Not that I believe in karma but if I did I would find it highly ironic and 
highly karmic this situation in Fairfield. Here we have a big corporation, 
coming in and apparently telling lies about its operation, its intentions, 
keeping it inner workings secret and in general getting ready to take the 
locals for a ride to the cleaners costing them a lot of money. This in a town 
that has long been dominated by an organization that came in, lied about its 
operation and its intentions, keeps it inner workings secret and takes people 
who became true believers for a ride. Karma? Can it be true, or is it just 
birds of a feather, energetically speaking I mean.


________________________________
 From: "dhamiltony...@yahoo.com [FairfieldLife]" <FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com>
To: FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com 
Sent: Wednesday, May 28, 2014 11:17 AM
Subject: Re: [FairfieldLife] FW: read this GREAT letter from Eileen Danneman.. 
Woman arrested but not gagged
 


  
Yes, she was completely out of
order, evidently did not understand the process of open public civil
meetings and became obnoxious.  It had to be done to protect the
public process.  It was taken care of openly and the public meeting
proceeded in good order whence the public was subsequently able to
make comments.  It was reported in the local newspaper. Other people said the 
same things she was trying to say only in better order.   
We generally have
really great public government in Iowa because by laws require that public
process must happen in open public meeting.  That is how it works in
Iowa.  There is long established process in that.  A lot of people
evidently are pretty weak in understanding how their government
works.  Lot of people it seems have hardly ever been to public
committee meetings. It works pretty well in Iowa by law by
comparison.  It's okay, the TM movement is even moving in process in
that same direction now too.    -Buck
sharelong60 asks:

Rick, do you know why Eileen was in jail?

Rick Archer writes:
 
Woman arrested but not gagged
By Eileen Dannemann | May 22, 2014
To the editor:
Spending eight hours in a cold cell in Jefferson County jail replete with gray 
and white stripes allowed me to realize that the “good ol’ boys network” is 
alive and well in Fairfield. So, let me tell you what I found out:
The Heartland project will ship 20 million bushels of GMO corn to Texas and 
Mexico​ despite Mexico being the corn capital of the Americas and disregarding 
the fact that Mexico has banned the planting of GMO maize. This is how the USA 
subverts the economies of developing countries.
Locally, it will take 25,000 semi-trailers to deliver the grain to Heartland. 
25,000 semi-trailers equal 50,000-semi trailers-round trip. Drivers will be 
reticent to drive under the 115-year old BNSF railroad, one lane Nutmeg Avenue 
gravel underpass, but will instead come down Burlington Avenue, past Walmart & 
HyVee substantially slowing down traffic and
polluting the city. It is interesting to note that 12 percent of Jefferson 
County residents already have lung problems. The county cannot ban Heartland 
semi-trailers from going down Burlington without banning all similar 
semi-trailers. So expect them!
Lee Dimmitt admitted that he was aware of BNSF railroad’s adamant refusal to 
renovate the Nutmeg underpass, a critical component in the deal. Yet the 
supervisors approved the TIF/bonding resolution, purposely leaving out what 
they know to be the county’s responsibility in the very near future – to 
renovate the dangerous one lane gravel underpass.
Were the entire Nutmeg
underpass construction included, transparently, in the front end of the deal 
where it belongs, the taxpayers would see that they are actually on the hook 
for $5 million. However, the supervisors put it on the back end, virtually out 
of sight. In other words, we are obligated to increase the debt at the time the 
one lane gravel underpass becomes untenable and dilapidated. At that time we 
will be forced to add another $2.8 million to fix the safety problem. Hence the 
aerial view of the taxpayer debt seeing both the front and back end is $5 
million dollars, not $2.5 million dollars. The service on the totality of this 
debt has not been calculated and disclosed to the public and appears to be 
financially unsustainable.
Moreover, the supervisors are remiss in not securing an “outside”
feasibility study. If Heartland does not meet its ambitious goals, it can fail. 
A CEO in the grain industry has told me, in his opinion, the Heartland project 
in not viable. If so, we will not only be left with an enormous debt but an 
abandoned monstrosity at our east gate with no property income to defray the 
debt. The supervisors’ actions are characterized by ignorance and “a lack of 
due diligence in securing professional advice, amounting to willful blindness.”
Just this week, in the face of the community’s concerns, the supervisors had 
the temerity to sign off on a $5,000 appropriation of taxpayer monies to hire 
outside attorneys so as to FEDA-fast track a legally binding TIF/bonding 
agreement between the county and Heartland, leaving out the Nutmeg underpass. 
No such agreement
should be signed nor appropriations made to outside attorneys on behalf of the 
county before the whole Heartland/FEDA/supervisor story is pulled out from 
under the cover of darkness and the actual cost analysis including the Nutmeg 
back ended underpass is revealed to the taxpayers.
 
