Showing posts sorted by relevance for query Mike Moncrief. Sort by date Show all posts
Showing posts sorted by relevance for query Mike Moncrief. Sort by date Show all posts

Thursday, February 4, 2010

Fort Worth's Moncrief's History of Conspiracy, Greed & The IRS Almost Destroyed This Legendary Texas Oil Family

Yesterday morning I opined that I thought the FBI should turn its attention to Fort Worth and investigate how it was the City of Fort Worth came to send in agents to raid Steve Doeung's home on Carter Avenue.

Find out who gave the orders and then find out their connection to the natural gas drillers currently poking holes all over Fort Worth and you'll have yourself another North Texas Corruption Scandal, maybe bigger than the current big one in Dallas.

Well, I had barely hit the publish button on "Largest Corruption Case in Dallas History, Is Fort Worth Next" when I got a message from my #1 Blogging Co-Hort, Elsie Hotpepper, telling me something very interesting that I find very bizarre that I had never heard a word about. Til Elsie told me.

Okay, let's say, hypothetically, that it was Fort Worth Mayor Mike Moncrief who gave the raid on Steve Doeung's home order. We already know he is in deep with Conflicts of Interest due to making over $600,000 a year from the various gas drillers operating in Fort Worth.

Well, that is just ridiculous, you're thinking, Mayor Moncrief would not stoop so low as to order a raid on a private citizen to intimidate him into not fighting Chesapeake Energy and its plan to run non-odorized gas under his property.

Apparently Mike Moncrief has relatives, other Moncriefs, who do believe he will stoop so low as to engineer a raid when he's feuding with someone.

Back in the early 1990s Mike Moncrief was feuding with his relatives over the splitting up of the family fortune, going so far as to sue his uncle, Tex Moncrief, over how his grandparent's estate was divvied up. Tex Moncrief told his son, Charles, that Mike Moncrief was an "ingrate" for turning against his family.

The Moncrief Family Feud escalated to Fort Worth Scandal status early one morning in 1994 when a swarm of gun-toting IRS Agents raided the Moncrief's headquarters in downtown Fort Worth, removing a truckload of documents.

The IRS had been pointed towards the Moncrief documents by Moncrief accountant Billy Wayne Jarvis. Jarvis had been an accountant for the Moncriefs for 14 years and claimed he was afraid of getting in trouble for helping the Moncriefs commit tax fraud. And so he went to the IRS.

In addition to talking to the IRS, Jarvis was also talking to Mike Moncrief. Due to the connection between Jarvis and Mike Moncrief, the Charles Moncrief side of the Moncrief family suspected Fort Worth's current mayor helped bring the IRS ire on the family.

By 1996 the government dropped criminal charges against the Moncriefs, who settled with the IRS to the tune of $23 million. In 1998 Tex Moncrief lambasted the IRS and called for reform when he appeared before the United States Senate's Finance Committee. The Moncriefs were additionally outraged to learn in federal court that their accountant, Jarvis, had conspired with his lawyers to turn in the Moncriefs for a $25 million reward.

Charles Moncrief, hoping to restore his side of the Moncrief family's good name, wrote a book, Wildcatters: The True Story of How Conspiracy, Greed, and the IRS Almost Destroyed a Legendary Texas Oil Family.

Charles Moncrief makes it real clear, in his book, that his side of the family does not approve of Mayor Mike's side of the Moncrief family, charging Mike Moncrief with "living off the hard work his family has done in the oilfields."

The feud between the two sides of the Moncrief family continues in current day Fort Worth. The Charles Moncrief side of the Moncrief family contributed funds to the opponents of Mike Moncrief in the last mayoral election. An election which Moncrief won with 70% of the vote of the 6% of Fort Worth eligible voters who bothered to vote.

Were the Moncriefs the inspiration for the fictional Ewing family of Dallas fame?

Sunday, May 3, 2009

The Ongoing Onslaught Of Mayor Mike Moncrief Propaganda

I was looking for a "Ruling Junta" image and this is the best I could come up with.

Each morning brings fresh, cliche-ridden, propaganda-like letters to the editor of the Fort Worth Star-Telegram that never have a single fact in them to buttress their exaggerated claims of the wonderfulness of the mayor reign of Mike Moncrief.

One of today's letter writers feels quite blessed to have Moncrief be the mayor of the greatest city in the world.

I'll copy the two letters below, then below that I'll have fun writing my own letter to the editor in support of Mike Moncrief in the style of these Ruling Junta shills.

Moncrief for mayor

There seems to be a lot of negative press lately about our mayor, Michael J. Moncrief.

I just wanted to say that Moncrief seems always to have the best interest of our city at heart without prejudice or personal gain.

He is always generous, respectable and honorable and seems to serve his community out of love for our city. I pray we are only so blessed to have Moncrief re-elected for another term as the representative of the greatest city in the world — Fort Worth.

— Donovan Steen, Fort Worth

This election is vital for Fort Worth, and the re-election of Mayor Mike Moncrief will help assure the integrity of this great city.

This is a treasure among other cities as we remain vibrant, fresh and full of life.

Moncrief fully backs our police and firefighters and their policies to enhance our safety. He supports tax controls and “real” spending accountability and champions quality-of-life efforts throughout our neighborhoods.

I have worked with Mike on a number of projects and know, without hesitation, that he is a man of his word and true to his commitment to us all. Fort Worth is one of the most desirable and livable cities in this country, and Mike and Rosie Moncrief work tirelessly to make that a reality for generations to come.

Moncrief has truly earned our vote — Fort Worth will remain in good hands as a result!

— Dr. William M. Jordan, Fort Worth

Mike Moncrief is the greatest mayor in the history of the world. I don't know how Fort Worth could possibly get along without his vibrant leadership which has made Fort Worth the envy of cities and towns far and wide.

Mike Moncrief is always a saint of a man. He listens to all points of view and then does what is right for Fort Worth.

Mike Moncrief looks after taxpayer's money with a vigilance that is truly admirable. A more honest, admirable, vigilant man can not be found anywhere in America.

Mike Moncrief cares deeply about the welfare of every citizen of Fort Worth. Mike is totally behind our firefighters and police, unlike other mayors who are not behind their firefighters and police.

Mike Moncrief works tirelessly to keep Fort Worth a city that has others green with envy over the most desirable and livable city in America. Mike does all this with only the interest of the city of Fort Worth in mind, with no personal gain to him.

You must vote for Mike Moncrief. The fate and future of Fort Worth hangs in the balance.

--Durango Jones, Fort Worth

Saturday, May 2, 2009

The Soviet Republic of Fort Worth and the Ruling Junta that Runs It

I think I've mentioned before that that newspaper I no longer subscribe to, the Fort Worth Star-Telegram, sometimes made me think it acted more like the long gone Soviet Union's Pravda, broadcasting the party line of the Ruling Junta, rather than acting like a real truth seeking newspaper.

Since an election is coming up there are a lot of letters to the editor regarding Fort Worth's mayoral race. This morning there were 2 letters supporting current mayor Mike Moncrief and 2 supporting Clyde Picht.

What strikes me about the letters supporting Moncrief is how they have a propaganda-like, non-factual, Alice Through the Looking Glass, upside-down, reality-distorting feel to them. I'll copy the 4 letters and maybe do some more pithy commenting below the letters.

We like Mike

While it’s tradition that mayors of Dallas continually fight the public over their local issues, I am proud that Fort Worth Mayor Mike Moncrief has been a consensus builder.

From citywide town-hall meetings to citizen task forces, Moncrief has proved that a good leader is a good listener.

