Saturday, April 30, 2005

Hamlin GOP Produces Candidates


Jumbo, the GOP mascot, dispenses Hamlin's future

HAMLIN GOP MAKES BIG DECISION

On Tuesday, the Hamlin Republican Committee produced a slate of candidates for local office in 2005. With its usual regard for the future of the community, the constipated clique that controls and terrorizes the organization directed the other members to “support the nominees or quit the committee.”

The candidates are all hand-picked Austin Warner supporters. They were selected by secret ballot with no vote count given. The ballots were immediately BURNED! Destroyed before anyone could verify them.

Said one disgruntled member, “That core group demonstrated their contempt for the committee, for the democratic process and for the future of Hamlin. They dumped on everybody.”
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Due to regulations established by our web-server Smell-o-Blog has been turned off for this story. The Blog apologizes for any inconvenience.
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Friday, April 15, 2005


I Scheme!

Austin Warner certainly does! Who knows the truth about what his plans really are? Most people agree that the reasons he gave for leaving office are phoney. Many residents now believe that Warner, Pat MacIntosh, Jim Breslawski and Big Nelly Nesbitt have hatched a lame-brain plot that will re-install Warner in the Supervisor's seat, immediately after a settlement with Larry Gursslin is reached!

Here's the scheme: MacIntosh gets elected Supervisor; She appoints Warner Deputy Supervisor; She settles the lawsuit which includes signing written apology to Gursslin; She then decides that she doesn't want to be Supervisor anymore and resigns, naming Warner interim Supervisor!

What a plan! Warner gets out of the humiliation of apologizing to Gursslin (he'd rather drink poison) then gets the Supervisor's job back! He has told people that if MacIntosh doesn't get the Republican nomination, "I will primary." Get it? He didn't say, "Pat will primary." He said, "I will primary!"

There are a few problems of course. To keep the Supervisor's job he will have to be voted in by the town board. They might not be too hapy about the shenanigans however! This is the problem for Town Board- who ELSE are they going to pick??!!

Slippery Slope or Rocky Road I scheme any one?

Tuesday, April 12, 2005


Over Easy

Stick a fork in. Jim Breslawski’s self serving career as Chairman of the Hamlin Planning Board has finally come to an end. Supervisor Warner’s threat to pass a local law, which would permit any person living in New York State to serve on the PB, collapsed last night. The Hamlin Town Board held an illegal Executive Session at which Warner sought support to reinstall Breslawski. Under NYS law, local government is not permitted to discuss this public issue in secret. Despite that, and ignoring their individual personal obligations to the public and the law, all our Town Board members, and the Town Clerk, willingly violated the rules. The Breslawski matter is far from private, but Warner demanded to know if he had TB support. To avoid his own personal public embarrassment he sought a straw-poll in secret, the TB agreed to give it to him.

He didn’t like the results. Warner discovered he had NO SUPPORT for a local law elevating Breslawski above everyone else. To their credit, no Town Board member would accept opening our support boards to membership by people who live outside Hamlin. It’s just too bad they had to do it behind closed doors.

Maybe when Warner is gone, and the culture of fear and intimidation evaporates from the Town Hall, the public will have their right to open government restored.

Sunday, April 10, 2005


Warner Woman poses for campaign pic

Warner Woman to run for Supervisor!

Hamlin Supervisor, Butchman Warner, has announced his retirement from public office- but he ain't done yet! While he goes away for a term he has hand picked his successor, none other then his Super-Secretary Pat MacIntosh!

The Warner-MacIntosh team has been around for several years. Blog readers may remember that evil scientist Doctor Minarik once cloned both Warner and MacIntosh to create Super-Supervisor, a he/she being which was able to both bully people and do math! Unfortunately for Hamlin the experiment failed and the cloned creature first blew up to gigantic proportions then exploded in a monsterious rage against some imaginary threat.

"We buried the remains down in Stink Pond," recalled Highway Boss Tom Ingraham at the time.

Feelings were mixed about this new Warner concoction.

"Ah baloney!" commented town resident Marty Gattenhousenn of Apple Hollow. "Warner is just doing this so he can get out of apologizing to Larry Gursslin."

Steve Gruppenfuerer of Bark Tree Road added, "Warner is gonna spend the next two years cryin about how overworked MacIntosh is. He's gonna lobby to have the Supervisor position made full time and full pay. Then watch, he'll run again and try to take the job back! Good freakin' luck!"

In addition to MacIntosh, there are three others seeking the Republican nomination, Mike Marchetti, Denny Roach and Councilwoman Shirley Hollink.

Mike Marchetti commented, "That's good. It's about time we had an Irish candidate. The Germans have been running things for too damn long!"

Roach, a retired sea captain said, "Harrr! 'Taint no good place for a lady!"

Hollink, hoping to capitalize on the "comfort vote" from the profoundly confused Hamlin Republican Committee said, " I don't really care. She hates the library as much as I do. I'll kick her ass anyway."

Highway worker, and Committee member, Larry Tarzinsky commented, "I think it's all a sandbag. She ain't running for office, she's just runnin' Warner's secret campaign. She'll turn all her votes over to him on nominating night, just watch. Oh, please don't use my name. Warner will accuse me of being a Democrat, again."

