FREE WHITEWATER

Monthly Archives: May 2012

Daily Bread for 5.21.12

Good morning.

Monday will be a sunny one for Whitewater, with a high of seventy.

Whitewater’s Park & Rec Board meets at 4 PM today.

Later, at 6:30 PM, Common Council meets to appoint residents to boards & commissions, and thereafter to consider (in both closed and open session) the resignation of Whitewater’c current city manager.

On this day in 1921, Charles Lindbergh completed the first solo flight across the Atlantic.

The Red Cross was also founded on this day in 1881 —

The Wisconsin Historical Society notes a local accomplishment, from 1985:

1985 – Distance Record Set for Paper Airplane
On this date Tony Feltch of Wisconsin set the world record for longest distance flown by a paper airplane. Feltch’s airplane, launched at the La Crosse Center, flew 193 feet. [Source: Paper Aircraft Association]

Over at the Huffington Post, there is a slide show of yesterday’s eclipse, with over 100 photos (number 24 being my favorite).

Google’s daily puzzle asks a question for the rambunctious: “What color will your white t-shirt be after you participate in the world’s largest annual food fight?”

Recent Tweets, 5.13 to 5.19

17 May
RT @badgrammar “Do what you can, with what you have, where you are.” -Theodore Roosevelt.

16 May
@DailyAdams RIP The Unlimited Data Plan Dream is Dead bit.ly/JsJ7aj

16 May
?@DailyAdams It Costs $99 [extra!] to Make Windows Work Right bit.ly/Kyq0vd

16 May
@dailywisconsin Walker 50-44 over Barrett, Obama & Romney tied in WI Marquette Poll bit.ly/KynDZk

15 May
?@DailyAdams [Because] state views vary: If Same-Sex Marriage Is So Popular, Why Does It Lose at the Polls? bit.ly/J9PZue

14 May
?@DailyAdams Ron Paul to end active campaigning – but effective campaigning ended long ago CNN bit.ly/JqTsoV

14 May
Sen. Fitzgerald’s false contention challenger Lori Compas isn’t running her own campaign FREE WHITEWATER bit.ly/KmwvBo

Old Whitewater’s Addled Message

We’re in a transition in Whitewater, from one political culture to another. Years are yet to go in this metamorphosis, but signs of that transition are all round. Old Whitewater (a group, not a person; a state of mind, not a chronological age) is still on its feet, but it’s more stumbling than walking.

Reactionary Messaging

Let’s suppose that a city administration proposes (and a city council approves) money to subsidize a multi-billion-dollar corporation’s employee bus route. That city would be Whitewater, that corporation Generac.

After spending money like this, Old Whitewater did what it often does: simply describe the mistake in less embarrassing terms. Instead of the Generac Bus, one was supposed to call it the Innovation Express. The idea, of course, was that the bus was not merely, in effect, a gift to one business.

But this declining faction cannot even stick to a flimsy re-naming effort. Only a few weeks after the introduction of the new name, here was a published update in a weekly report admitting who’s really calling the shots:

“I had the opportunity to talk to Generac officials today and they are very pleased with the progress of the Innovation Express to date.”

Oh, brother! Imagine not being able to speak consistently with the talking point’s of one’s own creation. Naming a bus with a term that’s meant to show independence from a single corporation doesn’t work if one shows that the corporation’s opinion is the one that truly matters, as a first resort.

There’s Old Whitewater: less interested in being right than in grabbing at anything in a futile attempt to look right. It’s a mental tic – and shoddy policy — to grasp for support from any institutional authority one can find to justify a poor proposal. It’s a contradictory message, in this instance, too.

At least you know — it’s still really the Generac Bus.

Daily Bread for 5.18.12

Good morning.

It’s a lovely day ahead for the Whippet City – sunny with a high of eighty-one.

On this day in 1980, the Mount St. Helens volcano exploded, leaving just under sixty people dead or missing.

