Salem Community Vision ready for New Year

Thanks, guys, you who checked out the Salem Community Vision web site after I whipped it up recently in a flurry of Wix-inspired creativity and asked for feedback. I've become a believer in the Wix web site creation service. It's a winner for people like me -- those who feel comfortable doing some site designing, yet are about as familiar with HTML coding as with Sanskrit.  I'm also a big believer in the potential of Salem Community Vision to do some good for our fair city, which could be way fairer, in 2014. Here's a key reason.  If there's anything…

Is City of Salem trying to screw up downtown parking?

I made this post's title a question. But it easily could have been a statement: City of Salem trying to screw up downtown parking, given the evidence to support this.  Today Carole Smith, a downtown business owner and resident, told it like she sees it in a Statesman Journal guest opinion. I'm going to share the entire piece so it will be available when the newspaper moves "Council insincere on parking" to its archives. The parking petition mentioned by Smith was signed by about 9,000 people. It called for a ban on parking meters downtown and elimination of onstreet parking time…

I’m a web site creator! Now, tell me if it works.

Wow. Now I kind of understand how a genuine web site creator geek spends his or her evenings. Having fun. Obsessed. Being frustrated. Happy. Worried. Yet in the end... feeling good. I just spent a couple of hours with a template-based web site creation service, Wix. I had the idea that a service like that could be a good way for Salem Community Vision to put up a functional web site quickly and cheaply. So I Googled "web site creation service," or something like that. After a few minutes of looking at Ten Best listings and such, I got intrigued…

Here’s the Hines 2013 Christmas Letter — not unduly uplifting

Shameful admission: for a few brief seconds this year I actually thought about not writing a 2013 Christmas Letter.  Laurel and I share so much on Facebook and my blog, went through my mind. Haven't we already shared enough dog, granddaughter, and longboarding photos? But there was an immediate next thought: Nyah, of course not! So I got into the Christmas Letter writing spirit a few days ago and dashed out this:Download 2013 Christmas Letter PDF To relieve anxiety among people who fear that this is one of those dreadfully positive and uplifting Christmas letters, fear not. We start out…

Geoffrey James tells City of Salem how to save $30 million

A few days before Christmas Architect Geoffrey James gave Salem, Oregon taxpayers a great present: $30 million. Well, let's call it a potential present, because this is how much James believes a City of Salem bond levy could be reduced if some viable alternatives to the City's proposal are pursued. The project under discussion is a new police facility and seismic retrofitting of the Civic Center. Plus the City wants to tear down the current Council Chambers and construct a new Chambers close by.  James, a founder of Salem Community Vision, describes a better way in a December 20 guest…

My Metolius River tubing video goes anti-viral on You Tube

Wow! I'm an anti-viral You Tube sensation! After finally getting around to putting up a video of me, my granddaughter, and her parents tubing down the beautiful Metolius River last August, in less than a day I've already gotten... (drum roll, please)... 4 views! All of which, of course, are the result of me checking again, and again, and again, and again, to see how the video looks.  Have a look. Make me even more ecstatic. Let's go for 5. Then -- dare I hope? -- 6, 7, 8, 9, to who knows? Don't mathematicians say the number of integers…

StreetStrider — my new fun non-traditional exercise

Here's a hot-off-the-iPhone photo of my Christmas present to myself, which I opened early. A StreetStrider, which is an outdoor elliptical bike. It's on a hitch rack that is made for the unusual machine -- two wheels in front, one in back. I decided to get a StreetStrider to supplement my other non-traditional outdoor exercise, senior citizen land paddling on a longboard/skateboard. (You can peruse my land paddling blog posts here; scroll down for earlier ones.) Longboard land paddling is a lot of fun. Most of the time. Not so much, though, when Oregon storms leave the Minto Brown Island…

Salem needs more artistry from City officials

In a way, we're all artists. Or at least, have the potential to be. I'm not talking about being able to paint, sculp, make music, dance, compose poetry, or such. Being artistic is much more than that. It's an inner quality of openness, creativity, spontaneity, expressiveness and much else that can't be put into words.  You can be an artistic anything. Plumber. Bartender. Lawyer. Housecleaner. Pilot.  Or... Mayor. City Manager. City councillor. Department head. I wish we had more artists among City of Salem leadership. This would go a long way toward making Salem, Oregon a more vibrant place to…

Putting our dog to sleep was a tough decision

I don't like euphemisms. But I still feel better saying "to sleep" in this blog post title than "euthanize," which is what we had done to our beloved dog Serena today.  It's a really tough decision. I miss her a lot. It wouldn't take much for the tears to return. But one way I cope with emotional pain is writing about it. So, I will. Partly because I want to share some thoughts that might help others deal with a similar situation. Before I do that, I'll share a bit of what this article says: Here’s what you need to know…

Salemians make creative 2014 wishes for our city

Salem, Oregon often is referred to as So-Lame. At least when compared to Salem's cooler neighbors, Portland, Corvallis, and Eugene. But there is hope for our town, judging from the creative ideas that were shared at today's Salem City Club meeting -- "My New Year's Wish for Salem." Here's how it was billed: If you could have one New Year’s wish for Salem, what would it be? 2014 is just around the corner.  It’s time to close the book on 2013 and think about the future of our city.  We’ve assembled a panel of Salem residents to do just that. Our panel…

Some talking could save Salem taxpayers $30 million

Talk is cheap, as the saying goes.

