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Monday, March 29, 2010
Thomas Stewart Building Capitol Annex
Today is the official dedication of the Thomas B. Stewart Office Building - the annex to the State Capitol that opened this session.
Above is the entrance to the building on 4th Avenue. Below, from 4th Avenue, is the Steward Building to the right and the Capitol to the left connected by the bridge or passage way. I don't think a name has been agreed on in actual usage yet.
Here's the passage way, looking from the Capitol to the new annex. The door at the end goes into the staff/public lounge. This is a very comfortable room which is used by people visiting the Capitol - citizens, lobbyists, bloggers - as well as staff. The staff have full kitchen that requires a key to get into.
This is Fairbanks News Miner reporter Chris Eshleman taking advantage of the free wifi in the lounge to get a story in.
The House Clerk's Office is also at the end of the bridge - on the right.
The problem with buildings on hills, is that you can have more than one ground level floor - one in front and one in the back, and maybe even another on the side. This has caused some problems because the elevator is programmed for 1-4. Another part of the floor numbering is related to matching the 2nd floor of the new building to the 2nd floor of the Capitol because the bridge connects there. I've heard from different sources that originally, the 2nd floor in the Capitol was (and still is) called the 1st floor because it was the federal building and had a post office in it. The federal rules required post offices be on the first floor. And technically, there is a door to the street on the side, half way up the hill. So, the fifth floor of the Capitol is the 6th floor. The bottom floor is the ground floor.
In addition to the lounge, which I've used a lot, I spend a fair amount of time at committee hearings in the Beltz Committee Room.
The quickest way to get from the lounge to the Beltz
The quickest way to get from the lounge to the Beltz Committee room is this stairwell, which, as you can see, was not finished when the session started. It's been blocked for much of the time, but now has linoleum.
And below are my favorite art pieces in the building. These are in the lounge.
Sheep Creek Trail - Skunk Cabbage, Big Trees, New Leaves
We drove down to the end of Thane Road today. It's maybe ten or twelve miles. The road north goes 40 miles. And you can drive a bit on Douglas Island. And that's it. The rest is by boat or air. Sheep Creek Trail goes up from the road. I'm pretty sure the picture is of skunk cabbage. I'm not used to seeing it at this stage. But here's a description from The Nature Institute website by Craig Holdrege:
It's after the equinox and the frost is gone already, but otherwise the description was on the mark.
Then back into the car, along the water into town.
It's March, the ground is still frozen, and frost comes nearly every night. The days are rapidly getting longer, but the spring equinox is still ahead. Walking through the woods, you see the grey and brown tree trunks, a coloring mirrored in the ground litter of leaves from the previous year. There is no green. Not only the temperature but the whole mood of the woods is cool.
Then you walk down to the edge of a meandering stream or, in my case, to a wooded wetland. Here, too, the ground is frozen, and patches of ice spread between groups of bushes and small trees (mainly red maples and alders) that dominate the wetland. In this still, quiescent world, little centers of emerging life are visible, the first sign of early spring. What I see are the four-to-six-inch-high, hood-like leaves that enclose the flowers of skunk cabbage. . .
Both color and shape are striking. Some leaves are completely deep wine-red or maroon, while in others this background coloring is mottled with patches or stripes of yellow or yellow green.
It's after the equinox and the frost is gone already, but otherwise the description was on the mark.
Then back into the car, along the water into town.
An abandoned pier.
Juneau Pro-Wolf Rally 2 - The Video
Here's video of the rally I covered yesterday.
Sunday, March 28, 2010
Water Birds at Rain Forest Trail Beach
We took advantage, finally, of having a car for the weekend and drove, after the wolf rally, to the Rain Forest trail on Douglas Island. I have to say I was a little let down. The well groomed trail made it feel way too civilized. I understand how nice this is compared to walking on mud - especially after I slipped on the slimy beach rocks. I could feel all the plants pushing up against the soil, but for now, only a few green tips had begun to emerge. When all that lush green fills in, I'm sure it won't feel so empty. I'm not sure why I haven't felt that way on the Perseverance Trail.
The trees are incredibly straight. I can imagine sailors coveting these trees for masts.
But things do happen.
Then we got down to the beach. Rocky, but much smaller rocks than last Sunday. But very slippery. There was a large flock of surf scoters busily eating. Through the binoculars we watched them dive and then gulp down the little fish they'd gotten into to their big yellow beaks.
We also saw some harlequin ducks (one of my favorites) swimming nearby the scoters, and I think both some common and red breasted mergansers.
