September 23, 2008

What’s It Gonna Be, D or R?

by Steve Dana

As we enter into the final phase of this election season, the voters can hardly wait until the campaigning is done.  Most citizens are not knowledgeable enough about a state budget to know whether Dino or Christine knows best, all we know is the ads never stop.  This year has been extra long since the presidential campaigns started last year.  Who knows who is telling the truth in the campaigns?  I don’t think most of us care anymore.

 

Political campaigns are all about getting your candidate elected.  We have become desensitized to the words used in the ads because we know they don’t really mean anything.  Political campaigns are not about facts and ideas.  We all know politicians that sit in our living rooms and tell us one thing and then turn around in their elected job and do just the opposite.  The only ideas they seem to have are about how to twist the facts. 

 

When Joe Biden was running against Barack Obama, he said some pretty negative things about Obama.  When Hillary Clinton was running against Barack Obama, she said some pretty negative things about Obama.  If you were a Democrat trying to figure out who to support for President, you heard some scathing criticisms of Obama from generally credible leaders.  We look to our credible leaders for guidance. 

 

Then when it was clear that Obama was the Party nominee, all those criticisms were retracted.  Were they mistaken before when they were comparing themselves to Obama?  “You should vote for me because I am for this and Barack Obama is not.”  “I have experience with this and Barack Obama does not.”  “I am qualified to lead this country and Barack Obama is not.”  Which is it, “I was mistaken before when I characterized him as being unfit for the job.” or am I mistaken now for flip-flopping and telling you “he is the absolutely best qualified person for the job.”? 

 

Politics allows two or more people to perpetrate vicious acts upon one another one day and invite the same people over to the house the next day for a barbecue without regard for the rhetoric.  How are citizens supposed to understand the messages contained in that behavior?  Either a guy is qualified or he is not…. Except in politics?

 

We have elected presidents with varied levels of experience.  All of them managed to muddle through. Certainly some did it better than others.  It is clear that no person can be absolutely prepared for the job of President of the United States prior to being elected to the job.  There is no training program.  We narrow the field of “big egos” by looking at previous voting records  accomplishments in office, personal statements and who supports them currently. 

 

What I look for in candidates is experience, character and ideas.

 

Even though he supports conservative issues, John McCain has a record of pitching ideas that are frequently not consistent with his Party Caucus.  He has shown a willingness to look at ideas that serve a cause first and their origin second.  Sometimes the good ideas come from his own party and at other times they come from the other party.  In his speech at the Republican Convention, he talked about good ideas on both sides of the aisle and how important the ideas are and not who gets credit for the ideas.  That was important to me.

 

Partisan ownership of ideas seems to be the stumbling block in politics and government today.  “If it didn’t originate in our caucus, it is totally unacceptable!”

 

Presidential elections are about shared values and visions rather than specifics.  Voters look for a candidate that they think will deliver on their specific needs without actually articulating what those needs might be.  Voters listen to the ads, the debates, the pundits and the candidates looking for that common ground on their issues.  When the time to vote comes, they will be selecting the candidate that they feel is most consistent with their vision for the future.  After the election we hope for specific ideas that will get us the vision.

 

Each president inherits the leftovers of the previous administration.  Those leftovers shape the actions of the new president.

 

Circumstances are different for every president and they shape the decisions that become a record of accomplishment or failure.  When the Congress is controlled by one party and the President is of the same party, the dynamics between them are different than when they are different.  When the Republicans took control of Congress in 1994, Bill Clinton’s strategy had to change just as George W Bush had to adjust when the Democrats reclaimed control in 2006.  Jimmy Carter was unable to act decisively even though he had a Democratic Congress that Ronald Reagan was able to work with.

 

If you are for bigger government, vote for the Democrat.  If you are for smaller government, vote for the Republican.  Even though Bush has “gone off into the ditch” with government spending for the military and security issues, Republican philosophy at most levels of government champion the “less is more” ideal. 

 

We have to choose who our President will be from the two choices, but we can apply the general rule of thumb.  D’s are for bigger government and R’s are for smaller government. 

 

Obama is for bigger government and McCain is for smaller government.  Beyond that it is all political posturing. 