Saturday, April 02, 2005


Local Republican tries to find path to the truth.

Is Warner Sandbagging?

Austin Warner’s minions have been scurrying around town pitching Hamlin’s need for a “full-time Supervisor.” Is it possible that Warner was only playing the drama-queen when he announced his retirement to theHamlin Republican Committee? Probably. Since then, all the usual suspects ( Nesbitt, Breslawski, Baas, Martin) have been out shilling the pitch, in all the usual locations (Kaiser’s, the VFW, Lions, etc.) ad nauseam. Hamlinites long ago deduced that they were hearing a pre-fab speech when a Warner mouthpiece would regurgitate the exact story, over and over, to every hapless victim they could trap. That is the essence of “old time politics” in Hamlin.

Beyond these carping Harpies, there was the sham “extension of time” to submit names for nomination. At the meeting, Warner flunky Jim Nesbitt “just happened to have” the committee’s by-laws. Moses-like, “Big Nelly” declared the right to extend the deadline. After some hemming and hawing, but little debate, the HRC voted for the extension.

Local pol watchers fingered this as a tactic to buy time so the GOOBERS (Good Ole Boys) might persuade Dave Rose to toss his tired old hat into the ring. The ol’ timers fear both Mike Marchetti and Denny Roach. Marchetti is “too young,” and Roach is an “outsider. Translation: We can’t control Marchetti, and we don’t know if Roach will obey. Like an old dog looking for a dark place to die, the GOOBERS sought out the familiar, the comfortable: “Let’s ask Davey!”

But this was all just bait and switch. It was never about Rose. It’s about Warner’s last desperate maneuver to keep his seat, and maybe, pocket a few extra bucks. Too bad for Butch that the plan hinges on a commodity that’s in short supply in the Town Hall- sympathy. Warner’s pitiable gamble began when he announced to the HRC that “nobody had bothered to ask” if he wanted to run again. This silly Shirley-Temple act backfired when George Todd leaned forward in his chair and boomed, “Bullshit!” Todd told the throng that Warner had been asked and had refused to commit. Butch played the pity card and went bust.

That launched the PR campaign. First Warner wept to the local papers, “The job don’t pay!” He complained, “I’m putting in 25 to 30 hours a week and I’m only making $21 thou!” Whaaaa??? Good Lord! 30 full hours? Wow, how does he ever survive? Natch, he left out the approximately 8 Grand he gets in benefits! Butch whines he’s overworked and underpaid.

His solution? Quit! Warner thinks we’re dumb enough to buy the notion that, “No dollars beats low dollars.”

Next his crew of carnival barkers hit the streets. “Oh, Hamlin really needs a full time Supervisor!” they ladled. But nobody wanted a taste. The public replied, “Yeah? For what ?” “We’re gonnna double Warner’s salary so he can work 40 hours?” And, “What’s he do now? Nothin’! More dough for more of nothin’. No thanks!” And, "There are a lot of people who think 30 thousand bucks for 30 hours a week ain't too bad. What's he think he's worth?!"

And it still doesn't solve his problem with the Gursslin settlement!

Butchy’s learnin’ that you don’t get much sympathy when you lead with both palms up!

Thursday, March 31, 2005


Coming Soon to a Town Hall Near You!
Staring Austin Warner as the Monster, Pat MacIntosh as the Mistress with Jim Nesbitt as the Igor the Geek.

Friday, March 25, 2005


Hamlin's burning Ship of State



The Real Reason


Much of the community remains in shock about Supervisor Warner’s seemingly abrupt decision to step down. As The Blog reported the day before his announcement, rumors had been circulating that Warner was planning to quit. The reason cited by knowledgeable insiders was always, “health.” Warner told friends that while his health had taken a downturn, it was his wife’s concern for his well being that was driving his decision. This explaination was repeated so often that Warner was clearly the source.

In truth, Warner’s health is fine. Despite a bad cold and recent knee surgery he is as healthy as he has ever been. “Poor health,” is a cover story.

So is the feeble rationale he offered to the Hamlin Republican Committee on Tuesday night. There he claimed that the job did not pay enough money and he couldn’t support his family on the income from this part time job. Warner’s salary and benefits comes close to $30,000 annually. Not bad for a part time job. He also claims to be an ad salesman for a local publisher of a free newspaper. Can money really be the reason he is quitting? Six years into the job and he is feeling the pinch only now?

No, that storyline is also a cover up.

The real reason that Supervisor Warner is stepping down is because of pressure from the Town’s insurance company to settle the Larry Gurrslin “Wrongful Termination” lawsuit! Warner has been told he must settle or risk losing insurance coverage for the town!

He refuses to settle!

On October 13, 2003, Warner conducted a kangaroo court which resulted in a 3-2 vote by the Town Board to fire Hamlin’s Building Inspector, Larry Gursslin. The Supervisor’s persecution of Gursslin was extraordinary. Both Councilmen Paul Rath and Ed Evans went on record opposing the firing. They stated that the town had established procedures for terminating an employee and that these procedures were not being followed. Rath said that the Hamlin “Employee Handbook” laid out a clear process and it was being ignored. He warned that the town was opening itself to a lawsuit. Warner pressed the issue and Gursslin was terminated with votes from Warner, George Todd and Shirley Hollink.

