FREE WHITEWATER

Our Low Expectations

Wisconsin has been a high tax state for years, stretching well back from the Doyle administration through Tommy Thompson’s many years in office (Gov. McCallum having served only briefly in between).

The Wisconsin State Journal recently noted positively a study contending that Wisconsin was out of the rankings of the ten highest taxed states for the first time in years. In fact, one of the few times times out of the top ten highest-taxed states since 1969.

(As the Journal correctly notes, even this belated and dubious accomplishment — we are still highly taxed, and ranked that way — is disputed. Another study still places us within the top ten on the list.)

The next time that someone mentions to me how much Tommy Thompson did for the state, I will remind him or her (as I always do) that he did too little to reduce our tax burden and size of state government. Far too little.

This high tax burden statewide presents an opportunity for Whitewater. If we significantly reduce our local tax burden through a significant reduction in the size of local government, we can offer an comparative advantage for new residents and businesses.

(I am convinced it would be a comparative advantage, not merely in tax burden, but it quality of life even apart from taxation. When I post on the ongoing budget process in the months ahead, I will present the case for a much smaller municipal budget. A reduction in government’s size doesn’t just save money — it reduces the scope of meddling and intrusion into private life.)

Daily Bread: June 16, 2008

Good morning, Whitewater

There are three public meetings scheduled for Whitewater today:

First, a neighborhood meetings concerning the Moraine View Park Plan, at 4 p.m. Later, at 6:30 p.m., there will be a meeting of the Young Memorial Library Board, at 6:30 p.m. At 7 p.m., there will be a meeting of the Planning and Architectural Board.

The library meeting will be held at the library; the other two meetings will take place at the municipal building.

Selected items from the Planning Board agenda include:

  • Consideration of a Conditional Use Permit for a Class B Beer and Liquor License for Craig Martin, to serve beer and liquor by the bottle or glass at 111 W. Whitewater Street (Novaks Restaurant).
  • Consideration of a Conditional Use Permit for a Class B Beer and Liquor License for Kirk Rasmussen, to serve beer and liquor by the bottle or glass at 202 W. Whitewater Street (The College Pub LLC.).
  • Consideration of a change in the City of Whitewater Municipal Ordinance regulations, to enact the proposed amendments to the City of Whitewater Municipal Code: Chapter 19, specifically Section 19.09.520 Non-family household; concerning the limitation of the number of residents in a non-family household.
  • Consideration of a Conditional Use Permit for the proposed studio apartment to be added in the basement of the residential apartment complex located at 467 N. Tratt Street for Russell Walton.
  • Consideration of a Conditional Use Permit to change a former fraternity house at 1036 W. Main Street, into a 4-unit apartment building for Phi Sigma Epsilon Alumni Association (Tim Popp, representative of the Association).
  • Review the proposed construction of a rear yard parking lot (total of 20 stalls) for resident parking at both 152 S. Franklin Street and 451 W. Main Street for David Kachel.
  • Consideration of an amendment conditional use permit application to change the interior of the building at 451 W. Main Street from 8 two bedroom units and 2 one bedroom units to 3 studio apartments, 12 one bedroom apartments and 1 three bedroom apartment for DLK Enterprises Inc.
  • Review and recommendation to the City Council for the purchase of the Scott Gittrich Condo (/SMVK 00002) located at 261 S. Fourth Street.
  • Consideration of an amendment to the conditional use permit for exterior alterations to the north side (rear) of the building located at 174/176 W. Main Street. (The changes include the first floor apartment window, the rear patio area and exterior stairs, and the courtyard wall.)

In Wisconsin history today, according to the Wisconsin historical society, the first public school opened in Wisconsin, in what is now Kenosha. The school, like those today, was supported with a property tax.

Daily Bread: Friday, June 13th, 2008

Good morning, Whitewater

I’m not superstitious, but if I were, I would avoid black cats today.

The National Weather Service predicts a 50% chance of thunderstorms with a high near 80. The Farmers’ Almanac predicts that today will bring showers.

Again, there are no public meetings scheduled for our city today.

School students have been out of school for about a day, and most buildings in the city are still standing… Who knew?

Update: Go Nuclear!

This morning, I proposed a bold new future of clean, efficient, safe nuclear power for Whitewater. Ordinarily, a proposal so visionary, so groundbreaking, might have to wait years for vindication and acceptance.

