Friday, December 31, 2021

X-mas Reflections of a Santa Elf

     Pre-Christmas (as I have the last two years) I spent as one of Santa’s elves! Embroidering names and greetings on blankets, bathrobes, hats, towels, trolleys, etc at Colony Brands. It’s always been a bit of a downer to go into that warehouse big as a football stadium full of stuff stacked to the ceiling.

For some reason this year it seemed more problematic than the previous two. I suppose because of the uptick in environmental disasters—the Cedar Rapids’ Derecho last year and ours this past August. I mean, it is one thing to sit in front of your TV and watch Australia or someplace else burn or flood be eaten alive by a tornado or cyclone.  It is quite another when the trees in your own back yard blow over, and a limb might take out your brand new deck.

Of course, the many phases of manufacture, transportation, marketing and sale of stuff—the hallmark of modern society—is destroying the environment. I had made a Christmas list, but I came home one night, tore the list into confetti and dropped in the waste basket. It just seemed sick, nay, depraved to want anything more than I already have. The more I looked at the stuff stacked 3 stories high, the sicker it seemed.

That didn’t fix anything: only resulted in me not get a hand pump for my bike tires. Cuz who in their right mind would get that for an old lady?

You Have a Right to Remain Unvaccinated; Do you Have a Right to a Hospital Bed if You Get It?

I personally know of a dying man who waited four hours for a bed at Finley Hospital, Dubuque. A gentleman from Sioux City whose pacemaker got infected couldn’t get into any of his local hospitals, so he had to take an ambulance to Omaha, Neb. My niece, an emergency room doc in Ohio, is not just exhausted, but a tad furious at the unvaccinated horde presenting in her hospital. Myself, I wouldn't want the emergency doc P-Oed at me before I even arrived!

Online sources vary in their estimates of how many Covid patienets are unvaccinated. Louisiana, the lowest estimate, is 80%. Most U.S. numbers run right around a hundred—96%, 98% and one  99 percent. Healthpayer Intelligence says "unvaccinated COVID-19 patients contributed over $13 billion to national healthcare spending from June 2021 through November 2021. So yeah, we are all footing the bill.

While it is anybody's right not to get vaccinated, and I endorse it wholeheartedly, do you also have a right to crowd into a hospital, when you do get it? Put an additional burden on overworked staff? Strain resources? Make cancer, stroke, burn or whatever patients wait for hours? I don't think so, and it is about time that political leaders everywhere recognize how easy it is for libertarian types to demand their rights to pollute, not get vaccinated or whatever, but we, the rest of the society, pay for their actions. 

It is unfair, undemocratic and unconscionable. 

Thursday, November 25, 2021

Grateful This Thanksgiving

 

This Thanksgiving 2021 I am grateful for:


1)      Brothers who build me new decks, septic systems and fix my lawn mowers for 30 years—it’s their fault I have zero tech skill because they can do everything!

    2) A sister who gave me a down coat that keeps me warm flying down the town hill on the fine new bike gifted me by my sister-in-law, though I look lumpy as Mrs. Michelin.

      3) A Florida sister who invites me to Ft. Myers in the dead of the frigid Iowa winter, and I go, fretting about my carbon footprint all the way.

   4) Pickleball and friends to play with even though it makes me swear to high heavens and forget the score when I miss the ball. Even if I am winning.


5)      5) Iowa sunrises and sunsets that turn the whole world rose, if only for a few brilliant, precious, transitory moments.

   6  6)  Food I’ve grown—here’s hoping I/we, none of us eat too much!

a  Happy Turkey Day to Everyone. 



H



Monday, November 15, 2021

Sidewalk Response from ILC

 Well, Well! I know that all of Cascade is interested in my exchanges with the National League of Cities and the Iowa NLC, pursuant to the question of: Is Cascade’s Sidewalk Ordinance a) legal or b) fair? The way the councilmen carry on, you’d think it was chiseled in stone. On tablets given to Moses! Here is the response from NLC, and must say I am not too surprised.

