Wednesday, December 31, 2008
Auld Lang Syne - Goodbye, 2008!
Empty Bins

Take a long look at these two bins, because you'll be seeing them at future board meetings and events.
When I got home last night, I filled one bin with food for the Sardinia Food Bank/Baptist Church:

and another with coats, shoes and some random toddler toys for the Trading Post in Springville:

Earlier this week I went on a blitz of errands, and made a stop at the Amvets store up in West Seneca. There, I went a little bit nuts and loaded up with the warmest kids coats I saw and what was left of the hats. Total cost? About $20.
I hope to drop each off early in the new year - which starts tomorrow!
Tuesday, December 30, 2008
On Fire Service Awards
I originally had this comment towards the end of this writing, but I suppose I'll put it up front, in the hopes of tempering any anger my opinion might produce.
With my comments, I am in no way saying that volunteer firefighting isn't a good thing. It's a noble cause and should be genuinely recognized as such. Given the limited information I've garnered, a service award isn't the right way to do it. Not for this Town and not in this Time.
From the minutes: "to do away with the program, once it is approved by the voters, it would take another voter referendum, and any changes to the program must also go to a referendum, except for increases or decreases in membership, which is just funded by the annual Town
Budget with either an tax increase or a budget surplus."
Ok - so once it's in place, it'll be in place forever. If the membership rolls rocket up and nearly double from 44 members to 75 (the maximum), the Town - YOU - will pay for it.
Will this program be a carrot with which to attract and retain fire company members? Let's step back a bit and ask the question, does the town have a problem attracting and retaining members? If that's the case, could the Fire Company take some intermediate steps to recruit members?
I'm not great with numbers, so I won't even try to put in numerical terms how many hundreds and hundreds of thousands of Town dollars this program will cost you, your children and your grandchildren. What I will say is that the United States is facing the worst economic downturn in the history of history, and 2009 will not be a good year, financially, for most people. Layoffs and furloughs are already happening. There are entire industries that will not around at the end of 2009. There are people who have jobs today who will not have jobs in a month. I hope I'm wrong, but there are economic indicators that are saying I'm being too optimistic.
The Town of Sardinia is sitting on a literal gold mine with its reserve capital, and to expend those funds into something that will have next-to-zero economic benefit for the town and its people is reckless and wrong. It's wrong. We should be taking some of those ideas from the community meeting in November to figure out how to support local business, energize individual people to invest in the Town, and to muddle through what promises to be a wild economic ride in the near-future. How can we make those dollars work so that a one-dollar expenditure from the reserves produces a three-fold or ten-fold economic benefit? I honestly don't care that this program has been researched for a year or ten years. An ill-conceived notion is still ill-conceived.
I will continue.
The previous public "hearing" on the Award Program consisted of a Fourth-of-July-weekend meeting where, according to the minutes, the only people in attendance were:
Present:
Councilman Ann M. Bean
Councilman Heather M. Phelps
Councilman Norman J. Uhteg
Supervisor Kathleen M. Balus
Absent:
Councilman Ronald L. Kenyon
Also Present:
Damien Ulatowski of Firefighters Benefit & Insurance Services
Donald Brooks of Tomkins Insurance Agencies
Town Clerk Betsy A. Marsh
9 Fire Company Members
An informational meeting consisting of elected officials (including 2 who will directly benefit from this program) + insurance agents (who will directly benefit from this program) + fire company members (who will directly benefit from this program) might equal a fair and open hearing in some alternative universe, or maybe in Stalinist Russia, but not in Sardinia in 2008. Setting aside, for a moment, the General Municipal Law that says it's ok for board members with a financial stake in an Award Program to vote on it, does anyone else see something wrong with this? Just because something is legal doesn't make it right.
A special election for this referendum will cost the Town money. That on its own is not a reason to not have a referendum, but it should make us sit back and consider holding it until the regular November election.
To conclude, questions that should be considered and answered.
- Is the Fire Company willing to have a portion of their financial reserves applied to this program?
- Where is a public record of the Fire Company's finances? Has one been done?
- Does the Town or the Fire Company have projections for membership over the next 10-20 years?
- Has the Town set an "entitlement age" (between 55 and 65 years)? How will this affect membership and payment projections?
- Are service award payments considered taxable income?
- Will the "point system" be audited by any external source? Will that be paid for by the Town? Or will fire fighters self-report their "points"?
- What payments can sitting board members (or their families) expect to receive?
