FREE WHITEWATER

The Scope of Donohue’s Work (Part 1)

WGTB logo PNG 112x89 Post 19 in a series. When Green Turns Brown is an examination of a small town’s digester-energy project, in which Whitewater, Wisconsin would import other cities’ waste, claiming that the result would be both profitable and green.

We’re now at the beginning of an examination of the current proposal from Donohue and Associates of Sheboygan, an engineering firm that I described in last week’s post as The Once and Present Vendor (since they were meeting with city officials, other vendors, and a waste importer on 11.5.13, even before Wastewater Superintendent Tim Reel gave his first slideshow presentation, and long before Donohue’s representatives made their first public appearance).

I’ll begin with this overview question: what’s the scope of Donohue’s work? They’re an engineering firm from Sheboygan, but that’s not an answer to this question. The scope of Donohue’s work is the boundary Donohue places on its work, either of their own imagination or from a client’s imposition. Embedded below is the first of several memoranda that Donohue prepared for Whitewater, each styled technical memoranda.

(There’s a double meaning to the term technical: although it’s likely intended to connote broadly the precise or scientific, it also describes work that’s narrow, and focused on engineering to the exclusion of other meaningful considerations: those of fiscal, economic, environmental, human health, and a city’s political and business culture.  Engineering matters, unquestionably so; other fields and perspectives matter just as much.)

I’ll post this initial Donohue memorandum on its own today, because I think it deserves particular attention.  Often, the best examination beings simply with presenting something, and giving others the chance to think about it for a bit.  A thorough examination should be neither hushed nor rushed.  For all the discussions, for all the presentations from Whitewater’s City Manager Clapper and  Wastewater Superintendent Reel, there’s information about fundamental perspective and defining intentions in this engineering memorandum that they’ve not emphasized on their own.

Tomorrow, in Part 2 of this post, I’ll pose questions derived from Donohue Technical Memo 1, Strategic Direction.

Donohue Technical Memo 1, Strategic Direction, http://www.whitewater-wi.gov/images/stories/public_works/wastewater/Donohue_Technical_Memo_1_-_Strategic_Direction.pdf.

WHEN GREEN TURNS BROWN: Mondays @ 10 AM, here on FREE WHITEWATER.

Tomorrow: The Scope of Donohue’s Work (Part 2).

Daily Bread for 7.13.15

Good morning, Whitewater.

We’ll have a day of scattered strong storms and a high of ninety today. Sunrise is 5:28 and sunset 8:32, for 15h 03m 37s of daytime. The moon is a waning crescent with 7.1% of its visible disk illuminated.

Whitewater’s Planning Commission meets tonight at 6:30 PM.

On this day in 1787, Congresses passes the Northwest Ordinance:

Northwest Territory Established

On this date the Northwest Ordinance was passed by the Continental Congress. The ordinance provided for the administration of the territories and set rules for admission as a state. The Northwest territoryincluded land west of Pennsylvania and Northwest of the Ohio River, which encompassed present day Ohio, Indiana, Illinois, Michigan, parts of Minnesota and of course Wisconsin. [Source: Indiana Historical Bureau]

A Google a Day asks a basketball question:

The youngest recipient of the NBA MVP award joined which one of his “Bulls” teammates in receiving this honor?

Sunday Film: Colors

Colors from The Mercadantes on Vimeo.

A celebration of color in our everyday lives.

Made by The Mercadantes
Directed by Daniel Mercadante
Producer: Jordan Shively
Executive Producer: Katina Mercadante
Additional Cinematography: Alisha Shimada
Music: W.A. Mozart

Made with a grant from Vimeo

Daily Bread for 7.12.15

Good morning, Whitewater.

Sunday will be partly cloudy, with a high of eighty-five. Sunrise is 5:28 and sunset 8:33, for 15h 05m 00s of daytime. The moon is a waning crescent with 13.4% of its visible disk illuminated.

Friday’s poll asked respondents whether they thought a Utah college’s designation of separate staircase lanes for walking, running, and texting was a good idea. A majority of respondents (54.55%) didn’t think so, but a sizable number (45.45%) supported the idea.

Yesterday, I posted a video of BASE jumper Uli Emanuele using a wingsuit to fly between a two meter opening far below his launch point. Embedded below is a video about a smaller creature that shares Emanuele’s skill in gliding —

On this day in 1995, a heat wave bedevils Wisconsin:

1995 – Deadly Heat Wave Begins
From July 12-15, 1995, the Midwest was subjected to a deadly outbreak of hot and humid weather responsible for 141 deaths in Wisconsin. According to the Milwaukee Journal-Sentinel, this was the “greatest single event of weather-related deaths in Wisconsin history.” Most of the fatalities happened in the urban southeast counties of the state, and at one point several Milwaukee-area hospitals were unable to admit more patients.