Hi Keyron:

Thank you for the inquiry. 

We do not have a model sidewalk ordinance. Iowa is a Home Rule state and ordinances like these are determined at the local level by the city council. Any time a city enacts an ordinance--even when we may have a sample ordinance to share--we always recommend they work with their city attorney to ensure it works well for their community and that the ordinance is lawful. With that said, we do have general guidance about right of way responsibilities which includes sidewalk maintenance/installation on the League's website which can be found here: https://www.iowaleague.org/resource/right-of-way-responsibilities/  Hope this helps.

Sincerely,

Bill Goldy, Iowa League of Cities Consultant goldyconsultingllc@gmail.com

Of course, even if NLC or ILC did have a generic sidewalk ordinance, it would never have taken into consideration the particular historical development of situation here. The city and its voters have to come to a fair resolution of that ourselves in terms of the reality on the ground. It appears we have put several people back on council who appear to be less than honest.

Still, I really don’t think you need a model ordinance or anything of the sort, to tell you it is unfair that the least well-off citizens are forced to install and maintain sidewalk. If they have to do it, they should get a tax rebate for providing the city a service. This summer, nearly every M, W & F, I passed a knot of women whome i believe live in the Conrad Addition walking in the old part of the city. This is hardly fair.

Friday, November 12, 2021

Grim Reflections for Vet's Day

Yes, I spent Veteran's Day lamenting my late 70s stupidity. I firmly supported an all-volunteer draft because it never occurred to me that the Kennedys, Kerrys and Bushes would not serve, but that has become one of the perogatives of wealth in the U.S. George Bush used his family influence to skirt active duty. Then, the military was honorable endeavor.

    Since Vietnam, what with Iraq and Saddam, also Bush's doing, we have instigated had a number of failed or marginal military encounters. The most recent being Afghanistan, which ended shamefully and was caused by the generals misleading the politicians and public about how successful various actions were. 

    So here we are with an all-volunteer military that dumped $8 trillion and can't afford to fix our own infrastructure, while Asraf Ghani, made off to Egypt with several million American dollars.



Sunday, November 7, 2021

State of Democracy in Cascade

This week, I filled out the city council agenda request and submitted it by Wed. a.m., as is required, along with documentation--emails with Brittney Kohler from the Nat'l League of Cities. At the candidate forum I had asked if the Sidewalk Ordinance they passed in 2017 was a) legal and b) fair. Nobody addressed the fair part. I, too, erroneously assumed that because they said it had come from the National League Cities, it was a model ordinance written by a lawyer and tested in a court of Law. Nix. Neither. 

Friday a.m. Deanna wrote that Mayor Greg Staner would not allow it on the agenda because it is a "new" issue.  This is the McConnell-Merrick-Garland move--stall when you are wrong. Britt at NLC had admitted:  "You’re correct – NLC’s recommendations do not equate to a legal standard, and to my knowledge, we have not provided any materials on this in the five years that I’ve been at NLC."

What sets me back on my heels is the 5-0 vote--the ordinance is transparently unfair--I saw just how when I was canvasing before the recent election. Less than 35-40% of Cascade has sidewalk. Oak Hill, Conrad Addition and Claddagh Court don't, only the old parts of the city. Maybe the new council will have a better sense of fairness and law. Here's hoping!


Another person also requested to be on the agenda, but Mayor Staner's refusal to let her on was far more pathetically  Merrick-Garland than mine--the stormwater ordinance is hardly "new." It has been  on nearly every agenda since November 2020 when we met with Eric Schmechel.  

If Mayor Staner does not want to deal with any of the controversial issues he leaves in has wake--may have even precipitated by his actions, I think he has an obligation, to resign and let the new mayor take over. 

