March 9, 2007

Cambridge Chronicle Accuracy

Cambridge Chronicle Accuracy

"City Councilor Marjorie Decker denounce[d] the Chronicle's reporting [...] Decker said the coverage was unfair [...]" "I really hope the Chronicle would do its diligent homework, [she] denounce[s] what she says is inaccurate reporting in this newspaper." (Erin Smith, "Decker attacks Chronicle (again)," Cambridge Chronicle,
October 19, 2006) Another story, same edition, raises accuracy questions.
Erin Smith reports that Mayor Reeves said "in a letter dated Oct. 11" to David Scondras, "I am also urging you to immediately seek psychiatric help, as well as alcohol and drug abuse treatment," (Erin Smith, "City fired Scondras before he 'resigned.'" Cambridge Chronicle, October 19, 2006) I asked Reeves about the letter urging Scondras to seek "psychiatric help." I said suggesting he get psychiatric help because he was arrested suggests that the illness caused the alleged crime. The Mayor told me, "I said he should seek help." He repeated that saying, "I said he should get help." I said the Cambridge Chronicle reported he said "psychiatric help." The Mayor said, "If you're relying on the Chronicle, then you're in trouble." Why is this an issue? If the Mayor was truthful, the reporter added "psychiatric" indicating an irrational and negatively biased view of a person regarded as having a disability. It suggests disability as the reason David Scondras was arrested and charged with a crime. It suggests that being regarded as having a disability is causally connected to crime. That is the Flip Wilson defense, "The devil made me do it." On the other hand, if the Mayor did say "psychiatric help," then not only did he lie to me, but also it indicates that the Mayor holds the same irrational and negatively biased view of being regarded as having a disability as a cause of crime. Aside from the absurdity of this view, and the pervasiveness of the view, what would be the reaction if a Mayor suggested that a person's race was a cause of crime? What would be the reaction if a Mayor stated that a person's sexual preference was a cause of crime? Why is it acceptable in polite company to slur persons with disabilities?
--
Roy Bercaw, Editor
ENOUGH ROOM
Cambridge MA USA


Decker attacks Chronicle (again)
By Erin Smith/
Cambridge Chronicle Staff
Thursday, October 19, 2006

City Councilor Marjorie Decker used her speaking time at Monday's council meeting to denounce the Chronicle's reporting on two battling arts groups. Decker said the coverage was unfair to the Cambridge Multicultural Arts Center, the arts organization that Decker sided with in the feud. "I really hope the Chronicle would do its diligent homework," shouted Decker. Decker did not say what was she thought was incorrect about the report, but accused the Chronicle of using blogs as its source of information.
Vice Mayor Tim Toomey, who was acting as meeting chairman, tried to convince Decker and other city councilors to drop the heated discussion of CMAC and the Dance Complex. The two groups came to a lease agreement on Monday, and CMAC sold its Central Square building to the Dance Complex for $1.
But Decker demanded that Toomey let her have a say on the topic. Toomey tried to silence Decker when she tried to rehash her fight with City Councilor Michael Sullivan.
Sullivan had chastised Decker at the Sept. 25 City Council meeting after Decker suggested that Sullivan and other city councilors favored the Dance Complex because Dan Epstein is their kids' pediatrician. Epstein is married to Rozann Kraus, the founder of the Dance Complex.
City councilors should "confine their remarks to the question under debate and avoid personalities," according to the City Council's rules of courtesy. After Epstein showed up at this week's council meeting to refute Decker's claims, Decker sought to deny that she had attacked the doctor's reputation or inferred a conflict of interest among fellow city councilors.
At the Sept. 25 City Council meeting, however, Decker accused Kraus and Epstein of having influence over councilors. "This is about power. This is about influence, and this is about one organization that has a lot more access to city councilors than somebody else did starting when this debate started several years ago," said Decker at the council meeting last month. "I mean, let's just disclose this. I mean there are personal relationships here. People who are patients of people who spoke tonight who happen to be married to someone else who represents the Dance Complex," said Decker on Sept. 25.
Epstein also spoke at the Sept. 25 meeting in support of the Dance Complex. Decker also said her colleagues had threatened to cancel CMAC's $200,000 in annual city funding if she continued to speak about the feud at this week's meeting. The threat was later withdrawn, according to Decker's testimony at the City Council meeting. Decker often uses her time at City Council meetings to denounce what she says is inaccurate reporting in this newspaper.
The Chronicle used past articles and a copy of the 1993 agreements and other documents between the city and the two arts groups to research the story on CMAC and the Dance Complex.
* * * * *
City fired Scondras before he 'resigned'
By Erin Smith/
Cambridge Chronicle Staff
Thursday, October 19, 2006