Milwaukee Temperatures (from the Milwaukee Journal Sentinel): July 12: Hi=91, Lo=65 July 13: Hi=103*, Lo=78 July 14: Hi=102, Lo=84 July 15: Hi=92, Lo=69 July 16: Hi=88, Lo=68 *Some communities reported highs as high as 108. Heat Index values were 120-130 degrees.

NOAA’s Natural Disaster Survey Report on the outbreak is available at http://www.weather.gov/os/assessments/pdfs/heat95.pdf [Source: Milwaukee Journal Sentinel]

Daily Bread for 7.11.15

Good morning, Whitewater.

Saturday in Whitewater will be partly sunny, with an even chance of afternoon thundershowers, and a high of seventy-eighty. Sunrise is 5:27 and sunset 8:33, for 15h 06m 21s of daytime. The moon is a waning crescent with 21.6% of its visible disk illuminated.

In the video below, Uli Emanuele “pilots what is possibly the most technical and difficult BASE jump ever. For the past 3 years Uli has been dreaming about and preparing for what could be a world record jump. With just his wingsuit and hiking poles, he climbs to his exit point and realizes there is no turning back.”

On this day in 1914, Babe Ruth makes his major league start, as a pitcher:

On July 11, 1914, in his major league debut, George Herman “Babe” Ruth pitches seven strong innings to lead the Boston Red Sox over the Cleveland Indians, 4-3.

George Herman Ruth was born February 6, 1895, in Baltimore, Maryland, where his father worked as a saloon keeper on the waterfront. He was the first of eight children, but only he and a sister survived infancy. The young George, known as “Gig” (pronounced jij) to his family, was a magnet for trouble from an early age. At seven, his truancy from school led his parents to declare him incorrigible, and he was sent to an orphanage, St. Mary’s Industrial School for Boys. Ruth lived there until he was 19 in 1914, when he was signed as a pitcher by the Baltimore Orioles.

That same summer, Ruth was sold to the Boston Red Sox. His teammates called him “Babe” for his naiveté, but his talent was already maturing. In his debut game against the Indians, the 19-year-old Ruth gave up just five hits over the first six innings. In the seventh, the Indians managed two runs on three singles and a sacrifice and Ruth was relieved. His hitting prowess, however, was not on display that first night–he went 0 for 2 at the plate.

Ruth developed quickly as a pitcher and as a hitter. When the Red Sox made the World Series in 1916 and 1918, Ruth starred, setting a record with 29 2/3 consecutive scoreless innings in World Series play. His career record as a pitcher for the Red Sox was 89-46.

To the great dismay of Boston fans, Ruth’s contract was sold to the New York Yankees before the 1920 season by Red Sox owner Harry Frazee, so that Frazee could finance the musical No, No, Nanette. Ruth switched to the outfield with the Yankees, and hit more home runs than the entire Red Sox team in 10 of the next 12 seasons. “The Sultan of Swat” or “The Bambino,” as he was alternately known, was the greatest gate attraction in baseball until his retirement as a player in 1935. During his career with the New York Yankees, the team won four World Series and seven American League pennants. After getting rid of Ruth, the Red Sox did not win a World Series until 2004, an 85-year drought known to Red Sox fans as “the Curse of the Bambino.”

On this day in 1921, the America’s first equal rights law of its kind takes effect:

1921 – Nation’s First Equal Rights Law Signed
On this day Governor John J. Blaine signed into law the nation’s first legislation guaranteeing women the same legal privileges, rights and protections as men. [Source: WLHBA]

Daily Bread for 7.10.15

Good morning, Whitewater.

The work week in Whitewater ends with mostly sunny skies and a high of eighty-two. Sunrise is 5:26 and sunset 8:34, for 15h 07m 38s of daytime. The moon is a waning crescent with 32% of its visible disk illuminated.

On this day in 1940, and lasting for over a hundred days, the Battle of Britain begins:

The Battle of Britain (German: Luftschlacht um England, literally “Air battle for England”) is the name given to the Second World War air campaign waged by the German Air Force (Luftwaffe) against the United Kingdom during the summer and autumn of 1940. The Battle of Britain was the first major campaign to be fought entirely by air forces,[18] and was also the largest and most sustained aerial bombing campaign to that date.