Well,  I'm doing my annual pre-X-mas gig, so here's hoping I have the time to write a reflection on some of the people I met knocking doors before the election. It was great fun, people were kind and I loved meeting ordinary folks, seeing their values reflected in their homes. 



Thursday, November 4, 2021

Election Reactions

 ...It isn’t enough that the voter writes your name in, if he/she/it/they do/does not fill in the oval, the vote doesn’t count because the computer only reads ovals! Tech has undermined democracy six ways from Sunday, yet its use only increases. Go fig.

            Tues, ironically Voting Day, I happened to tune into an NPR program describing the damage the Fed has done to American democracy by tipping the scales in favor of the banks and other inequities. One of the speakers seemed to think the whole financial industry is culpable for the disastrous inequity in the U.S.--moving money and resources from the middle and lower classes into the pockets of the wealthiest companies and people. Not totally, of course, the tax code does its bit. Muchas gracias, Senor Trump.

            Ironically enough, meanwhile the citizens of Cascade were putting not one, but two financial types on council—Riley Rausch who is routinely lead by the nose—and Megan Oliphant, who we’ll see how she votes. Cascade reelected Mike Delaney, the least independent of the council people, also on Andy Kelchen’s leash.

            The person with the most understanding of city ordinances, Bill Hosch, was not elected.

Steve Knepper was voted in as Mayor, so thank God, we haven’t lost his fund of understanding of infrastructure, or we’d really be up the creek.

            I don’t know if it was out-and-out lying, but Knepper, Rausch and Delaney all insisted in the candidate forum that the Sidewalk Ordinance was legal because the  National League of Cities gave them it (as a model ordinance). They didn’t bother speculating on if it was fair; they don’t care about that. I went home and emailed NLC, they say “No Way!”

            Tune into Monday night’s council meeting to hear the exchange and their reactions

Sunday, October 31, 2021

Experts Question the Benefits of Business

Wealthy landowners, I've read, were the demise of the Roman Empire when they sucked all the resources out of the rest of society.  One wonders if the American business community isn't repeating the performance here. The normally pro-business American Prospect, seems to have discovered some reservations about business: (Wonder of Wonders!)

            In a piece on Joe Biden’s unholy relationship with the credit industry in his state, we read this: “The benefits of business-friendly policies are waning. Corporations aren’t staying loyal despite the state’s perks, and handouts are being doled out at residents’ expense.” Ah, no kidding!

            This from an economist named Adam Tooze, who has a new book the U.S. in the Covid Pandemic: “…they (Congress) gave out extraordinary handouts to businesses around the world. We have various ways of disguising that fact. We passed special allowances for small to medium-sized businesses, which is a cuddly way of describing a large part of the most affluent groups in society—the owners of small and medium-sized businesses.”

            And in a piece on why the insurance industries aren’t doing much of anything about climate change, we read this: “But in the under-regulated American market, companies are not required to disclose any information on underwriting projects, which makes it nearly impossible to figure out who’s behind new pipelines, fracking installations, and processing plants, even the case of the most controversial, headline-grabbing projects like the Line Three pipeline in Minnesota.

            It appears that we have gone in the past 20 years from seeing business as a savior of sorts, to realizing that business has no intrinsic morals or obligation to anything beyond the bottom line. Only when a few unique individuals bring that to companies—and they are few and far between—does it happen. Community welfare is simply not a natural object of business.

Public servants who will attempt to insure that the activities of the business benefit—or at least doesn’t harm—the most people.

 

Friday, October 29, 2021

The Big Diff betw McD & the Other Council Candidates

3rd from left, 1964, big hair, freshman year at Clarke College.
 It’s hardly surprising that I am braver, tougher and more tenacious than any man on the Cascade City Council: by the time I was 14, my father was dead, my sibs and I had done stints in St. Mary’s Orphanage and in foster homes. By the time I was 21, I had waitressed myself through Clarke College—a hat-trick then—impossible now.

