Yelm Issues: February 2009 Archives

February 28, 2009

YELM ANIMAL RESCUE ROBBERY

From Seattle's KING-5 TV about Yelm:

Thieves steal animal shelter's pet food supply

"Wanda Bittner helps pet owners put food in their dog bowls when times are tough, but now the owner of a Yelm animal shelter has been targeted by thieves who stole hundreds of pounds of pet food.

Bittner has been finding homes for unwanted pets for more than 20 years, but this 80-year-old Yelm resident has also made it her mission to help seniors feed their pets by giving them free dog and cat food.

But last week, someone helped themselves to her supply and hundreds of pounds were stolen.

'I'm in shock... I can't believe it... Our food is free, no questions asked,' she said. 'Why would anyone take our pet food?'

Bittner supplies donated food to low-income pet owners and seniors in five cities...

Bittner has always kept her gate unlocked and it's very hard for her to think that she likely knows the person who stole from her.

'It's heartbreaking. I work hard at this,' she said.

Bittner will continue to work hard so pets can stay in their homes. She is hoping pet food donors will come forward to replenish her supply.

She regrets she has no other choice than to put in a surveillance system...

If you would like to donate dog or cat food, contact the Animal Rescue and Adoption in Yelm at 360-458-3281"

For further assistance, contact the Yelm Animal Alliance.

February 27, 2009

MAYOR PLACES 'FOOT IN MOUTH' ON YELM LIBRARY FUNDING!


Yelm Timberland Regional Library
Photo courtesy of Guustaaf Damave

From the NVN about Mayor Harding's State of the City Address on the future of the Yelm Timberland Regional Library:

"One challenge the city faces is determining a new location for the Yelm Timberland Library.

Only a certain number of people are taxed for the library, but many more people use it.

'The library is a unique situation,' Harding said.

'There’s only so much 5,000 people can pay for.'

'I’m confident in the end there will be a library in Yelm.'

Ed. Note:
This comment by the Mayor should be an outrage for all of those property owners outside of Yelm's city limits who pay property taxes to support the Yelm Timberland Regional Library. Mr. Harding, more than the 5,000 people of the City of Yelm fund the Yelm Library, in case you did not know!
Property owners from the Timberland regional area and outside of Yelm fund Yelm's Library, too!


NVN Publisher/Editor Keven Graves penned an Op-Ed piece Friday, February 13th titled:
"Hoping that mayor seeks second term"
where he said:
"Just to make it clear, I also have a great appreciation for well-intentioned government watchdogs.
Open government is essential to a free and democratic society, and taxpayers have every right to know how their money is being spent."

That's right, Mr. Graves.
This writer sure wishes you & your newspaper staff were as zealous in investigating the comments of government officials of the City of Yelm as you are being watchdogs for the Cities of Roy and Rainier.

There is no question your loyalties lie with Mr. Harding, yet I am truly amazed your newspaper did not follow-up on Mayor Harding's ridiculous comment about Yelm Library funding and service area. You seem to be an intelligent and observant man and were present in the Chamber Forum when Mayor Harding presented this information on the library. Your and your newspaper's silence on the remarks of the Mayor about Yelm TRL Library's funding and future speaks volumes!
The City of Yelm always gets a "bye" from the NVN on important issues.

Mayor Harding touts planning for a community youth center while giving lip service to the future of a Yelm Library facility that has the largest youth participation in the whole TRL system.

And, the silence by City Council member and Yelm TRL employee Mike McGowan about a smaller library here is noted, as well.
Where was your newspaper's award-winning investigative reporting on this, Mr. Graves?


Interestingly, Yelm is not currently on the list for public meetings asking for public input regarding budget cuts.
THIS IS IMPORTANT!

If you want a local meeting, email: comments@trlib.org now!

The Yelm Timberland Regional Library serves a two county area including the cities of Eatonville, McKenna, Rainier, Roy, and Pierce & Thurston County residents, which includes many from Fort Lewis and those surrounding these communities.

TRL to seek public input on budget cuts
"Timberland Regional Library's Board of Trustees met in a special board meeting Thursday evening [Feb. 19] at the TRL Administrative Service Center in Tumwater to determine how public input should be gathered regarding reductions in spending and revenue options to meet an expected $2.5 million shortfall in the library system's 2010 budget.

