A justified snarl at City of Salem’s August “Dog Days” event

Mayor Peterson, City Manager Norris, and other City of Salem officials just can't seem to please anybody these days. When they tried to take over part of public Riverfront Park for a private access road, they were slammed by park lovers. When they tried to foist parking meters on the Historic District without asking citizens how they felt about this, 9,000 Salemians signed a "No Way!" petition that halted this plan. When they had a notion of turning the library into a police facility and relocating it to a parking garage, library lovers showered them with "Are you crazy?" messages…

Salem City Council gets it wrong on Howard Hall

Tonight I watched another shameful performance by the Mayor and City Council of Salem (Oregon), who voted unanimously to approve the destruction of Howard Hall, a building that the Historic Landmarks Commission voted unanimously to preserve. Interesting, to say the least.  A citizen commission made up of experts on historic preservation and the ordinance governing historic buildings such as Howard Hall considers all of the evidence, along with the law, and concludes that Salem Hospital hasn't met three of the four criteria required to destroy the building. A political body with strong ties to the Chamber of Commerce and Salem's…

Fight to preserve Howard Hall is about more than a building

Next Monday, July 28, the Salem City Council will continue with a public hearing about Howard Hall, a historic landmark that is the last building remaining from the now-closed School for the Blind.  The Historic Landmarks Commission voted unanimously to preserve the building, denying Salem Hospital's request to tear it down so the hospital could have a parking lot with 87 more spaces than is required by code. Members of the blind community aren't at all persuaded by Salem Hospital's offer to put a playground for physically challenged children where Howard Hall is now. They know this is just a…

Is Statesman Journal buying Facebook “likes”?

Today the Salem Statesman Journal has a story about how a candidate for the state legislature, Chuck Lee, seems to be buying Facebook likes.  Download Did House candidate Chuck Lee buy Facebook likes? Naturally that got me curious about where the Statesman Journal's Facebook "likes" come from.  After a bit of Googling I found an informative story, "Facebook's new geographic data exposes tons of phony likes." That led me to SocialBakers.com, where I was able to get some free statistics on the location of the Statesman Journal's "likers." Turns out that 18% of the 20,066 likes are from Facebook users…

Parking time limits or meters coming to downtown Salem?

According to Salem city councilor Chuck Bennett, who represents the downtown area, City officials are looking at replacing the current free unlimited parking policy with "time-limited" parking. This could mean several things. Going back to a two-hour limit. Or installing parking meters, the City's goal before 9,000 signatures on a citizen initiative petition to ban meters and time limits dashed that dream. Bennett emailed me a response after he'd gotten my message asking if a report was true that he'd talked at a neighborhood association meeting about the council moving forward with parking meters again. No, I said the city…

Musings on the problem of deciding where to live after retiring

My wife, Laurel, and I are 65. We reside on 10 non-easy-care acres in rural south Salem, Oregon. We're trying to decide where and how we want to live if, or when, we decide to move from the home we've happily lived in for 24 years. It's a tough decision, as related here, here, and here. Recently we visited our first retirement community. We've browsed online and requested brochures before. But we'd never toured a retirement community. Touchmark Bend is of the "continuing care" variety. It offers options from detached cottages to home care for those with varying health care…

Salem Art Fair needs to make some changes

Don't get me wrong: I love the Salem Art Fair. I've gone to it every year since I moved here in 1977. But after attending the 2014 fair last Friday, my wife and I have come to a conclusion: The Salem Art Fair is feeling old and tired. It needs to make some changes. Now, it could be argued that we are the ones with the problem. After all, if we liked the fair more in the past, and the fair hasn't changed much, then isn't it us who need to make an attitude adjustment? Well, yes and no. But…

After 500+ miles on my StreetStrider, I’m addicted! And super fit.

This may sound strange, but it's true: at the age of 65, I can't remember when I've ever felt in better shape. (Note: my memory is pretty damn good, so this isn't senility talking.) Reason is my bright yellow StreetStrider Summit 8r -- an outdoor elliptical bike.I got it last  December. I rode it through Oregon's wet and cold winter. I've continued riding it in Oregon's dry and hot summer.  The StreetStrider is a super enjoyable exercise. I must have gone about 560 miles by now, mostly on multi-use trails at Salem's Minto Brown Island Park. Almost always I do…

Preserving Howard Hall got strong support at Salem City Council hearing

Just like I predicted in "How Salem City Council handles Howard Hall will say a lot," only two people testified in favor of demolishing Howard Hall at last night's council meeting:

Salem Health, represented by Norm Gruber, and the City of Salem, represented by Kimberli Fitzgerald. 