            Though I did all the course work for a master’s journalism at the University of Colorado, when I was offered a job writing for a Denver magazine, I figured: Why pay them to teach me to do something somebody will pay me to do? By the time I was 35, I was jet-setting back and forth to Europe 2x a year a publishing my own a little medical ultrasound catalog.

            I sold it, turned down a lucrative job in California, and returned to Cascade after Mom died because I didn’t want to lose touch with my parents, their place, their spirits. By then, I realized how very rare they were. Just how rare their plain-spoken, self-effacing honesty was!

        


     So I figure the main difference between me, the men on Cascade Council and the people running for it, is values. I know it is dishonest to pass an ordinance to force the less-well off portions of town to install new sidewalks. (In spite of what the Nat’l League of Cities says.) I know it is evil to give the tax money of struggling ordinary citizens to millionaires. (TIF, etc) I know it is corrupt to charge one citizen $17,000 for a vacated street, another $1,700 for a street the city has put in the flood plain and give a millionaire one free of charge. In private conversations with a couple of them, I think they may value fairness and justice on city council, but the votes don't always confirm it. A couple of them running are financial types, and they really scare me.

Wednesday, October 27, 2021

Recap of Candidate Forum

 

Well, it was a good thing I didn’t eat before I went to the candidate forum sponsored by ECIA Tuesday night. I might have barfed! The three mayoral candidates and six council ones about choked themselves with glowing and crowing..

            You would never have known the lovely little berg of Cascade, Iowa has in the past given free sewer line to a millionaire, a free street to a developer, god only knows what to Developer Danny Conrad (because it ended in sealed court case), $257,000 of citizen tax money to mop up the mistakes of a tech millionaire, who has left town, etc. ad nauseam.

            No mention was made either of the $20,000 a year the city is giving to Economic Development, a private corporation with closed books and meetings. Or any of the other transfers of goods and services that businesses get.

            The only question with teeth was asked by me: Is the Sidewalk ordinance passed in 2017 a) legal or b) fair? Every one of the current council people said this was model ordinance given to them by the National League of Cities. At least they didn’t say it was fair—I appear to be the only candidate concerned with that nonsense. ECIA refused to allow me to participate, which tells you how much that organization really cares about democracy.



            Late in the meeting there was a reference to TIF. As it so happens I had a list of all the current payments in my backpack. I whipped it out and handed it to the woman behind me (Marge Gehl). She refused to look at it—the perfect metaphor for the whole evening, I’d say.

            So if you stayed home and watched TV and even if the show was really lousy, you had a better time. Five glasses of wine didn’t put a dent in my disgust.

             

Tuesday, October 26, 2021

How Cutting-edge is Cascade?

 At Monday night’s city council meeting, I was called on the carpet by one of the early members of the Cascade Economic Development Corp. for saying it has received $20,000 of city money every year. Which it has every year since 2016, a total of $120,000 of ordinary Joe’s tax money.

            He apologized, when the City Administrator confirmed I was correct. Small consolation that hard-working folks’ money is being turned over to a private corporation, which doesn’t have open meetings and exists solely to benefit businesses—some of the wealthiest people in town.

            These days, I am not the only person objecting business on the take. I was shocked to get my copy of The American Prospect this month and see: 1) an article on the damage our business relationship with China has done us, 2) one on Joe Biden’s unholy relationship with business in Delaware, and 3) one by economic analyst (Adam Tooze) containing the following quote:

            “…special allowances for small to medium-sized businesses, which is a cuddly way of describing a large part of the most affluent groups in society: the owners of small and medium-sized businesses.”

            He stopped short of identifying TIF and such gifts as one of the main sources of the huge transfer of wealth in American society responsible the polarization and diminishing middle class.

            One of my serious objections to Mr. Henry’s candidacy is recalling his positive glee in discussing TIF at council when he was mayor—like a leprechaun who’d found his pot o’ gold! Likewise, I don’t trust Rausch and Delaney when it comes to gifties, ah free streets to Mike Beck, and reduced rate ones to Chad Demmer.

