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, …

Recent Articles:

Quarter of Board of Aldermen Have Not Filed Required Campaign Reports

 

A full 25% of the St. Louis Board of Aldermen have not filed required campaign finance reports with the Missouri Ethics Commission, as of 10:45am today. I double checked the seven that have not filed and the Missouri Ethics Commission does not show any reports received but not yet scanned. The reports were due October 15th which translates to October 16th since the 15th was on a Sunday.

The following are the aldermen that have not filed the required reports, all are Democrats (that is a joke, btw, since we only have one Republican elected to office in the City of St. Louis):

•Charles Quincy Troupe — 1st Ward
•April Ford-Griffin — 5th Ward
•Lewis Reed — 6th Ward (Reed has two committees at this point – one for alderman and one for president of the board, neither committee has filed the required reports)
•Jennifer Florida — 15th Ward
•Terry Kennedy — 18th Ward (Kennedy is up for re-election in 2007)
•Frank Williamson — 26th Ward (Wiliamson is up for re-election in 2007)
•Lyda Krewson — 28th Ward (Krewson is up for re-election in 2007)

More to follow in the next week, after I’ve had a chance to download and review all the reports that have been filed up to that point.

Related prior post: July 27 — A detailed look at Campaign Finance Reports.


UPDATE 10/18/06 @ Noon:

Ald. Lyda Krewson emailed me to indicate they mailed their reports on 10/13. Krewson also indicated she talked with the folks in Jeff City that said they just received some mail this morning postmarked 10/10 & 10/111 (and presumably Krewson’s dated 10/13?). This is somewhat different than Publiceye’s assertion that the Missouri Ethics Commission is behind on opening mail. I’m much more likely to believe that the US Postal Service is slow. Krewson indicates she will send future reports via FedEx to avoid this anxiety over timeliness.

Electronic filing is an option that aldermen should consider. I will check back to the state site throughout the afternoon to see if new reports for these seven have been received today. Part of the problem we have, as the public, is knowing if a report was postmarked on time or not. If the Missouri Ethics is backed up they will indicate a report has been received but not yet scanned — and here they will indicate the postmark. Most often I find they go right to being a scanned report with only the date it was received by the office and the date scanned — the same day. So, all seven reports may arrive today and be scanned today but because of their reporting system I will be unable to distinguish, online, between those that were mailed on or before the 14th and those that may have been mailed or send via overnight after the deadline.


UPDATE 10/18/06 @ 2pm:

The Missouri Ethics Commission does not show any changes for the above seven. The potential existed for them to have received a report but not yet scanned it into their system for public consumption but none of these where so marked.


UPDATE 10/18/06 @ 8:55pm:

At 4pm this afternoon two reports were indicated as having been received but not yet scanned: one was for Ald. Lyda Krewson and the other for Ald. Lewis Reed’s committee running for the President of the Board of Aldermen. Both show as being postmarked on Monday, October 16, 2006. Per the Missouri Ethics Commission, these are technically late. At 8:15pm I check all seven again just to see if any additional changes had been made after 4pm. The other five remain unchanged but now the two reports, one from Krewson and one from Reed, are scanned and available for review. At the moment both are still showing in the received but not yet scanned section as well along with the postmark date of 10/16/06 (I have saved both pages as PDF files and may post if necessary).

The Missouri Ethics Commission website does not yet show a report for the aldermanic committee for Lewis Reed which remains an active and open account. It should probably be converted to a debt account, if possible. Ald. Krewson’s report is of course quite orderly and includes a cover letter dated 10/12/2006. This date would collaborate her contention that it was mailed the following day, on the 13th which would make it a timely filing. Still the Missouri Ethics Commission says it was not postmarked until the 16th, making it a late filing.

We’ve got a couple of issues at play here. First, some aldermen are habitually late, sometimes 2-3 weeks. That is quite a different issue than mailing it at a slow post office or even on the actual due date rather than prior to the due date as required. Habitually late and rarely late is the separator here. Krewson is consistently ontime, at least back through 2004. Reed, on the other hand, is either on time or really really late.

