government and Society, government policy, Lansing Agriculture and Farmland Protection Plan, Lansing Comprehensive Plan, rural community, rural representation, rural social justice, rural tompkins County, Tompkins County

    “All Roads Lead to Cornithaca” – “New York’s Agriculture Policy” Bumper sticker

    “New York’s Agriculture Policy” Bumper sticker

    New York refuses to disclose the serious health and financial risks of living near “modern farming methods”; or the risk of those “methods” moving in next to you.

    New York refuses to disclose the extent of Agricultural pollution or meaningfully regulate its sources – while at the same time requiring the 3 of the 5 voting members of all “soil and water conservation committees” be from Agriculture.

    New York refuses to disclose the externalized costs of Agriculture; bragging of their economic and tax benefits, while keeping quiet about programs like the Farmer’s School Tax Credit; that pays back Agricultural entities for 50 to 100 percent of their school taxes through levying additional state taxes on the residents.

    “Urban Colonialism” paints a deliberately deceptive picture of modern Agriculture; while urban and suburban populations allow themselves to be convinced and placated – “it’s our food and it’s only those people who are complaining – they shouldn’t be living there anyway.”

    Posted on August 23, 2021August 23, 2021Categories Rural Tompkins BlogsTags agricultural disclosure, agricultural law, Agricultural pollution, All Roads Lead to Cornithaca, Cornithaca County, Government and Society, government policy, rural community, rural social justice, rural tompkins County, Tompkins County

    “All Roads Lead to Cornithaca” – Tompkins County “The tough love image . . .”

    Tompkins County “The tough love image . . .”

    It’s an ill wind that blows no corporation any good. In fact, in Tompkins County; every wind is used to fill their sails . . . and coffers. Even though Cargill’s salt mine continued to mine and sell road salt throughout the Pandemic, and the County’s new budget included significant property tax increases and budgetary cuts; the County Legislators continued to implement Cargill’s $640,000 tax abatement plan.

    COVID may have meant cutting back on basic services in the county; but friends don’t let friends cut back on corporate profits.

    Posted on August 23, 2021August 23, 2021Categories Rural Tompkins BlogsTags All Roads Lead to Cornithaca, Cornithaca County, Government and Society, government policy, rural social justice, rural tompkins County, Tompkins County

    “All Roads Lead to Cornithaca” – “Age may not teach wisdom . . .” Bumper sticker

    “Age may not teach wisdom . . .” Bumper sticker

    “But you certainly learn to recognize bullshit.” And you certainly learn what not to do. Maybe it’s time to listen . . . and learn what today’s politicians are so scared of.

    Posted on August 23, 2021August 23, 2021Categories Rural Tompkins BlogsTags All Roads Lead to Cornithaca, Cornithaca County, Government and Society, government policy, rural social justice, rural tompkins County, Tompkins County

    “All Roads Lead to Cornithaca” – “If you blame the rain . . .” Bumper sticker

    “If you blame the rain . . .” Bumper sticker

    There is no one like a politician or bureaucrat for sidestepping the obvious. If every lake that is surrounded by agricultural activity is impaired; they will find an impaired lake without agriculture; and use that to claim, “We don’t know what’s causing the impairment of our water bodies.”

    Cause and effect cease to have any meaning in the political decision making process — and not by accident.

    The elderly in New York aren’t dying because of equitable paddy cake and bureaucratic indifference — they’re dying from “COVID-19”; and they’re not categorized as “elderly” — but as “New Yorkers” — thereby removing both the identity of the victims, and the reason for their deaths. . . and not by accident.

    Posted on August 21, 2021August 21, 2021Categories Rural Tompkins BlogsTags All Roads Lead to Cornithaca, Cornithaca County, COVID-19 Elderly deaths, Government and Society, government policy, rural social justice, rural tompkins County, Tompkins County

    “All Roads Lead to Cornithaca” – “Cornithaca County is so corrupt . . .” 9

    “Cornithaca County is so corrupt . . .” 9

    “It’s a self-fulfilling sophistry.” In Tompkins County; every policy argument becomes true; because everything is controlled by the same people. It’s no surprise to residents that the fox not only guards the hen house; but also investigates the disappearances, and rules them to be “runaways.”

    Tompkins County and Tammany Hall will examine the origins and credibility of the term “rural sprawl” and why it immediately replaced all mention of “urban sprawl” at every level of County planning and policy making — and its use in carving up rural towns for commercial exploitation.

    Posted on August 21, 2021August 21, 2021Categories Rural Tompkins BlogsTags All Roads Lead to Cornithaca, Cornithaca County, government policy, rural community, rural social justice, rural tompkins County, Tompkins County, Tompkins County Comprehensive Plan

    “All Roads Lead to Cornithaca” – “Cornithaca County is so corrupt . . .” 6

    “Cornithaca County is so corrupt . . .” 6

    “The taxpayers aren’t the stakeholders.” Tompkins County has one of the highest median property taxes in the United States – but the formula used to determine the property tax on any one property is so complicated; that it’s not possible to condense it to a simple tax rate.

    When the simple is made complicated; there’s always a reason.

    In the rural northeast part of the county – there is only one Sheriff’s deputy for two towns – so if there’s criminal activity; just give them a call and they’ll come and write a report – and in the new budget, the County is making additional cuts in the number of deputies.

    The problem is not that the rural towns in the county don’t have police departments; it’s that Ithaca and its suburbs do — and they don’t want to budget money for the needs of anyone else; especially people they don’t want living there.

    While the formula for determining the property tax may be complicated; the formula for determining County services is simple: RURAL = LESS.

    Posted on August 17, 2021August 17, 2021Categories Rural Tompkins BlogsTags All Roads Lead to Cornithaca, Cornithaca County, government policy, rural community, rural social justice, rural tompkins County, Tompkins County

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