Archive for DuPoint
Read it and Weep, Suckers
Posted by: | CommentsThis, my 449th post, will be the last for RealDuPont. I do not plan on continuing the site in 2012.
I built the RealDuPont site around this time of year in 2007 with the first posts arriving in January of 2008. My readership began to grow, in large part to an article that the Hometown Clipper ran in the spring of 2008. Make no mistake, local advertising works!
Over time, I got to know several citizens as a result of the website. Their input has been invaluable.
Contrary to what some have asserted over the years, I did not know the identities of the people commenting on the posts unless they informed me. Frankly, I didn’t care who was commenting, I was just grateful people were reading my musings. And, much to my chagrin, often the comments to my posts where greater than my post itself.
I covered topics that ranged far and wide, but mostly I wrote about DuPont. I wanted to provide an antidote to what was being said at the time by the city cheerleaders and sycophants. I wrote to keep our neighbors informed on some of the events happening around town. I wrote to provide another perspective and to give a voice to those who may not have been otherwise heard.
But, I mostly wrote just to amuse myself.
Now has come the time where I am no longer motivated to continue writing commentary on city matters. To be honest, it was difficult enough to post anything this past year or more. And since I am not motivated to write I can no longer see the point of maintaining this website.
I can’t even muster a farewell address. So, I will just end it with goodbye and thanks for reading.
Bearing the Weight of the Local Economy
Posted by: | CommentsSometimes we can get focused on a single issue to the extent that we lose sight of things on the periphery. While that may be good when trying to sink a putt it probably is less desirable when driving to the market.
The focus has been on several things these past few years, and currently it is safe to say that the Settlement Agreement is that ten foot putt for many in town. Hit or miss, the topic we seldom consider is what got us to this point. Think of it as working on your pitching and chipping.
Can’t putt unless you get to the green, so why not get as close to the pin to improve that putt?
A few years before all the drama unfolded regarding dewatering, restoring, expanding; there was what seemed an inconsequential item on the council agenda. That day, way back in late July of 2006, was this item to consider “Ordinance Authorizing Comprehensive Plan and Zoning Amendments Regarding the Old Fort Lake, Mineral Resource Overlay, and the Civic Center.” Not as boring as it sounds, as it turns out.
You can review what that change entailed here; and you can see how it was debated and who voted for what reason here. But that the purpose of this writing (though I will refer back to it later).
The lesson learned is that not every item on the council agenda is inconsequential and more items are more interconnected than you may think. Take, for instance, a somewhat innocuous presentation made by a Pierce County duo called Economic Development Board.
The EDB came to deliver some encouraging news to some; or, it may have been pandering to our current economic unease. They spoke of cooperation and partnerships and opportunities. They also spoke of something that sounded straight out of a made for TV movie: Project Tango.
Ooooooo.

Attached to the dumb, clichéd sounding name was a project linked to an unnamed Multi-national U.S based company in need of a warehouse and logistics center. And what DuPont can do to better position itself to claim their “prize” would be to have the assets and infrastructure ready for this “shovel” ready opportunity.
I wish I were making this up, or even embellishing it. However, this is pretty much what was discussed and how it was presented.
However, there is a catch.
That’s right; DuPont could possibly stand to benefit from this lucrative project Tango if only they amended a minor ordinance. The council would have to allow larger trucks to navigate Center Drive and offer up to them access to Exit 118. Just think, for a moment, how that would change DuPont. Large tractor trailers gaining access through the business district and slowly entering and exiting Center Drive. This is a terrible idea, not just for the added sight of traffic but also for what it could do to the cost of maintaining the roads affected by this change.

It is another call to abandon the “plan” that many of us were sold on and to share a sacrifice. But let’s not forget why. So that we can have warehouses as our primary economic development. What is wrong with warehouses? Plenty if you read the documentation I posted from 2006. Council was quite bothered at the thought of warehouses pocking the landscape. Now, as it turns out, that is all we seem to be attracting.
I suppose this is what we get for not valuing a Community Development Director for the past few years. It may also be a product of what I wrote about last time where we have been living in a void without vision for this community.
We may want to pay closer attention to these agenda items so we are not forced to relive history.
