Celebrating Blog’s 19th Anniversary

 

  Nineteen year ago I started this blog as a distraction from my father’s heart attack and slow recovery. It was late 2004 and social media & video streaming apps didn’t exist yet — or at least not widely available to the general public. Blogs were the newest means of …

Thoughts on NGA West’s Upcoming $10 Million Dollar Landscaping Project

 

  The new NGA West campus , Jefferson & Cass, has been under construction for a few years now. Next NGA West is a large-scale construction project that will build a new facility for the National Geospatial-Intelligence Agency in St. Louis, Missouri.This $1.7B project is managed by the U.S. Army …

Four Recent Books From Island Press

 

  Book publisher Island Press always impresses me with thoughtful new books written by people working to solve current problems — the subjects are important ones for urbanists and policy makers to be familiar and actively discussing. These four books are presented in the order I received them. ‘Justice and …

New Siteman Cancer Center, Update on my Cancer

 

  This post is about two indirectly related topics: the new Siteman Cancer Center building under construction on the Washington University School of Medicine/BJC campus and an update on my stage 4 kidney cancer. Let’s deal with the latter first. You may have noticed I’ve not posted in three months, …

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Weekly Poll; How Much Do You Mail?

March 22, 2009 Sunday Poll 8 Comments
 

This week’s poll is about the use of the U.S. Mail.  We all receive mail but my question is how how much you send out.  Take the poll in the upper right hand corner of the main page.

The post office ended its first quarter — October 1 through December 31 — with a net loss of $384 million caused by a drop in mail volume of 5.2 billion pieces. The 9.3 percent drop was the eighth consecutive quarter of volume declines, the agency said. (Source: CNN)

In a typical year I stamp and mail fewer than 10 items.  Where possible I try to receive mail electronically.  Payments are done online.  I’m going to try to get my condo association to have a paper recycling bin near our mailboxes to make it easier to pitch junk mail.

To save costs one option is reducing delivery from six days a week to five.  The postal service needs Congress to authorize that change.

Another Anniversary

March 21, 2009 Steve Patterson, Travel Comments Off on Another Anniversary
 

Regular readers know I suffered a major stroke on 2/1/08 and spent all of February, March and April 2008 in three hospitals recovering and receiving therapy.  A year ago today I transferred from hospital #2 to #3.  This was a big deal because except for a few times in therapy I had not been outdoors for very nearly two months.  My middle brother Randy drove up from Oklahoma City to drive me to Missouri Rehabilitation Center in Mt. Vernon, Missouri — a 4 hour trip made longer by flooding along the Meramec River.

Staff at St. Mary’s/SSM Rehab helped get me into his car for the trip.  It was scary because I couldn’t walk yet and we had no wheelchair with us for the journey.  I managed to get there without needing facilities.  It was Good Friday.

Once there I of course waited in the car as Randy went inside to tell them we had arrived.  The facility and grounds are quite attractive but the addmitting entrance (above) is less than appealing.

I spent five weeks there.  Turns out the director is named Steve Patterson.  I returned in August for a quick visit as I pased by on I-44 headng to Oklahoma. I was scared as I arrived and scared to leave and return home.  They taught me well so my recovery continues to progress.

One Paper Towns

March 20, 2009 Media 7 Comments
 

This week Seattle joined an increasing number of major cities with a single daily paper.  I flew out of Seattle Monday as the staff at the 146 year old Seattle Post-Intelligencer was finishing the final touches on their final print edition.  The print paper is ceasing but the business marches on as an online news & info portal.  Other papers continue but are being published a few days per week.

St. Louis has been a one paper town since the closure of the St. Louis Globe-Democrat in 1986.  Some are predicting many one paper towns will become no paper towns. Ad revenues have fallen drastically over the couple of decades while costs have risen.

Eventually St. Louis will be a no daily paper town.  The Post-Dispatch is thinner than before.  It may well go to fewer days before ceasing print publication.

