Friday, January 15, 2021

Biden selects NYC Emergency Commissioner Criswell to run FEMA. January 15, 2021


Previous FCO (Federal Coordinating Officer) a plus for communities and States served in that capacity.

BEMA International

Photo by: AP Photo/NYC.gov
President-elect Joe Biden; NYC Emergency Management Commissioner Deanne Criswell

Posted at 7:15 AM, Jan 15, 2021
 
and last updated 7:34 AM, Jan 15, 2021

WASHINGTON — President-elect Joe Biden is nominating New York emergency department commissioner Deanne Criswell to serve as the Federal Emergency Management Agency administrator and has tapped former CIA deputy director David Cohen to return to the agency in the same role he served during the Obama administration.

The picks, along with a trio of other new nominations confirmed to The Associated Press by the Biden team, come as the president-elect is putting a premium on experience, and perhaps familiarity, as he looks to fill out top positions at federal agencies with less than a week to go before his inauguration.

Biden also is tapping former Food and Drug Administration Commissioner David Kessler to help lead Operation Warp Speed, the government's vaccine development program, according to a report Friday in The New York Times. Kessler has been advising Biden as a co-chair of his advisory board on the coronavirus pandemic.

Criswell, who also spent more than five years in top posts at FEMA during the Obama administration, is the first woman nominated to head the agency, whose primary responsibility is to coordinate responses to major disasters inside the United States that require federal attention. Nancy Ward served as the agency's acting administrator in the early months of the Obama administration before his pick, Craig Fugate, could be confirmed.

Cohen, who was deputy CIA director from 2015 to 2017, has traveled the world for years tracking money flowing to terror groups, such as the Islamic State group, and other bad actors on the international stage. His work directing the Treasury Department’s intelligence unit earlier in his career earned him the nicknames of “financial batman” and “sanctions guru.”

In 2019, Cohen, who has been leading the financial and business integrity group at the law firm WilmerHale, made a cameo appearance on the HBO series “Game of Thrones.”

Nominees are required to disclose details of their finances and complete ethics agreements as part of the confirmation process. Once confirmed, federal ethics laws can require the officials to recuse themselves from working on issues that could impact their previous business interests.

Biden throughout the 2020 campaign lashed at President Donald Trump, saying he eroded public trust in government. Biden pledged his team will abide by “the highest ethical standards.”

Cohen is not a registered lobbyist, but his firm does millions of dollars in lobbying work each year on behalf of clients that include the Beer Institute, Sinclair Broadcast Group, Walgreens and American Financial Group.

The president-elect is also nominating Shalanda Young, the top staff aide for the House Appropriations Committee, to serve as deputy director at the Office of Management and Budget and Jason Miller, who was deputy director of the White House National Economic Council in Obama's administration, to serve as deputy director for management at the agency.

Young brings a wealth of Capitol Hill experience in budget policy — and politics — to the budget office, along with close relationships with powerful House Democrats like Speaker Nancy Pelosi. Miller was steeped in manufacturing policy in the Obama administration, including an update of automobile fuel efficiency standards.

Biden is tapping Janet McCabe, an environmental law and policy expert who spent more than seven years as a top official at the Environmental Protection Agency during the Obama administration to return to the agency as deputy administrator.

“Each of them brings a deep respect for the civil servants who keep our republic running, as well as a keen understanding of how the government can and should work for all Americans,” Biden said of his picks in a statement. “I am confident that they will hit the ground running on day one with determination and bold thinking to make a meaningful difference in people’s lives.”

Criswell has served as New York City’s emergency management commissioner since June 2019. In her earlier work at FEMA, Criswell served as the leader of one of the agency’s National Incident Management Assistance Teams and as a federal coordinating officer. In New York, part of her duties included leading the coordination of the city’s emergency response to the COVID-19 pandemic.