Decoupling the Capitol - Legislative Staff Spoofs Bosses
It was a big night at Centennial Hall with the big ballroom full for Decoupling the Capitol. It was a fun night with everyone casual and playful - at least at the beginning. Since I'm trying to get my readers as close to the truth as possible, I'd say the skits were a lot like my non-flash photos in the dark room - a few are sharp, but most were not quite on target. But there was a lot of enthusiasm and enough liquor that most people enjoyed themselves anyway. The Saturday Night Life crew don't have to worry about losing their jobs though. But then they don't spend their workdays making the legislature work before they perform.
[Update 6:oopm: Pictures of what was performed on stage, posters on the tables, and content on the video screen have been pulled at the request of AK Skitters.]
We were in line behind Rep. Mike Doogan and the woman who lets him live with her
Around the table clockwise from front right: Reps. Guttenberg, Seaton, Buch, Crawford, and Petersen.
Rep Gara (left)
Rep. Gardner and her husband.
Rep. Tuck (right)
I would have cropped these, but then you'd see how bad the focus is.
Rep. Dahlstrom (in red)
Rep. Thomas (left) and Al Adams
Rep. Johnson pointing to the camera.
Senator Hollis French taking a picture of his wife (I'm assuming in red) and Rep. Kerttula.
Staffer Ted in his formal wear.
Rep. Lynn just can't stay still enough to not blur.
Staffer Mike and his Intern Daughter.
[Update 6:oopm: Pictures of what was performed on stage, posters on the tables, and content on the video screen have been pulled at the request of AK Skitters.]
Saturday, March 27, 2010
27,000 (NYE*) at Pro Wolf Rally at Capitol in Juneau
About 100 people showed up at a pro-wolf rally to protest the State policy of killing predators to increase the moose and caribou population for human hunters. That may not seem like a lot, but using *NYE (New York Equivalency) a measure I created to give Outsiders a sense of proportion for understanding Alaskan crowds, 100 people in Juneau, with a population of 30,000, is about the same as 27,000 people showing up for a demonstration in New York City.
Speakers decried the selection of Corey Rossi the new head of the Division of Wildlife Conservation. One speaker said he'd been involved with the Board of Game for over 30 years and there'd been many highly qualified Directors, some even with PhD's in relared fields. But Rossi, he said, without even a bachelor's degree was totally unqualified. Sen. Hollis French mentioned a member of the Board of Game as citing the Book of Genesis as the basis for for his wildlife management decisions.
Here are some pictures of the rally that began about two hours ago. I'll post video later today.
John Toppenberg of the Alaska Wildlife Alliance.
Some of the speakers included Joel Bennett, Greg Brown, Andrea Doll, Alex Simon, John Toppenberg, Vic Van Ballenberghe, Rep. Beth Kerttula, and Sen. Hollis French. Video later.
Update Monday March 29: Video now available here.
Labels:
Alaska,
environment,
politics,
wolves
What Do I Know? Linked in Craigslist Ad
This is the first time I've noticed that this blog was linked in a Craigslist ad. What were they selling? A Maytag washer, of course. The Maytag post was my first 'big' post. I got about 22 hits, a one day record at the time. I did fix the first problem, but eventually, we replaced the 32 year old washer for a much more water and energy efficient one. But this post still gets regular hits.
Maytag Washer and Dryer - $100 (Eau Claire)
Date: 2010-03-27, 12:54AM CDT
Reply to: sale-twxg6-1663474401@craigslist.org [Errors when replying to ads?]
It might be called the odd couple, but that show and 1/2 of this combo ran forever. The washing machine is a bid on the classic old style side. Made when things were made to last, this Maytag model A230 is one that keeps on going. I checked it out and found a few articles like this one on the Internet. Cut and paste it to your browser and read for your self. "http://whatdoino-steve.blogspot.com/2006/12/power-of-old-maytags-and-new-websites.html.
The Dryer is much newer, I don't have a date for you (around 5 years or under) I am helping a neighbor to recycle these to someone's door. The dryer is a Maytag Ultimate II and when I looked them up they lite up the sky with all the stars. (I've always wanted to say that.) If you got an interest, reply back and leave a phone # to call you back.
I appreciate your time, good luck and Thank you!
- Location: Eau Claire
- it's NOT ok to contact this poster with services or other commercial interests
Labels:
blogging,
consumers,
environment
Can You Define Fiscal Policy?
