Author Topic: Calif. town outraged to learn of officials' pay  (Read 1916 times)

Dos Equis

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Calif. town outraged to learn of officials' pay
« on: July 23, 2010, 05:21:49 PM »
 :o  Somebody was asleep at the switch. 

Calif. town outraged to learn of officials' pay
JOHN ROGERSJOHN ROGERS, Associated Press Writer 

BELL, Calif. (AP) — Residents in this modest blue-collar Los Angeles suburb where one in six lives in poverty were angry: Their city manager was getting paid more than President Barack Obama and the police chief more than the commander of the nearly 13,000-member LAPD.

They demanded and got the manager, the chief and another high-salaried official to resign.

They looked for the culprits and found them in the very people they entrusted to lead their city of 40,000 people. Now, they're campaigning to boot them out of office.

Their mayor and three of their four council members, people they see every day at the grocery store or church, approved the contracts, and put an obscure measure on the ballot that allowed council members to pay themselves any amount of money.

And they did: collecting between $90,000 and $100,000 a year as part-time officials.

"This is America and everything should be transparent," plumber and longtime Bell resident Ralph Macias said.

In Bell, however, not many people really paid attention. The city of mostly small homes is like many American cities and towns: No newspaper covers them regularly, and the citizens spend what little free time they have with family and recreation.

A few who kept tabs on City Hall said they were suspicious because the officials were secretive, brusque and quick to act without explaining themselves.

"What caught us by surprise was the amount of money they were paying people," said Ali Saleh, who helped form the Bell Association to Stop the Abuse, whose acronym BASTA, translates to "Enough!" in Spanish.

The salaries exploded into public view last week after a Los Angeles Times investigation, based on California Public Records Act requests, showed that the city payroll was bloated with all sorts of six-figure salaries:

— Chief Administrative Officer Robert Rizzo made $787,637 a year, getting a series of raises since being hired in 1993 at $72,000. President Obama makes $400,000.

— Assistant City Manager Angela Spaccia made $376,288 a year.

— Police Chief Randy Adams earned $457,000. Hired just last year to oversee a force of fewer than 50 people, he was making 50 percent more than Los Angeles Police Chief Charlie Beck's $307,000.

All three Bell officials resigned after a late-night meeting Thursday.

"To the residents of Bell, we apologize," Mayor Oscar Hernandez said.

Now, Hernandez and the council members may be next.

By law, the council would have had to approve the contracts in an open session, but several residents complained that officials are loathe to explain what they are doing and quick to race through matters at public meetings with little discussion.

The Times said Hernandez, Vice Mayor and Councilwoman Teresa Jacobo and Councilmen George Mirabal and Luis Artiga are paid $8,000 a year, plus about $8,000 a month for boards and commissions they sit on. The other council member, Lorenzo Velez, said he is only paid the base $8,000 salary.

Earlier in the week, both Hernandez and Artiga said they deserved their salaries, adding that in addition to council meetings twice a month they are constantly on call for city business.

"That would be obscene, to think we're getting paid for only two meetings a month," Artiga said. "But that's only half the story."

The residents' group is demanding that the big salaries be cut by 90 percent or that the officials resign.

If they don't resign, Saleh said, his group will initiate a recall. He gave the council until Monday's meeting to respond. In the meantime, organizers planned to paper Bell with 12,000 flyers over the weekend, urging people to attend the meeting.

City officials have declined to respond to the recall threat. A message left on City Hall's public information line was not returned nor were messages left for Hernandez at the grocery store he owns or on Artiga's cell phone.

The Los Angeles County district attorney's office and the state attorney general are looking into the salaries.

Artiga said earlier in the week that while some employees may be overpaid, no one, at least so far, has accused officials of stealing money or shaking down contractors. Instead, its officials boast of the city's $22.7 million budget surplus, its well-kept parks, clean streets and programs at the community center for people of all ages.

Still, the salary scandal has left residents suspicious.

