Sean Penn is Growing Up–International Agencies Never Cooperate

Sorry to tell you Sean, this is always the way that international multilateral, bilateral and private agencies have worked–everyone for themselves.  Each bureaucracy is unwilling to cede power to another, each follows its own procurement procedures and each responds to a different board of directors.  This will not change for a small, powerless country–only the big countries (say, Brazil, Mexico, Argentina in Latin American) set their own terms and have the power to force “some” coordination.

While every organization he’s come across has “extremely dedicated people,” there are “competing cultures in the international relief world” with one focused on emergency relief and the other on sustainable development, he added later.

“These have to work with each other against the problem of poverty and not against each other in competition for donors,” he said. “It’s one of the basic embarrassments and failures in the aid community.”

via Sean Penn sees Haiti relief shortfalls | World news | guardian.co.uk.

Miami Misuse of Funds–How Unusual

And one wonders why the citizens of this county are not more disgusted with the pervasive corruption of its government.  I can only conclude that they think that the rest of the world behaves to same way, and it’s a simply part of the cost of doing business here.  I can assure you that many cities and counties that are well run in this country.

The city of Miami, already deep in the throes of a federal investigation into bond sales and questionable moves used to prop up past budgets, used nearly $7 million in restricted public works money to balance its books to close out the 2009 and 2010 budget years, according to yet another stinging city audit released Thursday.

via Audit: Miami misused millions in public works funds – Miami-Dade – MiamiHerald.com.

Number of Police Down, Public Security Up in Coral Gables

Many of us recently received an email from the city of Coral Gables showing that public security had greatly improved in the last year.  This is really good news.

I have also heard that the city has not filled a number of positions (19 or so) in the police department.

Ergo–fewer police, more public safety.  Is that right?  What does do the overcompensated police and the police union have to say about those numbers.

In spite of an economic downturn that many experts believe will push crime rates higher, overall crime declined in Coral Gables last year. According to recent police data, the total offenses, total non-violent crimes and total violent crimes in Coral Gables each declined by 7 percent in calendar year 2010 compared to calendar year 2009. A category that increased in 2010 was thefts from buildings (office space with public access) which was 28% higher than 2009. The data shows that in 2010 compared to 2009 there were:

  • 20% fewer burglaries
  • 15% fewer attempted burglaries
  • 31% fewer thefts of motor vehicles
  • 13% fewer aggravated assaults
  • 5% fewer robberies
  • 50% fewer purse snatchings.

eNews of Coral Gables, Feb. 16

Candidates Page Updated

I have listed the websites that I know of for the candidates.  There you will find their relevant “blah, blah, blah.”  Some comments are more complete and forthcoming than others.