He is a problem solver, and your city’s economy and neighborhood quality of life have benefited from his friendly style of results-oriented leadership.

I have a lot of friends in Fort Worth, and I have seen a lot of changes in their neighborhoods. I like Mike, and he has my full support for his re-election.

-- Sonja Moore, Arlington

For those who don’t know, being mayor is not just being in that position.

It is the caring for, the knowledge of and the ability to adapt to all situations, no matter how unpleasant, stressful or difficult they may be.

Decisions that affect the city and all the factions that make it up are difficult at times, and not everyone agrees with the decisions, but that’s part of being the mayor. Mike Moncrief has learned to drive the train, and it always arrives at the right station.

Of all the disasters that have befallen our city, I hesitate to think of the outcome if it had not been for Moncrief.

Listen to your conscience, not hearsay. Be aware of the accomplishments of Mike Moncrief and vote for Mike, the mayor with “you” in mind.

-- John Grammer, Fort Worth

We want change

The past few elections, voters have sent Mike Moncrief to the mayor’s office. Moncrief recently said he was running “on his record.”

Here’s the record: Fort Worth faces a $10 billion budgetary shortfall.

Instead of focusing on city streets and our horrible trash service, the city gave tax money to special-interest projects like the Mercado and the Trinity River “Vision.”

Moncrief accepted more than $69,000 of “special-interest” money, including from the oil and gas industry.

Moncrief is not a fiscal conservative. No surprise, as he’s a lifelong registered Democrat.

We need fiscal responsibility from a conservative with a proven record.

Clyde Picht spent eight years on the council voting against overspending and special-interest projects. He has the know-how to fix our budget without raising taxes.

On May 9, I will be happy to cast my vote for Clyde Picht.

-- John Austin Basham, Fort Worth

I hear the word change with regularity.

Why not Fort Worth?

Wouldn’t it be refreshing for the voters to supplant those rich and influential few now controlling every move this city makes?

Perhaps then we could cap out that Trinity River fiasco. And we could then hold for the future that light rail to lighten the burden on taxpayers.

Most importantly, Moncrief’s sanctuary city would cease in favor of law and order. Can you imagine the cost of harboring illegal immigrants? How about the illegitimacy of such a policy?

Clyde Picht would put an end to these trends. Not only is he a 22-year veteran with three Purple Hearts, he is a seasoned and ethical candidate prepared to represent the interests of the voters. He has served this city well for eight years on the council.

I cast my vote for Clyde Picht.

-- Nathan C. Vail, Fort Worth

Moncrief has proved he's a good listener? At city council meetings he limits citizen input to 3 minutes. Stalin allowed 10 minutes to a Politiburo member. Moncrief will not talk to Fort Worth's responsible, fact-finding, honestly reporting local issues newspaper, that being FW Weekly.

I can't think of a single thing Moncrief has done that has benefited the city of Fort Worth. These Moncrief supporting letter writers do not mention a single specific fact to support their propaganda.

The city's economy and neighborhood quality of life have benefited from his friendly style of result-oriented leadership? Huh? Please, some specific example of how Moncrief has affected the quality of life and the economy. By cutting back on library hours? By lining his own pockets with Barnett Shale money? Is that what they mean by him benefitting the city's economy?

The aforementioned FW Weekly has an annual Best of Fort Worth issue. Below are a couple examples pertinent to this coming election...

Thing Tarrant County Needs

Critic's choice: A revolutionary with moxie

Lots of folks are whining about how the gas drilling companies are taking over Fort Worth, stepping on its citizens, and controlling city hall. Whine, whine, whine. This city needs somebody to go all Pancho Villa on somebody's ass - in a nonviolent way - and really kick up some resistance against city officials and corporate robber barons who treat residents like floor mats and rely on unfair laws put in place by co-opted legislators.

Politician Most Likely to Sell Grandma to the Highest Bidder

Readers' choice: Fort Worth Mayor Mike Moncrief

Tuesday, May 11, 2010

Crazy Talk AKA The Fort Worth Way From Mayor Mike Moncrief

That is Fort Worth's corrupt goofball Mayor Mike Moncrief shooting up downtown Fort Worth, like a celebrating Iraqi in downtown Baghdad.

Yesterday one of my sources emailed me about a Fort Worth City Council meeting where, apparently, Mike Moncrief nakedly exposed bare the corruption that is at the heart of what is not quite right with how way too much operates in Fort Worth.

Currently there is some controversy in Fort Worth over the predatory behavior of Pawn Shops, taking advantage of the desperate, while charging usurious interest rates.

Cash America is the biggest of the Pawn Shops. The headquarters of Cash America is located on 7th Avenue, due east of the Trinity River.

Recently, the Cash America Pawn Shop, out of the goodness of its corporate heart, donated a strip of land to the city for the expansion of the Trinity River Bridge. Mayor Mike Moncrief, when questioned by WFAA-TV, said the strip of land, that Cash America gave the city, was valued at around $2 million.

At the recent Fort Worth City Council meeting Moncrief was grilled about the Cash America Land Deal. He then backtracked regarding the value of the strip of land, saying it was a figure he made up to illustrate a point. Moncrief did not explain what point he was illustrating by making up a figure.

According to the public appraisal records, the 2.5 acre strip of land is valued at $3.4 million an acre, which, according to my rudimentary math skills, would make this land donation, by the Cash America Pawn Shop, worth $8.5 million.

Fort Worth's corrupt Mayor Mike Moncrief went on to say there was nothing unseemly or untoward about the generous donation from Cash America. That it was simply doing business "The Fort Worth Way."

You out there in the parts of America that don't do business the Fort Worth Way, allow me to explain. Oh, and by the way, the City Council did not act to put any restrictions on the Pawn Shops. What is the term for that? Quid pro quo? I am not sure. I never learned Latin. But I do know that quid pro quo is The Fort Worth Way.

In Fort Worth, civic corruption is the status quo. For example, Mayor Mike Moncrief is on the take from the gas drilling companies, poking holes all over his town, to the tune of over $600,000 a year. In other parts of America this is what is known as a very serious conflict of interest, which would land a politician in jail. In Fort Worth it is called The Fort Worth Way.

In Fort Worth a company comes to town, like Cabela's, sells the city a bill of goods about building a sporting goods store that will become the top tourist attraction in Texas. The City of Fort Worth gives Cabela's all sorts of concessions. A short time later Cabela's announces another store in Texas, down by Austin, thus making obvious the degree to which the City of Fort Worth was snookered. No one is held accountable, no one even admits they were snookered. The City just moves on to its next boondoggle. This is The Fort Worth Way.

Radio Shack wants a new corporate headquarters. A headquarters that would obliterate what was, really, the only thing in downtown Fort Worth that was something no other big city had, as in, huge, free parking lots, with a subway to take parkers to the heart of downtown. Eminent domain was abused to remove a big public housing project, the headquarters was built, Radio Shack could not afford it. And now the Radio Shack campus is the campus of a new branch of Tarrant County College. Boondoggle. It's The Fort Worth Way.

A business wants to run a non-odorized, high pressure natural gas pipeline down an avenue in Fort Worth called Carter. The City of Fort Worth does not act to protect its citizens, instead it helps the business, Chesapeake Energy, abuse eminent domain, including the City of Fort Worth ordering City of Fort Worth Gestapo Stormtrooper Raids on the home of the last holdout on Carter Avenue, Steve Doeung. In the rest of America a city, doing such a thing, would be considered a criminal act. In Fort Worth it is just The Fort Worth Way.

Anyway, enough about the Fort Worth Way. It's all very perplexing to me. When is the FBI ever going to find the time to investigate all the nefarious shenanigans that go on in these parts?