TRL will hold town meetings in the month of March in each of the five counties that have Timberland libraries. The meetings will provide the public an opportunity to understand the financial challenges facing the library district, learn what various programs, initiatives and services cost and participate in a facilitated discussion. In addition to town meetings, patrons in the month of March will be able to provide comments and suggestions via an online survey at www.TRL.org, by suggestion forms in all library branches or by email to comments@trlib.org.

Public input will be gathered and provided to TRL task forces focused on reviewing ideas for reducing expenses and increasing revenues. Recommendations will be delivered to the TRL Board of Trustees in the April or May 2009 board meetings, with decisions on budget cuts made by the June Board Meeting, which will be held at the Ilwaco Timberland Library.

The following town meetings have been confirmed and the public is invited to
attend. Additional town meetings will be announced when confirmed.
(SEND IN YOUR REQUEST!)
March 9 - 6:30 P.M. Olympia Timberland Library
March 10 - 6:30 P.M. Mountain View (Randle) Timberland Library
March 12 - 6:30 P.M. Vernetta Smith Chehalis Timberland Library
March 17 - 4:00 P.M. Lacey Timberland Library
March 18 - 7:00 P.M. Montesano Timberland Library (W.H. Abel Memorial Library)
March 19 - 7:00 P.M. Aberdeen Timberland Library
March 25 - 4:00 P.M. Shelton Timberland Library (Wm. G. Reed Library)

If you want a local meeting, email comments@trlib.org now!
Media Contacts: Jeff Kleingartner, Communications Manager, 360-704-4507;
Leanne Ingle, Communications Specialist, Olympia area: 360-704-4508, or 877-284-6237.
Timberland Regional Library
Website: www.TRL.org
Information: 704-4636
in the Olympia area, or 1-800-562-6022."


LET TRL KNOW WE WANT A MEETING IN YELM!
TELL THEM YOU READ ABOUT THIS ON THE YELM COMMUNITY BLOG!
THAT YELM HAS BEEN OMITTED IS AN EMBARRASSMENT TO OUR COMMUNITY!

February 26, 2009

NOW THE YELM CHAMBER SPINS TALES - LET'S TAKE A CLOSER LOOK

Yelm Area Chamber of Commerce Executive Director Cecelia Jenkins says in the Spring, 2009 Chamber Connection publication insert in the February, 20 NVN:
"Third-quarter 2008 data for taxable retail sales show Yelm rose 5.35 percent to $43.2 million from $41 million....
Retail trade data show Yelm rose 9.58 percent to $21.6 million from $19.7 million. This is a positive reflection on the quality of goods and services being offered locally. More importantly for chamber members, the study confirms what we promote and believe; our community is supporting local business."


OF COURSE THIRD QUARTER 2008 SALES FIGURES WOULD SHOW A MAJOR INCREASE, SINCE 2008 HAD A NEW SUPER WAL-MART OPERATING FOR THE FULL QUARTER, COMPARED TO LESS THAN 2 1/2 MONTHS OF OPERATION IN THE COMPARABLE 2007 QUARTER, AFTER THEIR JULY, 2007 GRAND OPENING.

TO PUT THIS IN PERSPECTIVE, WITH WAL-MART OPEN 17% MORE DAYS IN THE THIRD QUARTER OF 2008 VS. THE 3RD QUARTER OF 2007, DOES 9.58% RETAIL TRADE GROWTH ACTUALLY EQUATE TO A NET NEGATIVE RETAIL GROWTH? YOU DECIDE.

TO GET A FAIR COMPARISON, LET'S SEE THE 4TH QUARTER COMPARABLE NUMBERS, SINCE WAL-MART WAS OPEN FOR THE FULL QUARTER IN 2007 AND 2008.


THE YELM COMMUNITY BLOG SAYS TO NOT ONLY SUPPORT LOCAL BUSINESSES AS THE CHAMBER, RATHER SUPPORT LOCALLY OWNED BUSINESSES, TOO!

Congratulations to Yelm Citizen of the Year Cecelia Jenkins!

February 25, 2009

YELM BYPASS NIXED IN FEDERAL STIMULUS PACKAGE

"The federal economic stimulus package is sending $5.4 million to Thurston County communities for eight local transportation projects, including $1 million to complete Lacey's Woodland Trail, officials said Tuesday [Feb. 25].

