Articles for March 4th, 2010

UT Southwestern Probing Patient-Info Theft

So my better half gets a letter in the mail from UT Southwestern Medical Center. It says that her personal information may have been stolen from there by somebody who used to work in the hospital’s patient financial services department. This person supposedly accessed “personal identifying information of patients who had made payments,” then gave the info to someone who intended to use it to apply for credit cards, loans and bank accounts. UT Southwestern cops are investigating.

The hospital doesn’t know exactly how many patients were affected by the scheme. So it’s notifying a bunch of people and urging them all to place a “fraud alert” on their credit files. It’s even arranged with one of the fraud-reporting companies to offer identity-theft protection to the potential victims “at no cost for one year.” And, here’s a nice P.S.: the letter containing all this bad news arrived in an envelope that was open, looking like it had never been sealed.

City of Dallas Screws Its Own Citizens for Revenue

Times are tough. I wrote earlier in this space about a parking ticket I received at a meter that did not go into effect until an hour after I got said ticket (a ticket I successfully fought). But the city still needs cash. A story:

For 6-plus years we’ve lived in our quiet Far Far Far North Dallas home. We’re almost out of the county, but not quite. I came home around lunchtime (not for a nooner, unfortunately) and pulled up in front of the house, right behind my wife’s car, both of us parking against traffic flow. Our street sees almost no traffic other than residents, and pretty much everyone parks however they feel. We all know each other here (it’s a very friendly neighborhood) and nobody cares. As I pulled up to the curb, a City of Dallas PUBLIC WORKS & TRANSPORTATION employee (not a cop, BTW) was going along the street in our neighborhood ticketing cars for parking the wrong way against the curb. Since I was right there, he asked me to just turn the cars so they would be parked the right way (which I did immediately) but several of my neighbors (the ones I couldn’t reach on the phone) got his ticketful opprobrium. This isn’t a public safety issue — it’s just a revenue collection issue. Before this, I’ve never seen code enforcement, Public Works, etc. coming around and writing citations.

Personally, I’d love to see everyone ticketed for these set them for jury trial. It would clog up the metro courts so much that this preposterous ticketing would actually lose money for the City.

So, Fellow FBvians, beware. The City of Dallas has decided to adopt the philosophy of parking Nazism that has proved so successful in the People’s Republic of California. Kudos to you, City of Dallas!

Las Vegas Is Scared of Jerry Jones

The Las Vegas Sun takes a look at one of our most ambitious billionaires. Will he steal from Sin City the National Finals Rodeo? My guess: yes.

Locals Honored for Business Journalism

North Texans who appreciate good media coverage of local business should be heartened by awards just announced by the Society of American Business Editors and Writers. Among several honors for The Dallas Morning News, SABEW named the DMN business section one of the country’s best among large newspapers. (The News had been skunked in this competition for a few years, but then bolstered its section and is watching the effort pay off.) The business-journalism group recognized the Dallas Business Journal for its Web site. And, for the fifth straight year, SABEW named Mitchell Schnurman of the Fort Worth Star-Telegram one of the nation’s best columnists for midsize papers. The great Mitch’s work can also be read regularly in D CEO magazine.

D Sale of the Week: Classical Living in Munger Heights House

Karen MoyerIt’s not just a great house and a steal deal. It’s the home of former WRR  daytime host Karen Moyer. Karen melodically beautified our audible world, and she has great taste in classical homes. But now, seriously, she needs to sell and sell ASAP…

“The Texas Taliban” in Amarillo

Charles Johnson over at Little Green Footballs discovers a group of nutjobs in the fair city of Amarillo. Melissa Clouthier — er, sorry, Dr. Mellissa Clouthier — thinks he’s insulting Rick Perry and the entire state of Texas. Johnson finds that amusing and a little weird.

Leading Off (3/4/10)

1. Oncor had to defend itself yesterday at the City Council meeting. While officials from the company admitted communication was a problem, they said they had the fix: smart meters. These will help alert the company when a house is without power. That’s great and all, but I don’t see how it addresses the problem as it seems like one-way communication. Oh, and they won’t be installed and ready to go until 2012. So here’s hoping for no major snowstorms next winter.

2. I don’t like this article about it being a light flu season. It just seems like unsafe journalism. And it’s not that I’m superstitious or anything, but I’m going to go ahead and knock on wood.

3. Ever dreamed _f being _n Wheel _f F_rtune? Here’s y_ur chance. The Wheelm_bile is g_ing t_ be in town this weekend.  G_ here for details. And start practicing! (I’m convinced Vanna White’s job has to be the easiest in the world. Yes, Laura, even easier than Chris Harrison’s.)

Bonus: Now for maybe the most useless news of the day: the 1.8 millionth toll tag has been issued. Yep, get out the ticker tape. Start celebrating.