Showing posts with label Port of Bellingham. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Port of Bellingham. Show all posts

Wednesday, May 21, 2014

Clean Weblockers and Social Equity. A really big deal!

Yesterday, I took in a Port of Bellingham meeting. The room was packed, as the Port Staff were presenting a final recommended Moorage Rate and Policy Plan for the next four years. The plan was passed by a unanimous commissioner vote, 3-0.

There were plenty of kudos to go around. The Marine Advisory Committee had worked hard. A subcommittee on key details had really done a great job finding compromises all could agree on. Staff had facilitated the whole process admirably. Warm fuzzies and smiles were flying back and forth.

Then the matter of web lockers came up. Just what is a web locker? Well—apparently for a significant number of Bellingham fishermen, web lockers are a place for fishermen to store significant quantities of critical fishing gear—like pool tables, artificial palm trees, old sofas, dead runabouts, unused hot tubs—at rates less than half of normal commercial storage unit spaces, subsided mostly by recreational moorage users, and to a lesser degree, by the tax payer.

Big deal? Fishermen are needy souls, aren’t they? Suffering along with the tribes due to reduced salmon runs? (I’d like to hear more about the record runs of Chinook this last year, and the absence of Korean salmon boats just outside the 200 mile offshore territorial  zone).

Commissioner Robbins drew significant ire at his proposal to raise weblocker rates from 0.15 cents per ft square to 0.30 cents. His case in point? In the last couple of months, a Bellingham fisherman docked his boat in another port because local web lockers were all taken. Full. Not available. He needed one, and since Bellingham was “full”, he went elsewhere.

 Up to $60,000.00 in repair and maintenance revenue went elsewhere, as this fisherman drove several hours each day from his Bellingham home to the distant port.

Big deal? Bad Dan Robbins? Why not overlook these “small” matters? Why rock the boat? (Pun intended).

I would like to commend Commissioner Robbins for the guts to speak up and take some heat for bringing up unenforced weblocker rules, and for proposing a change that might help ease enforcement.

It is the little “holes” in the hull that ruin the cargo. It is the little barnacles that waste fuel and time.

Would I want for a coach on my athletic team who ignores breaches in teamwork and personal discipline, or the one who runs a “tight” ship?

I hear a lot about “affluenza”. The market place is bad. We need to unstring the bow and let the younger generation “take it easy”. Common core curriculum is good because the children learn to value people over mathematical accuracy. It is okay for public officials to make back room deals and break transparency laws because it is for the “common good”. Restrictive State and Federal Constitutions are advisory, outdated documents that need to be tossed out. Just chill out!

Really? Little compromises don’t count?

Dan Robbins was “put in his place”. I can understand the odious nature of confronting recalcitrant, sloppy fishermen who are” out of town”. But then, why not create public policy that promotes clean, properly used weblockers? Maybe a larger weblocker fee increase would ease staff workloads and bring in business for other waterfront entities. Common sense is not initially common.

Little holes very quickly turn large gains into large losses. “Socially equitable” public policy destroys the common good, and the self worth of the very businessmen it is supposed to move ahead.

Clean, purposefully rented weblockers count! Think about it.  JK

Monday, October 14, 2013

Sock Puppets

The doorbell rang.

“Hello! I am campaigning on behalf of Barry Buchanan. May I give you a flyer explaining his concerns? And, here is a suggested voter list on behalf of Whatcom Wins.”

Dan Robbins stood in the door and smiled.

“Oh, hello, Sarah*, is that you?”, Kathy Robbins piped up from sofa where she was resting.

Dan eyed the new neighbor with interest.

“Sarah, tell me, what do you know about these candidates? Do you think you’ll vote for them?”
“Most likely, Dan. Whatcom Wins thinks they are all right.”

“What can you tell me about Renata Kowalczyk, Sarah? Why would you vote for Renata?”
“Well, Dan, I don’t know too much about him, but he comes highly recommended.”

“Sarah, do you know what I would do if I was port commissioner? …

[Several minutes later]

“Wow, Dan, you know quite a bit about the port, and you have great ideas. You should run for port commissioner.”

“Sarah, did you see the yard signs you walked past? Dan Robbins for Port Commissioner?”

“No, Dan, I did not. I was looking at my list of addresses to doorbell. My husband was waiting in the car, and –  and I…”

This conversation actually happened a few days ago. The GOTV worker’s name* was changed for privacy’s sake.  What is the point? Do we have a month of grinding it out while a dump of mega bucks from outside the county works its way through the GOTV mills of Whatcom Wins and Terra Strategies? If patriotic and willing campaign workers are so woefully uninformed, what about the average voter?
Lots of outside money. Sock puppet campaign workers. Not a recipe for a healthy government.

