Tag Archives: assembly

On DVD: Singular Mystery Team Dares to Break Comedy Ranks

Comedy, because it’s best as a shared phenomenon, like music, is considered successful when you thrum the wires that get almost everybody laughing. But that can lead to a homogenization, a chortle-sausage approach — and if you’re familiar Chevy Chase’s career, even at its prime, you’ve seen the assembly line. Much as I can still get a rise out of the Apatow Paradigm, it’s already waning, a joke told 10 times. What’s needed are movies with no precedent, that reek of slightly deranged ideas and dare to amuse only of some of us — the odder few and far between. Mystery Team certainly fits.

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On DVD: Singular Mystery Team Dares to Break Comedy Ranks

Uh oh! It looks like Mayor Sullivan has been a very, very bad boy.

There have been murmurings aplenty about Dan Sullivan and his philandering ways but nothing definitive enough to post. But today cocky newcomer AlaskaWTF

How they did it! The complete Sullygate timeline from 1982 to 2010.

My good friend, and researcher extraordinaire, Mel Green has put together a comprehensive (I am not sure “comprehensive” is a strong enough word to be honest) timeline for just how the 2010 Anchorage Assembly was bamboozled into cutting a check

Assembly member Harriet Drummond just sent the posse after Dan "the desperado" Sullivan to retrieve the money he stole from our city’s treasury.

This is Resolution AR No. 2010-91, which Harriet Drummond, this liberal bloggers favorite Anchorage Assembly member, just submitted for consideratin on March 23. ANCHORAGE, ALASKA AR NO. 2010–91 A RESOLUTION OF THE ANCHORAGE MUNICIPAL ASSEMBLY TO AUTHORIZE ENGAGING THE SERVICES OF INDEPENDENT LEGAL COUNSEL TO REVIEW AND REPORT TO THE ASSEMBLY ON THE LEGAL AND CONTRACTUAL OBLIGATIONS, IF ANY, AND THE AUTHORITY OF THE ASSEMBLY, IF ANY, REGARDING PAYMENT OF $193,000 IN MUNICIPAL FUNDS TO THE GEORGE M. SULLIVAN IRREVOCABLE LIFE INSURANCE TRUST, AND PROVIDING FOR AN APPROPRIATION. WHEREAS, pursuant to Assembly Memorandum No. AM 76-2010, the Assembly was requested by and on behalf of the Mayor to appropriate One Hundred Ninety Three Thousand Dollars ($193,000.00) from the Areawide General Fund (Fund 101) for disbursement to the George M. Sullivan Irrevocable Life Insurance Trust; and WHEREAS, Assembly Memorandum No. AM 76-2010 declared that disbursement would be made under a life insurance contract; and WHEREAS, Assembly Memorandum No. AM 76-2010 did not disclose that the George M. Sullivan Irrevocable Life Insurance Trust was administered by the Mayor in his private capacity as the son of George M. Sullivan and Trustee of the life insurance trust; and WHEREAS, Assembly Memorandum No. AM 76-2010 did not disclose that no life insurance policy was in place and no written life insurance contract existed; and WHEREAS, AR 2010-33 was passed and approved by the Assembly, on February 16, 2010, authorizing disbursement subject to receipt of proper documentation from the George M. Sullivan Irrevocable Life Insurance Trust; and WHEREAS, the full circumstances purporting to legally obligate the Municipality to make a payout of $193,000.00 in public funds are more complicated than provided in the summary under AM 76-2010; and WHEREAS, the payout of $193,000.00 in public funds for life insurance without a life insurance policy in place has raised many concerns in the mind of the public and one or more Assembly Members, including these questions: • What is the legal basis for asserting the existence of a life insurance policy or contract? • What is the legal basis for asserting a contractual obligation in the absence of a written contract? • What is the legal authority of the Salary and Emoluments Commission to authorize an employee benefit after