Ordinance Would Allow Out-Of-Delco Hiring

Ordinance Would Allow Out-Of-Delco Hiring — Delaware County Council, yesterday, March 6, held the first reading of an ordinance that would allow the hiring of non-county residents for all posts except solicitor, executive director and other positions mandated by state law.

Councilwoman Christine A. Reuther said the county was having trouble filling positions and noted that government employment has fallen by 7 percent over the last decade.

Councilwoman Elaine Paul Schaefer pointed out that the county has lost good workers because they had to move a mile away. She said Philadelphia is the only other county that has a residency requirement. She said that 42 percent of the county workers already have an exemption.

Councilman Richard R. Womack said he had mixed feelings about changing the policy and that, if it should change, he would hope county residents would still get a preference in hiring.

Executive Director Barbara O’Malley also said she had mixed feelings but that the change was necessary.

Solicitor Jonathan Lichtenstein said the part of the bill providing for reimbursement for relocating only applies to those moving to the county and is not automatic.

Speaking against the ordinance were Joy Schwartz of Upper Darby and Carris Kocher of Concord.

John Baldini (phonetic) of Upper Darby said the county should open up but there should be a salary cap on non-county residents.

The ordinance is expected to pass at the March 20 meeting.

Ordinance Would Allow Out Of Delco Hiring -- Delaware County Council, yesterday, March 6, held the first reading of an ordinance

Delco Concedes CYS Is Poorly Trained And Understaffed

Delco Concedes CYS Is Poorly Trained And Understaffed — Delaware County, Pa. Executive Director Barbara O’Malley, last night, March 6, addressed the horrific stories concerning the county’s Children and Youth Services Department.

Mothers had been separated from their children for almost a year and stigmatized as abusers on the flimsiest of claims.

In at least one case, it was reported that the child, after removal, was placed in an environment in which he was sexually abused.

Further, the rulings by CYS have kept these women from getting jobs — at least two are teachers — or otherwise working with kids.

Ms. O’Malley reported that CYS was extremely understaffed and Delco was having trouble finding workers (see other story). She also noted the department’s training was poor.

Somewhere in her statement was a vague promise to improve things.

Recognizing the problem is a positive but immediate action can and must be taken to end immediate suffering.

First step is to make right the lives of those who were victims of this incompetency.

County Council can do this.

Simply call the person in charge and say let it be so. If this person won’t make these problems go away you make her go away and hire someone who knows what he’s doing.

By the way, we’ve heard reports of retaliation by CYS against a woman who spoke out. We are watching.

Second step is to create policy in which children aren’t removed due to domestic complaints unless a, hopefully, better trained supervisor does a follow up investigation. This is especially true if a judge has awarded custody to the accused.

Third step is don’t hire consultants that hire people implicated in serious scandals involving the removal of children.

That would be you, CAI.

Delco Concedes CYS Is Poorly Trained

Delco Concedes CYS Is Poorly Trained And Understaffed

Defensive Delco Council Shrilly Denies Issue With Illegals

Defensive Delco Council Shrilly Denies Issue With Illegals — Delaware County Council, tonight, March 6, perversely promoted multiculturalism when given first-hand accounts of suffering caused by illegal aliens and reports of law enforcement unable to keep them in custody when they commit crimes.

Sharon Devaney of Haverford Township described how she was permanently disabled in 2017 when a car traveling 70 mph and driven by an illegal, t-boned her Toyota Camry at Lawrence and Ellis roads. She had been dropping off her daughter with her parents before work. The illegal was not insured and in violation of numerous laws yet the police released her without charges.

Ms.Devaney implored council to change Delco’s status as a sanctuary county.

A “sanctuary city” or county is a jurisdiction that limits or denies its cooperation with the national government in enforcing immigration law

Kathy Williams of Haverford also demanded Delco stop welcoming illegals.

She noted an incident in which three illegals were captured by Ridley Police after stealing a car. Police informed ICE who ordered that they be freed.

Joy Schwartz of Upper Darby followed with a third request to end the sanctuary county status.

“This wave — I’ll call it an invasion — is like nothing I’ve seen before,” she said.

She brought up the reports of plans to house illegals in the shuttered Springfield and Delaware County Memorial hospitals.

The response from officialdom was shrill and defensive.

Solicitor Jonathan Lichtenstein vehemently denied Delco being a sanctuary county. He said such reports were “massive misinformation.”