Nothing Is Settled
Posted by: | CommentsThe sands of time are running out for the public to comment on the recently released 2011 Settlement Agreement. That deadline looms and it is set as September 9, 2011. All comments can be emailed to DuPont City Clerk, Erin Larsen (elarsen@ci.dupont.wa.us). The city of DuPont has dedicated a page to information and a document repository.
I have had an opinion on the matter for nearly four years now. Some of you may have first heard about the proposed mine expansion from me at that time. It is that proposed expansion that necessitated the whole renegotiation of the 1994 Settlement Agreement, after all. I won’t go into all the gory (i.e. boring) details. They are well documented here and elsewhere.
Some of those who joined my commentary midway through this issue may be mistaken at my motivations for opposing the CalPortland (formerly Glacier Northwest) mine expansion. I am neither aligned nor affiliated with the Sequalitchew Creek Watershed Council. I am sympathetic to their efforts, but mainly because they are also opposed to the mine expansion for different reasons. Think of it as going to a Mariner’s game. They may be cheering for the M’s but I am there to cheer against their opponent. Different motivation, same goals, and hopefully the same result.
One of the first distinctions between me and the SCWC would be that I do not hate CalPortland, mining, or big business. I am not particularly environmentally conscious beyond giving a hoot (I was raised by the same Saturday morning cartoons as the rest of you).

Nor am I in denial that when properly regulated, industry and nature can coexist for the benefit of a community. I get it. But, I am also somewhat cynical, and not in the classical sense. I find it all well and good that the creek and marshes are the SCWC focus, but to be honest, their rubber didn’t hit the road until there were plans to significantly increase the size of the mine; and dewater in order to do it.
The mine expansion is sold to us as a grand opportunity for a restoration project; first from CalPortland, then later from the Sequalitchew Creek Watershed Council. It was only then that the Sequalitchew Creek became a jewel of a resource to the City of DuPont and its residents. From that point forward, it was two opposing groups trying to sell me the same used car: a 1974 Chevy Vega.
The sales pitch was simple. This long damned and diverted, garbage strewn and weed choked creek could one day be restored to its former glory. The problem with this argument, just like the ‘74 Vega, is that it sat unused and unappreciated for years. People weren’t too excited by the Vega when it was new and shiny and it will take buckets full of money to restore to its original condition. However, the thought of losing that ‘74 Vega from the backyard was too much for some to bear.

That is their front, that is their fight. It just would have been nice for the motivated folks at the SCWC to paint a clearer picture for those less passionate about the creek or who may view city matters on the periphery. It sounds like a good idea but what can and should Sequalitchew Creek be? Only then will you get people excited about joining the effort to preserve, in the least, or restore the creek.
But the purpose here is not to bash the few motivated people who care enough to try to fix something. They are sticking their necks out, and in DuPont, that usually means they are the easy candidate for the chopping block. Far be it for me to discourage someone willing to call out City Hall.
For me, I oppose an expansion of the mine based on nothing more than vision. That would be vision for DuPont in case anyone from City Hall is listening, reading, or considering a point of view that may challenge their own.
Since DuPont was settled, its vision was largely conceived, implemented, and governed by those who have lived elsewhere. It existed as a place on a map. A place defined by its proximity to other places. First the water, then the trees, then the Fort. DuPont was a port, and trading post, a manufacturing plant, a wasteland, and finally a bedroom community that sits atop glacial deposited sand and rock. The merchants needed DuPont. So did the foresters and government; and DuPont has held up its end of the bargain with little complaint, and with little resistance.
DuPont has also paid a dear price for its servitude.
DuPont very well could have been a place that ‘used to be.’ A place that would have faded in Washington’s collective memory much in the same manner that the relics and disgraces from the dynamite plant faded into the wooded landscape. A village buffered from some wetlands and trees by a rusting chain link fence. Now that the current plats are built out we are offered a contemplative pause on where we came from and where we are going. With the current growth abating we are now afforded the opportunity to conduct a community inventory of our values, and more importantly, our vision.
DuPont is approaching a period with a static population. A period without the pressures and influences of the residential growth. Fewer and fewer tractor trailers delivering the materials for ready-made (fabricated elsewhere, of course) houses. Fewer contractor vans. Fewer building permits and inspections.
A contemplative pause.
Now that we have come this far it is time to re-evaluate the journey. Are we still heading in the right direction? Are we even the same as we were before we left? And, where is it, again, that we are going?
