Morning Roundup: Other Turkeys Edition

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Photo by kloppervok!
Good morning, Washington, and welcome back after the long Thanksgiving holiday weekend. We hope you managed to stuff enough turkey and cranberry sauce down your gullets to make the incessant White House crashers story feel like more of a distant memory. I'm all for making sure the Secret Service doesn't fall down on its job, but learning these reality TV whackos are now asking for half a million dollars to tell their "story," the whole thing kinda just makes me want to take a shower. That dumb people will do something super tacky and vaguely illegal just to become "famous" isn't exactly a new feature in our trash-obsessed culture, but isn't there something especially grotesque about the Salahis? My favorite little tidbit to come out of this story so far: could Michaele Salahi's real name actually be Michelle Ann Holt Salahi?

This is What it's Like Trying to Ask Adrian Fenty a Question: Hope you had a chance to read this amazing story by Nikita Stewart and Paul Schwartzman in the Washington Post on Sunday, concerning Mayor Fenty's brusque governing style. While the entire article, an attempt to tease out whether people just didn't know what kind of personality (stubborn, rude, obsessive) Fenty really had when they elected him, is worth a thorough read, it's this amazing quote from the mayor that really hits home the point: 'During the brief sidewalk interview this month, Fenty rejected the suggestion that moving too quickly can lead to missteps. As a reporter wrote down his remarks, the mayor slowed and dictated even the punctuation of his comment: "When I am in the community, and people are talking about the issues confronting the city, comma, I rarely hear people say, 'You are moving too fast,' comma, in fact, more often than not, people are encouraging me to move faster."' As someone who has occasion to ask the mayor questions after a press conference, it's somewhat reassuring to find I'm not the only reporter he speaks to as if they were five years old.

Smoke 'Em While You Got 'Em: Virginia bar and restaurant patrons have but one more night to light up indoors before the state's smoking ban goes into effect tomorrow. There are plenty of 'gearing up for the smoking ban' stories to choose from, but we appreciate the Richmond Times Dispatch for calling into question whether a $25 fine for both customer and bar owner is really much of a deterrent. Fines in the District range from $100 to $1000.

911 Call Takers Got Massages: The people who answer 911 calls have stressful jobs, but is it stressful enough that taxpayers should be buying them massages? Because that's exactly what we did, writes Michael Neibauer in his roundup of District government agency expenditures in the Examiner. It seems the 'District's Office of Unified Communications used its government-issued charge card to buy $900 worth of massages for its staff,' which happened as part of the OUC's Employee Appreciation and Wellness Program. The mayor's office says massages won't be included in this program again, but frankly, if $900 worth of shoulder rubs would make it so that we hear about fewer bad experiences when calling 911, we'd be happy to pay.

Briefly Noted: Possible misuse of tax funds by Montgomery County employees ... MetroAccess drivers rehired after cell phone violations ... D.C. police will not fire detective involved in shooting ... Prince George's County firefighters knocked down by back draft explosion.

This Day in DCist: One year ago, Michelle Rhee was on the cover of Time magazine holding a broom.

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Comments (16) [rss]

i leave DC for 5 days, hoping to get away from all of the rigamarole here, and what happens? i get barraged with that white house gate crashers story 24/7. the entire country only focuses on our town now, unless something bleeds elsewhere (tiger woods, cops in tacoma). ugh...

The media seems determined to be the Salahi's private PR firm, what with daily updates on these jerks. Just like with Palin!

Or the Ft Collins Heenes.
Next we'll be hearing about who's Falcon Michaele.

Is it my imagination or did AA photoshop a top on the russian prostitute in the red dress?

I don't really see the big deal with the massages. If they worked for a private company, and the company offered massages as a benefit, no one would complain. I think we forget that there's a balance between using money judiciously because it's public funds and treating your employees with respect; we ought not pay for strippers and a trip to Las Vegas, but there are things that we shouldn't object to if we'd accept them at our own jobs.

Me neither. They've got one of the most stressful jobs in the city.

After dealing with the unimaginable difficulties that come with being a 911 operator, I too see no problem with massages, even if they don't have happy endings.

Here here. I remember once years ago I met a bitchy lawyer who was all hyped up about her lawsuit to stop federal employees from keeping their frequent flyer miles. I asked her if she got to keep hers and she said "yes, but that's different."

I have no patience for people who seem determined to make gov't work as unattractive as possible and then bitch about why there are no good government workers.

Joining the crowd ... I've actually been doing a lot of research on employee retention strategies - mostly in the field of social work - and massages are pretty common. Moreso for private companies, but I'm cool with it for the public as well. As a matter of fact, in any number of fields, public organizations contract with private agencies ... so it stands to reason that some of the taxpayer money that gets funneled to private co's is used for things like this.

I think the people complaining about this are just jealous that they didn't get massages. (As I am, to be honest.)

They were allowed to return as part of a compromise in union negotiations, according to a spokeswoman for California company MV Transportation Inc., which runs the service for Metro.

Nice. So basically "zero tolerance" means "sorry for firing your stupid ass for talking on the phone while driving, but here's your job back." Anybody remember when unions were there to protect workers from predatory management practices, instead of to guarantee work for mental cripples who can't put the f**king phone down when they're driving? Didn't think so.

We've come a long way from when MLK stood with West Virginia miners.

That's funny about Fenty. I don't know the man but he strikes me as an egomaniac and a bully and I'm cool with that. The DC government is screwed up and it needs a hard ass to slap it around some. I'm not crazy about his cronyism but you get that with everyone.

As to the press, I used to be a reporter and work with them a lot now. Reporters are prone to getting things horribly wrong from time to time, and it can be very damaging when they do. He's a wise to treat reporters with distain. They are not his friends.

I don't have any beef with a Mayoral hard ass AS LONG AS HE/SHE IS COMPETENT. We need someone with their head on straight to fix the many problems in DC government, and Fenty's not the man. He strikes me as an egomaniac who uses arrogance to cover-up his incompetence.

Power + arrogance + incompetence = a DANGEROUS combination.

You know what this post is missing? That's right, ball-tapping.

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