FREE WHITEWATER

What It’s Like to Fly Over Mars

Explore the Atlantis Chaos region of Mars, in the Red Planet’s southern hemisphere. The video showcases a myriad of features that reflect a rich geological history. The tour takes in rugged cliffs and impact craters, alongside parts of ancient shallow, eroded basins. See smooth plains scarred with wrinkled ridges, scarps and fracture lines that point to influence from tectonic activity. Marvel at ‘chaotic’ terrain – hundreds of small peaks and flat-topped hills that are thought to result from the slow erosion of a once-continuous solid plateau. This entire region may once have played host to vast volumes of water – look out for the evidence in the form of channels carved into steep-sided walls.

See, also, http://www.esa.int/spaceinimages/Images/2015/07/Ancient_Atlantis.

7,000 and 7,622

Welcome signs in Whitewater list the city’s population as 14,622.  That’s right, give or take a small number since the signs were last updated. 

When thinking about Whitewater, however, one can’t reasonably think of a homogeneous population of 14,622.

We’re a more diverse city than that, with demographics revealing a multi-ethnic and vocationally-split community. 

Of this population of 14,622, approximately 7,000 are resident students enrolled at UW-Whitewater (resident undergraduates or graduate students). 

This number is approximate, but the point is clear enough: Whitewater would be far smaller without the resident student population. 

In fact, she’d be far smaller than some nearby towns, places that have a tiny number of college-student residents by comparison.

We’re one city, but not one group, and one of the groups we have is huge.  (As a vocation, being a college student is overwhelmingly the largest vocation in the city.   Nothing else is close.)

Some vital planning necessarily involves considering our entire population; some other efforts or analyses (such as the percentage of single-family housing) truly involve only a portion of the city. 

The relevant population, in these cases, isn’t 14,622, but only 7,622.

The smaller number is significant, apart from comprehensive services, for the actual size – and presumptions – of the non-student population within the city: the non-student group is neither so numerous nor so influential as it might wish to present itself.

Consequently and critically, self-defined elites from among the non-student population are neither so numerous nor so influential as they might wish to present themselves.

Daily Bread for 8.5.15

Good morning, Whitewater.

We’ll have a mostly sunny Wednesday in Whitewater, with a high of eighty-two. Sunrise is 5:51 and sunset 8:10, for 14h 19m 15s of daytime. The moon is a waning gibbous with 67.8% of its visible disk illuminated.

Whitewater’s Community Development Authority meets at 5 PM today.

101st-anniversary-of-the-first-electric-traffic-signal-system-5751092593819648-hp
Google has a doodle on its website to commemorate the 101st anniversary of the electric traffic light. Earlier, gas-illuminated versions proved dangerous, but an American inventor hit upon the safer method of using electricity:

Lester Wire, a former detective in Salt Lake City, came up with the revolutionary idea in 1912, and traffic lights began springing up across the United States shortly after….The doodle depicts the world’s first electric traffic light to be installed and put into major use in Cleveland, Ohio, on August 5 1914…..

Placed on the corner of Euclid Avenue and East 105th Street, it would have been a chaotic affair, with bicycles and cars as well as horses competing for domination of the road.

Doodle illustrator Nate Swinehart said that he did not include the yellow light outlining that the were not introduced until later to regulate the traffic more effectively.

On this day in 1825, a meeting for peace in Wisconsin:

1825 – Council Held at Fort Crawford
On this date a great council of Native Americans and white settlers began at Prairie du Chien. For days prior to the event, canoe-loads of attendees converged from all directions and included members of the Sioux, Ho-Chunk, Menominee, Chippewa, Ottawa, Potawatomi, Iowa, Sauk, and Fox tribes. The purpose of this gathering was to promote peace among the tribes and to establish boundaries for their territorial claims. [Source: The History of Wisconsin, Vol.I: From Exploration to Statehood, by Alice Smith, p. 122]

A Google a Day asks a question of literature:

Who, while working as an apprentice compositor, wrote articles under the pseudonym “Aristides”?

The History of a Project Isn’t ‘Misinformation’

WGTB logo PNG 112x89 Post 24 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.

Here’s a post that’s mostly an aside, a quick consideration of the notion of misinformation.  

One should be clear: the history of a project isn’t ‘misinformation.’

At the 7.21.15 City of Whitewater Strategic Planning Session, a member of Council expressed concern about misinformation concerning the wastewater plant project.  He remarked that sometimes

people fill in the gap with stuff that isn’t true or isn’t current information.  The wastewater treatment plant is a good example.  You know, talking about Trane.  Okay, it’s no longer part of that project, but we haven’t done a good job of letting that be known.

See, 7.21.15 Council Session, https://vimeo.com/134219394.

I don’t know what other people are writing or saying about Trane’s role in the treatment plant project, but it has been a part of my When Green Turns Brown Series.  