For the entire time that I have lived in DuPont, this city has been a building permit issuing machine. Our City Hall’s function was primarily in support of the vision conceived and actively pursued by others. We were told that by continuing to build that our tax burden would decrease, the burden would be shared; but, the reality is that we lost some services when we encountered some new obstacles.
Some were mistaken in believing that if we continued to build that our history would be somehow be preserved and garner increased interest. Yet through our growth we are actually losing some of that history while we grapple with our identity. And, we were also naive enough to believe that if we continued to grow then our town would become a destination for new businesses and merchants; yet we lack some of the most basic services while the large businesses that signed on in the beginning remain alone on the landscape.
This period of pause can allow us to look up from the city’s ‘plan’ in order to view our reality. The paramount question that needs to be asked, not only during this time but before every vote is cast by council and the citizens alike, is who will benefit from our city’s plan? The collective answer to that question ends up being our vision.
I contend that until this point that vision is a product of others from elsewhere. Whether we realize it or not, now is the time to take firm control of DuPont’s vision. We live here and we will hand off the consequences to the future. Successful visions of the past are silently enjoyed while failed visions, or worse yet, no vision, are publicly cursed. You know these arguments because they often start with the words: What were they thinking?
I think the easiest way to begin is with your own vision of DuPont and not you were told by the builder, realtor, or City Hall when you chose to live here. For whatever DuPont wants to be, it is, in fact, a suburb. Too far to be a suburb of Olympia or Tacoma, it ended up being a suburb of Joint Base Lewis McChord. It is a bedroom community with generally quiet streets and generally decent schools and a generally lower property tax rate.
I realize that it is difficult to conceptualize vision. In the past they were the providence of both wise men and the insane. But for your frame of reference, the following is the vision of DuPont, Washington as stated in their Comprehensive Plan.
DuPont: A model small city known for its planned setting and hometown sense of community – a place that blends its natural beauty and Rich Northwest history with a proactive approach to its future.
How does a 700 acre hole in the ground support this stated purpose?
Contemplative pause.
I scrapped my last vision since no one could accurately paint the picture of just how the creek would be restored, or where the fish would come from or whether they could thrive. I was hoping this MOU period would have been about forming a coalition between the city, the Department of Defense, the State and Tribes, Burlington Northern, and the environmental groups. I had visions of a salmon hatchery similar to the one in Issaquah that sits predominately in the center of town; school buses parked along the street. A yearly festival celebrating the Salmon. People standing on the Center Drive Bridge mesmerized at the scene below.

No, I awoke from that dream.
My vision now is much more pragmatic. A vision that is radical because it stands counter to everything we know of this town since the advent of Northwest Landing. It is contrary to our comprehensive plan, the builders plan, the military rental community’s plan, and certainly to CalPortland’s plan. I suppose that I arrived at this point because I wasn’t hearing from our leaders, elected or otherwise. After careful consideration of where we appear to be now, and factoring in where it is proposed that we go, I have concluded that a significant part of our future should not include new housing.
That is, of course, what is planned for that mine pit once all the gravel has been exhausted. But the hard question we need to ask ourselves is how have we done with the housing we do have? And, that includes the housing in the Historic Village. If we are honest in attaining that answer we may very well be uneasy with the direction we are tacking toward.
Take for instance, as we see the decreasing new house permits issued by city hall we are also seeing fewer of these Quadrant houses owner occupied. Take a drive around any of the “villages” and you will notice more and more signs alerting passersby to a home for rent. This is not entirely attributable to the economy of the past few years. Even after the real estate boom there was still evidence of speculation and opportunity to turn a quick buck. Others are choosing to wait out the financial storm, and with JBLM, why not? The problem is that this does not bode well for the City coffers. DuPont currently cannot meet their obligations to pay their debt on the Civic Center and the missing Real Estate Excise Tax (REET) is a large contributor to this dilemma.
If you are thinking that this financial crisis will eventually abate and this shouldn’t be a worry then consider our infrastructure. How will the home owners of twenty years hence leave their new village of Aggregate Acres? The same way the residents of Hoffman Hill will be leaving then, which is to say, the same way they leave now. A single conga line of traffic. Where will the kids go to school? Will the added community mean that there is finally funds to have full EMT service for our fire department? How big will our Police department be and what will the response times be in the pit? How will having a neighborhood so disconnected reconcile itself with the walkability aspect of our original plan?
