NAVIGATION
|
Your New Scoop SiteWelcome to Scoop! To help you figure things out, there is a Scoop Admin Guide which can hopefully answer most of your questions. Some tips:
For support, questions, and general help with Scoop, email support@scoophost.com ScoopHost.com is currently running Scoop version Undeterminable from . |
Tag: DPS (page 3)By Nick, Section News
Bad decisions all around. Unfortunate decisions. Expensive decisions. Decisions we all wish hadn't been made. Whether it's paying workers who don't do anything, firing workers who do or letting dangerous, psychopathic murderers out onto the street with nothing better than an "oops" to explain it the political leadership in Detroit, the Granholm-Cherry administration and the Obama administration suddenly find themselves on one heck of a collective roll.
Let's start with the "municipality" and work out way up, shall we? We learn today that the Detroit Public Schools, long a paragon of Lefty administrative virtue, have 257 "ghosts" on the payroll. According to the Ivory Tower these are folks who are pulling down major bank but aren't even supposed to be on the payroll. The local public school bureaucracy is so wasteful of taxpayer dollars they don't even demand a lick of work to get them.
Robert Bobb, DPS' state-appointed emergency financial manager, also said an audit has begun to determine if employees have unapproved health care dependents that are running up costs. Probably important, too, that we don't blame this entirely on the bureaucracy. That means there are 257 individuals who at one time or another were entrusted with the education of Detroit kids whose integrity was so poor they continued cashing the checks they knew they hadn't earned. DPS might want to audit their character assessment and their hiring practices next. And they're not the only ones. As frustrating as a chronically bungled payroll can be it isn't nearly as dangerous as the mistake the Granholm-Cherry administration made this week when they took a convicted murderer who'd wracked up 124 "major misconducts" since entering prison, took him out of jail and dropped him off at his grandfather's house without medication. Because that sounds like a safe thing to do. Read on... (610 words in story) Full Story By Nick, Section News
On the upside, the Final Four is in Detroit this weekend. Saturday at 6:07 PM they jump the ball in the first battle, between the Michigan State Spartans and the Connecticut Huskies.
And while the Green and White make their way to Ford Field,Jay Cutler won't be, which is also good news, because now I won't have to hate the Lions like I suddenly hate the Bears. (Kyle Orton and a couple of mediocre draft picks? Seriously?) That's the good news, and folks from out-of-state who stumbled onto this website in advance of your trip to the big game should just skip ahead to the next story on the page. Because to whatever extent the rest of Detroit remains a secret to the average non-Michigander, we'd probably all be better served to preserve that naiveté. The rest of the picture isn't pretty and it just keeps getting creepier. Worse, uglier, sure, between the record shattering unemployment, the stubborn refusal to vote for change and the mayoral candidates who sound like everyone else from the last fifty years there are a lot of adjectives we could use, but "creepy" fits this morning's news best. Read on... (5 comments, 756 words in story) Full Story By Theblogprof, Section News
cross-posted at thblogprof
This is a non-shocking shocking story from the annals of the Detroit Public School System. A system, mind you, that puts politics ahead of the kids. I wrote a post a few days ago that had this snippet: Duncan (Education Secretary) also criticized the area's leaders for putting politics ahead of kidsCase-in-point, a Detroit News piece today with this headline: Teacher corps could reverse Michigan's brain drain. The article begins with the personal story of one Katy Kelly, a top graduate of <span class="blsp-spelling-error" id="SPELLING_ERROR_0">MSU</span> who, instead of leaving the state for greener pastures, decided to make a difference in Detroit Public Schools. She signed up to serve in Teach for America in Detroit, a voluntary program that is dramatically improving the teaching quality in some of America's poorest classrooms. These teachers are trained to raise their students' achievement levels to suburban school levels. Detroit, one of America's worst school districts, welcomed her with flowers and hugs, right?You can see what's coming next: The Detroit Public Schools' response was: We don't want you. (642 words in story) Full Story By Theblogprof, Section News
(Promoted by Nick...)