Howard Hall

Everybody else who testified — I counted seven, watching on CCTV — were strongly in favor of affirming the decision of the Historic Landmarks Commission to preserve Howard Hall, a historic building that is the last structure remaining from the School of the Blind.

This included Curt Fisher, who spoke for the South Central Area Neighborhood Association (SCAN) where Howard Hall is located. 

Fisher said this was a David and Goliath situation, with powerful Salem Health up against ordinary concerned citizens. Yet the process worked, he noted, adding that the City Council should respect the wisdom, talent, and expertise of those who volunteer to serve on the HIstoric Landmarks Commission.

He pointed out that Salem Hospital (part of Salem Health) wants many more parking spaces than is customary under City rules. So there is plenty of room to put an adaptive playground and commerative garden elsewhere on the property, rather than demolishing Howard Hall and using its footprint for those uses.

In other words, Howard Hall can be preserved and an adaptive playground can be built by Salem Health. This isn't an either/or situation.

However, a representative of the Oregon Council for the Blind, Willamette Chapter, testified that they have met five times with Salem Hospital staff. The hospital refuses to consider preserving Howard Hall, a building that has deep significance for the blind community.

Thus Salem Health and Salem Hospital came off looking like money-grubbing corporate meanies. Again, there was zero support for demolishing Howard Hall from anyone but themselves. 

Not counting City officials. But they made the same flawed arguments that the Historic Landmarks Commission rejected. In fact, as I said in my previous blog post, the same person made the same flawed arguments.

A City staff report recommending reversal of the Historic Landmarks Commission decision was written by the same person who initially recommended approval of Salem Hospital's application. Namely, Kimberli Fitzgerald. This isn't immediately obvious, since the staff report to the Mayor and City Council is through City Manager Norris, from Community Development Director Glenn Gross, signed by Urban Planning Administrator LIsa Anderson-Olgivie, and, lastly, prepared by Senior HIstoric Planner Kimberli Fitzgerald. Yes, the same person who made the same points in a staff report to the HIstoric Landmarks Commission (HLC) before the commission voted 6-0 to reject the staff recommendation and deny Salem Hospital's demolition request. Again, this looks really bad — to not have a new person take a fresh look at the application prior to the City Council review of the HLC decision. 

Here's something else that looked really bad at last night's council meeting: Mayor Peterson ended the hearing somewhere around 10:30 pm, after people had waited four hours to testify about Howard Hall. 

I'm pretty sure not everybody who wanted to got to testify. Pretty damn frustrating after sitting there since 6:30 pm; the Howard Hall hearing didn't even start until 9:50 pm. Today Geoffrey James, a local architect who favors preserving Howard Hall, left this comment on my previous post.

Council knows that the way to deal with the "public" is not to start this "public" hearing until late at night. Then just hear from the "proponents" i.e. Salem Health CEO etc., then go into recess to discuss with attorney the Mayor's conflict of interest with the huge photos of her that Salem Health published in the paper. Then on resuming to announce it's getting late and pass a motion to continue the "public" hearing for two weeks. That way the opposition to the demolition may not show up again, after being subjected to waiting 4 hours in council chambers (not even allowed to stand!) until some of them, including the blind, have to go home. Then tell them they will not get to speak. What an outrageous strategy to defeat the "public".

Well, I did count seven opponents of demolishing Howard Hall who got three minutes to testify after the Salem Health CEO.

Still, it was decidedly strange to have the Mayor call a recess after Gale Warner used her time to hold up a large ad featuring Mayor Peterson that Salem Health had run in the Statesman Journal close to the May primary election.
Download WhatMatters-Ad-Mayor-10x10_FINAL

The City attorney asked to speak with the Mayor in private after Warner said Peterson should recuse herself because of a conflict of interest. 

When the meeting resumed and Peterson claimed she didn't have to recuse herself, the hearing abruptly ended with no additional testimony from other proponents of preserving Howard Hall. Instead, as noted above, people who had waited four hours to have their say were told to go home and come back on July 28.

This is no way to run a City Council meeting. Mayor Peterson chose the convenience of herself and other City officials over the convenience of ordinary citizens, saying that the hearing needed to be closed so other business on the agenda could be completed.

Maybe that was the reason.

Or maybe the Mayor and City of Salem staff knew that if more people were allowed to testify in opposition to demolishing Howard Hall, the more difficult it would be to vote in favor of this bad idea — given that no one other than Salem Health wants to tear down the historic building. 

Lastly, as a continuation to this post I'll include two letters from Geoffrey James and Gene Pfeifer regarding the feasibility of "repurposing" Howard Hall. At last night's hearing City staff erroneously said this had been properly examined and rejected by Salem Health.

Apparently not. Read on.

