History, politics, people of Oly WA

Author: Emmett O'Connell (Page 71 of 176)

5 reasons why MLS PDX is a much better idea than MLB PDX

I was an enemy of Portland getting a major league baseball team from way back (even before this). But, them getting a MLS team is a much better idea. I hope they get one, at least so we can kick their asses around another whole level of soccer.

1. Know your town. For awhile there, Portland was a Single A affiliate to the Rockies. The Portland Rockies. Single A. Didn’t draw well as memory serves.

Even though the Beavers have been back in recent years, Portland has a much better track record of soccer town than a baseball town.

2. Know your league. For as much as I’d like to play up the significance of MLS, it is still very much an emerging league. So, while the NFL and MLB are safely ensconced in the economics of regional monopolies, MLS teams are much better served by building up regional rivalries.

Very few Portland soccer fans would travel up to Seattle to deliberately root for the Sounders, so the only way for the league to capitalize on soccer fans in Oregon is to put a team there.

3. Know your t.v. contract. MLB=regional cable, such as Fox Sports Northwest. MLS=local broadcast affiliate, like King 5/Kong 16. No cross-over into the Portland t.v. market.

4. Know your town #2. Almost unspeakable truth that Portland is different than saaaaaaay Cincinnati, right? I’m just saying that culturally, Portland is more a soccer town than a baseball town. See chapter 10 in How Soccer Explains the World.

5. Know your ass kicking. Come on Portland, come and get it. You know you miss us. You know you want to lose to us again in league.

Come on…

The imaginary battle for Washington’s state capitol

Jerry Reilly deploys hypothetical politics to defend the state legislature stepping into a local planning process (or Olympia telling Olympia what to do):

Opponents of this legislation should consider two questions:

If the state were just now deciding where to locate our capital city, would it be reasonable to ask the City Council of Olympia to agree to forgo intense development on the isthmus in order to protect the views from and to the Capitol Campus?

Would city leaders be likely to accept this limitation as a fair trade for the enormous benefit of being the capital city?

Here’s my consideration:

The last time there was a serious attempt to move the state capitol from Olympia was just about 100 years ago. Tacoma tried to step in and snatch the seat of government. There was a less serious attempt in the 1950s that involved quietly moving state agencies up to Seattle. We beat back that challenge, along with others.

So, I don’t really consider the threat to move the state capitol serious, even hypothetically.

And, for the “enormous benefit” we receive as being the capitol city, I wonder how many city’s our size would appreciate their largest industry not paying property taxes?

Also, since Lacey and Tumwater are now having nice new state buildings built in them, its high time the state legislature dip into their local planning processes as well.

Hey Heather (from Washington CAN): bite me!

Because you can’t tell the difference between a town and the state legislature:

Hey Olympia, hands off the $

Dear Rhenda,

President Obama signed the federal stimulus plan to help states and their residents rebound from the current recession. Funding for health care is a significant part of the package. Washington State’s share is expected to be $2.06 billion over the next two years.

However, there is danger that lawmakers in Olympia will take the money with one hand, but then turn around and still make deep cuts to the health care safety-net with the other. That’s just wrong.

Email your legislators to demand that they use this new federal health care funding to stop cuts to the health care safety-net.

We agree with President Obama when he said, “These funds are intended to go directly toward helping struggling Americans keep their health coverage.” Now more than ever, we can not afford to weaken our health care safety-net programs such as the Basic Health Plan.

This past Sunday, the Tacoma News Tribune ran a guest editorial outlining the need to ensure federal dollars from the economic stimulus go to strengthen our state health care programs. Take a minute to read it now, www.thenewstribune.com/opinion/othervoices/story/642058.html then email your lawmakers.

Wanna have an even bigger impact? Please join us next Wednesday, March 11 in Olympia to speak directly to your legislators about the need to strengthen our health care programs. This is your last opportunity to register, so sign-up today!

Thank you for all of your support!