Not this time – only a few hours after I posted my proposal for an atomic age in Whitewater, the Reuters news agency published a story that confirms how compelling my proposal is.

Reuters reports that a devastating tornado struck a nuclear research reactor at Kansas State University.

Tragedy? Disaster? Not at all!

Consider this inspiring account of American engineering skill (emphasis added):

The tornado caused extensive damage to the building, but no damage to the reactor, which had been shut down properly earlier in the day

That’s right, Whitewater – the reactor was impervious even to the effects of a tornado. Everyone knows that the reactor’s the really important part of a nuclear power plant, anyway – the other buildings just have a bunch of technicians in short-sleeved shirts sitting around drinking coffee and watching computer screens.

Reuters isn’t even an American company, yet they acknowledge the greatness of American design.

We’ve probably spent a small fortune building a Whitewater municipal command facility in the event of a weather emergency. My plan for a reactor makes a separate facility superfluous. The Reuters story proves that there’s a better way.

In a tornado, hurricane, tsunami, mudslide, or volcanic explosion, our political leaders need not worry about their security within a hum-drum, conventional municipal shelter.

Instead, our political class could be assured of complete security merely by retreating to the protected core of Whitewater’s very own nuclear reactor. Once safely inside, they could wait out even the most ferocious storm in the toasty sanctuary that only cheap, efficient nuclear power can provide.

My proposal for a nuclear reactor will not only create jobs for technicians, construction workers, and nuclear engineers – it will simultaneously ensure the storm-proof safety of our political leaders.

Besides, what difference could survival mean to us, if they were not here afterward to govern so nobly and wisely? To borrow an expression from the oh-so-estimable editor of the Whitewater Register, ‘what would we ever do without them?’ Thanks to this proposal, you won’t have to go to bed worried sick about it.

Oh you clever, educated, well-traveled, sophisticated, town-faction skeptics — are you embarrassed now? This morning some of you were unconvinced. Reflect on, and rue now, your too-hasty dismissal.

Ye of little faith – doubt not the power of the atom.

Our better future is just a sustained, controlled nuclear reaction away.

Go Nuclear!

America finds herself beset with two fossil fuel concerns. We worry that we are damaging the environment by using too much fossil fuel; we worry that there is not enough fossil fuel to use.

There are alternatives, including one we have foolishly ignored. America began the atomic age, but she has since abandoned a committed program of nuclear power that would produce abundant, cheap, clean electricity.

It was a huge mistake for America to turn away from nuclear energy at home to rely on foreign oil. We do not rely merely on foreign oil – we rely on expensive foreign oil from despotic foreign regimes.

Nuclear power has been, and could be again, evidence of our skill and ingenuity. The technology is cleaner, safer, and more needed than ever before.

If there were ever a proposal to construct a nuclear power plant in Whitewater, I would be that proposal’s strongest proponent.

I have even researched the idea. The average nuclear power plant in America would offer many benefits for Whitewater: four to seven hundred permanent jobs, over a thousand jobs during construction, over $430 million dollars in annual goods and services sales, and state and local tax revenue of almost $20 million dollars per year.

All this for a reactor core, main building, cooling towers, and control facility.

Woo Hoo!

We easily have that much space in Whitewater – we have land to spare.

Other communities would love to have their own clean, efficient reactor. We’d face stiff competition for the site of any power plant. The hundreds of workers needed to staff the plant would require housing, parking, etc.

One must, in a case like this, carefully review a map of the city, and consider all the possible locations for a fission nuclear reactor. That’s exactly what super-smart, well-dressed planning consultants would do.

I may lack a consultant’s keen insight and sophisticated demeanor, but I more than make up for it in my unbridled love of planning.

After careful consideration of every possible location in the city, I have determined that the best location for the reactor’s core is 42°49’55.52″N, 88°43’59.15″W.

Those unfamiliar with terrestrial coordinates likely know the location better as 312 W. Whitewater Street, the current location of our municipal building.

The shortsighted among us will say that placing the reactor at 312 W. Whitewater means that we’ll have no place for local political meetings.

Why, why are some among us so lacking in vision?

When you have a nuclear reactor in your town, you don’t need local politics.

