Wednesday, September 23, 2009 • 12:00 AM Comments (9)

Unflinching, Susco is mad as Hell

posted by Daryl G. LaFleur

Well, Northampton resident Steve Susco (below) let Mayor Higgins and the City Council, as well as the public, know how he feels. He is tired of raw sewage bubbling up in his home. The story did not garner much media attention until the squeaky wheel amplified its volume. Susco unleashed a torrent of ill will towards Mayor Higgins and the Council during the last two City Council public comment periods.

Video courtesy North Street Neighborhood Association

While I viewed Mr. Susco's most recent public comments with surprise (I don't blame him mind you), I'm not sure why Mayor Mary Clare Higgins chose to implicate political motives as she glanced over at mayoral front runner Michael Bardsley at the conclusion of Susco's remarks. Susco has publicly thanked Bardsley and at-large City Council Candidate Jesse Adams for attempting to help him. He has derided Councilors Dostal and Carney and Higgins for apparently not doing so. He has also thanked this blogger for covering the issue.

It can be assumed from here until election day that anyone who dares cross Higgins will be suspect and accused of working at the behest of Bardsley. Dissent will be framed as a vast right wing conspiracy I imagine with Bardsley pulling the strings. Next thing you know rumors will abound that Bardsley is a conservative, a baby-killer and who knows what else. Let's be clear, Susco had four inches of raw sewage seep into his home and some of his neighbors have had similar problems. This has cost him thousands of dollars in clean up costs and lost possessions. He is fed up and is not going to take it anymore.

In a letter to the editor published in the Gazette Dan Felten implied that Bardsley stood idly by while one of his supporters acted like a mob during the Council meeting. However, Mr. Susco by himself does not constitute a mob and there was nothing Bardsley could do at that moment. I seriously doubt Bardsley or anyone else could have silenced Mr. Susco.

Moreover, the gasp eminating from Higgins' supporters regarding civility leaves me laughing out loud. I'm reminded of my failed run for city council in 2005 when I opposed David Narkewicz, a Higgins loyalist. One of his supporters or a group of supporters repeatedly vandalized my home. Repeatedly lawn signs were destroyed, with some of the stakes snapped in half. I counted about a dozen signs destroyed that season, many of them right in front of my home. Moreover, someone came onto my front porch and tipped over furniture and signs at about 2:00 a.m. one morning. I gave chase on foot but did not catch the coward(s). I called 911 and two cruisers arrived on the scene. The officers checked out the neighborhood, but found no one. Of course this was not covered by the local media, but it happened nonetheless.

Now Mr. Susco is not mincing his words and he is no coward, but he also is not threatening violence or vandalism to my knowledge. The point is that I have no physical evidence to suggest that Narkewicz had anything to do with the vandalism of my home nor have I ever made that suggestion, though some of my supporters at the time wondered aloud about it. If Mr. Felten has physical evidence linking Bardsley to the actions of Susco let him bring it forward, otherwise, he should stop trying to capitalize on someone's raw sewage problem. It appears to be a desparate political ploy in my view. Higgins has ample political capital built up around the city to defeat Bardsley in November and she need not resort to petty accusations and whisper campaigns. But this is the climate she is creating.

Moreover, a mayor should be able to withstand citizens expressing themselves when they are angry. It goes with the job and I was more surprised by her theatrical retreat from the mayor's seat than Susco's outburst. She patted Susco on the arm as she passed him by and in my opinion she lost her cool. If she can't take the heat then get out of the seat.

