The priorities of elected officials are warped, even when they’re dealing with public safety.
Because of serious budget cuts and possible bankruptcy, the county where I live has had to make severe cutbacks. The Jefferson County sheriff fought the cuts tooth and nail, trying to get his department exempt from the layoffs all the other departments were facing.
When his budget was finally cut in June — after the defeat of a legislative bill that would have allowed the county to raise taxes — Sheriff Mike Hale announced that his deputies would no longer have time to respond to calls about accidents in unincorporated parts of the county. It struck me as a petulant move to try to create pain on the part of the public and create pressure to get his budget back.
Friday, his busy deputies found time for some real police work. Sheriff’s deputies raided a couple of bingo parlors that were using electronic bingo machines that the sheriff and the state believe are illegal. The bingo operators have had some success in court arguing that their machines don’t violate state anti-gambling laws. Either way, the law and court rulings on the issue aren’t clear, so it’s far from clearcut about whether any laws are being broken.
How can I make sense of a world that’s fundamentally nonsensical?
Best time to raise dragon-slayers is when dragons are everywhere
Intuition sometimes tells you when someone is worth chasing
Humans are most heroic in small moments of caring for each other
More dependence ahead now that half of households get U.S. checks
Surgery report: It went very well, but first time is one too many for me
Suppressing speech you don’t like is a lousy way to encourage tolerance
Cancer unexpectedly took Lucy before old age could finish her