Monday, March 1, 2010

Ex-Mayor Roasted While Councilmen Late in Paying (if at all) Water Bills

This is just a preview of what's to come in March's issue of The Palmer Post.

Hypocrisy: Ex-Mayor Roasted While Councilmen Late in Paying (if at all) Water Bills


JOEY G. DAUBEN
Palmer Post

PALMER - Current and former city councilmen routinely paid their monthly water bills late and were not given disconnect notices, an analysis of public documents show.

A large portion of the water bills that were paid late by former Palmer Councilman/Mayor Mike Greenee and Councilman Kenneth Bateman, for example, show that both were late in paying their water bills, and rather than receive a disconnect notice from water utility clerk Charlotte Follis, the councilmen had their late fees waived.

Follis, who declined to comment for this story, has the arbitrary power to waive late fees and instruct Palmer's utilities department to turn off citizens' water, according to city officials and public testimony at city council meetings giving her the power.

According to public records, Follis also routinely adjusted her mother's water bill, crediting back charges for "yellow water" 10 times since March 2007. The only other person in Follis' neighborhood near Elizabeth Street to have received credits (i.e., lower water bills) for the mucky water known as "yellow water" that appears from time to time in Palmer water lines was Charles Clark, a political supporter of Greenlee, who, several years ago, hired Follis' mother to work in the Palmer Police Department.

Don Huskins, the former mayor of Palmer and a councilman at one time, was brought before the Palmer City Council two years ago with his wife, Laurie, to address the city council's allegations that Huskins had instructed Follis to waive one man's water bill late fee. Mayor Lance Anglin, who also declined to comment on this story, spoke on the public record that he had seen a computer screen showing Huskins' involvement in the water late fee waiver.

However, in a response to an open records request from Huskins' lawyer, the city of Palmer could not produce a document, e-mail or other record that city councilmen had alleged existed. Follis, meanwhile, is on a sworn affidavit (meaning she swore an oath to tell the truth) alleging Huskins of instructing her to waive late fees.

Huskins denied her allegations, but the examination of Follis' records as the city's water utility clerk reveal that:

Councilman Kenneth Bateman, a political ally of Greenlee and Mayor Anglin, simply did not pay a water bill from March 2007 to June 2007; from July to Aug. 28, there was no payment; he did, however, pay a portion of the water bill shortly thereafter. In fact, Bateman, while Huskins was before the city council with his wife to answer to the late fee allegations, was late in his water bill that night.

The Huskins were on the Palmer council agenda in September of 2007.

"He didn't say a word [the whole night]," Huskins said. "And now we know why."

Jeff Vick, another ally of Greenlee and Anglin who votes with Bateman on the city council usually, himself is listed in city records as not paying or not receiving late fees. He was, however, the only councilman to have a disconnect fee, but that was after several years of paying late and not receiving a late fee.

In Nov. 2005, Vick wasn't disconnected; he didn't pay in December of 2005; paid half his bill in January the following year, then paid late in Feb. 2006 and once again, in July 2006, he was late in paying his water bill but was not given a late fee or a disconnect fee.

In October 2006, Vick was given a late charge, but no disconnect; in November of 2006, he did not pay the water bill at all, but in December, he was charged a $30 disconnect fee from Follis, the water utility clerk.

In June 2007, Vick received no late fee for paying his bill late; in July, no late fee. September's bill was paid late, as was November 2007, but no additional disconnect fees were charged.

On the night of Huskins appearing before the city council in Sept. 2007, Vick was sitting at the city council horseshoe table himself late in a water bill with no late fee charged or disconnect notice.

Mayor Anglin, re-elected to a second two-year term last year over two opponents, was paying his water bills late on an almost routine basis up until he filed to run for the city's top elected spot.

In the analysis of city documents obtained by the Palmer Post, Anglin was never given a disconnect notice for his late water bills, but during the three-month (Feb/March/April) campaign for mayor, he paid his water bill early.

Greenlee, who lost by seven votes in 2008, had routinely paid water bills late, but had late fees waived and never received a disconnect notice.