Until now, most of the facts surrounding the Gursslin matter have been hidden from the public. However, a careful examination of public record sheds light on the events. In the summer of 2003 Gursslin served a summons on the homeowner of a very expensive property on Summer Haven Road. The summons resulted from the homeowner’s refusal to comply to an “order to conform” from the Building department. The order was to remove a fence which had been built in violation of Hamlin’s zoning code. The homeowner refused to correct the violation and enlisted powerful, “outside” political influences to help crush the complaint. This political leverage came in the form of a letter and phone calls from the homeowner’s neighbor. The neighbor is a well known Rochester attorney and allegedly very influential in the Monroe County Republican Party. In the letter he demanded that the Supervisor intervene in the zoning matter and menaced Warner with hints of serious political damage if the matter was not fixed. The implication was clear: Get your Building Inspector under control; leave my neighbor’s fence alone- even if it is a violation- or suffer serious political consequences from the Republicans downtown!

Warner crumbled. He rushed to Gursslin and demanded that the matter be droped immediately. Gursslin refused. He told Warner that it was a matter of law, that the summons to Town Court had already been issued and that it would be resolved by the judge. Warner was furious and commenced the action to fire Gurrslin. The community was startled by the speed at which the Supervisor drove the termination. He held a “special” town board meeting to set the hearing on a Saturday morning when he knew both Rath and Evans were out of town! Warner never revealed to the public, or the Town Board, what the rush was about. In fact, he was in a hurry because he wanted to fire Gursslin before the court date! With Gursslin out of the way, he could quash the summons! That is what happened.

Making matters worse, and in violation of the law, Warner purged town records immediately after Gursslin left office! This was reported, with photographs, on The Blog on Tuesday, October 21, 2003.

There is no doubt that Warner’s termination of Larry Gursslin was “unlawful.” There is no doubt that the Town of Hamlin will lose the lawsuit. That is what brings us to Warner’s sudden decision to quit.

People close to the legal negotiations have indicated that the town has made several offers to Gursslin to settle, but he has refused. The sticking point is an apology! Gursslin believes that the Town (Warner) severely damaged his reputation by not giving a public reason for the firing. By terminating his job, with only two months to go on his contract and failing to name a cause, the Town created an environment of speculation. That speculation has caused unmeasurable harm to his public reputation and made finding new employment difficult. He wants Warner to write, sign and publish a clarification of the matter and apologize for the action!

Warner refuses.

This, in turn, has created a very difficult situation for the company which provides litigation insurance to Hamlin. All insurance companies have a dollar range which they will pay out for various types of injury. This range will be negotiated with a plaintiff to settle their case. If the company feels their client is wrong, they offer a higher dollar amount. Hamlin’s insurance company has made it’s best monetary offer, but Gursslin won’t take it without the apology!

Larry Gursslin has not sued for money, he sued to recover his reputation. Only that will resolve the issue. It is likely that Gursslin’s own attorney has urged him to take the offer but he will not accept any conclusion which doesn’t include a published apology and clarification.

Warner refuses to apologize. Stalemate.

How does this lead to Warner’s decision not to run? Because he has been so intractable, and Gursslin so insistent about an apology, the prospect of a settlement is at an impasse. Gursslin is ready to take the matter to trial. Hamlin’s insurance company does NOT want that. Not under any circumstances. They know the Town was wrong, the termination was unjustified and, probably, that Warner acted illegally in destroying documents related to the matter! The insurance company does not want a trial because they are confident they will loose and, if there is a jury trial, the payout could be huge. The costs of litigation alone, separate from any settlement, would be far greater then the range of acceptable dollars usually offered in this type of suit.

The insurance company is in a terrible bind. Warner refuses to apologize, which is the linchpin for any settlement. If the matter goes to trial the outcome will likely be much worse then any settlement. What can they do?

Then can cancel Hamlin’s policy. They can force the Town to seek other coverage from other carriers at extraordinarily higher premiums. That is what they are telling the Supervisor. Apologize to Gursslin or the town’s insurance will be cancelled.

Warner still refuses. He is willing to jeopardize the legal well being of the entire community because of pride!

He has only one way out. He must get the insurance company to delay a trial until after the election. After the election, an apology to Gursslin will fall to the new Supervisor. Once inaugurated, the new Supervisor will quickly publish it and settle the case. Warner will retain his false pride and, possibly, avoid prosecution for destroying town records.

Those are the real reasons why Austin Warner is not seeking reelection.
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REPRINT OCTOBER 21, 2003**** REPRINT OCTOBER 21, 2003 **** REPRINT OCTOBER 21, 2003 **** REPRINT OCTOBER 21, 2003****



Getcha Free New Identity Here!

A new kind of “Open Government”

In these days of rampant identity theft homeowners are urged to protect themselves. Experts suggest that you shred bills, returned checks and bank statements so they are not plucked from your trash. They even advise that you remove subscription labels from old magazines before they are recycled.

But, here in Hamlin, that might not help.