He said the claims stem from Delco agreeing to join the US Department of States Refugee Resettlement Program in January 2020.

Um, no.

The claim stems from at least 2016 when Center for Immigration Studies included Delco on its list of sanctuary cities, and where it remains.

Ms. Devaney’s testimony obviously backs this claim.

By the way, Wikipedia list Delco as one of Pennsylvania’s 18 sanctuary jurisdictions.

Our officials don’t appear to have a handle as to what’s happening.

Christine A. Reuther dismissed Ms. Devaney’s claim that the problem was illegal immigration and that Delco was protecting illegals.

“I heard someone say we’ve been a sanctuary county since 2014, which I’m sure would surprise our previous councilmembers who I can’t imagine would have voted to have made us a sanctuary county,” she said.

Well, John McBlain wasn’t happy when we pointed it out.

Ms Reuther made light of the remarks made by Ms. Devaney.

“I feel bad for anybody who has been victimized by a bad uninsured driver,” she said.

She said that illegal immigration was just an election issue.

Ms. Reuther said the county didn’t even have an immigration commission.

Um, yes, you do.

Seriously, do you people know what’s going on?

Dr. Monica Taylor expressed anger at the words used by those describing the crisis and claimed those expressing the concerns were directing them at immigrants rather than the flood crossing the border in violation of our laws.

She also dismissed Ms. Devany’s experience saying the person who nearly killed two people while crippling one while speeding through a busy intersection was just an “uninsured driver” and it was not an immigration issue.

So tell us Dr. Taylor, where do you think this person took her test for her driver’s license?

Swarthmore College student Jonas Salk (phonetic) praised sanctuary cities and multiculturalism.

Ms. Reuther made a puzzling statement in her objections to the concerns expressed about illegal immigration.

“They can speculate about what we might do or tell you what they might do if they were sitting up here but to simply say that ‘Oh gee maybe somebody that has nothing to do with any of this who to be quite honest with you isn’t necessarily supported by every member of County Council in a run for higher office, who can’t affect any sort of usage for any sort of property that doesn’t belong to the county is just fearmongering.”

So who is this person running for higher office not necessarily supported by every member of County Council? We doubt it’s a Republican.

Defensive Delco Council Shrilly Denies Issue With Illegals

Looking young William Lawrence Sr Cryptowit 3-7-24

Looking young William Lawrence Sr Cryptowit 3-7-24

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Looking young William Lawrence Sr Cryptowit 3-8-18 Sing ye to the Lord a new canticle: sing to the Lord, all the earth. Sing ye to the Lord and bless his name: shew forth his salvation from day to day. Psalms

Answer to yesterday‘s William Lawrence Sr Cryptowit quote puzzle: Whenever a man’s friends begin to compliment him about looking young, he may be sure that they think he is growing old.
Victor Hugo (or maybe Washington Irving)

 

Plaintiffs Ask Fayette County Election Records Be Saved

Plaintiffs Ask Fayette County Election Records Be Saved — The plaintiffs in the Fayette County, Pa. election case have filed a request for a litigation hold asking the county and its bureau of elections preserve everything relating to the May and November 2023 elections.

These include ballots, mail-in ballot envelopes, return sheets, digital files including cast vote records and paper tapes.

The plaintiffs are Republican commissioner candidate Jon Marietta, GOP county Chairwoman Michelle Mowry, and electors Melanie Patterson, Robert Patterson, Cody Patterson, Maureen Elias and Thomas Elias.

Details can be found at Patriot.Online.

Plaintiffs Ask Fayette County Election Records Be Saved -- The plaintiffs  in the Fayette County, Pa. election case have filed a request f

Maine Pushes Vets Aside to Hire ‘New Americans’

Maine Pushes Vets Aside to Hire ‘New Americans’

By Joe Guzzardi

New York, Illinois, and California are among the states most closely associated with embracing illegal border crossers and assorted other asylum seekers. But perhaps because the state is smaller than the major destinations and somewhat off the beaten media path, Maine’s over-the-top illegal alien red-carpet layout is less well-publicized.

Make no mistake—Maine Governor Janet Mills (D) ranks on a par with New York’s Kathy Hochel, Illinois’ JB Pritzker, and California’s Gavin Newsom as overt illegal alien coddlers. Maine is normally considered a vacationer’s paradise. In the winter, visitors can snowmobile in Aroostook County, a vast landscape that’s larger than Rhode Island and Connecticut combined. Come summertime, 3,500 miles of tidal shoreline attracts sailors, sea kayakers and windjammers. Despite its scenic appeal to visitors, residents must endure Maine’s hardcore migrant outreach, and the pocketbook-busting fees associated with aiding and abetting illegal immigrants.