"I think they're a bunch of crooks," said Macias as he left City Hall after picking up a permit to install a water heater. "They should all be investigated by the feds."


http://hosted2-1.ap.org/HIHON/229cea0feec5482f81543bdaad3ec66c/Article_2010-07-23-US-Bell-Salaries/id-2385a5d7276c40a3a13d339530cf71dc

tu_holmes

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Re: Calif. town outraged to learn of officials' pay
« Reply #1 on: July 23, 2010, 05:35:56 PM »
I'm confused... Did someone do something wrong here?

Dos Equis

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Re: Calif. town outraged to learn of officials' pay
« Reply #2 on: July 23, 2010, 05:43:22 PM »
I'm confused... Did someone do something wrong here?

This:

The salaries exploded into public view last week after a Los Angeles Times investigation, based on California Public Records Act requests, showed that the city payroll was bloated with all sorts of six-figure salaries:

— Chief Administrative Officer Robert Rizzo made $787,637 a year, getting a series of raises since being hired in 1993 at $72,000. President Obama makes $400,000.

— Assistant City Manager Angela Spaccia made $376,288 a year.

— Police Chief Randy Adams earned $457,000. Hired just last year to oversee a force of fewer than 50 people, he was making 50 percent more than Los Angeles Police Chief Charlie Beck's $307,000.

All three Bell officials resigned after a late-night meeting Thursday.


Pretty clear the public had no idea these people were making this kind of money. 

Montague

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Re: Calif. town outraged to learn of officials' pay
« Reply #3 on: July 23, 2010, 07:44:49 PM »
People have a right to know this information, which is precisely why all town hall meetings should be accessible to the public via TV, radio, internet, etc.

But, people also need to take a greater interest in what their elected officials do.
Apathy and content are dangerous traits for the public to possess.

BayGBM

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Re: Calif. town outraged to learn of officials' pay
« Reply #4 on: July 23, 2010, 08:14:11 PM »
On the Media: How many more Bells are out there?
A shrunken Los Angeles Times still had the resources to unearth outsized official salaries in the small, working-class city, but more persistent journalistic voices closer to home are needed all over L.A. County.
by James Rainey

Several hundred citizens of Bell pressed toward the front door of City Hall this week, shouting and chanting with an indignation that did the heart good.

Bellians have turned into hellions. And for good reason. A story last week in The Times revealed leaders of the working-class city get paid like a bunch of white-shoe lawyers: City Manager Robert Rizzo makes more than $787,000 a year, Police Chief Randy Adams $457,000 and most of the City Council close to $100,000 each.

When they weren't hollering for the ouster of their small-town satraps Monday night, many in the crowd told me how much they appreciated the work of my colleagues Jeff Gottlieb and Ruben Vives, who broke the news of the shameless taxpayer rip-off.

Few causes are more righteous than the outing of officials who convince themselves they are worth more than an honest wage. So the revelations out of the scrappy little city deep in the gut of L.A. County served as both affirmation and alarm of what journalism can do and how much more needs to be done.

With newspapers shrinking and new media alternatives slow to step into the void, one has to wonder how many other City Halls conceal Bell-sized sleaze. How many other city officials have scrimped on services to fatten their paychecks? How many have cut lucrative contracts to benefit friends and relatives? Which developers got sweetheart deals for campaign cash?

It would be nice to point to a Golden Age, when so many reporters patrolled city halls and government agencies that the bureaucrats had no choice but to keep to the straight and narrow. But the truth is that even when newspapers reached their maximum power and economic success, two or three decades ago, they still didn't employ enough reporters to cover all the beats that needed tending.

As circulations have declined and newspapers have been flummoxed in their hunt for ways to make their popular Internet editions pay for themselves, the reporting ranks in Los Angeles County have thinned to half what they were 15 years ago.

The result is that officials in places like Bell can blithely go about their business — racking up 12% annual pay raises, keeping a pal on the payroll in a make-work job — without anyone in the news business sniffing around for months, or even years, on end.

Times Metro Editor David Lauter tells me that Vives and Gottlieb will stay on Bell's case. Two other veteran investigative reporters are "looking at whether the kind of problems we saw cropping up in Bell have been replicated elsewhere" in the poor cities of Southeast Los Angeles County, Lauter said.