 

After the election the players that lose will still have their old jobs and the winner will invite them to the White House for a barbecue and all will be forgiven.  Hey, nothing personal.

September 15, 2008

What is it, Rural or Urban?

by Steve Dana

The Growth Management Act (GMA) was intended to reduce the consumption of large tracts of land for subdivisions with large lots and in areas where there is substandard infrastructure to accommodate the burdens.  There was supposed to be a widening differentiation between conditions inside urban growth boundaries and outside them.  Urban standards would provide more dense development on smaller lots while Rural standards would create minimum lot sizes of five acres or greater.

 

Inside the Urban Growth Boundaries (UGB) most cities have done a reasonable job of increasing density.  At times, they have done so with significant negative impacts to the quality of life in their towns.  The county has insisted that they comply with GMA through their Comprehensive Plans and Planning Policies.

 

In the parts of the county that are not in cities, Unincorporated Snohomish County, the county’s Comprehensive Plan dictates what can happen.  Our county’s interpretation of the Growth Management Act indicates there is no difference between urban and rural.  The language in the act is not ambiguous, but the allowed interpretations seem to be.  It is not clear what counties should be permitting if they are limited to being rural service providers.  It appears that in our county there is a full range of permitted uses even those allowed in fully urban areas.  That seems to be the root of the problem.  Define “Urban Development” and “Rural Development” and compare the two.

 

That should mean that density be rural at one dwelling unit per five acres and not five dwelling units per acre.  That should mean that if a sewer district is providing service in an area, the land is designated for urban development and it should be inside an urban growth area at a minimum and probably within the city limits proper.

 

If the GMA requires that cities be Urban Service Providers, why is Snohomish County developing hundreds if not thousands of acres under urban development standards?  Areas outside UGBs were supposed to be rural, 5 acres or greater.  What happened to rural standards?

 

GMA also requires that Urban Service Providers develop Levels of Service (LOS) standards to guide where resources are allocated to accommodate the expected growth.  This requirement forces government to consider impacts to the infrastructure before they actually become real and formulate a funding plan to put the improvements in place in advance of the growth.

 

Level of Service standards make assumptions about existing capacity and from those assumptions determine where improvements should be made before additional development can occur.

 

Concurrence is when the infrastructure improvements are in place prior to the developments that will require them.  Comprehensive planning enables government to calculate where growth should occur based upon existing infrastructure capacity, what improvements need to be made to improve capacity which would allow for more growth or where growth should not occur based upon other considerations.

 

In much of unincorporated Snohomish County, development patterns are more consistent with Urban requirements than Rural.

 

In order to simplify county development regulations, I would advocate for the county to have only rural standards.  I would change the rules so that only cities could develop land with Urban Development Standards.  The County code would eliminate all language that dealt with urban standards.

 

The result would be property owners outside urban growth areas would have very clear expectations about what could happen on their land.  The current regulations are so convoluted that it’s not clear about anything.

 

If the county was not approving development plats between cities, the cities would be better able to secure infrastructure improvements from developers that work within an urban area.  If land was to develop at urban density, it would have to annex into a city first.  Engineering standards would be consistent for all the improvements if they took place within a city from start to finish.

 

Think about the Lynnwood, Mountlake Terrace, Brier area.  Imagine what that area would look like today were it not for the formation of the Alderwood Sewer District.  Think about how each of those cities might have developed differently if the county had not given away the farm.  Think about every other city in the county that annexed subdivisions allowed under the county regulations but that would not have been allowed under city regulations.  Imaging what our county would look like today if sewers were only allowed within a city’s limits.

 

If this requirement were in place over the years, we would not have seen the type of sprawl that brought about the Growth Management Act.

 

In King County, cities like Burien, Covington, Shoreline, Lake City, Kenmore, Woodinville and others would not exist today if their county had not allowed urban development in rural locations.  In Snohomish County, Mill Creek is the only “new” city to be formed as a result of county sponsored urban development, but Clearview/Maltby might warrant incorporation.

 

The whole point of this rambling is the fact that county governments have been given the sole authority and responsibility to manage growth in their respective areas without any tool for accountability to anyone.  The Growth Management Act does not provide guidance to replace local application of good judgment.  Our county leaders need to bring the run-away-train to a screeching halt.