            Next Tuesday, we’ll see how cutting edge Cascade is.  

Thursday, October 21, 2021

Another Businessman on Council?

            One of the things I inherited from my Mother is a categorical suspicion of business. However, when I returned here, I got to know Carl Cigrand, who was, along with my parents, was one of the most honest people I ever met and revised my opinion: an honest businessperson can be a real asset, and for the most part Councilman Bill Hosch falls in that category.

            Not that I am not furious over the Sidewalk and a couple other votes he has taken. But what truly amazes me about Hosch is his understanding of city ordinances and ability to apply them. It was Hosch who caught the City Administrator Deanna McCusker spending over her allowed limit, (the administrator must submit expenses over a given sum for council approval). She authorized upgrades at the pool (the blue roofs, etc.) in 2021 in excess of that limit.

            Recently, he requested that a provision council was about to vote on be sent back to the city attorney for clarification and I thought to myself, “OMG, how does a carpet monger have such a sophisticated understanding of ordinances?” On the basis of that, I am voting for him.

Wednesday, October 20, 2021

Give City $ to a Company not in Compliance?

 

City of Cascade

320 1st Avenue W

PO Box 400

Cascade IA 52033

563.852.3114

 

                                                                            AGENDA REQUEST

 

Here’s an ordinance I will introduce at Monday night’s Cascade City Council meeting and why:

No business, group or organization may apply for Tax Increment Financing, Façade Reimbursement, any present or future remunerative program or action offered by the City of Cascade as long as applicant company/business or any of it divisions, sections, departments or subsidiaries is disputing another matter with the city, regardless of the nature of the matter. If said dispute is not resolved, the city is entitled to recoup the funds until the firm is in compliance. Once the dispute is resolved, the request may then go forward.

I offer this amendment because at a council meeting late last winter there was a discussion of various councilmen’s (unsuccessful) efforts to get a Cascade company to do drainage mitigation required by law at a project here in town. The company refused.

Shockingly, this summer that company was granted a TIF money.

And what happened to the unresolved drainage problem? Still unresolved: the city administrator tells me it is back on the list of street projects that must to be done—you and I get to pay for it, folks!

Am working on one to try to achieve greater transparency and control of the Economic Development. the city has paid over a million $ on infrastructure on Industrial Dr. Each year, Economic Development comes to council looking for a $20,000 and usually gets it. However, Ec Dev is a private corporation which makes it harder to “follow the money” and see who benefits.

            And if you don’t like this nonsense write in somebody who will squawk about it: Shirley McDermott

Monday, October 18, 2021

Ethical ?s on City Council

 

The moment I committed to doing a profile of councilmen on the basis of their votes and public discussion, I had to confront the question of how to distinguish Councilman Mike Delaney and Riley Rausch. Each brings a distinct talent to the table—Delaney computer expertise; Rausch often asks perceptive questions, but over time, it seems not to have affected his vote.

            For starters, there are far too many 5-0 votes on council, even on horrific issues like dissolving the Sidewalk Committee and passing an ordinance that is likely illegal. But if there is a split it’s typically 3-(Kelchen, Delaney and Rausch)-2 (Knepper and Hosch), which gives rise to some a serious ethical questions, especially with the kinds of issues it ends up resolving: Mike Beck wouldn’t get a free street if Delaney, Rausch and Kelchen hadn’t voted to give him one! YOU vote accordingly!

Mr. Delaney’s PC firm is not the first ethical question about businessmen on council—my mother spent the ‘50s & ‘60s scoffing at “that charade.” Recently, a citizen complained to me about Delaney providing council computers. He may have even got us a better deal--it just looks bad.

Speaking of ethics, Ms. Oliphant and others on the ballot have not bothered to come to council meetings and see what gives. No less offer an idea or objection in the 2-minute public comment period. Or show us they can write an ordinance by submitting one!