The Times took a similar approach in years past — rooting out scandalous behavior in places like South Gate, Lynwood and Compton.

But Lauter doesn't deny what's become obvious — that The Times doesn't have enough reporters to regularly cover the county's 88 cities, not to mention myriad other agencies and beats (like transportation, education and healthcare) that loom large in the lives of our readers.

Staff cutbacks have been even deeper at the small- and medium-sized papers — like the South Bay Daily Breeze and Pasadena Star-News — that used to cover many suburban communities. And the smallest community papers — like those in the Wave chain, which covers many of the working-class communities in L.A. County — have only skeletal staffs.

Arnold Adler covers about a dozen cities, including Bell, for the Wave chain, but his work consists mostly of rewriting press releases and scrambling after quick accounts of city council votes.

He has overseen coverage of Bell city government since 1993, but has not yet attended a City Council meeting. He noted that his paper's readership is substantially greater in neighboring cities like South Gate.

I figured Adler, 73, might be rushing out to Monday night's meeting but he told me he wasn't sure it was more important than the other small cities holding meetings that night.

I asked if he was curious whether other officials in some of those other cities might be paying themselves huge salaries. "Not really," the soft-spoken Adler replied. "Technically, the salary should be based on state law and that is based on the population of the community."

It would be wrong, though, to lay diminished coverage in the lap of any single publication. The Long Beach Press-Telegram never ventured far enough north from its harbor roost to get wind of Bell's problems. And the Spanish-language papers owned by Eastern Group Publications tend to other communities around Bell, but not Bell itself.

"There is something wrong in this city," said Leo Bueno, a hospital maintenance man who joined the rally outside City Hall. "But nobody can find out anything about what is going on. There is nowhere to go."

Back in the days of more robust staffing at local newspapers, Bell officials might have gotten away with a few years of unchecked pay raises. But I'm guessing The Times or a smaller competitor would have sniffed out Rizzo's ill-gotten gains years ago, perhaps when his salary was a mere $400,000.

Several of the residents pleaded for The Times to stay on the story. But a big downtown paper spread over hundreds of Southern California communities can only dip in occasionally on any single small-town government.

It will take a more persistent journalistic voice, closer to home, to keep municipal malefactors on the run. Bell reformers have recently created a Facebook page. They have a new political organization. But it's unclear whether they can find and support a new journalistic voice to patrol their city's cozy corridors of power.

The Times reporters had been probing finances in Bell and neighboring Maywood when they discovered the district attorney's office had launched an investigation into excessive pay. That led to public records requests, which smoked out the whopping salaries.

A few Bellians told Gottlieb they had demanded public records before. But they said city officials put them off.

A big newspaper like The Times can't be so easily dissuaded. As they waited for the records, the reporters frequently reminded city officials they didn't want to have to take them to court.

If they're lucky, that's the only kind of judicial action Bell's bosses will be facing.

Dos Equis

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Re: Calif. town outraged to learn of officials' pay
« Reply #5 on: September 21, 2010, 11:40:38 AM »
*APPLAUSE*

California City Officials Reportedly Arrested After Salary Scandal
Published September 21, 2010 | FoxNews.com

At least eight officials reportedly have been arrested from the California city of Bell, where the local government has come under fire over exorbitant salaries paid to its employees.

The arrests come ahead of a press conference where Los Angeles County District Attorney Steve Cooley is expected to announce criminal charges in the case.

The Los Angeles Times reported that former Bell City Manager Robert Rizzo was among the officials arrested Tuesday.

Rizzo's nearly $800,000 salary triggered outrage in the California community. Other council members and city employees were earning nearly $100,000 before recently cutting their pay.

http://www.foxnews.com/politics/2010/09/21/california-city-officials-reportedly-arrested-salary-scandal/

tu_holmes

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Re: Calif. town outraged to learn of officials' pay
« Reply #6 on: September 21, 2010, 11:41:58 AM »
*APPLAUSE*

California City Officials Reportedly Arrested After Salary Scandal
Published September 21, 2010 | FoxNews.com

At least eight officials reportedly have been arrested from the California city of Bell, where the local government has come under fire over exorbitant salaries paid to its employees.

