Not all that long ago, Human Services Director Sue Wandalowski said that vacancies in Human Services existed because the county was stuck in a cumbersome state civil service program. Well, the county has been unshackled from state civil service and the vacancy problem should be an unhappy memory of the recent past, right? Wrong. Last night, Wandalowski reported that there are "around" 30 vacancies in Children and Youth. She indicated there are vacancies in the Department of Aging but failed to specify how many. I'll have more about this tomorrow.
Lehigh Valley Ramblings
Today's one-liner: “In a republican nation whose citizens are to be led by reason and persuasion and not by force, the art of reasoning becomes of first importance.” T Jefferson
Thursday, February 19, 2026
Keegan Blames Negative Public Perception of Gracedale on Unfounded Complaints and ... Me
Although I ramble, my favorite topic has always been Northampton County government. That includes the county-owned nursing home, Gracedale. When there's been good news about the home, like a zero-deficiency survey from the state Department of Health (DOH), I've reported it. When it achieved a four-star (above average) rating, as it did at this time just one year ago, I let you know. But when it dropped to just a one-star (much below average) rating, was red-flagged for abuse and was issued a provisional license, I've told you that as well. Moreover, based on an analysis of the DOH surveys for all 14 county-owned nursing homes throughout the state in 10 different counties*, Gracedale has the lowest nursing care rating, It is the only county-owned home with a one-star rating. It had the highest number of deficiencies in 2025. Objectively, it was the worst county-owned home in the state in 2025 and kicked off the new year with yet another deficiency for inadequate staffing.
Unfortunately, there's been more bad than good news, but that's the way it is. If we have a moral obligation to care for those who are unable to care for themselves, and are spending public money for that purpose, then the public should know when we are falling short so we can rectify the situation. That's why the DOH surveys and Medicare star-ratings are public. That's why people can complain anonymously to the state DOH if they feel something is wrong even if it turns out that they are themselves incorrect.
Public scrutiny of a public nursing home is something that NorCo Council member Kelly Keegan dislikes. At last night's human services committee meeting, she actually wanted to know whether the county has a policy against whistleblowers who dare to report perceived violations at the home. Fortunately, Administrator Michelle Morton answered that whistleblowers are actually protected and could very well be sincere when they call in with a complaint.
Keegan was still unsatisfied. "That's cutting your nose off to spite your face," she suggested. "And it's like, their livelihood, so why would they want to do that?"
Maybe because they care about the residents and want the home to improve.
It's true that Gracedale does get complaints of deficiencies that turn out to be unfounded. But based on my analysis of the 14 county-owned nursing homes in 10 different counties, this happens at all nursing homes, not just Gracedale. Employees, families or residents themselves can complain. The state DOH would rather investigate an unfounded complaint than ignore a concern that is real.
Later in the meeting, Keegan objected to bringing in a consultant with recommendations on improving the home, arguing that we should refrain from spending money on a third party only to learn that our "fantastic administration" is telling the truth. "Don't we believe them?"
She added that any poor public perception of Gracedale is due solely to "one person that continues to trash Gracedale on a continuous basis, and I would put a lot of blame on that person. I think we all know who he is. Every single day, constantly writing about Gracedale, and if that one person would stop doing those things, and we could believe the administration, and what they're telling us, why would I pay somebody - a third party - to tell me that they're telling the truth?"
How about because Gracedale is a one-star home, is red-flagged for abuse, has a provisional license and had the lowest nursing care of all county-owned nursing homes in 2025. I believe the administration is trying, but I also believe the DOH.
During last night's meeting, NorCo Council member Dave Holland had two suggestions.
First, he suggested downsizing the home by eliminating a 30-bed unit. Exec Tara Zrinski suggested that she's not ready to downsize at this point but agrees that reliance on agency nurses needs to be reduced. She worried that downsizing might result in the discharge of some residents, although that's not what Holland intimated.
I believe this topic will be revisited in the near future.
