Footage — and a live webcam of the cubs’ den, available at Wildlife Research Foundation.
Monthly Archives: January 2012
Local Government, Official Misconduct, Police
The Dismissal of Palmyra’s Police Chief, Charles Warren
by JOHN ADAMS •
Last week, Palmyra’s Police Commission, on a 2-1 vote, fired Chief Charles Warren. Warren had been police chief of the village’s force for five years. Both the Milwaukee Journal Sentinel and Jefferson County Daily Union reported on Warren’s dismissal.
The Police Commission action followed an autumn hearing on the complaint of Gary Byers, a village resident and former Milwaukee police detective. The complaint alleging misconduct concerned Warren’s handling of a marijuana case, an accidental overdose case, and a child enticement case.
Warren’s attorney, Paul Bucher, has threatened further action.
A few observations:
Dismissal is rare. Few officers, let alone leaders, are dismissed. (The vogue term is to call police leaders part of the ‘command staff,’ but Palmyra’s very small, and no town in Wisconsin is anything like the Pentagon or a fighting front, in any event.)
Real oversight is rare. Most people, on most police commissions, in most places, mean well. But, few get their positions because they’re actual watchdogs. They get their jobs because they’re supportive, so supportive that they boost rather than scrutinize. Really, a solid chief should be able to get by without maneuvering sycophants onto a police commission, but the weaker the chief, the more important stacking the deck becomes.
In particularly bad situations, chief and commissioners will pat each other on the back, and issue mutually supportive and congratulatory declarations as often as they can. Leaders shouldn’t need these things, and commissioners shouldn’t seek them, but mediocrity invites a treacly neediness for a circle of praise.
Is Warren’s dismissal the proper exercise of oversight? I don’t know. Two of the cases are less serious than the accusations of possible child enticement in the third. I do know that the published accounts to which I have linked describe decisions and actions probably similar to those in dozens of other Wisconsin towns.
(Palmyra, one reads, doesn’t have written procedures for some of the situations described in the complaint against Warren. Palmyra is not alone, among Wisconsin towns & villages, in that regard.)
An officer or chief could be culpable of misconduct even apart from written guidelines; my point is that if Warren should be so, many others have been, too.
Does Warren’s dismissal help or hurt the cause of oversight, generally? By itself, this case is so rare that it will gain attention, but probably make no lasting impression on the state. So few commissions address discipline of officers or leaders that many police commissioners in Wisconsin probably cannot imagine any disciplinary hearing of any kind (let alone one involving possible dismissal).
Commissioners typically play no role in discipline, and learn only about it only in a pro forma way (if they learn at all). Wisconsin law allows commissioners in cities disciplinary authority (Wis. Stat. 62.13(5)); they seldom exercise it.
Commissioners across Wisconsin have probably heard about this case and either see it as proof of a very poor leader or a very loose, ill-controlled commission.
What happens next? It all depends on what Warren, through his attorney, wants. Does the chief want a settlement of some sort, or does he really want a day in court (not as a prospect to force a settlement, but for its own sake)?
There’s more ahead, but how much more depends on how practical the parties are.
Music
The Roches: The Train
by JOHN ADAMS •
For a reader who rides the commuter rails each day, here’s a song from the Roches:
Daily Bread
Daily Bread for 1.31.12
by JOHN ADAMS •
Good morning.
A partly sunny day, with an unseasonably warm temperature of fifty-four, awaits Whitewater. In Lawrence, Kansas, it will be drizzling and fifty-nine today.
On this day in 1865, the House of Representative passed a constitutional amendment abolishing slavery:
…when the presiding officer announced that the resolution was agreed to by yeas 119, nays 56, the enthusiasm of all present, save a few disappointed politicians, knew no bounds, and for several moments the scene was grand and impressive beyond description. No attempt was made to suppress the applause which came from all sides, every one feeling that the occasion justified the fullest expression of approbation and joy….
On the day of Florida’s presidential primary, Google’s daily puzzle asks a question about that state’s electoral history: “Did Florida vote for the last elected U.S. president who was neither a Democrat nor a Republican?”
With a hat tip to the Huffington Post for the link, here’s a happy video to start the day — a snoring dormouse, with accompanying descriptive text:
Don’t worry, he’s okay! He’s just sleeping.
