Impassioned testimony at City Council hearing on a new police facility

Here's the post I put up a little while ago on my Strange Up Salem Facebook page while I sat in the City Council chambers and listened to a lot of people testifying about the City of Salem's proposal for a new $80 million, 150,000 square foot police facility.------------ O'BRIEN SITE ROCKS. BLOCK SOUTH OF LIBRARY SUCKS. This is the clear message of the many people who are testifying at tonight's Salem City Council public hearing on a new police facility. Great turnout. Lots of impassioned testimony. People who live and work at the block south of the Library (Leslie…

Dog walk photos remind me why I love where we live

Having lived in our non-easy-care rural south Salem house for 26 years, and having reached the semi-geezerish age of 67, I'm heavy into a love/hate relationship with where we are.  (See here, here, here, here, and here.) But then there's a day like today, when a near-sunset dog walk on trails and roads in our neighborhood made me feel, This is why it'd be tough to move somewhere else. My iPhone's camera tells the tale. With some word help from me. (click to enlarge the photos) Near the end of our walk, ZuZu and I come to a trail that…

Is Statesman Journal Best of Mid-Valley contest really about “best”?

I readily admit that I've rarely, if ever, voted in the Salem Statesman Journal's annual Best of the Mid-Valley contest -- the 2016 version of which is underway now. If memory serves me (chancy at my age, but I think I'm correct about this), Olive Garden won "Best Italian Restaurant" some years back. That soured me on viewing Best of Mid-Valley as a genuine reflection of business/organization bestness.  Rather, the Best of Mid-Valley rules are clearly pointed toward a popularity contest, rather than a quality contest. We rely on our audience to supply us with the names of outstanding people, businesses…

Salem citizens: save lives by sending an email to the City Council

Look, I know it's a cliche: "It's about saving the children." But in this case it's true. And not only the children -- we're also talking about saving the lives of everybody who works at or visits the Salem City Hall and Library.  I feel strongly about this, earthquake-proofing the Civic Center buildings so they won't collapse in a major earthquake. We in the Pacific Northwest know this is a matter of when, not if, because hugely powerful Cascadia subduction zone earthquakes occur with semi-predictable regularity.  And Oregon is due. For The Really Big One. Unfortunately, City officials have lost…

Yikes! City wants Salem taxpayers to pay $80 million for supersized police facility

Well, we finally know how much City officials want Salem residents to pay for a new police facility: $80 million. This is the cost estimate consultants presented at tonight's City Council work session in the Library's Anderson Room.  Bottom line -- this is way too much. The cost should be half that, or even less. Salem Community Vision (I'm a member of the SCV steering committee) has been hammering on this point for several years. Read all about it in the group's position paper, "Salem's New Police Facility: The Best Way to Achieve It." Here's a PDF scan of the…

Eye-opening, disturbing, inspiring: “Where to Invade Next” movie

My wife and I just got back from seeing Michael Moore's new movie, "Where to Invade Next," at Salem Cinema. We hugely enjoyed it.  It should be a political game-changer for the United States. Unfortunately, the people who should see it, those who really need to see it -- the right-wing flagwavers who wrongly consider America is #1; the tax-cutting fanatics who don't believe in the efficacy of government programs; the strong-military zealots who fail to understand the harm our giant defense budget is doing to this country -- they won't risk having their delusions challenged by seeing the movie.…

I ask City officials Seven Great Questions about a new Salem police facility

Salem has lots of unmet needs. This isn't a rich town. Many people are struggling financially. Our City Hall and Library almost certainly are going to collapse when the Big One earthquake hits.  So why is Mayor Anna Peterson and her right-wing City Council majority pushing so hard for a supersized new police facility that is double the size and cost it needs to be? Not long ago, in 2014, they were happy with a proposal for a 75,000 square foot police facility. And with seismically retrofitting the Civic Center buildings so lives of staff and visitors won't be lost…

Salem Statesman Journal — the incredible shrinking newspaper

How much smaller and more pathetic can Salem's so-called "community newspaper" get? I suppose it can shrink to almost zero on the Journalistic Quality scale and still keep on publishing.  But what's the point of that? In The Incredible Shrinking Man movie... Scott accepts his fate and is resigned to the adventure of seeing what awaits him in even smaller realms. He knows he will eventually shrink to atomic size; but, no matter how small he becomes, he concludes he will still matter in the universe because, to God, "there is no zero." This thought gives him comfort and ends…

Why people will LOVE to use a multi-use path in West Salem

Mark Wigg is a marvelous advocate for multi-use cycling and pedestrian paths here in Salem. A few days ago, in a post I shared a video of his testimony at a City Council meeting where he persuasively argued for a Salemtowne to Downtown path in West Salem -- which would be built largely with volunteer labor if City officials would simply approve the right of way for it. At the meeting Councilor Jim Lewis, who represents West Salem, asked Wigg a skeptical question about how many people would use a Salemtowne to Downtown path.  Wigg gave a good answer at the…