Holland's second suggestion was to bring in a third-party consultant to validate what's right and make suggestions to correct what is wrong. This is apparently also opposed by the administration. Although Council members like Theresa Fadem and Lori Vargo Heffner support this idea, Keegan is opposed, as I noted above. Council member Jeff Warren said we should first give Zrinski a chance. He suggested things might be different by the end of April.
Holland has no problem with waiting but cautioned that Council needs to monitor what is happening because a provisional license can eventually result in a denial of payments.
____
*) NorCo Council member Kelly Keegan and Gracedale Administrator Michelle Morton stated last night that there are only seven county-owned homes in the state. According to the state DOH's nursing home facility locator, there are 14 county-owned nursing homes in 10 different counties.
Wednesday, February 18, 2026
Pinsley Drops Out of Congressional Race, Will Seek State Senate Seat Instead
Munich Security Conference: Hillary Clinton Blasts Trump's Chaotic Ukraine Policy
Local Governments Considering AI Should Follow This Checklist
Artificial Intelligence can prove to be a very helpful resource for local government, especially cities that have cumbersome and unfriendly permitting systems. According to GOVERNING, NYC's small business chatbot was providing unethical and possibly illegal advice and there were no guardrails. Midland, TX, however, succeeded with a low-risk chatbot that included human oversight. Here's the question an administration should ask before using it: "Could you explain your AI system to a non-technical councilmember in five minutes — what it does, how it’s supervised and what happens when it fails? If not, you probably don’t understand it well enough to deploy it."
Tuesday, February 17, 2026
Gracedale Cited by State Again Over Inadequate Staffing
Late last week, Northampton County's press office sent an email about a "love-themed luncheon" for Gracedale residents and families that included "creamy parmesan chicken plicata and pan-seared Atlantic salmon, with triple chocolate cheesecake for dessert." It singled out one couple who have celebrated 60 years together. It's nice to hear anecdotes like these. And without doubt, there are many very dedicated people who work at Gracedale and whose calling is to make life just a little better for the people who live there. I've seen it. But I also hear other anecdotes that are much less pleasant. This one-star home with a provisional license and a poor record of nursing care, is objectively the worst county-owned nursing facility in the state. What's worse, it has been cited again for its failure to provide the state-mandated minimum amount of nursing care to residents in early January.
The state Department of Health (DOH) visit in early January was actually a revisit to see whether Gracedale had corrected its inability to provide adequate nursing care back in November. The home, which already provides the lowest level of nursing care among county-owned nursing homes within the state, was unable yet again to meet the minimum standard of nurse's aides and LPNs. The home failed to meet the state mandated minimum or 3.2 hours of nursing care per resident per day.
The county's plan of correction. More agency nurses! Over 100!
In other words, the facility plans to continue bringing in disengaged nurses out for a quick buck, which will mean more county funding, instead of a realistic solution that combines a temporary census reduction so that residents can be cared for by more dedicated county workers. This will mean a temporary county contribution as well, but at least it will ensure that the home is on the right path,
A Rabbi's Commentary on Life in America Today
Though I'm by no means a religious person, my evil Republican brother is. Last night, he suggested I watch a homily recently presented by reform rabbi Ammiel Hirsch of New York's Stephen Wise Free Synagogue. His topic was our life in America today.
He noted that we've been hammered by so many crises in recent years, from the Ukraine invasion to Iranian transgressions that we've become catatonic. We've been peppered by attacks on the independence of the Federal Reserve, the courts, the Justice Department and our NATO alliance. "But take heart,. At least Greenland will soon be ours. The easy way or the hard way."
Without mentioning him by name, he compares Donald Trump to Melville's Ahab, who "never thinks. He only feels gnawed within and scorched without the infixed unrelenting fangs of some incurable idea. The Greenland whale is deposed. The great sperm whale now reignth."
He's especially discouraged by an explosive surge of anti-Semitism in the US, which actually pales in comparison to what is happening in Europe.
"Jew hatred is a warning sign that something rotten is metastasizing in society itself," he thundered.
While our lives go on unchanged, he warned that will change as the "intense winds of social change" batter down our doors.
