Stan Robison's that lawyer, sans pink slip from Glorious Leader. |
It has been almost nine months since New Albany's Human Rights Commission made a feeble blip on the city's radar screen.
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(January 19, 2017)
Gee, CM Phipps, we're mystified as to why the New Albany Human Rights Commission is moribund.
During the appointments phase of this evening's city council meeting, President Pat McLaughlin (4th District) asked Greg Phipps (3rd District) about the council appointments status of the Human Rights Commission.
According to the ordinance, council and mayor each appoint members to the HRC, and then the four pick the fifth.
Phipps waved him off, briefly indicating that the HRC seems dead, with no meetings for the past 18 months and no apparent interest. McLaughlin was more than happy to move to the next commission, and that's all we know. It isn't much.
I won't go into the lengthy and exceedingly futile history of the HRC's most recent incarnation, though almost exactly five years ago, we thanked Phipps for taking an interest.
Kudos to CM Phipps for making the Human Rights Commission's revival a priority.
Subsequently, perhaps no other single topic better illustrates the doctrine of Civic Gahanism than the history of our reconstituted Human Rights Commission:
Fundamental change is imperative, so long as nothing fundamentally changes.
Here's a short summary from 2015.
It was never Jeff Gahan's idea to enable a human rights commission, but in the grand scheme of political maneuvering, there was sufficient support that he acquiesced, pausing only to be assured that he'd receive credit for the sham he at first opposed, and would extract payback chits from those duly assuaged, redeemable for bonded boondoggles down the road.
Consequently, New Albany was gifted with vintage Gahan intellectual infrastructure: An entity neutered and defanged at birth, suitable primarily for posturing and press releases. The sycophants were delighted, and so little of merit occurred (for once, actually by design) that a whole other entity (Southern Indiana Equality) was privately created.
If you can find anything in this story to suggest a vote to re-elect Jeff Gahan, please let me know. While you're pondering this, consider yet again the "human rights mayor's" abysmal record in matters such as ... well, human rights.
Also from 2015:
Often in these pages, we advocate the notion of progress by design, and since 2012, New Albany has possessed a reconstituted Human Rights Commission. Since it was formed again and duly stocked with appointees, it has had very little to do, not because New Albany is a fundamentally functional utopia of tolerance and good sense, but because City Hall's evident design for the HRC has been that it remain unused -- reserved for show and public relations pronouncements, while kept hermetically sealed and out of controversy's way.
This has disgusted me from day one, and continues to do so. It implies that "quality of life" derives solely from capital intensive building projects, and has nothing to do with fundamental human dignity. It is both cynical and cowardly to first enable a Human Rights Commission, then render it caged and impotent.
My most recent reprinting of the following column on the topic of the Human Rights Commission was on March 21, 2011. The column itself was written in 2009. Ironically, as I read the final paragraphs, there is considerable irony. We certainly did determine that the members of New Albany's political class could vote "for" something.
Unfortunately, they seem to be content with form over content. This needs to change.
The HRC was reformed, then immediately stripped of working parts and left to rest atop blocks in City Hall's dustiest file cabinet. This was fine with the mayor, who never wanted it to be viable, anyway, and was perfectly content to accept the plaudits for a commitment to human rights that he doesn't possess in any discernible way, shape or form.
If Gahan, a self-described Democrat, did in fact possess such a commitment to human rights, chances are he wouldn't be telling people that the best solution to the housing "project" is to demolish it and ship housing authority residents to the county somewhere, perhaps in tent camps, as though he were speaking of toxic waste or cordwood and not human beings.
But in the end, the saddest cut of all is that Phipps, who has danced the limbo to Adam Dickey's increasingly discordant Democratic tune, went along with this shell game from the very start, garnering his own participation trophies and gold stars, and accepting a non-functional Potemkin facade of an institution as quid pro quo for rubber-stamping every one of Gahan's TIF bond and "quality of life" over-expenditures that crossed his desk.
It's a damned shame.
Gahan's done nothing for Phipps. Neither has the Democratic Party. Perhaps independence is the only true way for a New Albanian to preserve even a semblance of integrity amid the chicanery, dullness and corruption taken for granted by the big fish here in this tiny bird feeder of a town.
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Let's summarize the current situation.
The revised, updated and currently moribund human rights ordinance was the work of the city's non-corporate attorney at the time, Stan Robison, who based it on an existing ordinance in Bloomington.
The commission formed to oversee the ordinance -- to educate and hear cases stemming from complaints about violations -- was emasculated from the start via a handy mechanism for all potential activity being shunted first to one or the other city attorneys.
The HRC was built for show, and in truth, it was unable to achieve even this in spite of the efforts of well-meaning commission members like Brad Bell, who saw the rot almost from the start and jumped a hamstrung ship to try his hand at an autonomous organization called Southern Indiana Equality -- which lasted two years and recently was disbanded.
In 2017 Robison, the architect of the subsequently neutered human rights ordinance, was appointed to the public housing board when Jeff Gahan packed it with bootlickers and sycophants willing and eager to implement the mayor's annexation of public housing properties for future luxury, and the necessary expulsion of hundreds of residents in the absence of a viable plan to shelter them.
When asked about the public housing putsch, Phipps the human rights campaigner has replied (in effect) that is no business of his.
Phipps' purportedly "Democratic" party has watched the human rights commission crash and burn, supports Gahan's public housing incursion, and continues to exist in an Adam Disneyesque netherworld of hypocrisy, wherein it is encouraged to criticize a Republican mayor in Charlestown for doing what a Democratic mayor in New Albany is doing even when the party's two best hopes for 9th district Congress surely know better.
The Putsch Man Cometh: Jeff Gahan waxes delusional about being a public housing "advocate," then cheerfully explains why he should be summarily deposed in 2019.
Welcome to Jeff Gahan's perfect Come to City: Human rights ordinances aren't worth the digital ink it takes to spell the word "deleted," while David Duggins, Stan Robison and Bob Norwood are in control of peoples' lives.
I'll stick with this meme from my 2015 campaign.
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