Between her stints at FEMA and in New York, Criswell was a principal at Cadmus Group, a firm that provides homeland security management consulting and training services for federal, state and local government agencies and private sector companies. The company made about $68 million between the time she joined the firm in 2017 and when she left in June 2019, according to a tabulation of contract spending data from the site USASpending.gov.

She also served as the head of the Office of Emergency Management for the city of Aurora, Colorado. Criswell also served in the Colorado Air National Guard, including 21 years as a firefighter and deputy fire chief with deployments to Qatar, Afghanistan and Iraq.

Associated Press writers Deb Riechmann and Andrew Taylor contributed to this report.

Tuesday, January 12, 2021

1954 United States Capitol shooting March 1, 1954, March 1, 1954,

1954 United States Capitol shooting


The 1954 United States Capitol shooting was a terrorist attack on March 1, 1954, by four Puerto Rican nationalists wanting Puerto Rico's independence from US rule. They shot 30 rounds from semi-automatic pistols from the Ladies' Gallery (a balcony for visitors) of the House of Representatives chamber in the United States Capitol.

The nationalists, identified as Lolita LebrónRafael Cancel MirandaAndres Figueroa Cordero, and Irvin Flores Rodríguez, unfurled a Puerto Rican flag and began shooting at Representatives in the 83rd Congress, who were debating an immigration bill. Five Representatives were wounded, one seriously, but all recovered. The assailants were arrested, tried and convicted in federal court, and given long sentences, effectively life imprisonment. In 1978 and 1979, their sentences were commuted by President Jimmy Carter.[2] All four returned to Puerto Rico.

SEDITION. Shall there be a double standard for those that participated Wednesday, January 6, 2021?

SEDITION.

Shall there be a double standard for those that participated Wednesday, January 6, 2021?
CDS 

https://www.law.cornell.edu/uscode/text/18/2384 

" If two or more persons in any State or Territory, or in any place subject to the jurisdiction of the United States, conspire to overthrow, put down, or to destroy by force the Government of the United States, or to levy war against them, or to oppose by force the authority thereof, or by force to prevent, hinder, or delay the execution of any law of the United States, or by force to seize, take, or possess any property of the United States contrary to the authority thereof, they shall each be fined under this title or imprisoned not more than twenty years, or both.
(June 25, 1948, ch. 645, 62 Stat. 808; July 24, 1956, ch. 678, § 1, 70 Stat. 623; Pub. L. 103–322, title XXXIII, § 330016(1)(N), Sept. 13, 1994, 108 Stat. 2148.)"

Amendments
1994—Pub. L. 103–322 substituted “fined under this title” for “fined not more than $20,000”.
1956—Act July 24, 1956, substituted “$20,000” for “$5,000”, and “twenty years” for “six years”.

Statutory Notes and Related Subsidiaries
Effective Date of 1956 Amendment

Act July 24, 1956, ch. 678, § 3, 70 Stat. 624, provided that:
“The foregoing amendments [amending this section and section 2385 of this title] shall apply only with respect to offenses committed on and after the date of the enactment of this Act [July 24, 1956].”

Saturday, January 9, 2021

How Capitol Police handled a Black woman in 2013. Her name is Miriam Carey.

 https://www.wusa9.com/article/news/politics/elections/miriam-carey-capitol-police-trump-capitol-riots/65-7ba91013-d0ee-46f5-b7f9-87afa7273c40




Carey, 34, originally from Connecticut, struck a security barrier with her car at 15th and E Streets NW, one block from the White House. Officials don't know if she deliberately rammed the barrier or simply sideswiped it, according to CBS News.

The collision led to a chase, from near the White House to the Capitol, ending with officers opening fire and shooting at her 26 times from behind, including a fatal shot to the back of her head on October 3, 2013. Her 13-month-old baby was in the car but unharmed.

