2011

Sioux Falls should try this to reduce DUI’s (H/T – AG)

I have often felt that SF needs to get more progressive with transportation. If I were mayor, it would be on my top ten list. We also must realize that transportation also relates to public safety, the fewer drunk drivers, the safer our roads. Seattle is trying this out;

Today, the city is launching a program that allows people driving to concerts, bars, clubs, or other late-night social activities in Seattle to pre-pay for up to two hours of parking for the following morning—essentially giving drivers a grace period until 10:00 a.m. to pick up find their cars after a night of drinking

The parking program, which is part of Mayor Mike McGinn’s Nightlife Initiative to bolster safety and access to Seattle’s nightlife scene, is being rolled out along the Pike-Pine corridor and Capitol Hill (eventually it’ll apply to all pay stations). Blue and yellow informational stickers on parking pay stations explain that after 10:00 p.m., drivers can purchase two hours of parking for the following morning (from 8:00 to 10:00 a.m.). This will hopefully encourage social drinkers to find another way home and retrieve their cars the next day.

“I’m about to hand you a ticket”

Also read the Nightlife Initiative, some very interesting ideas;

Of the nightlife initiative’s eight points, a so-called meat-head ordinance is getting both bar owners and residents excited. The ordinance, which is currently sponsored by city council member Nick Licata, would allow police to issue tickets for some public nuisance behaviors—such as fighting and drunk and disorderly conduct—between the hours of midnight and 5:00 a.m. in targeted nightlife areas. “Currently, we have limited means for dealing with these people,” says SPD spokeswoman Det. Reneé Witt. “If they create enough of a disturbance, say if they’re fighting, we can take them off the street.” Obviously, the benefit of such an ordinance is that there’s an immediate penalty for wasted yahoos, it might dissuade these people from being drunk, public messes in the future, and itkeeps officers on the streets instead of having to process and book them.

If we gave tickets for people being drunk meat-heads in SF, we could raise money for a new Events Center in a couple of years.

Events Center; Politics are dumb

Andy sums up our mayor in a couple of sentences.

Ellis fills us in on why the Events Center debate is boring;

Huether responded: “People want it. There are people that are just sick of the dialogue: ‘Get it done so we can move on to other things.’ ”

That comment reminded me of the conversation I overheard at the Y. I’m not sure whether the two guys want an events center, but they want the subject to go away.

I personally would like to see both. Bring it to the ballot with a funding source ASAP. Let the voters decide. If they want it, we go ahead and build. If they don’t, we shelve it for another 10 years or so – AND DON’T TALK ABOUT IT! It seems Huether is under the impression that the voters are just salivating to approve it. LOL! If they wanted it so bad, as you claimed during your campaign, wouldn’t the first thing you would have done is found a funding source and stuck it on the ballot, ASAP? Nope. You are still looking for an angle, because you know support for an EC is a 50/50 longshot, and you cannot stand to be wrong. Look how many times Lincoln failed, and he is still considered one of our greatest presidents. Mike, failing on the EC isn’t the end of the world. If I were mayor I would much more prefer citizens telling me they love the streets they drive on and how beautiful our parks are. I’m just saying.

This comment by Andy Traub, who is a BID supporter, sums it up;

I was at that meeting and I want to thank the writer of this editorial for summarizing the 90 minutes of conversation very well. People, it was a discussion between the Mayor and BIDT so of course it had a lot of pro-downtown points. It was a VERY interesting meeting. The mayor sounded stuck in my opinion. He’s a businessman who can’t make a decision based on dollars alone. That’s frustrating for me as a taxpayer because I want an investment that makes cents/sense for the future according to the study. I came away feeling sorry for the mayor in some ways. Politics are dumb. Thank you for a very balanced perspective on the meeting. I agree people are tired of the conversation because most people, even those following this closely, are discouraged by a lack of openness. We’ll learn more tomorrow.

And who has made it political? The mayor. He should have opened the process up to the voters and the council from the beginning instead of hogging it to himself. It will end up biting him in the butt. He won’t be able to sell this plan like he bought the election.

It seems this SF citizen gets it, but is anyone in city hall listening?

Before another penny is spent on anything to do with a potential events center, the current marketing Svengali we have for mayor needs to expand his tunnel vision and address the critical infrastructure needs of the people of Sioux Falls as a top priority.

This effort should include the widespread problems associated with the sewer network, long-term fixes to the numerous potholes and degraded sections of road throughout the city, replacement of all unsafe bridges, completion of work on the levees and finishing the Sioux Falls segment of the Lewis & Clark water project.

The city also needs to properly fund its parks and recreation and cultural facilities, including their operation, maintenance and personnel.

The Washington Pavilion is a shell of its former self, and the Art Barn is closed.

If the city can’t afford to operate and support these existing facilities, how can it possibly hope to run an events center?

 

The Ugly Table #38 (Happy Easter – The Pretzel Bunny has risen!)

PLEASE, LEAVE THESE ITEMS AT HOME WHEN DINING OUT

Crystal Light

Salad dressing

Portable DVD player

Artificial sweetners

Cake, cookies and other desserts

Wetnaps

Baby food

Popcorn

Tax forms

Tupperware

Lego-Land play set

Breast feeding shawl

Bratty, snotty, crybaby kids

If you feel these things are needed to make your dining experience better, maybe you are eating at the wrong place, may I suggest your own fucking dining room? Next time you should stay home with your bunny rabbit cupcakes with pretzel whiskers.

S. L. Ehrisman (c) 4/23/11