Contemplative pause.
*sigh*
The point is that we haven’t figured out how to efficiently run the town as it stands now. Adding a new residential space does not solve any of our problems, it actually exacerbates them. The current green space near the mine and overlooking Puget Sound can be our greatest asset in the future. Unfortunately, we never pause long enough to realize it.
DuPont City Council is Presented the Draft Settlement Agreement
Posted by: | CommentsThe council has finally begun their long anticipated deliberation of the 2011 Settlement Agreement. Late last month, the city of DuPont held a town hall meeting to present the details of the draft settlement to the citizens. Signatories to the agreement fielded questions from the crowd via cards submitted during the meeting; however, all questions at that time that required a city response were deferred to a later date. The July 12, 2011 regularly scheduled DuPont City Council meeting is the beginning of the process where the city council will consider the materials presented, the testimony of citizens, and data of the various hired parties. This information will presumably be vetted against the city’s Comprehensive Plan, Shoreline Master Plan, and any vision the council, mayor, and perspective office seeking candidates may have.
The council has not set a firm date to vote on whether to accept this agreement, but based on the comments from the meeting it shall remain on their collective radar through the balance of the summer.
The video presented here contains only the portion of the last televised council meeting where the draft Settlement Agreement was discussed. The video clocks in just shy of three hours so you can certainly gauge the importance of this topic by the amount of time dedicated to the subject. That is the only edit of the video and I have provided no other commentary, sound effects, or musical accompaniment. I also will withhold my opinion on the Settlement Agreement until people have taken the time to view this video or otherwise educate themselves on the issues involved.
Lamenting the Loss of an Institution: Home Town Clipper Folds
Posted by: | CommentsLate last week rumors began to circulate, and later they were confirmed, that the Home Town Clipper would cease publication with the June issue. While I am sure that this is a surprise to many, it should not be. The cost of producing anything in print continues to increase while Americans have shifted the way they get their information to electronic media.
The competition for advertisers is fierce in the newspaper marketplace, especially among the major newspapers, smaller market papers can sometimes find a niche and remain self sufficient and vital. It is hard to say whether this was the case with the Home Town Clipper, but from the beginning we all should have known that this wasn’t publisher Rick Beaver’s primary business. The humble beginning of the Clipper was that of advertising Home Town Services and the associated carpet cleaning business. The handout; later, newsletter; later, pamphlet; later, newspaper was born into a community hungery for information. Beaver rode the wave.
The Clipper plugged the hole by providing news about DuPont’s growth, politics, community members’ activities and accomplishments, businesses, and military families. In a way, we are back to where we were at the beginning of Northwest Landing.

It is sad to see the Clipper leave us but understandable considering Rick Beaver’s last sentence of this send off letter, “[D]ue to personal reasons and health issues in my family, it’s time to say good bye. Thank you!” I know from experience that if your heart or head isn’t into it, then it is time to walk away.
DuPont is left to pick of the pieces of how they will carry on and get their information. A large tract of land still needs to be developed and a major decision is expected soon on the proposed mine expansion. There are more residents than ever who will be searching to find out what is happening when, where, or even why. A feeling of dread crept over me when I heard the news of the last issue. This web site, the Clipper, and any other collection of sources of information were created because of the fact that the City of DuPont is notoriously crappy about getting information out to its citizens. They still cling to the methods used in the Village (now, Historic Village) of expecting the couple hundred people to come to meetings and find out for themselves or tell their neighbors.
That is great expect for the fact that DuPont is no longer a village with less than a dozen streets and all houses are a couple hundred feet from City Hall, at its farthest. Since that model was established DuPont was the fastest growing community in Pierce County and now the housing construction is nearly complete, maxing out our population at about 8,000 soon to be ill informed residents. While it isn’t the City of DuPont’s responsibility to publish a newspaper, they should provide information to the citizens. To that end, they have all but surrendered. There is a crappy Friday Letter that regurgitates the City Administrator’s junk mail pile, and is there even a LISTSERV anymore? We have a reader board with the capacity of Twitter but only with weekly, manual updates. You get the point, whatever sources the city is employing it doesn’t really provide much insight to matters of city business.
The City of DuPont’s foray into electronic media is best summarized by it outdated and largely useless web page. That same lack of attention to detail is evident in the city’s Facebook page and Twitter account.