Anyone who had studied the archives of the Fox TV Network would know that in the Simpsons’ Springfield, it’s the nuclear plant owner Mr. Burns, and not Mayor Quimby, who calls the shots.

That happens in different forms in different places. For example, in Whitewater, it’s Chief Coan, and not City Manager Brunner, who runs the town. (Runs it right into the ground, actually…)

Far as I know, Coan has no background in applied nuclear physics. The adverbial Chief Coan may yet say, however, that his senior officers are completely, thoroughly, amazingly, courageously, valiantly prepared to staff the reactor.

Go nuclear!

Daily Bread: June 12, 2008

Good morning, Whitewater

The National Weather Service predicts heavy rains with a high of 83. The Farmers’ Almanac predicts that today will bring showers — a match!

Again, there are no public meetings scheduled for our municipal corporation today.

In Wisconsin History today, according to the Wisconsin Historical Society, in 1899 Wisconsin saw its worst tornado disaster, in which over 300 buildings were destroyed in New Richmond.

From the Department of Platitudes, “Are You Kidding?” Division

Here are a few of the empty and inapplicable phrases that politicians in Whitewater often use to describe and justify their actions. They’ve used far more expressions than these, but we can consider this post the first in an occasional series.

Bring solutions, not problems. I’ve teased about this before, yet this expression is as profound as it was the day I first saw it in an email. Not quite as good as “There’s no I in TEAM,” or “If you get lemons, make lemonade,” but it’s still pretty good.

I could kick myself when I think that I was born without insight this piercing.

Let’s not micromanage the department. I’ve teased about this before, too. Let’s be clear — One cannot micromanage our police department unless one first manages it.

Death knell. I’ve heard the expression more than once, concerning the encroachment of student housing into residential neighborhoods.

What, though, does the tune – the actual knell, so to speak – sound like? Is it low and sonorous, or high-pitched and piercing?

If one hears the death knell, it’s presumably a bad thing. That might be true for most of us, but what about the hard-of-hearing? Are they affected? If one does not hear a death knell, does it truly transform the residential mix of a neighborhood? If one cannot hear it, then perhaps it makes no demographic sound.

If so, then a group of homeowners with bad hearing would have much better chance of preserving their neighborhood from the depredations of student renters.

Let’s not open the flood gates to resolutions. Should I conclude that we’ve yet to reach a point of too much discussion on some matters – as though it has not happened, but might?

The flood gates were long ago opened to the hopelessly trivial, in our public meetings. If matters of American constitutional law are now too much for you, you have only yourself to blame. Quibble less on small matters, and find the energy for large ones.

Floodgates? Having tolerated the descent of the city into a Waterworld of silly discussion, there’s no longstanding incumbent in the city who should be complaining now.

If one were to repeat these four expressions elsewhere, they’d merely be trite.

Say the same words against the backdrop of Whitewater politics, and each one is low comedy. Add a few tigers jumping though flaming hoops, or a chimp riding a tricycle, and the city would have a suitable Vegas act.

Daily Bread: June 11, 2008

Good morning, Whitewater

The National Weather Service predicts a chance of thunderstorms with a high of 81. The Farmers’ Almanac predicts again that today will be “mostly fair and turning warm.” An approximate match.

There are no public meetings scheduled for our municipal corporation today.

It’s the last day of school for students. After today, one of the three supposed challenges in our community, juveniles, will be loose during the day.

(The other two being, according to the Whitewater Police Department, Hispanics and university students.)

If these groups ever got together…. What horrible chaos might befall our fair city? It might almost become a… normal civil society!

In Wisconsin History today, according to the Wisconsin Historical Society, in 1935 Milwaukee native Gene Wilder was born. (The Internet Movie Database reports he was born on June 11, 1933.)

No matter — he was the best Willie Wonka, whenever he was born.

Who’s This? The Answer’s Below…

This morning I offered a blind quotation describing a social group. I asked if you might recognize in the description some people you know.

Here’s the quotation, once more –

[L]ocals were overwhelmed. Modern…ways and the waves of foreigners had created among them a sense of panic, he said, “the erosion of everything traditional and a real sense of insecurity.” In the minds of the locals, the world they knew was disappearing…. “It’s a very pervasive feeling for a large portion of the population.”