During Mills’ tenure, Maine’s large southern municipalities have struggled to house thousands of migrants, mostly from Angola, the Democratic Republic of Congo, and Haiti. COVID-19 brought federal money that the state used to house migrants at hotels, motels, and shelters. The federal funds bonanza has dried up and the state is on the hook for the ever-increasing cost of providing food and shelter to the mostly homeless migrants. The fortunate are living inside the Portland Exposition Building, originally designated as a sports and exhibition venue. Most of the migrants speak limited English, have little money, and had no living arrangements when they arrived in Maine. They are heavily dependent on taxpayer-funded resources for charity.

In May, 2022, Maine’s growing migrant overflow prompted Kristen Dow, then-Portland’s Health and Human Services director, to send an ominous E-mail to Customs and Border Protection, FEMA, U.S. Rep. Chellie Pingree’s (D) local office, Portland’s city council and mayor, and its so-called community partners which read, in part:

     “As of the date of this email, there is no further shelter OR [emphasis Dow’s] hotel capacity in Portland, Maine. We have been over capacity in our shelter for quite some time and have now reached the point where the hotels we have been utilizing are also full…if your organization sends a family to Portland, Maine they are no longer guaranteed shelter upon their arrival to our shelter. Additionally, because our staff are spread quite thin, it is not guaranteed that we will be in a position to aid individuals in their search for emergency housing. I ask that you all share this information widely within your organizations and with families you are working with.”

In a predictable immigration-expansionist response to a migrant-overwhelmed state, Mills, in office since 2019, proposed to add 75,000 more illegal aliens by 2029, and in the process, throw citizens further under the bus. The vehicle that Mills will rely on to provide for the unlawfully present aliens is her newly developed Office of New Americans (ONA) created through the governor’s executive order. Mills’ plan would work toward “making Maine a home of opportunity for all, by welcoming and supporting immigrants to strengthen Maine’s workforce, enhance the vibrancy of Maine’s communities, and build a strong and inclusive economy.” The illegal aliens would be called “New Mainers.”

Mills and Maine’s immigration lobby have come up with what they view as the perfect solution—brand new, free housing. As local news station WCSH-TV reported, Brunswick will open 60 new migrant apartments, with 24 of the units already completed. The units, built at a $13 million cost and which residents disparagingly refer to as the ‘Taj Mahal’ are specifically designed for migrants awaiting their work permits, a process that can take more than a year.

The taxpayer funded Maine State Housing Authority leads the apartment project and has put into place a unique rental schedule. The state—taxpayers, in other words—will help pay for migrants’ rent using state legislature-approved funds. Taxpayers will be on the hook for two years, but migrants will need to pay 30 percent of their rent once they find a job that earns at least $30,000, half the average $60,000 local annual income. Such a rental structure is a strong inducement to never look for a job. Living rent-free is so much better. And while a migrants’ lease may expire after two years, that doesn’t necessarily mean he’ll vacate. Nationwide, squatters’ rights are all the rage.

In this era of illegal aliens first, Americans last, no audacity is too outrageous. A Somali woman who advises Mills on the ONA travesty proposed that the “new Americans” receive priority in job searches over military veterans because, in the advocate’s words, vets “have the advantage of speaking the language [English].” Punishing vets for speaking their native language in their home country is scraping the barrel’s bottom.

To Mills and other Democratic officials, establishing the ONA, building rent-free condos, and giving jobs away to illegally present foreign nationals at Americans’ expense is all normal governance even though not a single supporting vote from the Pine Tree State’s citizens has been cast in favor of Maine’s radical policies.

Joe Guzzardi is a Project for Immigration Reform analyst who has written about immigration for more than 30 years. Contact him at jguzzardi@ifspp.org

Maine Pushes Vets Aside to Hire ‘New Americans’

Maine Pushes Vets Aside to Hire ‘New Americans’

Keystone Town Hall March 13

Keystone Town Hall March 13 — The next Keystone Town Hall is, 7 p.m., March 13, in the amphitheater of the Desmond Hotel, 1 Liberty Blvd., Malvern, Pa. 19355.