The money is part of the $492 million sent to Washington state for transportation projects, $151 million of which is earmarked for use in local projects approved by local transportation planning organizations. No state projects in Thurston County receive funding from the larger, $341 million state share of the federal stimulus money, however...

No South Sound projects qualified for an additional $341 million in money earmarked for state projects in Washington. Yelm had sought $11.3 million to start constructing the first 1.5-mile phase of the "bypass loop" along state Route 507.

But Rep. Judy Clibborn, the Mercer Island Democrat who chairs the House Transportation Committee, said she plans to secure $10 million for the first phase of the Yelm project this year using state dollars in the 2009-11 budget," quoting The Olympian.

Ed. Note: As discussed here last month, if funding is obtained, the additional monies will be robbed from Phase 2 of the Bypass r-o-w and engineering funding, leaving that part of the Bypass unfunded until at earliest, the 2021-2023 biennium. That means there will be no Bypass at Wal-Mart for over a decade and a half - a building that got approved using an unfunded Bypass to mitigate the store's traffic. The Yelm area will pay a dear price for a partially funded Bypass taking truck and vehicular traffic through residential streets to access a Phase 1 Bypass (i.e. Killion and/or Cullens).

Mayor Ron Harding said in his recent State of the City talk that traffic is one of the things that had improved in Yelm in the last year thanks to all of the road projects the city has completed on his watch. While the city is to be commended for completion of the Inner loop, many of the existing street and sidewalk improvements were completed with federal or state grants. Many of the miles of new roads and sidewalks added to the city's grid were in new developments, for which the developers paid. Of course, almost 50% of the funding for the addition of a center turn lane and sidewalks on Yelm Ave. West, Killion & Tahoma Blvd. improvements were completed on the backs of the property owners along those roads, with a developer requested LID.

Further, let's put the traffic "improvements" in perspective. As reported here and in every area newspaper, traffic trips from Yelm to Olympia, Tacoma and elsewhere and to Yelm greatly decreased last year with $4 a gallon gasoline and continued to slide as the economy tumbled and gasoline prices dropped. So, YES, traffic has improved.

ProtectYelm.org filed this report on Yelm's reported traffic improvement. CLICK HERE

KING-5 TV had this report today about less traffic in Seattle due to the economy.

February 24, 2009

HARDING SPINS MISREPRESENTATIONS TO STATE LEGISLATURE ON WATER CASE

Yelm's Mayor Ron Harding answered questions on Tuesday, February 17, 2008 before senators in the State Legislature about State Bill 5867 stemming from the case of JZ Knight vs. City of Yelm et al.
CLICK HERE for information on the bill.

The Senate Environment, Water and Energy Committee asked about why the lawsuit against the city came forward.
Mayor Harding said the litigation is a land use issue.
He opened his remarks by saying funding for city improvements to roads could not have been accomplished without the growth here, and to limit growth because of this water case would hurt the city in the long term.
That is NOT exactly true, as many of the existing street and sidewalk improvements were completed with federal or state grants. Most of the miles of new roads and sidewalks added to the city's grid were in new developments, for which the developers paid.
Harding was asked if the case is in appeal and answered that was so.

Harding went on to say, "The opponent (JZ Knight) used water and water timing as a mechanism to stop growth in the area."

"What came out of the Superior Court was a vague ruling...
the opponent may feel they won,
yet we feel we won?"

Ed. Note:
Knight wants to stop growth?
She has made very clear this not about stopping growth, rather requiring the city to provide water resources prior to final plat approval for a development and following state law on the city's water appropriations from the State Dept. of Ecology. The court agreed with Ms. Knight.

Vague ruling?
There was nothing vague in the ruling by Superior Court Judge Wickham. The Court was VERY specific in the final judgment.

The city may feel it won, however, even The Olympian reported last November the city lost the case:
Judge says Yelm must prove it has water
Condition placed by city on subdivisions ruled illegal

"The city has lost the latest round in an apparent precedent-setting case that will determine when and to what level a city must prove it has the water to serve a planned development...."

IF THE CITY WON, MR. MAYOR, THEN WHY DID YOU APPEAL THE CASE?

Harding has not been so credible or truthful in his previous statements about this case.

Now, the Mayor has taken his spin to the State Legislature. One can only hope they do their homework on this case and find out Mayor Harding was not totally factual with them.
CLICK HERE to see Mayor Harding's comments before the Senators:
Beginning of SB 5867 Hearing: 32:40
Ron Harding Testimony: 40:55
End of SB 5867 Hearing: 56:00

Would Mayor Harding have said the same thing to the senators if under oath?
HMMM!


