Thursday, December 22, 2011

Christmas Memories

Ho Ho Ohhhhhhh........

I must admit first off that I am The Grinch. And Scrooge. I wasn't always and indeed loved Christmas as a kid (what kid doesn't?). My childhood joys of opening Xmas gifts were surpassed only in the summertime when the hydroplanes came to race in the Diamond Cup on Lake Coeur d'Alene. But Christmas was fun and gifts, aka TOYS!, were wonderful. For the most part. Like everyone, I got some awesome, and some not-so-awesome, gifts over the years.

As a tyke I got the usual late-1950's and early-1960's assortment of trains, cars, airplanes and tractors. Oh how I wish I still had them all (in mint condition, hello Ebay!).



Some of my best gifts came from Uncle Ray and Aunt Mary in Montana. Over the years I got cool stuff like an astronaut helmet and a secret agent attache case for Xmas and birthdays. But my All Time Number One Greatest Xmas Gift of All was an Aurora Thunderjet 500 HO Slot Car Set. It wasn't a big set but that small track and the skinny-tire Fords started a love affair that grew and lasted until I was in high school.

In time, all my buddies got slot car sets and we'd combine our track to create huge layouts. I had control of half an unfinished basement that was hobby central. The wall was covered with center spreads pulled from Hot Rod and Car Craft magazines, a desk was dedicated to slot car tune-ups and model car building, and the radio was always tuned into the original KVNI at "1240 on your dial". What we now refer to as Man Caves was, back in the day, Boy's Club.


Other memorable Xmas gifts included a 20 gauge shotgun (pheasant hunting!), a trip to Hawaii (4th grade, didn't mean much then but was my first big vacation) and a trip to the 1995 Indy 500 from my wonderful wife, Sue.

One year I had my eye set on a wonderful plastic Army set from JC Penny and let know that that box of little green men and vehicles was what I desired. Come Xmas morn I didn't get it. After everything was opened and breakfast was over, Dad broke the news that they got the Army set but couldn't find it. We went through Mom's office (Ace Travel, 3rd & Sherman, 2nd floor) and Dad's (CdA Chamber of Commerce attached to the Desert Hotel) to no avail. Such is life, Xmas was still great.

In the summer, for some reason, I was yanking my way through an 8 foot long basement closet with only a walk in door. As I pushed my way to one end I heard something. Crawling back I discovered a box. Hello Xmas. We spent the summer setting up all the soldiers, cannons, jeeps and tanks only to bombard them with dirt clods. Now that was a great Xmas present and well worth waiting for.


Then there's the presents that didn't go over so well. As a high school freshman I got a typewriter. Sure, I was in typing class, but a typewriter as a present?! (This may have been a turning point in my perception of Christmas.) Not too many years ago I got a "brew beer at home" kit (which was promptly returned, if I'm going to be a home brewer I'm sure not going to do it in a plastic jug from Spencer Gifts). No complaints on socks and underwear, they may not be fun but are everyday useful.

But the all time worst Xmas gift was from my dear Aunt Mary. After Uncle Ray had passed, which suggests that he was the "fun" guy in the pair.

My family was a Christmas morning family, but on Christmas Eve I was allowed to open ONE gift as long as it was from someone other than them. Knowing that Ray & Mary always sent cool stuff, I plucked a small box from under the tree. From the size it could have been a wallet, maybe with money. Excitedly I opened it only to discover the most gawd awful ornate gold maltese cross on an equally awful gold chain. (And this was the days before wearing crap like alarm clocks around your neck was cool.) The one time I wore it was the one time I also wore a funky white turtleneck just long enough for Dad to take a photo. I need to find it, you'd get a great laugh. Out of respect I stashed the cross somewhere and one day re-gifted it in some manner.

Wednesday, December 14, 2011

McEuen, Part 5

With the end of 2011 just around the corner and I look back at the year, McEuen remains one of the most controversial issues in Coeur d'Alene. It even had a direct affect on the 2011 City Elections. If you've read many of my Old Koot entries (see Feb 2010), you know that I have strong feelings for this important piece of land. As such I'd like to review what's happened this year along with a couple of pieces I wrote.

In February my following essay on the McEuen debate was posted on the CdA Press website as well as published as a My Turn editorial. It is the basis of my rants and irritation regarding McEuen. Follow along my next couple posts as I continue to cover the topic of McEuen and politics in Coeur d'Alene from 2011.