The U.S. was lead to the brink of history fully repeating itself.

https://www.facinghistory.org/holocaust-and-human-behavior/chapter-6

CHAPTER 6

Conformity and Consent in the National Community

Holocaust and Human Behavior

Holocaust

PREVIOUS CHAPTER

NEXT CHAPTER

Table of ContentsOverview

By 1934, Hitler considered the National Socialist revolution in Germany complete.  In control of the nation, the Nazis turned their attention to creating a racially pure “national community” in which Nazism was not revolutionary but normal.  This chapter focuses on the methods the Nazis used to get individuals to conform, if not consent, to their vision for German society. It also focuses on the consequences faced by those who did not fit into the “national community” the Nazis envisioned. 

Essential Questions

1.     In what ways did the Nazis use laws to create “in” groups and “out” groups in German society? How did they also appeal to people’s hearts and minds?

2.    What were some of the reasons that the Nazis’ idea of a “national community” appealed to many Germans? Why did it appeal to particular groups, like young people? 

3.    What did it mean to be an outsider or even a dissenter in an otherwise “racially pure and harmonious national community”? What did it mean to be an insider?

 





Original Post on 01/05/2021: 1860. Is history repeating itself when President Lincoln was elected. January 9, 2021

 Was history rewritten on January 6, 2021?

https://www.bostonglobe.com/2021/01/07/opinion/horror-confederate-flag-us-capitol/

The horror of the Confederate flag in the US Capitol

Historians have noted that not even during the Civil War did this violent symbol of white power and oppression penetrate the halls of our Capitol.

By Josh Delaney     Updated January 7, 2021, 4:56 p.m

A member of the mob of Trump supporters who rampaged throughout the US Capitol in Washington, D.C., Wednesday carried the Confederate flag inside the building.ERIN SCHAFF/NYT

 As white supremacists stormed our nation’s Capitol on Wednesday, the text messages and e-mails were coming so quickly that it was just easier to copy and paste a form response to nervous friends, family, and loved ones: “I’m home safe. Thank you for checking on me. This is horrifying.”

Like the rest of America, I watched the chaos unfold on TV. Although I was about a mile away from the Capitol building, I feared for the safety of my colleagues and friends who were in the complex, as well as the thousands of staff — especially the Black and brown support workers — who dutifully keep the sprawling Capitol complex humming every day.

Read full article


                                        --------Original Post------------


1860. Is history repeating itself when President Lincoln was elected

Shall the GOP majority 'secede' from the Union?
Tuesday and Wednesday, January 5-6, 2021 will show, will change come, or business as usual since Reconstruction ended.

Friday, January 8, 2021

Mayor Bowser, District of Columbia. You did your job. Activation of D.C. National Guard. January 2021

 Mayor Bowser, District of Columbia. You did your job/

The president of the United States is the commander-in-chief for the District of Columbia National Guard. Command is exercised through the Secretary of Defense and the commanding general, Joint Force Headquarters (JFHQ), District of Columbia National Guard
The mayor of the District of Columbia, the United States marshal for the District of Columbia, or the National Capital Service director may request the commander-in-chief to aid them in suppressing insurrection and enforcement of the law; however, there is no chain of authority from the District of Columbia to the D.C. National Guard.[3]

Database of Legal Cases Related to The Capitol Hill Siege January 8, 2021

 

 

 

 

The Capitol Hill Cases

 

 

WASHINGTON, DC (January  8, 2020) -

In keeping with our tradition of providing primary source documents to the research community and the public at large, The Program on Extremism has launched a project to create a central database of federal court records related to the events of January 6, 2021. This page will be updated as additional individuals are charged with criminal activities and new records are introduced into the criminal justice system.

 

You can access the cases here.

Media training 101 for small businesses

 

Zapier blog

 

Small business

 

Media training 101 for small businesses

 

 

Public speaking is a notorious phobia. And yet, as a small business owner, you're expected to speak to the media while keeping your cool and promoting your business? It can be...a lot.

 

Here, PR expert and small business owner Elisabeth Edelman shows how a little preparation can go a long way in helping you promote your brand.