The reason is the Warner Administration has adopted a new form of “Open Government” which puts many of us a risk.

The attached photos show several containers outside the Town Hall. These wer put outside yesterday. Outside for everyone to enjoy! Outside for the public to casually page through, or if you like, take a handful of files home for yourself to enjoy later.

What are in the piles? Town records. Specifically, old Building Department records. Documents which include: Building inspection reports on people homes and businesses; site plan maps, correspondence between the Building Department and various governmental agencies; letters from attorneys; copies of deeds; transfers of property. Your basic stuff.

What is the matter with this town? At a time when there is a legitimate risk of identity threat, the municipality puts hundreds upon hundreds of records out in the parking lot for all to share. The files are filled with people’s names, addresses, phone numbers and correspondences. It is mind boggling.

Setting aside the horrific breech of customer confidentiality, there is an equally troubling question as to why these records are so suddenly being dumped.

We all remember the events at Enron and Global Crossings when incriminating documents were destroyed to prevent their discovery. Why are these records, some of them dating back to only 2002, being thrown away now? Is there a relationship between the sudden firing of the Building Inspector and the rush to destroy documents from his department?

Gursslin has said that he was never confronted with charges or allegations of wrongdoing so he believed his dismissal was arbitrary and capricious. If it is true that there is no evidence of any wrongdoing, then it might benefit the town to destroy hundreds of records in anticipation of litigation. Is this possible?

Whatever the motivation, the sudden public dumping of a large number of documents- into the public parking lot for all to grab- is a distinct violation of public trust and government responsibility.


Helpy Selfy

Thursday, March 24, 2005

Breslawski Pulls Feeding Tube: Warner Terminal

James Breslawski, Supervisor Warner’s biggest campaign contributor, resigned from the Hamlin Planning Board yesterday. Breslawski stuck to his lie right to the bitter end using his fake Hamlin address on the letter of resignation!

In a legal wrangle which has raged since Election Day, Warner and Breslawski stuck together like siamese twins. Now it appears they will end their political lives together as well.

On Tuesday night, in apparent anticipation of Breslawski’s quitting, Warner announced to the Hamlin Republican Committee that he will not be seeking reelection. After whining that nobody on the Town Board had bothered to ask him if he wanted to run again Warner cited vague complaints about his pay being insufficient and announced he was quitting.

Right click mouse to save jpeg images to expand.



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The Blog recognizes that this is a major local story and assures our readers that there will be more stories on it. Watch for an upcoming blockbuster which will reveal the REAL reason Warner is quitting!

Monday, March 21, 2005


Don't wait to fall!

The End for Warner?

Rumors have been circulating for weeks about the health of Austin Warner and whether he will make another run for Supervisor. People who are close to Warner are speaking out quite plainly saying that he will not seek reelection. “He has some serious health issues and his wife is strongly opposed,” said a member of the Hamlin Republican Committee speaking on condition of anonymity. Warner has recently had surgery and he has been seen using an inhaler. In addition ,the long struggle to control his weight seems to have been lost.

Equally important is the current political atmosphere. There is tremendous dissension inside the Hamlin Republican Party. The committee has withered from the normal membership of 44 down to 34. Typical monthly meetings have only 7 or 8 members in attendance. Numerous highly qualified committee members have quit. Their dissatisfaction stems from Warner’s heavy handed control over every aspect of local government. “He interferes in everything,” said a past member of the committee, speaking under anonymity, “He tries to control every committee, every employee, every job- Highway Department, Clerk’s office, Dog Warden- he sticks his nose into all of it. He bosses people around and tells them to do things HIS WAY, everybody is afraid of him.” The result, say past members, is that nothing gets accomplished. “Look at the Comprehensive Plan and Zoning Code committee,” he said, “They have been working on that for two years and they have nothing to show for it. Nothing! Lots of good people, good workers, quit because nothing was being accomplished. People are busy, they don’t have time to talk in circles just because Austin wants to control the show.”

In addition, two qualified and committed challengers have emerged to oppose Warner for Supervisor. Mike Marchetti, manager of Burke’s Hardware and leader of the fight against the DeMarco project, has been an unofficial candidate for nearly a year. Dennis Roach, a retired naval captain and experienced civic administrator, has also entered the contest for the Republican nomination. Warner may be seeing the writing on the wall. He is the only Supervisor in Hamlin history who has been forced to run in a primary every time he sought election. If he stays in this time, he will face another one. That cannot make the Hamlin Republican Party very happy.

Running in a primary and then an aggressive election in the fall may be too much for Warner physically. It might be better to climb off the wall now, then fall off later.

Saturday, March 12, 2005



Breslawski Prepares to Lie to Board of Elections

Hamlin Planning Board Chairman James Breslawski has been huddling in his corporate headquarters this week cooking documents and testimony in preparation for his “appeal” before the Monroe County Board of Elections.

Late last month, the BoE decided that Breslawski’s voter registration was invalid and notified him that he was being dropped from the town’s voter rolls. Breslawski, had claimed that his corporate office at 1534 North Hamlin Road is his home. The Board determined that he actually lives with his wife at 26 Deer Track Lane, in a quarter million dollar home, located in Clarkson.