Former Senator Arliss Sturgulewski and former State and current Anchorage budget head Cheryl Frasca spoke to the House Fiscal Policy Committee Thursday. It's heartening to know that some legislators actually do spend time proactively thinking about the future and not just reactively.
I have to disclose that I met then Anchorage Assembly member Sturgulewski when I first came to Alaska in 1977. I lived in her district and I was also involved with a management study at the Municipality of Anchorage that she too was involved in. She is, in my opinion, one of a handful of the most knowledgeable, experienced, public spirited, and wise citizens in Alaska. She is truly the model of why societies honor and and listen to their elders.
Her talk covered a variety of issues - from the Permanent Fund to taxes to how the legislature handles all this. Cheryl Frasca talked about how the legislature engages the public. The key point I got was the need to engage, not to educate. To educate suggests one side knows more than the other. Here are a few excerpts of Sturgulewski speaking.
You can listen to the whole session below. It begins with Sen. Sturgulewski, then Cheryl Frasca, then discussion with the committee members.
And what is fiscal policy? Wikipedia's post on this begins this way:
I have to disclose that I met then Anchorage Assembly member Sturgulewski when I first came to Alaska in 1977. I lived in her district and I was also involved with a management study at the Municipality of Anchorage that she too was involved in. She is, in my opinion, one of a handful of the most knowledgeable, experienced, public spirited, and wise citizens in Alaska. She is truly the model of why societies honor and and listen to their elders.
(l-r: Reps. Austerman, Foster, Fairclough, and Gara)
You can listen to the whole session below. It begins with Sen. Sturgulewski, then Cheryl Frasca, then discussion with the committee members.
And what is fiscal policy? Wikipedia's post on this begins this way:
In economics, fiscal policy is the use of government expenditure and revenue collection to influence the economy.[1]
Fiscal policy can be contrasted with the other main type of economic policy, monetary policy, which attempts to stabilize the economy by controlling interest rates and the supply of money. The two main instruments of fiscal policy are government expenditure and taxation. Changes in the level and composition of taxation and government spending can impact on the following variables in the economy:
* Aggregate demand and the level of economic activity;
* The pattern of resource allocation;
* The distribution of income.
Fiscal policy refers to the overall effect of the budget outcome on economic activity. The three possible stances of fiscal policy are neutral, expansionary, and contractionary:
* A neutral stance of fiscal policy implies a balanced budget where G = T (Government spending = Tax revenue). Government spending is fully funded by tax revenue and overall the budget outcome has a neutral effect on the level of economic activity.
* An expansionary stance of fiscal policy involves a net increase in government spending (G > T) through rises in government spending, a fall in taxation revenue, or a combination of the two. This will lead to a larger budget deficit or a smaller budget surplus than the government previously had, or a deficit if the government previously had a balanced budget. Expansionary fiscal policy is usually associated with a budget deficit.
* A contractionary fiscal policy (G < T) occurs when net government spending is reduced either through higher taxation revenue, reduced government spending, or a combination of the two. This would lead to a lower budget deficit or a larger surplus than the government previously had, or a surplus if the government previously had a balanced budget. Contractionary fiscal policy is usually associated with a surplus.
Friday, March 26, 2010
Molly Ivins, Objectivity, Subjectivity, and Blogging the Legislature
'Nail the bastard' is advice I've gotten from some. Clearly, some legislators need to be more exposed so the public can hear what they say and weigh how they use power. And while I do expose a bit of what's going on, I'm not giving away context-free scandal headlines.
My personal style though is to hold back on pronouncements and give lots of information for readers to draw their own conclusions. The truth is so elusive, declaring you've caught it is a fool's mission. While I have hunches, and they tend to be basically in the ballpark, what seemed black or white at first gets greyer and greyer. On the other hand somebody has to stop counting angels and reveal the emperor's naked state. Bloggers have to go with the style they are most comfortable with.
As an academic, I long ago gave up the conceit of objectivity. No one is objective. Using 'we' instead of 'I' or other devices to avoid the writer's presence in the article is just a pretense. The writer is always there and always has a point of view. Even if it is a belief that the writer can be objective. While part of me says readers should figure out who I am from my writing, another part says to reveal my points of view so they can better judge what I write.
So the biography of Molly Ivins I'm reading now by Bill Minutaglio and W. Michael Smith is a useful reminder for me not to get too hung up on how others want me to do this. But being aware of what and how I'm doing this is always important. Here's a passage I enjoyed because it speaks to these issues I wrestle with.