Despite this chaotic atmosphere, he noted that the common denominator between religion and politics in a free society is the moral code. "None of the institutions of our democracy can survive without a keen sense of our moral obligation. Once people lose trust in the goodness and decency and fairness of governmental and non-governmental institutions, disintegration sets in."
He quotes a saying in the Mishna (oral Torah?) advising people to pray for the government. "If it were not for the government, people would swallow each other alive." But the powers of government can be misuse, so these immense powers must be exercised justly.
Rabbi Hirsch noted that, in the Torah, "might makes right" has no place. "Upright makes right is the Jewish way." When force is necessary, it should be wielded as humanely as possible.
He lamented the excessive use of force by masked immigration agents in Minneapolis but also slammed past administrations who failed to control our borders and past Congresses who failed to resolve the legal status of undocumented residents who have been here for decades. Instead of resolving these matters, American politicians have instead torn us apart. He did concede that immigration policy requires a compromise between mercy ("an attribute to God himself") and justice (justice, shall you pursue") While there is much room for disagreement and debate, "we do not have to accuse our opponents of evil or enmity."
He said that in the debate about policy, there should be no room for "arrogance, conceit, pride, contempt, indifference, scorn. And shouldn't we be able to agree, that in the debate around immigration, there is no room for prejudice, xenophobia, and the appeal to baser instincts?"
He notes that the Torah commands us to love the stranger 36 times. "Loving your neighbor is mentioned only once. It's because strangers are much harder to love than those closer to you." He said Jews especially need to try to love the stranger because they were strangers in the land of Egypt and "know the heart of a foreigner."
While he supports the right to protest, he stressed that all protest and opposition must be nonviolent. If tainted by violence, it will never gain the support of a majority of Americans.
He recommended the advice of Jewish sages. "A brute cannot be righteous. An ignoramus cannot be pious. The impatient cannot model behavior. And in a place where there are no decent human beings, strive to be a decent human being. Avoid intolerance, prejudice, and especially hate. Do not hate your kinsmen in your heart. Hate is too heavy a burden. It consumes both the hated and the hater. If you are to be free, you must be free of hate."
Monday, February 16, 2026
Pa. 7's Democratic Hopefuls Will Have Two Forums in Allentown This Week.
At this moment, there's no shortage of Democrats who wish to wear their party's mantle in this year's Pa. 7 race for the seat currently held by Republican Ryan Mackenzie. And for good reason. A blue wave was felt in last year's municipal races and Republican are in danger of losing the House and possibly the Senate in this year's midterms, and the Pa. 7 Congressional race is rated a toss-up by the Cook Political Report. There are currently seven candidates, but that number might fall once nomination petitions are returned.
These seven candidates are Robert Brooks, Ryan Crosswell, Aiden Alexander Gonzales, Lamont McClure, Carol Obando-Derstine and Mark Pinsley and Lewis Shupe.
You can see and hear from them yourselves on two separate occasions this week.
Tonight, Resurrected Life Church (620 Hamilton St, Allentown, Pa 18101) will host a forum between 6 and 7:30 pm. Its focus is supposed to be the economy
Thursday. Muhlenberg College Democrats and LV Young Democrats will host a debate at The Great Room, Seegers Union (parking is at the loop and on Chew Street). Doors open at 6:30 pm.
I missed the first get together at Lafayette College because I thought it was private. But I will attend one of these events this week
Friday, February 13, 2026
LC Exec Josh Siegel: Republicans "Maniacally Evil and Cruel"
Recently, both NorCo Exec Tara Zrinski and LehCo Exec Josh Siegel have requested local developers to decline selling any space to the federal government for immigration detention centers. I share the sentiment. But there's a difference in the way these two Execs went about this. Zrinski shared an open letter and asked people to sign on to it. Siegel, on the other hand, stupidly recruited the very elected officials who might need to weigh in on zoning matters and hopelessly compromised them. And now, another difference. Zrinski has actually opened the County's Facebook page even though it means she will be trolled by partisan Republicans. She recognizes that she represents everyone, even thos who oppose her. Siegel, on the other hand, has missed that lesson. Just as Donald Trump bashes Democrats as evil in his attempt to ruin democracy, Siegel is doing the same to Republicans.