Contrary to reports in other media, Breslawski is not a native of Hamlin having moved here when he was almost a teenager. While he did live in town for a number of years, he moved out: first to Kendall; then to Holley; then to Clarkson. Breslawski has not actually lived in Hamlin since about 1991.

Perhaps the real villain in the story however is Hamlin Supervisor Austin Warner III. Despite first hand knowledge of Breslawski’s true domicile, Warner has relentlessly asserted that Breslawski was a resident.

It is well known that Breslawski is Warner’s principle campaign donor and that he has long coveted the Planning Board Chair. Heading the Planning Board while controlling thousands of acres of farmland in and around Hamlin provides a significant advantage over competing farmers. Additionally, Breslawski is privy to development proposals long before they appear in public. It is a powerful position for a large landowner.

Supervisor Warner knows all this, yet has urged Breslawski to lie about his residence to protect their collaborations. It is against the law to file a false voter registration. It is against the law to serve on the Planning Board in the town of Hamlin unless you are a resident. It is against the law to file a false address for political purposes.

Breslawski has done all of the above. Warner has encouraged it. However, if Breslawski is ever prosecuted it will be him alone, who has to answer. While it may be unfair, Warner will not have committed any crime. Breslawski is responsible for his own actions, he is the one liable for prosecution.

This raises many serious questions about the moral and ethical foundation of local government, however. How can the Supervisor encourage someone, especially a supporter, to break the law? How can Warner permit and promote an ongoing violation of State law simply to serve his own political ambitions? How can he take a public position defending an action which he knows might land Breslawski in jail? How can he leave his biggest supporter to “swing in the breeze,” all alone, if criminal charges for perjury or voter fraud are filed?

It must be politics.

Tuesday, March 08, 2005


Residency? We don't need no stinkin' residency!

Domestic Bliss

In the 3/8 edition of the D&C, Planning Board Chairman Jim Breslawski makes some curious statements. He says that “ 99.9 percent of the time, I'm here at the North Hamlin Road address." He is suggesting that he does not live at his home at 26 Deertrack Lane in Clarkson. He wants us to believe that spending so much time at his workplace makes him a resident. The Board of Elections wasn’t impressed or persuaded with that argument.

Later we learn that, “There are times when Hamlin Planning Board member Chris Schlieter, who is an employee of Greece's Public Works Department, spends more time in Greece than he does in his hometown of Hamlin.” Does that mean he is entitled to vote in Greece? Of course not.

Curious. The same illustration proving opposite points.

Supervisor Warner deliberately tries to muddy the issue saying, “"It's all a question of what you consider home to be. Is it the place you sleep at night, or the place where you spend all of your time?" Sadly the Supervisor again displays his poor understanding of anything legal. His logic is dull and puerile. One works in the workplace; One lives at home.

The law states, “The term ‘residence’ shall be deemed to mean that place where a person maintains a fixed, permanent and principal home and to which he, wherever temporarily located, always intends to return.” CHAPTER SEVENTEEN OF THE CONSOLIDATED LAWS ARTICLE 1--GENERAL PROVISIONS, § 1-104. Definitions (22)

So, Mr. Schlieter cannot vote in Greece and Breslawski cannot vote in Hamlin. Even if he only goes home to his wife .1% of his time, he still lives in Clarkson!

What have the courts decided on this issue? “An individual is not permitted to live in one locality for purposes of comfort, community and home life, and yet have separate and distinct address of convenience for political office.” McKinney's Public Officers Law §§ 3, subd. 1, 30, subd. 1, par. d.

That sounds remarkably like what Breslawski is trying to do! It serves him personally to be Chairman of the Planning Board so he has invented a, “separate and distinct address of convenience for political office.” With the full consent and blessing of the town Supervisor of course!

Finally, the other shoe drops, “Town Supervisor Austin Warner said that if Breslawski loses the appeal and is removed from the Planning Board, Warner will propose changing the local law to allow nonresidents with a vested interest in the town to serve as town officers." Gotta keep those contributions comin’ in!

What will that mean for Hamlin? Well, the DeMarco Corporation has a “vested interest,” perhaps they might join the Planning Board. Maybe Waste Management will buy a few hundred acres from Jim Breslawski and become vested too. Then one of their VP’s might be appointed to the Zoning Board just in time to examine that landfill request!

Permitting non-residents to join our boards is a terrible idea. But imagine how it will improve contributions to Warner's campaign financing!

Tuesday, March 01, 2005



It's 75% done!

The Truth About Hamlin’s Comprehensive Plan
The 2/18 edition of the Brockport Post carried the story, "Master plan still under construction" in which Supervisor Warner made several false claims. In the public interest, The Blog will attempt to discern the truth.

*Warner alleges: "After more than two years the plan... is about 75 percent finished."
**Truth: Who knows? Since this committee operates in secret the Supervisor can claim whatever he wants! He might as well say it is, "200% complete."

* Jerry Hutchinson, committee chairman, alleges: " the average comprehensive plan takes about three years." Warner said, "You try to do it every five years."
**Truth: You figure this one out. It takes three years to complete a plan that is changed every five? Sounds like it should be a standing committee.