Cross-posted at theblogprof (929 words in story) Full Story By Nick, Section News
If there was one thing I took away from the Governor's State of the State address a few nights ago it was that the woman is completely and utterly tone deaf, unable to hear the fading pulse of state that's been on life support since the moment she first took the oath in 2003.
But if I took two things away from the speech, the second would be that the Gov's fancy new programs each have disaster written all over them. Now, a day or two after delivering the critically panned performance she's back to the drawing board offering even more suggestions the people of Michigan would be better off ignoring. Lets start, though, with the originals and head over to the Ivory Tower which investigates the woman's populist assertion that universities should freeze tuition, lest they incur her unending wrath. Turns out, those kinds of threats really won't do much to help the relatively few Michigan students sticking around after high school.
A short-term freeze, they also note, would not address long-term problems such as rising health care costs that fuel the rising cost of a degree.
"The reality is that tuition freezes are not permanent," said Sandy Baum, a senior economist with the College Board, a national group that manages standardized testing and analyzes issues related to higher education. "If tuition is frozen one year, you're going to have to make up for it two or three years later." In other words, the woman is passing the buck. If you sit down and think about it for a moment, it's a masterful move and makes perfect sense based on her track record. The woman has made a career, literally, out of criticizing John Engler and moves that created the top economy in the United States for much of the 1990s. Somehow every problem she encountered for the first six years in office were THAT man's fault, not hers. It was always HIS administration. HIS policies. HIS legacy. She was just fighting upstream and incapable of overcoming what he'd done. Never mind the tacit admission that one Governor, Engler, was somehow powerful and able enough to create policy that altered the state of the economy for decades while another, Granholm herself, remains entirely devoid of any skill, power or ability to do so much as dent her predecessor's momentum... that's beside the point and far too nuanced for the random political observer. It was HIS fault. That's all that matters. Now, with fewer than two years left before riding off into that Hollywood / Lobbyist sunset that so clearly calls to her, she's attempting to plant legislative landmines that will only be tripped after she leaves office. Try to make things a little less ugly while she's stuck with us and then wait for the next guy to blow himself up on her hidden time bombs. HIS fault, not hers. Read on... (2 comments, 1034 words in story) Full Story
|
External FeedsMetro/State News RSS from The Detroit News+ Craig: Cushingberry tried twice to elude police, was given preferential treatment + Detroit police arrest man suspected of burning women with blowtorch + Fouts rips video as 'scurrilous,' defends Chicago trip with secretary + Wind, winter weather hammer state from Mackinac Bridge to southeast Mich. + Detroit Cass Tech QB Campbell expected to be released from custody Friday + New water rates range from -16% to +14%; see change by community + Detroit's bankruptcy gets controversial turn in new Honda ad + Royal Oak Twp., Highland Park in financial emergency, review panels find + Grosse Ile Twp. leads list of Michigan's 10 safest cities + Wayne Co. sex crimes backlog grows after funding feud idles Internet Crime Unit + Judge upholds 41-60 year sentence of man guilty in Detroit firefighter's death + Detroit man robbed, shot in alley on west side + Fire at Detroit motel forces evacuation of guests + Survivors recount Syrian war toll at Bloomfield Hills event + Blacks slain in Michigan at 3rd-highest rate in US Politics RSS from The Detroit News + Apologetic Agema admits errors but won't resign + Snyder: Reform 'dumb' rules to allow more immigrants to work in Detroit + GOP leaders shorten presidential nominating season + Dems: Another 12,600 Michiganians lose extended jobless benefits + Mike Huckabee's comments on birth control gift for Dems + Granholm to co-chair pro-Clinton PAC for president + Republican panel approves tougher penalties for unauthorized early primary states + Michigan seeks visas to lure immigrants to Detroit + Peters raises $1M-plus for third straight quarter in Senate bid + Bill would let lawyers opt out of Michigan state bar + Michigan lawmakers launch more bills against sex trade + Balanced budget amendment initiative gets a jumpstart + Feds subpoena Christie's campaign, GOP + Poll: At Obama's 5-year point, few see a turnaround + Obama to release 2015 budget March 4 Front Page
Sunday January 19th
Saturday January 18th
Friday January 17th
Thursday January 16th
Tuesday January 14th
|