The objective of the Nazi German forces was to achieve air superiority over the Royal Air Force (RAF), especially its Fighter Command. Beginning in July 1940, coastal shipping convoys and shipping centres, such as Portsmouth, were the main targets; one month later, the Luftwaffe shifted its attacks to RAF airfields and infrastructure. As the battle progressed, the Luftwaffe also targeted factories involved in World War II aircraft production and ground infrastructure. Eventually the Luftwaffe resorted to attacking areas of political significance and using terror bombing strategy.[nb 10]

By preventing Germany from gaining air superiority, the British forced Adolf Hitler to postpone and eventually cancel Operation Sea Lion, a planned amphibious and airborne invasion of Britain. However, Germany continued bombing operations on Britain, known as The Blitz. The failure of Nazi Germany to achieve its objective of destroying Britain’s air defences in order to force Britain to negotiate an armistice (or even surrender outright) is considered by historians to be its first major defeat in World War II and a crucial turning point in the conflict.[20]

On this day in 1832, during the Black Hawk War, soldiers begin building a fort:

1832 – Fort Koshkonong Construction Begins
On this date General Henry Atkinson and his troops built Fort Koshkonong after being forced backwards from the bog area of the “trembling lands” in their pursuit of Black Hawk. The Fort, later known as Fort Atkinson, was described by Atkinson as “a stockade work flanked by four block houses for the security of our supplies and the accommodation of the sick.” It was also on this date that Atkinson discharged a large number of Volunteers from his army in order to decrease stress on a dwindling food supply and to make his force less cumbersome. One of the dismissed volunteers was future president, Abraham Lincoln, whose horse was stolen in Cold Spring, Wisconsin, and was forced to return to New Salem, Illinois by foot and canoe. [Sources: History Just Ahead: A Guide to Wisconsin’s Historical Markers edited by Sarah Davis McBride and Along the Black Hawk Trail by Willilam F. Stark]

A Google a Day asks a geography question:

The expansion of the earth’s surface is demonstrated by what U.S. state that is believed to be increasing by 1.2 “nanostrains” per year?

Demand

Here’s a follow-on to yesterday’s post, Business Dependency in Whitewater.

There’s a huge effort locally, from the Community Development Authority in particular, to spur growth through large, publicly-funded incentives.  

These addled few are like men who’ve heard the expression, ‘if you build it, he will come,’ but don’t understand when it applies and when it doesn’t.  That’s a much bigger topic than I intend here, and it has both economic and legal implications (ones that are being litigated elsewhere in Wisconsin now). 

Sometimes – and here in Whitewater all too often — building something doesn’t attract anyone, doesn’t attract the target audience, or only attracts someone at an unsustainable cost. 

Consider the story of men in rural Pennsylvania who built a commune, only to find no one else to take them up on the venture:

….They were born Michael Colby and Donald Graves, but once there, on 63 acres in the Mahantongo Valley, a bowl of land in central Pennsylvania, they changed their names to Christian and Johannes Zinzendorf and called themselves the Harmonists, inspired by a splinter group of 18th-century Moravian brothers who believed in the spiritual values of an agrarian life.

Their ideals were lofty but simple: They would live off the land, farming with Colonial-era tools, along with a band of like-minded men dressed in homespun robes wielding scythes and pickaxes. They would sleep in atmospheric log cabins and other 18th-century structures that they had rescued from the area and that they began to reconstruct, painstakingly, brick by crumbling brick and log by log.

But what if you built a commune, and no one came….

The 25 buildings that dot the landscape are mostly dormant, save for Zephram’s house and Johannes’s house….

See, They Built It. No One Came @ The New York Times.

These utopians, to their credit, tried to build a community with their own money; Whitewater’s development gurus want to do this with vast heapings of public money. 

They’ve both the same problem, though: an ambition that exceeds aptitude, a conviction that they know what others want, perhaps better than others, themselves, do. 

Daily Bread for 7.9.15

Good morning, Whitewater.

Thursday in the Whippet City will be partly cloudy with a high of seventy-eight. Sunrise is 5:25 and sunset 8:34, for 15h 08m 51s of daytime. The moon is a waning crescent with 42.8% of its visible disk illuminated.

 
A Live Version from March 1963

On this day in 1962, Bob Dylan records a protest song that he contends isn’t a protest song at all:

“This here ain’t no protest song or anything like that, ’cause I don’t write no protest songs.” That was how Bob Dylan introduced one of the most eloquent protest songs ever written when he first performed it publicly. It was the spring of his first full year in New York City, and he was onstage at Gerde’s Folk City in Greenwich Village, talking about a song he claims to have written in just 10 minutes: “Blowin’ In The Wind.” A few weeks later, on this day in 1962, Dylan walked into a studio and recorded the song that would make him a star.

Dylan’s recording of “Blowin’ In The Wind” would first be released nearly a full year later, on his breakthrough album, The Freewheelin’ Bob Dylan. This was not the version of the song that most people would first hear, however. That honor went to the cover version by Peter, Paul and Mary—a version that not only became a smash hit on the pop charts, but also transformed what Dylan would later call “just another song” into the unofficial anthem of the civil rights movement.

A Google a Day asks a sports question:

What piece of sports equipment is described in section 1.10 (b) of the MLB Official Rules?