With the exception of Sue Knepper, who seems to care a great deal: she has been at every meeting for the last couple months.

I can't insist that business people on city council is categorically a bad deal. Check my next post which will take a look at the voting record and discussion of Bill Hosch. 

Friday, October 15, 2021

Mike Beck's FREE Street--Cascade Pays his Legal Fees

 

In the good old days before greedy councilmen, Cascade citizens could petition to have a street vacated and conveyed to them: appear before council and make the request, pay the legal/filing fees and the street was conveyed to the person.

            In 2018 Ida Trumm was assessed $1 a sq. ft. for an unopened street through her property considered prime building lot, over $17,000.       

   In 2016, I was assessed 15 cents a sq. ft. because the unopened street required so much fill it was not considered buildable. Council refused to acknowledge that it had been put into the flood plain by city development decisions, the sewer was never accessible, and that I had requested it, when Richie Knepper was mayor and it would have been free. $1,690.

            In June 2021, while I was at an out-of-town wedding, Mike Beck was given a street FREE. Zilch. Zip. Nada. He didn’t even pay legal fees, we paid them. I complained the following meeting and Councilman Andy Kelchen hollered, “It was HIS street; he gave it to the city.”

            “He’s the developer; that’s his obligation!” I replied.  At the last meeting Oct. 11th, Kelchen tried to give Eastern Iowa Excavating Owner Chad Demmer, a valuable piece of industrial property free. Demmer was eventually charged 15 cents a sq. ft.—same as me for valuable property council in the industrial area. Not in the flood plain.  Bill Hosch brought it up at the last meeting called it “a very bad precedent,” exactly what I called it when they were doing it. But it was a 5-0 vote!?

            Still have any doubts about how you will be treated when you get down there?

Tuesday, October 12, 2021

Compare & Contrast, Cascade

In the 2-minute public comment period at Monday’s Council meeting, I pointed out that the city is spending $36,000 to repair the east river wall, directly across from Riverview Park where in the early days of Cascade, the mill sat on the falls. Now, there are three buildings on that narrow spit of land, so close together you can stretch your arms touch both walls. 

            So, you have to wonder where the water they shed goes. From the photo, it appears there is enough green space below Cascade Communications warehouse and Dr. Bisenius old office, but the lack of it around the middle building is worrisome.

The river—which can’t defend itself—gets the blame for buckling and cracking in the wall, but I can’t believe that rainwater isn’t at least partially responsible—that runoff froze, expanded and BOOM!  But it is presented as an infrastructure problem, so we all pay.

Contrast that with how a private citizen on Main Street in my neighborhood, who has water pooling on the sidewalk in front of his house, which may have been caused by the city resurfacing Main Street. I’d bet he didn’t even know it, when he bought the house!

My neighbor, John Q. Private Citizen, was invited to council to split the cost of fixing the problem, probably $2,500 in 2016 Council passed an ordinance that makes citizens with sidewalks financially responsible for them. I told him, “You go down there and tell them that ordinance is illegal because you can’t treat half the people one way and absolve other half…”

So the puddle is still there. It freezes in the winter and I will probably be the one who falls and busts her butt there! My question remains: is this not a cautionary tale about the way citizens are treated by city council? It bears mulling over before you vote next month.

 

Monday, October 11, 2021

Short History of the Cascade Sidewalk Committee

Sometime circa 2014 when Mike Henry was Mayor and Pat Kearney was on Council, a Sidewalk Committee was established. Jim Conlin and I served on it. Off and on for several years there had been complaints about an inequitable sidewalk policy: some people being allowed to remove theirs, others not, the costs, etc.

In 2016, the last year of the Committee’s existence, $50,000 was allocated in the budget for sidewalks. The committee prioritized places with lots of foot traffic—churches, parks, businesses--and set about repairing them.

