Sunday, June 06, 2021

City of Mesa Reveals Positive Results of A Snap Telephone Survey They Commissioned

> More than 800 Mesa residents across all city ZIP codes participated in the non-partisan live-telephone survey commissioned by the Mesa Police Department and conducted between Feb. 22 and March 8, 2021
BLOG INSERT > This was an item in a Mesa City Council Study Session @ 07:30 Monday June3, 2021  
THE FINDINGS IN A CITIZEN SURVEY ON POLICING AND COMMUNITY SAFETY
Conducted by ASU's Morrison Institute for Public Policy
21-0637 2-aPresentationHear a presentation and discuss the findings of a citizen survey conducted by ASU’s Morrison Institute for Public Policy on policing and community safety in Mesa
14x03 eavesdropping marge simpson GIF - Find on GIFER
> The survey found that nearly 69 percent of respondents are satisfied with the Mesa Police Department, while less than 10 percent expressed disapproval.
> The study seeks to help the Mesa Police Department understand current perceptions of policing in the community.
Survey GIFs - Get the best GIF on GIPHY
> Of the survey respondents who had interactions with the Mesa Police Department, nearly two-thirds said their experiences with the agency were positive, while an overwhelming 95 percent said officers sufficiently explained their actions.
 
____________________________________________________________________________________-
11x03 survey trabajo GIF - Find on GIFER 
 

Independent Survey: Mesa Residents Feel Safe and Have a Positive Perception of Police Department

June 3, 2021 at 9:08 am
The results of an independent survey conducted by Arizona State University’s Morrison Institute for Public Policy, reveal that Mesa residents feel safe, protected, and maintain positive relationships with their police department

======================================

RELATED CONTENT ON THIS BLOG

02 June 2021

Final Agenda: Remote Zoom STUDY SESSION Mesa City Council Thu 06.03.2021 at 07:30 a.m.

Something was added - in addition to the 35 items already on the previously printed and published Tentative Agenda in advance of one more study session before the regular council meeting for Monday, June 7, 2021 at 5:45 p.m.
THE FINDINGS IN A CITIZEN SURVEY ON POLICING AND COMMUNITY SAFETY
Conducted by ASU's Morrison Institute for Public Policy
Here are the usual questions that are asked about the conduct of surveys:
1. Is it believable and verifiable and independent when there might be overlapping interests?
    There must be disclosure if there is or has been a relationship in the past or present
2. Is the survey representative and reliable?
    What is the size of the data sample in relation to the entire citizen population?
    What method was used for contact, how was it done, and during what time period?
3. The questions asked must be free of taint and/or not intended to produce a desired outcome
4. Would the same results be duplicated in an independent and objective survey by a 3rd party?
_________________________________________________________________________
 

Screen Time for U.S. Jobs Data Report: A "Good Job" Should Get You Out of Poverty, NOT Keep You In it

This is the first in a new monthly series on the U.S. Economy that is forthcoming in the 200-year old The Guardian, filled with excellent visuals to illustrate the details

The truth behind the US jobs figures – a visual guide

Government data shows unemployment rates for many groups remain high, even as post-pandemic hiring picks up

 
Empty cubicles, with trace of unemployment rate graph overlaid.
(Photograph: Guardian Design)
 
"The coronavirus pandemic sparked one of the deepest, and strangest, downturns in employment in US history. On Friday, the Bureau of Labor Statistics said the US had added another 559,000 jobs in May, and the unemployment rate had fallen to 5.8% – a dramatic drop from its 14.8% high in April last year.
Employers say they are struggling to hire workers, and yet the US is still 7.6m jobs short of where it was before Covid-19 struck. Below, in the first of a monthly series, we take a look at what lies behind the headline figures for the highly influential jobs report.
Here are some selected inserted excerpts that follow - please use the link to the source that is underlined above if the visual graphics don't display in this blog post.
1

Overall unemployment in the US

The nature of the pandemic has highlighted structural inequities in the economy that are reflected in the monthly report. Black and Hispanic workers, for example, suffered the most during the recession, and are still struggling even as other parts of the economy recover.

2

Race and gender groups that are recovering slowly

Younger Americans have also experienced greater incidence of joblessness this May: though unemployment hovered at 4.9% for those 45 and over, it was 5.8 and 10.1% for people between the ages of 25-34 and 20-24, respectively. Those rates have been slow to drop to pre-pandemic levels.

3

The effects of the economic downturn brought on by the pandemic were most dramatic for people with lower levels of educational attainment. One-fifth of all those with less than a high school diploma (including younger people) were unemployed last April, and many have not been re-employed.

Unemployment rates by educational attainment

Many industries also continue to report high levels of unemployment. As has been widely reported, the leisure and hospitality industry was among the most affected. Last April, the shutdown of restaurants, bars and other nightlife brought unemployment to a whopping 39.3%, dropping to 10.1% last month. Other industries that continue to see elevated rates include mining and construction.

Agriculture, which saw seasonal changes in unemployment, is the only group to report a better unemployment rate now (8.2%) than before the lockdowns last year.

