Archive for ‘Snohomish County Political Commentary’

July 27, 2008

R E S P E C T Gimme a little respect, just a little bit

by Steve Dana

The Snohomish City Council just adopted guidelines to “rein in” council members who make inappropriate comments during council meetings.  Those would be comments that are not consistent with the majority point of view. 

 

The guidelines discourage council members from making personal or disruptive comments.  The guidelines were developed and adopted to “force” councilmember Swede Johnson to act more civilly toward his council colleagues. 

 

It is probably true that Johnson lost patience with his council mates and blew his cool on a couple occasions.  But when you are dealing with inexperienced novices; that is understandable.  I think Swede could have crafted more civil language that conveyed the same point, but he got caught up in the moment.  Sometimes acting outrageously is the only outlet when dealing with folks who are closed to outside ideas.

 

It seems that since council member Johnson is the only member of the body with the experience and knowledge to recognize bad government when he sees it and then point it out in a public meeting, he is being “put in his place” by Hamlin and his posse.

 

Swede Johnson has more experience in government than Hamlin and the majority of the council combined.  His knowledge about how government works and the substance of our local government makes him uniquely qualified to offer insights his council colleagues have not even imagined.  Most of the majority have made up their minds that they don’t really care what Johnson has to contribute so they take positions opposite his without really considering the content of his comments.  The arrogance of the majority emboldens them to push forward with their agenda, hoping that the public will never know about their errors in judgment. 

 

It really annoys them when Johnson asks questions that are embarrassing to council members or staff when they cannot be answered.  It doesn’t seem to bother most of them that the staff managers are not prepared to answer more than most basic questions.  Council members are elected to ask the tough questions.  It is their job to protect the interests of the citizens by making certain the issues are thoroughly discussed and possible outcomes have been assessed. 

 

I would hope that every council member comes to every meeting prepared to hold the feet of staff to the fire.  Responsible council members do their home work and look deeper than the cover sheet on agenda bills.  They take the time to know the material and are prepared to take the staff to task if the material is not complete enough to make a good decision.  It is clear that some council members take their responsibility more seriously than others.

 

I don’t live in the historic district so the people I listen to seem to have a different spin on this effort by the council.  Comments I hear suggest the average citizen views the Snohomish City council and city management to be a bad joke.  And I believe the council is oblivious to it.  Unfortunately, that is typical of people convinced that they are the only smart ones in the room.  They are so full of themselves they are not listening to anyone else’s input.

 

I am not suggesting that Swede Johnson is the only one with good questions, but he has quite a few.  His many years of experience would suggest he is not a crackpot.  His ideas might have some merit.

 

On the other hand, the lack of experience and knowledge of Hamlin, Guzak, Schilaty, Clemans and Randall suggest they could use all the help they can get. But they don’t like the tone of his input.

 

Bad decisions by city councils are often not detected until significant time passes.  Some are evident right away.  Sometimes, bad decisions are as simple as not holding staff accountable for their mistakes.  The current crop of rookies is confident that the city manager and his staff will prevent them from making too many bad mistakes.  They think staff has their back.  It is my opinion with the council we have and the staff we have the blind are leading the blind.

 

Over the years we have had some pretty decent department heads; finance managers, planners and engineers.  That is not my view today.  I cannot remember a time when I felt the city was in such jeopardy because of a lack of substance on the council and with city staff.

 

In difficult times, we hope we have capable leaders and managers to protect the interests of the city.  At this time, I have no confidence that our city will have the ability to avoid the pitfalls and capitalize on the opportunities that might come around.  Council members aren’t digging into the issues deep enough to be prepared for the tough choices that have to be made or sharp enough to recognize the difference between the two.  If they are counting on staff to cover their back side, they are in deep trouble.

 

Swede Johnson has been a respectable member of the school board and the county council.  It is only when he drops back to a city council position that his credibility is called to question.  How can that be?  I have known Swede Johnson for forty years and he is not the one whose credibility should be questioned.

 

Council members are not comfortable with Johnson’s input.  The truth is often uncomfortable.  Dealing with it is often painful.  But, council should listen because there is substance in his comments.  If nothing else, his questions and comments should serve as a “heads up” to lead them to questions of their own.  Sadly, arrogance and ego won’t let them.