The amphitheater is on the third floor.

Keystone Town Hall March 13

Republican is the only form William Lawrence Sr Cryptowit 3-6-24

Republican is the only form William Lawrence Sr Cryptowit 3-6-24

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Republican is the only form William Lawrence Sr Cryptowit 3-7-18 Sing ye to the Lord a new canticle: sing to the Lord, all the earth. Sing ye to the Lord and bless his name: shew forth his salvation from day to day. Psalms

Answer to yesterday‘s William Lawrence Sr Cryptowit quote puzzle: The republican is the only form of government which is not eternally at open or secret war with the rights of mankind.
Thomas Jefferson

 

Closed Hospitals To House Illegals In Delco?

Closed Hospitals To House Illegals In Delco? — A couple weeks ago we reported on a story going around that Gov. Josh Shapiro will close some Penn State satellite campuses to house illegals.

Chuckles Sports is now saying that Delaware County Pa.’s shuttered hospitals — Delaware County Memorial Hospital in Upper Darby and Springfield Hospital — will now be used to house illegals.

What does Delaware County Council say about this?

In other news, Pennsylvania Secretary of State Al Schmidt gave a warning to those concerned about election transparency and integrity.

“In recent years, we’ve seen bad-faith actors attempt to exploit these changes by spreading lies and baseless conspiracy theories, and attempting to delegitimize our safe, secure, and accurate elections,” Schmidt said in a statement Feb. 29. He noted that the Shapiro administration has created a task force to “combat this dangerous misinformation and continue providing all eligible voters with accurate, trusted election information.”

Hey Al, why not just let counties audit their voting machines as they see fit?

UPDATE: Just saw a letter from Delaware County Councilwoman Christine Reuther where she says Chuckles Sports is spreading a “paranoid fantasy” and that she has “literally no idea” as to what the concerned citizen is “talking about.”

She then pointed out that “the county does not control those properties.”

Hey Christine, maybe you should make a few phone calls and get an idea before you give a knee jerk response.

Our hope is that you are right and that it is a paranoid fantasy.

On the other hand, it was our hope you were going to come through after expressing what we thought was sincere sympathy to the moms suffering at the capricious hands of Children and Youth Services.

Our hope certainly didn’t pan out there, did it?

Closed Hospitals To House Illegals In Delco

Closed Hospitals To House Illegals In Delco

Does Cheyney University Have A Future?

Does Cheyney University Have A Future?

By Bob Small

Nicole Rayfield sued Cheyney University in September 2019 a lawsuit alleging she was fired as retaliation for being a whistleblower. She said the Pennsylvania state system university misused federal funding and awarded full scholarships to undeserving students among other things.

The case has been settled and the terms are undisclosed. Ms. Rayfield is not the only one to have won a case against Cheyney.

Cheyney, in Delaware County, was founded in 1837 by Abolitionist Quakers. It is the nation’s oldest historically Black university.

Robert Bogle, president of The Philadelphia Tribune, which carried the article linked in the first paragraph is a Cheyney graduate and chairs the university’s Council of Trustees.

The Middle States Accreditation Commission put Cheyney on probation on 2015 for numerous failures, including failure to balance it’s budget.

Though it’s accreditation was renewed in 2019, it was put on accreditation probation in November.

Enrollment, however, has increased from 470 in 2018 to 700.

Cheyney University administrators are again battling to regain accreditation.

Governor Josh Shapiro is backing them. He says that that the Middle States Commission made “a hasty decision” and showed “disregard of established procedure.”

The state has agreed to forgive taxpayer loans to Cheyney.

Democratic Vincent Hughes, who chairs the State Senate Appropriations Committee, says “There’s always something hovering around to try to get this university.”

Save the Oldest HBCU is being formed by alumni.

Among the more well-known alumni, are Ed Bradley of 60 minutes, Octavius Catto, NFL Player and college/NFL Coach (Eagles) William “Billy” Joe , and civil rights icon Bayard Rustin.

Cheyney gave up its football program in 2017, and the men’s and women’s basketball teams now play an independent schedule. The men’s team went 9-18 in 2023-4 and the women went 9-15.

The Pennsylvania state system of higher education recently merged a number of their schools, due to financial problems and Cabrini University is scheduled to close at the end of this school year, so these are hard times for many Pennsylvania colleges and universities.

Does Cheyney University Have A Future?

Does Cheyney University Have A Future?