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Thursday, June 18, 2015

Public Servants Who Can't Keep Their Cool must be THROWN out of office

Paul A. Camuso, reprobate.

No sense of DECORUM at the City Council.

Fred Dello Russo, Jr., tears up a State Rep Ruth Balser's filing,  LOUDLY - slowly, torturously, to interfere in the senior member of the council discussing the bill... a loud tear repeatedly by Dello Russo, who wants YOU to display decorum while Freddy Dello Russo acts like a social moron, an inept and bungling adolescent who probably plays tiddly winks with Adam Knight but who CERTAINLY doesn't do the people's business.

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MEDFORD CITY COUNCIL 

#15-424 April 28, 2015 Support Community Access Television


 



State House, Massachusetts



Massachusetts House Bill 2847



 



 https://legiscan.com/MA/bill/H2847/2015


MA H2847 | 2015-2016 | 189th General Court

Status

Spectrum: Moderate Partisan Bill (Democrat 8-1)
Status: Introduced on January 20 2015 - 25% progression
Action: 2015-01-20 - Senate concurred
Pending: Joint Telecommunications, Utilities and Energy Committee
Text: Latest bill text (Introduced) [PDF]

Summary

Relative to community access television. Telecommunications, Utilities and Energy. 
 
Outrageous lack of decorum.  Then Dello Russo, a disgrace to the family name in Medford, that disgrace Dello Russo has the AUDACITY to tell citizens how THEY should behave.

Do as he says, not as that irrelevant imbecile does.

 
#15-424 April 28, 2015 Support Community Access Television


Then there's lame-duck Mayor Ripoff McGlynn

 http://usatoday30.usatoday.com/news/nation/story/2012-04-12/public-access-tv-bill/54228840/1


As many as 1,800 Public, Educational and Government (PEG) operations have closed and funding has been slashed in 20 states as franchise agreements expire, according to the advocacy group American Community Television in Washington. Supporters see the proposed Community Access Preservation Act, or CAP Act, as a way to salvage their mission.

Community access TV can air shows ranging from city council meetings to features on local artists and school productions. In Chicago, for example, program topics include poetry, photography and motorcycle safety, as well as government meetings.

The legislation would restore communities' ability to get PEG funding and loosen restrictions in the Cable Communications Act of 1984 on how public access channels can spend money, according to the advocacy group Alliance for Community Media. The bill is pending in the House Subcommittee on Communications and Technology. No hearing date has been set.