A family friend of the Greenlee political alliance, Merle Cravens, has appeared before the city council repeatedly over the years to request more time in paying water bills, but has never received a disconnect notice, an issue highlighted by Huskins.

"They never went after her on the agenda," Huskins said, who recently sued the city of Palmer over the allegations. County Court at Law No. 1 Judge Greg Wilhelm, a Republican from Midlothian, sided with the city's outside attorney, David Miller, in that Palmer had sovereign immunity and therefore, could not be sued in Wilhelm's court.

An analysis of public documents from Palmer City Secretary Alicia Baran, who released the legal bills in response to an open records request, shows that Palmer councilmen started consulting with Miller on Huskins' suit - and were billed - several months before the official vote took place in a special called July 2007 meeting to hire him.


And here's a chart that shows how many times Palmer water utility clerk Charlotte Follis adjusted her own mother's water bill:

From May 2006, Palmer Water Utility Clerk Charlotte Follis adjusted her mother's water bill to lower the payments due to "yellow water." The chart below is an excerpt from thousands of public documents obtained by the Palmer Post showing those yellow water credits given to Jacque Bonner, Follis' mother.

May 2006
Credited $47.68

June 2, 2006
Credited $39.88

June 13, 2006
Credited $54.75

Sept. 14, 2006
Credited $27.50

Oct. 16, 2006
Credited $27.50

Nov. 2006
Credited $33

March 2007
Credited $45.50

April 2007
Credited $45.50

Sept. 2007
Credited $52.25

Tuesday, February 2, 2010

Forward Palmer PAC Launched for 'Legal Sale of Beer & Wine'


I'll be taking this paperwork into the Ellis County Elections Department this week, but the Forward Palmer PAC has been launched to support the "legal sale of beer and wine" in Palmer. The ballot proposition will be slated for the Nov. 2 ballot (tried getting it done for the May 8 election, but I was provided the wrong dates.)




Monday, January 11, 2010

Instant Message Conversation with Mayor Lance Anglin and John Templer



Live Instant Message Chat With Mayor Lance Anglin and John Templer

LanceAnglin75152: Sup John
KnightTempler: How’s the new agenda coming along?
LanceAnglin75152: Excellent. Greg Penny and Tony Roybal will never get anything passed.
KnightTempler: Good. I want you to direct Jeff Vick a bit more. He seems to be making a total a** out of himself and you.
LanceAnglin75152: Right, I know. If not for Christen Vick on the school board, poor Jeff wouldn’t even be on the council.
KnightTempler: When I ran Mike Greenlee, Shannon Conger and Linda Harper two years ago, how obvious was it that Vick was not in our plans?
LanceAnglin75152: I hear ya, John, I hear ya. Give it time. We just need to keep Jeff happy with some steel work. Eagle Steel is I’m sure struggling because of the economy.
KnightTempler: I’m considering another slate of candidates this year to take out Penny and Roybal. If we cannot contain Vick, we must take him out. I’m tired of telling him why he has to vote a certain way.
LanceAnglin75152: I’m working with him. Don’t worry.
KnightTempler: Well hurry. I must take control of the city. Having a 3-2 vote margin is too risky. I want total control.

Sunday, October 25, 2009

ECP-TV.com | No Action Taken on Curfew Ordinance

Palmer councilmen voted 3-2 not to take any action on a proposal to adopt a curfew ordinance for the city.

There are two videos that I want to upload from tonight's meeting that pretty much tell the whole story. Stay tuned. But for now, those who voted for and against the "take no action" item:

VOTED TO TAKE NO ACTION ON CURFEW:
Greg Penny
Tony Roybal
Kenneth Bateman

VOTED NO (i.e., wanted a curfew ordinance):
Jeff Vick
Dianne Drewery



I was impressed with this issue and how Mayor Lance Anglin stood up for parents and made a distinction between the city's role (which was not to parent) and a parent. Also impressed with Bateman on this one, as well.

Ironically, I think I like the Palmer City Council every time I drop in.

:)





Parts 1 and 2 are posted below:



Here's Part 2:

Friday, July 31, 2009

Ex-Palmer Mayor Sues City

Former Palmer Mayor Don Huskins and his wife filed suit against the City of Palmer two weeks ago for - I believe - issues related to a rival political faction (who hold a 3-2 majority on the city council right now) slamming Huskins for failure to pay water bills.