 

Learn the rope

17 Blocks the Final Cut. Capitol Hill and OUR communities. Our vulnerable communities. January 2021.

 https://thedcline.org/2019/08/13/gordon-chaffin-17-blocks-shows-bittersweet-portrait-of-dc/


Gordon Chaffin: ‘17 Blocks’ shows bittersweet portrait of DC


“You want to be comfortable and our conditions are uncomfortable. And when you’re uncomfortable, you make bad decisions. These streets are vicious; they soak your ass up.” ~ Smurf, 17 Blocks

17 Blocks — a new documentary set in DC — challenges viewers to make sense of the many ways that sparse neighborhood resources, chemical dependencies and limited opportunities can rob futures from the District’s youngest. Recently featured at AFIDOCS and 13 other film festivals, 17 Blocks centers on a four-generation Northeast DC family: three siblings, their mother, their grandparents and, in time, their own children. 

Director Davy Rothbart’s film includes footage from 1999, 2009, and 2016 to the present. Davy knew the family and they suggested, after events in 2009 (spoiler), that he use their home movies to make a film. They wanted Davy to highlight their struggles, which were also the struggles of their neighbors and friends in families throughout Southeast and Northeast DC.

Settings in 1999 and 2009 are seen almost entirely via home movies shot by the youngest of the three kids — a gregarious boy named Emmanuel, 9 years old when we first meet him in 1999. He follows his sister Denice, older by a few years, and his 15-year-old brother “Smurf.” The camcorder footage captures candid perspectives of children raised by a drug-addicted single mother, a “father figure” boyfriend, and DC neighborhoods presenting odious influences to the offspring of even middle-class parents.

The family in ‘99 is living 17 blocks from the Capitol Building: just off Barney Circle SE near the Sousa Bridge; the story follows them on visits to their grandparents’ home at 17th and Franklin streets NE in Langdon. Smurf has already dropped out of school and has started selling marijuana. Emmanuel captures Smurf drafting a list of women he’s slept with, and later tapes Smurf and a friend violently beating another kid over a drug debt. You can hear the victim call out “Somebody help me.” Cut to the mother in the middle of a chemical trip, berating her boyfriend and kids. Later, speaking to the camera about Smurf’s drug dealing, she says, “I exposed him to that life.” 

When the documentary flashes forward to 2009, the family lives in the Fort Totten neighborhood, at 2nd and Webster streets NE. Smurf is now 24; Denice, 21; and Emmanuel, 19. The family takes video of Emmanuel and his girlfriend; she goes to Archbishop Carroll, a nice private high school, and lives a clean life. Emmanuel is clean too, the mother says: “a homebody, no weed, no cigarettes, no alcohol.” Emmanuel had recently graduated from Theodore Roosevelt, a public high school in Petworth, where he earned a five-figure scholarship from Kappa Alpha Phi for future tuition at a college or trade school.

Emmanuel’s straight living and seizing of opportunity is contrasted by his mother’s as she sells off family items to pay for drugs. Smurf, too, has advanced in the dope game; his sales volume is up, and he’s selling harder drugs like heroin. Emmanuel’s camera captures Smurf discussing his recent release from prison; he says that within a month of leaving jail, he was selling drugs again. Denice has a son she’s raising in the family’s home and contributes to household expenses with wages from a child care job.

The documentary continues with a final flash-forward to recent years where the film crew captures the latest developments, which include some second chances for Smurf and his mother.

Denice Sanford uses a video camera to capture family members in 1999. The footage became part of the new documentary “17 Blocks.” (Photo courtesy of Big Beach LLC)

A nagging question of 17 Blocks is how the mother, a daughter of middle-class parents in a safe neighborhood, could fall victim to such harmful habits, for herself and her children. You ultimately learn that she disobeyed those parents who were trying to get her into a better set of social connections and influences. You learn she was raped as a teenager and that traumatic experience may have transformed bad habits into chronic disabilities.