But the big issue is the information the Missouri Ethics Commission provides, or more accurately, doesn’t provide. Once a report is filed we know the date is was received and the date it was scanned. Almost always these are the same date. What is missing is the piece of information that determines whether a filed report is timely or not — the postmark date. How is it this information is not part of their reporting? If you agree this is relevant information that should be part of the public record online and thus not requiring a phone call to verify the postmark date, please email the Missouri Ethics Commission at helpdesk@mec.mo.gov.

One final thing, just an observation. While it may be a coincidence that Krewson held her big fundraiser on October 2nd I think the date was no accident. A week earlier and the activity would have been required on the report just submitted. But, no regular quarterly report is due in January so her next report is the 40 day before election report, not due until January 25, 2007 (that would be with a postmark of 1/24/07 if you are doing the math). Either way, this is after filing closes if anyone is considering challenging her they do so not really knowing how much money she raised a couple of weeks ago. Come January 1st contribution limits get tossed the window so someone that gave the maximum of $325 can come back and give considerably more prior to the election. Very smart that Lyda is.

UPDATE 10/20/06 @ 10:15am:

As of yesterday afternoon after 5pm only one change was noted. The Missouri Ethics Commission received the quarterly report from the campaign for Jennifer Florida. However, it was noted as having a bad [unreadable] postmark.

This leaves the following as not yet having submitted reports: Ald. Lewis Reed’s aldermanic campaign committee, Ald Troupe, Ald. Ford-Griffin, Ald. Kennedy, and Ald. Williamson. Five out of twenty-eight, or just under 18%. Reed is now officially running for the President of the Board of Aldermen in 2007. Also in 2007, Ald. Kennedy and Ald. Williamson are up for re-election. I’m guessing they won’t file their intent to seek office again after the deadline.

Writer & Director to Present Free Screening of ‘CSA: The Confederate States of America’

October 17, 2006 Events/Meetings 3 Comments
 

In late August I did a post about the powerful new film entitled, CSA: Confederate States of America. In short, the film looks at what America might be like today if the South had won the Civil War and slavery was still legal. This Thursday evening the film will be presented (free of charge) by the writer & director, Kevin Willmott, at Saint Louis University.

Here is the press release:

CSA: THE CONFEDERATE STATES OF AMERICA

On Thursday, October 19, 2006, Kevin Willmott, writer and director of ” C.S.A. The Confederate States of America” will appear at the John Cook School of Business on the campus of Saint Louis University for the screening of his film, “C.S.A. The Confederate States of America.” The film, an official selection of the 2004 Sundance Film Festival,” will be shown in conjunction with the current exhibition at the Saint Louis University Museum of Art, “The Lincoln Legacy: Presidential Years.” Willmott will introduce the film and also conduct a post-screening question and answer session.

Spike Lee is the executive producer of “C.S.A: The Confederate States of America.” The film addresses a disarmingly simple question: What would our nation be like if, as the film supposes, Jefferson Davis’ Confederate States had won the battle for independence? The answer as imagined by Willmott is provocative and sometimes uncomfortable and, as the critics at the Sundance Film Festival noted, ” audacious,” and “frighteningly resonant.” See what the critics have been writing!

Willmott is an associate professor in the Film Studies Department at the University of Kansas. He teaches screenwriting, production management and a class in African-American images in film. He co-wrote the NBC miniseries, “The 70’s” that aired in May 2000. His first film titled, “Ninth Street” starring Isaac Hayes and Martin Sheen is a comedy/drama based on Willmott’s experiences while growing up in Junction, KS. His latest scripts are titled “Colored Men” and “Gotta Give It Up. Willmott and his wife, Becky, have five children and live in Lawrence, KS.

WHERE:
Saint Louis University
John Cook School of Business
3674 Lindell Blvd.
Anheuser-Busch Auditiorium (lower level)

WHEN:
Thursday, October 19
Film screening begins at 7:30 p.m.