It’s part of that series because the series is about the full measure of a digester-energy project, its history, development, and implications.  

The role of Trane is both relevant and material to the project.  (If it were otherwise, then Trane never should have been involved, and Whitewater’s city government is remiss for voting at any stage to compensate that vendor.)

The epidemiology of influenza, for example, would reasonably include a history of prior outbreaks.  One wouldn’t say that, because those outbreaks were in the past, they were beyond consideration or, so to speak, “no longer part of that project.”  (In fact, the connections are even stronger in this case: Trane’s participation was part of the same course of events, the same outbreak, so to speak.)

This series is not written for a specifically local audience, let alone Whitewater’s Common Council.  No one owes Whitewater’s politicians their narrative, their efforts to direct the discussion from what they consider done to what they consider ongoing.   

The series is a mere prelude to both a written and video assessment of a digester-energy project; it’s only begun, and will take well over another year to complete (perhaps more, I’m not certain).  These are notes – as I have made plain – along the way toward a work for a wider audience.  

I’ll be writing about this project without a timetable constrained by political votes or expectations, local or otherwise.  

In any event, writing about the actual advancement of this project is not ‘misinformation.’

I’d happily discuss this series with anyone, but I’ll not limit a careful, methodical consideration of this digester-energy project, by omitting significant events in its development.    

Next Time: “Estimates of Future Flows and Loadings,” showing again how this project is, fundamentally and not incidentally, about the importation of other cities’ unwanted waste into Whitewater.

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

Film: King of the Mountain

King Of The Mountain from Grain Media on Vimeo.

As a boy growing up, Samuel Mugisha dreamed of being a part of the Rwandan national cycling team, Team Rwanda, as he believed it would be a way to help make money for his family. What he discovered was something else entirely. In a country trying to get over the trauma of a genocide, Team Rwanda represents a lot more than sport.

Made for AJ+ / ajplus.net
To find out more about the fantastic Team Rwanda visit teamrwandacycling.org

Credits:

Director / Producer: Orlando von Einsiedel
Producer: Harri Grace
Cinematography: Franklin Dow
Fixer: Jean_Pierre Sagahutu
Film Editor: Katie Bryer
Composer: Patrick Jonsson
Sound Design: Rob Hardcastle
Colourist: Franklin Dow
Executive Producer for AJ+: Aloke Devichand
Executive Producer for Grain Media: Jon Drever
Production Co-ordinator: Nick Rowley
Production Manager: Amelia Franklin.

Daily Bread for 8.4.15

Good morning, Whitewater.

Tuesday in town will be sunny, with a high of eighty-one. Sunrise is 5:50 and sunset 8:11, for 14h 21m 35s of daytime. The moon is a waning crescent with 78.3% of its visible disk illuminated.

Whitewater’s Alcohol and Licensing Committee meets this evening at 6:20 PM, and thereafter Common Council at 6:30 PM.

On this day in 1901, Louis Armstrong is born:

Louis Armstrong (August 4, 1901 – July 6, 1971),[1] nicknamed Satchmo[2] or Pops, was an American jazz trumpeter, singer, and one of the pivotal and most influential figures in jazz music.

Coming to prominence in the 1920s as an “inventive” trumpet and cornet player, Armstrong was a foundational influence in jazz, shifting the focus of the music from collective improvisation to solo performance. With his instantly recognizable gravelly voice, Armstrong was also an influential singer, demonstrating great dexterity as an improviser, bending the lyrics and melody of a song for expressive purposes. He was also skilled at scat singing (vocalizing using sounds and syllables instead of actual lyrics).

Renowned for his charismatic stage presence and voice almost as much as for his trumpet-playing, Armstrong’s influence extends well beyond jazz music, and by the end of his career in the 1960s, he was widely regarded as a profound influence on popular music in general. Armstrong was one of the first truly popular African-American entertainers to “cross over”, whose skin color was secondary to his music in an America that was severely racially divided. He rarely publicly politicized his race, often to the dismay of fellow African-Americans, but took a well-publicized stand for desegregation during the Little Rock Crisis. His artistry and personality allowed him socially acceptable access to the upper echelons of American society that were highly restricted for black men.

On this day in 1862, there’s rioting in Wisconsin:

1862 – War Department Order Prompts Riot
On this date the War Department issued General Order No.99, requesting by draft 300,000 troops to reinforce the Union armies in the Civil War. This action reinforced public sentiment against the draft and prompted the citizens in Port Washington, Ozaukee County to riot in protest.

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?

Donohue’s Technical Memorandum 2 (Population)

WGTB logo PNG 112x89 Post 23 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.

