History, politics, people of Oly WA

Author: Emmett O'Connell (Page 103 of 176)

I’m not qualified for the Olympia City Council

A post in which the blogger attempts to clean himself of the ickiness of judging eight people who applied for an open city council seat in Olympia.

I spent the last week or so writing eight posts about people that are applying for open council seat, and I’ve come to a conclusion that about half of them shouldn’t be on the council. I also concluded that I’m not worthy to judge and I only hope that the small amount of wisdom I have helped people think about who might be appointed to serve on the Olympia City Council.

And, that if I had applied, I wouldn’t have been qualified to serve. I am pretty sure I wouldn’t have even gotten through filling out the application packet. While I have some strong feelings about how Olympia can write a better budget, even thinking about the city’s compressive plan would have thrown me off.

Maybe I would have written something about trying to open that process up, make it more transparent and obvious, but that would have been a lot like my budget answer too.

Anyway, reading and writing about those applicants made me think long and hard about my own civic life.

One of the standards I used to judge was whether the applicant had served on a city advisory board, which I’ve never done. Those closet I came as an ad-hoc committee on wi-fi downtown. I think we served the council well, but that hardly gave me a deep understanding of any aspect of city management.

So, maybe next time the city recruits for their many advisory boards, I’ll be applying. Not because one day I want to apply or run for city council, but because if I’m so interesting in my city, I should try to be a bigger help.

New Header for a new year

I’ve been toying with this one for a few days, but yes you’ll notice there is a new header at Olympia Time today.

And yes, that is the capitol building in the background, someone added it as a 3d building on Google Earth. And, yes, I added a bridge and took out the 5th Avenue Dam, so that body of water behind the bridge is an estuary.

Just in case you were wondering.

Seattle no longer most literate. I blame Jeff Shaw

Seattle fell to second place behind that city that was in about the middle of Fargo. You know, I think it was the one with the bar where the creepy guy tried to hit on Francis what’s her name.

Blame can be spread widely, but I blame this fall from grace, and the rocket accent of that yet unnamed upper Midwest city on Jeff Shaw, who moved from the “Seattle area” (Bellingham) to there earlier this year.

His reading power is so… uhmm… powerful that the Twin of this city moved from 11th to third, when I have good information that Jeff’s never stepped out of his car in St. Paul (there I’ve said it). Crap, we’re surrounded!

Not that Jeff would let something like this go to his head:

Verily, I think I speak for all us learned and sagacious denizens of these dual metropolises when I say: Suck it, Seattle. I hereby challenge Seattle Weekly‘s talented and debonair web editor, Chris Kornelis, to a read-off. Alternative weeklies at 10 paces.

Jeff is either smart in challenging his corporate sister paper, or smart to not challenge the Stranger’s Amy Kate Horn, who everyone knows is a much better reader than Chris Kornelis.

On “The hippest town in the West”

I’ve been burning annual leave for the last week, so in addition to Christmas, I’ve been thinking longer about things that I usually spare just a bit of time for.

One if the phrase “hippest town in the West,” which has cursed Olympia since it was written by Benjamin Nugent almost eight years ago.

A few facts:

1. Ben wasn’t compiling a list of hip western towns, on which list Olympia came first. This wasn’t like the most livable cities list or the most reading cities. This was almost a throw-away article about Sleater Kinney and the indi-rock scene in Olympia. This isn’t a scene that I know much about, by the way.

2. Also, Olympia took this label seriously. So much so that God sent an earthquake seven months later, destroying many a hip thing in Olympia. That’s not actually true, though God does disprove of Olympia taking itself too seriously.

But, that’s the point, isn’t it? We take this label too damn seriously today. And, as soon as you start taking a label of hip seriously, does it now make you unhip?

Some various links of people taking the label seriously:
I use it here.
Bad Nazis can’t come to the hippest town in the West, can they?

The most extreme example I can think of this is The Sitting Duck, the local version of an alternative newspaper, which from my memory came around about the time Ben made his proclamation. They feature a tag line at the top of each paper, which today is “featuring the bubbliest writers in the West.” I’m not sure if they’re sinning by taking the hippest label to seriously or not seriously enough, therefore taking it seriously.

Basically, what I’m saying is that by the summer of 2010 I’d like to see Olympia forget about being the hippest town in the West. Ten years is enough and over a year and a half is enough time for us to prepare to stop using the phrase.

Also, by now, eight years after the fact, I’m sure some other town has usurped us in hipness.

Archie Binns was framed!

And given to me for Christmas. My favorite Christmas gift:


Story behind the gift. I’m a big Archie Binns fan. One of my oldest (in actual age and in terms of how long I’ve owned it) Binns books is The Timber Beast. Because we’ve rearranged our house a few times in the past two years, my book collection has been moved, boxed and rearranged. The dust cover to Beast was one of the saddest casualties.

Last September I took the dust cover (which had begun to rip along the spine) off the book and set it aside. The tattered cover was because I’m an oaf, and because I forget some stuff, I didn’t realize that my wife picked it up and created a beautiful Christmas present for me. Better than the Wii.

A party of the caucus, for the caucus and because of the caucus (crap)

Noemie has a very comprehensive post up at Washblog about the upcoming precinct caucuses. She rehashes for a bit the fight last year to try for a primary instead of a caucus, and puts forward some of the arguments for the caucus.