---------------

In all the recent talk and reporting of McEuen, the concept driven by the Committee of Nine has been mentioned only in passing. It's too bad because it was created by citizens with input from all parties. A concept that, after a year and a half in the making, was accepted by the Coeur d'Alene City Council. Without fanfare and without a public vote. Yet, save the Library, nothing has come of it. What happened?

Around the year 2000 and after the Hyett-Palma and Walker-Macy studies, the future of McEuen was at the feet of the City Council. A committee was set with a mission of considering the various reports and, with local input, come up with a conceptual plan/vision for a future McEuen. This group included Scott Reed, Red Halpern, Dave Schreiber, Denny Hague, Mike McDowell, Brad Jordan, Steve Anthony, landscape architects Dell Hatch and Jon Mueller. I was and am proud to have been a member of that group of high quality community leaders and what our committee accomplished.

We met mostly weekly and started with setting ground rules for how any/all concepts would relate to McEuen. That became what is now known as the Seven Values. If you aren't familiar with that list I urge you to take the time to read it (see below). It is the single most important document regarding McEuen.

Consulting with City Attorneys and associated government entities helped us define what could and couldn't be done, both legally and logically. We met with various civic entities connected to McEuen and spent one entire Saturday talking with representatives of each group to understand their concerns, answer their questions and get their input.

As concepts were drawn out we held public workshops where locals sat in groups at tables with maps, pencils, markers and survey sheets. The only "loading" we did was to try and put opposing viewpoints together at the same table to stimulate discussion. Committee members acted as moderators only, moving from table to table answering questions. Each table then presented their findings. After a workshop we returned to committee and tweaked things in accordance of what we heard, then held the next of what was three workshops.

These workshops are some of my all time favorite memories of working as community. Discussions were spirited but mannered. Ideas were traded and eyes opened. A "good of the whole" attitude won out over myopic special intrests. Feedback was positive and enthusiastic as people visioned the possibilities.

With the Values set in stone and a plan created by the community, a "final" concept was accepted by the City Council. And it went in a drawer. Outside our beautiful Library, nothing much has happened since.

Fast forward to now and the City's latest attempt to update McEuen. And, not uncommon to Coeur d'Alene, the topic ellicits smiles, ideas, hopes, passions and, sadly, fear and hate. Emotions so high it drove one person to consider a gun at a meeting. Take a breath people. Let me address a few issues and tone down the emotions.

The land now known as McEuen has, over time, been everything from an industrial site to a fairgrounds to low income housing. It was never owned by Mae McEuen and therefore never given to the City by her nor does it carry any sacred covenants from her. I am shocked by the number of people who still think this.

One of two huge issues is the boat ramps. I am personally not in favor of removing the boat launch and the Committee of Nine's concept also left it in place. It's long history and the restraints from decades old deals with entities like Land and Water made the decision obvious. But the idea of moving the trailer parking for green/people space is even more obvious. If nothing else is done, that blacktop has got to go.

Then there's the baseball field. I'm surprised that's the best we can do for our American Legion teams. Forget the location and view, it's a low quality baseball field. Local high school fields are superior. I'm puzzled that with the cries to save the field, nobody seems to want a better field.

One of the Seven Values states we "Ensure the replacement of any displaced facilities with equal or better facilities."

Imagine a baseball facility serving not only Legion but high school, Major Little League and a returned NIC team. One that could proudly host tournaments and draw crowds to watch America's game. Would something like that be the right fit at McEuen? I don't think so.

There was a baseball plan once. Post-Committee of Nine, an ad-hoc committee took on the idea of a better baseball facility for Coeur d'Alene. I was also in that little group and boy oh boy did we have a great plan for a two-field complex, one being a feature stadium. This first class facility would meet said Value in spades and open the green space door at McEuen. But where to put it?

Stars must have aligned and the City Council acquired property earmarked for baseball. Located near arterials with room for plenty of parking, it was a perfect fit. So what happened to it? That property is now known as Kroc Center. While Kroc is a wonderful assent to Coeur d'Alene, it may be the single biggest reason McEuen was left behind until now.

An obvious move now would be a new Memorial Baseball Stadium. With rights of way opening for parking next to Northwest Boulevard and located across the street from City Park, what a great place to watch America's favorite game.

