Showing posts with label Rev. Jim Purcell. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Rev. Jim Purcell. Show all posts

Wednesday, March 19, 2014

The New Politics of Racism in Suburban New Jersey, Pt. 4 : Middletown's Borg Mentality

Crossed posted from The Purcell Chronicles

By Rev. Jim Purcell, MPS, CPSP1 (Ret.)

Strictly in theory, the Middletown Township Committee has to vote as a body on things like who will be named to what position, if a body will be created or disbanded as an advisory group or any other kind of group affiliated with the municipal government, among other things.
In reality, though, GOP committee people do not express individual leadership skills and vote as a small herd. It is less the Round Table, so to speak, than it is the Borg, of Star Trek: The Next Generation fame.
I have already been asked why I do not include discussion of the democracy and 'one-member-one-vote' nature of the committee more heavily when discussing the governing body and its decisions relative to the controversy about the abolishment of the Middletown Human Rights Commission. This is because such 'democracy' by the committee is in theory and ceremony only. The real power behind such votes are not even the mayor, past or present, associated with the town through the course of time, but the Republican Machine that has controlled the community for the past 40 years.
In fairness, members of the Republican Party in Middletown Township who serve on the governing body do have opportunities in office to express their ideas, from what I can tell after years of covering the town. However, these expressions are more private at first, certainly not 'off the cuff' ever or without prior consultation with the town GOP's Political Machine. GOP office holders in Middletown row their oars in the same direction and no one plays as an individual in the political game -- and benefits from that organization.
Yet, this is not how a government organized under the Government of the United States is supposed to operate -- doing things the way they are done in Middletown laughs in the face of the American system of rule within its own borders, in my opinion.
Well, the core with this, of course, is that no political party is supposed to run any town or community in the United States of America -- yes, their candidates/officer-holders do but the darn political party is supposed to have nothing to say. This is where Middletown takes a 'hard right turn into crazy.' The idea that the electorate votes and sends cardboard cut-outs instead of bona fide representatives of the people's will to a governing body, which then gives license to any measure brought by the town's GOP Political Machine, which is led by several attorneys that are paid by the township for various services, is ridiculous and goes on every single day in Middletown.
This is not the first place I have stated that the leadership of the Middletown Republicans have historically been involved with overseeing governmental borrowing for his Newark law firm for several decades now. This must be legal, or else law enforcement would have been involved in this years ago, but it nonetheless smells as bad as Johnny On The Spot after a day at the circus.
The Middletown Committee is not, historically, a group of independent-minded people looking to do local government as much as they are a collection of the hopeful and ambitious seeking to be helped in careers and futures by the Middletown GOP, which is the most influential community politically in the county -- and one of the most influential in the state. In addition, so many state legislators and officials hail from Middletown it seems being closely aligned to the Middletown GOP can often lead to advancement in the ranks of politics or professions (particularly law or engineering).
Where does all this arrive where it involves bias? Not just of race but certainly that too. Its collected excesses have made Middletown one of the last all-White gated communities in New Jersey, if not the Industrial North East, intent on not allowing diversity or thoughts other than those in the 'group speak' of a small ring of influential, anonymous attorneys who are the real force behind the community's governance; not the committee people -- not the elected representatives of the people.
However, Middletown stoics, intent on never giving sway to the laws that govern the rest of the land, or the diversity that is so present nearly everywhere else in the Garden State, cannot win forever and, one fine day, this government will have to join the rest of the world.
Does all this make the elected and non-elected politicians of Middletown racist? Well, after much consideration, the community is 93 percent White -- and that is the proof in the pudding, isn't it? If race were not one of the single-most important issues to the powers that be there, how would the town have otherwise acquired a Native American population that is many times over the number of residents in town....
Continue reading
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Rev. Purcell was licensed to preach at Stelton Baptist Church, in Edison, NJ, in 2007. He is a graduate of the New York Theological Seminary, in New York City, and Capital Health's Clinical Pastoral Education Program, in Trenton, New Jersey. Rev. Purcell is the former Editor and Publisher of the late Courier newspaper, in Middletown, New Jersey (1998-2009); and is a former correspondent for The Star-Ledger, Jersey Journal and North Jersey Newspapers, among others. During his tenure in the U.S. Army, Rev. Purcell earned the rank of Sergeant and served as an Intelligence Analyst and Infantry Squad Leader, respectively, in Airborne and non-Airborne assignments.
 


