Council presses Brown on blizzard response

Reeling from the deaths of more than 30 residents — among at least 44 fatalities across the region — Buffalo’s Common Council is asking a lot of questions about the city’s readiness and response to the Christmas blizzard.

Today the Common Council will consider items filed by three of its members, all demanding information and action from Mayor Byron Brown’s administration.

On Dec. 30, South District Council Member Chris Scanlon filed resolutions asking for, among other things:

  • An inventory of vehicles and other equipment available to the city’s fire, police, and public works departments.
  • The use of federal COVID relief money to purchase new equipment for those departments.
  • Revising the city’s snow removal plan to include strategies for major snowfalls and blizzards.

The city’s current snow-fighting plan, released just two weeks before November’s record-setting snowstorm, offers no strategy for snowfall over eight inches, beyond enlisting outside help from private plowing firms and other governments.

Scanlon also expressed concerns about post-traumatic stress disorder affecting city workers involved in emergency response efforts.

The Council member did not respond to a request for an interview for this story. Neither did Department of Public Works Commissioner Nathan Marton or the mayor’s spokesman, Michael DeGeorge. 

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Last Friday, following Scanlon’s lead, Fillmore District Council Member Mitch Nowakowski filed a resolution asking that the mayor and the Council form an independent panel to examine “deficiencies in the emergency response” to the storm.

Among other proposals, Nowakowski would like the mayor and the Council to:

  • Create an emergency manager position for the city.
  • Establish an emergency operations center similar to the one operated by Erie County during the blizzard and extreme weather events.
  • Examine the performance of the city’s 311 Call and Resolution Center during the storm.
  • Strengthen coordination with county, state and federal officials.
  • Open more and better-equipped warming centers.

When the storm began, the city had just four warming centers open. Two of them closed when their power failed. 

During a big snowstorm, the city’s emergency “command center” is supposed to be the Broadway Garage, which houses the city’s plows and other street maintenance equipment, according to the snow plan. But this is what the inside of the Broadway Garage looked like in late October, three weeks before the November storm and two months before the December blizzard:

Like Scanlon, Nowakowski wants the Brown administration to amend its snow removal plan to account for severe weather. And, echoing Scanlon again, Nowakowski wants a blizzard post-mortem to evaluate the condition of the city’s snow-fighting fleet and other emergency response equipment.

Niagara District Council Member David Rivera, meanwhile, has asked Police Commissioner Joseph Gramaglia to attend the next meeting of the Council’s Police Oversight Committee to describe “challenges [police] faced, and what lessons and recommendations they have from this experience.”

That meeting is scheduled for Wednesday at 11 a.m. in Council chambers.


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Last week, the mayor announced he had commissioned an “after-action report” evaluating the city’s performance during the blizzard by a group of academics from New York University’s Robert F. Wagner Graduate School of Public Service.

Brown also announced his plan to address deficiencies in the city’s supply of roadworthy snowplows, fire trucks and police cars: He wants to hire a city fleet manager — a new salaried position. 

The heads of the city’s police and fire unions indicated they believe the city’s money would be better spent on equipment than another administrative salary.

John T. Evans, president of the city’s police union, has called on the mayor to commit city funds — including the roughly $360 million the city received through the federal American Rescue Plan — to buy new vehicles for police and other emergency responders.

“Instead of squandering this money, invest in the department’s infrastructure,” Evans wrote on the union’s website on Jan. 1. “Police, Fire and Public Works need it badly.”

Investigative Post reported previously about the Brown administration’s failure to invest consistently in renewing the police department’s dilapidated fleet.

Likewise, the head of the city’s firefighter union has called on the Brown administration to tap into the ARP money to buy new trucks and improve conditions in city firehouses.

“We have lived in barely habitable firehouses … we have responded to emergency after emergency in rigs that are barely street-worthy … and we have made due with equipment that is outdated and obsolete,” Vincent Ventresca, the union president, wrote in a letter released last Tuesday.

