Interesting alternative design for Salem’s Minto-Brown Pedestrian Bridge

I'm looking forward to completion of a bicycle and pedestrian bridge from Salem's Riverfront Park to Minto-Brown Park. Three times a week I head to Minto-Brown to do my Streetstriding thing on an outdoor elliptical bike. It'll be great to have additional trails to ride and a bridge that connects Minto-Brown Park with downtown. But completion of the bridge likely has been delayed for a year, until 2016, due to a delay in getting approval from the Coast Guard to build a structure over a navigable waterway.  Download Minto Island bridge delayed as permits await approval So this may allow…

Exciting videos of me talking about a new Salem police facility!*

[* Note: "exciting" is used in a special sense in this blog post title. I am comparing watching my videos to, say, spending several hours in a doctor's waiting room with no cellular or wi-fi service, ten year old copies of Parent's Magazine being the only reading options.] Now that I've gotten past the above disclaimer, I'll share my EXCITING videos. Be careful not to watch them close to bedtime. I'm worried you will be too energized to sleep. However, I suppose there is a counter-argument for watching them when you want some sleep. Last Wednesday Ken Adams and I…

Salemians, take in the last Stories from the Dark Side

Salem (Oregon) is fortunate that some creative folks organized Stories from the Dark Side -- which is akin to a local version of The Moth Radio Hour: true stories told live. Tomorrow -- Thursday, June 26, 7:15 pm at the Grand Theatre in downtown Salem -- is the last of three Stories from the Dark Side monthly events. Tickets can be bought at the door. Info here. $15 gets you in; money well spent I told a story in May about the one hour I spent with my father. Total.  Audio of my ten minute talk is now available. Click…

I tell City of Salem officials to “put up or shut up”

Some email messages to public officials are more satisfying to send than others. This one felt great when I sent it off a few minutes ago to Salem City Councilor Laura Tesler, with a cc to other top City officials. Laura, you, along with some [other] councilors, keep referring to “lies” (or synonymous words) that people have been spreading about the City of Salem. I assume that, as a blogger, writer, and citizen activist, I am one of those people.   Please share with me specific examples of those lies you have found in my blog posts. Let’s fact-check them…

Salem Mayor tells citizens to let City officials make decisions for them

It was a strange Salem City Council meeting last night.

Several people told me, as I was leaving after testifying during the public comment period, that this was the first meeting they'd ever attended. They couldn't believe how disrespectful Mayor Anna Peterson was to citizens who came to speak their mind.

I told them, "I wasn't surprised, because I've seen the Mayor do her 'schoolmarm' act before. Sit down, shut up, stay in your seats. Just listen to what Teacher has to say. No backtalk!"

Repeatedly Mayor Peterson emphasized that she and other City officials are empowered to make decisions, and they are going to do just that.

Whether the decisions make any sense; reflect community values and desires; are based on solid facts; flow out of an open public involvement process… not important.

In the Brave New World of the Mayor, City Manager, and city councilors, Big Brother (oops, should say Big Sister) is in charge and Must Not Be Challenged.

To which I and others said last night (in so many words), screw that.

Mayor Peterson started off the council meeting by announcing some good news. City officials have given up on the crazy notion of converting the Salem Public Library into a police facility.

In my testimony about this I thanked the many people in the audience wearing red stickers saying "Hands Off the Library." It was obvious that the vociferous objections to moving the library to some other undisclosed location led to the Mayor and City Manager realizing this was a really poor idea.

The bad news, though, was that an almost equally poor idea has been resurrected: building a vastly over-priced police facility at the Civic Center (the current proposal is for a three story Police Palace next to and over Mirror Pond, with very expensive underground parking).
Download Council: Salem library will not become police station

I'd presciently anticipated this in a recent blog post

Also, if a new police facility isn't going to go into the library building, this opens the door to City officials bringing back an almost equally bad idea: building an over-priced three story police palace with expensive underground parking next to (and over) the Civic Center's Mirror Pond. A new police facility should be built out in the community at much lower cost.

By "lower cost," we're talking big bucks — in the neighborhood of $64 million, including bond financing costs (the City wants to spend about $128 million; Salem Community Vision considers the project can be done for aboout $64 million, half the price.)

So why aren't Mayor Peterson, City Manager Norris, and the eight city councilors eager to hear what citizens have to say about lower-cost alternatives to building a police facility at the Civic Center?