The arrests come ahead of a press conference where Los Angeles County District Attorney Steve Cooley is expected to announce criminal charges in the case.

The Los Angeles Times reported that former Bell City Manager Robert Rizzo was among the officials arrested Tuesday.

Rizzo's nearly $800,000 salary triggered outrage in the California community. Other council members and city employees were earning nearly $100,000 before recently cutting their pay.

http://www.foxnews.com/politics/2010/09/21/california-city-officials-reportedly-arrested-salary-scandal/
What were they charged with?

Soul Crusher

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Re: Calif. town outraged to learn of officials' pay
« Reply #7 on: September 21, 2010, 11:42:04 AM »
This goes on nationwide.  

Govt is too big, too corrupt, and out of control at every level.  The govt is nothing but a supersized locust at this point.  

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Re: Calif. town outraged to learn of officials' pay
« Reply #8 on: September 21, 2010, 11:43:57 AM »
obama did it right?

Dos Equis

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Re: Calif. town outraged to learn of officials' pay
« Reply #9 on: September 21, 2010, 11:46:57 AM »
What were they charged with?

Rizzo faces 53 counts; Bell was 'corruption on steroids,' D.A. Cooley says
September 21, 2010 | 11:23 am

Los Angeles County Dist. Atty. Steve Cooley filed charges against eight current and former Bell officials Tuesday, alleging that they misappropriated $5.5 million in public funds. Robert Rizzo, Bell's former city manager, has been charged with 53 counts of misappropriation of public funds and conflict of interest.

The charges come after a dramatic morning in which authorities swept through Bell and other cities, arresting former and current Bell officials.

Among those arrested were Rizzo; Angela Spaccia, former assistant city manager; Mayor Oscar Hernandez; councilmembers George Mirabal, Teresa Jacobo and Luis Artiga; and former councilmembers George Cole and Victor Bello.

"This is corruption on steroids," Cooley said.

[Updated at 11:28 a.m.: Cooley said officials used the city's tax dollars "as their own piggy bank that they then looted at will."

He said that councilmembers, who earned salaries of nearly $100,000, received $1.2 million for "phantom meetings" -- many which never occurred or lasted only a minute or two. 

Police Chief Randy Adams, who also stepped down after The Times reported he was earning $457,000, was not arrested.

"Being paid excessive amounts is not a crime," Cooley said, noting that the investigation is ongoing.

Bail for Rizzo has been set at $3.2 million. Bail for the others ranges from $130,000 to $377,500.]

Rizzo, whose high salary sparked the outrage that led to the investigations of the city, was among those arrested in the sweep. At 10 a.m., officials emerged from Rizzo's luxury home in Huntington Beach. Rizzo, handcuffed, was escorted into a black SUV.

In Bell, a neighbor of Hernandez, said authorities used a battering ram on his front door after he failed to answer the door.

"They broke the door down," said the neighbor, who only gave his name as Jose. "They knocked down the door and they brought him out in cuffs."

The city of Bell released a statement about the arrests, calling it a "sad day" for the city.

“Given the sheer volume of charges levied against former Bell Chief Administrative Officer Robert Rizzo and former Assistant CAO Angela Spaccia by the district attorney, it is clear that Rizzo and Spaccia were at the root of the cancer that has afflicted the City of Bell. Also, it is a sad day for Bell that four current and two former members of the council also have been arrested. I am prepared to double down our efforts to continue to restore order, establish good government reforms, and to ensure that Bell is providing needed services to its residents,” said Pedro Carrillo, interim city manager.

Outside City Hall, about two dozen residents gathered as news of the arrests spread. One man used a bullhorn to broadcast the Queen song, "Another One Bites the Dust." Members of the crowd laughed and applauded, happy to see arrests in the scandal.