– Eileen Dannemann, Fairfield
 
 




 


On Wednesday, May 28, 2014 9:57 AM, "'Rick Archer' rick@... [FairfieldLife]" 
<FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com> wrote:



 
Woman arrested but not gagged
By Eileen Dannemann | May 22, 2014
To the editor:
Spending eight hours in a cold cell in Jefferson County jail replete with gray 
and white stripes allowed me to realize that the “good ol’ boys network” is 
alive and well in Fairfield. So, let me tell you what I found out:
The Heartland project will ship 20 million bushels of GMO corn to Texas and 
Mexico​ despite Mexico being the corn capital of the Americas and disregarding 
the fact that Mexico has banned the planting of GMO maize. This is how the USA 
subverts the economies of developing countries.
Locally, it will take 25,000 semi-trailers to deliver the grain to Heartland. 
25,000 semi-trailers equal 50,000-semi trailers-round trip. Drivers will be 
reticent to drive under the 115-year old BNSF railroad, one lane Nutmeg Avenue 
gravel underpass, but will instead come down Burlington Avenue, past Walmart & 
HyVee substantially slowing down traffic and
polluting the city. It is interesting to note that 12 percent of Jefferson 
County residents already have lung problems. The county cannot ban Heartland 
semi-trailers from going down Burlington without banning all similar 
semi-trailers. So expect them!
Lee Dimmitt admitted that he was aware of BNSF railroad’s adamant refusal to 
renovate the Nutmeg underpass, a critical component in the deal. Yet the 
supervisors approved the TIF/bonding resolution, purposely leaving out what 
they know to be the county’s responsibility in the very near future – to 
renovate the dangerous one lane gravel underpass.
Were the entire Nutmeg
underpass construction included, transparently, in the front end of the deal 
where it belongs, the taxpayers would see that they are actually on the hook 
for $5 million. However, the supervisors put it on the back end, virtually out 
of sight. In other words, we are obligated to increase the debt at the time the 
one lane gravel underpass becomes untenable and dilapidated. At that time we 
will be forced to add another $2.8 million to fix the safety problem. Hence the 
aerial view of the taxpayer debt seeing both the front and back end is $5 
million dollars, not $2.5 million dollars. The service on the totality of this 
debt has not been calculated and disclosed to the public and appears to be 
financially unsustainable.
Moreover, the supervisors are remiss in not securing an “outside”
feasibility study. If Heartland does not meet its ambitious goals, it can fail. 
A CEO in the grain industry has told me, in his opinion, the Heartland project 
in not viable. If so, we will not only be left with an enormous debt but an 
abandoned monstrosity at our east gate with no property income to defray the 
debt. The supervisors’ actions are characterized by ignorance and “a lack of 
due diligence in securing professional advice, amounting to willful blindness.”
Just this week, in the face of the community’s concerns, the supervisors had 
the temerity to sign off on a $5,000 appropriation of taxpayer monies to hire 
outside attorneys so as to FEDA-fast track a legally binding TIF/bonding 
agreement between the county and Heartland, leaving out the Nutmeg underpass. 
No such agreement
should be signed nor appropriations made to outside attorneys on behalf of the 
county before the whole Heartland/FEDA/supervisor story is pulled out from 
under the cover of darkness and the actual cost analysis including the Nutmeg 
back ended underpass is revealed to the taxpayers.
 
– Eileen Dannemann, Fairfield
 
 


Reply via email to