Article

**PLANET EXCLUSIVE** STATE AG RULES IN FAVOR OF TERRY KINNAS NOT ONCE, NOT TWICE, BUT THREE TIMES … KINNAS’ COMPLAINTS AGAINST REID MIDDLE SCHOOL SUBCOMMITTEE UPHELD … EAT CROW, JULIA SABOURIN, DAN BIANCHI, ALF BARBALUNGA, and SCHOOL COMMITTEE MEMBERS

0 0 votes
Article Rating

By DAN VALENTI

PLANET VALENTI News and Commentary

(FORTRESS OF SOLITUDE, THURSDAY, AUG. 29, 2013) — Congratulations again to Terry Kinnas,

TERRY KINNAS: Vindicated!

Pittsfield’s most effective public servant. Once more (actually, thrice more), the office of state Attorney Gen. Martha Coakley has ruled in favor of Kinnas in three open meeting complaints related to the Reid Middle School Council Community Outreach Committee. The AG ruled that the Reid group, chaired by Julia Sabourin (aka Julia Berkowitz), violated the law three times in its deliberations, including two meetings illegally held to plan what became the most embarrassing evening for any city deliberative body in years.

THE PLANET speaks, of course, of the infamous Scopes Monkey Trial, in which Mayor Dan Bianchi and the rest of Kinnas’ school committee colleagues put Kinnas on trial for having the audacity to file the Reid complaints with the AG in the first place.

The AG’s ruling makes clear: Terry Kinnas was in the right. The Reid-ites, the Pittsfield School Committee, Dan Bianchi, and the PSD administration were in the wrong. Shame on them, and more glory to Kinnas. Do you wonder why, folks, the Pittsfield public schools have turned into a joke? You shouldn’t anymore.

“I feel vindicated,” Kinnas told THE PLANET. “I received unwarranted political and legal harassment via the Pittsfield School Committee [of which Kinnas is a member] and the mayor. That would be Bianchi, of course. Kinnas also pointed out the “arrogance” of the Reid subcommittee, which ignored the Kinnas’ complaints. As the AG ruled, “failing to respond to Mr. Kinnas’ two Dec. 11, 2012 complaints … also violated the Open Meeting Law.” Jonathan Sclarsic, assistant AG, sent letters to Sabourin informing her of the decisions.

Let’s take a look at the three rulings:

KINNAS: Justice will not be denied.

Violation #1: The AG found that the Reid subcommittee broke the Open Meeting law on Nov. 14, 2012, for conducting a meeting “that was inaccessible to the public.” The AG determined that in response to Kinnas’ complaint, the subcommittee took remedial action and that no further remedial action was necessary beyond a slap on the wrist. The Reid Critters didn’t get off as well on Violations 2 and 3.

Violations 2 and 3: The AG found that the Reid-ites violated the Open Meeting law twice for “failing to provide 48 hours notice for its November 21, 2012 and December 3, 2012 meetings.” Moreover, the AG also determined that the Reid-ites broke the law by failing to respond to Kinnas’ Feb. 7, 2013 allegations. The law requires that “a public body shall, within 14 business days of receipt of an Open Meeting Law complaint, review the complainant’s allegations; take remedial action, if appropriate; and send to the Attorney General a copy of the complaint and a description of any remedial action taken” [PLANET’s underline]. The  Reid-ites did none of this.

Kinnas, therefore, is more than justified in his criticism of the subcommittee’s “arrogance.” Public officials must sign an affidavit of compliance and file it with the city clerk’s office that they have read the state’s Open Meeting Law, that they understand it, and that they will obey it. This is not discretionary, except that many Pittsfield officials seem to think the laws do not apply in the city. Well, as everyone on Bear Creek can tell them, those laws DO apply. Think for a moment if it wasn’t for Kinnas, nothing would have happened. The Reid-ites would have continued to meet illegally, and no one on the PSC or in the administration — including all the troughers who lap up six-figure salaries out of taxpayers’ pockets — would have done a thing about it.

PA-THE-TIC.

For these violations, the AG:

1.) Ordered the Reid-ites’ “immediate and future compliance” with the law.

2.) Put the subcommittee on notice “that similar future violations may be considered evidence of an intentional violation of the law.” This is AG-speak for saying, “The next time, it’s going to hit the members of the subcommittee in the pocketbook.”

3. Ordered “the subcommittee members to review and certify in writing to our office within thirty (30) days that the members have complied.” In other words, the AG gave the Reid-ites a homework assignment and a deadline. They have to eat crow, and rightly so. They must put it in writing, and we shall eagerly look forward to obtaining a copy of the letter, which we shall share. We hope Sabourin can avoid further embarrassment by at least spelling her mea culpa correctly. She is, after all, connected with the PSD.

