Are we in this together?
Last year I called for all to work together as "we are in this boat together" and by working together we can move forward together. Perhaps the specter of an election in November has spooked some people and I see many potential fractures of this idea that we are in this economic challenge together. For instance, recently I got a couple of emails that said, "forget history" we need to watch our pennies and not be "historical perfect", or another set of emails that the Community Sustainability Commission is "out of control and too powerful" and then my favorite is "run government like a business" as if government has a profit center (essential to business). These are confusing statements if, indeed, we are working together.
The following helps sew together the ideas that investment in our historic districts is part of growing jobs and sustainable growth and how we can grow new jobs and keep our existing jobs and finally government (and I am glad to say) is not to be run like a business but is "business plus". We need to be lean, efficient, effective for the good of all. Let me know if you know of a business model that has this as a mission statement. Government is not the panacea but it sure can advance the investment for jobs that the private sector has been shy about for more than two years.
Sunday, May 22, 2011
Thursday, May 19, 2011
Delta Suisun Marsh Recreation Plan
Growing Benicia's Tourism - Plan Proposes Expanded Recreation in Delta, Bringing Boost to Local Economy
This past Tuesday, May 17, the State Parks, in cooperation with the Water Education Foundation, hosted a day-long tour of sites highlighted in the draft Delta-Suisun Marsh recreation plan, which State Parks is preparing as its bit of the overall Delta planning. I participated in the tour as part of the Parks' key step in State Parks interagency coordination process for the plan.
The plan highlights Benicia as a community with extensive recreation and tourism opportunities that can be a gateway for visitors to Suisun Marsh and the Delta. I was invited to talk about Benicia's community's visitor attractions for a few minutes as the tour bus traveled between East Bay Regional Park's Big Break shoreline and Suisun Marsh. Dan Ray, Chief of Parks Planning said, "There are so many wonderful things happening in Benicia and other Carquinez Straight communities - they deserve more recognition."
As I described the Carquinez Strait and the natural resources and industry, the tour participants could follow the bike trail from Martinez to Benicia and the Clock Tower and historic Arsenal in the distance. The tour participants included key people from the Coastal Conservancy, Delta Conservancy, Delta Protection Commission, East Bay Regional Parks, Solano Parks, CalTrans, Department of Water Resources, the Nature Conservancy, Trust for Public Lands, and others as well as the State Parks.
This past Tuesday, May 17, the State Parks, in cooperation with the Water Education Foundation, hosted a day-long tour of sites highlighted in the draft Delta-Suisun Marsh recreation plan, which State Parks is preparing as its bit of the overall Delta planning. I participated in the tour as part of the Parks' key step in State Parks interagency coordination process for the plan.
The plan highlights Benicia as a community with extensive recreation and tourism opportunities that can be a gateway for visitors to Suisun Marsh and the Delta. I was invited to talk about Benicia's community's visitor attractions for a few minutes as the tour bus traveled between East Bay Regional Park's Big Break shoreline and Suisun Marsh. Dan Ray, Chief of Parks Planning said, "There are so many wonderful things happening in Benicia and other Carquinez Straight communities - they deserve more recognition."
As I described the Carquinez Strait and the natural resources and industry, the tour participants could follow the bike trail from Martinez to Benicia and the Clock Tower and historic Arsenal in the distance. The tour participants included key people from the Coastal Conservancy, Delta Conservancy, Delta Protection Commission, East Bay Regional Parks, Solano Parks, CalTrans, Department of Water Resources, the Nature Conservancy, Trust for Public Lands, and others as well as the State Parks.
Thursday, May 5, 2011
Council seeks to avoid layoffs
Tuesday night the Council heard testimony from city employees and citizens about the proposed layoffs and potential service cuts in order to balance the budget for the fiscal year 2011-2012.
