The Seattle PI ran a story about the crazy politics in Renton these days. Click here to access the story. I noticed there is a sound-off section for public comment after the story… if you have strong feelings about what has been going on, you have an opportunity to express them there.
Monthly archives for October, 2007
Renton’s largest employer keeps our city humming
We have diversified our empoyement base, and redeveloped some of Boeing’s surplus property, but that has in no way slowed down our city’s record airliner output. According to this article, at todays production rates, it would take more than FIVE YEARS for the Boeing Renton plant just to produce the 737’s that are already on order! And NEW orders are coming in strong! Click here to see the Tacoma Tribune article.
Councilman Dan Clawson put a hold on the city’s entire email system, and then went on vacation
(I wrote this mid-week but held off publishing this until Dan returned from his vacation, to keep his home safe)
Dan Clawson halted routine processing and management of email last week in his futile effort to find an email supporting a secret meeting that never occurred.
After placing this hold on the-city wide email system, he failed to follow-up with a detailed public records request to inform the clerk what she was looking for. Instead, he took a vacation while the clerk struggled to determine what to do next.
Proposition 1 Tax data; trying to make sense of the numbers
Interesting tax-collection analysis for Proposition 1. I can’t personally guarantee the numbers, but the format is good, and the person who prepared it identified himself as a professional engineer. Click here to see it.
Two men injured in Renton drive-by shooting
Two men were injured in a drive-by shooting on 167 down near Vally Hospital. Click here for the story.
Target Grand Opening is tomorrow!
The new Renton Target Store has been open for a few days in a “soft opening” warm up for their big day tomorrow. Renton residents are reporting that they are really enjoying the convenience of having a Target so close to home.
In the top picture below, new Target Employees are getting some last minute coaching as customers enter the store for the first time. In the lower picture, mayoral candidate Denis Law and Renton Technical College CEO Don Bressler are checking out the cool stuff in the Halloween aisle for the first time. You can see how large and bright the new store is.
Everyone is invited to the formal ribbon cutting tomorrow at 8:00 AM sharp. If you attend, be sure to look for me and say Hi!
New comments I am proud to have received. (Thanks readers!)
Somebody in Received from a Renton citizen…
You’re welcome sweet_panda!Anyone who reads Randy’s blog (except for Mayor Kathy, perhaps) can probably tell that he’s exactly the kind of person we need on the city council. I have also been incredibly impressed by Denis Law’s responses to my concerns. (Link) (Reply)
Sombody inWe did the right thing to open up our email to everyone (Entry Link)
Dude, you rock
Greg Overstreet mentioned this on his blog today. I give you a big two thumbs up for doing this. Missed the original Times article, sorry I am belated in congrats.
If only more public servants did so, it would be a much better place.
The Geezer
Formerly an elected official, now part of the solution, instead of part of the problem, generating more light, than heat, I hope.
I’m catching up on my responses…
If you left a comment that needed me to respond, please check back where you left it. I’ve been trying to catch up!
Thanks, Randy
If anyone considers my thinking difficult to follow….
My father was a nuclear physicist. Here is a report he wrote the year I was born (recently declassified and posted on the web). I studied physics in college, but um…when I read this abstract, I think airplane design is a little easier to understand.
My dad was the sweetest man you could ever meet, but he was also a bit of a mad scientist.
Optical-Model Analysis of High-Energy Neutrons Scattered by Deformed Nuclei
Authors:
Corman, E. Gary
Affiliation:
Lawrence Radiation Laboratory, University of California, Livermore, California
Publication:
Physical Review, vol. 125, Issue 1, pp. 359-365
Publication Date:
01/1962
Origin:
APS
Abstract Copyright:
(c) 1962: The American Physical Society
DOI:
10.1103/PhysRev.125.359
Bibliographic Code:
1962PhRv..125..359C
Abstract
This work investigates the effects of target nuclear deformations upon the high-energy differential elastic and rotational excitation cross sections for neutron scattering. An optical-model potential of cylindrically symmetrical ellipsoidal shape is used to represent the target nucleus. The deformed potential is first oriented parallel to each of the coordinate axes. The differential cross sections are evaluated and averaged over such orientations. Next, the potential is oriented at an arbitrary angle. The differential cross section is evaluated and averaged over all possible orientation angles. The foregoing averaged cross sections are compared with the cross sections obtained by assuming spherical nuclei for the cases of aluminum and lutetium. Third, differential cross sections with the simultaneous excitations of the target nucleus to higher rotational levels are investigated. Results of calculations are shown for a nucleus having the dimensions of lutetium in initial I=0 and I=7 spin states. Fourth, the cross section and polarization are investigated by assuming a spin-orbit interaction added to the central deformed potential. It is found that for an arbitrary nuclear orientation the polarization generally has a component parallel to the scattering plane. However, such a component vanishes upon averaging over orientations.
I got a nice mention in Greg Overstreet’s open government blog today!