It shall furthermore be the case, in light of the AG’s finding, that all personnel on all city boards, councils, and commissions had better start following the law. Simply put: They have to do the public’s business in public.

MAYOR BIANCHI: Did he orchestrate the “Scopes Monkey Trial?” and why was he out of town that night?

Also invited to the crow feast is Bianchi, Alf Barbalunga, Dan Elias, Jim Conant, Kathy Amuso, and Kathy Yon. These accomplices aided and abetted the unjust persecution of Kinnas in the now infamous “Scopes Monkey Trial.” This occurred in January of this year, as THE PLANET recalls, on a night in which Bianchi conveniently found it “necessary” to be out of town. The mayor has yet to explain his role in arranging the Trial or why he wasn’t in the room that night. Was it a miraculous coincidence or was it an example of Bianchi’s political cowardice? We’ll leave it to you to decide for yourself.

During the Trial, the school committee chastised Kinnas for pursuing these violations of the law. Now that Kinnas has basically stuck it to them, at minimum Barbalunga, Bianchi and the rest owe Kinnas a public apology at the next school committee meeting.

The violations send the message that Bianchi and the others, caught red-handed, think they are above the law. It also makes us wince to think about the message these yahoos send to Boston. No wonder the politicians think the state ends at Worcester, despite the neat little photo ops of Mayor Bianchi shining the shoes of newly minted U.S. Sen. Ed Markey.

We also throw school committee lawyer Mr. Dupere in with the hooligans. Dupere presided as legal counsel to the committee during the Monkey Trial. In essence, he gave a stamp of approval to nothing less than a violation of Terry Kinnas’ civil rights. We aren’t lawyers here at THE PLANET, but we know plenty of law, and it would seem to us to be an actionable situation.

Oh, by the way, for his stellar work on behalf of the school committee, that body gave Dupere, who’s a private lawyer serving the PSC as a hired gun, a $10,000 raise! When that came up early in this term, all but one member of the PSC voted to boost Dupere from $35,000 to $45,000 a year for his part-time gig.

Guess who was the only school committeeman who voted against this? If you guessed Terry Kinnas, you got it right!

Incidentally, THE PLANET shares this “veddy interesting” side note from the AG’s action. It has to do with the online postings.

As we said, the AG sent the complaints via post directly to Julia Sabourin c/o of Reid Middle School. Kinnas, as the complainant, received a copy by mail as well. If you want to see the actual letters online from the AG’s website, you follow these steps (there’s a reason we are sharing this information, so bear with us uno momento):

a.) Go to www.mass.gov/ago

b.) Click on “Government Resources” on the top menu bar.

c.) Click on the hot link for “Open Meeting Law.”

d.) Under the heading :Open Meeting Law Resources,” click on the first hot link, which reads, “Browse OML Determinations.” This lists the recent findings from the AG on the Open Meeting Law.

Do all this, and you will see a list of determinations that go back to Jan. 3, 2013. It is a ponderous list, some 127 items in all. Here’s the anomaly: Every one of the links on this long list is a hot one except two. Can you guess which two? If you guessed the two dated 8/26/13, OML 2013-125 and 126, “Reid Middle School Council Community Outreach Subcommittee,” you are correct once more.

What are the odds, ladies and gentlemen, that this should be a coincidence? Gosh, you think someone out there doesn’t want the good people of Pittsfield to know about the reckless attitude toward the law exhibited by the mayor and the school committee.

No problem, though: THE PLANET is here, once again, to break a story that the GOB-controlled local mainstream and alternate media wouldn’t find in a million years — not because the Boring Broadsheet, WBEC, WUHN, WBRK, and all the rest of them aren’t capable of finding.

It’s because they’re too friggin’ afraid to look.

——————————————————————————-

“One can see what will trouble / This sleep of mine, whatever sleep it is. / Were he not gone, / The woodchuck could say whether it’s like his / Long sleep, as I describe it coming on, / Or just some human sleep.”Robert Frost, closing stanza, “After Apple-Picking.”

“OPEN THE WINDOW, AUNT MILLIE.”

LOVE TO ALL.