Engineering firm Donohue prepared several memoranda about their proposal for Whitewater’s wastewater facility. In posts 19 and 20 in this series – The Scope of Donohue’s Work (Part 1), The Scope of Donohue’s Work (Part 2) – one sees that Donohue describes a strategic direction for Whitewater (selling water, importing waste) that neither City Manager Clapper nor Wastewater Superintendent Reel has mentioned as a primary goal in any of their published presentations. (The public presentations do not match the published strategic direction in fundamental ways. The gap suggests either a lack of candor or a lack of focus.)

Today, I’ll look at a part of Donohue’s Technical Memorandum 2, Flows, Loadings, and Existing Conditions (embedded in full, below). A critical portion of that memorandum – a work for which in total Whitewater would pay Donohue over a million in fees – raises questions about Donohue’s understanding of the city’s population and demographics, among other topics.

(Every question in this series has a unique number, assigned chronologically based on when it was asked.  All the questions from When Green Turns Brown can be found in the Question Bin.  Today’s questions begin with No. 164.)

In Section 4.1 (Growth Projections), Donohue writes that “[d]ifferent projections were developed based on information from the US Census, Wisconsin Department of Administration (DOA), and the City of Whitewater.”  I’ve placed the table below.

Table 14

164.  Why these three estimates – not why three estimates, but why these three?

165.  Of the three, aren’t two of these sources (Wisconsin Department of Administration, City of Whitewater) expressly political bodies in the way that the third (U.S. Census Bureau) is not?

166.  Wouldn’t a political body have an incentive to contend for population increases as evidence of growth, vitality, etc.?

167.  Of the City of Whitewater’s case, Donohue writes that

The population of the City of Whitewater has steadily increased for several decades. However, the City is anticipating significant growth through the year 2035. The census population for the City was 14,390 in 2010. The City?led growth study predicted a growth rate of 0.93 percent annually for 2008 to 2013, and the City has adopted this growth rate for long?range planning purposes. Based on this data, the year 2035 (design year) population is projected to be 18,398.

Why would the City-led growth study assume that a bounceback-from-recession, pre-university-cuts level of growth from ’08-’13 would continue identically each year for the next 22 years?  What does it reliably mean, if anything, that Whitewater takes a number from the recent past and simply ‘adopts’ it as a standard for the next two decades?

168.  Does the City of Whitewater analysis take into account university cuts’ impact on the economy and growth of our city since 2013?  If not, why not?

169.  If the City of Whitewater projections do take into account university cuts’ impact on the economy and growth of our city since 2013, and still the city estimates significant growth, then does City Manager Clapper conclude that the cuts will have no impact on growth?

170.  Aren’t a recent study and findings from Sarah Kemp of the Applied Population Laboratory at the University of Wisconsin-Madison on enrollment and demographics in the Whitewater Unified School  District evidence that, in the city and surrounding area, growth that produces enrollment gains will be tepid?  Why would one conclude in favor of the City of Whitewater’s rosy population estimates (simply adopting an increase for the next two decades) over actual evidence of decline (in this case, of school enrollment, and therefore families bringing children into area schools)?

171.  Why does Donohue not use population protections from the Southeastern Wisconsin Regional Planning Commission (SEWRPC)?  They make no mention of the SEWPRC or its work in population projection and analysis.  (The Southeastern Wisconsin Regional Planning Commission (SEWRPC) “is the official metropolitan planning organization (MPO) and regional planning commission (RPC) for the seven county southeastern Wisconsin area.” Walworth County is part of the organization, an organization founded in 1960. Their data are for Walworth County. )

172.  If Donohue had used the respected Southeastern Wisconsin Regional Planning Commission estimates, wouldn’t they have found 15,838 as the 2035 population estimate (SEWRPC Regional Land Use Plan (Intermediate Growth Scenario) or 15,273 (Trend Based)? (See, Comprehensive Plan for Walworth County: 2035.)

173.  Of the five available population projections, hasn’t Donohue adopted one that’s ten-percent higher than the U.S. Census (simply projected by Donohue linearly) and sixteen-percent higher than our area’s own regional planning authority’s estimates for our principal county?

174.  Was Donohue even aware of the Southeastern Wisconsin Regional Planning Commission work?  If so, shouldn’t they explain the decision to omit it?  If not, why would Whitewater’s city administration , itself, ignore that work, and leave Donohue’s ignorance of it uncorrected?

Donohue Technical Memo 2, Flows, Loadings, and Existing Conditions, http://www.whitewater-wi.gov/images/stories/public_works/wastewater/Donohue_Technical_Memo_2_-_Flows_Loadings_and_Existing_Conditions.pdf.

Next Time: “Estimates of Future Flows and Loadings,” showing again how this project is, fundamentally and not incidentally, about the importation of other cities’ unwanted waste into Whitewater.

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

Daily Bread for 8.3.15

Good morning, Whitewater.