He’s a dormouse. Dormice hibernate in the winter in nests that they make hidden away on the ground. In Britain the dormouse may spend up to a third of its life in hibernation. Dormice usually enter hibernation at the time of the first frost, when nearly all food is gone. Dormice rely upon fat reserves gathered in the summer and autumn, and during hibernation they lose about a quarter of their body weight.
Surrey Wildlife Trust Mammal Project Officer, Dave Williams, took this lovely footage of a dormouse in torpor (hibernation).
Help them protect our endangered dormice and other wildlife by giving a donation. Click here: http://bit.ly/AfDNLk
Or, consider adopting one: http://bit.ly/zxOnTN
For more information visit
http://www.surreywildlifetrust.org/conservation/projects/8They don’t normally snore like this, but don’t worry. This one was fine really and in expert hands. He was only briefly removed from his nest to be weighed and check he has enough fat reserves to sleep on safely through until spring.
Food, Restaurant
Wisconsin Foodie: Dave Swanson of Milwaukee’s Braise and Gordon Edgar, author of Cheesemonger: A Life on the Wedge
by JOHN ADAMS •
Watch Braise Restaurant, Chef David Swanson and Gordon Edgar on PBS. See more from Wisconsin Foodie.
Business
What are the Biggest Challenges on Main Street?
by JOHN ADAMS •
No surprise, in a list of over ten, what’s the first: “Dealing with Regulations.”
See, Small-Business Outlook: What Are The Biggest Challenges On Main Street?
Daily Bread
Daily Bread for 1.30.12
by JOHN ADAMS •
Good morning.
Whitewater will have a mostly sunny Monday, with a high temperature of thirty-nine; in Tallahassee, it’s a sunny day, with a high of sixty-seven, before tomorrow’s primary.
Whitewater’s Community Development Authority will meet today, at 4:30 PM. These last years have been difficult for the CDA, and a wrong direction over several years makes finding a way forward hard:
Possible direction regarding CDA Director position and hiring process.
The Board requested that Brunner and Knight facilitate a meeting with Bud Gayhart, Dennis Heling, Mike Van den Bosch and Kristin Fish of Redevelopment Resources to discuss the CDA Director position and related responsibilities. In addition, the Board requested that all candidates for the position that have previously applied be informed that the CDA is taking no action and has decided to reopen the recruitment selection process and will be announcing how that process will take place over the next several weeks.
There’s no surprise in this: a long-enduring, bad relationship leaves one unable to identify a good one.
Here’s Google’s puzzle for today: “What is an English match for a German Ritter or French chevalier?”
Military
Elkhorn World War II veteran, 91, gets Bronze Star 50 years later
by JOHN ADAMS •
A 91-year-old World War II veteran gets a Kindle reader for Christmas, reads a book his daughter has loaded into it and learns he is a Bronze Star recipient….
Congratulations and many thanks, Ken Quinlan.
Via Janesville Gazette.
Cartoons & Comics
Sunday Morning Cartoon: Soccer Scene from Bedknobs and Broomsticks
by JOHN ADAMS •
Public Meetings
WW: Zoning Code Rewrite Committee
by JOHN ADAMS •
Public Meetings
WW: Landmarks Commission
by JOHN ADAMS •
Public Meetings
WW: CDA Board Meeting
by JOHN ADAMS •
Food
Chicken Nuggets: How Bad Are They?
by JOHN ADAMS •
If you have to ask the question…
Cats, Crime
FBI: Illinois Suspect Planned to Electrocute Wealthy Man, Blame Murder on Cat
by JOHN ADAMS •
Outrageous:
EAST ST. LOUIS, Ill. — Federal investigators helped by a conscientious paroled killer say they foiled a plot to abduct, extort and electrocute a wealthy man in a scheme they say borrowed elements from a television show and sought to blame the killing on the planned victims cat….
According to an affidavit, one plan [suspect Brett] Nash explored involved forcing the intended victim into a hot tub and electrocuting him with a radio tossed into the water – followed by kitty litter that Nash thought would prompt authorities to believe the animal was the culprit in the killing.
Via Huffington Post.