* Hutchinson, the chairman, said: "It's been a slow process but has taken a reasonable amount of time because the project is so large."
** Truth: Has anyone asked for or examined Mr. Hutchinson’s credentials, his aptitude, qualifications or experience to manage such a "large and complicated" project. No disrespect, but the public has a right to expect that the Supervisor would use due diligence in his appointments. Does Mr. Hutchinson have any planning experience? Is he an attorney? Has he studied the subject in school or in private research? Has he read any books on the subject. Does he have ANY experience or familiarity with this dense, complicated subject? Is he at least conversant with the Comprehensive Plans of other communities? Or, is he merely a supporter of Austin Warner, which is the Supervisor’s ordinary test for municipal duty? Did the Town Board examine, question or approve the members of this committee, or is it just a collection of a few Warner cronys? (Like Nesbitt, Baas & Quakenbush.) Has the Town Board simply turned its back on any sense of oversight, involvement or obligation regarding the Town’s Comprehensive Plan? Since that would have been normal, we can assume "Yes."

* The Post asserts that: " 83 percent (of the residents) would prefer the town remain as a rural community instead of a suburban one."
** Hutchinson replies saying: " the committee... discussed... requiring building lots be two to four acres. But size isn't the only problem." He said some houses are built on "bowling lane" lots, narrow and deep. The committee is considering requiring a lot shape, in addition to size."
**Truth: The way to keep Hamlin rural is to reduce lot sizes??? Every reputable municipal planning study throughout the NYS, and across the nation, which has examined the question of protecting agriculture from development has stated that larger lot sizes, preferably minimum 10 acre lots, is the best measure a community can take.
The drive to reduce lot sizes is the tired old issue of Norm Baas, ZBA Chair. He is a retired farmer who has long resented being prohibited from selling tiny lots when he liquidated his farming operations. This issue has virtually obsessed Baas for decades. He lobbies about it relentlessly to anyone he can trap into listening. Mr. Baas, who refuses to read or learn about contemporary zoning, planning and growth- much less go to training- has made up his mind, and that’s it. Too bad for Hamlin. All the meaningful research refutes him. That won’t matter for much around here. He’s a Warner supporter, he’ll get his way.

*Warner states: " Tonery participated in the first few committee meetings about two years ago before being removed because the committee felt he was stirring up controversy, not helping."
**Partially true! Tonery was removed because he refused to give up his right to tell the public about the committee’s proceedings. Warner asked Town Attorney Ken Licht how to make the committee secret and then closed it to public scrutiny! So if Warner wants to hand the community over to big developers like Demarco, the public has no way of knowing about it. If "not helping" means refusing to be silenced, it’s all true.

*Supervisor Austin Warner said of the revision: "the most important thing is, if we're going to grow, then we need to grow smartly."
**Truth: Could Warner actually mean, " Smart Growth?!!" That is the policy of protecting a community from excessive, unbridled development. It is exactly what Hamlin needs! Could it be that Hamlin’s Supervisor has it right? Sadly, Smart Growth is the philosophical enemy of Republicans everywhere! Still, is it possible that’s what Warner meant?
Not likely. He often doesn’t know what he means when he says something.

Saturday, February 19, 2005

Planning Board Chairman
"NOT A RESIDENT."
Breslawski likely to be removed as Board of Elections rules he is not a Hamlin resident; Cite his refusal to take oath as cause!




Sunday, January 16, 2005

Democracy Fails in Hamlin- Again

On Jan. 3, the Hamlin Town Board appointed Ms. Mary Hueser as Deputy Town Supervisor. Ms. Hueser is well know and liked throughout the community. As Deputy Supervisor she would have all the power and authority of the Supervisor in the event that Austin Warner fell ill or was incapacitated. Ms. Hueser would be able to write checks, sponsor and write legislation, and amend the Town budget, among other things. She would enjoy full “command and control” over Hamlin.

There is only one problem. Ms. Hueser has never recieved one single vote from any Hamlin resident for any political office! If Supervisor Warner was unable to perform, a person who has never been elected to any office would assume political control of the town. This is not democratic. It is very poor practice.

Every other town prohibits such an appointment! Everywhere but Hamlin, the Deputy must be a person who has been elected, and usually, it must be a member of the Town Board. This only makes sense. A person who is “a heartbeat away” from the most powerful position in the community ought to at least have gotten some votes from the public.

Where are Hamlin’s mainstream Republicans? This appointment is another, glaring example of the Good-Ole-Boy network which controls the town. Our elected officials seem concerned only about promoting and protecting a small circle of friends. Only members of this in-crowd are permitted to reach public office. Is the average Republican satisfied with this situation? Republicans didn’t vote for Ms. Hueser either! Isn’t it time for the average, indifferent Republican to pick up a pen or phone and contact the Town Board? Legislators and chief executives should be elected, not appointed.

That’s what democracy means.

Thursday, January 13, 2005

What will they do?

At the Planning Board meeting on Jan. 3 members were urged by the public to apply conditions to the new gas station planned for Tops Plaza. The PB must issue a Special Use Permit and is entitled to apply reasonable conditions on the construction and operations of a business requiring one.