Read Rev. Purcell's other articles in his series on the Politics In Racism on his blog, "The Purcell Chronicles":

The New Politics of Racism in Suburban New Jersey, Pt. 1: Preface
The New Politics of Racism in Suburban New Jersey, Pt. 2: Middletown and the facts
The New Politics of Racism in Suburban New Jersey, Pt. 3: The Dismemberment of the Middletown Human Rights Committee




Tuesday, March 11, 2014

The New Politics of Racism in Suburban New Jersey, Pt. 3: The Dismemberment Of The Middletown Human Rights Commission


Crossed posted from The Purcell Chronicles

By Rev. Jim Purcell, MPS, CPSP1

On March 3, in Middletown Township, New Jersey -- perhaps the 'Whitest' town this side of Nebraska, the Township Committee voted to disband the Human Rights Commission. This commission was also, by statute, the Civil Rights Commission for Middletown Township, one of the largest municipalities in New Jersey -- and likely the leader in the least diversity.

Middletown is rich in patriotic spectacles, if not addressing civil liberties

In my opinion, no community stays all-White (or 93 percent at least) for its entire history, dating back to when the town was a Tory stronghold for Red Coats before and during the Revolutionary War -- unless part of the town priorities are not being inclusive, and for generations. Meanwhile, things like human rights commissions can certainly be a nuisance in that scenario. Communities today are not non-diverse by accident. It is a plan by the town fathers, long-standing political bosses and party interests that keeps that ugly idea going. And, there is no short supply of that in Middletown, as will be discussed in the next installment of this series.

It is a great shame, not only because the commission had been in continuous operation since 1968, but also because I am aware of the work of the commission's chair, Dr. Carolyn Schwebel, and I have always known her to be the one in the trenches, fighting for disabled-accessible improvements to public buildings, not being afraid to tackle issues of race and controversy to do what was as just as she and her commission members could.

It is not a secret in Middletown that Dr. Schwebel was not a "team player" with the all-Republican GOP. She speaks truth-to-power in a place where that is very hard to do. Dr. Schwebel, you see, is pretty much the only actual tether the government in that town had of understanding how the actual world, not secluded in a moneyed section of New Jersey, works.

There are four members of her commission, and there have been several others wanting to join as well. And, as I am well aware from my days putting out a newspaper in this close-knit community, the Middletown Committee ignores the truth of the actual world, in favor of its own. In fact, Dr. Schwebel was not able to accept everyone who was interested in joining the commission, because there were too many.

Yet, one of the primary reasons offered by former Mayor Anthony Fiore for this disbandment was because there were not enough people interested in joining this commission. Well, I have known Dr. Schwebel many years and I am not about to call her a liar, as I am aware of her good character, while I am similarly aware of the tradition of bad conduct by this committee and its entrenched politicians.

One of the so-called reasons, which were expedient excuses, by the town committee was that the Human Rights Commission was not drawing enough interest by volunteers. In fact, the commission had no wont of new recruits. Dr. Schwebel, reluctantly, had to turn down several volunteers for the post due to the size of the body.

She stated recently to her commission members: "Mr. Fiore was wrong when he said that there was no interest, no one applied for the Middletown HRC. Several citizens have actually applied for membership on the Middletown HRC. While Larry, Spiro, and Ray were appointed, the rest, about seven, who looked good,were not."

In its proclamation disassembling the 46-year-old town body, the committee stated: "Whereas, the Commission has not been an active body for many years, and when it did meet, it failed to focus on its statutorily defined mission as set forth under N.J.S.A. 10:5-10 (formerly N.J.S.A. 18:25-10 at the time of its formation by Resolution in 1968); and whereas, not only did the Commission fail to perform its statutorily defined duties, it involved itself in matters entirely outside of the jurisdiction of the Township’s governing body, in one instance it was even used to promote a pet food drive for a charity associated with a member of the commission."

So, the alleged reasons for the disbandment included, but was not limited to: the commission addressing the broad scope of issues presented it (e.g. "failed to focus on its statutorily defined mission") -- yes, it could not be told what it would say by politicians; it is alleged the commission "has not been an active body for many years," and I would ask how the commission can be meeting and doing things the committee didn't like without being active; and, "in one instance, [the HRC] was even used to promote a pet food drive for a charity associated with a member of the commission." The committee is castigating the commission for helping out dogs? Really?