0 0 votes
Article Rating
56 Comments
Inline Feedbacks
View all comments
Ron Kitterman
Ron Kitterman
10 years ago

Why would the Mayor offer an apology, he was conspicuously absent from the meeting ? He makes Silent Cal, look like a blabber mouth with his actions.
http://www.iberkshires.com/story/42853/Pittsfield-School-Committee-Reprimands-Member-Over-Reid-Dispute-.html “ The committee voted 5-1, with Kinnas opposed and Mayor Daniel Bianchi absent, to approve the following motion in response to the dispute: “

Scott
Scott
10 years ago

This mayor has proven himself unworthy to lead. It’s a shame he’s going unopposed. Spend, spend, spend Bianchi we got ill just get another job. New police station, new water system and a new school.

Sally
Sally
10 years ago

Whatever good Mr. Kinnas tried to do was overshadowed by his ranting diatribes and anger management issues. He is his own worst enemy.

Russell Moody
Russell Moody
Reply to  Sally
10 years ago

Ms. Sally,
I concur…
Russell

Jim Gleason
Jim Gleason
Reply to  Sally
10 years ago

Terry Kinnas did no ranting, in fact he was very much under control at all times during all of this ridiculousness.He asked questions, which is taboo under GOB control(and I don’t count Mayor Bianchi as a GOB). Weneeded 6 more Terry Kinnas’ on that committee and maybe they could’ve gotten something accomplished instead of worrying about pleasing their masters.Keep up the good work Terry and I’m sorry you’re not running again. You got and would have my vote.

Ten
Ten
Reply to  Jim Gleason
10 years ago

So From what you say Mr. Kinnas did no ranting at any meeting. From what I have heard from parents that were present at the meeting was that Kinnas did not only rant but went as far as to slam his fist on the table on which the meeting was held around and become “red in the face” resorting to yelling and belligerence to “get his point across”. It appears from what I know of the meeting from people who were present was that some members of the subcommittee felt so intimidated that they required someone to escort them from the building to feel safe to leave. Not only did Mr. Kinnas resort to an agressive tactic to present his displeasure regarding the violation of open meeting laws he was also observed to be in violation of standard meeting practice demanding to be admitted to sit at the table around which the committee was sitting. This would indicate that he has a measure of power regarding the actions of the committee as to their deliberation which clearly a non member of the committee, even one who is an elected public official, clearly does not possess. He refused to sit in the seats reserved for the public presenting a face I find to be displeasing at best.

I find such comments from members of the committee to reveal conduct that is simply unacceptable and downright troubling in regards to politics especially coming from an elected official. I am simply disappointed in the man who many of you see as a savior of local politics and instead have come to see a man who I once had great hope for in the school committee as more of a hindrance to progress in the local school system.

In addition he proceeded to take his complaints regarding the open meeting violations to the AG rather than local authorities which may have simply resulted in the fixing of the error which was perpetrated. Instead he proceeded to make a move that showed a lack of confidence in the local systems generating such controversy and the potential of massive fines to be paid out by the government of Pittsfield,

Those of you that have up to this point supported Mr. Kinnas’s actions relying on the biased information supported by himself and those who support him, without ever looking into the true nature of the events which had unfolded in the meeting in question and the words of those who were present are in the right to have such opinions and I likewise would take similar action regarding a public official given the same information. However with this information I cannot find it morally sound to continue blindly supporting someone in the face of such fact. Those of you who rethink your support of this man should like me find themselves at least reconsidering their support of the man.

Ten
Ten
Reply to  danvalenti
10 years ago

So… simply because the AG says it’s right makes it right? The U.S. Government said slavery was right for more than 100 years. was that right then or were they wrong. Furthermore you totally fail to address my content

Jim Gleason
Jim Gleason
Reply to  Ten
10 years ago

Dear Ten, I that your IQ? It surely seems to be that way. “According to parents who were at the meetings” blah blah. Did you see this for yourself? I did, and you can be assured that at no time did Mr. Kinnas lose him composure or rnat and rave. You wont believe me , of course, because I am telling it as it happened, not a made up fantasy version of the happenings. Ta Ta.

TKO
TKO
Reply to  danvalenti
10 years ago

If the AG had found intentional violations of the law there could have been $1000 fines assessed for each violation. That fine would be payed out of my tax dollars. These were not found to be intentional….thank you. I wonder how this is in any way financially responsible? The open meeting violations could have been handled at the school committee level. Complaints to the AG clearly were an option, but change to a faulty meeting posting process could have been handled in a far more financially responsible manner.

Ten
Ten
Reply to  danvalenti
10 years ago

Sir by my understanding in the case of the Money Trial officials were not punished for their actions to bring attention to violations. Rather they were reprimanded for their actions in disrupting a meeting. If you have data to disprove me and prove otherwise I would greatly appreciate it.