WHAT DO YOU SAY ABOUT MAYOR HARDING'S CONTINUED WHITEWASHING OF THE FACTS ON THIS ISSUE?

UPDATE:
JZ Knight issues official statement on this issue February 26, 2009
CLICK HERE

The NVN story of Friday, Feb. 27
CLICK HERE

February 23, 2009

NVN SURVEY: DO YOU WANT MAYOR HARDING TO SEEK ANOTHER TERM?

"Do you want to see Mayor Ron Harding seek reelection to a second term?"

Take the NVN survey.
See upper left box...

UPDATE: The NVN removed this survey on Monday afternoon, Feb 23rd.
At the time, the survey was 55 percent in favor, 45 percent against.

The NVN reports in their February 27th edition that 57% or 94 votes were tallied for and 72 votes or 43% against, not exactly a mandate!

UPDATE:
In the March 6 edition of the local weekly newspaper, the Op-Ed said, "The online survey has been a popular crossover feature [from the website] into the newspaper. Last week, readers said by a healthy margin that they'd like to see Ron Harding run again for mayor of Yelm."

Ed. Note: Most would not consider 57% to 43% a healthy margin from 166 votes tallied?

February 21, 2009

CITY OF YELM, ROY & RAINIER SALARIES PUBLISHED BY NVN

A recent blog commenter said,
"The NVN consistently writes negative articles about Roy and Rainier and yes, their city government has suffered greatly because of budget issues and constraints.
Frankly, I'm tired of seeing it on the front page news every few weeks, pointing fingers at anything which may reflect them in a more negative manner. Where are the positive stories about them on what
they have and or trying to accomplish on their budget restrictions?

Where are the real stories and reports on Yelm city government, over-staffed police department, and the inefficiencies in Yelm city government? If NVN has to write a story? they need to start in their
own back yard, addressing and investigating the Yelm community issues and concerns on the front page too."

The NVN provided a terrific public service by their December, 2008 listing of Yelm Roy, & Rainier public employees salaries:
"Public employees work for the taxpayer. Plain and simple.

In an era where obstacles to public information are being thrown up by lawmakers, what we pay them cannot be kept a secret.

When reporters for the Nisqually Valley News contacted various agencies about pay for public employees, some voiced displeasure at the idea of that information appearing in the newspaper, and others speculated on the motivation.

It’s information that every citizen has a right to. Anyone can seek public information, and they don’t have to explain or justify their request to anyone.

In the spirit of democracy and transparency in government, the following is the first-ever Nisqually Valley News list of what public employees are earning in Yelm, Rainier and Roy."

CLICK HERE for the NVN article listing City of Yelm employees salaries.



Protect Yelm.org said this:
"Hats off to the Nisqually Valley News for researching and posting public employees earnings for the Yelm area online.

CLICK HERE for the NVN article listing City of Yelm employees salaries."

February 18, 2009

YELM PRAIRIE HISTORICAL SOCIETY MUSEUM OPENING FEB. 19

PLEASE JOIN US AS WE CELEBRATE THE GRAND OPENING OF THE YELM MUSEUM !

Yelm Area Chamber After Hours
and
Ribbon Cutting at the Yelm Museum

5:30—7 p.m.
Ribbon Cutting 6 p.m.
Thursday, February 19
Third and McKenzie
360-458-8436

Hosted by the City of Yelm & the Yelm Prairie Historical Society

February 13, 2009

YELM NO LONGER 'HOLDING ITS OWN IN A TIME OF RECESSION'

The Nisqually Valley News (NVN) reports in today's editions that in Mayor Ron Harding's State of the City Address last Tuesday, "The City is weathering the downturn in the economy and doing well...
In order to maintain its current level of service , the city will have to tap into its reserves...
If the economy continues to decline, cuts may have to be made..."