That rival political faction, led by former Councilman Mike Greenlee (ousted last year because of this) and his current allies on the city council, as well as their "mob boss" John Templer, has accused Huskins of theft and has sought a vendetta because of Huskins' alignments with councilmen Greg Penny and Tony Roybal. Greenlee and Co. believe Huskins to be Dick Austin, the infamous news editor at the Palmer Post, an underground newspaper that has exposed the Greenlee clique.

Random smattering of Palmer-related videos on ECP-TV.com.











Details are developing about this lawsuit, but the city has kept this issue hush-hush.




Developing...

FEMA Report w/ ‘Removing People’ Missing in Palmer

This story just went global, thanks to my friend Andrew West Griffin syndicating it :)

FEMA report detailing Palmer, TX ‘population removal’ section missing

Joey G. Dauben
Ellis County Observer
Friday, July 31, 2009

PALMER, Texas – The Federal Emergency Management Agency’s reports of how to mitigate potential civil uprisings and disasters have sections dealing with the mass relocation and confinement of citizen populations: except in Palmer, a city 20 miles south of Dallas.

The City of Palmer and the Palmer Police Dept., according to a former reporter for conservative weekly The Ellis County Press who requested the FEMA documents for three months, have the federal plans but the section instituting population relocations came up missing.

“I have already talked to [Palmer PD Chief Mike Zaidle] about FEMA in Palmer the section of the emergency management plan regarding moving people into camps is totally gone from the 3 inch binder,” said Brandy Owen, the former reporter who penned a series of articles on the Trans Texas Corridor last year. “There is a chapter or [section in] it but the section is gone from the plan.

“He [Zaidle] is quite aware of federalization and says he has tried to be “compliant” and make proper arrangements for housing people in the high school gymnasium and other places,” she said. “FEMA always tells him his plans are inadequate.”

FEMA report detailing Palmer, TX population removal section missing  150709banner2

Recently, plans were announced by the Ellis County Sheriff’s Office to team up with local church pastors for a “safety seminar.” Some critics of the federal government plans involving local police agencies and churches cite FEMA’s attempt to “quell” dissent and facilitate the confiscation of guns from private citizens.

“A shocking KSLA [Shreveport, La.] news report has confirmed the story we first broke last year, that Clergy Response Teams are being trained by the federal government to “quell dissent” and pacify citizens to obey the government in the event of a declaration of martial law,” Paul Joseph Watson reported two years ago for Austin-based website Infowars.com.

“In May 2006, we exposed the existence of a nationwide FEMA program which is training pastors and other religious representatives to become secret police enforcers who teach their congregations to “obey the government” in preparation for the implementation of martial law, property and firearm seizures, mass vaccination programs and forced relocation.

“A whistleblower who was secretly enrolled into the program told us that the feds were clandestinely recruiting religious leaders to help implement Homeland Security directives in anticipation of a a potential bio-terrorist attack, any natural disaster or a nationally declared emergency.”

When she first approached the City of Palmer, Owen said Mayor Lance Anglin fielded requests to City Administrator Doug Young.

“For three months I asked and checked back in with Palmer City Hall,” she said. “Mayor [Anglin] turned all of his emergency plan responsibility to Young. Lots of sections are missing but specifically relocation of people.”


http://www.prisonplanet.com/fema-report-detailing-palmer-tx-population-removal-section-missing.html

Monday, June 8, 2009

Judge Sue Schmidt Fired

The question now becomes, since Palmer's revenue is derived from municipal court fines, fees, etc. on a 51 percent scale (meaning other revenues come from sales taxes, property taxes), how much higher will Palmer citizens pay?

The current council majority, fueled in the May 9 election when all three incumbents won - including Mayor Lance Anglin - despises the fact the police are on Interstate Highway 45 writing tickets after tickets. However, being that 51 percent of the city's revenue coffers are filled in this fashion, what will new Judge Bill Scott do? That remains to be seen...

Videos courtesy of Megan Gray/The Ellis County Press. Available at ECP-TV.com.