Based on what was said at last night's city council meeting, City officials consider they were elected to make decisions without considering the desires and values of the people they represent. Thus they aren't concerned that no public hearings about the best location for a new police facility have been held.

Well, I am. And I will continue to be.

Every time I heard the Mayor or a city councilor talk about themselves being the decision-makers, this strengthened my resolve to work to restore transparency, openness, and a genuine respect for public involvement back into City Hall.

These guys and gals are acting like they're the CEO and board of a private corporation, accountable to no one. Problem is, they're playing this private enterprise fantasy game with public funds — taxpayer dollars. 

More: those dollars don't exist yet. Approval for a $128 million bond measure, or whatever the final cost is, would have to be approved by Salem voters. What are the chances of a bond measure passing when citizens have had essentially zero input into the project they're expected to pay for?

Just about zero.

Top-down authoritarian management such as that practiced these days at City Hall has gone out of fashion even in the corporate world. It is hugely more out of place in city government where officials ostensibly are servants of the people.

Here's a video of last night's City Council meeting. I start to do my public comment thing at the 32:35 mark and depart the podium at 41:45.

 

Lastly, as a continuation to this post I'll copy in an email I sent to City officials after I got home from the meeting. I was bothered by repeated unsubstantiated comments that "bloggers," almost certainly referring to me, had been promulgating false information about the planned police facility, and how the Civic Center was selected as the site for it.

All of my posts on this subject are listed and clickable on the Salem Community Vision "Other Voices" page. City staff and elected officials know where to find my blog, believe me. None have pointed out any factual errors in what I've been writing about.

In my email message I sent to City officials last night, at one point I had a "put up or shut up" in it.

I decided to take that out in a gesture of good will. But I said the same thing in other ways. If you read on, you'll see that I've researched how the siting decision was made, concluding that City staff chose the Civic Center location without any public hearings or other community input.

Our life in photos, June 2014 version

It's a lazy warm sunny Oregon Sunday, a day past the summer solstice. TIme to browse the iPhone and dig out some unshared photos of what we -- me, wife, and dog -- have been up to recently. Such as...walking along the Metolius River in central Oregon near sunset. The Metolius has to be one of the most beautiful rivers in the world. Sure seems so to me, anyway. . I wasn't aware of the beam of light when I snapped the photo. A bit of natural "divinity." Hiking to the top of Black Butte, an ancient volcanic cone that sits…

Turning Salem Public Library into police facility looks less likely now

A just-released staff report for next Monday's City Council meeting thankfully throws a lot of cold water on the crazy notion that the Salem Public Library should be converted to a police facility, with the library moving to some other undisclosed location -- maybe the Marion Parkade parking garage. Download Council Item 7a (6_23_14) City Manager Linda Norris says in the informational memo: According to the City's Chief Building Official, the challenges in taking an existing building, constructed earlier than the 1990's when building codes were updated to account for seismic risk, may make it cost prohibitive to reconstruct the…

Save the Salem Public Library from being moved to a parking garage

I don't want Salem's library to be moved into the ground floor of the Marion Parkade parking garage. But the City Council might give the go-ahead to plan for this at its next meeting on Monday, June 23.Crazy? Yeah, of course it is. Mayor Anna Peterson and City Manager Linda Norris have the hots for a vastly overpriced police facility taj mahal at the Civic Center, a monument to... something or other. Wasteful government spending and bureaucratic egotism, I guess.   Read on for a Call to Action from Salem Community Vision. Our Salem Public Library is on the chopping block.…

Too old for ten acres and a big house — too young for retirement living

I guess you could call us tweeners. Senior citizen variety. At 65, my wife and I are beginning to find that the joy of maintaining our large 1970's era house on ten rural acres is beginning to wear thin. So we've started to think about where we'd like to move when and if we really want to. As noted in my "I'm 65. Where's my 'Aging Hippie' retirement community?" post, we wouldn't fit in with any of the senior-oriented planned communities we've looked at. Not in person; via the Internet, brochures, and such. Our impression is there's a considerable difference…

Is the Salem Public Library really a “charmless concrete bunker”?