After Mayor Staner was elected, I went to council several times and asked when the next Sidewalk Committee was scheduled, but got no answer. At the first council meeting in November 2016 an ordinance passed that forces the expense of sidewalks back on homeowners.  Most of it in less highly-valued properties in the older, center of the city.

I believe this ordinance is illegal (but you’d have to go to court to find out) because you can’t treat one group of citizens one way, and another group another way. If the city can’t give senior citizens a preferential garbage rate, then it can’t force the expense of sidewalks on group either.

I complained loudly but the ordinance and this another reason why I am saying there is a moral dimension to this vote.

Saturday, October 9, 2021

Rah, Yeah Bike Days!

     This may be the last for 2021, as they are calling for 80 today. You can both get outdoors exercise and see a lot of the infrastructure of this village. Ride along Riverview Park,cross Main Street over the parking lot next to J Salon and Enstyro, and enter the Coohey Trail. The vantage point will give you a great view of the river and the levees and berms constructed  to protect the west side of the city.

    If you are interested in a look at drainage done right, ride out the Davidshofer Bike Path to Dollar General and have a gander behind their building, which is an empty depression to hold the runoff shed by their parking lot and building roof--a textbook example of doing drainage right. You may want to compare it with some of its neighbor businesses, which have run their parking lots right up to the cornfield and provided for no drainage.

When the the bike path ends, continue on until you come to the first right turn, Industrial Drive, ride to the top of it, and look back down. You'll see the three businesses there have none of the required green space to offset the parking lots and building roofs they have created. This probably isn't their fault, the developer of the area built them without it. However, as the puddling in the picture indicates, it needs to be addressed. 

From the top of Industrial Dr., it is a short shot to the Bent Rim--you'll probably need a beer by then. 

Tuesday, October 5, 2021

Fun & Games at the Park Board

 

They were discussing the placement of the Gazebo in Riverview Park last evening at the Park Board, when someone inquired if changes had to be okayed by The Army Corps of Engineers.

“Yes,” thought City Administrator Deanna McCusker.

Next, someone asked about the east side, where the city is currently reinforcing the wall behind the Farm Bureau. They are fortifying the rock wall on the East Side of the river because the buildings there are now shedding so much water from their roofs it is undermining the wall.

 Then City Administrator McCusker said, “Oh, the Army Corps doesn’t care what we do on the East side (of the river)."

            I hollered, disgusted but not surprised: “NO Kidding!” I had gone there to apprise the Park Board of the problems they may be creating by putting so much cement the parks--especially the pool, which was installed without any drainage mitigation. The rest of the meeting they discussed where to put the cement by the renovated/built gazebo.

Fun & Games at the Park Board. 

Monday, October 4, 2021

Are We Really Considering This?

       Yesterday, I saw a real estate sign in this neighborhood that said "SOLD in 20 Days."  Hardly a surprise when everybody knows how short of affordable housing we are. That is why I am flabbergasted by rumors that many people prefer the library plan that tears two very affordable homes--one with an impressive new steel roof--down for the new library. 

       On the very next block stands a derelict two story house that no one has lived in for years, next to the most recoverable, historical building in Cascade--the Old Brewing in former times the Dahlem Feed Co. I once had a friend from Europe come here and pitch a fit of outrage when I told her it wasn't used for anything, but there were lots of mice in residence! 

       The big objection is we don't have the money.  Duh, of course we don't have the money.  Every time we turn around down at city hall, we are TIF-ing a new part of town, and giving tax rebate to another business, usually one that is already quite profitable, thank you. 
       If we had done the City Market that I researched instead of giving almost $300,000 to owners of Brothers (a retired football millionaire), and $10,000 for Facade grants, $20,000 to an up-and-running profitable company, like we did last month we'd have the thing half paid for.
        Heartsick and pathetic are the only words I can think of.

Wednesday, September 29, 2021

Scenes from Cascade City Council: My Deck, the Back Story

In early August, I applied for a building permit because my brother “Whitie/Dave” offered to build me a new deck.

