Will Jackson's garbage be picked up after this weekend? Inquiring minds want to know. WLBT reported today:
I can confirm there is the possibility he would stop if something isn’t worked out by then,” said John Walker, attorney for the Baton Rouge-based Richard’s. “Saturday has been discussed as the last day and is what is being considered.”
Richard’s has been picking up trash in the capital city for six months. However, the firm has yet to be paid for the work.
Based on the amount Richard’s charged the city for its first two months of service, the company says it is owed more than $4.8 million....Rest of article.
A synopsis of the case is posted below. Richard's Disposal has been picking up Jackson's garbage since April 1 under an emergency no-bid contract and has not been paid since the City Council did not approve the contract and refused to pay all claims submitted for the company.
Richard's sued the city for payment in U.S. District Court on July 13.
U.S. Magistrate Judge Mike Parker ordered the parties to try to settle the case in August but no settlement was reached.
The plaintiff moved for summary judgement yesterday. The motion argues the company had a valid contract with the city and has collected garbage per the contract's terms since April 1. Richard's accuses the city of unjust enrichment since it received the service without paying for it. The company submitted invoices for services performed through August 31.
The memorandum to support the motion claims the Mayor vetoed the Council's rejection of the emergency no-bid contract, relying on Judge Dickinson's opinion while completely ignoring Judge Larry Roberts definitive ruling that the Mayor could not veto a no-vote (p.11):
Additionally, the Mississippi Attorney General has opined that "the mayor does not have the ultimate authority to bind the municipality to a contract. That authority lies with the city council, subject to the veto power of the mayor." (emphasis added) MS AG Op. No. 2012-00013, 2012 Miss. AG LEXIS 18, *4. "A 'mayor's veto . . . is undeniably a part of the legislative process.'" Shanks, 793 So. 2d at 579 (¶12) (quoting Bryant v. Nichols, 712 F. Supp. 887, 891 (M.D. Ala. 1989)). A mayor's veto is also an action that may be appealed under Mississippi Code Annotated section 11-51-75. Shanks, 793 So. 2d at 580 (¶15). The mayor's veto becomes 'final'— and the legislative process finally concludes—only when the municipal legislative body has had an opportunity to either accept or override the veto. Id. at 580-82 (¶¶17-24). Therefore, in this case, the initial vote of the Board of Aldermen to approve the Claims Docket was nothing more than an interlocutory step in the legislative process. Once the Mayor vetoed the Board's action, the Board's vote was legally ineffective and had no further legal significance." Warnock & Assocs., 328 So. 3d at 1263. Hence, RDI did not know of an error or failure in the COJ's contract implementation based on the Mayor's Veto....
After the City Council failed to override the Mayor's veto, the City Council still instructed the Mayor to arrange for garbage collection services. The Mayor did arrange with RDI for garbage collection services. According to that arrangement, RDI performed services at the request of COJ and according to the terms and provisions previously used in its arrangement with Waste Management, Inc. for such emergency services....
RDI still does not know which legal opinion is correct because the determination regarding the Mayor's and City Council's opinion is still pending at the Supreme Court of Mississippi under a case separate from this case and between different parties. Surely, knowledge of a difference of opinion between the City Council and the Mayor regarding a mayoral veto is insufficient to render RDI in bad faith under the statute in question....
However, Richard's Disposal may have to wait a while before the Court rules on the motion. Judge Parker issued an order to show cause Tuesday. Remember that fight over the "negative veto" that was appealed to the Supreme Court? The Court stated:
The parties have informed that Court that the Mayor has appealed the chancery court order to the Mississippi Supreme Court, which has granted a motion for an expedited decision. Following a conference with the parties, and given that the issue of the validity of the Emergency Agreement and the actions taken are before the Mississippi Supreme Court and the supreme court’s decision may affect the issues pending before this Court, the Court finds that the parties should show cause why this action should not be stayed pending a ruling from the Mississippi Supreme Court on the Mayor’s
appeal.IT IS, THEREFORE, ORDERED that on or before October 18, 2022, the parties shall show cause why this action should not be stayed pending a ruling from the Mississippi Supreme Court on the Mayor’s appeal of the Chancery Court’s Order [8-1].