 

Respect is something you earn with your deeds.  Swede Johnson has paid his dues and done the work to earn the respect of his peers and his constituents.  All I see on the Snohomish City Council is a bunch of whiners who think they can demand respect with a council motion.  I’m sure Swede Johnson is quaking in his boots in fear of these intellectual giants.

 

I am proud of Swede Johnson for having the courage to stand up for the city when it would be very easy for him to sit back and do nothing.  I can assure you that based upon the actions of most council members doing nothing is the only thing they do well.

 

Let’s hope that a code of conduct helps them with those tough choices and good luck with that respect thing!

July 26, 2008

Where is Hal Moe when you need him?

by Steve Dana

Another school year has been completed and we turned another batch of young people out to the world.  The class of 2008 received their diplomas, but did they get the education they need to make it in the world.

 

There has been a lot said lately about the WASL testing program.  I have never seen a “WASL” test, so I cannot comment about that specifically, but I do see young high school students in my business and I am no longer shocked, but seriously disappointed with the lack of education I see in them.

 

My comments are not meant to suggest that our local school district is failing all the kids, most of them are smart enough to succeed in spite of the system.  When I interview current high school students and recent graduates for jobs, I review their applications and I talk to them.  I don’t know much about them except what I see on paper and in conversation.  If the educational level I see in these kids is representative of the other kids in this age group, they and we are all in trouble.

 

The point of my concern is the fact that we don’t have achievement standards for kids all along the way from grade 1 to grade 12.  If a kid is not making progress along that continuum, the kid is not advanced to the next level.  In the old days, we were concerned about being promoted to the next grade.  I don’t know about kids today.

 

Whether you like WASL or not, our local school district should have promotion standards that establish respectable benchmarks that would prepare kids for life regardless of their career path.  The responsibility of the School Board is to educate kids for life.  It seems to me that we are more interested in providing the opportunity for education rather than achieving it.

 

Electives are great for a lot of kids, but basics are good for all kids.  Core classes that cover science, English, math and social studies that give the average child the tools to figure out the world are the minimum.

 

For me, I see kids that cannot write well enough to describe why I should give them a job.  In interviews I listen to kids that cannot tell me about what is happening in the world, how to solve a math problem or even rudimentary explanation for basic science questions.  When I ask about level of education, they often reply with “I wasn’t required to learn that.”

 

My question to our school district leaders is this, “What standards do we set independent of WASL that insure that kids meet a local expectation of achievement?”  If we set the bar high enough on a local level, who cares about the rest of the state?  The debate about WASL takes too much energy from the district to be healthy.  If we need to hold kids back in the fourth grade to get them on track, they will be better served than if we say that they would be too traumatized by being held back and just send them along knowing that they are not making necessary progress.

 

Our country does not demand educational excellence from our kids.  Our state does not demand educational excellence from our kids.  Currently our School District does not demand educational excellence from our kids.  That disturbs me.

 

But, we can.  If our local district takes the initiative to step up our standards we can meet the needs of our children.  It will take effort, but what worthwhile goal doesn’t take extra effort?

 

I hope we have certain expectations for kids already.  That could work as a framework for the future.  If we think a kid needs to have exposure to some part of English curriculum every year, then make that a requirement through grade 12.  Include a healthy dose of composition to help a kid communicate better.  If I had to choose between literature and composition, I would favor composition.  Half the English requirement would be in development of communication skills.

 

Social Studies curriculum includes history, geography, government and current affairs.  Every year a child should be required to take full time classes in one of these areas.

 

Math knowledge today is shockingly absent, even for the bright kids.  Calculators and computers today take all the thinking out of solving a math problem.  But, solving problems using math as a tool still requires that a kid be able to think.  If we determine that a kid needs to be able to implement math skills to solve real world situations, we get to incorporate both reasoning and knowledge of when and how to use particular buttons on the calculator to solve the problem we might be on the track.  We need to teach kids at a young age how to do basic math and build on it every year to take into account that we don’t always have a machine to do the work for us.

 

Last but not least, Science.  The quest for knowledge about why things are the way they are should be a lifelong journey.  Our school system doesn’t motivate kids to ask “why” at an early age so some of them never do.  They just accept the world as it is.