What a deal!

My brother ordered the materials and I visited city hall for a building permit, $25. At the following City Council meeting, someone observed I had applied for a building permit. I said there are some rickety boards on my old bac porch and it may not be too stable.

“Well the owner isn’t either!”

More than once Councilman Hosch or Knepper have apologized for disrespectful comments made to me in council, often by Mayor Staner, but this wasn’t him. It was either Councilman Andy Kelchen or Riley Rausch. 

It certainly feels like a “Me-Too” Moment, when your private business is made public and you are gratuitously ridiculed but that’s what’s representing Cascade. Think twice when you vote next time.  

 

Thursday, August 12, 2021

Question Rebates & Give-a-ways?

 For a long time now Cascade has needed a new library that we are having trouble affording. Could it be because of the city’s give-a-ways to businesses under a variety of different programs?

The most spectacular being the quarter of a million ($257,000) Jesse Loewen to refurbish the old Farmers Bank Building. He was back at council this week looking for another $80,000! 

It is interesting to contrast the businesses who got loans—Cheryl’s Flour Garden and the Corner Tap, have up and running businesses, paying taxes and paying their loans back.

One could argue it is a good idea for the city to encourage business by loans, but when the programs are simply funneling money well-established, profitable companies, they should be questioned. Almost every council meeting features some such give-a-way: Centro got a $60,000 tax rebate at the 9 Aug. meeting and at the late July meeting Cascade Lumber got $20,000 rebate to build a new warehouse.  At this rate, we will never get a new library.

Sunday, May 23, 2021

RIP Lion Kitty

 The best old kitty ever...

Lion Kitty was fond, but v. critical of TV: never failed to come tripping downstairs from her sleeping/eye on the world vantage point to watch, when she heard it go on. Nonetheless, she often complained sit-coms were insipid and boring and put her to sleep, and most everything else (including the news) was violent, frequently fake, and aired only for effect.

Though she appreciated new Danish cinema, notably Borgen and Seaside Hotel, which she found genuinely funny; the humor integrally rooted in the foibles of the colorful cast of characters, businessmen, closet gays, rebellious teens, Lotharios and others who repaired to a Danish coastal hotel, like many Euros for a month and a fortnight of summer. 

It can be reliably and honestly said that Lion Kittycat NEVER once walked on the counter or kitchen table or white couches. Unlike most felines and altogether too many humans she was not the sleazebag sort who jumped up there the minute your back was turned. Honor was paramount in Lion Kitty's life. She regarded dogs as fatuous, slobbering, smelly and generally excessive. She loved nature, gardens and summers could often be found sleeping among the weeds, wildflowers or asparagus. Winters, Lion monitored the world from the end of the bed, or the office couch in front of the window.  She kept herself as impeccably as she conducted herself, and will be sorely missed. 

RIP eternally among hostas under the trees in the cool of the windbreak at the back of the house, Lion.

Tuesday, March 9, 2021

City Administrator Misinforms Pioneer; Mayor Delays Drainage Meeting


            The cover story of the March 3rd Cascade Pioneer concerns storm water drainage. Which of course, is a big problem in Cascade with its hilly topography. Therefore, it is imperative that city officials be scrupulously honest and accurate about the facts.


            Yet City Administrator Deanna McCusker told the Cascade Pioneer that runoff … doesn’t necessarily have to be directed to grass. “It could be rock or a gravel parking lot, just something that’s not impervious like concrete because anything concrete or asphalt, it will just run off.”

            Can it be that someone in such a key position doesn’t know that gravel is nearly as impervious as cement when you drive heavy equipment on it?! It’s logical: tons of weight compact the earth and stone like cement. She was corrected by an engineer and a council member, but she misled a lot of people.

            Meanwhile, Mayor Greg Staner is delaying a drainage ordinance meeting till he the Mayors’ Meeting. Tell me, what do the mayors of flat Farley and Epworth have to tell us about drainage?