Just into my 10th year of living in DC, I was challenged by 17 Blocks to make sense of the interplay of agency and circumstance, of discipline and explanation, in the outcomes of the lives on screen. I know DC residents who are like the family in this movie. They are my neighbors in Brookland, a Ward 5 neighborhood that like many others is still anchored by working- and middle-class African Americans with a sense of upward mobility. These are people whom I meet several times per week in community meetings across the city, talking about their decades living in Washington.

The neighborhoods profiled in 17 Blocks are those I defend to recent transplants and skeptical Northwest denizens as being “safer than you’ve heard” and “worth a visit.” These are neighborhoods where gentrification means something much more complex than seeing a new apartment building and a coffee shop replace the corner liquor store. “Displacement” is much more nuanced than the bludgeon anti-change community members swing at housing and transportation projects.

Families like the one in 17 Blocks benefit from the streets around them getting better. Smurf benefits from a DC program designed to lift Washingtonians up when they make mistakes, rather than lock them up. Smurf’s mom benefits from subsidized addiction care. Denice benefits from job opportunities in DC that come from new commercial and residential development.

Even in these prosperous times for DC, families like this one still live in uncomfortable conditions. These streets are getting better, but they can still “soak your ass up,” as Smurf says. NoMA and Union Market are two of the District’s fastest-growing neighborhoods, but people experiencing chronic homelessness live under bridges there. Our city — which facilitates expensive development — hasn’t housed and positively intervened in the lives of people living on the streets next to those projects. The most DC seems to do is permit the homeless to move their encampments before sidewalk cleaning and allow them to resettle in the same spot afterward without losing their belongings — though that’s the best-case scenario that often fails to materialize. DC razes old playgrounds and recreation centers for brilliantly colored artificial fields and playscapes, but its agencies do little to address citizen worries about potential dangers from the whizz-bang new.

17 Blocks is an important watch for all who live and work in the District. I spend most of my time in Northeast and Southeast DC, where lots of things are getting better on first approximation: new and restored buildings, new mixed-use development, safety-enhancing street improvements, and investments in community centers and schools. But I’m reminded by 17 Blocks to keep in mind that there are lots of people living uncomfortably in these areas.

DC still needs more jobs that lead to careers with living wages — plus enough new affordable housing to increase the total stock rather than simply minimize its losses. Our city may be embracing legalized weed and sports gambling, but there are still far worse addictions out there that require resources for prevention and treatment. DC is safer than it once was. But violent crime in DC this year shows the persistent harm to livability and vibrancy wrought by guns and neighborhood animosity. It’s hard to stay optimistic dealing with the stress of burglary, harassment and other non-lethal crimes. Grief catches up with people over time who see friends, family and neighbors fall victim to violence. Those trials cause exhaustion and even destroy communities.


Gordon Chaffin is a reporter for Street Justice, a daily email newsletter covering transportation and infrastructure throughout the Washington region.



Old Boy network still exist in the Emergency Management Arena? January 8, 2021

Emergency Management as an off shoot of FIRE\EMS, and Law Enforcement is the 'old boy' network still exist within the field from the Federal, State, County, City, and Local Jurisdictions?

Emergency Management offices\agencies on average are filled with individuals from the law enforcement career field that have transitioned to emergency management in control of plans, budgets, and opportunities for members of their community, their 'whole community' to be involved in disaster awareness, education, training, financial opportunities for small business, and all members of the community to be at the table.

From FEMA HQ, Regional, NEMA, IAEM, and others in the mainstream of emergency management to protect the assets of the nation, their state, and provide professional guidance within the field.  Are changes needed across the board, and each to be re-evaluated for its effectiveness for our nation and our local communities?

Is diversity and inclusion a priority? 

Is equity and inclusion a priority?

Are funding opportunities to vulnerable communities equal and distributed accordingly or are funds under or never utilized until focused upon?

Many more questions to come.

BEMA International


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