The fact of the matter is Higgins has created angry factions in the city. She tore down Old Main at the former Northampton State Hospital and has significantly altered its plans. She is standing idly by while the Green Street neigbhorhood is annexed by Smith College. She sold a parcel of land behind Pulaski Park for one dollar in order to construct a Hilton Garden Inn Hotel downtown. This spurred two lawsuits and cost the city at least $55 thousand in settlements. She rejected a citizens' petition regarding the Smith College Educational Use Overlay District, I believe illegally, at the advice of former City Solicitor Janet Sheppard. She is the primary force behind expanding the landfill over a fresh water aquifer spurring lawsuits that led to $1.2 million in settlements. Her deposed Solicitor Sheppard resigned under a cloud of controversy regarding shredded public records pertaining to these landfill settlements. She has shifted about $1.5 million in free cash funds into capital and equipment stabilization funds while starving the schools of needed financial resources which led to a divisive override effort. She has retroactively removed health insurance eligiblity from former city employees. She pushed a controversial panhandling ordinance proposal before withdrawing it. She endorsed a questionable Business Improvement District signature initiative also leading to a lawsuit which is pending last I knew. Her administration has fined the Northampton Nursing Home for sewage violations, and then rescinded the fines. The list could go on. The Higgins administration seems to be devolving into a state of chaos. Whose fault is that?

Quite frankly I'm surprised more people haven't showed up at City Council meetings to express their anger. Hopefully people will at least restrain themselves from throwing shoes at sitting officials.