Unless (and improbably) you have read about Saipan, and how the indigenous population has reacted to immigrants from Asia with a mixture of envy and hostility, then you would – quite reasonably – not have guessed the subject of the quotation.

It’s an observation from Samuel McPhetres, as John Bowe quotes him in Bowe’s recent book, Nobodies: Modern American Slave Labor and the Dark Side of the New Global Economy. The quotation is a description of Saipan’s first residents.

You might, instead, have supposed that the quote was a reference to Whitewater’s stodgy, stagnant town faction.

It would have been a fair guess. One could not fault you for looking for a group close at hand, and so fitting for the quotation.

Saipan, though, is far away. It’s part of a failed, multi-island commonwealth, suffering from an ailing economy, ineffective government, and social hostility from longstanding residents against newcomers.

Some people here — those who think that this town belongs principally to them — would be insulted at any comparison with Saipan. Each and every one of them must think that he or she is more important, cultured, and fair-minded than the inhabitants of Saipan, a tropical island turned rat hole.

Our self-designated town squires and their narrow coterie may rest assured — the author of the quotation did not you have you in mind.

Then again, I don’t think that he’s yet visited Whitewater. more >>

Who’s This?

Here’s a description of a group within a struggling community. Who’s the group, and what’s the community? Recognize anyone you know? The answer this evening…

[L]ocals were overwhelmed. Modern…ways and the waves of foreigners had created among them a sense of panic, he said, “the erosion of everything traditional and a real sense of insecurity.” In the minds of the locals, the world they knew was disappearing…. “It’s a very pervasive feeling for a large portion of the population.”
more >>

Daily Bread: June 10, 2008

Good morning, Whitewater

There is a scheduled meeting of the our city’s Nominations Committee at 5:30 p.m. today.

The National Weather Service predicts a 40% chance of thunderstorms. The Farmers’ Almanac predicts again that today will be “mostly fair and turning warm.”

In world history today, in 1943 the Biro brothers, of Hungary by way of Argentina, patented the ballpoint pen.

Daily Bread: June 9, 2008

Good morning, Whitewater

There is a scheduled meeting of the Community Development Authority business park committee at 4:30 p.m. today in the municipal building. The principal topic is the “Presentation, Discussion and Possible Action on Applied PhD Research Stage I Study for the Whitewater Business Park.” (The agenda item, itself, sounds like a dissertation topic.)

Today offers up lunch on the lawn and field follies at Washington School, and fifth grade recognition at Lakeview School.

The National Weather Service predicts a 90% chance of showers. The Farmers’ Almanac says that today will be “mostly fair and turning warm.” No it won’t be — that’s the problem of trying to predict something as variable as the weather a year in advance — one may easily be far off.

Just below this post is my series on the latest Council meeting — on cars, number of people at a residence, and a brief discussion of the police and fire commission.

Common Council’s June 3rd Meeting: Cars at One’s House

Whitewater has had an ordinance, seldom enforced, that limits the number of cars that may be parked outside on certain parts of a residential property. Members of the Council had understandable trouble determining what our current two-car limitation really meant – the jumble of definitions of side yard, front yard, etc. is like a parody of regulation.

Some of the definitions of areas of a house will make no sense to most people, and their enforcement will only make Whitewater look ridiculous.

An amendment to the existing ordinance will now allow three cars where two were permitted. That’s not 50% more generous – it’s 100% as intrusive and meddlesome.

There’s a question about whether the ordinance will be enforced in response to complaints, or comprehensively. Some at the meeting expressed understandable concern – given the city’s sketchy reputation for enforcement – that the provisions would be enforced selectively.

There are two good reasons to contend that it will be enforced selectively

If the ordinance is enforced in response to citizen complaints, then it is by definition enforced selectively.

If, as someone observed, the new ordinance derives from a desire to protect single family housing, then it will almost certainly be enforced selectively. If that motivation controls, rather than a comprehensive one, then selective enforcement will be the result.

If the city started ticketing everyone in every neighborhood who violated this ordinance, they would have to hold long-term residents, friends etc. to the same standard as students and newcomers. Exceptions and selective enforcement – an exercise of discretion in dubious ways – will be tempting.

Not even tempting – what temptation would be required, really, if the motivation is to preserve a certain class of housing?