Ivins has just finish a year long graduate program in Journalism at Columbia. There are campus demonstrations going on (it's 1967, there were protests against military recruiters, but the big demonstrations at Columbia were yet to come in 1968) yet many of the journalism students are being "neutral."
My goal here isn't to expose foibles or even corruption. My interest is to understand why people are acting the way they do. So I might write about behavior - not so much neutrally, but by trying out different stories to explain the behavior - as a way of understanding not just what happened on a given day in the Capitol, but the long term evolution of that person and the institutions that encouraged or permitted that behavior but not others.
Merely 'throwing the rascals out' is a short term fix. The systems that be keep putting new rascals in. My interest is in understanding how the decent, honest, public interested legislators get in and stay in power and why the public elects them and why they also elect the self-serving, deceptive, ego driven legislators. And it's also important to remember that these qualities aren't neatly divided among people as I divided them above.
Another goal here is to get people to start using BASIS and Gavel to Gavel and all the resources available to keep track of what's going on in Juneau. Depending on an unpaid blogger to keep at it is much too big a gamble in the long term.
What I really think is needed are 20 or more teams of reporters spread out and covering the legislature in different slices. Some focus on key committees. Others on key bills. Others on key legislators. Others on key issues. Sort of like having topographical maps, political maps, street maps, and a bunch of other types of maps to keep track of various important features and events.
My personal style though is to hold back on pronouncements and give lots of information for readers to draw their own conclusions. The truth is so elusive, declaring you've caught it is a fool's mission. While I have hunches, and they tend to be basically in the ballpark, what seemed black or white at first gets greyer and greyer. On the other hand somebody has to stop counting angels and reveal the emperor's naked state. Bloggers have to go with the style they are most comfortable with.
As an academic, I long ago gave up the conceit of objectivity. No one is objective. Using 'we' instead of 'I' or other devices to avoid the writer's presence in the article is just a pretense. The writer is always there and always has a point of view. Even if it is a belief that the writer can be objective. While part of me says readers should figure out who I am from my writing, another part says to reveal my points of view so they can better judge what I write.
So the biography of Molly Ivins I'm reading now by Bill Minutaglio and W. Michael Smith is a useful reminder for me not to get too hung up on how others want me to do this. But being aware of what and how I'm doing this is always important. Here's a passage I enjoyed because it speaks to these issues I wrestle with.
Ivins has just finish a year long graduate program in Journalism at Columbia. There are campus demonstrations going on (it's 1967, there were protests against military recruiters, but the big demonstrations at Columbia were yet to come in 1968) yet many of the journalism students are being "neutral."
At the journalism school, some students and faculty were frozen by indecision and alleged journalistic objectivity; others were too fixated on their careers, their student draft deferments, to do anything other than remain neutral. "The classes of 1967 and 1968 seemed intent on moving ahead with their careers and staying out of activist politics . . [T]he graduate classes may have absorbed unconsciously, even too well, the school's newer ideal of the job-oriented neutral - or neutered - journalist."2
Ivins had decided that Albert Camus, George Orwell, and I.F. Stone were her literary and journalism heroes. She was also reading the new journalists, the writers who had an edge. Richard Goldstein, who would become one of the better-known rock journalists of his era and an editor of The Village Voice, had
graduated from Columbia the year before. He'd clearly gotten more quickly to where Molly Ivins the columnist would finally emerge almost fifteen years later. After Columbia, he would write about "the struggle for subjectivity" and how to dance between objectivity and the nagging doubts, fears, and history swirling in his head : how to inject your own voice, your own subjective sets of experiences - and basically run counter to particular rules espoused at Columbia or at the Houston Chronicle. The dictum that was usually preached over and over again was to never make the story about you. But Goldstein was immersing himself in as many entry points inside the crackling counterculture as possible - and bending the hell out of conventions that some were dutifully outlining at Columbia. Most mainstream educators and editors wanted journalists to speak truth to power, but they wanted it done in the usual time-honored fashion - dig, report some more, write a linear story devoid of any subjectivity. Goldstein and others were on another path - covering the news, speaking in their own voice, and weighing the cost of using it in stories about the Real Politick edges of the '60s and '70s. Hunter Thompson hadn't yet risen up like the homunculus born to feast on Richard Nixon and his ilk, but his brand of subjective journalism was coming. Ivins would later chuckle and call her short-form version of it "story-telling," in honor of her Texas mentor John Henry Faulk, the blacklisted humorist who specialized in Southern-style homilies and parables. Whatever it was called, there was a new set of possibilities, something way the hell beyond the hometown woman columnists in Houston that her mother was praying she would be like.
