Tuesday, July 30, 2013

"Hill Street Blues"


We’ve all been there… you’re driving down the street, going about your day, and you look in the rearview mirror only to see that the car behind you is a police car. Wham! Your blood pressure skyrockets, little beads of sweat pop out on your forehead, and that little panic creeps in as you desperately try to think of what the officer could pin on you. Did I pay that parking ticket I got visiting my sister-in-law in Texas last year? What about that seatbelt? What about those Excedrin Migraine tablets that are stuffed in an old Advil bottle because it was the only one small enough to fit in the glove compartment? For God’s sake, are you driving straight down the street?

Since we have all been there, I offer a slight sedative you might try before your next run in.  It is called “Ride with a Cop.”  Simply put, it is a great experience.  Really.  What better way to see what the officer sees than riding “shotgun” with a Paducah City Policeman? 

Once the call to the Police Department to request a ride has been made, the day and shift to ride decided and some paperwork completed you’re set to roll.  I picked a Friday night shift.  I was partnered with Officer Justin Hodges.  Our beat would be from 28th street to Jackson out to Lone Oak, though we would travel to the south side and to the mall area in the course of the evening.

O.K. this was not Hill Street Blues.  I didn’t sign up for that either.  It was a humanizing experience about the people who deal with those who are not, for the most part, on their best behavior.  The night covered the spectrum from fender benders to domestic violence, from the west side to the south side.  More than the events of the evening, what really sticks with me is how capable these officers are. They are “multi-taskers,” answering my non-stop questions, constantly looking for situations that just don’t look right, running license plates for offenders, and, of course, interacting with the people. Time and again during the shift when interacting with people, whose emotions can run high, my officer was  able to verbally diffuse fractious situations in a way that was professional, not power-driven.   

After my “shift” with Officer Hodges, I had a greater understanding of the professionalism of this “Band of Brothers” and the caliber of the police force in Paducah.

Tuesday, July 23, 2013

Buy Local? Apparently not...






Tonight’s city commission meeting has given me a headache and my Founders Porter has not helped. 

You look to the city to make logical decisions for all our citizens.  I get that.  When we make logical, sound decisions about things you understand that is a good thing.  It gives you the confidence that on the really complicated stuff we will act in the same logical way, right?  Well, I think that’s the way it works.  And generally, I think that is what we do as commissioners and department heads.  Now, this is where the headache comes in.  Tonight I proposed that the city allow the local Ford dealer to bid on city police cars instead of buying from the state approved dealer in Frankfort.  You know, buy local, and all the benefits that will follow to our fair city.  What seemed to be a logical idea, at least in my mind, sure got everybody stirred up.  Me included. 

I’m not saying the city should award the bid automatically to the local Ford dealer, but  give the guy the chance to bid.  I really don’t see a downside.

Am I missing something here?

Please email me with your thoughts, but don’t forget we have a mayor and three other members to email also. 

Allan

allanrhodesjr@gmail.com



Tuesday, July 2, 2013

Not Your Usual Phone Call

Yes, I did change the title to Misc Ramblings........

When the phone rings at Etcetera after hours it is usually "Are you all open?" or a phone survey.  Imagine my surprise when the phone rang Monday night.  "Etcetera Coffeehouse.....this is Allan Rhodes." Then,  "Hi, this is Jason calling for the Huffington Post......"

Really, the Huffington Post?  The interview was this afternoon. The subject was Senator Mitch McConnell and the Paducah Gaseous Diffusion Plant.  I thought I would bore you with a bit of the conversation with Jason.

Basically, I shared that as the second most powerful person in the Senate, I was hopeful that McConnell could help the progress to get DOE approval for GE/Hitachi and/or do a full cleanup as in Oak Ridge.  I expressed the fear that as McConnell's number one goal was to defeat Mr. Obama this probably did not endear him to the Administration.  Also, as our Senator I feel his real mission is to serve his electorate.  Isn't there that understanding that I vote for you, though maybe I don't want to, so when something really bad happens you will have my back?  Anyway, you get the idea of the thing.

I don't think I was mean-spirited toward our Senator, but there are moments when I wonder, does he have our backs?   Or is life on the national stage just really sweet?

It has been an afternoon.

Allan