Greg Overstreet has been one of Washington’s leaders in ensuring open government for all citizens. He worked many years for the Attorney General’s office, and has now gone into private law practice where he works with private citizens to ensure good access.
I’m flattered and grateful that he appreciates my act of opening council email to all!
Random thoughts on blogging, keeping in touch, and emotions
If anyone thinks my blogs are a little too candid, personal, or silly, I would like you to know that I am in pretty good company.
Today, I discovered that the Deputy Administrator of the EPA has his own blog, and I have to say my impression of that agency rose after reading it. I like the director’s view on life, and the human qualities he brings to the job.
This Blog in particular amused me, as he recognized the fun that the Simpson’s movie poked at his agency (after you read the Simpson’s blog scroll up and down to see his others):
Doh! EPA is teased by the new Simpsons Movie! Click Here!
Okay…lately I’ve been extra-critical and sometimes even a little cranky as a result of the forthcoming extremely-important election (and all the accompanying political hijinks); but I’ve been able to keep my sense of humor too, which is the coping mechanism I learned growing up in a busy, busy household with lots of other kids..
Meanwhile, In spite of my teasing and quips, I’m taking my work on your behalf very seriously, as I always do. I try to keep my perspective, and help others to do the same.
There was a tragic reminder on the Associated Press today about how much emotion can enter into a city council chambers:
Councilmember wants to resign after witnessing suicide at council meeting…Click Here
Good communication is so important. It keeps issues collaborative, and it keeps everything in perspective. So please keep in touch readers! Please leave me your comments, or send me an email or drop by city hall. You can also find me in and about your community, along with your other Renton neighbors.
And by all means, you may also call me anytime. My home number is 425-271-6913. And my city council phone is 425-430-6501. Please feel free to leave messages with our Legislative Aid, Julia.
To end on an upbeat note, I got a nice mention in a Mercer Islanders blog. Richard Sprague keeps an online journal which I ran across while google searching for Mercer Island reaction to the Renton Airport Issues.
He writes about me as City Council Blogger (click here). Thanks for your kind comments Richard! The positive feedback really makes it worth it.
Taking care of business… The load could be shared better
Last Monday, council observers watched in wonder as two members of Planning and Development Committee, Terri Briere and Dan Clawson, announced that their committee was going to quit accepting any more work. Then, they started dumping their unfinished work on other committees. The rest of us rose to the call of duty. Marcie Palmer’s Transportation Committee (which I serve on) agreed to tackle a Planning and Development item concerning driveway widths, and the Committee of the Whole (for which we are all members) agreed to tackle some land-use appeals.
This came across like an effort to push even more council work onto Don Persson, Marcie Palmer, Denis Law, and me, while Dan Clawson and Terri Briere further exclude themselves from daily council business. Several of us seem to be getting buried by work of late, as the annual budget hearings are coming up and we all have full committee schedules already. We are also intently preparing for the financial aspects of the Benson Hill proposed annexation, such that Renton will be ready if Bensen Hill voters approve this. On top of all this (and adding insult to injury) we are also busy making appointments with an Issaquah legal team which is defending the city from Dan Clawson’s frivolous lawsuit. So taking on more of Terri Briere’s and Dan Clawson’s responsibilities is a bit much.
The seventh member of the Council, Toni Nelson, is council president this year so she serves only on Committee of the Whole, and does not get involved in Transportation, Utilities, Public Safety, Community Services, or Finance Committee the way other council members do. (Toni retires at the end of this year)
I’m a little irritated that Dan Clawson and Terri Briere are sidestepping their responsibility here, and I have never seen such a thing in 14 years on council.
Dan Clawson and Terri Briere stated that they are punting on all the appeals work because the whole council does not accept their recommendations. I disagreed at the meeting, pointing out that there is not a single appeal in recent years, at least not in my memory, when the council did not approve their recommendation. Terri was simply giving an unsubstantiated reason for ducking the appeals.
Terri used the same rationale for ducking new policy decisions, like the driveway width issue. Her view was she has seen council second-guess planning and development recommendations over the last couple years, so she is getting tired of her committee “wasting time” preparing these recommendations. I can understand her point of view a little more here, but I think she is exaggerating the issue. Of all the work the Planning and Development Committee has done in recent years, there have only been a few issues that Council has asked for full council deliberation before acting on the P&D Committee Recommendation. Most notably, in Renton Highlands, a project in which every council member had input coming from all over. More recently, council asked for an additional week of deliberation/public vetting of some design guides, based on a request from the third member of Planning and Development Committee, Marcie Palmer. None of these actions provided a reasonable basis for P&D Committee to decide they would no longer perform their agreed functions.