My goal here isn't to expose foibles or even corruption. My interest is to understand why people are acting the way they do. So I might write about behavior - not so much neutrally, but by trying out different stories to explain the behavior - as a way of understanding not just what happened on a given day in the Capitol, but the long term evolution of that person and the institutions that encouraged or permitted that behavior but not others.
Merely 'throwing the rascals out' is a short term fix. The systems that be keep putting new rascals in. My interest is in understanding how the decent, honest, public interested legislators get in and stay in power and why the public elects them and why they also elect the self-serving, deceptive, ego driven legislators. And it's also important to remember that these qualities aren't neatly divided among people as I divided them above.
Another goal here is to get people to start using BASIS and Gavel to Gavel and all the resources available to keep track of what's going on in Juneau. Depending on an unpaid blogger to keep at it is much too big a gamble in the long term.
What I really think is needed are 20 or more teams of reporters spread out and covering the legislature in different slices. Some focus on key committees. Others on key bills. Others on key legislators. Others on key issues. Sort of like having topographical maps, political maps, street maps, and a bunch of other types of maps to keep track of various important features and events.
Anchorage Assembly Liberates Bikers
Anchorage friend DZ sent me this link to a KTUU story. I'd seen it at Bicycle Commuters of Anchorage blog (which is on my AK blog list at the right) and knew it was big, but being Juneau, other things distracted me. I do miss my bike and I know good bike paths are part of the answer to our dependence on foreign oil. As I've said before, biking to work isn't for everyone, but many people could bike in the summer only, or three days a week only, or even one day a month. The cumulative effect would make a big difference in energy consumption, physical fitness, health care costs, traffic, parking ease, mental health, and even people in the community talking to each other as they get out of cars and into closer contact with their fellow citizens.
The Bicycle Commuters of Anchorage posts begins:
While it turned out to again be a long night, those that stuck it out were greeted with a great cap to the evening. The Assembly first voted 10 to 1, rejecting an amendment to withdraw the proposed route that would parallel the railway from Westchester lagoon to south Anchorage. It is a great uninterrupted route and we were happy to see it stay in the plan. While it will no doubt require a lot of work to make it a reality, BCA is certainly up to the challenge and hopes that the Railroad and the City can find a solution. Rails along trails can be tricky but there are many successful examples from across the country.
Then to top the night off, the Assembly showed 100% support for the Bike Plan. We extend our thanks to the Assembly for their patience. There were a lot of bicyclists who came out to let the Assembly know how important this is to the bicycling community. BCA is excited that the Plan has the Assembly’s full support. And, assuming AMATS approves the plan, that we can all move forward with its implementation. It no doubt will make Anchorage safer and more convenient for bicyclists, but it will also make Anchorage a more livable city for everyone.
All good stories need a villain and the KTUU story inserts one whose imagination is constrained by money. If you don't believe in something, you package it as $100 million, but if you believe in something, it's $5 million a year for 20 years. If you don't believe in something, it's too much money. If you believe in something, you find ways to raise the funds. After all, the mayor does support the Knik Arm Bridge which is waaaay more money. Maybe if the bridge were just for bikes and pedestrians we could bring the cost down.
Assembly unanimously OKs 20-year bike plan
by Jason LambMayor Dan Sullivan says the plan would be great in an "ideal" world, but it's just too expensive. (Joshua Borough/KTUU-DT)
Wednesday, March 24, 2010
ANCHORAGE, Alaska -- Cyclists have something to look forward to after the Anchorage Assembly approved the 20-year Anchorage bike plan at the Tuesday night Assembly meeting.
Supporters say it will cut bike and vehicle crashes while adding new bike paths and bike lanes in Anchorage.
The plan, which passed unanimously, will create more bike trails, add bike lanes and create connections between existing trails.
The cost for the plan's proposals adds up to more than $100 million dollars. Mayor Dan Sullivan says that's too much.
Despite unanimous approval, some Assembly members wanted to make sure that cyclists wouldn't be left with unplowed bike lanes come winter.
"There's the expectation that these lanes are going to be there and they're going to be striped. But we need a strategy for prioritizing in the winter time, which ones we're going to clear first and some sort of coordination so people won't have expectations that those lanes will be there if they're not going to be cleared," said Assembly member Sheila Selkregg.
Thanks DZ
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