Monday, May 4, 2009

Fort Worth Blossoms Under Mike Moncrief

This morning's Fort Worth Star-Telegram's letters to the editor once more had 2 letters to the editor in support of re-electing Mayor Mike Moncrief.

And once again the letters appear to have spun from the same boiler plate as previous letters to the editor in support of Moncrief.

And for the first time amongst these letters hyperbolic nonsense there is a mention made of some actual thing Moncrief supposedly has done for Fort Worth during his reign, that being a supposed 10% reduction in homelessness.

These cliche filled letters have so many gems. In one the writer says he or she had watched the community rally behind the homeless program? Huh? How do you watch such a thing? And the city has blossomed under Moncrief? Huh, again? How has it blossomed? Are there more wildflowers?

Anyway, below are the 2 Moncrief letters of the day (that the Star-Telegram should charge a fee to print as an advertisement)....

Fort Worth mayor

Mike Moncrief has long ago proved his loyalty and devotion to Texas and to the city of Fort Worth.

One can research his political career and see that his tireless efforts and his personal contributions more than reflect this dedication to service. He has proved himself to be a brilliant businessman and has a vision of many improvements for the future of Fort Worth.

This city has blossomed since he took office, and I hope to see him here for a long time.

It would be so nice to read ALL of the facts and not just the bits and pieces of information that the Star-Telegram wants us to know — therefore we must do our homework.

— Phyllis Campos, Fort Worth

Mayor Mike Moncrief’s homeless-assistance initiative shows his sincere and heartfelt passion for our city and all our residents.

I recently saw that homelessness in Fort Worth has been reduced by almost 10 percent in the short time of this important program. Moncrief’s leadership on this issue has uplifted community awareness and inspired action by many in the city for a group of neighbors who are truly least fortunate.

I have watched the community rally behind this very worthy program to help house, care for and retrain the city’s homeless population. A great leader is measured on many levels, and Fort Worth is fortunate to have a mayor whose sincerity and compassion inspires others.

— Libby Lindstrom, Arlington

Tuesday, December 29, 2009

The Texas Conflict of Interest Laws Made Simple Enough For Fort Worth Mayor Mike Moncrief To Understand

I have a slight problem, at times, confusing my dreams with reality. It is now obvious to me that I was dreaming when I said I had had a long talk with Fort Worth Mayor, Mike Moncrief, in which I was able to get him to understand why he is committing a serious crime with his Conflicts of Interest involving his Barnett Shale Natural Gas Drilling Company holdings and he being mayor in a town that's getting drilled.

Apparently, I was also dreaming when I said that Moncrief had agreed to use his ill gotten gains to fund the Fosdic Lake Dam Vision.

See that dollar bill with Mike Moncrief on top of George Washington? Moncrief makes over 600,000 of those dollar bills, annually, from his holdings in each of the gas drillers drilling in Fort Worth.

Now, there are those in Fort Worth, like the city's attorney, who do not think the Conflict of Interest laws apply to Fort Worth or Mike Moncrief. Both the city attorney and Mike Moncrief apparently are ignorant of the fact that the State of Texas has quite strict, precise Conflict of Interest Laws.

The State of Texas even conveniently put an explanation of the Texas Conflict of Interest laws on a website, under the title 2010 Texas Conflict of Interest Laws Made Easy.

Made so easy, in fact, that I'm almost certain a simpleton, like Fort Worth's mayor and his city attorney might finally understand that Moncrief is breaking the law and needs to be removed from office, jailed and fined, now that the Conflicts of Interests have grown so dire with Moncrief in cahoots with a corrupt company like Chesapeake Energy in their abuse of eminent domain in a basically Nazi-like attack on Steve Doeung and the citizens on Carter Avenue.

I think I'll send a letter to the FBI today. Surely it's time the feds intervene in Fort Worth now that the political racketeering has reached its current level of corruption.

Below is a short excerpt from 2010 Texas Conflict of Interest Laws Made Easy. Read it and ask yourself how in the world the Mayor of Fort Worth and his idiot attorney can claim he has no Conflict of Interest when he owns a piece of the drilling companies and looks the other way while they steal Trinity River water, abuse eminent domain and pollute the air?

What conflict of interest laws apply to local public officials in Texas?

The general conflict of interest law for Texas city and county officials, as well as officials of other Texas political subdivisions, is found in chapter 171 of the Texas Local Government Code. Chapter 171 establishes the standard for determining when a local official has a conflict of interest that would affect the ability to discuss, decide or vote on a particular item. Chapter 171 conflict of interest provisions apply to all local public officials. Within a governmental unit, “local public officials” are defined to include:

1) elected officials such as the members of the city council or county commissioners (whether paid or unpaid); and

2) appointed officials (paid or unpaid) who exercise responsibilities that are more than advisory in nature.

It should be noted that other state and federal laws, as well as local provisions in the case of cities, may be applicable to officials in a particular situation. Whether a law is applicable depends on the activity that the official is undertaking. Officials should work with local legal counsel to determine whether their activities are subject to any such provisions. However, the general conflict of interest provision for officials remains chapter 171 of the Local Government Code.

What types of issues are covered by Texas conflict of interest laws?

Texas conflict of interest statutes do not address every conceivable conflict that may arise for a local official. In fact, chapter 171 conflict laws are generally financial in nature and only cover two types of conflicts of interest:

1) Business Entity conflicts: Conflicts due to a local official's substantial financial interest in a business entity and that has an issue before his or her governmental unit;

or

2) Real Property conflicts: Conflicts due to a local official's substantial financial interest in a real property and that would be affected by his or her governmental unit's action.

What is considered a “substantial interest” in a business entity (such that it would amount to a potential conflict of interest)?

There are four ways that a person could be deemed to have a “substantial interest” in a business entity that would raise a potential conflict of interest. A person has a substantial interest in a business entity if the person has a(n):

1) Stock interest: If the official owns 10 percent or more of the total voting stock or shares of the business entity;

2) Other ownership interest: If the official owns either 10 percent or more, or $15,000 or more, of the fair market value of the business entity;

3) Income interest: If the official received more than 10 percent of his or her gross income for the previous year from the business entity;

4) Close family member with any of the above interests: If a close relative of the local official has any of the above types of interest in a business entity. A local official is considered to have the same interest in a business entity that his or her close relatives have in that business entity. In this context, close relatives of an official would include persons who are related to the official within the first degree by consanguinity (blood) or affinity (marriage). Such relatives would include an official father, father-in-law, mother, mother-in-law, daughter, daughter-in-law, son, son-in-law and the spouse of the official.

Sunday, December 20, 2009

It Is Time To Put Fort Worth Mayor Mike Moncrief Behind Bars

My favorite commenter, Anonymous, commented yesterday or the day before on a blogging that made reference to the man behind bars, Fort Worth Mayor Mike Moncrief.

Anonymous informed me that I am playing a major role in the local public rebellion against corruption and tyranny.

I don't know if that's true or not, my playing a major rebellion role. At most I only get a few thousand blog visitors a day.

I liked the Anonymous comment so much I'm going to copy it below. And then below that I'll do some rebelling...

Mr. Durango--you exhibit more of the vaunted Texas spirit and straight talk than so-called "native Texans". Let's hope that this man will get adequate legal help (or not--he seems to hold his own against these thugs so far, not only to kick CHK's @#$% but maybe also get Mayor Gasbag and his cronies under oath to reveal their secret dealings that benefit them but harm the citizens. Your sister probably can tell you that information from a good deposition can lead to many other legal actions, including your vision of Snively Whiplash and co. taking the "perp walk". Stay on this, Mr. D., because it's obvious the Star Telegram and even other media have been compromised and subdued. This battle must be viewed and conducted as a public rebellion against corruption and tyranny. You're playing a major role, sir, whether you know it or not. You have the power of the pen.