I disagreed with a lot of what was said in a Salem Breakfast on Bikes post, "How much worse would a Marion Parkade Library actually be?" The post refers to a proposal by City officials to seriously consider making the current library into a police facility, and moving the library to some other location. What rubbed me the most the wrong was a repeated Breakfast on Bikes mention of the library being a "charmless concrete bunker." Well, for comparision here's a genuine charmless concrete bunker -- the Marion Parkade parking structure that City officials have said could be the new…

A right-on critique of Statesman Journal lameness

Nicely said, Jim Scheppke. I agree with your cogent Facebook critique of how the Salem Statesman Journal, which aspires to be our town's "paper of record," has gone downhill a lot journalistically. Here's Jim's post: I can't believe how lame our local newspaper has become. I mean LAME! Today there were two articles on the front page. The headline grabber had to do with a Portland-based accordion club that is having a meeting at Silver Falls State Park. The second was about the Silverton Hills Strawberry Festival. This is the front page! Great editors from the past like Charles Sprague…

Don’t believe biased Salem Chamber of Commerce third bridge poll

It's easy to show why the Salem Chamber of Commerce's poll about a proposed third bridge across the Willamette River is as crappy as the whole idea of this unneeded, unwanted, and unpaid-for boondoggle. Here's a quick question for you: "Would you like to have a new car?" Mentally press "1" for yes, "2" for no, "3" for no opinion. I answered yes. Most people would. Why the heck not?  Of course I'd like to have a new car. I'd also like to have a new house, a new television, a new computer, and lots of other new things. I just don't want…

Update on proposal to convert Salem Public Library into a police facility

Previously I've blogged about the Children's Room at the Salem library being held hostage to an ill-advised notion of converting the entire building into a police facility. (See here and here.)  Today I attended a two hour meeting of the Library Advisory Committee where this issue was discussed. A dozen or so people watched the proceedings, testimony to how much the library means to Salemians. (The committee chair said they usually only have one or two observers in attendance.) City Manager Linda Norris was delayed getting back from Eugene. So most of the library into a police facility discussion occurred…

Come to No 3rd Bridge sidewalk rally in Salem — June 11

What's not to like about next Wednesday's rally against the unneeded, unwanted, and unpaid for $400 million Third Bridge that special interests want to foist on Salemians? Us ordinary people, of course, would be expected to pay for it. Somehow or other. Bridge proponents haven't figured that out yet. Along with not-so-little details like why the bridge is needed in the first place. The rally will feature nice weather, almost certainly. Soapbox for ranting provided. Plenty of sidewalk standing room. Opportunity to ask pointed embarassing questions of politicians and bureaucrats immediately after the rally.  Love it!  So I plan to…

Library Children’s Room “hostage taking” to be talked about June 11

A week ago a humble local blogger -- ME! ME! -- revealed that City of Salem officials were holding a much-needed remodeling of the library's Children's Room hostage... to a possible conversion of the Salem Public Library into a police facility. Since, I've come across interesting snippets of information related to this. They've come from here and there, which is all I'll say about my sources. Hey, this isn't the New York Times. I'm just a blogger. I'm not wearing pajamas at the moment, but pretty close: shorts and sandals while sitting on a deck. Anonymous snippets is what you get…

The joy of being crazy — in a sane way

"You're crazy." When people say that to me, or when I say it to myself, I realize that we're not talking about clinical craziness.  I'm in touch with reality. I can relate to people appropriately. I don't hear voices inside my head, other than the usual chattering of my own mind (a topic I wrote about on my other blog). No, the sort of crazy being referred to is different. It's main quality, I'd say, is an imbalance that doesn't make sense to other people. And sometimes to myself. For example... Today I did some major mowing. We have a large…

Climate change is the big job-killer, not EPA carbon regulations

It was an interesting juxtaposition of truth-telling and fear-mongering. Sunday night my wife and I watched the most recent Cosmos episode, which was about global climate change. Scary scientific conclusions, as recapped by the LA Times. Here's the thing: Nature doesn't care about your politics, or what you want to be true. It just does its thing according to the well-established rules described by science. We ignore reality at our peril. The sharp rise since the late 19th century means that the average global temperature is rising, with some pretty devastating consequences for our environment. Melting ice caps, rising sea…

Giddily, I catch another Dick Hughes journalistic ethics violation

When you read the title of this blog post, what do you think "giddily" meant? Probably something like happy, right? Joyful, maybe. This indeed is one definition of "giddy." As in, he was giddy with delight. Almost certainly you weren't thinking of another definition: dizzy, causing dizziness. As in, a giddy climb to the topmast. Therein lies my newest gripe about the Salem Statesman Journal's editorial page editor, Dick Hughes. Dick and I have a history of journalistic disagreements. It's sort of a fun game between us, and sort of not. (The first "sort of" made my use of giddily…