One I find troubling:

Washington State Democratic Party Chair Dwight Pelz has said that the caucus system encourages grassroots democracy and dialogue while the primary favors candidates who spend the most money on TV ads and teaches participants that politics is a solitary process. I agree.

Prior to this, Noemie (full disclosure: I like and admire Noemie) argues that we have to look at the caucuses in the context of our fully screwed up election system. Granted, caucuses are a lot better than much of what goes on.

But, I’d argue that caucuses (while usually a good thing) are being used cynically by the Washington State Democratic Party to:

a) drive down participation, and
b) recruit volunteers for the nine months before the election.

Yes, caucuses are great because they require and encourage active participation. But, the party is using that participation for its own use. And, after the election, the scores of jazzed, encouraged people will be dropped like a wet rag by the party because the job will be done at that point.

If the party was actually all about the participatory democracy, it would hold caucuses for every election. We hold a state primary for every other less sexy election in this state because the party would much rather have the state government pay for its winnowing down election than to have to pay for a caucus no one will show up to.

Here are some old posts from Washblog of mine arguing about caucuses and such:
Republicans were trying to make a point with primary vote
More Caucuses v. Primary
Caucus v. Primary debate keeps attention off the real problem: lack of participation

Here’s my favorite line:

But, the problem with caucuses is that very few people actually do turn out for them. On the other hand, the problem with primaries is that still very few people turn out for them. The Olympian editorial points out that while only two percent turn out for caucuses in a given year (certainly not in 2004), but 42 percent turn out for a primary. Two percent may be extremely small, but 42 percent is all that great either.

Wouldn’t it be great if instead of having to choose between really horrible turn-out and depressing turn-out, we could find a way to get more people participating?

Conversate on the (KUOW’s) Conversation

I was thinking about my post from yesterday, and I was thinking about what a KUOW’s Conversation blog would look like.

It would be not at all like this, but this is as close as I could get for free in a couple of days.

The Conversation already kind of blogs because they send out an email with the day’s topic and a handful of links on the topic. This takes that email and adds a comment thread.

And, of course its actually a wiki, so if I miss a day to add the email of the day, someone else can come along and add it. I’ll try to keep up though.

You can also suggest and discuss show ideas, which is kind of pointless right now because no one actually reads this blog/wiki.

KUOW’s Conversation, get thee a conversation

So, Radio Open Source is back. But, all I’m saying is that it’s not really back. Its a podcast with a blog, sort of like Jesse Thorn is Chris Lydon.

But, I’ve been thinking: what’s to stop other hour long recent topic public radio shows from posting their topics and possible guests on a blog five or so hours before the show is supposed to begin?

Why can’t say, KUOW’s the Conversation have a blog? So, instead of asking us to email in or call to “join the conversation,” we could post up and have a conversation on our own, justl like ROS 1.0?

Bergeson watch is over

A media something-or-other finally put finger to internet and saw that OSPI chief Terry B. is running again, so my vigil is over. Olympian Education Blog:

According to the Public Disclosure Commission, Bergeson’s committee filed its registration paperwork a few weeks ago, as did Richard Semler, who (according to our sister paper The Tri-City Herald) is the soon-to-be retiring superintendent of the Richland School District. Donald Hansler of Spanaway filed a campaign committee registration form in 2006, but nothing else since then.

Leave it to a blogger though, in this waining days of my watch, to take a close look at a couple of roots of the race (if this race were a tree…). Ryan at I Thought a Think:

The business community loves Terry Bergeson, because the business community gains personally from the higher standards of education that the WASL represents. The WASL is a very bottom line assessment, something that business leaders understand, and I don’t know that there’s anything that teachers or parents could say that would turn their heads to our way of thinking.

Terry’s biggest donations might come from the private sector, but her largest numbers of donors are those who work under her.

There are an awful lot of people around the state who have a personal stake in seeing Bergeson returned to office. They have history, cache, an in; however you want to put it. If a new wind blows their boat goes off course, and that’s when personal self interest kicks in and gets them to reach for their wallet.

Everything I’ve heard and seen speaks to the idea that Richard Semler is a good man. I’ve heard him talk about the how the testing system in Washington has gotten far away from any educational purpose, and he’s right. Living here in Eastern Washington, where we voted Tom Foley out of office when he was Speaker of the House, I should probably be more optimistic.

As things stand, though, Bergeson is racing with a Porsche while Semler hops behind on a pogo stick. And that’s why she’s going to be, once again, the Superintendent of Public Instruction.

My thoughts on this entire thing is that we should focus less on making employees and focus more on making citizens. But, I’m a liberal arts major, so you’d expect that.

Command and Control sports entertainment

Another reason why the NBA sucks, but not the reason you were thinking:

Last week, a fan was moved to a new seat and issued a written warning for heckling Head Coach Isiah Thomas; the card read “You are being issued a warning that the comments, gestures and/or behaviors that you have directed at players, coaches, game officials and/or other spectators constitute excessive verbal abuse.” On Monday, a fan had a “Fire Isiah sign” confiscated, pursuant to a policy that prohibits signs that block the views of other patrons.

But at some point won’t teams figure out this is not worth it? In exchange for removing one sign that probably was not blocking anyone’s view (see above), the team gets more bad publicity and it sent the fans into the streets, literally: A “Fire Isiah” rally was held on the 7th Avenue side of the Garden today, complete with an 8-foot-tall pink slip. Maybe the Knicks are so desensitized to bad publicity at this point that it does not matter.

Not a sport likely to embrace “hey let’s let the fans fire the manager every four years” model.

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