Things cannot stay stuck in the past for any community so long

So, the Town Committee and former Mayor Fiore and freshman Mayor Stephanie C. Murray all made it clear they didn't want the commission around. The final excuse for this was that the action was a cost-saving measure.

Insofar as "saving money," the HRC was a volunteer body, as was the volunteers that helped them with their initiatives (far from being inactive). Aside from burning some electricity and leaving the bathrooms open when they met at Town Hall, 1 Kings Highway, there was really no cost whatsoever attached to this body. I daresay the governing body probably spends more on appetizers for one or two of their own self-congratulatory, private events than this commission costed the town in an entire year.

On Friday, January 28, 2010, Dr. Carolyn Schwebel, the chair of the commission, wrote a letter to then-Middletown Township Mayor Anthony Fiore thanking him for his visit the previous night during a meeting of the HRC.

At that session there was, naturally, a discussion between Mayor Fiore and Dr. Schwebel about the nature of her commission.

As she promised at the then-recent meeting, Dr. Schwebel sent Mayor Fiore a memorandum from the Monmouth County Prosecutor's Office, noting NJSA 10:5-10, "which empowers local municipalities to appoint local commissions on civil rights."

Dr. Schwebel went on to cite the reference and noted the primary function of such a included "...[an] attempt to foster through community effort or otherwise, good will, cooperation and conciliation among the groups and elements of the inhabitant of the community."

Dr. Schwebel made the argument that the "intention was not to limit the functioning of local civil rights commissions only to advising the governing body." Yet, in the resolution abolishing the commission and in its language throughout the dismantling process the group was always characterized by the Township Committee as an "advisory group" to the governing body; not an independent body of its own with its own ability to review issues or take testimony, as appropriate, about crucial issues of diversity and equal access and offer independent opinions, other than those the Township Committee strictly gave them.

It is no secret that Dr. Schwebel is also involved, and has been for many years, in an area group called The Equalizers, a private group that explains and, when necessary, agitates for, equal access to various public venues for those who are disabled. This is work intended to 'catch up' lethargic Monmouth County and Shore towns in things they should be doing anyway to comply with the Federal Americans with Disabilities Act. If such a group is a reason for scorn in any community, then priorities for that place need to be seriously re-examined.

Middletown is part of the United States of America, where there is a U.S. Constitution and Bill of Rights in operation right now, despite those who would seek to run their municipality in a similar fashion to "Boss Hog" on the beloved 70's TV show "The Dukes of Hazard." Yet, Middletown Township has managed to do just that -- evade what most other communities have to do in New Jersey to ensure the rights of the citizens of this state.

Where there is not oversight, there will be excesses: Any CEO can tell you that -- any store manager for that matter. What is it that will get accomplished? Whatever is checked to ensure workers have done it. In this case, the Middletown Committee just did away with its own Human Rights and Civil Rights Commission. So the question has to be offered: Just what is the pain in the neck that the committee wants to go away -- the human rights" part or the "civil rights" aspect of the body? Either way, it is not a healthy sign for any community.


Correction: I have been informed that the abolishment of the Human Rights Commission has not yet occurred, it was simply vetted on March 3rd for the governing body, which will vote upon it finally at its next session. Personally, I don't think anyone on that dais is going to change their mind about a thing, though. JJP

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Rev. Purcell was licensed to preach at Stelton Baptist Church, in Edison, NJ, in 2007. He is a graduate of the New York Theological Seminary, in New York City, and Capital Health's Clinical Pastoral Education Program, in Trenton, New Jersey. Rev. Purcell is the former Editor and Publisher of the late Courier newspaper, in Middletown, New Jersey (1998-2009); and is a former correspondent for The Star-Ledger, Jersey Journal and North Jersey Newspapers, among others. During his tenure in the U.S. Army, Rev. Purcell earned the rank of Sergeant and served as an Intelligence Analyst and Infantry Squad Leader, respectively, in Airborne and non-Airborne assignments.



Read Rev. Purcell's other articles in his series on the Politics In Racism on his blog, "The Purcell Chronicles":

The New Politics of Racism in Suburban New Jersey, Pt. 1: Preface

The New Politics of Racism in Suburban New Jersey, Pt. 2: Middletown and the facts