For two months, the Los Angeles County district attorney's office and state and federal authorities have investigated Bell, where high salaries earned by Rizzo and other top officials have sparked widespread outrage. The Times reported last month that Rizzo was set to earn more than $1.5 million in 2010. Additionally, he gave loans totaling $1.6 million to more than 50 city officials, including himself.

http://latimesblogs.latimes.com/lanow/2010/09/bell-charges-rizzo.html

Soul Crusher

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Re: Calif. town outraged to learn of officials' pay
« Reply #10 on: September 21, 2010, 11:48:41 AM »
obama did it right?

These clowns are in the millions, obama is doing this crap on the TRILLION dollar level at this point. 

BayGBM

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Re: Calif. town outraged to learn of officials' pay
« Reply #11 on: September 22, 2010, 06:14:55 PM »
Bell's Rizzo faces 58 years in prison if convicted
by Richard Winton and Jack Leonard

Prosecutors said Thursday that former Bell City Manager Robert Rizzo faces up to 58 years in prison if convicted.

Rizzo and seven other current and former Bell officials have been charged with dozens of felonies in a sweeping public corruption case filed by the L.A. County district attorney's office.

On Thursday, a judge reduced Rizzo's bail from $3.2 million to $2 million. Rizzo's attorney said the high bail was unfair because Rizzo was not a flight risk and did not commit a violent crime.

But the judge said the accusations against Rizzo warranted high bail. "The charged offenses are, in my opinion, extremely serious," said Los Angeles County Superior Court Judge Michael E. Pastor.

James W. Spertus, Rizzo's attorney, said that his client has been in a jail medical facility and that he has been unable to review the array of felony charges with Rizzo. The former city manager is charged with 53 counts of misappropriation of public funds, falsification of documents and conflict of interest.

Spertus said that the charges came as no surprise and that Cooley,  who is running for California attorney general, was politically motivated in filing them.

"The allegations are mistaken," Spertus said. "They are factually untrue in many readily provable ways."

Agnostic007

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Re: Calif. town outraged to learn of officials' pay
« Reply #12 on: September 23, 2010, 07:26:53 AM »
The citizens of Bell have some culpability in this case. I grew up in a small town with a city council and Mayor who were good ol' boys who didn't have much else to do. They all probably started the job wanting to do the right thing but when they discovered no one was watching them, or calling them on their decisions, they began making decisions that lined their pockets, their brothers pockets and friends pockets at the expense of the townspeople. It goes on till this day. You know how many people attend the monthly city council meetings? 0, zilch, nada. No one cares. If it doesnt affect them personally, you won't hear a peep out of them.
What I suspect happened in Bell is similar. They found that no one was watching, no one cared, and they voted themselves a pay raise and no one bitched. So they voted themselves another, and another and no one knew because no one ever bothered to show up.
So while the arrested are low life scumbags who deserve years in prison for taking advantage of those who trusted them to do the right thing, the town should be ashamed of itself for allowing it to happen under their noses.

   

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Re: Calif. town outraged to learn of officials' pay
« Reply #13 on: September 23, 2010, 07:49:02 AM »
Bell's Rizzo faces 58 years in prison if convicted
by Richard Winton and Jack Leonard

Prosecutors said Thursday that former Bell City Manager Robert Rizzo faces up to 58 years in prison if convicted.

Rizzo and seven other current and former Bell officials have been charged with dozens of felonies in a sweeping public corruption case filed by the L.A. County district attorney's office.

On Thursday, a judge reduced Rizzo's bail from $3.2 million to $2 million. Rizzo's attorney said the high bail was unfair because Rizzo was not a flight risk and did not commit a violent crime.

But the judge said the accusations against Rizzo warranted high bail. "The charged offenses are, in my opinion, extremely serious," said Los Angeles County Superior Court Judge Michael E. Pastor.

James W. Spertus, Rizzo's attorney, said that his client has been in a jail medical facility and that he has been unable to review the array of felony charges with Rizzo. The former city manager is charged with 53 counts of misappropriation of public funds, falsification of documents and conflict of interest.

Spertus said that the charges came as no surprise and that Cooley,  who is running for California attorney general, was politically motivated in filing them.

