Officer Diane Tillery
Community Services Officer
No one is more knowledgably and aware of what is happening in the Village than Diane Tillery. She is connected, informed and sensitive, not just of matters of security and safety, but also the critical concerns, issues and activities of the homes corporations, condominiums, residential rental, commercial, and educational communities of
She has daily contact with community, resident and commercial property representatives, and private security guard personnel as she answers e-mail and phone inquiries, identifies owners of vehicles, discusses incidents and exchanges information.
Memorable Service to the Village Officer Diane Tillery’s most memorable service was her outstanding police work to uncover the full extent of the series of embezzlements and thefts of funds from the Montgomery Village Foundation.
However, under the circumstances, Officer Tillery and Prosecutor Tracy Bortnick of the
As reported in the October 24th Gazette story on the sentencing, “I can’t tell how many people have called my office to say ‘Go after this lady; this is my money she stole,’ testified Officer Diane Tillery, community services officer for the county’s 6th District police station who led the police part of the investigation.
Profile of a Professional Police Officer In an article in The Gazette on her 25th anniversary on the
Diane spent two years working with delinquent children before she was recruited to join the county police force.
After more than 10 years patrolling in
Officer Tillery was the subject of a featured profile in the Montgomery County Department of Police 2006 Annual Report., commending her for excellent police work by continually “initiating community outreach efforts and building partnerships in order to alleviate community problems and issues.
“As a direct result of her work, 6th District patrol officers have seen a dramatic reduction in the calls for service in many areas. She truly goes above and beyond the call of duty in the spirit of community policing. Officer Tillery has done an incredible job reaching out to all aspects of the community.”
Officer Tillery received the coveted Governor’s Crime Prevention Award for Law Enforcement Officers from Governor Martin O’Malley at the 2007 Annual Governor’s Crime Prevention ceremony.
First Runner Up
Robert Hydorn
President
Motivated to run for the MVF Board to do something about the Foundation’s sub- standard maintenance and care of the Village’s ball fields, parks and recreation facilities, Bob Hydorn was elected to the MVF Board in March of 2006.
During his first year on the Board, he found himself many times the lone concerned voice questioning MVF’s failing financial, operating and personnel policies and practices. From his first day as a member of the Board, Hydorn was considered an “enemy of the Foundation” by veterans on the Board and senior staff.
His surprising and dramatic election as Board President by a
Bob’s immediate and critical priorities as announced in his President’s Message feature in The Village News were to: open two-way communication between the Board and the community; bring order, transparency, control and effective management to the Foundation’s financial affairs; hire the best Executive Vice President and Director of Finance & Administration available; and improve the quality and management of the Foundation’s services.
In his first President’s Message feature in The Village News, Hydorn listed his e-mail address, Bobhydorn@comcast.net and invited the Village community to send their comments, concerns and complaints to his attention.
At his second meeting as President, Bob called for Board approval of the appointment of an ad hoc Personnel Selection Committee after 288 days of inaction following the resignations of John Zakian and Geraldine Barber.
Despite the challenges to the Selection Committee’s composition, legitimacy and competency that followed, the members of the Selection Committee worked tirelessly over the next six months to make the capable leadership team of Dave Humpton and Bill Blum a reality and a blessing for the Village.
As MVF Board President, Bob Hydorn has done a remarkable job of leading the Foundation during an exceedingly difficult time. He has conducted himself with dignity. Thanks to his dedication to the Village, his outgoing personality and accessibility to Village residents, he has begun the renewal of
Second Runner Up
Sebastian Montes
Staff Reporter, The Gazette
Information about what’s happening in
The Village News is not trusted by many as a source of accurate, fair, useful and critical information. There is a feeling that The Village News’ editorial, reporting and communication policies are geared to self promotion over effective communication. Its news and features, more than likely, attempt to create an illusion of favorable property conditions, superior service performance by the Foundation’s staff and contractors or to justify past and current board decisions and actions.
Since the summer of 2006, Montes’ in-depth reporting has brought focus to the Village’s crippled governing process, community divides, financial follies, and crumbling infrastructure.
In the seventeen months since John Zakian’s resignation, staff reporter Sebastian Montes has written six feature articles that covered the state of the Village’s troubled financial affairs, nine articles on the series of embezzlements and missing funds, five on the search and selection of an Executive Vice President and Director of Finance and Administration and five on the controversy over approving the appointment of the Ad Hoc Personnel Search Committee and appointing newly-elected Katherine Gray as Treasurer.
Taken collectively, these articles spurred reform in the Montgomery Village Foundation by focusing attention on the financial and governance issues plaguing the Village. Without this consistent coverage over many months, it is doubtful that Village residents would have ever understood or fully appreciated the crisis on their doorstep. Village residents responded by electing three newcomers to the MVF Board and thus began the first steps to restoring the Village to financial health and managerial excellence with the hiring of a superbly qualified senior staff, Dave Humpton as Executive Vice President, and Bill Blum as Director of Finance and Administration.
Gray works at the same bank the MVF uses. Dummy! She can't be an officer of the board in that capacity.
ReplyDeleteObviously the previous writer does not read or understand English well. There was no comment about Grey being treasurer again. She could be with a real board that knew what the hell they were doing. Didn't Dick Wright even vote for Grey to be treasurer?
ReplyDeleteDon't get too excited about Blum, he will be gone by June and not by his choice!
ReplyDeleteIf Blum goes, remember that Pat Huson hired him and Lois Campbell was trained him. Another of Huson's wrong moves.
ReplyDeleteThe last blogger is a moron, why do we continue to live in the past!
ReplyDeleteHuson and Campbell are gone but Hydorn isn't and he was involved in the hiring!
I think the previous poster is a bit misinformed. Wasn't the interim EVP, with assistance from the acting Director of Finance and Administration, responsible for all hiring after Zakian left? From what I've heard, no board members were involved in any hiring other than for the replacement executive vice president. There was no need for them to get involved because Pat Huson was fully in charge of hiring and added Kimberly West, Rob Meier, and probably others to the MVF payroll as part of her regular duties.
ReplyDeleteBILL BLUM fired at MVF. So much for the Observer being "right" on this call. WRONG.
ReplyDeleteYou need to get your blog rolling again. MV is back to Zakianland
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