Sometime in the past week I said something like it seems as if the zone of Texas I'm living in is under some sort of protective bubble that prevents the laws that govern the rest of America from being relevant.

Many people have complained about Mayor Moncrief's conflicts of interest, with him having holdings in all the Barnett Shale natural gas drillers operating in the city of which he is the mayor. In other parts of America a mayor would either shed the interests that cause a conflict or recuse himself from having any part of any decision that benefits a business that benefits him.

Mike Moncrief benefits from his gas company holdings to the tune of $600,000 a year.

Now, back when the gas drilling seemed a fairly benign, fairly harmless endeavor, Moncrief's conflicts of interest did not seem so conflicting to me.

But, now that we learn the gas drilling operations are doing some serious polluting, endangering lives, abusing eminent domain, with the City of Fort Worth and its mayor doing nothing to make the gas drillers take the measures necessary to reduce the pollution.

We see the City of Fort Worth looking the other way when gas drillers steal water from the Trinity River and damage the river's levees in the process.

We see the City of Fort Worth act as a stooge for Chesapeake Energy, being an ally of that company as it attacks Fort Worth citizens in locations like Carter Avenue. In Arlington, Mayor Cluck finally had the guts to tell Jerry Jones there would be no more eminent domain abuse in Arlington.

Fort Worth's corrupt, conflict of interest-laden, dictatorial, narrow-minded miscreant of a mayor could do the same thing, telling Aubrey McClendon that he would not permit any more eminent domain abuse in his town.

The fact that that won't happen and the eminent domain persecution of Steve Doeung by Chesapeake Energy continues, is the point where, along with doing nothing about the gas drilling caused pollution, Mayor Mike Moncrief crosses the line into being engaged in what amounts to a form of racketeering.

There is an FBI office in Dallas.

I wish the Dallas FBI would spend less time setting up stings in which fake bombs are given to 19 year old kids and more time investigating the crimes that are being committed in Fort Worth, where the city has a mayor who is in collusion with natural gas drilling companies who are in full assault mode on the citizens of Fort Worth.

I'll distill it down for the FBI and shout it in capital letters and make it bold.

THE MAYOR OF FORT WORTH, MIKE MONCRIEF, IS TAKING $600,000 A YEAR FROM NATURAL GAS DRILLERS WHO ARE ABUSING EMINENT DOMAIN TO TAKE FORT WORTH CITIZEN'S PROPERTY & POLLUTING THEIR AIR WITH DANGEROUS CHEMICALS WHILE STEALING WATER FROM THE TRINITY RIVER.

Saturday, April 25, 2009

Blindsiding Fort Worth's Mayor Mike Moncrief

If you are a fan of Survivor you are also likely a fan of what is known as a blindside. That's when someone expecting to win is voted out of office, I mean, voted out of his tribe. A blindside is particularly satisfying if the one blindsided has been arrogant, cocky and way too sure of himself.

Fort Worth will soon have a mayoral election. Very very very few people vote in Fort Worth's mayoral elections. This basically leaves the decision as to who will be mayor up to the Ruling Junta, also known as the Fort Worth Oligarchy.

The current mayor of Fort Worth, Mike Moncrief, is running for mayor again. The natural gas industry wants to keep him in office. Mayor Moncrief has vested interests in the various companies drilling for gas that the city tries to regulate. In other parts of America this is what is known as a conflict of interest. Such things can have a person in all sorts of trouble, elsewhere.

I'm currently reading a book called Honor Killing, by David Stannard. It's about the infamous "Massie Affair" that riveted America in the early days of the Great Depression. The "Massie Affair" brought out in the open all sorts of bad things that had become accepted in Hawaii, which was then pretty much an isolated outpost.

As I read the sad details of how the Oligarchy that ruled Hawaii, acting in their own selfish interests, to the detriment of the majority, who were all minorities, Native Hawaiians, Philipinos, Japanese and others, I thought of how things are done here in Fort Worth.

At one point the Honolulu Ruling Junta decided a place called Waikiki would make nice beachfront property. So, without a vote of the people, including the people who had built elaborate fisheries and farms on this land, a primitive method of eminent domain was used and a beach, now famous, was made.

In Fort Worth a primitive form of eminent domain is being used to take property to build a lake, some canals and an un-needed flood diversion channel in a project called the Trinity River Vision, that the people of Fort Worth have not been allowed to vote on.

Mike Moncrief has 2 men running against him in this election, Clyde Picht and Louis McBee. Because so few people vote, Moncrief is expected to win again. In 2004 McBee filed an ethics complaint against Moncrief, regarding the Cabelas Scandal, to no avail.

Moncrief did not attend a League of Women Voter's debate last week, saying he was too busy doing the city's business, like an hour later, being in the same building as the debate, to help open a remodeled gallery. It would seem that more pertinent city business would be being brave enough to participate in a candidate's debate.

I'm thinking it's time for the citizens of Fort Worth to act like they live in a grown up city and get out and vote to blindside Mike Moncrief. And then start demanding to be allowed to vote on whatever fool thing the Ruling Junta comes up with, be it a Santa Fe Rail Market or a fake lake or subsidizing a convention center hotel or a sporting goods store.

I'm voting for Clyde Picht.

Wednesday, May 6, 2009

Flushing Out Fort Worth's City Hall

The following is a message from Don Young regarding the upcoming, May 9 elections in Fort Worth.....

Sensitive readers: please read no further.

Only a fool would keep flushing a stopped up toilet, right? Disgusting? Yes. Irresponsible? Definitely. But that's essentially what's happening in Fort Worth, Texas under the watch of the current elected officials.

Fort Worth Mayor, Mike Moncrief, and his city council brown-nosers keep flushing and we keep paying to clean up their mess. Case in point:

Irresponsible Gas Drilling.

The reason that irresponsible gas drilling is allowed in Fort Worth and other north Texas urban centers can be traced directly to Mike Moncrief's and former mayor Ken Barr's dishonorable association with the gas drilling industry. The buck stops with them. Consider the following:

---Moncrief's gas drilling Task Farce was designed to deceive the public and grease the wheels for a dirty industry. Public comments were ignored.

---We now have proof that Barnett Shale drilling has a major impact on the air we depend on for life yet, the City of Fort Worth under Moncrief's watch still issues drilling permits and cozy's up with drillers.

---The Barnett Shale Energy Education Council (BSEEC), Moncrief's brainchild, was founded by gas drillers to counter the negative press they rightly deserve. (see above)

---Moncrief continues to violate respectable ethical standards by voting on controversial gas drilling issues before city council, despite his significant investments in Barnett Shale drilling companies.

---Former FW mayor, Ken Barr, who now works for Chesapeake Energy, represented them on the gas rilling Task Force and, unethically uses his insiders clout to push their filthy agenda at city hall. That's not very sporting of our former mayor.

---For the past year, both men and their lawyers have mercilessly toyed with the people of Carter Avenue whose property and lives have been held hostage.

---Moncrief has so many conflicts of interest it's hard to tell him from a truth-challenged Pinocchio. He deserves a jail term, not another term as mayor.

Voters should stop holding their noses and hoping things will get better. Moncrief's, "Fort Worth Way" is the Wrong Way. It's time to stop the foolishness and flush out city hall.

>>> Vote the gas drilling fanatics out of office on May 9th.
>>> Bring back ethics and a livable city to local government.