I am also sure there are a few at City Hall, and a couple council people come to mind, who are probably dancing on the streets (Kincaid, McNeil?) over the news that their activities will no longer be memorialized in newsprint. They are the shiny happy people who choose to arrange deck chairs rather than confront the iceberg just off of starboard. Or, those poor souls who felt that the Home Town Clipper wouldn’t give the city a fair break. Yes, I said they felt that the Clipper would not give them a fair break. Perhaps, due to their audacity, to reprint council meeting summaries or report on proposed tax levies, or other crimes and misdemeanors.
We will also lack a news source of achievement of locals who received scholarships, traveled the world for humanitarian missions, or who may have even captured a trophy for their work golf league. (Ahem.) Not to mention profiles of potential candidates for mayor and council. Yes, dancing in the streets.
Gone is the ability for local business to advertise to the community they serve. This isn’t just the bricks and mortar buildings in town, but the handymen, painters, babysitters, and other home businesses, much like Home Town Services. If you don’t think those little ads you see matter, I am here to tell you otherwise. After a feature article in the Clipper, and then later some advertising, my readership increased considerably. More than I could have mustered on my own without considerable cost. Small newspapers are a community service.
Just when you may think that I will accept the challenge of picking up some of the slack from the departed Home Town press, I won’t. Like Rick Beaver, it isn’t my primary mission and my heart isn’t in to it. I do not care about military life, nature walks, 12 and under sports, or Zumba classes; nor will I pretend that I do. Besides, clipping out an article about those returning from deployment or little Johnny’s first home run just doesn’t carry the same cultural weight when printing it from a web site. The times, they are a changing.
Good bye, Home Town Clipper. You will be missed, unfortunately in ways we will yet to know.
The Public Relations Alchemy Award
Posted by: | CommentsThe last televised council meeting was brief. In addition to being brief, it also had some filler material to round it is 70 or so minutes.
Coming to the rescue to save the agenda and to add much needed filler material (in lieu of actual City Hall accomplishments) was CalPortland. In addition to generously providing support for various city hardscaping projects, parade and celebration support, and printing needs; CalPortland deftly provided “Agenda Filler” by offering a presentation during the community input period of the meeting.
The two representatives gleefully and professionally announced that the DuPont Washington mine site was given an industry award and a gold award at that! The DuPont site was recognized for blah blah while maintaining blah blah blah. This is a competitive award where blah blah competes against blah blah blah and blah.
Excuse me if I do not hold the same enthusiasm for an insider industry award. I have made it pretty clear on this website that I cringe when people refer to DuPont’s Northwest Landing as an “award winning” community. Hey, it is a nice place but when the award is given by the building and real estate industry it sort of loses its meaning to those of us driving ten miles to buy groceries. It is all marketing hoo-ha anyhow and I am sure it looked impressive on the brochures. Those of us left with the two ways in and out of town and the building dust may beg to differ on what sort of award is deserved. Likewise with the numerous awards the mayor offers to staff from some obscure AWC criteria. I am happy someone at City Hall has got their stuff together enough to complete tasks within their job description but save the back slapping for a staff meeting where there are enough Krispy Kremes for everyone.
Even though we are no longer in kindergarten we certainly are treated to numerous accolades that have little meaning outside our own offices and classrooms. Because of this approach to recognition, the “Raise your hand if you need to use the potty” award bears the same heft as CalPortland’s environmental stewardship award. When it comes to awards you have to consider the source.
Just because your shorts are clean doesn’t mean our water will be.
When I left Intel last year I had accumulated ten years worth of awards. When I left, the awards, in their dollar store frames, were recycled with jammed copier paper and old expense reports. The only award I saved was the golf titles won in our golf league. It seemed silly to save awards from program launches of products now obsolete; but an award to a high handicap golfer who could string together three or four or five consecutive rounds (under competitive pressure), well, now that is something worth remembering.
The problem with many of these CalPortland related stories is that of timing. I am sure it is not easy working community relations for any place whose business is to create a crater in the earth. Whether all like to acknowledge it or not, CalPortland is part of DuPont’s business community as much as State Farm and Intel and Community First Credit Union. However, I can’t help feel that there might be some Eddie Haskell sincerity at play. This new found exposure couldn’t have anything to do with wanting to expand mining operations and deflecting our concern over de-watering issue by distracting us with a shiny, gold award?