What is interesting is Mayor Lumumba opposed the Mississippi Supreme Court's expedition of the appeal. Richard's is probably thankful the Court ignored the Mayor.
Synopsis
Richard's Disposal has collected Jackson's garbage since April 1 after Waste Management's contract expired. The Jackson City Council rejected Mayor Chokwe Antar Lumumba's recommendation to hire Richard's Disposal after completing the RFP process. Richard's Disposal had the lowest bid for twice a week service but customers would be forced to purchase a 96-gallon garbage cart. Waste Management had the lowest bid for twice a week service but without the garbage cart requirement, but the bid was still higher than the Richard's Disposal bid with the garbage cart requirement. The City Council did not want to impose such a requirement on Jackson residents so it rejected the recommendation.
Mayor Lumumba
declared a state of emergency and awarded a one-year no-bid emergency
contract to Richard's Disposal. However, the City Council rejected the
contract but Mayor Lumumba vetoed the rejection. The veto fight went
to court and Special Chancellor Larry Roberts vetoed the Mayor's veto,
thus upholding the Council's rejection.
The City Council
formally notified Richard's Disposal on March 31 the Council would not
pay the company for picking up garbage since it did not have a contract
to do so.
Richard's Disposal continues to collect the garbage. The emergency no-bid unapproved contract states Jackson will pay $808,035 per month. However, the Council rejected Richard's Disposal's claim for payment since it rejected the emergency no-bid contract.
Attorney John Walker represents the Crescent City company.
The complaint recites the basic facts of the case but omits the notification that the City Council would not pay for the plaintiff's services. However, the company points out a little passage in the Council's veto lawsuit:
the City Council" recognizes the public health implications of garbage pickup during the duration of this matter, and Plaintiff, therefore, asks that the status quo continue with regard to the provision of garbage pickup service during this time of self-declared crisis. (p.6, paragraph 17 of Council complaint)
The plaintiff says a claim for $808,035 was presented to the Council on May 24 but the Council removed it from the claims docket on a 5-2 vote.
Richard's Disposal argues it collected the garbage under the terms of the unapproved emergency no-bid contract and should be paid for the work. The city owes $1,616,070 to the plaintiff. The complaint accuses the city of unjust enrichment.
The company asks the court to award $1,616,070, interest of 1.5% per month until payment made, and attorney's fees.
The City Council filed a motion to intervene on July 29, arguing the City Council and Mayor have competing interests. The Council said it had an interest in the case since it did not approve a "valid contract" with Richard's Disposal, thus no contract was not spread upon the minutes as required by law. The motion states:
There are competing positions between the Mayor and the City Council, as evidenced by legal disputes in the Circuit and Chancery Courts of Hinds County, Mississippi, that could impair the City Council’s interest in this dispute if it is not allowed to intervene and defend its position in this action.
However, the Council did not stop with a motion to intervene but filed a crossclaim against Mayor Lumumba. The crossclaim states:
IT IS FURTHER REQUESTED respectfully that this Court grant the City Council’s Crossclaim against the Mayor as his actions resulted in the monetary loss to the Plaintiff and as the Mayor should be responsible for making the Plaintiff whole. It is further respectfully requested that this Court find that the Mayor committed Civil Conspiracy which resulted in the damage claimed by the Plaintiff.The case is assigned to U.S. District Court Judge Kristi Johnson and U.S. Magistrate Judge Michael Parker. Judge Parker ordered the parties to try to settle the case in August but no settlement was reached.
22 comments:
No trash pick-up, no clean drinking water, an overwhelmed and understaffed police department, the worst roads in the state, the worst school district in the state, the most dangerous streets in the state, and a mayoral administration that doesn't give a fuck about fixing any of it.