NVN publisher/editor Keven Graves said in his editorial printed today about Harding's Address,
"Seemingly addressing Yelm's anti-growth contingent, Harding explained that it's the growth that Yelm experienced in recent years that has helped to keep the city in the black."
[Ed. Note: Mr. Graves, growth has stopped in its tracks not only from the economy, rather from Yelm's limits on how much water can be pumped to support new homes. The Dept. of Ecology says Yelm pumped 756 acre feet per year (acy) of its allocated 796.66 acy in 2008. An acre-foot is about 325,000 gallons – which, for the City of Yelm, is about enough water to serve 3.5 homes for a year, according to the Dept. of Ecology. Doing the basic math then, the City would be over their limit with the current water rights they hold
withdrawing an additional 40 acre-feet (796.66-756 = 40.66 underage).
That 40 acre-feet X 3.5 homes per acre-foot = 140 homes.
Yelm has many development permits already in the works & approved that have not yet been hooked-up to Yelm's water supply. My guess is that the 140 home limit is nearly or already reached when those homes are hooked-up. Of course Mayor Harding and the city are seeking additional water rights transfers to the city.
Bottom line: If the economy hasn't stopped growth here, the limits of water allocations has put Yelm about near the end of available water to continue this growth binge that has burdened our traffic, water availability, groundwater, air and land resources.]

The Olympian is reporting a huge blow to Yelm's economy:
"Lasco Bathware plant manager Bill Kysor said Wednesday that an additional 20 people directly involved in manufacturing will leave the business at the end of the month.

That means Lasco has shed 35 jobs since January, including some salaried and office staff members, Kysor said. The plant now has fewer than 100 employees, down from 160 to 170 when Kysor started 18 months ago...

The plant workers made an average of $15 an hour, and the company gave them notice so that they could use up sick leave before they leave, he said.

Yelm Area Chamber of Commerce executive director Cecelia Jenkins said Lasco is a longtime business and active chamber member. It also is one of the community's largest employers, joining the new Wal-Mart store and retailers such as Safeway. The largest employer in the area is the Yelm School District, she said.

There is no other company in the area similar to Lasco to hire laid-off workers, Jenkins said."


This is devastating news to our Lasco friends and neighbors, that almost 40% of the workforce of one of Yelm's largest employers have lost their jobs. This is less occupational tax, income tax & sales tax for the City, plus the social impact on our town's fabric with those families impacted by their job cuts.

February 12, 2009

RAMTHA'S SCHOOL OF ENLIGHTENMENT WELCOMES HUNDREDS OF STUDENTS TO YELM

Ramtha's School of Enlightenment (RSE) is welcoming students from around the world to their spiritual retreat in Yelm this week and next. One can see and hear many cultures in area stores as they gather here:
Japanese, Chinese, Portuguese, Spanish, Mandarin, Italian, German, Danish, Hebrew, French, Romanian and Dutch and others.

Yelm is known across the globe as a center of spiritual studies. RSE officials report this Retreat will be one of the largest groups ever assembled for the Spring series of events.


Ramtha®, Become a Remarkable Life®, and Consciousness & Energy® are trademarks of JZ Knight and used with permission.

February 11, 2009

YELM POLICE PARTICIPATING IN PUBLICLY AVAILABLE CRIME REPORTS

"Yelm citizens now have a new source to check local criminal activity.

Residents can log on to the Web site, CrimeReports.com

The Yelm Police Department is one of four Thurston County agencies participating in the program.

'We looked at the benefits of what it can provide to our citizens,' said Yelm Police Chief Todd Stancil.

'Rather than have the info stored on a server somewhere, it’s out there for the public to use,' Stancil said.

Citizens can log on to the Yelm page and review all criminal cases in Yelm over the previous 30 days.

A map shows where the crime is located and a sidebar lists the time, date, location and type of crime.

Cases can be sorted by crime, date or location and broken down into statistics.

A statistics page also provides information in graphs and pie charts.

Citizens can also sign up to receive automatic e-mail alerts when a crime happens near their home.

Incident data is updated every weekday night.

Anyone can access the information for any city involved with the program," quoting the NVN.

February 10, 2009

MAYOR HARDING'S STATE OF THE CITY ADDRESS

UPDATE
Tuesday, February 10, 2009, 2pm
Here are some of the key points Mayor Harding discussed to a full house of almost 100 people at the Chamber Forum today:
- There is no reason to highlight traffic & water; we're working on those.
Let's talk about the good things. Harding had so many people come up to him in Las Vegas at his daughter's Miss America pageant telling him they know about Yelm because of Janet being Miss Washington from here.