I concede that there are other questions that should be asked. I expect none of these questions to be answered tonight. I expect all of them to be answered by the time a referendum is held.
A "Thinking" Site
I agreed with the tone and content of this comment much more than the previous anonymous comment, so I will be more friendly in my response. Again, my playground.
I don't plan to "yank" any submitted content. I haven't so far! I may choose not to post things that are emailed to me. I may choose to mock and refute comments. But I think I'd only "yank" something that is abusive, threatening, or posted in error.
To hear that this is a "thinking" site - that's flattering! I'd just have a minor quibble that there are two sides to every issue - I tend to think that there are many more than two sides, and none is perfect. I think if the "two sides" actually came together more often, they'd find that they had more in common than they realize.
My Playground, My Rules, and Ad Hominem Arguments
I do control the subject matter on this blog; I was actually "in" to blogs as early as 2002, and it was the focus of my master's thesis, so I take the editorial control of this site quite seriously. And since it's my playground, we play by my rules. I absolutely invite external input, but with some strong caveats. If a person wants to say something, the main way to be taken seriously is to attach one's name to those opinions. I'm not going to open this site up to anonymous screeds (in the main blog posts). I'm not going to permit anonymous attacks.
Let's pause, for a second, to discuss what an Ad Homimen argument is. Wikipedia aptly defines such an argument as:
attacking or appealing to a characteristic or belief of the person making the argument or claim, rather than by addressing the substance of the argument or producing evidence against the claim.
The assertion I have a "Johnny come lately" attitude seems, on its face, to be a classic (anonymous) Ad Hominem argument. Rather than having to mount up (anonymous) rationales as to why I'm wrong, it's so much easier to just claim that I haven't been around, so my opinions count for nothing. When left unrecognized, Ad Hominem arguments can be quite effective. I'd like to turn that (anonymous) argument around by saying, there is no better way to stifle the involvement of individuals in a community than to say "you haven't been around, so don't even bother." I sincerely hope that is not your (anonymous) intent.
As for my writing style, including referring to Springville as the 'Ville - how in the name of grilled cheese could that leave anyone on edge? My comment that I wish I had taken notes on the community forum - it IS as if it never happened. We're 2 months out and the only idea that's being acted on for Sardinia's funding reserves is the Fire Service Award (more on that later).
Frankly, anonymous comments like yours, Mr. or Mrs. Anonymous, make me on edge.
Monday, December 29, 2008
Vegetables and more for the Sardinia Food Bank
The Sardinia Food Bank at the Baptist Church is in need of canned vegetables - peas, green beans, baked beans - plus items like hamburger helper and spaghetti-o's (which, really, are kind of gross, but they do taste delicious).
The Trading Post in the 'Ville is always looking for baby formula, baby food, canned goods, boxed pasta.
Since our family came home a bit earlier than I thought, I plan to be at tomorrow night's end-of-year meeting at 7 p.m. (December 30). I'll have a bin or two with me for food collection as an early toe-in-the-water to see what the response will be. With the holidays and all, I'm not sure how many people will be attending! Right now I'm off to the store to pick up some groceries!
Thursday, December 25, 2008
Merry Christmas, Sardinia!
Monday, December 22, 2008
Any ideas about the community forum ideas?
Sunday, December 21, 2008
Food Needed: Trading Post
Friday, December 19, 2008
Buffalo Pundit & New NYS Taxes
Thursday, December 18, 2008
End of Year Board Meeting: December 30
George Bush Plans to Write a Book
Wednesday, December 17, 2008
Civics Test
Tuesday, December 16, 2008
Southtowns Agriculture
With a $10,000 federal grant and help from the University at Buffalo Regional Institute, the Southtowns Agribusiness project is looking for ways the rural region could boost revenue and jobs. . . . The project is funded by the Sustainable Agriculture Research and Education program, an arm of the U. S. Department of Agriculture.
Monday, December 15, 2008
Chaffee-Sardinia Kiwanis Club
Next Town Board Meeting: January 14, 2009
Saturday, December 13, 2008
Town of Sardinia on Google Maps
Friday, December 12, 2008
Food at Board Meetings?
Oh, Christmas Tree

It's the Giving Season
Thursday, December 11, 2008
An Official Web Site for the Town of Sardinia
Notes from December 10 Town Board Meeting
Wednesday, December 10, 2008
Subscribe by Email to TownOfSardinia.blogspot.com
Monday, December 8, 2008
Town of Sardinia Board Meeting: December 10
Monday, December 1, 2008
Overdrive - Buffalo Library Resources
Friday, November 21, 2008
A Chapter of Sardinia's History
Wednesday, November 19, 2008
A Wild Idea on Municipal Energy
Tuesday, November 18, 2008
Good Ideas for Sardinia?
Thursday, November 13, 2008
Senior Thanksgiving Dinner Set for November 18 at the Hearth
Planning Board Meetings, November 19 and December 3
I have no idea where, but the Town Hall main number should be able to connect you with that information (716-496-8900).