What is next? General Motors getting an award from the North American Dealers Association on behalf of the Chevy Volt for its environmental consciousness? Sure, why not? We will be so impressed that we will forget about the Cadillac Escalade or Silverado HD. (I also formally worked for General Motors)
And just what is this organization that bestowed the award on DuPont’s CalPortand? It is the National Stone, Sand, and Gravel Association. Take time to read their interesting website. You will find the criteria for getting this award here. You will also find some interesting related links and products available to mining insiders. My favorite is a book entitled “NIMBY Wars: The Politics of Land Use.” Maybe we can request a copy to be sent to the DuPont Public Library.
CalPortland is going to continue with their soft approach of trying to win the hearts and minds of average DuPont citizens. I just hope that our collective price is higher than the gifts that we accept.
Fuzzy Math
Posted by: | CommentsThe Salary Commission’s final report was issued in time for the May 10, 2011 DuPont (WA) City Council Meeting but the results were less than satisfactory to some of our elected representatives. In particular Councilman Roger Westman seemed particularly flummoxed by the resulting $75 per month increase for council members.
I am afraid that Roger is so far into the weeds that he will have to take a drop or let others play through. I can fully understand his confusion that it appeared that the compensation increase did not account for the time required by each member of council and mayor had to provide in the fulfillment of the position. However, not all value is derived by the time spent working on something. When providing a service, value becomes even more difficult to quantify. The real question to ask is what is anyone’s time worth? You are apt to get boundless inputs and opinions on the matter.
While the average citizen probably does not realize how much time each individual council member puts into his or her duties it would be safe to say they also probably do not care. The majority of those on the periphery of city business only begin to care when something the city does or does not do impacts them directly. It is also safe to assume that what is important to Roger or any other council member isn’t as important to the average Joe. So when Roger makes the case for his time spent at AWC conferences and seminars he also needs to articulate the value back to the citizen resulting from that time. Good luck with that.
Further, Roger offered two very lame and non-applicable examples of his value proposition. The first was of a garage door repairman requesting $100/hr labor rate to come out and diagnose his problem and recommend, and presumably render, a solution. It was also the same rate the computer repair technician quoted in Roger’s second example (he should have went to DNA Repair on Wilmington). It is beyond a stretch for these examples to be applied to the rate a part-time city councilman or mayor of a small town can reasonably expect. First of all, in the two examples cited, the technicians provide a measureable service. If Roger called for his garage door to be fixed then it would be fixed by the end of the transaction. Same is true with the computer technician.
In the case of the garage door Roger’s choices are as follows: 1) Pay the $100/hr rate and get the garage door fixed, 2) Fix the garage door himself for the cost of parts and his sweat equity, or 3) leave the garage door in disrepair.
To have Roger suggest that his time on council is somehow worth $100/hr because that is the going rate is preposterous. First of all, the technicians actually fix things. There is a measureable result in the service that they provide. Can anyone holding elected office in DuPont honestly say that they routinely fix issues with every minute they are deliberating on city business? What skill is it exactly that they are providing?
Look at this very council meeting. Seven council and one mayor. It lasted one hour. At Roger’s rate they would have each gotten $100. Watch it (if you can bear) and ask yourself if we got $800 in value.
Let me offer another example in the same vein as Roger’s above two. A plumber. A plumber probably also gets $100/hr as mentioned. But at least the plumber is willing to clean up someone else’s shit for them; and at the end of the transaction you can flush confidently knowing you were able to keep your own hands clean. The problem with our council and mayor is that we still have some shit clogged in our pipes and the only thing we have seen from them in the last four years is ass crack, not much in the way of results. Let’s begin with that discussion on “value.”

Here is where the argument gets ugly. What is the value the council and the mayor are providing back to the taxpayers of DuPont? If Roger Westman is quick to keep a ledger of council and mayoral value then so will RealDuPont.
What council should acknowledge is all of our money that they waste and that the citizen’s see zero return on investment. A certain $25,000 phone (scientific) survey comes to mind. Can any council member show any actionable items that came from the exercise of the obvious? OK, how about the countless council “retreats” where a facilitator is hired to tell council just how dysfunctional they are. Any learnings from that that I can see in action or is our council still divided into cliques pushing their own agendas? What about the pencil whipping City Staff pay increases during a recession? The benefit to the citizens for that charade was to lay off employees and decrease our level of services so that the managers could all get a pay bump.