The unanimous vote came after compelling testimony about the value of the literacy program which will be severly cut due to the state budget cuts and elimiinated if the city council initiated staff proposed cuts for next fiscal year. Ellen Kolowich eloquently testifid that the literacy program is mostly for people, the majority of whom were born in the US, but did not learn English or how to read in school. She testified how English as a Second Language literacy program opens the doors to life for them by removing the barriers of not speaking English or reading. It was compelling.
Because many of the proposed staff cuts targeted publish safety, there was discussion looking to other deparments for additional layoffs to spare public safety. The city manager pointed out that last year, that is actually what happened - positions have not been filled and layoffs occurred in many of these deparments. There are not too many more places to look for employee salary savings.
Hence, the direction to staff by the unanimous vote by Council is to seek to negotiate with the bargaining units (unions) for salary and benefit savings to avoid the layoffs and service cuts. As a city fire employee stated, "we [the public employee] didn't cause this economic recession" and yet he lamented that the public makes negative statements about them as if they are responsible for the hard times.
The unanimous vote came after compelling testimony about the value of the literacy program which will be severly cut due to the state budget cuts and elimiinated if the city council initiated staff proposed cuts for next fiscal year. Ellen Kolowich eloquently testifid that the literacy program is mostly for people, the majority of whom were born in the US, but did not learn English or how to read in school. She testified how English as a Second Language literacy program opens the doors to life for them by removing the barriers of not speaking English or reading. It was compelling.
Because many of the proposed staff cuts targeted publish safety, there was discussion looking to other deparments for additional layoffs to spare public safety. The city manager pointed out that last year, that is actually what happened - positions have not been filled and layoffs occurred in many of these deparments. There are not too many more places to look for employee salary savings.
Hence, the direction to staff by the unanimous vote by Council is to seek to negotiate with the bargaining units (unions) for salary and benefit savings to avoid the layoffs and service cuts. As a city fire employee stated, "we [the public employee] didn't cause this economic recession" and yet he lamented that the public makes negative statements about them as if they are responsible for the hard times.
Monday, May 2, 2011
Hard Budget Decisions
Action is necessary to achieve a budget with balanced expenditures and revenue projections for fiscal year 2011-12. Our employees stepped up in 2010 when agreeing to salary and benefits reductions requested by the Council. Revenues on which the city depends are lower because of depressed property values, lower Benicia Industrial Park sales taxes and lower franchise fees, so we continue to make expenditure adjustments. The choice between layoffs and salary and benefits reductions is not a welcome one, but the situation speaks for itself.
These decisions are grounded in the Council’s policy to maintain a balanced budget, to avoid service cuts and to maintain fair and competitive salaries. To quote our 26th president, Theodore Roosevelt, “Do what you can, with what you have, where you are.” Our city employees have been inventive, creative and frugal in finding ways to reduce costs and maintain our parks as the jewels of Benicia; our police deparment’s vigilant effectiveness; our fire department’s dependable and responsible emergency response; our water quality for drinking; our wastewater treatment to avoid polluting the Carquinez Strait; and other everyday public safety and administrative needs.
Their efforts are commendable. But it is not enough in the face of such a severe revenue shortfall. That is why we have the decision Tuesday night about further layoffs and potential salary and benefits reductions.
Monday, March 28, 2011
CSC Lecture-Workshop Series
The Community Sustainability Commission has worked hard to make this lecture-workshop series possible and would love to have your full participation in this FREE series.
This is a working collaboration with Solano Community College. Here's the series at one glance.
This is a working collaboration with Solano Community College. Here's the series at one glance.
Stewards of our Children's Future: 2011
for Ecologic and Economic health
+ Community Resilience
+ Community Resilience
Free Public lecture-workshop series
Monday, February 28, 2011
Smart Growth Conference
I attended the 10th Annual New Partners for Smart Growth Conference sponsored by the Local Government Commission in Charlotte, North Carolina, from Wednesday through Sunday, Feb. 3-5, 2011. There were about 1,300 attendees from all over the United States, a mix of elected officials, local, state and federal officials, planners, public health professionals, developers and others concerned with healthy and livable communities. Vallejo City Council member Marti Brown attended as well but no other Solano officials or staff. This is too bad because many concurrent sessions were on topics of considerable interest including investment strategies for infrastructure, winning bond elections for transportation (light rail, bicycle routes and "complete streets"), locally grown food, and sea level rise.