Back to McEuen. Looking at this grand new vision and as one who poured his time and heart into McEuen over the years, I gotta ask. What is the City thinking?

Why did we spend money on yet another professional study and another (21 member!) committee when a plan driven by The People already existed? How could a concept this fantastic be produced with seemingly so little public input? And for the $64K question, if we couldn't pull off a simpler plan during better economic times, how is this one going to work?

Now the big question is do we vote on McEuen. Of course some are calling for a vote, it's a City Council election year. Don't tell me you haven't lived here long enough to see that one coming.

My question is what exactly would we vote on? Is it A, leave it alone forever, or B, accept the proposed concept as it stands? Black or white. One or the other.

The fact is, any such vote would be a waste of time and money and wouldn't accomplish anything no matter how the vote went. Neither side wins in the end. If the concept is booted then we're saddled with a future of the same old underused and overvalued property. If it's accepted and during the multi-year build out things need to be added, deleted or moved, who makes the call? Or do we have another vote on where the swing-set is relocated? Any concept is just that, a work in progress and a yes or no vote isn't what McEuen or Coeur d'Alene deserves.

A change is due. Near half of the McEuen property is currently parking lot. For being adjacent to gems like Lake Coeur d'Alene, Tubbs Hill, a charming downtown and a world class resort, the property is vastly underused. Toss out any numbers you want, this property can and should serve a greater number of people than it does on its current day to day basis. You can see more people at G.O. Phippany Park.

Say NO to a vote but say YES to more public input. This is not something that needs to be on such a fast track. If we've waited this long, then let's take a little more time to do it right. I ask the City of Coeur d'Alene to present the Committee of Nine plan to the people before one more step is taken on McEuen. It was and still is a viable, multi faceted and more affordable plan. I believe the community would rally around a more reasonable option. Let's take another look before we go any farther.

Now go take a walk around McEuen, imagine and dream.

----------------------------------------
The Values

Recognize the value of public-owned space and encourage improvement
in accessibility and usability by and for the citizens;
Promote and enhance open space;
Encourage greater use of downtown public space for the community;
Recognize the value of vistas and views;
Ensure the replacement of any displaced facilities with equal or better
facilities;
Explore possibilities in creating a community gathering place;
Link the Downtown to the waterfront.

McEuen, Part 6

The McEuen debate continues. A week prior to the 2011 election my following Letter to the Editor was printed in the CdA Press. Now, mid-December, neither issue referred to has been addressed.
--------
As this election season draws to a close (hooray!), I still have concerns on what seems to be a top issue regarding the City of Coeur d'Alene races: McEuen. I've long been troubled with this topic and wrote a Press My Turn column earlier this year detailing such. Since then, neither of these following items have been addressed to any satisfaction so I am revisiting them.

Some Council candidates and many residents are demanding a public vote on McEuen. But not once has anyone, candidate or activist, ever attempted to define how that vote would be worded and exactly what the supposed "yes" or "no" vote would be on.

I see the possibility of two choices; Yes, build a $35 million McEuen or, No, leave McEuen as it is. McEuen is too important to be reduced to a yea or nay and neither of these choices are acceptable. Following a rigid plan would be foolhardy yet not doing anything still leaves us with an underused resource and blacktop where green space should be.

This point is especially directed at candidates who are using a McEuen vote as part of their campaign platform. You want a vote? Then define the vote. Otherwise this is just political rhetoric. And I think we can all agree that America already has plenty of that to go around.

The second point I raised last spring was a seemingly simple one. Ten years ago a McEuen concept that was driven by community input was unanimously passed by City Council. That plan was put away and I am still perplexed as to why the City saw the need to start from scratch, again, and create a committee that apparently didn't seek public input yet came up with a pie in the sky concept to the tune of $35 million plus.

I asked 6 months ago and I'm asking again, what happened to that plan and why hasn't the public been given the opportunity to view it along with the current one?

Why are these such difficult concepts? It's simple, Define any proposed McEuen vote and show us the plan the City of Coeur d'Alene has been sitting on for a decade. This election and the future of McEuen are based on these two items. It shouldn't be this hard for the people of Coeur d'Alene to get this information.

Ask questions. Demand answers. And don't forget to VOTE!