 

In Rural/Urban Transition Areas, the county needs to apply the rural zoning to the land and lobby neighboring cities to consider including them within their urban growth areas to fully realize the development potential of the land.  If a neighboring city is not inclined to consider the proposal and then justify the inclusion with planning to show how the land would be served by utilities, essential public services and infrastructure improvements, the land would remain outside and undeveloped.

 

The pressure to accept population growth cannot over-ride all the factors that determine a desirable quality of life we have (had) in Snohomish County.

 

Some cities in Snohomish County view growth as a good thing while others do not.  Brier chose to incorporate in order to protect their rural life style.  They knew they could better control their destiny as a city rather than a neighborhood in the county.  Woodway incorporated for similar reasons, but rather than rural life style, it was maintaining exclusivity for wealthier Edmonds folks.  Both cities remained small to protect their identity, recognizing that the cost of government would have to be borne by the smaller population.

 

Other cities saw growth as an opportunity to develop a tax base that would pay for enhanced services.

 

None of the cities in Snohomish County appreciate the burdens created on their margins by development planned and permitted by the county without their consultation.

 

Imagine how our county would look today if in 1991 when the GMA was passed, the county had put a moratorium in place preventing urban levels of development outside urban growth boundaries.  And if they had agreed that, those areas within UGAs but outside city limits would only be developed after they were annexed into a city we would be looking at a vastly different Snohomish County today.

 

I for one am not impressed with the job done by our elected officials in safeguarding the public trust.  In spite of the fact that many of us were not in favor of GMA, it has been the law of the land since 1993.  We have the option of following the law or changing the law, but not disregarding the law.

 

I have been a city person for all my years involved with government.  I was the Snohomish representative to Snohomish County Tomorrow when the GMA was passed and was on the committee when the county and the cities developed the first batch of County-wide Planning policies.  Cities were forced by the county to agree to policies not necessarily in the best interest of our cities with the understanding that for our pain, there would be a corresponding pain for the county.

 

The cities did their part to accommodate growth, but the county failed to stop.  It is time for the county to stop permitting urban development.  It is time for the county to get out of the Urban Services business.  It is time for Snohomish County to STOP!

August 9, 2008

Is Marital Infidelity a Character Flaw?

by Steve Dana

I was listening to the radio this morning and during a segment of the news, they were talking about John Edwards.  He has been hounded for a couple years about an extramarital affair he was alleged to be having.  Of course, he assured us that there was no truth to the allegations.

 He campaigned this past year for president with his wife at his side on many occasions.  He talked about being a family man with kids at home and how much they mean to him.  He continuously denied the rumors.

Recently, the National Enquirer reported that the woman Edwards was alleged to be having the affair with had a baby.  That sparked new interest in Edwards’ continuing relationship with the woman and the prospects that she had his “love child”.

Of course, he said that it wasn’t true.  Then when reports were confirmed that Edwards had been caught leaving a hotel room that woman was registered in, he knew he had been caught “with his pants down” so to speak.  He decided to come clean and admit his affair.

Personally, I don’t care whether John Edwards cheats on his wife or not.  I am trying to figure out whether he admitted to having a short term love affair with a woman he now says he doesn’t/didn’t love.  I guess it was just about the sex.  Or did he admit to having a continuing affair that has been ongoing for more than two years.  I thought the news account said he was recently observed leaving the woman’s hotel room.

Even though the details won’t affect my opinion of the man any more than the general story already has, I am intrigued with the current spin.  The admission that Edwards had demonstrated a lack of good judgment two years ago is not the same as a two year affair that continues today.

The wife admits that she knew about the affair two years ago.  Was she aware that it was ongoing?  How could she be treated that way and still stand by her man?

Does this story sound familiar?  Sadly it does.

I am not suggesting that Bill Clinton and John Edwards are the only serial cheaters out there.  I think in the circles those guys run in, that is more the norm than the exception.

What I have learned in my brief political experience is this.  Regardless of your profession, the elite top performers in any field have “super star egos” that are black holes for attention.  They need for people to pay attention to their needs, their whims, their opinions.

I know there are some down to earth regular folks that are successful and don’t let their success go to their heads.  My experience is that every politician, actor, musician, you name it, at the top of their game have people around them handling their needs because the public relations people constantly tell these “stars” that they are so great.  Before too long, anyone in that position might begin to believe the hype. 