Conversely, not-talking can be expensive. This was my theme in the Salem Weekly Strange Up Salem column that hit the streets today. 

The current Salem Weekly issue isn't available online yet, so I'll share "Some talking could save $30 million" as a continuation to this post (see below). Here's how the column starts.

“We need to talk.” This can be an ominous-sounding statement. Like when your boss utters it after a bunch of co-workers already have been laid off.

But government officials should love to hear those words from the people they serve. 

For example, if taxpayers want to talk about being asked to pay $70 million for something that could cost $40 million, that’s a conversation worth having.

Which is what needs to happen here in Salem. 

After several years of mostly-secret meetings, City officials are running around town pushing a plan to build a new three-story Police Facility with expensive underground parking at the Civic Center.

Cost: $44 million. However, the City of Eugene recently remodeled an existing building into a similarly-sized police headquarters for $17 million. 

Salem Community Vision, a group working to improve local government decision-making through more citizen involvement, is asking why less expensive alternatives to the $44 million Civic Center Police Facility haven’t been seriously considered.

Below is a cost comparison worksheet prepared by Geoffrey James, an architect, and Gene Pfeifer, a designer and builder. Here's a PDF version:  Download How to save $33 million

James and Pfeifer have lots of experience with complex construction projects. They were instrumental in finding a much less expensive solution to fixing Courthouse Square, Marion County's problem-plagued building. 

The image at the top is a Site Plan prepared by the City of Salem. The City's June 2013 cost estimate for the new Police Facility and Civic Center renovation project is under the image: $70.5 million. Below that is a $37.5 million estimate prepared by James and Pfeifer that reflects a smarter way to go. (click to enlarge)

How to save $33 million

This isn't the last word, of course. It's a discussion piece.

People in Salem need to have an open, factual, and candid conversation about the best way to build a new Police Facility and seismically retrofit the Civic Center buildings. Like I said in the column, if talking can save $30 million, let's converse.

If you agree, sign the Salem Community Vision petition at Change.org. And give the group a Facebook like

For more info about why there is a better way than what the City of Salem is proposing, have a look at the Salem Community Vision brochure — presented as "inside" and "outside" images. (click to enlarge)

SCV Pamphlet inside SCV Pamphlet outsideHere's the entire Salem Weekly column.

Archive — cool addition to Salem’s downtown scene

Coffee. Cocktails. Food. Looks like there will be something for everybody when Archive opens in the McGilchrist building next March or April. I learned about this bar/restaurant from a Salem Breakfast on Bikes post, "Hipster Baristas Add Booze and Bar, Invade Downtown."  Excellent news! The words hipster, barista, and downtown give me increased hope that Salem's core is on the way to being enlivened by some much-needed youthful energy. So says Breakfast on Bikes. It will be a great addition to the scene already set by Ventis, La Capitale, Amadeus, Maven, and the others. What feels significant about this, though, is the…

New York Times kicking Oregonian’s online ass

TO: Peter Bhatia (pbhatia@oregonian.com), Jerry Casey (jcasey@oregonian.com)FROM: Brian HinesRE: New York Times is kicking the Oregonian's ass Mr. Bhatia and Mr. Casey, you are the Editor and Director of Digital Operations for the Oregonian, our state's largest newspaper.  I have written you before about how, to put the matter succinctly, your online edition sucks and I hate the digital Oregonian. However, I hold out hope that one day, perhaps, just maybe, I will actually be able to read the newspaper that I pay to get seven days a week but can only read on four -- since Monday, Tuesday, and Thursday…

Marijuana legalization creeping closer to Oregon

Oh, yeah, the times are definitely a'changing here in Oregon. High times are coming soon to Washington state, which legalized adult marijuana sales/use last year. Willamette Week has reported news of considerable interest to those of a cannabis-consuming bent in northwest Oregon: the would-be sellers and growers in Clark County, a mere crossing of the Columbia River away from Portland. I'm 65. I've been used to marijuana being illegal my entire life, obviously. I still feel a pang in my '60s heart (the decade, not my age) when I remember driving with similarly stoned friends in my smoke-filled '57 VW…

Salem, Oregon is really several cities: well-off and struggling

I live in south Salem. Well, rural south Salem, above five miles from the city limits. Yet I can drive to downtown in about 20 minutes.  Where, if I go north or east, I'll reach a whole other sort of city: much poorer than the well-off enclaves of south and west Salem.  Several recent stories by Hannah Hoffman (nice job, Hannah!) in the Statesman Journal have cast much-needed light on Salem's income disparities.  The first one was "Salem shows vast income gap." Here's a PDF version for when the story falls into the paper's archives. Download Salem shows vast income…