Mike Ward
Mike Ward
10 years ago

Terry’s school committee legacy is, not surprisingly, a continuation of his role as government watchdog. It’s an important role, but it was never necessary for Terry to actually be a member of the school committee. I’d rather see someone in that seat who is interested in improving the product.

Jim Gleason
Jim Gleason
Reply to  Mike Ward
10 years ago

Mike, would you say the same about Barry Clairmont on the City Council? Terry got a lot accomplished, including bringing the light the shady dealings that go on in the PPS and getting rid of the most inept and crooked Superintendent since Dr Lafrenzie.He also stood up for students and families who weren’t connected and who had no voice before.As I said before, keep up the good work Terry, and I’m sorry you’re not running again.

Ed Shepardson
Ed Shepardson
Reply to  Jim Gleason
10 years ago

At this point, it might be that the entire electorate has anger management issues.

Mike Ward
Mike Ward
Reply to  Jim Gleason
10 years ago

Good observation, Jimmy. Barry and Terry both have that auditor quality about them. I get the impression that what they do with their findings is what differentiates them. Barry is more of a reformer and Terry is more of a snitch.

I do give Terry credit for uncovering Housegate, even though he was unable to stop the deal.

Dave
Dave
Reply to  Mike Ward
10 years ago

“it was never NECESSARY(my caps) for Terry to ACTUALLY(my caps) be a member of the school committee” If that one statement doesn’t sum up what is ACTUALLY wrong with the way this city has run for far too long I can’t come up with a better one. Also, “interested in improving the product”?!?!?!?!?!?! The throwing more money approach hasn’t worked. “The vocational department has been grossly underfunded for far too long” is a statement I have heard for quite a few budget seasons. The budget grows each year, the surpluses get spent elsewhere, whose fault is this? Obviously not the people interested in improving the product.

Ten
Ten
Reply to  Dave
10 years ago

A question I feel needs to be presented in this situation is “Why is the vocational system grossly underfunded?” I cannot simply find myself willing to complain about the problem without more information. I feel that it is more important to find out why the school department is spending more money elsewhere? Personally I find a totally possible answer to be that the requirements placed upon the local school department by the state regarding the MCAS test and scores in other areas of study as well as other programs to support such advancement might be responsible in this under-funding.

Mike Ward
Mike Ward
Reply to  danvalenti
10 years ago

Dan, please describe a constructive idea that Terry brought forward, advocated, sold, and saw implemented. An idea that somehow improved the way the schools operate or saved us money. That’s not how he works. He’s a watchdog. He looks for procedural missteps and reports those missteps to the proper authorities. I think my critique was a fair and apt counterpoint to your characterization of his term. That’s allowed here, right?

raider50
raider50
Reply to  Mike Ward
10 years ago

Amen

Jim Gleason
Jim Gleason
Reply to  Mike Ward
10 years ago

Mike, every time Terry brought forward a valid way to save money or improve efficiency his small minded mates on the committe shot ot down because it came from him, and solely because it came from him.At least you have the guts to put your name on your misguided thoughts, unlike the cowards who bash anonymously.

CarlosDanger
CarlosDanger
10 years ago

Whereas Mr. Kinnas seems to try to do the right thing, he lacks the tact and proper communication skills to gather buy-in for his proposals and ideas. That being said, what the school committee and the mayor did to him was just downright wrong.

dusty
dusty
Reply to  CarlosDanger
10 years ago

What the mayor and school committee did was demoralizing to the taxpayers. But that is their style and they probably lost the battle but won the war. I am sure they have discouraged other candidates with integrity from running. And was that not their goal in the first place?

At least now the people who do pay attention know who the slime balls are and what they really stand for. They are above shame so I doubt Terry will let any hand shakes from any of them.

Ten
Ten
Reply to  dusty
10 years ago

How can one say that these people have no integrity? I mean to say is it not possible that these people who you would have be believed spineless and without integrity to simply be running on different ethical systemics and moral ideals than yourselves. Could it not be possible that they show integrity in equal measure toward the objectives that they believe to be most important? Or is it that many among you cannot find it possible that one could have other objectives than Mr. Kinnas? Before you ever judge a man’s integrity you need to know his objectives.