On his County Exec Facebook page, Siegel posted this: "The Republican Party is an anti-democratic, authoritarian party that relies on racism, zero sum politics and divide and conquer strategies to win power. It thoroughly rejects free and fair elections, corrupts the judicial system and uses the levers of government to enrich the Epstein class at our expense. They’re cutting healthcare, public education, food stamps, funding for seniors and veterans. They’re manically evil and cruel."
I completely disagree with the Trump's brand of Republicanism, and suspect many Republicans are just as tired as I am of him. But to call Republicans "manically evil and cruel" is itself manically evil and cruel. What Siegel fails to see is that he is an anti-democratic authoritarian himself.
I have Republican neighbors, Republican friends and even a Republican brother. Most of them are actually better persons than I am. Even my brother. He admitted to me last night that he really is "maniacally evil and cruel," and he is, but he's still nicer than me.
In addition to disparaging Republican, Siegel at Wednesday night's meeting of Lehigh County's Board of Commissioners promoted some goofy resolution that can be boiled down to three words '"We hate Trump." It had nothing to do with county business but eventually passed in a 5-4 vote.
My evil Republican brother, who has somehow duped Chair Geoff Brace into thinking he is a reincarnation of Bobby Kennedy, offered this argument against the resolution:
Our county commissioners are all well aware of the core functions of county government - operating the jail, delivering public health initiatives, maintaining county roads and bridges and utilities, record keeping, elections, administration, land use and planning, the 911 center, tax collections, unfortunately, for all of us.Many or most of these functions are administered by the executive branch, headed right now by Mr. Siegel.The recently passed capital plan identifies problems and projects, such as $15 million in needed Cedarbook renovations; $10 million needed for roads and bridges; $9 million for critical maintenance and security upgrades at the county jail ; $12 million needed for parks and trails and much, much more in that plan.We heard tonight that the county is facing critical staffing shortages in its 911 center and the jail.I read that the county has an F in air quality and increased pollution going into the Lehigh River, mostly due to, they think, warehousing.There are over 50 farms on the waiting list for farmland preservation.Recently, last week, I read the county was sued for a wrongful death at the Leigh County Prison.Supposedly, as a result of inferior health care delivery.Somehow, there was an unpaid bill for office space (DHS) that went unnoticed for three years. Amounting to over $100,000. Until the controller very zealously, piously, but mostly politically, brought it to our attention.I also know that there's a crisis at the seed farm, but I'm not really, I really don't know what that means, but I've heard and read about it.All this to do, and our executive seems to have time to interfere with other jurisdictions, telling them who and who they should not support and be selling to, seems to have time to gather signatures from other elected officials about ideology.Recently, two days ago, the Lehigh County Executive Facebook page from February 8th, refers to members of the Republican Party as maniacally evil and cruel, among other things. He calls Republicans, racists, anti-democratic, and other things that seem totally detached from reality.Yet the one Lehigh platform of candidate Siegel, calls for an "everybody together, no one left out" strategy.What is it?Can a leopard change its spots?It's time for an executive to decide whether he wants to be a candidate for the next office, an activist standing on the streets of downtown, yelling, F the police, or do the job he was elected to do for all the citizens of Lehigh County.I appreciate all of you.I'm praying for all of us, and I hope the best for everybody in Leigh County.
Commissioner Ron Beitler, who used to be a maniacally evil Republican but now is an Independent, said the next day that "[e]ach Commissioner can and should use individual platforms to speak on issues outside county government as we see fit. ... But our collective platform? We should focus on the things residents elect us to do. We have 15 elected officials in county government. Some of the more sober roles on the administrative front line. We're service providers. Often for our most vulnerable. We're not playactors staging ideological theater in a distant chamber like so many career politicians. "