1. Economy
- Cash reserves are well established now to maintain current level of services. If the economy continues a decline, we'll have to assess service cuts by year's end.
- Revenues were up only 3% in 2008; we expected higher.
- We did fall quite a bit short with revenue last year.
- We are expecting a continuing economic decline.
- Gone to a biennium budget (every 2 years) that looks fine for the next 2 years, though we can amend at any time.
- Working to draw new jobs, businesses, industry here for when economy picks up, in cooperation with other organizations like Thurston Regional Planning, Thurston EDC, etc.

2. Transportation
Seems to be the topic of the day based on the NVN's Question of the Week.
- Projects completed in a 3-4 year window are a gauge of our accomplishments. I stood before this collective three years ago and said we were going to spend alot of money on our roads. We did! (listed all of the road improvements)
- All of this would not have happened were not for our partnerships, i.e. Yelm Community Schools
- We built 60,000 feet of sidewalks - 5 miles.
- We built 15 streets in the city that we did not have in our grid previously
- Next phase is to plan east /west connection south of Yelm Avenue, just like we did with the Inner loop north of Yelm Ave., with a goal to make more of our grid connect.
- SR 510 Loop is a big project, one that is not a city project, rather the State's. We have no control on how that will take shape or be funded. "I feel we'll have a partial phase constructed this year... If the $11.3 million in funding stays in place, we will have construction on Phase 1 this year!"

3. POLICIES
- We need to answer the critics within the city and keep moving forward, balance regulating development and provide affordable housing. This area is known for homes that are lower than most in Puget Sound, and people are attracted here for that reason.
- Governing is not all about providing tangibles, the philosophy is important, like thinking outside of the box. We did that in 2008 by cutting costs and improving service, making us more efficient. Two areas were the animal license fees being eliminated. The hope is more animals will be licensed so there will be less expense to provide care from the city. Water late fees were eliminated, because the $5 fee cost more than the office-expense to go after those.

4. CHALLENGES
- "The biggest demand on the city for services comes from outside of the city. Our city serves 5,000 people, yet demands are placed on our roads, parks and facilities from a lot wider area. The difficult part is making those outside of the city understand that someone in the city is paying for services you are using. The library is an excellent example. I am confident in the end, there will be a library in Yelm, but what it will look like will be far different. The issue is how much can 5,000 people provide for an area serving multi-thousands? Timberland Regional Library has approached us with changing this facility (Yelm's Library). We do not know yet; it may be in the same place or maybe not."
- Bottom line: 5,000 people can't provide a home for the Library that serve so many more!
[Ed. Note: Does Mayor Harding NOT know that there are thousands of property owners who pay property taxes in Thurston County outside of the Yelm City limits to fund the Yelm Library, to Yelm Community Schools, to the Yelm Cemetery? Fortunately, 2 Timberland Library representatives were in the audience to hear this comment! This writer asked them if they had heard the same comment. Yes, they did! ]

5. Water
- We are doing a good job on water rights transfers that are in the works.
- We are working with State agencies in partnership on this issue.

6. Protection
- Area youth are a big issue.
- Planning will start on a Recreation/Community Center this year -- not construction.
- Working on Youth Safety Policies identifying Youth at Risk.
- Focusing more on networking with Youth Services not here in Yelm, i.e. seeking to get a Big Brothers/Big Sisters Chapter here.

7. Questions from Audience
- Megan Hansen of the NVN asked about plans for a traffic study.
Grant Beck, Community Planning Dept. answered: traffic study counts were done last month. He gave no details.
- Tom Dewell of the Yelm Food Co-op asked about how can someone help like himself who lives outside of the City, since he pays no taxes as a resident here. The Mayor said locating the business in the city limits affords the city to garner a 30% business tax, which is a tremendous help.

8. Closing
The Mayor asked how he could do things different for this presentation next year to make interesting.
[Ed. Note: For Mayor Harding to do this next year would mean he ran again for Mayor this Fall and won. Right now, no one has come forward to throw their hat in the ring to oppose Mayor Harding, if he chooses to run again.]

Copyright © 2009 Stephen R. Klein. All Rights Reserved

UPDATE:
In his weekly Op-Ed piece on newsstands February 12th, NVN Publisher Keven Graves says "Hoping that mayor seeks second term"

Mr. Graves, that's a slam-dunk!
Mayor Harding WILL run unopposed and your newspaper will not have to conduct a Town Hall Forum, once again, IMHO.

MAYOR HARDING'S STATE OF CITY ADDRESS TODAY!