Sports stars and actors are the most visible examples of this treatment.  In most cases these folks with one endearing quality suddenly find that quality in demand.  It starts in high school for jocks.  The ones with gifted athletic ability are given special treatment from an early age.  Is it any wonder that when they get older, they expect special treatment? 

Politicians elected by increasingly larger constituencies tend to equate their ability to sway voters as acknowledgment that they are pretty special people.  Just think about the people you know in sports or government.  How many of them have big egos? 

In government, it takes a big ego to do the work.  The responsibilities are enormous.  How could any person think they could do the job if they didn’t have that ego?

Certainly that is no excuse for their boorish behavior; it just seems to be the way it is.

For the most part, celebrities have that attitude that they are better than non celebrities.  Somehow, they think that the very people that hold them in such high esteem are beneath them.  What’s wrong with that picture?

If it weren’t for the fact that Edwards was running for President of the United States, I wouldn’t care a lick about him.  He can cheat on his wife all he wants. 

I expect better character from my presidential candidates.  And I don’t care which party they come from.  Left wingers don’t have a corner on the market.

The dilemma we face with public figures in general and political figures specifically is “What part of a candidate’s character matters when we are selecting our leaders?  Is the fact that a person cheats a character flaw or is the lying about it the character flaw?”

If all we have to gauge a person’s fitness to serve in public office is their words and deeds, what are we to do when both the words and deeds are pure deception?

The radio news person was interviewing people on the street for their opinions.  I think a majority of the responses I heard supported Edwards and the fact that what he does in his private life are his business.

My last question would be “What measure do we use for a political candidate if character doesn’t matter?”

August 6, 2008

Separate, Incinerate, CoGenerate

by Steve Dana

The State of Washington determined last year that our state needed to reduce the amount of material deposited in the waste stream (garbage).  They passed a bill in the legislature that set the stage for cities like Seattle to develop local ordinances making it illegal to use Styrofoam clamshells, plastic food and beverage containers and enabling them to levy “Green” fees for plastic bags.  Their intent was to reduce the consumption of not just plastic things, but clearly biodegradable items as well.  Even though paper bags are not covered by the Seattle ordinance, they will be in the next wave.

 

I prefer to look at the massive volume of waste as an opportunity for a business rather than a penalty.

 

I look at the massive volume of waste we deposit in land fills and see millions of dollars worth of product being buried in the ground.  If that bothered the legislature a lot, they should have offered incentives to change behavior rather than penalties.

 

I remember the time when there were people at the dump that salvaged much of the stuff we dumped.  The trucks dumped the garbage on the ground and the salvage sorters jumped all over it.

 

Today, we encapsulate our garbage in plastic bags inside plastic bags.  Then, we bury it in the ground in a dry landfill where no oxidation takes place.  No significant biodegrading is taking place when there is not water or oxygen; particularly when these plastic bags are left intact.

 

I make no claim of ownership to the idea that at a minimum, we should be shredding the garbage bags to facilitate oxidation of the contents. 

 

But there is more to this idea as well.

 

The shredding would allow a machine to separate different types of waste so that those items that are clearly biodegradable can be composted, while the metals, plastics and other non-biodegradable items would be separated and reprocessed.  For materials that are organic, but not particularly biodegradable, we would incinerate and capture the energy in a co-generation plant.  It might be that we don’t need land fills.

 

Certainly there are issues to be dealt with regarding the burning, but this whole process could be a business opportunity rather than a business penalty.  This would be a system that is the friendliest to the environment.  Why isn’t Greg Nickels pitching sorting and incinerating?

 

I would offer tax credits to the companies that developed the plants to move this plan ahead.  I might offer public land to set up the plants as well.

 

We pay millions to transport our garbage out of the region.  We pay the railroad and the county that receives the trash.  If my system turns waste into a marketable commodity, the value of your garbage could reduce or eliminate the cost to the consumer, rather than creating additional burdens. 

 

Since nobody in our region is talking about this idea, I doubt the publicly stated goal is the real one they don’t want you to know about. 

 

What do you think?  Does my idea have merit or am I clueless?