Monday, October 7, 2013

Who is “Uniting Creatives”? What are “Vibrant Futures”? How big should a mouthful be?


Saturday, an organization called “Uniting Creatives” hosted a conference on “Vibrant Futures” at Syre Hall. Someone had sent us a link to a 4th Request for Proposal Submittal to the Bellingham Port Authority, a late entry from Uniting Creatives. I went to the Uniting Creatives website, and found the conference promo the day it happened, October 5, 2013. Too bad—I had scheduled a client that day.

Looking at the Uniting Creatives RFP document, the word “Utopia” comes to mind. It is everything that everyone wants. Global change. Global leadership. New luxury code. Waterfront trails. Olymic size pool. Green energy. Blue economy (oceanography). Green economy. Toxic clean up strategies. Urban gondola to WWU campus. Global grad school campuses. Incubation of new entreprenuers. Global media complex. Dozens of environmental agency stickers.  All really nice stuff. A breath of fresh air from the no coal drum beat.

Maybe the “jobs first” election campaigns are are beating the “no coal” campaign, and a different tack is needed. Maybe the “handlers” pulled Terry Wechsler out of the GPT debate at the Tea Party so as to promote a carrot instead of a stick. Maybe I should not be so cynical.

Sifting through the layers of the Uniting Creatives website, I found a link to a 5-23-13 Joe Show (KBAI Progressive Talk), where Phylis Joy Gilfilen and Lane Southcott of Uniting Creatives explained their goals and methods. Both are longtime local residents with business success stories and business clout. Joe Teehan interviewed the pair last week as well, 9-30-13. Great ideas. Great enthusiasm. Great energeee.

Uniting Creatives is scheduled to present their RPF submittal to the Port of Bellingham today, Monday, October 7, 2013. I would suggest you look at the draft on their website. See link below.  Note that in the mile long list of collaborative agencies, somehow Whatcom Business Alliance and the Building Industry Association of Whatcom County did not sign on. What issues might they have with “Vibrant Futures”.

So, what does this mean? “Vibrant Futures”  works to get people on opposite spectrums together. breaking down fears, reactive and adversarial patterns. We are to recognize scare stories that snooker and polarize us for lifetimes. We are to see our high intelligence, and go after the bad system. The problems are not with me, and not with you, but… with what we have made together in the past. Lets throw it all out and start over. Cash flow is king. Make whatever compromise is necessary to get the cash moving again. Great ideal. This is also an opportunity to give away the store to the globalist movement. Everything has a price tag!!

Being snookered. Having fears. Why did the thirteen colonies press separation of government powers so far? Was it not to make individual abuse of power more difficult?  Is man always good, just needing the right environment to resolve his problems himself? Progressives declare  the divine spark in man, but then legislate every aspect of life. Conservatives declare a fallen, sinful mankind, and then let the free market spank the miscreants. The Enlightenment in the French Revolution left a legacy of death and destruction. Puritans and Virginian gentlemen gave us separation of powers, which has served the United States very well.

I looked at parts of the three other RFP submittals for water front master plan redevelopers. Solid credentials with past development experience. Organizations that have developed waterfront communities and economies.  Uniting Creatives will need more than chutzpah for a long range master developer role.

The Uniting Creatives RFP submittal rests on a gentleman named Paul Holmes, a seasoned leader in Olympics development, with significant success milestones in his career. And, it is driven by the desire of many locals to “get back in the game”, to put small businesses (500 or fewer employees) in the driver’s seat. SSA’s cooperation with larger natural resource firms supposedly makes them not a small business.  The UC submittal for the local port is so global in its scope that it may ultimately be untenable.

Which brings me to the elections and the Port Candidates. If the ethos of the Vibrant Futures/Uniting Creatives master developer proposal is the “fuzzy goodness” of creativity (listen to the two Joe Shows), we definitely need single bottom line port commissioners who can separate chaff from wheat. I would not vote for either Mike McCauley or Renata Kowalcyk. We do not need commissioners who are “easy collaborative negotiators”, simply echoing the Vibrant Futures applicants.

 Whatcom County may be over regulated, but creative anarchy would be worse. There is a reason why capital investment loans require collateral. We need master plan developers who are in this for the long haul. Peace makers eventually run up against stake holders, and must have the grit to endure the hail of resistance and the droughts of desertion. Good feelings and vibrant futures are only secured with significant personal sacrifice. It will be up to the commissioners to choose the master developer. I will vote for highly stable candidates, not the ultra flexible ones.