I recently wrote a letter to the newspaper about the sad state of affairs in our city. I have begun to describe that situation in the first part of "Pity Poor Saskatoon." Today the my thoughts appeared in the "Letters to the Editor" section of the paper -- albeit in an edited form.
Here's the original.
It’s Saskatoon's election time. And John Gormley (with his “usual gang of suspects”) is back with GAAG. (That’s short for “Gormley Against Anything Good.”)
Gormley mentions a “Gang of Four” on Council (“The Politics of City Election Campaigns,” Oct.16/09) but says less about Council’s other seven “gang-sters.” What Gormley missed is their thinking about urban development, which he perhaps shares. They’re firmly stuck in the 1970s. This is 2009.
Saskatoon’s deeply in debt, instead of using a sustainable, “pay as you go” development policy. That debt level is 1970’s thinking. Watch for taxes to rise significantly or services to be cut drastically.
We had the Gathercole building, then the Gathercole site, then Parcel Y; now it’s the “Atch hole.” Will Lake Placid ever build there? Perhaps the City's accepted a “pig in a poke.” That overall lack of planning major developments is 1970’s thinking. And how long will the “Barry vacant lot” sit vacant?
Consider the Farmers' Market. Built too small, in the wrong place, without enough parking, and streets too narrow. That’s 1970’s thinking. (It’s so crowded I, like many others, rarely go there any more.)
And the mayor wants to turn the Farmers’ Market to a kind of General Store, because he doesn’t understand Farmers' Markets. That’s pre-1970’s thinking.
The new bridges -- Preston over Circle Drive and the south-west Circle Drive Bridge. Where are the spaces for future LRT (Light Rail Transit), that we'll need to move Saskatoon’s growing population? No LRT. That’s 1970’s thinking.
Recycling is important. Community-University research has shown that more than half of what goes into Saskatoon’s land fill can be re-used or re-cycled. That would save the city money and extend the life of our current land fill. But, no civic curb-side recycling here. More 1970’s thinking.
There’s a problem with 1970’s thinking. Cities that keep using it don’t shine; they rot.
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Just to fill in the blanks, John Gormley is a lawyer who was a Conservative Member of Parliament for a time. He makes his living as a radio talk show host these days. He's just touch to the right; he thinks Attila the Hun was a socialist. When he speaks of those with who he disagree he calls them "the usual gang of suspects."
"Saskatoon Shines" is the big advertising motto the city is using currently.
Curb-side recycling (usually done by the City itself) is a feature of many Canadian cities, often much smaller than ours.
Some of the other elements are explained in previous postings.
The reference to "Atch hole" is to our Mayor, Don Atchison. The community largely wanted the Farmers' Market to go on the Gathercole site. But Mayor Atch (who is up for re-election) has an "edifice complex" -- a Farmers' Market is too simplistic and dull for such a great site. Sigh!
Sounds like politics is politics the world over. Gormley as politician? A Canadian Rush Limbaugh? Retch for the top.
ReplyDeleteWe have a presidential election in January, with the usual suspects. Yushchenko is the best of the lot but has zero support from parliament. Yanukovich is the criminal unseated from his fraudulent win by the 2004 Orange Revolution. To learn about Yulia Timoshenko, read Casino Moscow.
Fantastic. Congrats on doing this letter to the editor it is so well written and I love how you said about cities that don't shine but rot.
ReplyDeleteExcellent Rob-bear.
Love Renee xoxo
® BF: Retch at the top. Yup. Lord Acton lives (even thought he's dead.)
ReplyDelete® Renee: Thanks for the kind thoughts Renee. We had the chance to do something like the Forks Corporation in Winnipoeg, and develop a co-ordinated and integrated downtown. Our current Mayor nixed the plan. How we have an ugly hodge-podge of stuff. SIGH!
As they say, "the pen is mightier than the sword". I'm imagining that now, you have becoming a member of "the usual gang of suspects". It takes civic minded people, such as yourself, to force people to think about their city and the mismanaged waste that surrounds them. Perhaps before any upcoming election comes along, Saskatoon's general population will re-consider their vote before hastily dropping it in the ballot box.
ReplyDelete