Archive for August 2009 – Page 2

Responsible Bidder Ordinance and first Neighorhood Presentation

The August 17th city council meeting will be bring back the controversial responsible bidder ordinance.  It is likely, more than likely, to be rescinded.  It was passed earlier this year shortly before the city council election.

The meeting was also feature the first neighborhood group presentation from the GM Square Neighborhood Organization.  A selected neighborhood group from the city will give a presentation before the city council on the second council meeting of each month.  This is a new program that the city has created.

A Little Inspiration From Up North

I’m back from Miller Park Zoo in Bloomington – no cage can contain me!  I hadn’t been up there for a few years but I was impressed with their new spray park and mini-golf course.  The kids saw it and wanted the same thing for Decatur and so do I!  I’d  just like it bigger and even better.  If ideas are still being taken for Nelson Park, I’d encourage our park board to mosey on up to Bloomington and take a gander.

The spray park is free.  Their mini-golf course looks new too and located right by the spray park.

http://www.cityblm.org/parks/Parks-Facilities/Aquatics/aquatics-sprayparks.htm

(Click on photos for full view)

Miller Park, Bloominton

blooming_zoo_park2

Flaming Torches

It’s hard to ignore the rowdy town hall meetings lately regarding health care. There’s no doubt both Republicans and Democrats are playing politics, and have bused in their own plants, to either stir the pot or sing praises for the changes – even when neither knows exactly what the changes are. I don’t have a clue what kind of changes congress is planning, however there’s some things I’m fairly certain of: Universal care is pretty much off the table; mandated coverage seems more likely. Much like drivers are required to carry liability insurance for their vehicles, Americans may have to purchase health insurance for themselves – whether they want it or not. The only thing I can be sure of: insurance companies are going to get richer because they’re rooting for the plan. That should tell us something right there.

I don’t know if it’s more entertaining or scary watching the sideshow tactics and paranoia as the health care battle rages on. Some people are tossing out ridiculous claims anywhere from Obama being the Anti-Christ, with universal health care being his first step in his diabolical plan to take over our minds and bodies, to eventual death camps for old people, fat people and the disabled. I think most people find those claims ridiculous but there are serious questions to be asked and answered and that’s what has most people upset.

There’s something very creepy about government creating legislation about our bodies. That why abortion is legal. There are privacy issues but more than that, we all know how persuasive the mighty dollar is. When Grandma begins costing more than she’s worth, do we cut off her health care and put her out the pasture? What about babies born with severe disabilities, who will never be productive in society? If an abortion is medically necessary to save the life of the mother, will government funded programs pay for the procedure or not? What if we are found to carry a cancer gene – will we be forced to pay more? What if we’re overweight? Will we be forced to lose weight to keep our coverage? That’s why it’s so creepy and that’s why people get a little crazy about government playing a major role in our health care coverage – though Medicare and Medicaid, both government funded insurance programs, have been around for ages and there’s enough HMO horror stories to fill a library the size of Texas. None of this is necessarily new nor something we haven’t seen before.

It makes me wonder: Why are Europeans so much more accepting of government run health care while we Americans are ready to pick up flaming torches and pitchforks to thwart it off? Because we’re Americans! It’s because our Constitution is at odds with many proposed changes needed to implement a government run insurance system. We have our rights to privacy and a Bill of Rights ensuring that we can live unhealthy lifestyles – if it makes us happy. Just like we didn’t want British soldiers marching in our homes and staying the night in colonial times; we don’t much care for big brother checking our Body Mass Index to ensure we aren’t costing taxpayers too much or being a burden to society. Independence means just that. Being American carries a price. Those who are able have to fend for themselves must do so. However, if we are to be any semblance to a civilized and yes, Christian nation, we have to care for those who can’t care for themselves. Creating a health care system that can cater to both is the task before us. We just need to be a little more reasonable and quiet to do so.

High School Task Force Narrows Choices

Another in a series of High School Task Force meetings was held tonight at MacArthur High School.  Several community members filled the MacArthur cafeteria and narrowed down three proposed high school solutions for Decatur.  The participants composed of teachers, local business leaders,  community leaders and yours truly.  I think I was the only one new to the process.

BLDD drew up several options from suggestions made by earlier task force meetings.  It was kind of overwhelming to look through all the different options but I think I made sense of it by the end of the night.

Some of the options:

  • Build a new school on a new campus
  • Renovate Stephen Decatur Middle School into a high school and build another new high school somewhere else.  This option was tossed for being too cost prohibitive, considering we’d have to build or renovate a third building, to house middle school students displaced from Stephen Decatur
  • Convert Stephen Decatur back into a high school and renovate it; convert MacArthur into a middle school and sell Eisenhower.
  • Renovate both MacArthur and Eisenhower

The most expensive option, according to BLDD was renovating both MacArthur and Eisenhower.  Basically, Eisenhower would have to be torn down and rebuilt; MacArthur is in better shape, at least from what I gathered from those at my table, which consisted of two teachers and another woman in the education field.  They were vehemently opposed to a single high school option.  They feared disciplinary problems and voted for renovating MHS and EHS.  I chose the Stephen Decatur option – upgrading Stephen Decatur into a single campus high school.  That option is the least expensive, about 78 million, if I remember correctly.  Building a new high school on a new campus would costs about 93 million.  Upgrading Eisenhower and MacArthur was estimated to cost 120 million.

Luckily I videotaped much of the meeting, so hopefully after reviewing it again, we all can get a better grasp of the numbers and details.

After reviewing the options, the three top vote-getters were (in order):

1.  A new campus, a new building

2.  Renovate Stephen Decatur as one new campus

3.  Renovate MHS and EHS

Videos of the meeting can be found on the Decatur Navigator YouTube Channel.

Decatur Township: Too Funny, Too Sad

The ongoing saga of the Decatur Township is sounding more and more like an MTV reality show as the days roll by.  Things were tense before the election, when accusations of corruption, hanky panky, favoritism and all that good stuff  were tossed around.  At that time, the Township was held by a strong Democratic majority.  That Democratic majority lost in the last election when the Republicans took control.

What gets me is why on earth a government body, who’s main duties are the maintenance of less than 10 miles of road and a couple cemeteries, would be such a battle ground for partisan politics but it is and it’s silly.

Just this week, two field assessors were fired for “offensive conduct toward fellow employees or supervisors”  (See the Herald & Review article.)

Personally, I think it’s time to close the book on the Decatur Township and let its duties by absorbed by the county.  It’s not worth the partisan headaches and elections.  It’s not worth a pricey Town Hall of which few people use.  It’s not worth it.  Period.  The only positive thing about the Decatur Township is the entertainment value it brings to a reality television viewing audience – they only problem is, it’s not on television.