Tune Up Code of Conduct

June 26th, 2023

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Great news from Mayo!

June 17th, 2023

Today’s platelet count hit NORMAL! 135! That’s up from 9, yes, NINE, on admission.

This is such good news, heaving a sigh of relief. When the doctors say Alan is doing “better than expected” this is a most positive spin on that statement!

It all started with the City Council’s appointments to the Charter Commission, and the process leading up to it. Charter Commission appointments are divided, some appointed by Council, some appointed by Charter Commission. I’m on the Charter Commission, which voted to reappoint me at the April Charter Commission meeting. There were also four Council appointments made on April 24, 2023 meeting.

Check the April 24, 2023 City Council meeting, starting at ~53:53:

https://redwingmn.portal.civicclerk.com/event/21/media

After the appointments, they’re sent to the District Court for judicial approval. Instead, we got this letter back, staying confirmation of all appointments, something I’ve not seen before! Here’s her letter:

On seeing that Letter and the attachments, oh my:

Legalectric post: Der Kommissar’s in Town!

In that letter were two letters expressing concern about, and wishing to block, appointments of Tom Drazkowski, Jason Snyder, and MOI, to the Charter Commission. One was from Rev. Dr. Eick had been at the meeting, and was disturbed by what he saw at the meeting, in particular the odd process, in voting in Tom Drazkowski and Jason Snyder, particularly as they’d both been found to have violated campaign finance law in the November 8, 2022 campaign cycle, and they were fined. See Eick letter, p. 3-4 and Order of OAH re: Campaign Finance at 5-14.

The other was Mayor Wilson’s letter, “As Red Wing’s Mayor,” to block my reappointment to the Charter Commission:

Really… he said that and more. See Wilson’s letter starting at page 15, and the attachments, through page 21, jawdroppingly absurd. When I read the part about “Commissar,” the old Falco “Der Kommissar” tune started on the tape loop, and I couldn’t help but SNORT! Then a native German filled me in, Der Kommissar was a popular German TV show ages ago, and Der Kommissar was a brilliant and most successful homicide detective.

I’ll regard Wilson’s labeling as a compliment, although for sure it was not meant as such.

In her letter, Judge Lennon requested the following:

And here are the responses to the judge, provided after I sent a Data Practices Act Request to the city. See above link for City Council meeting of April 24, 2023:

City Council explanation of process:

From Jason Snyder:

From Tom Drazkowski:

And from moi, Carol A. Overland:

And again, read this letter Wilson sent “As Red Wing’s Mayor” directly to the judge AFTER the Charter Commission had voted to reappoint me. The Charter Commission welcomes public comment, it’s on the agenda. Did Wilson show up and make a public comment prior to our vote? NO! The Charter Commission accepts written public comment. Did Wilson write a comment to the Charter Commission prior to our vote? NO! Instead, he sent an ex parte letter directly to the judge after the Charter Commission voted to reappoint me to the Commission. He did not serve the letter on me or the Charter Commission or the City. Transparency much? Once more with feeling, check out this letter below, and here’s the link, as above, see pages 14-21:

And this… he attached this to a letter to a judge?!?!?! As proof of ???

Suffice it to say we need a new Mayor, one who understands the role as the public face of our city, and specifically that it is not to be used to attempt to control public opinion or its expression. Again, from the City Charter:

What’s next? Judge Lennon will post an Order sometime, I hope soon. Maybe the judge will order a hearing!

Here’s the U.S. Department of Justice report on the City of Minneapolis police department in its entirety:

Marilyn’s Quilt

Above is a quilt made and gifted by Marilyn Tkachuk, intensely detailed, easily hundreds of hours of work. Just WOW. Marilyn and Tilton have been in to visit, and Marilyn’s been there, has been to Rochester lately for testing, and knows too well how life-changing a cancer diagnosis, chemo, and this “new normal” can be. Her support means so much… Thank you all for inquiries, visits, calls, and care packages, he appreciates that y’all are thinking of him. I’ll keep “updates” on the calendar so you’ll have some idea what’s going on. Lately, it’s just more of the same, B-O-R-I-N-G! But that’s good news in hematology!

Alan’s still in Mayo, Methodist campus, Eisenberg 9-416 (3rd room so far). If you’d like to visit, do give him a call to check his schedule, he’s in and out, poked and prodded often every day. (302) 299-8638.

Alan’s stabilized, doing well, Drs. say “you’re doing better than expected” and yet needs to be in another 3 weeks before he’s discharged. After discharge, there’s DAILY chemo for SEVEN MONTHS, alternating months between a month of oral ATRA (vitamin A derivative) and a month of IV arsenic(yes, that arsenic) at some Mayo facility, and hopefully NOT Rochester (that’s a 3,000 mile a month journey). Back and forth, month ATRA, month arsenic, seven months, so likely through January, into February? I hope by Alan’s birthday it’ll be “Happy Birthday to you, you’re done with CHEM-O.” Until then, onward with treatment and figuring out what life will be like going forward.

Platelet count has been a major concern, that was the trigger that caught our attention, because low platelet count means bleeding, and suddenly he was covered in bruises. Bleeding can start spontaneously or with a bump, and doesn’t clot. A fall can be deadly. When he was in the clinic, and then the ER, he had a platelet count of 9. Yes, NINE! They were popping their eyeballs in shock, got him in the ER stat, and they wouldn’t even let me drive him to Rochester, hence an ambulance with lights and siren.

He’s got a PICC line in now, getting regular platelet infusions, and it seems to be a peak and trough, with peak raising it, and trough then not so low, another peak, and then not as low, so he’s above the crisis point, but no where near normal, more like half of normal, but not NINE! They want to keep platelets over 50. Bruising is fading, and no new ones, so PROGRESS is visible.

White blood count is an issue too, as we’ve been told that what’s happening is that his white blood cells aren’t “maturing” and with the chemo, they’re being released when not read due to the chemo, and too many too soon triggers, or is, differentiation syndrome:

That means there’s a balance of quick release that signals the release of the deadly stuff, too many WBCs v. keeping them in, keeping it low, so there’s daily testing and monitoring, and adjusting the teeter-totter.

You can see the sharp peak exactly 2 weeks after starting treatment, and, whew, then a sharp drop, lowering, I think, to where it should be.

Fibrinogen is also an issue, but that seems stable:

I’m posting these updates, trying for weekly, but missed last week’s (!), because there aren’t enough hours in the day. It’s hard to explain the details over and over, so these updates are the nutshell. It’s a steep learning curve with so many variables, and IT’S SUCH LONG TREATMENT. We’ve been told that 90% get through this “induction” phase, which is the hospitalization and stabilization, and it seems he’s in that 90%. They’re constantly monitoring him, sucking blood out of him like the Minnesota State Bird.

The new normal is a new part-time to full-time job, taking up even more head space than actual time doing all that needs to be done, an extremely high band-width endeavor on this end, and I’d guess even more so for Alan, though he’s bored shit-less there, spending a lot of time at the hospital library now that he can roam the halls. TV is against his religion, though I hope he got to see what reporting there was of Trump’s arraignment.

We’ve had a picnic with Sadie, because he SO misses his dog (plus there’s real food in Rochester, in RW, there’s little to choose from), and need to do another soon:

Sadie never smiles, but look how happy she is to see Alan!

Onward…