“If the public knew the real condition of our gear and our working conditions, they would be appalled — and they would be terrified.”

The post Council presses Brown on blizzard response appeared first on Investigative Post.

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Former Democratic presidential candidate endorses Whitmer for VP



Former New York Mayor Bill de Blasio endorsed Gov. Gretchen Whitmer to be vice president Sunday evening, calling a ticket combining Vice President Kamala Harris and the Michigan governor “the winning hand” for Democrats after President Joe Biden ended his re-election campaign Sunday afternoon.

“The heroic, selfless decision by Joe Biden has given us the chance to nominate two leaders who will wipe the smirk off Donald Trump’s face and allow us to come roaring back,” de Blasio said in a post on X, formerly known as Twitter.

The best way to beat Trump? Team up @VP Kamala Harris and @GovWhitmer!
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De Blasio ran for president during the 2020 cycle and participated in the presidential debates held in Detroit in 2019.

Biden endorsed Harris to be the Democratic nominee for president shortly after ending his own campaign, and Harris has started the process of taking over his existing campaign apparatus.

Several Michigan officials quickly endorsed Harris on Sunday, including U.S. Sens. Debbie Stabenow (D-Lansing) and Gary Peters (D-Bloomfield Twp.), U.S. Reps. Hillary Scholten (D-Grand Rapids), Debbie Dingell (D-Ann Arbor), Dan Kildee (D-Flint), Shri Thanedar (D-Detroit) and Elissa Slotkin (D-Holly), Attorney General Dana Nessel and former governors Jim Blanchard and Jennifer Granholm.

Granholm also serves as Biden’s energy secretary. Another member of Biden’s cabinet, Transportation Secretary Pete Buttigieg, who lives in Traverse City, also quickly endorsed Harris.

Buttigieg is among the names who have been floated as a potential replacement for Biden or running mate for Harris, along with California Gov. Gavin Newsom, who also endorsed Harris on Sunday, and Whitmer.

Whitmer did not endorse anyone Sunday but said that her “job in this election will remain the same: doing everything I can to elect Democrats and stop Donald Trump, a convicted felon whose agenda of raising families’ costs, banning abortion nationwide and abusing the power of the White House to settle his own scores is completely wrong for Michigan.”

Other officials being floated as potential running mates for Harris include Pennsylvania Gov. Josh Shapiro, Kentucky Gov. Andy Beshear, North Carolina Gov. Roy Cooper and Arizona Sen. Mark Kelly.

We need a Harris-Whitmer ticket now!
Think of the excitement and energy that would bring! @KamalaHarris and @GovWhitmer: That’s a team we can win with. https://t.co/Pz2Kc7CqzV
— Bill de Blasio (@BilldeBlasio) July 22, 2024

While some have indicated they believe Harris may select a male running mate to “balance” the ticket, de Blasio urged delegates to “think of the excitement and energy” a Harris-Whitmer ticket would bring.

“We need a Harris-Whitmer ticket now!” de Blasio said.

Michigan Advance is part of States Newsroom, a nonprofit news network supported by grants and a coalition of donors as a 501c(3) public charity. Michigan Advance maintains editorial independence. Contact Editor Susan J. Demas for questions: info@michiganadvance.com. Follow Michigan Advance on Facebook and X.

‘By hell, she’s impressive’: Kamala Harris gets thumbs up for energetic Wisconsin speech



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Harris, who was endorsed by Biden on Sunday after he announced that he would be dropping out of the 2024 race, delivered a fiery address that touched on themes ranging from voting rights to reproductive freedoms to gun safety.

Writing on Twitter, many progressives took immediate note of the jolt of energy she had injected into the campaign.

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Watching Kamala Harris speaking in Wisconsin... By hell she’s impressive," wrote British broadcaster and media personality Carol Vorderman. "And she’s going to win … she’s energizing the young voters and has no fear of the fight."

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