Steve Truelson, owner of Bob’s Grocery and gas station, spoke about the impact this will have on his business. He pointed out that the parent company to Tops is in Denmark while he lives and works here in Hamlin. He stated that the Tops parent company was worth billions of dollars and if they start a price war at least one of the local gas stations would likely close. He estimated that each of the nearby gas stations will lose revenues of between 25 to 50 %! He asked the PB how the loss of a locally owned and operated business would be good for competition.

Several neighbors expressed concerns about an increase in traffic, noise, and odors from gas fumes. They also voiced concerns about foot traffic across their property and the littering that goes with it. Other neighbors were very concerned about the additional lighting and the overall aesthetic effect this fuel station will have on the community. John Picard of Lake Road asked how the Planning Board saw fit to permit another gas station while there are already three within a thousand feet of Tops. He wondered how this idea could fit into any reasonable concept of a town's "Comprehensive Plan."

Not surprisingly, the PB sat motionless and unmoved by the public’s concerns. Several PB members undertook to claim that the situation wasn’t their fault and that the PB was powerless to do anything about the situation. Like the Zoning Board, which rubber-stamped five variances for the project, the PB fully intended to whisk this SUP through untouched. The Zoning Board had told the public that the Planning Board would fix the situation and the PB turned around and claimed they "couldn’t do anything" once the Zoning had acted!

This is wrong. The PB has almost unlimited authority to apply conditions to a SUP and effect solutions for the neighborhood. However, to do that the PB would need to be creative, proactive and genuinely concerned about the impact the business will have on the neighborhood. They are not.

Instead, inventive and practical ideas came from the public. More and better landscaping to screen the business and deter foot traffic was suggested. Also, limiting the Top’s signage and hours of operation to "level the playing field" for Hamlin’s local businesses. All these ideas flowed from the citizens.

Peter Tonery admonished the PB members for their failure to provide solutions. He said that they knew ways to solve problems but didn’t try very hard. He said it was dishonest of them to say they "couldn’t do anything" when they were granting a SUP. He said the board failed the community by not "publicly advocating for change." He pointed out that virtually the entire west side of Lake Road was zoned commercial and this type of problem was bound to continue. He challenged them to work for change.

As a result of the demands of the public the PB took the unusual step of tabling the matter and setting a workshop to explore solutions. The blog will continue to watch and report the progress of their efforts.

The workshop is scheduled for Tuesday, Jan. 25 at 7:30 PM in the Town Hall.



Breslawski Gets Reprieve

PB Chairman James Breslawski was granted a reprieve of sorts by the Town Board. Breslawski, is not permitted to serve on Hamlin’s Planning Board since he resides in Clarkson. His voter registration, which states that he lives in Hamlin, has recently been challenged with the Monroe County Board of Elections. The TB, apparently growing uncomfortable with the situation went into Executive Session at their organizational meeting on Jan . 3 (This was, once again, an illegal act in violation of the NYS Open Meeting Law, but the Hamlin TB routinely violates the statute.) Upon returning to an open meeting Councilman Paul Rath read a resolution which will permit Breslawski to keep his position "until a replacement is named by the TB." However, the TB, probably at the insistence of Councilwoman Shirely Hollink, conditioned the resolution saying, "Pending a decision on residency by the Monroe County Board of Elections."

The implication is that if the Board of Elections determines that Breslawski is not legally registered in Hamlin he will be replaced. That is the suggestion, but who knows. These "Law and Order" Warner-Republicans violate rules and regulations so often that residents can never take their word on anything. Supervisor Warner seems willing to move Hamlin and earth to keep Breslawski in power, apparently simply for financial support to his campaign. Well, that is the way of Good-Ole-Boy government.

The citizens of Hamlin deserve better. A lot better.

Friday, December 31, 2004

Baleful Breslawski?

It seems unlawful Planning Board Chairman James Breslawski has been huddling up with Town Big-Shots lately, maybe to finally take stock of his legal situation. Meetings, up to three hours long, involving Breslawski and Supervisor Warner and Breslawski and Zoning Board boss Norman Baas have been held. These "skull sessions" can only mean one thing- everybody is running scared! Breslawski might have had the good sense to talk to a private attorney about the reality of his legal status. As The Blog and Brockport Post have reported, Breslawski lives in Clarkson yet has registered to vote in Hamlin! In fact, he hasn’t lived in Hamlin for more than a decade! He registered in Hamlin to promote and protect his business interests. Breslawski owns a agricultural production company which controls thousands of acres in Hamlin. Being Chairman of the Planning Board gives him a huge competitive advantage over other farmers. It also enables him to foresee, and possibly control, the direction of growth in town. However, state law says that people have to register to vote where they live, NOT where their business is located. No doubt being Chairman of Hamlin’s Planning Board is good for Breslawski’s business, but the bottom line is that voter fraud is a felony!

But why should Supervisor Warner be so upset? There are several reasons. First, as he has done so often to others, Warner has mislead Breslawski about the seriousness of the situation. Years ago the Supervisor directed the town attorney to provide a letter which intentionally minimized the legal situation regarding Breslawski’s voter registration. Warner has had years to correct the information, but he didn't. Warner maintained the deceit because he needs Breslawski too much! Breslawski is not only the Planning Board Chairman, he is also Austin Warner’s biggest campaign contributor! The appearance of a payoff is unmistakable. Breslawski receives a position which benefits his ag business and in exchange Warner gets a loyal, generous donor for his reelection. Quid pro quo, it’s called; you scratch my back....