Industries change as times change.  Cities change as well.  A century ago many people needed the afternoon or morning paper to inform them of what happened.  That need no longer exists.  The need that remains is journalists being around to uncover scandals.  The Post-Dispatch following the recent towing scandal is a perfect example.  A printed paper is not necessary to uncover these stories.  A good business model is.

The Pulitzer family cashed out of the Post-Dispatch at just the right time.  Lee Enterprises is now stuck wth massive debt from their 2005 acquisition of Pulitzer, Inc.  Newspaper companies all over the country are in trouble.

The question I have is how will a 2-paper town going to a 1-paper town or no paper town impact the civic pride?  Will businesss and politicians be able to get away with more with fewer paid journalists on the local beats?

Politicians using New Media to Communicate With the Public

 

We are without a doubt fully in the information age.  We want news and we want it now.  We don’t want to wait for a monthly neighborhood meeting or a quarterly newsletter to stay informed.

Missouri’s junior Senator, Claire McCaskill, does an amazing job of using new media techniques.  On March 3rd she posted on Twitter:

“Those naysayers bout twitter don’t get it. It’s all about communication. Communication is always a good thing especially in my job.”

A web feed (or news feed) is a data format used for providing users with frequently updated content. Content distributors syndicate a web feed, thereby allowing users to subscribe to it. Making a collection of web feeds accessible in one spot is known as aggregation, which is performed by an Internet aggregator. A web feed is also sometimes referred to as a syndicated feed.

In the typical scenario of using web feeds, a content provider publishes a feed link on their site which end users can register with an aggregator program (also called a feed reader or a news reader) running on their own machines; doing this is usually as simple as dragging the link from the web browser to the aggregator. When instructed, the aggregator asks all the servers in its feed list if they have new content; if so, the aggregator either makes a note of the new content or downloads it. Aggregators can be scheduled to check for new content periodically. Web feeds are an example of pull technology, although they may appear to push content to the user.

The kinds of content delivered by a web feed are typically HTML (webpage content) or links to webpages and other kinds of digital media. Often when websites provide web feeds to notify users of content updates, they only include summaries in the web feed rather than the full content itself.

I don’t plan to at this time maily because many of my constitutents are not online. When I was in office we had regular 20th Ward Meetings in which anywhere from 100 -400 people would attend. I also did a yearly newpaper, direct calls and written letters and attended the police and block unit meetings. Also those who used the email found that was the best way to contact me since I check my email early morning most days. I have not had a problem interacting with the press and or interested citizens. If they phone me at the office or home and leave a message or , write and/or email me, I respond appropriately. My ward meetings were often published in the press and were announced at the end of the Board of Alderman’s meetings. They wee open to the public as well as the press. The press came on several ocassions.”

So they can email but they are not online?  Seems to me you need to be online to send an email.

Four out of five U.S. adults go online now, according to a new Harris Poll.

The survey, which polled 2,062 adults in July and October, found that 79 percent of adults — about 178 million — go online, spending an average 11 hours a week on the Internet.

“We’re up to almost 80 of adults who now are online, or are somehow gaining access to the Internet. That’s a pretty impressive figure,” said Regina Corso, director of the Harris Poll.

The results reflect a steady rise since 2000, when 57 percent of adults polled said they went online. In 2006, the number was 77 percent. (source)

It is true that a fewer percentage of blacks are online, but the numbers are increasing.

The sharpest growth in Internet access and use is among young people. But blacks and other members of minorities of various ages are also merging onto the digital information highway as never before. According to a Pew national survey of people 18 and older, completed in February, 74 percent of whites go online, 61 percent of African-Americans do and 80 percent of English-speaking Hispanic-Americans report using the Internet. The survey did not look at non-English-speaking Hispanics, who some experts believe are not gaining access to the Internet in large numbers. In a similar Pew survey in 1998, just 42 percent of white American adults said they used the Internet while only 23 percent of African-American adults did so. Forty percent of English-speaking Hispanic-Americans said they used the Internet.(source)

Our politicians have got to stop presuming that their audience is not a part of the 21st century.