Need more reasons to flush out Moncrief & Co.? See my 28 Questions for Mike Moncrief (that he never addressed) first published in 2005, here:

Now it's your turn. Voting Day is May 9, 2009.

Thursday, May 15, 2008

Corruption in Fort Worth, Texas?

You non-Texans, I'm going to be writing about Fort Worth here. So, you might want to look away if you don't want to be freshly appalled at how different things are here than how your city and state operates.

Fort Worth started as a Fort. That is sort of obvious. What isn't so obvious is that Fort Worth is run by what amounts to being a Ruling Junta, with little accountability to the good citizens of Fort Worth.

A few years ago it was discovered that natural gas, in shale form, known as the Barnett Shale, was underneath much of north Texas, including Fort Worth. Prior to the drilling beginning, Fort Worth's Ruling Junta installed an oilman named Mike Moncrief as Mayor of Fort Worth. That is Mike Moncrief behind bars in the photo.

Mike Moncrief is a millionaire. He has holdings in all the drilling companies that have been and continue knocking holes in the ground all over Fort Worth.

Last year Mayor Mike Moncrief made an estimated $633,000.00 from his various oil and gas deals.

Now, in pretty much any jurisdiction in the rest of America a mayor would recuse himself from having a say in any public policy matter that affected his holdings. In the rest of the nation this is what is known as a conflict of interest.

In Fort Worth it is known as the status quo.

In a bizarre case of one of the foxes saying the hen house is safe, Fort Worth's Ruling Junta's mouthpiece, that being City Attorney David Yett, said Moncrief's gas and oils deals are not a conflict of interest because no single one of his deals amounts to more than 10% of Moncrief's total income.

Huh?

Moncrief's wife also benefits from all the gas drilling by owning her own stock in one of the drilling companies called XTO.

Fort Worth's Ruling Junta continues to approve of new drilling operations, one of the latest being Chesapeake Energy will be drilling under the heart of downtown Fort Worth thanks to the Bass Family selling them the drilling rights to the parking lots known as Sundance Square.

I don't know what the Mayor of Fort Worth's cut will work out to be for the Sundance Square wells.

And on a totally different, yet related subject. Did you know that these gas wells sometimes blow up? Watch this video of a well explosion 30 miles west of my abode. I saw the smoke plume from this one.

Wednesday, May 6, 2009

Fort Worth's Public Library & Mayor Mike Moncrief's Reign of Craptacularness

Preserving scenic areas by establishing National Parks and free to use Public Libraries are 2 of the best ideas America has given the world.

We are getting a daily dumping of Ruling Junta propaganda here in Fort Worth regarding our amazing mayor, Mike Moncrief, and all he has done for the people of Fort Worth during his reign.

The Ruling Junta shill's letters to the editor of the Junta's mouthpiece, the Star-Telegram, are long on meaningless fluff and weak on facts. Facts like pointing out what exactly Moncrief has done for Fort Worth that warrants him remaining in office.

I can think of one specific that has occurred during this ethically challenged man's reign. He cut the number of days and hours the Fort Worth Public Library is open. The reason for the cuts? Not enough money.

Here's another accomplishment of the City of Fort Worth's government under Moncrief's sterling, inspiring, leadership. Millions of dollars have gone missing. Just vanished. Now when I first read of this, my first thought was has anyone checked Moncrief's pockets for the missing money? I mean, this is a guy who operates in an ethics free bubble, doing stuff that would have you under investigation, or in jail, in the parts of America that have opted to live under a system of laws. I forget how much money it is Moncrief and his wife have made during his reign, off the various natural gas drillers he is in cahoots with that he does not recuse himself from voting on when natural gas drilling issues are on the table.

So many of those Ruling Junta shills have mentioned how much Moncrief cares for all the citizens of his city. Has he seen the kids lined up outside the Eastside Regional Library, waiting for it to open, later than it used to? Has he seen all those kids, with no computer at home, eagerly waiting their turn at a terminal?

But, what's got me blogging about this right now is I just returned from the Eastside Regional Library. I needed to get some new books to read, now that I've bailed on all the local papers. Except FW Weekly, this week's copy of which I got at the library.

Anyway, ever since the library cutbacks there has been a line when I go to check out. It can be a long wait. Today it was at least 20 minutes. The first time I experienced a line, between when I walked in and was ready to check out, the line had not moved at all. I waited at the back of that line for maybe 10 minutes, then with a couple people now behind me, I got feisty and started complaining. Another librarian then began checking out books.

I like going to the library. I always have. I've never experienced a library as badly run as they are in Fort Worth. I never waited in a line in the Mount Vernon library, the Bellingham library, the Burlington library, the Seattle library or the Tacoma library. Now, what is the difference between those libraries and the Fort Worth one? They are in Washington. The state with America's highest per capita number of book readers and library users. And trust me, if you tried to pull on people in Washington the stunts pulled in the Fort Worth library, it would not be tolerated. You'd have so many people complaining, demanding it be fixed, that it would get fixed.

But, the bottomline is, this type problem would never have been allowed to even develop up in Washington. Paraphrasing Bart Simpson, Fort Worth is used to things being craptacular. You accept craptacular service in your public library, in your trash pickup service, in your road maintenance. And worst of all, you accept a level of craptacularness in your elected officials that not only, would not, it could not, occur in Washington. Moncrief would be in his 5th or 6th year in prison by now if he'd been mayor of Seattle and tried to do business the Fort Worth way.

At the top I mentioned National Parks. Tomorrow I'll blog my crankiness about the craptacular way Fort Worth has managed its parks under Mayor Mike Moncrief's caring leadership.

Thursday, May 7, 2009

Fort Worth's Parks & Mayor Mike Moncrief's Reign of Craptacularness

Like I said in the previous blogging, here in Fort Worth we are being inundated by a propaganda misinformation campaign by the Ruling Junta seeking to convince those few who vote to keep Mike Moncrief as mayor.

Those singing the praises of Mike Moncrief go on and on about all he has done to make Fort Worth the most celebrated city in America, how he has solved the many problems thrown at Fort Worth, how he has helped make Fort Worth the dynamic wonder that it is.

I beg to differ.

Let's just take one example of something that has happened during Mike Moncrief's reign and how it effects those little people who his supporters claim he cares so much about.

Fort Worth has one of the biggest areas of parkland in the nation. It is called the Fort Worth Nature Center & Refuge. This park has buffalo, prairie dogs, miles of trails, a nature center, boardwalks over a bayou. And very few visitors.

In April of 2006, with very little debate, Fort Worth's city council, with one or two councilmen objecting, voted to begin charging an entrance fee for access to the Nature Preserve.

I have never read any followup as to how this has worked out. Has the fee even been able to raise enough money to pay for the toll booth and pay to man it?

The entry fee is $4 for adults, $3 for seniors, kids 3 and older $2, under 3 free. And residents who meet federal low income guidelines get in free.

This is what I said about the fee and the city council debate on my Eyes on Texas website...

The argument was made that other cities charge for admission to similar parks. However, no argument was made to counter that dubious assertion. Many cities consider their parks to be amenities that add to the overall quality of their communities and to which it is important that the least affluent of their people feel 'free' to visit. Does Central Park in New York City charge an admission? Does Point Defiance Park in Tacoma? Does Stanley Park in Vancouver? Does Golden Gate Park in San Francisco? Does Cameron Park in Waco? Does any city with real aspirations to being a livable community charge an access fee of this sort to a park of this sort? And require the poorest among us to prove they are without means in order to enter?

It's that low income part of this that really bugs me. This is why a great city has parks like this. So those who can't afford to fly to California to go to Yosemite or drive up to Wyoming to go to Yellowstone, can still enjoy the great outdoors.