If you have the means to leave Jackson, and stayed anyway, you chose this. Best of luck.
Should we get our popcorn? I feel the Council will cave once Richard's stops picking up, but I am on the Council's side as there is no contract. The Mayor should have to pay the bill.
I will.
Private pickup trucks can deliver all uncollected refuse to City Hall or the Mayor or his Sista Rukia’s private residence. Restaurant owners are encouraged to drop off rotting food directly to the Mayor’s private residence.
Where is Shad when you need him.
@2:34
YouTube has many great tutorials on building catapults with common materials found at Lowe’s and Home Depot. You want to make sure you get that sack full of old baby diapers and crawfish shells clear of his high wall. Bonus point if you land in his swimming pool!
“ Where is Shad when you need him.”
October 6, 2022 at 2:36 PM
Shad only goes after the folks in the sticks.
2:19 PM
The council should absolutely bully lumumba into taking Waste Management back. No quarter given, but I doubt they have the balls. Virgi the Fink was Lumumbas stool pigeon for a lot of this.
"Where is Shad when you need him." We up here in Canton have been wondering the same thing.
I know a few Eastover libtard lawyers that were gung-ho supporters of Mayor McCheese and his bow tie.
I hope they feel that the virtue signaling they pompously and aggressively trumpeted on social media has had a solid return on investment. You asked for this.
Enjoy!
@2:51 - hate to burst your bubble filled with hate of Shad, but the MS State Auditor has no authority to audit/investigate municipalities UNLESS an indication of a criminal misuse of funds occurs. They cannot just go audit Jackson because the Mayor and his administration is incompetent. Incompetence is not in and of itself a crime, and not investigatable. But - should a penny be paid to this vendor without having a legal contract, then Shadrick should be on site immediately. And for my money, I'll take the side saying he will be there first chance he gets.
Synopsis my ass. Who gives a shit? Everybody goes on about their daily business and avoids Jackson.
.Those who live in this rat hole don't give a shit.
.Those who work there are looking for other jobs.
.Chokwe is happy as a pig in shit that his daddy's dream has been accomplished.
.Even Delbert, Tater and Gunn taking down the state flag can't save Jacktown from itself.
.Phil's new company can't fly anywhere on the globe and recruit industry.
So...Move the hell along.
If you live in Jackson and you don't take your trash to Lumumbles house, please don't complain.
If the mayor was conservative, Rukia would be protesting and demanding all refuse be left in the conservative mayors yard.
Y'all deserve this. Keep up the virtue signaling! Its awesome.
Now, 4:59, you’re onto something there. All over the US there are trash collection outfits champing at the bit to collect garbage in Mississippi now that the legislature changed the state flag. All it takes is a few phone calls.
Ugly broken bridges, cratered streets, shitted creeks, pools of stinking raw sewage in yards for years, assassinations nightly including road rage shooting on I-55, 3rd world financial management, a school system ecstatic to have a few "C" ratings, and a belly-crawling marxist mayor who couldn't manage a carwash.
Shad is cleaning out the horse stalls and mowing the grass at Brett's house
Attn 3:00 PM. Where is Chad. The culpable people in Canton are mostly white, with a few exceptions. Some even have the names of previous local Madison county law enforcement families.
When they take out the trash, include Chowke.
I’m taking mine to dumbass ckokwe Lumumba’s house
Take y’all’s trash to your local voting precinct and drop it off, cuz that’s where the majority of you morons voted for this fool running your city into the ground.
Don't worry about the trash. People of jackson will just do as they have been doing all along. They already throw their trash out on the streets. Just look around Jackson. Trash all over the streets, in the yards, and trash anywhere there is a vacant building to dump it in. There are a lot of vacant buildings.
Just saw on Wapt Facebook that Richards is picking up again on Monday.
The council is paying them for their past work.
I guess they aren't going to fight the mayor.
Not sure how I feel about this.
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