What’s most dangerous about the Malheur militants’ mentality

I'm glad the Malheur National Wildlife Refuge standoff is over. I'm equally pleased that Cliven Bundy has been arrested and charged with crimes that could lead to him spending the rest of his life in prison.  I readily admit that, like lots of other people here in Oregon and elsewhere, I became quasi-obsessed with the twists and turns of this drama -- especially after the four militants remaining at the refuge started broadcasting a live audio feed featuring their wacko rants and bullhorn pleas from a FBI negotiator to surrender peacefully. So it's good to have the Malheur situation on…

Salem Chamber of Commerce mass transit bill to aid Cherriots is dead

Wow, what a non-surprise. The Salem Chamber of Commerce's BIG PLAN to fund improved bus service in Salem by a means other than a payroll tax is dead as the proverbial doornail (yeah, I'm old; people used to say that frequently). So says local state Representative Bill Post, who got the unenviable job of trying to convince legislators to fulfill the impossible dream of Salem getting a pot of money from State coffers so Cherriots could offer weekend and evening bus service. HB 4078 (link will  take you to the actual bill) is now dead in committee. I had hoped…

Why the unbuilt Third Bridge boondoggle is hurting Salem

Last night's Salem City Council meeting showed how badly planning for the unneeded, unwanted, and unpaid-for Salem River Crossing project, a.k.a. the 3rd Bridge, is hurting this town.  This billion dollar boondoggle is nowhere near being built -- hopefully it never will be -- but the remote prospect that it might be constructed someday is causing problems. Agenda item 3.3c dealt with purchases of right of way that would be paid for from 2008 Streets and Bridges General Obligation Bond funds. Some of these purchases would be on the east side of the river in the Highland neighborhood, the location…

Must read for Salem citizens: SCV Police Facility Position Paper

Today Salem Community Vision released it's long-awaited position paper, "Salem's New Police Facility: The Best Way to Achieve It." That link takes you to the Scribd document, which is an easy way to read a PDF file without Acrobat Reader. Here's the PDF version. The formatting is a bit cleaner on the PDF file, but the Scribd version is completely readable. Download Police Facility Position Paper Final PDF I said "long-awaited" not because other people have been waiting for the position paper (nobody outside Salem Community Vision knew we were working on it), but because I volunteered to write it…

Salem City Council is trying to sneak through a sleazy decision

Oh, man. Here we go again. City officials here in Salem, Oregon are trying to do what happens so often in this town: screw over citizens with very little public notice in a fashion that goes against the will of the people. At next Monday's City Council meeting, February 8, the agenda has an Action Item that is difficult to decipher -- which is the goal when you're trying to do something sneaky. (c)  Marine Drive NW, Urban Growth Boundary, and Streets and Bridges Bond Funds – Wards 1, 8 – Councilors Bennett, Lewis – Highland, West Salem (PW)Recommended Action:…

“You’re a dick” often means “You’re telling the truth”

I don't hear "You're a dick!" very often. Maybe never. But my citizen activism leads to me being called other derogatory names, like bombthrower.  I've made that into a term of endearment. Here's what I said in a 2014 post: I've been called a bomb-thrower by folks at City Hall. I guess this is supposed to be an insult. I consider it a compliment. I'm proud to speak out loud and powerfully when I see stuff going on in Salem that shouldn't be. My goal is to throw truth-bombs that open up minds and demolish barriers to seeing what is happening behind…

Rubio and Clinton are the odds-on favorites in presidential race

OK, let's get this straight right off the bat: I'm pretty much clueless about betting. So if I make some dumb-ass mistake about odds and what-not in this post, that's because I'm a betting dumb-ass.  (I'd say there's at least a 50-50 chance of that happening.) That said, I'm a believer in prediction markets. Which basically involves a bunch of people betting that something will, or won't, happen.  A Washington Post story, "Why Marco Rubio now has the best chance of winning the GOP nomination," caught my eye today.  Marco Rubio placed third in the Iowa caucuses Monday, but observers liked…

Is the presidential race over yet? It’s gone on too long already.

Way back when, I thought I'd be more excited tonight, what with the Iowa caucuses finally kicking off voting that will culminate in November 2016 with a new president of the United States. Problem is, it feels to me like the campaigning has already gone on forever, plus or minus a few eons.  I just looked at the online New York Times front page. With most of the Iowa voting counted, Ted Cruz appears headed to a narrow victory, as does Hillary Clinton. Whoopee. That's my lack of enthusiasm talking. And I'm a political junkie.  There's something wrong about an…