I mention Point Defiance Park in Tacoma, above. I had an interesting incident at Point Defiance last summer. Point Defiance is one of the biggest urban parks in America. It is huge. There is a zoo and an aquarium in Point Defiance, miles of trails through old growth forest, beaches, picnic areas and other attractions, like Fort Nisqually. You do not pay an admission fee to enter Point Defiance. There is a fee to enter the zoo and the aquarium.

Last summer I was heading back to my car after jogging the trails at Point Defiance. A couple was walking towards me, looking perplexed. The man of the couple said "excuse me, can I ask you a question? Where do you pay to get in this park?" I was perplexed. But I recognized the accent. I asked if you guys are from Texas? Yes, was the reply. To which I explained that in Washington, unlike Texas, there is no entry fee to state parks, nor is there an entry fee to city parks, like Point Defiance. A few years ago, during a budget shortfall period, Washington tried charging an entry fee to the state parks. The public rebelled, like the public in a participatory democracy is prone to do when they don't like something. The fees were removed.

I have other issues regarding Fort Worth's parks during Moncrief's corrupt reign.

Heritage Park in downtown Fort Worth has been turned into an embarrassing, for any city with pretensions of livability, eyesore.

Fort Worth does little to help the Tandy Hills Natural Area, an area the city should embrace and appreciate as being something in Fort Worth that is truly unique. The city should send in crews to clean up the litter, remove the dumped roofing material, remove non-prairie vegetation and cover up no longer needed manhole covers and pipes from a bygone era.

On Boca Raton Boulevard in east Fort Worth, in an area of dense population due to their being a lot of apartment complexes, one of those complexes was condemned and removed, leaving a huge open space in an area with no parks. Has Mayor Moncreif and the Ruling Junta, caring about all the citizens of Fort Worth in that magnificent manner we hear so much about, proposed turning this new open space into a park? No.

Sansom Park near Lake Worth has been allowed to deteriorate during Mike Moncrief's reign, with the rockwork pavilion now closed off by crime scene type tape, just like Heritage Park is closed off.

There are likely many other examples of park deterioration and neglect and wrong-headedness that I am not aware of or currently not remembering.

Fort Worth really deserves better than it is currently getting from the Ruling Junta. The only way to change that is for the people of Fort Worth to have a revolution and throw the bums out. But that won't happen. It's not the Fort Worth way.

Friday, November 27, 2009

Fort Worth Mayor Moncrief Fails To Turn Trinity River Purple

I have watched a strange thing or two over the years in Texas and Fort Worth. I don't know, for sure, if this morning's attempt to dye the Trinity River purple was the strangest, but I am sure it is in the Top 10 Strangest Things I've Seen in Texas.

There was quite a large crowd assembled in Trinity Park to witness the spectacle of turning the Trinity River purple.

Fort Worth Mayor Mike Moncrief read an extremely long proclamation that ended with him decreeing that the purple section of the Trinity River was re-named Horned Frog River.

Before Moncrief's proclamation another politician spoke. A female. I've no idea who she was.

In the picture you are looking at Moncrief pouring a glass of purple dye that looked like grape Kool-Aid into the newly christened Horned Frog River.

Now, this was a bit of a pep assembly, so Moncrief's hyperbole could be forgiven. I guess. This was the first time I've seen Mike Moncrief up close and heard him speak, at length. I wish I'd thought to whip out my video camera and record the entire speech. Some of Moncrief's verbiage was shockingly ironic. I can't quote it exactly from memory, but he said something very Jesus-like, about Fort Worth looking out for the least among us. And being the #1 city in America. Or was it the world? Darn, I wish I'd turned on the camcorder.

As you can see, Moncrief is bookended by two TCU Cheerleaders. You can also see the Trinity River behind Moncrief. At this point in the proclamation he had not yet re-named the river. You can also see that it already looks sort of purple. When I first saw the river I thought it had already been dyed, plus there was a white froth on the banks that I thought might be dye related. When the actual dyeing did begin there was pretty much a collective rolling of the eyes watching. It was that bizarre.

Soon after Moncrief emptied his glass of purple dye into Horned Frog River a tanker truck on the other bank started spraying what looked like water. This was the dye. People started muttering. The tanker sprayed for maybe 5 minutes before there was no more dye to spray. The only change to the river was the effect of the spray as it landed. When the spraying stopped I could detect no color.

I asked a couple people if they saw any purple. They didn't. One lady told me her husband told her there was no way they could turn the river purple.

The crowd of hopeful purple river watchers quickly melted away after the tanker spraying stopped. The only purple I saw, besides on TCU people's clothes and the cheerleader's sign, was "GO FROGS" painted on the Trinity, I mean, Horned Frog River Levee.

Okay, now I've got to tell you the really weird thing that happened. Someone came up and asked me if I was Durango Texas. That has never happened to me before. Not in Texas. I've had it happen in Washington. I've sort of slightly had it cross my mind that this might happen and that the person might be cranky about something I'd said about their, I mean, my, beloved Fort Worth.

I asked the questioner why she thought I was Durango Texas. She said she read my blog, read what I wrote about the plan to dye the river purple and that I looked like the pictures on the blog. So, I confessed that I was the culprit. We exchanged a few pleasantries and then I wandered off taking more pictures.

A couple minutes later I sat on the river bank to listen to Moncrief. I was slightly paranoid, noticing a few people looking at me and not at the mayor. Maybe it was something behind me they were looking at. Like I said, I was slightly paranoid.

Anyway, I'm glad I watched the purple river spectacle this morning. I found it entertaining. And more so than before I'm appalled that 70% of 6% of Fort Worth's eligible voters voted that man to be their mayor. Like I said. Bizarre.

Wednesday, October 14, 2009

Fort Worth's Corrupt Mayor Mike Moncrief's Re-Election Is A Sign Of The Apocalypse

I do not know how I missed this gem in Fort Worth Weekly's Best of 2009 issue about Fort Worth's notoriously corrupt mayor, Mike Moncrief.

I previously noticed and blogged about another Best of 2009 mention of Fort Worth's un-esteemed mayor, that being him being Fort Worth Weekly's pick as "The Politician Most Likely to Sell Grandma to the Highest Bidder."

But, I somehow missed the other Mayor Mike Moncrief Best of 2009 mention. That being "Sign of the Apocalypse."

The Reader's Choice was the Tarrant County College downtown campus boondoggle.

The Critic's Choice for "Sign of the Apocalypse" was Mayor Mike Moncrief's landslide re-election.

About that particular election travesty, where only 6% of Fort Worth's registered voters voted and gave the insufferably corrupt mayor a landslide 70% victory, FW Weekly Critics said...

"Fort Worth voters elected this former senator as mayor in 2003. Since then, millions of dollars have gone unaccounted for at city hall but nobody got fired, the budget is in turmoil. Moncrief's gas drilling buddies are degrading the city's quality of life, and the mayor likes to bully and badger people who try to speak out at city council meetings. The apocalypse might almost be an improvement."

Friday, March 6, 2009

Good Government: Fort Worth Style

The Mayor of Fort Worth is an oil man named Mike Moncrief. Fort Worth sits on top of this stuff called Barnett Shale. Barnett Shale can be turned into natural gas. There are several natural gas drillers drilling holes in Fort Worth. It is very controversial. But some people make a lot of money from the hole poking, so all is good.

The Mayor of Fort Worth owns an interest in several of the natural gas drillers. Yet, unlike in other jurisdictions in the democracy known as America, in Fort Worth an elected official is allowed to influence issues in which he might have what is known as a vested interest. In other words, in Fort Worth you can stand to profit from voting a certain way, thus possibly skewing the principle known as fairness, and no one calls foul.