employment has terminated? • Were the legal requirements, procedures and process under Charter Section 5.08 (c) properly followed? • What, if any, is the extent of a municipal obligation to make payment of $193,000 in life insurance without a life insurance policy? • What is the current Assembly’s authority to approve or disapprove a life insurance payment in the absence of a life insurance policy? • Is this disbursement recognized in the FY 2010 General Government Operating Budget? • What process should be used under the Ethics Code to ensure that an elected public official does not sit on both sides of a municipal transaction? • Under what public purpose are public funds being disbursed as life insurance? and WHEREAS, the current Mayor is also actively serving as Trustee of the George M. Sullivan Irrevocable Life Insurance Trust, creating a situation in which he serves on both sides of a significant financial transaction involving public funds; and WHEREAS, as Mayor, the incumbent is required to represent and act in the Municipality’s best interests; and WHEREAS, as Trustee of the George M. Sullivan Life Insurance Trust, the Trustee has a fiduciary duty to the Trust to represent and act in the best interests of the Trust and its beneficiaries; NOW, THEREFORE, the Anchorage Assembly resolves: 1. Because the events surrounding the creation and administration of a special benefit for the Honorable George M. Sullivan occurred after he was no longer in office and over the course of several mayoral successions without a full and public review before the Assembly, the Assembly authorizes an independent legal review to include the following: • The authority of the Salary and Emoluments Commission, after the mayor or other elected official has left elected office, to authorize a special life insurance benefit; • Whether a special life insurance benefit was legally effectuated for George M. Sullivan, when, and by whom or under what actions; • The legal obligations and risks to the Municipality concerning the special life insurance benefit (prior to payment); • The authority of the Mayor to request an appropriation when the Mayor also currently serves as Trustee of the George M. Sullivan Irrevocable Life Insurance Trust, without disclosure of the potential for conflict of interest; • The public purpose under which disbursement of public funds is allowed as life insurance proceeds, without a fair market life insurance policy or premium payments. • The authority of the Anchorage Assembly to approve an appropriation of public funds for this purpose. 2. The services of independent legal counsel shall be selected by the Internal Auditor, the Municipal Clerk and Assembly Counsel under a small procurement contract not to exceed [$5,000 – $10,000], and an appropriation of [$ 10,000] for this purpose is approved. 3. Until the Assembly is assured by independent legal counsel that payment of $193,000.00 in public funds is legally appropriate, the Mayor, in his private capacity as Trustee for the George M. Sullivan Irrevocable Trust, is respectfully requested to return any funds disbursed under AR 2010-33 to a special account to be held by the Municipality. PASSED AND APPROVED by the Anchorage Assembly this ______day of ____________, 2010. ______________________________ Chair ATTEST: ____________________________ Municipal Clerk Damn! It is about time SOMEBODY took Sullivan to task for emptying the city’s cash reserves while cutting services to its citizens! If you are late to the party and a little confused by this resolution just go here , here , and here and you will soon know why Anchorage residents are so angry. By the way, is it too early to draft Harriet Drummons to run for mayor of Anchorage? State Senator? How about Lisa’s job? (H/T to my friend, and fellow Alaskan blogger Phil Munger )

