Going through old email, I got this from Peter 3 months ago.
Hi Norm,
Re: http://ednotesonline.blogspot. com/2009/10/why-was-arne- duncan-hyping-now.html
and
http://www.openleft.com/diary/ 16461/gerald-braceys-last- column-the-skeleton-in-arne- duncans-closet
I'm writing a book that includes the rise & fall of the Save-A-Life Foundation (SALF), which is now under investigation by federal and state agencies. Yesterday I posted this update article on my blog:
http://www.the-sidebar.com/ 2011/10/still-haunted-by-his- ties-to-tainted.html
I've attached a file with the HTML if you wish to cross-post.
Thanks for taking a look.
Re: http://ednotesonline.blogspot.
I'm writing a book that includes the rise & fall of the Save-A-Life Foundation (SALF), which is now under investigation by federal and state agencies. Yesterday I posted this update article on my blog:
http://www.the-sidebar.com/
I've attached a file with the HTML if you wish to cross-post.
Thanks for taking a look.
Sincerely,
Peter
Peter M. Heimlich
Atlanta
ph: (208)474-7283
website: Medfraud
blog: The Sidebar
Peter
Peter M. Heimlich
Atlanta
ph: (208)474-7283
website: Medfraud
blog: The Sidebar
Gerald Bracey's Last Column: The Skeleton in Arne Duncan's Closetby: Paul RosenbergSun Dec 13, 2009 at 14:00 | ||
But official records indicate that the daughter's alcohol level was twice the legal limit, that she flipped the car, and died a half hour after reaching a hospital. Confronted with these facts by Chicago TV investigative reporter Chuck Goudie in 2006, Spizzirri terminated the interview and stomped off the set. Over the next year, Goudie did another three reports raising more questions about SALF. Those stories appear to have been the first time a Chicago reporter did any fact checking about the foundation. For instance, in an uncritical 2002 Sun-Times article, Spizzirri claimed that her foundation trained 400,000 Illinois school children in 2001 alone. Do the math. In a 180-day school year, that's 2,222 children per day. | ||
Paul Rosenberg :: Gerald Bracey's Last Column: The Skeleton in Arne Duncan's Closet | ||
Three more invoices from 2004/2005 -- which CPS failed to provide to the defendants' attorney -- have since turned up via a public records request. The first 19 invoices produced by the subpoena appear to have gone through regular CPS payroll. But the three later invoices, totaling $49,000, were processed and signed off by CEO Arne Duncan's office. One includes this handwritten notation: "per AD per Ann Whalen 9-14-05." Whalen was Duncan's personal assistant. She now works for him in Washington. The $49,000 was for "training elementary school students in life supporting first aid skills which will take place in approximately 15 schools with approximately 2,400 students." But the subpoena to CPS didn't produce any records showing the training ever happened. What about all those CPS students allegedly trained by SALF? If you train 67,000 children in a single year and there are, let's say, 25 children per session, that's 2,680 sessions, 15 per day if evenly distributed across a 180-day school year. As any overworked administrator can testify, that's likely to produce a mountain of paper work -- work orders, reports, employment records, evaluations, etc. Twenty-two invoices over a seven year period do not a mountain make. On July 9, a federal judge in Chicago granted SALF's request for voluntary dismissal and the lawsuit was dropped. A few months later, SALF filed dissolution papers with the Illinois Secretary of State's Office. But questions remain about the organization's 16-year history, their funding, and their relationships with powerful public officials -- including Arne Duncan. Why did CPS pay SALF over $60,000 for a "free" program? What happened to the more than $1,000,000 SALF received from the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention for one year (there were other CDC contracts)? What about the millions SALF received from Illinois taxpayers? In the case of the Illinois State Board of Education, it's a guessing game. ISBE's complete records consist of a form showing a disbursement of $600,000 to SALF -- no application, no review, no evaluation, no nothin'. According to an Oct. 11 Chicago Tribune article, "(Spizzirri) estimates 2 million children took the classes, many of them from the Chicago Public Schools ... City school officials did not respond to inquiries about how many students received emergency training" Looks like this tale is so spooky that CPS won't even talk about it to a Trib reporter. But the public may feel entitled to know whether their money went for tricks or treats. For example, the $60,000+ CPS gave SALF was apparently spent on first aid training for hundreds of thousands of ghosts. I'd say it's time to knock on the door of someone who can get to the bottom of this money mystery. He lives in that big house down at the end of the street, the one marked, "Secretary of Education." Copyright 2009, Gerald W. Bracey, All rights reserved |
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