NO ADMISSION CHARGE

DIRECTIONS:
http://www.slu.edu/campusmap/cook.html

INFORMATION:
http://thelincolnlegacy.com/; http://www.csathemovie.com/index2.html

PHONE:
314.977.2666

Again, I cannot over stress what a powerful statement this film makes. It will leave an impression on you! The Cook School of Business is caddy-corner from the Coronado in one of those new campus buildings designed to look old. Even though I’ve seen the film a couple of times I can’t wait to meet writer/director Willmott and hear what he has to say about the impact of the film. By the way, you’ll want to check your political correctness at the door when you arrive.

Washington University Medical Center Provides Motorcycle Parking

 

Today I am attending the St. Louis Great Streets Symposium being held at the Newman Center on Euclid in the midst of the Washington University Medical Campus. I’m actually writing this from the event — you gotta love wi-fi.

Upon arriving I found an out of the way place to lock my scooter. As I was getting ready to secure the lock a Wash U security person drove by and said the city would cut the lock and tow my scooter. He said I should take advantage of the motorcycle parking a block to the west. I had no idea they had motorcycle parking!

I thanked him and headed over to the area where he pointed. How wonderful to see a special section just for motorcycles and scooters. I’ll have pictures tonight but it was roughly 10 spaces in an unused area adjacent to a building. It is actually covered by virtue of the design of the building. Two motorcycles were there as well as two scooters, one a blue Honda Metropolitan.

So pulling out my computer this morning I began searching the Washington University Medical School website for a guide to motorcycle and bike parking. I found a nice map indicating where parking garages are located but nothing on their very helpful motorcycle parking. What is interesting is this symposium is about great streets. The topic includes making streets open for people, not just cars. But the literature on the event didn’t make note of the fact we are next door to a bus transfer station and MetroLink station. What a statement that East-West Gateway Council of Governments didn’t mention alternative means of arriving and “parking” for the event.

It is encouraging to see Ald. Phyllis Young (D-7th) and from Jim Shrewsbury’s office, Brandyn Jones and Pam Ross attending. It would have been nice to have seen more folks from city hall.

A Busy Weekend in St. Louis

October 17, 2006 Events/Meetings 5 Comments
 

If you are not sure what you are going to do this weekend let me suggest a few of the many things going on in St. Louis, taken mostly from press releases:


Tower Grove Harvest Festival: Oct 21-22

PUMPKIN PATCH, CRAFTS, YOGA, TAI CHI, LIVE MUSIC AND MUCH, MUCH MORE AT TOWER GROVE PARK

This October, one of St. Louis City’s newest and most successful farmers’ markets will celebrate the end of its inaugural season by hosting its First Annual Harvest Festival. The Tower Grove Farmers’ Market, together with community partners, The Southside YMCA, KDHX, The CommonSpace and Slay & Associates promises a full day of autumnal activities for the whole family.

Joining the Market’s regular cast of farmers, bakers, ranchers and artisans, the Tower Grove Harvest Festival, scheduled for Saturday, October 21 and Sunday, October 22 from 10:00 am – 5:00 pm, will feature the following activities:

– Various arts and crafts
– Face painting
– T-Shirt art
– Sack racing
– Food concessions by Missouri and Illinois small farmers and restaurants
– Pumpkin patch
– 5 bands each day (bluegrass to pop rock)

For additional information on the Tower Grove Harvest Festival visit http://www.tgharvestfest.com or email the Tower Grove Farmers’ Market at Contact@tgmarket.org.

Tower Grove Farmers’ Market’s mission is to enhance the quality of life in the St. Louis area by providing a community activity that fosters social gathering and interaction while promoting sustainable agriculture and education.

[UR Note: The Tower Grove Farmers’ Market was co-founded by fellow SLU Urban Planning Grad Student Jenny Ryan.]