There appears to be another issue rooted in these actions. I think there is a misunderstanding of the basics of delegating within a large organization, or within a legislative body. I find it interesting that when Don Persson and I delegate controversial topics to committee, we do not fully release our ultimate responsibility or accountability for the final action; and we are also the only two members of the Council that have spent our careers working within large organizations, with both subordinates and many people that we report to. Toni Nelson, Terri Briere, and Dan Clawson are all self-employed, and may not fully understand that when you delegate something you delegate some of your authority, but not your responsibility or accountability for the end result. I’ve observed that 99 % of issues delegated to council committee get quietly worked out in committee meetings, and meet with no public fanfare or outcry when they reach the full council. But for that 1%, when the public (my boss) comes back to me on a decision I delegated, and asks for me to reconsider the way it is headed, I listen to them. I’ll give preference to the P&D Committee recommendation, particularly if all three members support it, but I will still listen to the public’s point of view.
Another way to look at it is that there are actually seven levels of delegation, and I view our council delegation on the highly-controversial items falling right about in the middle of the spectrum. Right between these two options:
3. “Give me your recommendation, and the other options with the pros and cons of each. I’ll let you know whether you can go ahead.” Asks for analysis and recommendation, but you will check the thinking before deciding.
4. “Decide and let me know your decision, but wait for my go ahead.” The other person needs approval, but is trusted to judge the relative options.
Terri may see it differently, and I guess I don’t mind discussing this. But that is no reason to quit doing her fair share of the hard work of City Council in the meantime.
The Seven Levels of Delegation
Delegation isn’t just a matter of telling someone else what to do. There is a wide range of varying freedom that you can confer on the other person. The more experienced and reliable they are then the more freedom you can give them.
The more critical the task then the more cautious you need to be about extending a lot of freedom, especially if your job or reputation depends on getting a good result. Take care to choose the most appropriate style for each situation.
1. “Wait to be told.” or “Do exactly what I say.” No delegation at all.
2. “Look into this and tell me what you come up with. I’ll decide.” This is asking for investigation and analysis, but no recommendation.
3. “Give me your recommendation, and the other options with the pros and cons of each. I’ll let you know whether you can go ahead.” Asks for analysis and recommendation, but you will check the thinking before deciding.
4. “Decide and let me know your decision, but wait for my go ahead.” The other person needs approval, but is trusted to judge the relative options.
5. “Decide and let me know your decision, then go ahead unless I say not to.” Now the other person begins to control the action. The subtle increase in responsibility saves time.
6. “Decide and take action, but let me know what you did.” Saves more time. Allows a quicker reaction to wrong decisions, not present in final level.
7. “Decide and take action. You need not check back with me.” The is is most freedom that we can give to the other person. A high level of confidence is necessary, and needs good controls to ensure mistakes are flagged.
The author of this article, Irene Becker, is the Chief Success Officer of Just Coach It, a professional, boundary-less coachng practice that specializes in helping clients build a better human, personal and business bottom line at the speed of change; and even in the face of life/career transitions or difficult/painful turning points.
Boeing may expand at Renton Airport
More news about Boeing solving our problems at the Renton Airport! Yay! The Boeing team are local heroes once again. Good-bye jet center…we hardly knew ya, but you seemed to have troubles making friends….
Kenny and Susie
Even though I am not running for office this year, I caught two of my kids lounging in their two-year-old campaign T-shirts tonight. They said it was a coincidence that they both put them on, but I wonder if it is the fall air…campaigns are always on my family member’s minds this time of year. Three of my kids don’t remember, or only barely remember, the time before I was a council member.
This resident is trying to avoid growing a crop of yard signs
The yard sign campaigns are a unique and sometimes entertaining aspect of overall political campaigns. Finding legitimate and approved locations, and then fastening the signs in so that they are sturdy and visible, but not interfering is not always as easy as it seems.
No candidate ever wins because of their yard signs, but if you don’t have any it can really hurt your name recognition and your campaign. So it’s always good for a candidate to find a few dedicated sign staff, and a team of part-time helpers.
About ten years ago the US supreme court declared public right-of-ways to be legitimate zones for political freedom of expression, so many candidates focus their signs on the city easements around major intersections, creating what we frequently refer to as “sign farms.” Occasionally, these will get hit by city brush cutting equipment or random vandals, who will destroy all the signs, and necessitate that each campaign to come out and make repairs or install replacements. Political newcomers will often take it personally when this happens, but more often than not the sign was simply in the wrong place at the wrong time…I’ve never actually seen a campaign removing the other’s signs.
The best sign locations are actually on private property, because they tell surrounding owners and visitors that the candidate has won an endorsement as well as providing name recognition. But sometimes the lines between public and private property are hard to distinguish without a survey, so the whole picture gets messy.
I enjoyed spotting this sign tonight, next to one of Denis Law’s yard signs. This is the first such sign like this that I have seen in 14 years, but I bet it won’t be the last…it seems like a good idea. Yard signs tend to reproduce if placed in a greenbelt that may appear to be public property.
Believe it or not, some of my most fun campaign memories are riding around with other campaign workers, putting up yard signs. The actual installation can be laborious, but the camaraderie and conversations are often the best I’ve ever had. And it is a little like cruising Renton…but with a mission. If you have never done this before, consider volunteering to help with a sign campaign for your favorite candidate sometime. You may decide you really like it.
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