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Assembly member Harriet Drummond just sent the posse after Dan "the desperado" Sullivan to retrieve the money he stole from our city’s treasury.

Anchorage Mayor Dan Sullivan learned much from his idol Sarah Palin.

(This picture was undoubtedly taken after Sullivan brags to Sarah that someday he will outdo her when it comes to ripping off the people of Alaska. Sullivan is on the left. Picture courtesy of AKM.) As incredible as it may seem, before there was a Mayor Dan Sullivan, there was a Mayor George Sullivan (Yes I know the people of Anchorage are slow learners!) And in 1982 the city, in it’s infinite wisdom, decided to provide George Sullivan with a life insurance policy. On Jan. 19, 1982, about two weeks after he left office, the Assembly passed a resolution thanking Sullivan “for the many outstanding contributions he made to the general well-being of the citizens of the Municipality of Anchorage during his years of public service.” The resolution asked the city’s Commission on Salaries and Emoluments to consider granting him life insurance coverage for the rest of his life, with the same rate for the same coverage he had as mayor. Sullivan was considered a city employee until the end of October 1982, when his accrued hours of leave ran out. Now THIS was highly unusual. In fact it had NEVER happened before, or since. However the decision was made and for the last 27 years the Sullivan family has been paying for this insurance. Except that the premiums that were paid did NOT go to an insurance company. Instead it went into a city account. Twenty years later, in 2002, Deputy Employee Relations director Karen Moore was baffled when Dan Sullivan, who was on the Assembly at the time, came to the city to make that year’s premium payment, according to e-mails from the time. She asked the city’s insurance carrier about a policy for Sullivan. The company didn’t know about it either. The premiums paid by Sullivan and his family had been deposited into a city account, not given to Aetna. The city, then headed by Mayor George Wuerch, talked about buying a real insurance policy for the elder Sullivan but Aetna would not cover him since he was no longer a city employee and suggested that the city simply return the money to the family. Well the city did not do that, they did this instead. The city finance director at the time, Kate Giard, told fellow city officials they could put an end to it by just telling the Sullivan family the city would no longer provide the insurance. Giard said another option was for the city to try to buy a life insurance policy for the former mayor, but she suggested that would likely be too expensive because of his age. She suggested the city put $193,000 into a reserve account , the coverage amount that was described in a 1982 memo, then pay it out to the family when George Sullivan died. Last year ex-Mayor George Sullivan did indeed pass away. And just last week the Anchorage Assembly voted to pay this $193,000 of our city’s money to George Sullivan’s survivors. And can you guess who the beneficiary of this bizarre, city provided, pseudo life insurance payout might be? That’s right, none other than current creepy Mayor Dan Sullivan, George’s much less capable offspring. You remember Danny boy don’t you? Here let me refresh your memory. Yeah THAT Mayor Dan Sullivan! So now thanks to a vote by our current assembly and some very strange shenanigans by the 1982 Assembly Mayor Dan Sullivan suddenly became $193,000 richer and our fair city became $193,000 poorer. How is that for justice? And just to make matters much, much worse, our current Mayor Sullivan has been cutting, or attempting to cut, essential services in the city ever since he took office because, in his own words, “Anchorage’s economy is in a delicate balance.” So delicate in fact that Sullivan attempted to cut $174,000 from the city budget, part of which would have gone to fund our libraries and arts programs. So delicate that he vetoed 3.2 million to build a storm drainage system for downtown and $250,000 for a new ambulance. The economy in Anchorage is so delicate that just last month Mayor Sullivan saved the city $150,000 by disbanding the Anchorage Fire Department’s wilderness rescue team and cutting back some other specially trained teams like divers. For God’s sake this is Anchorage freaking Alaska! Every year we have a dozen or so people fall off of a mountain, get stuck in the mudflats, get attacked by a bear, fall overboard, get lost in the wilderness, or succumb to the elements. When it comes to “essential city services”, this certainly applies. But hey, if the city does not have the money then what are you going to do? Except that the city, whose economy is in a “delicate balance”, apparently has plenty of money when it needs to hand Dan Sullivan a big fat check for $193,000 dollars now doesn’t it? I wonder how many books that would buy? Or how many lives it might save? Or how many other necessary city projects it might help to fund? There was only one dissenting vote on the Assembly which voted to give Danny this money, and that came from the always ethical Harriet Drummond. “If there were enough (Assembly members) who realized this was stupidity and voted no, then Anchorage’s taxpayers would still have $200,000 in the bank,” Drummond said later. “And the Sullivan estate could have gotten the $20,000 in premiums back. Maybe that was the appropriate thing to do. But it was certainly not appropriate for the city to be acting as an insurance company, which it is not.” And before you think I am being too unfair to little Danny Sullivan let me remind you that he is the same guy who charged the city $12,115.20 for a period of time BEFORE he physically took office, simply because he could. The fact that other mayors, including his predecessor and nemesis Mark Begich, had chosen not to take the money not bother him at all. Dan Sullivan clearly views the job of mayor as a stepping stone to higher office and an opportunity to grab as much cash as possible, and cares not one little bit about the people who elected him or who need him to run their city effectively. I am sure Sullivan would have felt quite at home with his grifter role model Sarah Palin and her ” swarm of locusts “.

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Anchorage Mayor Dan Sullivan learned much from his idol Sarah Palin.

Arnold’s Secret Code Letter

Check out the letter Arnold just sent to the California State Assembly giving his reasoning behind vetoing a financing bill. It's got a secret code in it! Arnold is the coolest/most juvenile governor ever. ( SFBG via Amanda .) Contribute: Add an image, link, video or comment