Q-Tipz
Local points of contact – including the occasional disclosure of heretofore secret ones – within the city’s suspected to be purposely labyrinthine bureaucracy.
After all, certain North Quincy residents need jobs.
Q-Tipz also features ratings of individual city services departments as well as stories from citizens who have dared to go down their rabbit holes.
Mayor Thomas P. Koch:
Many politicians talk about rolling up their sleeves and getting to work, but only Quincy’s Mayor Thomas P. Koch takes the cufflinks out of his surely custom-made & French-cuffed shirts to vogue with construction workers.
Seriously, while Quincy Quarry suspects that Mayor Koch means well, such is also how the road to Perdition was paved.
But enough about Koch’s many as well as well-known shortcomings, Q-Tipz is all about offering suggestions on how best for Quincy residents to perhaps actually succeed in securing merely but basic standard local government services.
As has long been standard practice in Quincy except for a recent 6 year anomaly and precious few other times, a hierarchical model is the local patronage standard operating protocol.
For example, to secure Family & Friends Diamond Inner Circle expedited priority treatment during the Koch Interregnum, at least one of the following is required.
- Be one of the mayor’s innumerable relatives – many of whom are on the City of Quincy’s payroll – or one of his life-long bff’s.
- A fervent, if not also rabid, willingness to continue to unquestioningly back his burning through millions on his to date failed efforts to redevelop Quincy Center. Do not, however, ever stop doing so as such will result in il bacio della morte.
- Be in a position to perhaps help approve providing $40 million in taxpayer-provided funding so that Tommy can then spend $30 million of it on his way over the top plans for a grandiose acre and a half theme park, complete with three water fountains, in front of City Hall. For a tacit preview of his plans, see this and that, including the photo below.
- Able to facilitate $200 million but more likely needed to be closer to $400 million in funding for his proposed as many as 12 level replacement of the currently half-condemned Quincy Center MBTA station.
Kool Aid Gold Club status requires abject as well as strict adherence to the following.
- Drink massive quantities of Kool Aid on command, believe all they are told – however patently absurd – as well as attack any and all who question the nonsense so promulgated.
- Provide the maximum allowed campaign donations each and every possible contribution cycle regardless of how meager one’s city paycheck might be.
For examples of Kool Aid Gold Club members, check out the list of City of Quincy hires since 2008 against Koch’s campaign fund reports – excluding those with teaching credentials seeking jobs as teachers as these individuals are hired independently of City Hall interference as well as must actually be duly qualified for hire.
Pothole Card status might be granted given perfect compliance with the following:
- Be willing to litter their front yards with Koch campaign signs during election season as well as participate in campaign sign holding standouts on command.
- Rumor has it that Pothole-plus status is provided to those who also keep pristine Koch bumper stickers on their cars.
Everyone else is road kill – and don’t ever forget that road kill only gets flatter.
____
Mailing Address:The Koch Imperial Suite, Quincy City Hall, 3rd Floor, 1305 Hancock St., Quincy 02169.
Email Address: [email protected] (not that he ever personally checks his email)
Phone: (617) 376-1990 (not that he ever returns any calls unless a caller is a serious dues paying Koch Club member).
QQ Disclaimer
Latest Posts from Q-Tipz
Quincy Continues to head further into the COVID-19 Red Zone without a paddle
Per all germane metrics, Quincy’s COVID-19 risk statistics are worse to significantly worse than statewide averages.
City Hall Dumps on the Church of the Presidents
The diss was done in a way that many local homeowners are familiar with suffering given the way that city operated or contracted snowplows wall off their driveways and especially so all but invariably after local homeowners have shoveled out their driveways.
Quincy Streets So-So After Snowstorm
As such, count on Quincy Quarry to continue to hit the snow covered streets of Quincy and then report the bad news.
Quincy Mayor Thomas P. Koch Inexplicably Proclaims Quincy’s New Red Zone COVID-19 Risk Rating Is Not So Bad
In Mayor Koch’s apparently first public statement about Quincy flipping into COVID-19 Code Red risk last Thursday, the mayor downplayed things. In fact, he failed to specifically note the fact that Quincy just crossed over into COVID-19 Red Zone status.
Quincy 2021 Property Tax Bills Yet Again Fraught With City Hall Games
At least locally, December 7 is yet again a day that will live in infamy.
Quincy Mayor Thomas P. Koch finally admits Quincy is heading towards Red Zone COVID-19 risk rating
After weeks of Quincy Quarry repeatedly pointing out that Quincy was experiencing a second COVID-19 surge and so again ending up on the COVID-19 Yellow Zone risk list as well as is now on track to likely soon be moved into the Red Zone, Mayor Koch finally acknowledged that the Q is Q’ed.
Quincy Quarry Weekly Fish Wrap: Football Happens …
For those Quarry readers who pay attention, the Weekly Fish Wrap for November 19 was errantly repeated on November 26. Why offering no excuse, the reason for this Q-up was that the football bacchanal that is also Thanksgiving Day distracted the writer tasked with writing the Fish Wrap for last week.
NTSB slams trucking company and RMV for administrative failures before deadly New Hampshire crash
The National Transit Safety Board review of the tragic accident that killed seven motorcyclist last year found that a variety of systems that are supposed to help protect motorists failed to see that the truck driver who caused the accident was stripped of his commercial driver’s license before the accident.
COVID-19 Pandemic MBTA Service Cuts Imperil Transit-oriented Residential Housing Building Boom
In recent years public policy has encouraged developers to build multi-unit housing projects within walking distance of public transit stations. Now, however, the residents of such projects are facing greatly reduced to outright elimination of public transit service.
Quincy returns to COVID-19 Yellow Zone status per weekly state report update
In fact, before the Department of Public Health recently downgraded its ratings criteria, Quincy would most likely now be in Red Zone statue per its old ratings criteria.
Recent Comments