Monday, November 26, 2012
All information residents gather through the SeeClickFix app goes right to Canton's Public Works Department.
Are you sick and tired of driving over the same pothole day after day and wish you could somehow let the city know where it is and that they need to fix it? The City of Canton Public Works Department has adopted a mobile app called SeeClickFix that will allow Canton residents to tell the department about non-emergency issues such as potholes or street signs that need to be repaired. The app is available for free from the iPhone Store, Android Market and Blackberry App World. For residents without smart phones, problems can still be reported by using the online functionality of the software. Residents can describe the problem in detail, provide the exact location and even upload photographs. All of this information will go straight to City …
Friday, March 23, 2012
Spencer Tillman said he didn't show a community service worker a picture of his wife's naked backside.
Canton public works director Dave Cangemi wasn't the only city employee punished as a result of a community service worker's sexual harassment claims, according to new documents released Thursday through an open-records request. Days after the city manager issued him a letter of reprimand for calling community service worker Bill Bradley his b----, Cangemi gave a subordinate a written warning for allegedly showing the same man a photo of his wife's naked backside. Parks maintenance worker Spencer Tillman said his wife wasn't naked, but the city ruled that he violated the city's "standards of conduct." Tillman and Cangemi signed the employee warning report on Jan. 4, six days after City Manager Scott Wood hand-delivered a letter of …
Friday, March 16, 2012
Public works director Dave Cangemi called an employee gay and a community service worker a 5-letter expletive.
Last year, Canton public works director Dave Cangemi referred to a community service worker assigned to his department as his "b----." Another time, he told the same worker that an employee who lightly slapped him on the backside was gay. But because he offered an unsolicited apology to the worker before the incidents were reported to City Manager Scott Wood, all he got was a letter of reprimand. Cangemi received that letter on Dec. 29, 2011, but the story only came to light during the 10-minute public input period of Thursday's City Council meeting. That's when the accuser, Bill Bradley, told the council about his ordeal, which included exposure to pornography by an unidentified city employee. He said he was ordered to complete 80 hours …
Etowahwah
12:05 pm on Monday, November 26, 2012
This is a great idea and service! Now, if we only had an APP to fix our City Council!   more ›