Comments (9)
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i arrived for my shift to hold a "bardsley for mayor" sign at the jackson street school 150' from the entrance of the polling station on september 15th when who should approach me on the way to my post less than 150' from the polling station with her sign resting against a tree but my ward 1 representative, maureen carney. she asked if i were a ward 1 resident. i confirmed that i was, and introduced myself. she asked where i lived; i told her that i live in river run. i proceeded to inform her of the many emails i had sent her within the past year regarding the unsafe - almost deadly - pedestrian and biking conditions along damon road from river run to king street especially, and about my concern over the mayor's support of altering exit 19 off of interstate 91north. let it be known that ms. carney did not reply to my emails until i contacted mr. bardsley, and left a message on the councilor's message machine stating as much, and i told her as much. ms. carney then proceeded to share with me that she is very busy with full time work and all that that job entails, as a musician, as a homeowner, and then to go out and meet everyone of her constituents in ward 1 and sit on the council as well as the other obligations from being a representative is just asking too much. (i inferred that this is why i had not received replies to my emails and why she had never met me before, although it appeared as though she knew my name.) ms. carney then educated me about her previous campaign 4 years ago when she went door-to-door to over 2500 households meeting everyone and /or leaving fliers to every home, so questioned why i did not recall meeting her then. i told her that i did not live in ward 1 4 years ago. she informed me that today she doesn't have time to canvass ward 1 and besides cannot enter river run because it is private property. clearly as one enters river run there is a "no solicitation" post. however, on saturday, 9/12. higgins fliers were dispersed throughout the complex during the afternoon. ms. carney responded that perhaps a higgins supporter lives in river run, which could be why the fliers were dispersed. as i left my post two hours later, ms. carney stated to me that she would review her emails, and would welcome a meeting with me to discuss my concerns. as i understand mr.susco's problem, he did not receive word from his ward 1 councilor, ms. carney, either - i suspect because she is too busy. a councilor-at-large covers the entire community, hence the "at-large" title - not a campaign strategy, as the mayor inferred. therefore, councilor bardsley performed his duty fully, without any dereliction of duty. i applaud him for honoring his elected title and for fulfilling his job to the best of his ability. when i had problems while living in ward 5, i did not hear from my ward 5 councilor, mr. murphy, but i did hear from my at-large councilor, mr. bardsley, and the ward 5 candidate, ms. silva. i totally understand mr. susco's anger and frustration.
Posted by mary likins on 9.23.09 at 6:38
As much as I sympathize with Susco, I couldn't help thinking as I watched his latest outburst why he doesn't just hire a lawyer to help him. The poor guy is nearing the precipice and definitely needs professional counsel to represent him and get results. Shouting at the Councilors clearly isn't working for him. I agree with you, however, that Higgins' walking out of the room was overly dramatic and not warranted. It was the political equivalent of running home from the playground with your ball. But considering this happened in the same week as her defeat in the primary, maybe she was having a rough day.
Posted by John on 9.23.09 at 8:09
Daryl, can you say more about this: "She has shifted about $1.5 million in free cash funds into capital and equipment stabilization funds while starving the schools of needed financial resources which led to a divisive override effort." I have long wondered what it is about the budget and financial management of Northampton that causes a city with relatively high property values (leading, before the override, to a relatively low tax rate, but pretty average overall levy), which also has a robust commercial and reasonably strong industrial base, to be in such a state of continual crisis with regard to public education. Sure, things are tough all over, Chapter 70 keeps getting cut, etc., but I gather that elementary school kids in Goshen have instrumental music, while we lost it years ago. What is it about our city, structurally and in terms of the choices we make, that has put us in this position over and over again. If you have an answer, I'd be enormously eager to hear it. I'm hesitantly supporting Bardsley after getting up close and personal with some of the worst effects of the school situation in the last year. But yes, the rumors that he is a conservative are already out there. The fact that my republican neighbor has his sign on his lawn gives me very great pause. Strange bedfellows, I suppose.
Posted by mamacate on 9.23.09 at 13:17
mamacate please see post http://www.valleyadvocate.com/blogs/home.cfm?aid=8199
Posted by Daryl on 9.23.09 at 14:52
mamacate the mayor decided to build a new police station. In my view she should have gone before the voters for a debt exclusion override but no matter. To pay the bonds on the station she had the city council create a capital stabilization fund with free cash. The city council established this stabilization fund in fiscal year 2006 and appropriated $1.18 million to it in that year and $.565 million in fy 2007 for a total of $1.745 million. That was the figure as of August 2008. Contact Christopher Pile in city hall for more current information, but most of the money is still sitting there.
Posted by Daryl on 9.23.09 at 14:56
"The fact that my republican neighbor has his sign on his lawn gives me very great pause." Mamacate, give me a frickin' break. You think Obama won the recent election only with Dems voting for him? Last time I checked, there are only two options for mayor in Hamp and neither are registered Republicans. So, what's a Republican supposed to do? Move out of town or not vote? Don't think for a minute that Higgins would shun your neighbor's support if offered. This whole Bardsley's a conservative thing is clearly a deliberate smear campaign by the Higgins side. Remember only weeks ago, before a certain primary, the party line was there was little difference between the two of them, since they'd been friends and allies for so long. That didn't work, so now they're trying to call him a non-liberal. Don't be such a chump.
Posted by Murphy on 9.23.09 at 15:27
Consider for a moment the senior center's funding. According to the city's finance director Christopher Pile, the city issued a 20-year $3.91 million general obligation municipal bond at 3.88% interest. At the end of the term the city will have paid a total of $1,546,675 in interest payments to investors. To make the bond payments the city has allocated $1.41 million to the general fund for debt service and will use $2.5 million in Community Development Block Grant (CDBG) monies, grant monies that could be used for community housing to aide senior citizens and low income people among other things. By locking up CDBG funds in this way organizations like the Valley Community Development Corporation are turning to Community Preservation Act funds for items like the controversial single room occupancy housing projects recently approved by the city council. According to Pile the total interest to be paid for the proposed police station would be at least $7 million and the city has already sunk more than a $1 million into its design. The projected annual bond payments on the police station, which is on hold, will total about $1 million per year, money that otherwise could be allocated to the schools. Combining the two obligations, the city will be paying out at least $8.5 million in interest payments total, and the bonds for both the proposed landfill expansion and a proposed DPW building will be added to that. In addition, the bonds for the landfill will likely be paid, at least in part, from landfill operating revenues, which may reduce the $468 thousand host community fee that the solid waste stabilization fund pays to the city annually, so the direct economic benefit of operating the landfill might dissipate in the future.
Posted by Daryl on 9.23.09 at 19:44
Thank God they are both gay, so neither one gets an upper hand with that PC card--especially in Hamp (but would also play well in the People's Republic of Amherst). I just hope Mr. Bardsley brings up Higgins lack of (small) business experience and her involvement with a public agency (essentially a baby-sitting organization) that went bankrupt costing taxpayers millions.
Posted by Larry Kelley on 9.24.09 at 15:07
Hey Larry, nice way to dismiss a major child-care operation..I don't think you're helping bardsley's cause with that swipe.. So, the mayor ran a childcare agency and this city for 10 years...Bardsley has been a guidance council for 30 years...where exactly is his business experience? Has he ever actually put together a budget in his life? Just curious.
Posted by teri on 9.29.09 at 12:54
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