4

Americans have yet to experience a full economic recovery, and companies continue to struggle to hire. While some lawmakers have pointed to the possibility of a labor shortage, progressive members of the House of Representatives have emphasized the importance of a more reasonable living wage.

Joe Biden, in his response to the jobs report, spoke with optimism about the continued the success of the American Rescue Plan, and his plans for the future.

 
 

A Worrisome Ultimatum For Two Fellow Democrats From Grant Woods, Arizona Turncoat Republican Who "Switched Parties"

Looks like Grant Woods is taking nothing for granted taking liberties to speak out about who belongs in the U.S. Senate and who doesn't.... that a higher office he himself never attained under his own powers. So who is he trying to bust on now about the filibuster >

Major Kyrsten Sinema Supporter Says Abolish Filibuster Or Get Out Of The Senate

Former Arizona Attorney General Grant Woods prominently backed Sinema, but he says she now needs to support getting rid of the filibuster.

Grant Woods on Twitter: "Proud of our Senator-elect @kyrstensinema. So good  for Arizona.… "

=========================================================================

"Former Arizona Attorney General Grant Woods, who prominently backed Kyrsten Sinema’s election to the Senate, is now saying she doesn’t belong in office anymore unless she helps abolish the filibuster. 

Sen. Kyrsten Sinema (D-Ariz.) has repeatedly said she opposes abolishing the filibuster

<div class=__reading__mode__extracted__imagecaption>
Sen. Kyrsten Sinema (D-Ariz.) has repeatedly said she opposes abolishing the filibuster.&#160;

 

Woods, a former Republican, was attorney general from from 1991-1999 and worked for the late Sen. John McCain (R). In 2018, he switched parties and became a Democrat.

That year, he also endorsed Sinema, and the campaign even featured him in one of its ads saying, “We need more people who are not just politicians who will say or do anything to get elected.” 

But on Friday, Woods was much less enthusiastic about Sinema in comments to HuffPost. He said he feels very strongly about passage of H.R. 1 ― Democrats’ For the People Act, a democracy reform and voting rights bill ― and believes the Senate must abolish the filibuster, which is something Sinema has said she is adamantly against. (Sinema is, however, a co-sponsor of the For the People Act.) 

“I do think that Sen. Sinema and every senator should support ending the filibuster for the voting rights bill,” he said, adding, “To keep the Jim Crow filibuster while losing some of these basic voting rights that are central to our democracy is preposterous.”

“Sen. Sinema should know that, so should Sen. Manchin,” Woods said, referring to West Virginia Democrat Sen. Joe Manchin, who also opposes removing the filibuster. “At the end of the day, I’m very hopeful that they’ll come around and do the right thing. But if they don’t, then I don’t think they belong in the Senate anymore.

Woods had also tweeted his thoughts about the filibuster on Thursday, without directly naming Sinema. 

. . But this week, Sinema reiterated her refusal to abolish the filibuster, which remains a major impediment to passing much of President Joe Biden’s agenda. 

“It is a tool that protects the democracy of our nation,” Sinema said Tuesday in Tucson, at an event with Sen. John Cornyn (R-Texas). “Rather than allowing our country to ricochet wildly every two to four years back and forth between policies, the idea of the filibuster was created by those who came before to create comity and to encourage bipartisanship and work together.” 

But as New York Times columnist Michelle Goldberg noted Friday, Sinema’s history is inaccurate.

“The filibuster was created by mistake when the Senate, cleaning up its rule book in 1806, failed to include a provision to cut off debate. (A so-called cloture rule allowing two-thirds of senators to end a filibuster was adopted in 1917; the proportion was reduced to three-fifths in 1975.) The filibuster encouraged extremism, not comity: It was a favorite tool of pro-slavery senators before the Civil War and segregationists after it,” Goldberg wrote. 

____________________________________________________________________________

Last week, Republicans successfully filibustered their first piece of legislation in the Biden administration. They blocked the formation of a bipartisan independent commission to investigate the Jan. 6 Capitol riot. 

____________________________________________________________________________

Saturday, June 05, 2021

"Sangria on Ice": Is Sinema Changing Her Behavior Lately or Losing Her Substance Sacrificed to Flamboyant Fashion?

One on Arizona's two Democratic U.S. Senators is taking a lot of heat from both sides these days after she got elected straddling the fence with something for everybody in the middle ground of politics. Now they need some one to sting
(When a pink newsboy cap is the least offensive part of your outfit.Photo illustration by Slate. Photo via Kyrsten Sinema/Instagram.)
<div class=__reading__mode__extracted__imagecaption>When a pink newsboy cap is the least offensive part of your outfit.Photo illustration by Slate. Photo via Kyrsten Sinema/Instagram.

Who Is Kyrsten Sinema Telling to F— Off?

Her style has overtaken her substance.

Sen. Kyrsten Sinema spent her Sunday sipping sangria in a pink newsboy cap and a ring that says “Fuck Off.” The Arizona Democrat got someone to take a photo of her, ring proudly displayed in the foreground. Then, she posted the image to her Instagram stories.