THE HONORABLE MAYOR RON HARDING

MAYOR HARDING'S STATE OF CITY ADDRESS TODAY!

Mayor Harding was quoted last Friday in the NVN that he will discuss his accomplishments as Mayor during this last State of the City Address of what is assured to be his first of at least two terms.

He mentioned two major areas of accomplishment:
1. TRANSPORTATION.
Expect the Mayor to highlight the completion on the Inner loop and LID-financed roads, as he does annually about the city roads projects. While the completion of these roads is a stellar achievement, there is a major disconnect as the City's Newspaper of record asked the public in their Question of the Week,
"What do you want to hear Mayor Ron Harding address in the State of the City next week?"

4 or 5 answers were about the roads & traffic.
That tells everyone the public sees the traffic issue here as unresolved. As this writer mentioned many times previously, installing a center turn lane and sidewalks on Yelm Ave. does little to alleviate the traffic issue. The city should have widened Yelm Ave. W. to 5 lanes from 93rd to the SR 507 traffic light when they undertook construction to three lanes.


2. WATER.
Regardless of an appeal by the city to a Court ruling, how can the Mayor stand before the Chamber of Commerce and look them square in the face and tell everyone all is well with water, no pun intended, when 5 developments are not allowed to proceed being permitted because the city does not have enough water to support them?
Now, the Washington State Legislature has taken notice of Yelm's issuing permits without proving available water as of February 5, 2009, and has Bill 5867 before that body "By Senators Fraser, Swecker, Pridemore, Ranker, Fairley, Kauffman, Marr, Regala and Morton
Verifying water supplies for new subdivisions.
Referred to Committee on ENVIRONMENT, WATER & ENERGY."
With this Bill, looks like the City's appeal in the water case is not viable. He will not share with the Chamber Forum this Bill before the State Legislature, count on that!

And one for the future:
1. RECREATION CENTER
"Some of the projects Harding would like to start planning include a recreation center..."
He mentioned this last year and a very worthwhile cause. However, what will he do; place a public facility in a private, rented building?
That was done with the Yelm Library and in almost 10 years, this city did little to nothing to get our public library in a public building, so now Mayor Harding has stated the Library will go into much smaller quarters with reduced amenities.

CRIME. (not brought up in the newspaper as a subject of Mayor Harding's for today)
This topic will not even be discussed, or if it will, the increase in crime will be explained away by petty thieves and other incidents as a result of the economy, instead of the on-the-record testimony of several before this City Council over the last years that crime will increase because of the city's grow, grow, grow policies.

February 8, 2009

YELM & OTHERS LINE UP FOR STIMULUS AID

From the Sunday Daily Olympian:

South Sound lines up for stimulus aid
Local funding requests: 12 from Olympia, 17 from Lacey, 1 from Yelm and 1 from Port of Olympia

"...And Yelm is clinging to hopes of $11.3 million to kick off the first phase of construction on the long-dreamed-for city "loop" project that would steer state Route 510 around the city core. State money to actually construct the Yelm project has been elusive; the project is aimed at relieving traffic at the fast-growing city's core and open new corridors to its industrial area....

In Yelm, City Administrator Shelly Badger said the right-of-way acquisition is done, engineering and design work are complete, and the next step is putting out bids and hiring a contractor for the first phase of the $65.9 million Yelm bypass project.

The 4.5-mile project does not have state funding available any time soon, but it is a priority for the Thurston Regional Planning Council, Badger said. The first phase is from Mud Run Road to Cullens Road.

'It's bid-ready,' Badger said of the construction work that could be put out for bid in May or June with construction to follow in 'late summer or fall."

The project would provide about 100 construction jobs, according to the data the city gave to the OFM. But it also would open a new route to both the city center and industrial areas needed for economic development, Badger said.

Thompson, meanwhile, said he is trying to damp down expectations for what kind of green might sprout on the federal money tree. After meeting recently with a local government group, he said, 'They all think they are going to get money.'"

Ed. Note:
Mrs. Badger is not quite correct, as covered here recently in a discussion with WSDOT SR 510 Bypass Project Manager Dennis Engel, to whom I went to get some straight answers, since few come from the City of Yelm.