On this day in 1964, as the Wisconsin Historical Society recounts,

1964 – Milwaukee Students Participate[d] in First School Boycott

On this date, the 10th anniversary of Brown v. Board of Education, students from Milwaukee schools participated in the first boycott of the city’s public schools, a critical moment in civil rights and desegration movements in Wisconsin. Two months earlier, in March 1964, the NAACP, CORE, and other civil rights organizations formed MUSIC — the Milwaukee United School Integration Committee. Its purpose was to implement mass action to highlight the issue of educational inequality. For two years, sit-ins, picketing, prayer vigils, marches, and boycotts had raised public awareness about segregation but failed to move the school board to action. In December of 1965, Wisconsin civil rights activist and attorney Lloyd Barbee filed a formal desegregation suit in federal court on behalf of 41 black and white children, eventually decided in their favor in 1976. [Source: Rethinking Schools].

Something of ancient medicine from Google’s daily puzzle: “Ancient Greek and Roman physicians treated patients with electrical shocks generated by a particular fish. Up to how many volts can it produce?”

Whitewater’s 5.15.12 Common Council Meeting

Whitewater’s Common Council met Tuesday, and among the topics, there was a discussion of whether to publicize delinquent taxpayers’ debts, and whether to modify parking restrictions in the downtown. (All of the Council were at the session.)

The agenda for the meeting is available online.

Publicizing Taxpayers’ Unpaid Personal-Property Taxes.

Many cities publish lists like this, and the best place would be the Web (rather than a print publication like Whitewater Register). It must true that the City of Whitewater’s website gets more visitors than the Register has subscribers – it’s probably not even close.

Downtown Parking on Saturdays.

The discussion concerned the request of some downtown merchants who wanted less restrictive Saturday parking (so patrons could enjoy a longer stay), as against the opinion of others preferring a two-hour Main Street limit (to spur parking turnover in front of stores).

Patrons coming outside to find tickets on their cars, after dining at a restaurant or bar, are understandably irritated at a surcharge on their spending.

A few points seem reasonable:

(1) Employee parking. No employee should be parking his or her vehicle at an empty spot on Main Street during a work shift. Any employer who lets this happen has no respect for his or her own interest. If a car in one of these spots is an employee’s car, that’s one too many.

That’s true now under the practical restriction of a two-hour limit, but it would be as true with unlimited parking – employees and owners should never take the prime spots.

(Employees and owners shouldn’t be smoking out front, either – that’s an activity for an alley behind one’s shop. Merchants who let employees smoke out front have insufficient respect for their customers.)

(2) Enforcement of parking violations. Enforcement that that affects businesses but involves no personal harm should be done with discretion. Revenue-collection for parking tickets during peak Saturday game times is simply counter-productive. Community Service Officers should exercise discretion by forbearance.

Ticketing during these times doesn’t make the city more orderly – it just angers patrons and turns them into former patrons.

(3) Merchant solidarity. Merchants should be trying to hang together on these questions, and if they cannot, they should at least be together to discuss their concerns. All the downtown merchants should be talking with each other about these topics.

By the way, a landlord who has a vacant store and an empty storefront has one thing too many. You’ll not sell space by leaving the space wholly empty. Empty storefronts, like empty shelves, have the look of failure that keeps customers and tenants away. If you’re not decorating the storefront (with something more than a FOR SALE sign and the faded lettering of the last tenant’s logo), you’re inhibiting your success and making the place look like a rat’s nest, both.

(4) Merchandising, chamber lobbying, enforcement, sanitation. These are separate roles.

There were lots of smart people taking part in this council discussion. This city and her merchants should come to a satisfactory arrangement. A fair amount of time went into this, but that’s for the best.

We could stand more discussions about actual business conditions for merchants in the city.

Natural Plant Communities Talk & Tour at the Whitewater Effigy Mounds Preserve on Saturday, May 26th at 10 AM

I received the following press release that I’m happy to post:

Renae Prell-Mitchell, from UW-Whitewater, will lead a ‘Natural Plant Communities Talk & Tour’ at the Whitewater Effigy Mounds Preserve on Saturday, May 26th at 10 AM.

Renae will talk about the existing wetlands, DOT prairie and Silver maples/bur oak stand, as well as the rare remnant of Oak Savannah or Oak Opening. She will help us understand the importance of these existing habitats, and give us a glimpse of the landscape as it was for the hundreds of years before the founders of our community described its beauty in the “Annuals of Whitewater.”