But what scares Warner just as much as losing his financier is losing Breslawski from the Planning Board. Because Breslawski has such an enormous personal interest in the operations of the Board he is one of it’s most active members! This is not saying much, mind you. Hamlin’s Planning Board is one of the most complacent and careless in the County. This is the group who fumbled the Bower dog kennel; the bunch who insulted the entire community by staging a one-way "public hearing" for the DeMarco Millstone subdivision; the crew who has botched the Tops gas station. This board has stalled the essential Senior Housing project while almost instantly permitting small businesses to pop up in the middle of neighborhoods where residents don’t want them. The Hamlin Planning Board stumbles with good projects and promotes the bad, almost always in direct contrast to the will of the public. There are only two guys who know or do anything on the Planning Board and Breslawski is one. If he quits, as he will have to once he acknowledges his true residency, the Planning Board will be hopeless.

That’s why Warner is scared.

But it probably won’t be enough to keep Breslawski from bailing.

Tuesday, December 28, 2004

NEWSFLASH: Good-Ole-Boys Smack Down Innocent Girl!

The Hamlin Town Board met today in "Special Session" to fire Cindy Olds the Assistant Building Inspector and Clerk to the support boards!

Olds, who was well liked in the community and by local builders, was let go in the continuing aftermath of the Larry Gursslin firing fiasco of last year. Olds was perceived by Boss Warner as too "independent." Translation: She wouldn’t do something he told her to. Probably it was something wrong or illegal. Refusing Boss Warner will get you kicked out, every time.

No word yet on whether Olds will also sue the Town for wrongful dissmissal.

Correction: The TB didn’t "fire" her, they passed a resolution to "not reappoint" her.

Your tax dollars at work. Secretly, or at least below the radar, but at work! Happy New Year!

Tuesday, December 21, 2004

Zoning and Planning Fail Again

What does the public believe is the most serious threat to Hamlin?
Development- continued, commercial and residential growth.

How has local government responded to increasing development? With welcome arms! As fast as a proposal is presented, the support boards rush to approve them.

A case in point is the recent application by Tops Markets to put up a gas station in front of it’s store. The plan required environmental approval from the Planning Board and several variances from the Zoning Board. The SEQR review flew through without even a public hearing offered to the public. The Zoning Board hosted a hearing, as required by law, but then discarded all citizen complaints and concerns.

Two main issues were presented to the ZBA. The first need: How would another gas station impact the existing service stations and how three gas stations within 1000 feet of one another would effect the appearance and character of the community. The second issue was environmental impact. Citizens wanted to know how this station would look, how smelly, noisy and bright it would be, and how much new traffic would be generated.

How where the public’s concerns were handled? The ZBA took, at face value, virtually every reply offered by the Tops planners to citizen objections. Not much questioning, very little challenge. Of course, they gave Tops everything it asked for.

The process was similar to the infamous DeMarco, "Millstone" proposal. The public raised their concerns, the support Boards facilitated the developer, and the developer was allowed to "answer" the citizens without challenge or debate.

In Hamlin, despite overwhelming popular sentiment, all Town boards are naively infatuated with development. Some board members feel powerful when dealing with "big-time" developers, others hold a radical "business is good" philosophy which prohibits any challenge to any proposal.

Whatever their motives, they are bad for Hamlin.

Local government is hopelessly lost when the public says that they want to preserve the town’s "rural heritage." Elected and appointed officials have no clue what the residents mean, or want.

Supervisor Warner’s claim to be developing a Comprehensive Plan is an empty, failed promise. The ZBA Chairman steadfastly refuses to read outside of monthly meetings! He admonishes applicants for not being efficient and then, in the next breath, announces that he didn’t bother to bring his records to the meeting! This Chairman refuses to go to training, doesn't know or understand the Code Book and relentlessly promotes his own agenda for growth, an agenda which is twenty five years out of date!

The Planning Board is chaired by a man who is not even a resident of Hamlin! Mr. James Breslawski lives in Clarkson and every meeting he chairs violates state. The Town Board supports him because he is a "taxpayer" and "large landowner." Is that sufficient reason to permit a non-resident to be in charge of our town’s planning? This man is partner in a company which owns thousands of acres of land in Hamlin, yet fails to recuse himself from hearings on projects potentially effecting those lands.

* The Chairman of the Zoning Board won’t read or go to training.

* The Chairman of the Planning Board lives in another town. He owns thousands of acres of land. He is in charge of the direction of development.

* The Supervisor is under the corporate philosophical delusion that commercial development lowers taxes. He refuses to read or go to training as well.

The Town Board, Planning Board and Zoning Board all oppose the creation of an Architectural Review Committee which would have authority to block projects that make Hamlin look ugly and overdeveloped. For example, the Dollar General building or the new Tops gas station signs and kiosk.

The residents can answer surveys until hell freezes over, but unless and until there is a local government which understands the issues of development, nothing will change.