The conference is co-sponsored by 170 organizations with wide ranging interests, and the major funder this year was the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, Office of Environmental Justice. Speakers and presenters included high ranking government officials, including former cabinet secretaries and governors as well as people simply doing great work.
I went on two tours: a bus tour of three communities who collectively adopted form base zoning (similar code adopted for Benicia Downtown Master Plan and Zoning Code - CA Neighborhood). The first stop was the Town of Davidson, located 20 miles north of Charlotte. Davidson is home of Davidson College - an historic small college campus. Davidson is built for pedestrians and bike riders, not for the car. No drive thrus are allowed here. We believe in connectivity and walkable streets.
As we toured the narrow streets, we saw mixed use (both within buildings and neighborhoods). In Davidson, all commercial property must front a public street - the unexpected benefit of this requirement is that the public safety is better and done by the city rather than private security patrols typical of shopping areas with public streets. Below is a grocery store on a public street. When you drive off the interstate into Davidson, you see offices, restaurants and hotels but you also see green space, homes, schools and shops all accessible by pedestrians. Davidson is the 2004 Smart Growth Award winner for Overall Excellence in town planning and design. (Read More...)
Monday, January 3, 2011
Steady Helm in a Storm
(This post also appeared in the Benicia Herald Opinion column, 1/4/2011)
“The city sure has been taking a beating,” a merchant told me last week in front of his shop. I couldn’t agree more. His comment was referring to the letters, columns and blogs with constructive — and some not so constructive — opinions about how to run the city.
This column is about where we — the city of Benicia, its staff, commissioners and Council members — have been and where we are going. Readers are welcome to respond on my blog (www.elizabethpatterson.blogspot.com), in the Benicia Herald, or during my open office hours.
They may also attend the workshops, study sessions and Council meetings we will conduct in 2011. Last year we held more than 30, posted surveys, and ran community open houses. This coming year I invite those who write letters, columns and blogs, as well as residents who read them or not, to participate in the extensive city outreach effort to: a) access and vet information; b) explore volunteer opportunities; and c) consider more new and untried budget solutions. Your participation is vital for the important decisions that will be made for our city in 2011.
Earlier this year, I affirmed at Council meetings that “we are all in this boat together” as we enter the third year of the Great Recession. The country’s financial meltdown is the result of many factors, but especially the reckless risk-taking by financial institutions, the ripple effect of which affected our neighborhoods, jobs, available funds for small businesses — and public anger.
“The city sure has been taking a beating,” a merchant told me last week in front of his shop. I couldn’t agree more. His comment was referring to the letters, columns and blogs with constructive — and some not so constructive — opinions about how to run the city.
This column is about where we — the city of Benicia, its staff, commissioners and Council members — have been and where we are going. Readers are welcome to respond on my blog (www.elizabethpatterson.blogspot.com), in the Benicia Herald, or during my open office hours.
They may also attend the workshops, study sessions and Council meetings we will conduct in 2011. Last year we held more than 30, posted surveys, and ran community open houses. This coming year I invite those who write letters, columns and blogs, as well as residents who read them or not, to participate in the extensive city outreach effort to: a) access and vet information; b) explore volunteer opportunities; and c) consider more new and untried budget solutions. Your participation is vital for the important decisions that will be made for our city in 2011.
Earlier this year, I affirmed at Council meetings that “we are all in this boat together” as we enter the third year of the Great Recession. The country’s financial meltdown is the result of many factors, but especially the reckless risk-taking by financial institutions, the ripple effect of which affected our neighborhoods, jobs, available funds for small businesses — and public anger.
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