~the Washington CAN team

Hat tip to dear ol’Rhenda Strub, because she cc’d me on her response:

Olympia has no control over the money. Olympia is a city struggling to make ends meet just like every other city in the state. If you have a gripe with the legislature, please say so and stop batting our name around to make your point. Most of the legislators are from up there where you are. Why not say “Hey Seattle, hands off the $”

Rhenda Iris Strub
Olympia City Councilmember

I honestly couldn’t argue with Heather’s actual point, but to make that point on the back of a lazy use of language, she can bite me.

And, yes: an elected official has bought into my crazy pet peeve.

Ken Camp’s Tumwater coverage

Wondering about the continuing musical chairs that is still occurring since Bob Macleod resigned from the county commission in December?

Ken has the scoop on all the folks who want to fill Karen Valenzuela’s seat on the Tumwater City Council. Karen filled Bob’s seat on the commission (Ken did a pretty good job covering that process too).

Here’s a particularly good graph:

I have to say that for someone who has served on the planning commission, and presumable made recommendations to the city council, I’m surprised that Ed didn’t take the time to ensure he spelled Commissioner Valenzuela’s name correctly. It also wouldn’t have hurt him to take care of some of the other misspellings and wrong verb tenses in the application too.

Metonymy angle of the transportation stimulus battle between Seattle and the Leg

Metonmy:

Olympia to Seattle: Drop Dead

More metonmy:

This week’s dustup between Seattle and Olympia over how to spend $341 million in federal stimulus money…

The problem with this specific metonymic device is that is blurs out the reality of the situation. It makes the state legislature, an organization of locally elected (and proportionate to population) representatives into “Olympia,” an other.

Its a very short line of logic from othering state government to a Gov. Bobby Jindal-type speech where government can never solve any problems and wrecks everything it touches.

It would be much different to say: “Our State Legislature to Seattle: Drop Dead” or “this week’s dustup between Seattle and the state legislature…”

An aside: I understand metonymy, probably more than most people should. See my somewhat depressingly long archive on this particular topic, please. I understand the purpose of using a specific term for a broad topic, like “press” for the “news media,” especially in a time when there are fewer and fewer “presses” in the “news media.”

But, the use of Olympia for “state government” or “state legislature” is a hugely inaccurate and damaging metonymy, because it misstates the nature of our government. Because we elect our representatives from proportional districts, most of the people who serve in the state legislature come from the urban Puget Sound (not unlike the makeup of the Senate Transportation Committee), so its also the urban Puget Sound telling Seattle to “drop dead.”

Back to the main point: I don’t have a problem with language short cuts. I have a problem with language short cuts that are dangerous.

And, especially when my town is made the label for the scapegoat. At least Josh Feit stop saying “Oly.”

Is the Williams Group relaunching The Sitting Duck?

This got me thinking.

If you go to where the old Sitting Duck website used to be (thesittingduck.net), it takes you to the Williams Group’s (a local full service PR/publishing/Marketing firm) website. This implies that while Sitting Duck in charge Terry Knight said he was looking for a buyer late last year, he actually did find one.

The domain registration tells a different story. While the name servers are pointing to Williams Group, the registration remains with the old KnightVision organization.

I wonder what the Williams Group is going to do with what they bought, if they did indeed buy it.

Ken not running

Ken Camp isn’t running for Tumwater City Council. I’m going to say he will eventually, but who wants to ruin the first summer of Sounder FC by doorbelling?

Plus, he has another mini-Camp on the way, which is a huge consideration.

In the mean time, Ken should prep himself, which means getting to know the city.

The Tumwater City Council posts their agendas online. I also put together a nice little RSS feed you can subscribe to.

There are a handful of open board and commission spots in the city government, serving on one of those would be a great experience. Of course, you might want to hold out for a spot on the planning commission, the top drawer of local appointed boards.

Read municipal research stuff. Its worth knowing all you can know about local government in Washington State.

Develop a Tumwater-centric hyper local blog. I just thought of this one this morning. All the times I’ve gone to the state library to look at old newspapers, I never found any archives for Tumwater papers. That makes me think that Tumater has never had its own newspaper. It might be a cool thing to be known as the guy who helped Tumwater develop its own news source.

Or not, people migth think you’re some kind of crank blogger.

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