1. Regardless of what Mrs. Badger says, right-of-way acquisition is not complete according to Mr. Engel:
"We have been working on purchasing the right of way for the entire project and have acquired about 75 of the 105 needed parcels. We are continuing the right of way acquisition and hope to secure the entire corridor by June 2009."
Mr. Engel is focused on the entire Bypass, while Mrs. Badger is talking only about Phase 1, a small section of the Bypass.

2. Mrs Badger says: "...engineering and design work are complete,"
Mr. Engel says, "We have been working on preliminary engineering and permitting for the entire project. We have now moved into the final design phase, preparing the plans for construction."

3. Badger says, 'It's bid-ready,' of the construction work that could be put out for bid in May or June with construction to follow in 'late summer or fall.'

That's only true for "The first phase is from Mud Run Road to Cullens Road." That is called the High School Bypass option.
As stated here previously, the City has NOT been up-front with constituents, and as Mr Engel reported,
"Our current design work is focused in the area of what could be stage 1, this work is also needed for the entire project. The City of Yelm is working with the legislature about the possibility of splitting the project into stage 1 and 2, and changing some of the funding to construction so stage 1 could be built.
As you mentioned in your e-mail [from the Yelm Community Blog], one possible solution is to move some of the PE and Right of Way for the stage 2 area money to construction of the stage 1 work."

Mrs. Badger, you well know the City is attempting to move all funding to a Phase 1 Bypass and just dump any funding for the rest of the Bypass to the 2021-2023 biennium!

4. Badger says, "But it also would open a new route to both the city center and industrial areas needed for economic development."

Come on, you have got to be kidding, Shelly!

Having traffic diverted around the High School on a partial Bypass and then returning to Yelm Ave. West at Cullens, does NOTHING to alleviate traffic or as you say "open a new route to both the city center and industrial areas needed for economic development."
Far from it!
The only thing you get with that is traffic diverted through residential areas onto an unimproved two-lane Cullens, where there is currently is no traffic light where traffic would return to Yelm Ave. West, and would force trucks and other traffic onto Coates Rd. to get to the city center & industrial area. I believe our area residents would not be pleased to see truck and other traffic through residential side streets with children playing diverted from a partial Bypass to the Inner Loop for a new route to the city center and industrial areas, such as you describe! Better to terminate your partial Bypass at Killion, which is a three lane, LID-improved street with a traffic light at Yelm Ave. West.

WILL CITY ADMINISTRATOR BADGER OR MAYOR HARDING COME CLEAN WITH AREA RESIDENTS ABOUT THEIR INTENT ON DIVIDING THE BYPASS INTO TWO PARTS & MOVING ENGINEERING AND RIGHT-OF-WAY FUNDING FROM THE EASTERN END TO CONSTRUCTION FUNDING NOW FOR A PARTIAL BYPASS ON THE WESTERN SIDE, WITH PHASE TWO FUNDING FOR THE WAL-MART PART OF THE BYPASS BEING LEFT TO CITY OFFICIALS IN 2021, BASED ON THE GOVERNOR'S PLANS?

PROBABLY NOT. INSTEAD, MAYOR HARDING WILL TALK ABOUT THE ACCOMPLISHMENTS OF THIS ACTION IN HIS STATE OF THE CITY ADDRESS THIS TUESDAY AND BE HERALDED FOR IT IN THE NISQUALLY VALLEY NEWS!

THE USUAL SPIN AND INCONSISTENCIES WILL CONTINUE TO SPEW FORTH THIS WEEK!
OF COURSE, FEW CARE ANYWAY, SO THE CITY CAN JUST KEEP ON SAYING ANYTHING THEY WANT & DUPE THEIR CITIZENS.

FEW KNOW WAL-MART WAS APPROVED ONLY BY HAVING A FUNCTIONING BYPASS TO MITIGATE THEIR TRAFFIC WITHIN 7 YEARS OF OPENING; A BYPASS TO WAL-MART WILL NOT EVEN BE CONSIDERED FOR FUNDING NOW FOR AT LEAST 15 YEARS FROM THEIR OPENING!

HOWEVER SOMEONE THAT UNDERSTANDS CONCURRENCY [i.e. don't allow an unfunded/unconstructed road to be used to mitigate traffic for an applicant, like Wal-Mart] NOW KNOWS; NEW COUNTY COMMISSIONER SANDRA ROMERO KNOWS ABOUT THIS ISSUE, AS REPORTED HERE ON JANUARY 24TH!

YELM'S BYPASS IS NOT LISTED ON STIMULUS WATCH.