Saturday, May 28, 2016

Politics

I want to connect the presidential race with that of our neighborhood's local politics.

It appears we know the names of the two remaining candidates and one will definitely be our next president ... Not surprisingly, there's a wide chasm of differences between the two ... passions are running hot, their supporters are filled with assertiveness, animosity, anger and rancor. 

Despite the negatives and because of the passion, I'd say there's legitimate belief in the "system"... People want visions, tangibles and actions ... they want - we want - normalcy, fairness and justice.

Comparing the national state to our local government - there doesn't seem to be any connection.

Locally, voter turnout is consistently low (around 25%), few people have actually seen or heard the candidates (or the elected) and few can name the members of local city and county councils.  Other than yard signs, can you recall any political candidate visiting this area and engaging us in a town hall type of meeting?  And I don't mean the sham kind of meetings as was dished to us during the sports complex sales job. All of which adds up to a degree of pessimism. Many people have said to me, "You can't fight city hall, they're going to do whatever they want". Or, "That's how it is in Snohomish County".

I ask, "Do you think we have a fair and square representational county government?"  "Do you think those five Snohomish Council people actually represent us and they're doing whatever it is they're doing with our best interest as their guiding light?"

I've been closely following the County's focus on our local community beginning with the initial plans for the Brightwater sewage plant ... that was in the late 1990's.

Our conflict with the County over Wellington Hills Park just passed the four year mark ... Not once in those many years have I sensed any sort of warm-fuzzy-real or honest connections between the County council or the county's bureaucracy with the people of this area.  Despite their glittering generalities and sales pitches for "done deals", we are anonymous to them.

A while ago I attended a public meeting concerning the 2015 Comprehensive Plan... once their slide show was finished I asked one of the County planners a question relative to Wellington Hills... the response... "the County sees things more from 60,000 feet than ground level".  I think that that encapsulates their general view of us.

It's easy to rant about how things are ... what's more important, and very difficult, is for citizens to step-up, with voices raised, and tell - not ask - but tell our representatives what's important to this community.

There should be no assumptions that things will be OK, that they have our best interests in mind when they do what they do because that isn't the way it works.  There's a reason lobbyists and special interests people attend County Council meetings... they want their projects and their version of progress and because the lobbyists are always in front of local gov people - as opposed to us - they usually get whatever it is they want.

Save some of that passion you have concerning the presidential race and use it locally.



(I don't know who the few in attendance are ... the photo is meant simply to show a sparsely attended session.  
If the Council is ruling on "newsworthy" items, the room can be filled, along with TV cameras too.)

Sunday, May 8, 2016

Mother's Day and the four year anniversary of "It's A Done Deal"

Today is of course Mother's Day - but it is also a very significant Anniversary date for those living in Woodinville and surrounding communities.

It was May 8, 2012 when those "lucky" enough to receive the following mailed card from Snohomish County, sat in the Brightwater conference room - not certain about what we would be hearing - then with various degrees of being stunned - we heard the now infamous words:

"We (Snohomish County, Dept. of Parks) are building a sports complex on the Wellington Hills Golf Course ... "It's a 'done deal' and you're 'going to love it."'



And so began a citizen's effort to save a local park in order to keep a community rural and consistent with all the Quality of Life reasons that make this a wonderful place to live.

Lots of heavy reading ... here's 4 years worth of the accumulated documents relating to the Wellington Hills Park fiasco ... from various gov bureaucracies, attorney documents, petitions and, piles of CDs acquired via the Freedom of Information Act. (And this represents just one person's "collection"... other concerned citizens have their own document piles.



Happy Mother's Day and if you want to save our community from urbanization, sprawl, unwanted development and traffic snarl (among other things) while also saving the very unique Wellington Hills Park...

Please donate by check, payable to “NSWP” and mail to: 
                                                     
                                                     NSWP 
                                                     PO Box 1805 
                                                    Woodinville, WA 98072 


 NSWP is a 501(c)(3) Non-Profit Corporation

Wednesday, May 4, 2016

Challenging Snohomish County

Today's Woodinville Weekly did a good job with this article  .... 

Of course there's more to the story, there's always more to political (County) intrigues. 

From our vantage point, the task remains - save the park to save the community ... because if the park is developed, so goes the rural nature of Woodinville.