Monday in Whitewater will be sunny and clear, with a high of eighty. Sunrise is 5:49 and sunset 8:12, for 14h 23m 53s of daytime. The moon is a waning gibbous with 87.3% of its visible disk illuminated.

On this day in 1958, the USS Nautilus completes a trip beneath the Arctic icecap:

USS Nautilus (SSN-571) was the world’s first operational nuclear-powered submarine. The vessel was the first submarine to complete a submerged transit to the North Pole on 3 August 1958. Sharing names with Captain Nemo‘s fictional submarine in Jules Verne‘s Twenty Thousand Leagues Under the Sea, and named after anotherUSS Nautilus (SS-168) that served with distinction in World War II, Nautilus was authorized in 1951 and launched in 1954. Because her nuclear propulsion allowed her to remain submerged far longer than diesel-electric submarines, she broke many records in her first years of operation, and traveled to locations previously beyond the limits of submarines. In operation, she revealed a number of limitations in her design and construction. This information was used to improve subsequent submarines.

Nautilus was decommissioned in 1980 and designated a National Historic Landmark in 1982. The submarine has been preserved as a museum of submarine history inGroton, Connecticut, where the vessel receives some 250,000 visitors a year.

A Google a Day asks a question about history:

What Frankish ruler is associated with the Carolingian Renaissance?

Sunday Animation: The Casebook of Nips & Porkington (2015)

The Casebook of Nips & Porkington (2015) from Melody Wang on Vimeo.

A Sheridan 4th year animated short film done primarily in Toonboom Harmony and Photoshop.

www.nipsandporkington.tumblr.com
www.mellowatt.com
www.mellowatt.tumblr.com
https://www.facebook.com/pages/Mellowatt/1446255342343757

Film by Melody Wang
Score by Xintong Wang

Voice Talents
Elaine Wise as Constable Nips
Elliot Cowan as Porkington, the rat, and Mr. Goose
Kirsten Lloyd as Mrs. Goose

Mentors
Nancy Beiman
Bruno Degazio

Minions
Danial Darabi
Rui Hao
Jack Hincenbergs
Marissa Iavazzi
Ruby Xia
Xin Wu

Daily Bread for 8.2.15

Good morning, Whitewater.

Sunday in town will be partly cloudy, with a high of ninety, and strong scattered thunderstorms in the late afternoon.

When a bison at a national park attacks a tourist, as happens now and again, whose fault is that?  In the FW poll for Friday, 77.27% of respondents said the park visitors should be responsible, 18.18% said the park should be responsible, and 4.55% said the bison should be responsible.  If it should be the bison’s responsibility, perhaps that leads to a recipe.

 

On this day in 1865, the crew of the Shenandoah finally accept news of the South’s surrender:

The captain and crew of the C.S.S. Shenandoah, still prowling the waters of the Pacific in search of Yankee whaling ships, is finally informed by a British vessel that the South has lost the war.

The Shenandoah was the last major Confederate cruiser to set sail. Launched as a British vessel in September 1863, it was purchased by the Confederates and commissioned in October 1864. The 230-foot-long craft was armed with eight large guns and a crew of 73 sailors. Commanded by Captain James I. Waddell, theShenandoah steered toward the Pacific and targeted Yankee whaling ships. Waddell enjoyed great success, taking six ships in the South Pacific before slipping into Melbourne, Australia, for repairs in January 1865.

Within a month, the Shenandoah was back on the loose, wreaking havoc in the waters around Alaska. The Rebel ship captured 32 additional Union vessels, most of which were burned. The damage was estimated at $1.6 million, a staggering figure in such a short period of time. Although the crew heard rumors that the Confederate armies had surrendered, Waddell continued to fight. He finally accepted an English captain’s report on August 2, 1865. The Shenandoah pulled off another remarkable feat by sailing from the northern Pacific all the way to Liverpool, England, without stopping at any ports. Arriving on November 6, Waddell surrendered his ship to British officials.

 

On this day in 1832, war in the Midwest ends:

1832 – Black Hawk War Ends

On this date the defeat of Black Hawk and his followers at the Battle of Bad Axe, ended the Black Hawk War. Black Hawk led the American troops northward while the rest of the Indians constructed rafts and canoes to facilitate an escape over the Mississippi river. The plan was successful initially but eventually General Atkinson realized the ruse. In the battle, women, children and the elderly hid behind rocks and logs and American soldiers often could not or did not differentiate between warriors and the women and children. Atkinson sent Wabasha and his Sioux warriors, enemies of the Sauk, after the approximately 150 members of the British Band that made it to the Western bank of the Mississippi. The Sauk, “escaped the best they could, and dispersed“, but only 22 women and childern were spared. Black Hawk escaped, but the Battle of Bad Axe marked the end of the war. [Source: Along the Black Hawk Trail by William F. Stark, p.142-153]