"The allegations are mistaken," Spertus said. "They are factually untrue in many readily provable ways."


cuzz is a little fat shit

Dos Equis

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Re: Calif. town outraged to learn of officials' pay
« Reply #14 on: April 26, 2011, 12:32:07 AM »
Disgraced California City Official Set Up Secret Pension Fund
Published April 26, 2011
Associated Press
 

AP
Feb. 23: Bell City executives (from r.) Administrator Robert Rizzo; former Assistant City Administrator Angela Spaccia; Luis Artiga and Oscar Hernandez listen during a preliminary hearing for the four, who are charged with misappropriation of public funds in Los Angeles.

LOS ANGELES -- A former public official accused of orchestrating a scam that nearly bankrupted a working-class Los Angeles suburb set up a secret pension fund containing $4.5 million to skirt retirement limits for California public employees, according to a newspaper report Monday.

Grand jury transcripts reviewed by the Los Angeles Times revealed that ousted Bell city manager Robert Rizzo and his former assistant, Angela Spaccia, set up two pension plans to inflate the already generous compensation paid to city employees.

One account benefited 40 employees, guaranteeing them at least $2,000 a month if they retire as early as age 52 and had spent five years in office. That's in addition to their normal payments from the state pension system.

Another account was set aside just for Rizzo and Spaccia, allowing them to circumvent IRS regulations capping government pensions.

Lourdes Garcia, the city's director of administrative services, testified under a grant of limited immunity that Rizzo told her in 2008 that he wanted the city to spend $14 million on the secondary pension fund.

"My reaction was `That's a lot of money,"' Garcia testified. "The city doesn't have that kind of money ... He knew that money was getting tight."

An attorney for Rizzo, who faces more than 50 counts for masterminding a scam in which he paid himself and other top Bell officials massive salaries, denied that his client was setting up his own retirement plan.
"It could be that Ms. Garcia is misremembering facts," James Spertus said.

Members of Bell's new City Council say they will look into recouping some or all of the money to help reduce the city's debt.

In all, prosecutors said, Bell was looted of more than $6 million. The city of 40,000 people, where one in six people live in poverty, is in as much as $4.5 million debt.

Rizzo had an annual salary and compensation package of $1.5 million, Spaccia was paid an annual salary of more than $375,000 and six former Bell City Council members each received about $100,000 a year for part-time service.

Bell's interim chief administrative officer put a halt to payments to the supplementary pension fund several months ago.

http://www.foxnews.com/us/2011/04/26/disgraced-california-city-official-set-secret-pension-fund/

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Re: Calif. town outraged to learn of officials' pay
« Reply #15 on: April 26, 2011, 07:43:53 AM »
Bell's Rizzo faces 58 years in prison if convicted
by Richard Winton and Jack Leonard

Prosecutors said Thursday that former Bell City Manager Robert Rizzo faces up to 58 years in prison if convicted.

Rizzo and seven other current and former Bell officials have been charged with dozens of felonies in a sweeping public corruption case filed by the L.A. County district attorney's office.

On Thursday, a judge reduced Rizzo's bail from $3.2 million to $2 million. Rizzo's attorney said the high bail was unfair because Rizzo was not a flight risk and did not commit a violent crime.

But the judge said the accusations against Rizzo warranted high bail. "The charged offenses are, in my opinion, extremely serious," said Los Angeles County Superior Court Judge Michael E. Pastor.

James W. Spertus, Rizzo's attorney, said that his client has been in a jail medical facility and that he has been unable to review the array of felony charges with Rizzo. The former city manager is charged with 53 counts of misappropriation of public funds, falsification of documents and conflict of interest.

Spertus said that the charges came as no surprise and that Cooley,  who is running for California attorney general, was politically motivated in filing them.

"The allegations are mistaken," Spertus said. "They are factually untrue in many readily provable ways."

Epic Leans

Jadeveon Clowney

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Re: Calif. town outraged to learn of officials' pay
« Reply #16 on: April 26, 2011, 07:48:10 AM »
lol, google City of Vernon.