Well, no one who matters calls foul. I'm a Yankee and my opinion does not count.

Currently the most notorious of the natural gas drillers, an enterprise called Chesapeake Energy, owned by the corrupt thief, Aubrey McClendon, who stole the Sonics from Seattle and moved them to Oklahoma City, wants to poke 7 more holes in Fort Worth ground so they can extract natural gas from a resting ground known as the Greenwood Cemetery.

The neighborhood surrounding Greenwood Cemetery is split on the drilling issue. So, there was a well attended city council meeting this past Tuesday to discuss and allow citizen input regarding Chesapeake's request for a waiver so they can go to work under a cemetery.

There were 2 letters to the editor in this morning's Fort Worth Star-Telegram, that being the paper I no longer pay for, but glance at online, mostly to make sure I don't miss anything in Fort Worth that is causing waves of green envy outbreaks in the rest of the nation.

The first letter was title "Good Government." The second letter was titled "Bad Government." I suspect a paid shill working for Fort Worth's Ruling Junta wrote the Good Government letter.

Below are the 2 letters....

Good Government

I took great pride in seeing democracy in action Tuesday night at the City Council. Our mayor and council, but especially Mayor Mike Moncrief, were magnificent.

They spent almost three hours discussing granting a waiver for a permit for Chesapeake Energy to drill seven gas wells in the area of Greenwood Cemetery and Rockwood Park. The wells would be in the Greenwood Cemetery area and would benefit the cemetery, the Crestwood neighborhood and Rockwood Park.

The council ultimately approved drilling with certain stipulations, but how they reached that conclusion was most impressive.

This action had been approved by the Parks and Community Services Advisory Board and addressed twice before by the council. Every council member had toured the site.

Tuesday, the council sat through almost two hours of resident comments along with a presentation by Chesapeake Energy.

Every resident who wanted to speak was allowed to speak.

Prior to the presentations, Moncrief explained the “house rules” that everyone had to be respectful and not make personal attacks.

Three times he cautioned speakers that they were about to cross that line. Moncrief was definitely in control, respectful of everyone, kept it moving and injected lots of humor.

One person said he lived close enough to Rockwood Park Drive that he could spit on it from his house. Moncrief jokingly asked him just how far he could spit.

The council, especially Councilman Carter Burdette, spent a tremendous amount of time and effort evaluating alternatives and trying to determine the best course of action. We should all be proud of our mayor and council for such outstanding service to our city.

Glen Estes, Fort Worth

Bad Government

As a longtime resident of Fort Worth, I regret to admit that I have never attended a City Council meeting until Tuesday night and I must say that I was very disappointed.

One item on the agenda was regarding gas drilling in residential neighborhoods and there were many people in attendance. They were cautioned to be respectful of everyone — a very valid request.

I did not realize that this request meant that one could not voice any criticism of any kind, however. Mayor Mike Moncrief corrected those who used a “negative” verb with regard to the gas drillers and then silenced the first person who made a comment that indicated the city was giving the gas-drilling entities free water and that he would like some free water.

We live in America and still have First Amendment rights, but I guess that doesn’t apply to Fort Worth City Council meetings. Could it be the mayor realizes that many of us who live here feel as if the city has sold out to the gas-drilling companies, especially Chesapeake, and is afraid to hear from us?

The mayor and council members were elected to uphold the laws and oversee the good of city residents, not protect the interests of any one corporation or industry.

(By the way, I support drilling in the Barnett Shale, but I want the needs of the community considered first and foremost.)

Moncrief should recognize that the right to free speech is not his to revoke.

Cheryl Andrews, Fort Worth

Is anyone but me on the Clyde Picht bandwagon? For the enlightenment of you non-Fort Worthers, fascinated as you are by the most fascinating city in America, Clyde Picht is running against Mayor Mike in an election that will quickly be upon us. Clyde Picht is given a ghost's chance in Hell of winning. In Fort Worth you have to have the support of the Ruling Junta and the Good Old Boy Network to become mayor. Most of the people who might benefit from having someone like Clyde Picht be their mayor, don't vote. The majority not voting is what keeps the Ruling Junta in power. It's a pretty sweet system. And it pays pretty well, too.

Wednesday, April 29, 2009

Landslide Clyde ImPichting Fort Worth's Mayor Mike Moncrief

A few days ago I suggested that maybe it was a good idea to blindside Fort Worth's Ruling Junta and vote Fort Worth's current corrupt mayor out of office by electing Clyde Picht.

One of the Ruling Junta's anonymous shills commented on the blindsiding idea with this comment...

Picht was totally ineffective as a councilman. He would be even worse as Mayor. Blindsided? You people are blind to reality.

Near as I can tell, any ineffectiveness as a councilman was due to not being able to go against the dictates of the Ruling Junta.

In this morning's Fort Worth Star-Telegram, online version, there was one letter praising the amazing progress under the amazing leadership of Mayor Mike Moncrief, saying that "Fort Worth is continously complimented for the quality of life here."

Continuously complimented? By who? Who is doing this continuous complimenting of the amazing wonder that is Fort Worth? That verbiage seems suspiciously like the Star-Telegram's notorious green with envy type propaganda.

Another letter was in support of Clyde Picht becoming Fort Worth's mayor. That letter was perplexing because over and over again rather than calling the man Clyde Picht it used nClyde. What does nClyde mean?

Below are both letters, first the Ruling Junta shill and then the nClyde supporter....

Keep Moncrief at work

I, for one, am proud of the progress made in Fort Worth under the leadership of Mayor Mike Moncrief. Our city is continuously complimented for the quality of life here, and when you look at the opportunities here compared to other cities in Texas and the rest of the United States, we are very fortunate.

Moncrief is not afraid to speak his mind on sensitive matters, he is fair and equally concerned about all ethnicities and areas of our city. The dedication of Moncrief and his wife, Rosie, are beneficial to our city. It really bothers me when any of our community servants are criticized.

Pam Minick, Fort Worth

Clean the air

It is time to clean the air at City Hall.

Change is always healthy, and now is the time. Our city has been faced with financial challenges and growth that bring many challenges.

Citizens across the USA are beginning to clean their houses. Political leaders don’t need to serve for decades. Fort Worth deserves some better choices.

I am supporting Clyde Picht for mayor for the following reasons:

nClyde will act as an effective leader.
nClyde will know when to say no and will gather troops for support. Remember that the late Chuck Silcox and Clyde were the only council members who were not afraid to say “no.” They listened to their voters.
nClyde will treat residents politely and in a courteous manner.
nClyde has the time for this job. He is retired and has the experience. He needs no learning curve.
Help clean the house!

Peggy Terrell, Fort Worth

Wednesday, May 15, 2013

Good Grief Doctor Moncrief?

Surprising news in Fort Worth Weekly this morning that basically proves that in America anyone can become a doctor.

Tarleton State University gave something called honorary doctor of humane letters degrees to former Fort Worth Mayor Mike Moncrief and his wife Rosie.

Karen Murray, who is an official associated with this school which apparently has a low opinion of doctors, said this couple was doctored because of their “consistent commitment to the common good” and for being “models of engaged citizenship.”

Consistent commitment to the common good? Models of engaged citizenship?

Ugh.

The writer of the Fort Worth Weekly Doctor Moncrief? article, Eric Griffey, verbalized the reason for the "UGH" quite well...