Ten
Ten
Reply to  danvalenti
10 years ago

No. They acted out of ignorance of the law there is a strong difference between acting in defiance and ignorance. The other members of the PSD and School Committee were for giving them a chance to rectify their error. I believe integrity is acting for what you believe is right it has nothing to do with law. To say law is the basis of integrity means men like Gandhi who acted directly in defiance of colonial law, or MLK and the Civil Rights fighters who acted in opposition of the law to do what was right had no integrity. INSTEAD you give integrity to men like the Taliban who make unfair laws and enforce them with an iron fist. If having integrity means always acting to persue punishment to the fullest extent of the law then count me out. I’d rather be able to act fair then have your kind of “Integrity”.

Tom Verizer
Tom Verizer
10 years ago

Terry Kinnas has always conducted himself in a modest and professional manner. He has been a fearless watchdog on behalf of his citywide constituents. He has never never never engaged in “ranting diatribes” as Sally claims. He doesn’t has anger mgnt issue, he has “dishonest govt” issues. Go Terry!

TKO
TKO
10 years ago

On this blog, the open meeting law violations and the sanction against Mr. Kinnas are presented as if they are the same issue. The open meeting law violations were against a middle school school council that was made up of volunteer parents and teachers who disbanded at the conclusion of their business….good luck with following up with a group that no longer exists. Also, “Mr. Keeper of the law” was sanctioned for being aggressive and speaking out of order to these parent and teacher volunteers. Those present at his “performance” felt threatened and asked to be escorted from the building because of Mr. Kinnas. There is a place for being vigilant, there is no place to be a vigilante. It was never up to Mr. Kinnas to enforce the law, and that is why he was sanctioned.

TKO
TKO
Reply to  danvalenti
10 years ago

DV

As usual, you have given me a chuckle for the evening…..
I beg to differ….it was not any more my school council meeting than it was any constitutents meeting….Just saying….and you confirmed the fact that Mr. Kinnas should have known that raising his voice, speaking without being recognized by the chair and pounding on the table constitutes conduct unbecoming of a school committee member and a state official. Why don’t you admit it?

TKO
TKO
Reply to  danvalenti
10 years ago

How can you say he was not doing these things at the meeting? You were not there. What possible motive do the volunteer parents have for making this up? Mr.Kinnas is the only attendee at that meeting that says he was not aggressive…if I recall the School Committee meeting correctly, even he said because of the back pain he was experiencing at the time, his body language could have been mis-interpreted. This is in no way intended to be a quote from him…

Also it was discussed that the subcommittee had no way to know that the meeting posting was held before being distributed. Clearly that needed to change. The system of meeting notification needed to change. Criminal? Really???

Ten
Ten
Reply to  danvalenti
10 years ago

I find there to be a fine distinction between the actions that you discuss. In this I mean to say that Kinnas’s reprisal and the open meeting violations are connected in that they are in relation to the same meeting but disparate in that Kinnas’s reprisal is related to complaints from members of the committee regarding his behavior while the open meeting violations are the result of actions taken by the committee before Mr. Kinnas was involved. This leaves all of us with two options. Either one chooses to believe that the events are unrelated in nature to a high degrees. Or instead we decide that they are directly related. This means that Kinnas did indeed threaten the council with action about open meeting violations, such that I would consider to be aggressive action resulting in reprisal, instead of acting to resolve the issue without problems.

Ten
Ten
Reply to  danvalenti
10 years ago

Is not a threat agressive? Is aggression the basis of our governmental system? Do Americans not believe in second chances? Is it not the job of elected officials to support the beliefs of the people they represent? (HINT: the answers are yes; no; yes; and yes) In this I believe Kinnas failed to give the council a chance to rectify their wrongs without harsh punishment. So yes with the AG’s decision he is legally right but he is totally morally wrong in not giving them a chance to reform without punishment and in opening with aggression.

Jim Gleason
Jim Gleason
Reply to  TKO
10 years ago

Tito, you should be sanctioned for writing asinine statements. Mr. Kinnas was right, they were wrong, simple.I’m sure mr. Kinnas threatened no one and that was all used for effect, “Oh, I felt so threatened by him”. He’s not Andre the Giant for crying out loud. Get off that bandwagon, the wheels don’t turn any more.

raider50
raider50
Reply to  TKO
10 years ago

Quit bringing facts into the discussion

Ten
Ten
Reply to  raider50
10 years ago

Hahaha Very funny I appreciate commments like this.

Rick
Rick
Reply to  TKO
10 years ago

How can you speak out of order at an illegal meeting?

tito
tito
10 years ago

Jim, you need a vision check, and see if the Jets can find a new coach while your at it,,,,,,,,,,

GMHeller
GMHeller
10 years ago

Mr. Valenti,
No mention, of course, to which political party all these arrogant clowns belong.

tito
tito
10 years ago

,,,,,keep an eye on this bird Planet.