 

Science should be a part of every child’s education every year.  If we can impress upon them the need to know why something is the way it is, they can have the knowledge to know what can be changed.

 

In summary, curriculum for every child, every year should include an English component, a Social Studies component, a Math component and a Science component.  Then in order to round them out a little more, we should require some exposure to foreign language and art in some form.  The kids should be required to meet benchmarks of achievement at places along the way to make sure they are making required progress and be held back if they are not.

 

The system needs to acknowledge that some kids are already behind and refocus efforts on them to help them get on track so they don’t end up casualties of neglect.  We need to make it clear to parents that we are not hoping for excellence, we are demanding it and they have to play a part in their own kids success.

July 26, 2008

Flowers should not be political!

by Steve Dana

I was cruising down First Street in Snohomish recently and was impressed with the flower baskets hanging on the street light poles in the historic district.  They always look nice this time of year.  I turned north on Avenue D and was disappointed to see that the flower baskets stopped.

 

Avenue D in our part of town has zero flower baskets.  That seems a little odd to me.  Considering the fact that the historic district businesses produce a fraction of the tax revenues of the city yet that district receives nearly all the city’s discretionary expenditures for beautification seems a little unfair to me.

 

If the city decides it needs flower baskets to beautify business districts, it needs to make sure the benefits are distributed more even handedly.

 

I think in a part of town where the businesses are close to together, the businesses themselves would take the initiative to beautify the area to attract business.  The Collector’s Choice, Mardini’s and the Cabbage Patch all invest in landscape features that beautify their area.  I don’t think the city pays for any of those improvements.

 

My point is that the clear favoritism the city council and staff shows for a part of town that takes so much already and contributes so little to the whole is not healthy for the city.  It makes us business owners on Avenue D wonder what we have to do to get some respect.

July 23, 2008

Balancing High Energy Cost with What?

by Steve Dana

I was listening to Dave Ross on KIRO recently and he was talking about the fact that left wingers oppose drilling for oil in American coastal regions for a variety of reasons, but one they cling to is the assertion that there is not a meaningful quantity of oil to be found if drilling is allowed.

 

In spite of the fact that Dave Ross and I are often on opposite sides of the political debate, I was pleased that he aggressively supported measures to exploit American resources first to nullify the argument that we face high energy costs because we are not allowed to search for and consume fossil resources in our own country.  Both sides of the energy debate maintain that we are held hostage by the oil producing countries.  It makes sense that we know how large our oil reserves are whether we drill for them or not.  Then if we decide to pump our own reserves or consume someone else’s we will at least know if we have a fall-back position.  Whether there is a price difference remains to be seen.

 

Common sense dictates that nobody intentionally develops products that are not cost competitive; who would buy them?  If the price of oil is $60 or $80 per barrel it is still too cheap to make us look elsewhere very seriously.  If the cost of alternative energy sources were translated into cost per barrel of oil, the most familiar ones would probably be priced at around $160 to $170 per barrel.  That means that even paying $140 per barrel, energy is still cheaper with oil than domestic alternatives.

 

If you are a proponent of alternative energy, the next step in the logic says that if you can’t reduce the cost of alternative energy to be more competitive, you figure out how to increase the cost of the existing product.  That way the comparison between “foreign” oil and trendy alternatives shows a lesser differential.

 

If you are a proponent of alternative energy and you don’t control the resources from an ownership standpoint, you work to limit access to them from a regulatory standpoint.  If you limit the market supply, you increase the value of the product in the “pipeline”.  No pun intended.

 

I think it would be clear to anyone that if you were a manufacturing company, you would want to be selling product at a price where you could make a killing and I think the international and domestic oil companies are doing just that.  Who could blame a company for successfully doing what it is in business to do?  Does it really matter to you whether the company screwing you is American or foreign?  Do you feel somehow better knowing that it is OPEC that is transferring the resources from our country to theirs?  Or would you feel better if you knew the price would be the same, but the money was going to American companies. 

 

I believe that the reality is that domestic oil will not affect the price at the pump, but it will perhaps change who gets to collect the profits.  Isn’t it easier hating a foreign country than an oil company you think of as American?