I guess Murray was unaware of Mayor Mikey’s horrible track record of holding the door open for urban gas drillers with scant regulation or environmental protections in place, while lining his pockets with oil and gas money, and protecting elected officials from ethics probes. Maybe she forgot his penchant for abusing eminent domain, shutting out the press and the public from important policy matters, offering tax abatement to every cooperation, neutering the city’s ethics committee, and being generally unaccountable, secretive, and downright hostile to anyone who opposed him.

I only saw Mike Moncrief once during his Reign of Terror as Fort Worth's mayor. That one in person viewing happened while watching Mike Moncrief try to dye the Trinity River purple. I have seldom witnessed such an embarrassing spectacle. I documented this event way back on November 27, 2009 in a post titled Fort Worth Mayor Moncrief Fails To Turn Trinity River Purple.

I never guessed then, as I watched a grown man try to dye a river purple, that I was looking at a future doctor. Or that I was looking at a model of engaged citizenship consistently committed to the common good.

Have I mentioned that my new favorite word is hubris?

Wednesday, February 16, 2011

Thanking Departing Despot Mike Moncrief For Making Fort Worth The Best Place To Live On The Planet


There was a letter to the editor in this morning's Fort Worth Star-Telegram that I could not tell if the letter writer was making some sort of sarcastic joke or not.

The letter writer was thanking Fort Worth's departing despot, Mayor Mike Moncrief, for the amazingly wonderful job he has done as mayor, overseeing the poking of thousands of holes in his town, from which the departing despot profited hugely due to his ability to skirt by the ethics violations in the form of the mayor's rather obvious conflicts of interest, that would likely have the mayor in jail by now if Fort Worth was a city in the United States.

Below is the perplexing letter...

Thanks, Mayor Mike

Thank you, Mayor Mike Moncrief, for making Fort Worth the best place to live on the planet. Maybe we could send a carload of TCU players to bring you back in time for the May 14 election. We're sure going to miss your positive leadership. I am proud to say you still have my vote.

-- Steve McCans, Fort Worth

Mayor Mike Moncrief made Fort Worth the best place to live on the planet? What planet is this person speaking of? This person is suggesting a carload of TCU players kidnap the mayor so that he can continue his reign? Positive leadership? Has this person not seen a Fort Worth City Council meeting presided by the departing despot?

Saturday, November 28, 2009

The Fort Worth Star-Telegram Sort Of Sees Purple

My one reader may remember how a time or two I took issue with some erroneous Fort Worth Star-Telegram reporting.

It's been so long now I forget what the final straw was that caused me to cancel my subscription.

But, this morning reminded me of the type of thing that caused me to doubt pretty much anything I read in that paper, because over and over again when a Star-Telegram article was about something I had eye-witness knowledge of, I would spot bizarre errors.

Like over and over again touting a little lame collection of shops called the Sante Fe Rail Market as being modeled after Seattle's Pike Place Market and being the first public market in Texas. Soon I was to discover not only was it not the first public market in Texas, it was not even the first public market in Fort Worth!

Anyway, back to this morning's Star-Telegram.

In an article about yesterday's predictable dyeing the Trinity River Purple Boondoggle, titled "TCU fans are purple, even if the Trinity isn't" were a few odd pieces of information.

First off, please note the the title of the article accurately reported that the Trinity did not turn purple yesterday.

Yet in the article you read the following...

"We started this morning at 2 a.m., and we will go until it runs out," said Jim Oliver, water district general manager.

He said he didn’t know how long the river would remain purple, as the water district had never tried to dye it before.

"At least a day or two," he said.

They started what at 2am??? Nothing was sprayed into the Horned Frog River until Moncrief poured his glass of purple dye sometime after 10am. The Star-Telegram has this water district manager, Jim Oliver, saying he did not know how long the river would remain purple. And then in the next sentence he is saying it'll stay purple "At least a day or two."

The article has Moncrief saying he'd been a tad worried the past couple days about whether the Trinity River would really turn purple. I'll copy directly from the article...

Mayor Mike Moncrief admitted that he’s been a tad bit worried the past couple of days.

Would the Trinity River really turn purple?

"I did sleep with one eye open," Moncrief joked Friday morning while standing on the riverbank, where trucks were shooting purple dye into the water.

"But it is purple now, and it will be purple tomorrow."

Uh, it was not purple then and it certainly is not purple today. And trucks were not shooting purple dye into the water. It was one truck and it was spraying something into the air, not pumping anything into the river, as you can clearly see in the picture above.

I'd not heard Mayor Mike Moncrief speak before yesterday. I have had others tell me how embarrassing he can be. I totally get that now. He slept with one eye open? Due to worrying about dyeing a river? How does he sleep without worrying about getting indicted for corruption? How does he sleep without worrying about cutting back on library hours? How does he sleep without worrying about closing all the city pools?

Here's another Moncrief quote from the purple river article...

"To see people out here, in large numbers, young and old, with helicopters flying overhead, you can feel the energy in the air," he said. "There is nothing Fort Worth can’t do."

To which the article retorts, accurately, "Well, maybe one thing."

As in Fort Worth can't successfully dye a river purple. As for helicopters, in the plural, flying overhead, I saw one helicopter. It made one pass sometime after 10, but before the pseudo dye job began. The helicoptor was well gone before Moncrief finished with his mayoral decree and ceremonial dumping of his purple kool-aid into the former Trinity River.

To Moncrief's statement that the river will be purple tomorrow, the Star-Telegram said...

Well, maybe not. At 2 p.m. Friday, several hours after the dye briefly turned the river purple, the river looked the way it usually does — muddy brown.

Once more reporting that the river was turned "briefly" purple. It was not remotely purple, even briefly. I do not know how the river looked at 2pm, but at 10am it did not look brown or muddy. As I said yesterday, the river was looking a shade of purple. But not from any dye job.

I don't know if it is true or not (because I read it in the Star-Telegram) but the article about the failed dye attempt said the dye was donated by Streams & Valleys, with the Tarrant Regional Water District handling the details, "such as pumping dye into the river."

Again, I saw no pumping yesterday. I saw some material being sprayed from a truck, material that only altered the look of the river by causing a sort of white foam, which quickly dissipated. You can see that in the picture.

As another example of how brain dead dumb this operation was, make note of where the "dye" is being sprayed. On the blocked side of a dam-like structure, which has an opening in the middle that the river rushes through. Thus, whatever was being sprayed, yesterday, was quickly whooshed through that narrow funnel and sent merrily downstream, with no detectable purple left in its wake.

Except for the purple provided by Mother Nature.

One more thing. The dye was donated, but how much did the rest of this latest Fort Worth Boondoggle cost the city?

Friday, April 22, 2011

Fort Worth's Goofy Mayor Mike Moncrief Turns Into Spiderman On A Fort Worth Skyscraper

I've been asked a time or two why I think Fort Worth's mayor, Mike Moncrief, is goofy.

How would I know why he is goofy? I'm no psychiatrist.

I suppose if one did not follow, too closely, the antics of Fort Worth's mayor, it might sound a bit rude when I refer to him as Fort Worth's goofy mayor, Mike Moncrief.

But.

I've seen the mayor shooting pistols with the governor of Texas, Rick Perry, in downtown Fort Worth.

That is goofy.

I have seen the mayor pour purple Kool-Aid in to the Trinity River after reading a proclamation renaming a section of the river after a local football team. Fort Worth's mayor was trying to dye the river purple.

That is goofy.

And then this morning, in the Fort Worth Star-Telegram, there were photos of Fort Worth's goofy mayor, Mike Moncrief, trying to rappel down the side of a downtown Fort Worth building.

That is goofy.

The goofy mayor forgot his rappelling instructions, which caused him to start his descent upside down.

That is also goofy.