In the 23rd ward all seven candidates for Alderman had websites.  Two March winners, Antonio French in the 21st Ward and Shane Cohn in the 25th Ward, used blog-based websites (chronological posts with feeds) and the social networking site Facebook.

In the time it takes to talk to one constituent in the phone a politician can reach hundreds or more.  So here is some easy no-cost or low-cost ways for other elected officials to start communicating electronically in addition to face-to-face at meetings.

Email lists:

Nearly everyone has an email address so this is still a good way to reach folks.  Managing lists, however, can be a nightmare.  Setting up a free Yahoo or Google announcement group is the way to go.  Set the group up so that anyone can join, leaving the list management to Yahoo or Google.  Publicize the existence and watch the number of members grow as regular emails are sent to the group.  One email per week is a good number.

Website or Blog?

A blog is a special form of a website.  While websites have traditionally been static and required specialized software to create and update, blogs make it east to add new information and archive old information.  Free blogs can be had from Google, WordPress or in the case of Claire McCaskill, Tumblr.  This last one is new to me.  It is very simple and is set up so it can be updated on the web, with a phone or using email.  Very smart & easy.

Facebook & Twitter:

Facebook is a good supplement to email lists and blogs but not everyone is on Facebook.  Like Facebook, not everyone is on Twitter.  Unlike Facebook, Twitter has a feed that people can subscribe to.  This can let someone use Twitter as a short form blog.  An entry might be, “Introducing bill on Friday to allow steet vendors city-wide.”  Another could be, “Hearing on BB56 on street vendors Thurday at 10am in Room 208.”  Twitter tweets are limited to 140 characters so it doesn’t take much time.   Both Facebook & Twitter give you the code to place your updates on your blog — see my sidebar on my main page as an example.

I urge current and future elercted officials to see the importance of keeping the public informed about their work on our behalf.

A Smoke-Free Vacation

March 19, 2009 Smoke Free, Travel 23 Comments
 

On Monday I returned from a 9-day trip to the states of Washington & Oregon.  Both are states with bans on smoking in public places. Most of the trip was spent in the City of Seattle.  Going out to eat was never a chore of having to wade through various lists of non-smoking restaurants as I do here.  Instead we could focus on the location, menu and price.

One day was spent visiting the small mountain town of Granite Falls, WA and the bay side town of Poulsbo, WA.  Granite Falls is not a tourist town.  It has only a few restaurants.  Without the smoking ban they few restaurants in town would have all had smoking.  This would leave persons with no choice but to endure the smoke if they wanted to eat out.  Poulsbo, on the other hand, does cater to the tourist crowd so some of its places might have been non-smoking without the ban.    As with Seattle, we could select our dining options based on factors other than smoking.

Saturday we drove to Portland for an overnight stay.  Our downtown hotel was across the street from numerous gay bars.  We visited three that night.  All were very busy.  Gay bars are notoriously smokey.  But these were smoke-free thanks to Oregon’s smoking ban.  We met up with friends for lunch on Sunday but our first choice had a long wait so we went to another restaurant.  If business was hurt by the smoking ban you couldn’t tell.

Smokers outside a Portland gay bar huddle under an umbrella to get out of the rain.
Smokers outside a Portland gay bar huddle under an umbrella to get out of the rain.

Having to seek out non-smoking places is a major hassle.  Not having to worry about finding non-smoking places truly was a vacation.  I’m established here in St. Louis but if I weren’t I’d consider relocating to a state that placed greater importance on the health of the public. I personally don’t care if someone wants to smoke cigarettes (or marijuana) in their home.  I just don’t want to be forced to inhale their smoke while in establishments serving the general public.

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