Sinema’s outfit, which also included oversized fuchsia glasses and gigantic earrings containing a charm of what appears to be a skull and butterfly, is right in line with her sartorial M.O. The former Congresswoman and first-term senator has long been the flashiest dresser in the Capitol, and during the pandemic, her wardrobe has gotten even weirder.* She’s worn several highlighter-hued wigs on the Senate floor to hide her grown-out dye job as she stayed home from the salon. (According to her spokesperson, the wigs were a reminder to constituents to practice COVID-19 precautions.) In February, she wore a pink sweater emblazoned with the phrase “Dangerous Creature,” a nod to a line from one of romance novelist Lisa Kleypas’ books: “A well-read woman is a dangerous creature.”

I’ve always been a fan of Sinema’s flamboyant getups, which have gotten more daring over the course of her tenure—not because I particularly like the clothes she wears, but simply because they make Congressional fashion a lot more interesting. Her eschewal of the traditional array of solid neutrals and jewel tones, sheath dresses, and conservative pumps would seem to suggest a healthy disregard for fusty, outdated customs—both explicit and implicit—of political dress, which were devised with a certain race, class, and gender of politician in mind. That’s probably the exact interpretation Sinema intended: It supports her self-presentation as an independent-minded outsider, beholden to no party or standard of Congressional dress. One would be forgiven for assuming that a neon-wigged, go-go boot­–clad, “Dangerous Creature”­–wearing senator was a hippie-dippie liberal, but one would be wrong. Sinema’s weirdo wardrobe isn’t an outgrowth of some anything-goes progressive ideology, but rather a matching complement to her weirdo politics, which have drastically changed over the years and don’t seem to coalesce into any discernible, deeply-held ideology at all.

But Sinema’s “Fuck Off” ring marks a new phase of her wardrobe still. The cheeky display is maybe the clearest indication we’ve received of how Sinema views her own role in the Senate this term, especially since she rarely speaks to the national press. Since the Democrats took control of all three branches of government in January, Sinema has relished her new role as one of just a few Democrats standing in the way of an ambitious progressive wish list. While Sen. Joe Manchin has received a possibly outsized share of the attention (and blame) for his near­-singlehanded ability to thwart the Democrats’ plans, Sinema’s relatively moderate politics and obsessive fixation on bipartisanship is equally limiting to her own party’s ability to implement its agenda. That includes a voting rights bill that could counter some of the partisan Republican attacks on the franchise, which would stand no chance of passage in the 50-50 Senate without filibuster reform—a step Sinema has repeatedly said she will not consider.

In this context, Sinema’s ring oozes contempt. When elected officials adopt a posture of mockery toward their critics or constituents, they lose their claim to an image of thoughtful, measured leadership. Sinema is behaving like a drama-seeking celebrity caught in a cycle of clap-backs, not like a senator who has the power to block, or implement, policies that would improve the lives of millions. Her style, in other words, has overtaken her substance.

Some people, invested with the power of a Sinema or a Manchin, would develop a solemn understanding of their own responsibility and seek to convey that to the people who elected them. Sinema, however, has been flaunting her power in highly visible and unseemly ways.

> When she voted against including a $15 minimum wage mandate in the most recent pandemic relief bill, she made a spectacle of it, popping her hip and giving an exaggerated thumbs-down to the vote counters. The moment, viewed by progressives as a vindictive show of indifference toward the poor, became a meme. Sinema wasn’t the only Senate Democrat who voted against the provision; seven of her colleagues joined her. But none of them made themselves the focus of the story the way Sinema did. Whatever plausible reason she might have offered for her position, such as protecting small businesses, was subsumed by her smugness. . .

A saucy put-down is the last missive Sinema should be sending at the height of her legislative power, especially as she prepares to build support among colleagues and constituents for her $11 minimum wage bill. There is a very “cry more, lib” vibe to the sangria photo, a suggestion that Sinema is as motivated by spite and ego as her most insufferable Republican counterparts. There are plenty of norms of political self-presentation worth breaking. A veneer of compassion isn’t one of them.

========================================================================

RELATED CONTENT ON THE BLOG

1 February 2021 (excerpt)

". . .Let's skip the AZ State House for the time being and get to surprising rifts in Democratic Party unity - two "hold-outs", one a man and one a woman, Kirsten Sinema (who's the only Congress member openly declared as bisexual).
This is not about gender-orientation > she's come out against pending legislation to establish a federal $15 per hour minimum wage.
The article reference is from Politico published 02.12,2021 and makes the statement the 44-year old Democrat is one of the most quirky and interesting members of the stodgy Senate

The most influential Democrat you never hear from

Reminiscence - Official Trailer (2021) Hugh Jackman, Rebecca Ferguson

Municipal Government Recording | LISC Creative Placemaking

Designing and Building Community | LISC Creative Placemaking

WHAT IS THAT ELUSIVE AND OVER-USED WORD "Community"???