In the wake of the Scondras scandal, Cambridge is wondering how to fill the gap the activist's absence creates. David Scondras, a political activist battling allegations he tried to have sex with a teen, was a former Boston City Councilor and the coordinator for the Area 4 Coalition prior to his Oct. 9 arrest by Lawrence police. The coalition is a community organization for Area 4, a neighborhood bordering Central Square.
The neighborhood group is expected to form a hiring committee next month to find a replacement for the part-time, city-funded job. The city pays for the position with grant money. At a neighborhood meeting last week, Marian Darlington-Hope, chairperson of the coalition, said she hoped that the coalition wouldn't lose momentum during the transition.
"Well, I'm willing to help them out in any way," said City Manager Bob Healy about the coalition. Scondras tried to resign his post with the Area 4 Coalition last Thursday, but there was no need for the resignation letter because he was fired two days earlier. Healy terminated his $19,000-a-year city contract as coordinator for the group on the night of Oct. 10, less than 24 hours after Scondras was arrested in a Lawrence school parking lot for allegedly soliciting a minor.
Police alleged Scondras tried to lure a man posing as a 15-year-old boy into sex acts in the woods near a school with offers of alcohol, marijuana and lubricant. "As a result of the allegations that were made, it seemed appropriate to terminate the contract," Healy told the Chronicle. There was no word yet as to whether Scondras plans to resign his post as a board member for the Margaret Fuller Neighborhood House, a nonprofit settlement house in Area 4. A representative from the organization did not return calls placed last week.
Scondras' resignation letter came one day after Mayor Ken Reeves asked him to step down and seek professional help. "As the Mayor of Cambridge and your friend, I am asking you to immediately resign your position as Community Organizer for Area Four. I am also urging you to immediately seek psychiatric help, as well as alcohol and drug abuse treatment," Reeves wrote to Scondras in a letter dated Oct. 11.
Reeves, who credits Scondras for encouraging him to enter politics, told the Chronicle that he didn't know Scondras had already been fired when he wrote the letter asking him to resign. On Monday, police alleged Scondras showed up at a Lawrence school parking lot hoping to have sex with a 15-year-old boy.
"You know, a lot of people have prejudices against guys who like to have sex with children," Scondras was reported to have said Oct. 9 as he sought to solicit sex from a 20-year-old security guard who was posing as a teen. Police said they listened to the attempted tryst set-up via speakerphone. Scondras, 60, of 17 Worcester St., pleaded not guilty in Lawrence District Court to charges of enticement of a child under the age of 16; selling or delivering liquor to a person under 21; assault and battery on a police officer; resisting arrest; and larceny under $250.
Scondras was released on $1,500 cash bail. He is scheduled to appear in court for a pretrial hearing on Nov. 16. Prosecutors said Scondras, under the online screen name "Toppdadd," was actually messaging a 20-year-old hospital security guard. The security guard alerted police to graphic messages from "Toppdadd," including photos of a naked, aroused man and two men having sex, according to police reports. In his resignation to the Area 4 Coalition, he refuted the charges against him.
"I am innocent of any wrongdoing, but I can not talk about the case on the advice of my attorney," said Scondras in his resignation letter dated Oct. 12. In his letter, Scondras claims that he is the victim, saying he received a "vicious beating" by Lawrence Police. "Unfortunately, the press and city officials have already started to focus on me instead of the critical work needed here in Area 4. For this reason I am, with much sadness, resigning as the coordinator for the Area 4 Coalition so that the important work of the organization can continue," said Scondras in the letter.
Scondras referred the Chronicle to his lawyer, David Duncan, when reached by phone this week. Duncan told the Chronicle that Scondras has denied the charges against them and that he plans to fight them in court.
esmith@cnc.com

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