How Salem City Council handles Howard Hall will say a lot

Actions speak louder than words. Tomorrow night, Monday, July 14, the Salem City Council will make a decision about Howard Hall -- a historic building that is the last structure remaining of the School for the Blind. Salem's Mayor, Anna Peterson, is fond of saying that she and the eight city councilors are dedicated to making fair and transparent decisions that reflect the broad community interest.  Well, talk is cheap. What counts are values expressed in actions. So what the City Council does at tomorrow's meeting will tell us much more about what counts at City Hall than the platitudes…

Photos of 2014 Oregon Country Fair — yes, yes, yes!

Man, I so love the Oregon Country Fair in Veneta. Every year my wife and I feel joyful and rejuvenated when we attend on our usual opening Friday.  If only the entire freaking United States could be this loving, this uninhibited, this creative, this yes-yes-yes (a Fair slogan) ALL of the time. After parking our car, we came across a talented couple outside the entrance gate who reminded us that everyday reality is much enhanced during the three days of the fair. We had bought tickets months ago in anticipation of our annual secular-sacred July pilgrimage to a land where…

Feels like Oregon will legalize marijuana this year

Way to go, dude! An Oregonian (even more, a Salemian!) was first in line when a store selling legal marijuana opened its door yesterday in Vancouver, Washington. The state on Monday issued its first batch of retail licenses, giving two to establishments in Vancouver. One, New Vansterdam, plans to open Friday. The other, Main Street Marijuana, opened Wednesday in downtown Vancouver. And standing first in line for a few grams of Washington pot? An Oregonian. "I know I'm going to be paying way more than I probably should," said Mark Edwards, 42, a tie-dye clad Salem man who arrived at…

Salem City Council poised for bad Howard Hall decision

After watching the Salem (Oregon) City Council, Mayor, and City Manager make a series of really bad decisions, I'm worried that the council meeting next Monday, July 14, will result in another screwed-up vote. This time, to overturn the unanimous HIstoric Landmarks Commission decision to deny Salem Hospital's request to demolish Howard Hall, a Salem Historic Landmark that was part of the Oregon School for the Blind before it closed. Salem Community Vision is calling on people to come to the meeting and tell the councilors, Save Howard Hall.  Please mark your calendar and plan to attend the Salem City…

Humpty Dumpty being reborn at Enchanted Forest!

Ever since I moved to Salem in 1977, Enchanted Forest has been a regular must-visit for my family. Notably my daughter Celeste, born in 1972, and now my granddaughter Evelyn, age 7. Visiting us this week from their home in southern California along with husband/father Patrick, they were as shocked and saddened as I was to hear of the death last Saturday of Humpty Dumpty -- a beloved feature of the park for as long as I can remember. Download Humpty Dumpty has great fall at Enchanted Forest Reportedly two men climbing on the wall were responsible for Dumpty's demise.…

Applause for Paws benefit for Willamette Humane Society: July 16

Woof! Meow! Yay!  Both humans and animals are excited about the Willamette Humane Society's annual benefit night of comedy, Applause for Paws.  Wednesday, July 16- 7:30 pmHistoric Grand TheatreTickets: $25 2014 features the comedy talents of voice impersonator and sound-effects king Michael Winslow (Spaceballs, Police Academy) and musical funny-man Michael Jenkins. My wife is a volunteer dog walker for the Humane Society. She knows how much good they do for animals in need.  Support them -- and have some laughs -- by attending the Michael Winslow event.  General Admission SeatingDoors open at 6:30 p.m.; show starts at 7:30 p.m.The Historic Grand Theatre191 High St.…

Indiana visit was nice, but Oregon is the best

Here's what I did on my summer vacation, teacher. No, wait... I'm 65 and retired. Every day is a vacation now. (Yeah, right; if you believe that, just wait until you retire.) Laurel and I got back last night from a family reunion -- her side of the family -- in Madison, Indiana. Madison is on the Ohio River, a bridge away from northern Kentucky. We stayed at Clifty Falls State Park.  Not surprisingly, I saw (1) cliffs, and (2) falls, at the park. This is a view from an overlook of the Big Falls (on the right). It's straight…

Investigative reporting: still alive in Salem and elsewhere?

Remember when we trusted reporters to search out the truth without regard for who might be responsible for nefarious goings-on found at the end of the trail? I do.  Now I readily admit that my view of investigative reporting in this country may be through rose-colored glasses. Maybe journalistics never were as dogged in their pursuit of wrongdoing by government functionaries, business executives, elected officials, and others as I imagined they were. Still, it is unarguable that print and television media have gone downhill in this regard. There are good reasons why. For example, financial pressures caused by declining readership…