Should I go on?
I would like to remind our belly aching council that their bonehead decisions cost taxpayers money too. Did Roger vote to send a $1000 gift to Steilacoom High School even though we do not have an electronic reader board ourselves due to lack of funds and in spite of the fact that we all pay school taxes for such nonsense? What about the second, off season, failed levy election because the first tax proposal was botched? What was the cost on that, again? How much in CYA expenses has council authorized to work on the CalPortland Mine expansion and subsequent renegotiation of the legally binding (at one time) 1994 Settlement Agreement? Lawyer’s fees? Planning department time? That total is nowhere near being completely calculated. Is there a price tag on every dead-end, go nowhere town hall meeting?
The way I see it, Mr. Westman, perhaps some of you on council could pull out your own checkbooks and offer back a rebate as a matter of good faith.
But, things don’t work that way, nor are you to be judged on how many hours council puts in for their blunders and successes. Just be thankful you are not being paid by results (like your technician friends).
You are serving the public, not the other way around.
RealDuPont TV Presents…Day 1
Posted by: | CommentsI was surfing YouTube the other day, getting my fill of British comedy, when I happened upon a show similar to E!’s Talk Soup. There are many similar shows airing in the UK as there is here and certainly no shortage of reality TV. They have Wife Swap, Big Brother, and other familiar titles appearing nightly. What you might not expect to see broadcast here is the “docutainment” of Muslim Driving School.
The more I watched the more riveted I became in the quest for these women to obtain a driver’s license. When I lived in England passing the driver’s test was a long, drawn out ordeal. It was rare that people passed on their first try. It is not like obtaining a license in the US where having a pulse and enough money to pay the fee are all that is required. In England, you are judged on such matters as what gear you had the car in as you entered a roundabout.
Here is installment one of three of Muslim Driving School.
Et tu, Billy Jack?
Posted by: | CommentsCould it be that folk hero of early 1970s cinema, Billy Jack, has come to town to help with the re-negotiation of the 1994 Agreement? If so, he may need to know that he left his hat in the parking lot of America’s Credit Union.

Imagine if we had this sort of righteous indignation in town, willing to put his right foot upside the head of those in charge. It could change the course of the conversations about yellow curb parking, cracking sidewalks, the sign code, and of course, punching a hole in the Vashon aquifer in order to harvest gravel.
Back to reality, we simply don’t settle things in this fashion any more. It would be compromise and working toward consensus. Everyone would have to feel good about the outcome and no foot prints would be left on anyone’s cheek. There would be no bad theme song to inspire us nor would there be a sequel. Nope, what we see is what we get.
If Billy Jack were to come to DuPont Washington today he would be seeking to side with the guys in the ice cream shop or city park in the name of salmon recovery.
Andy Estep Speaks Rhetorically to DuPont City Council
Posted by: | CommentsAfter the Council debate over the city funding “donation” (in exchange for levy support) of the Steilacoom High School reader board, citizen comments was next on the agenda. Andy Estep spoke briefly regarding 1994 Settlement Agreement revision.
Bear in mind that Mr. Estep just sat through the spirited and somewhat passionate discussion regarding child safety, lunatics roaming the streets of Lakewood, and adherence to the DuPont Strategic Plan. It was a plea to talk about real city business, if only for a few minutes.
We have been hearing for months about the MOU and the proposed revision to the 1994 Settlement Agreement and council is being asked a rather simple question regarding their vote on the proposal. Will they consider citizen input, as you would assume, since they are elected representatives of the people of DuPont. Of course, there may be a minority of council members who mistakenly believe that they were elected to govern based on their wisdom and what they consider is best for the city of DuPont. The former method would require canvassing a wide cross-section of citizens for their opinions and concerns; while the latter would require a vote based on their own will; perhaps from prayer, an Ouija board, or several gin and tonics.
Only they know how to breathe from within a vacuum.
The mayor promised that the legislative process that will be used by council will be posted on the city web site, but to date there is nothing as described by her request online. However, since no agreement has been presented to the city, we will just have to wait.
However, I will offer this space to council so that they may solicit their input on the matter. Interested council members can submit to me their written opinions, illustrative materials, and interpretation of the revised agreement. The pay off would be the direct feedback of the five people who still read this site.