 

There seems to be a feeling that because we have developed a dependence on any and every oil supply available that the product should be affordable.  Free market systems do not have any obligation to offer product anyone can afford.  Check with Canadian or European consumers about the price of gas at the pump over the past fifty years.  Ask them how affordable fuel is in their countries.

 

Our government manipulates market forces in many ways that do not benefit consumers.  In most cases, the manipulation comes in the form of preferred treatment for some entity.  Think about how your food bill went up when the government shifted the preferred treatment to companies who would “relieve our dependency on foreign oil supplies.” 

 

If you combine the cost of your fuel and food and compare this year to last, you can see the serious effect of market manipulation.  Biofuels will not represent even a hiccup on the fuel supply but the shift from feeding to fuel production will affect nearly everything you eat.  Imagine what a loaf of bread would cost today if the government had not created an artificial market for grains.

 

Remember what I said about the price of alternative forms of energy and how you have to raise the price of oil to make the alternative look attractive.  Biofuels don’t even look good if you just consider their part in the fuel supply.  If you factor in the additional negatives on the food supply we are facing a disaster.  Looking at all the impacts in total, manipulating the cost of the food supply to ease the energy problem will prove to be a significant error in judgment by our government.

 

World economies force us to play in arenas outside our comfort zone.  Big business learned many years ago that consumers have a hunger for low priced goods.  Consumers say they want “good quality” but are rarely willing to pay for it.  What they really want is “cheap priced products that are of minimally acceptable quality.”  Americans are so greedy for stuff that they sabotage their own country for lower priced goods.  That will prove to be a strategic error in judgment at some point. 

 

WTO and NAFTA have changed the way business works.  There aren’t American companies like they used to be.  Ownership is international and there is no patriotic mandate in their corporate goals.  Shareholders are looking for profit; consumers are looking for low prices.  Formerly American companies learned how to adapt by dumping American workers in favor of cheap Asian workers.  The name on the product remained the same, but the strength of our economy shrank because our jobs and money left the country.  If you believe that the company is American, think again.  Time and again, American factories closed and American jobs were traded for cheaper consumer goods.  Is that healthy?

 

Our government has been the back pocket of business since our country was formed.  Nobody should be shocked to learn that today.  What we can learn is how to put the interests of our country ahead of the interests of business.  If we look at international trade and test whether it is in the best interest of our country to have cheap imports that fuel the economy of foreign countries or do we exchange the cheap imports for agreements that allow American companies to export goods to foreign countries.  I guess we have to look at the value of the product exported to know whether the deals we make with the devil justify the price we pay.

 

For me, I am a proponent of America’s ability to be self sufficient and not dependent on foreign anything.  I am a proponent of American workers and I know that we can’t have it both ways.  In our state, we are one of the most dependent upon international trade so taking this position may not be particularly popular with some.  Having access to international markets is important to our state, but it may not be best for our country.

 

I would prefer that our products be desired by foreign countries and the products stand on the competitiveness of our efficiencies.  If we sacrifice our national interests to advance local interests, we take the risks of having neither.

 

If you know someone who lost a job because the company he worked for moved that job to a foreign country you know the impacts that creates.  Are the jobs that are going away family wage earning jobs?  Then think about the companies that benefit from liberal trade policies that allow us to export products instead of jobs.  Are those saved jobs family wage earning jobs? 

 

Our country is becoming increasingly more service oriented and less product oriented.  We are finding that the public sector is growing as the private sector is withering.  Public sector jobs produce nothing to fuel the economy.  Private sector jobs create employment, products and services that pay for everything.

 

Where does all of this leave us?  We need to explore our country for resources that allow us to choose whether we buy foreign goods rather than have no choice.  We need to exploit technologies that enable us to reduce our dependence on fossil fuels.  Whether it is a global warming issue or not; reducing pollution is a good idea.  We need to reduce the regulatory permitting process to facilitate construction of state of the art refineries and technologies that produce cleaner energy like nuclear power.  There are responsible processes that acknowledge that the plants need to be built in ways that protect the interests of the majority of the public.

 

The interests of the majority are not necessarily the interests of either big business or environmental extremists.  Common sense has to play a part in the discussion.

 

And that brings us back to Dave Ross who brings common sense to the masses one listener at a time.

 

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