Downtown Living Tour

The Downtown St. Louis Partnership and Downtown St. Louis Community Improvement District present two Downtown Living Tours each year. These tours showcase various properties and include rental as well as sale properties. The Downtown Living Tours are the best way to explore the wide variety of neighborhoods and housing options available throughout the downtown area. As you stroll past new and familiar shops, restaurants, services, amenities and attractions, the tours are also a great way to get a feel for the excitement and convenience of downtown living.

The next Downtown Living Tour will be held on Saturday and Sunday, October 21st & 22nd from noon to 5 pm. The starting point will be at the corner of Tucker and Washington Avenues. Click here for more information.


Fundraiser for Landmark’s Association of St. Louis

An auction will be held in the afternoon of Sunday October 22, 2006 as a fundraiser for Landmark’s Association of St. Louis. The event will be from 2pm to 6pm and will include a live auction as well as many silent action items. The $50 ticket includes a Hors D’oeuvres buffet, wine, beer and soft drinks. The event will be held at the lovely Coronado Ballroom at 3701 Lindell. For more information on tickets please call Landmark’s at (314) 421-6474. I’m hoping some of the funds will be used for a productive website.


Barkapalooza: Entertaining People & Pooches

The Party Animals, the young friends council of the Animal House Fund, proudly presents Barkapalooza, an outdoor benefit concert for people and pooches on Sunday, October 22 from noon – 5 p.m. in Langenberg Field in Forest Park.

The exciting line-up of bands includes local acts Modern Red, Upright Animals and the Dean Evans Band who are donating their time to help the Party Animals raise funds for the construction of the critically-needed new city animal shelter. However, Barkapalooza is much more than just a concert! Not only will you be entertained by three great local bands but your dog will be entertained, too. Fun for the four-legged set will include an agility course, speed course and pet contests such as Biggest Dog, Smallest Dog and Coolest Canine Crooner.

So bring a picnic, a blanket, your dog, your friends and family and enjoy a perfect fall day at the park for a great cause, complete with funnel cakes and cotton candy. We will also have representatives from HOK, the architectural firm donating their services to design the new shelter, onsite to help educate concert-goers about why the new shelter is a groundbreaking effort in the animal welfare world.

Before Friday, October 20, advanced tickets range from $20 for general admission to $50 for VIP which includes access to the VIP tent with complimentary Bud Select and a gift bag. Day of concert tickets are $25 at the door. Call (314) 968-5505 or visit www.animalhousefund.org for more information or to purchase tickets.

A ‘Sordid’ Party Planned at City Hall on Two-Year Anniversary of Urban Review

 

It seems fitting the 2-year anniversary of my blog falls on Halloween as some, especially those in elected office, find my frankness a bit on the scary side. What is frightening to me is that some of these folks are in office at all. Seriously, I’ve enjoyed the last two years commenting on planning & politics in the city and region.

So I thought to myself, why not have a party to celebrate? But this year Halloween falls on a Tuesday and I’ve got class that night anyway. Why not have a party on the Saturday night before Halloween. And since I write so much about the ‘sordid lives’ of folks at city hall that seems like the perfect place to hold such a party. Well, being the gracious person I am I thought why not let others in on this so when Bill Donius, President of Pulaski Bank, wanted to use city hall for his annual costume party I said why not.

Not buying it? OK, fine. I had no real plans to celebrate but it seemed like a good way to lead you into an announcement about the formerly private party at Donius’ Ladue home going public for charity: A Sordid Halloween Party.

We are hosting this big bash to provide St. Louis with a provocative and enjoyable evening of entertainment, good company, and the opportunity to raise funds for worthwhile charitable organizations. The beneficiaries of this year’s event will include Food Outreach and Doorways. Food Outreach provides food to patients living with AIDS and cancer, serving over 1300 clients per week. Doorways provides housing to those who are critically ill and their children.

Tickets are $50 per person or $150 for the VIP section (prices go up after today). And what do you get for that extra hundred bucks? You get to meet two stars from the acclaimed plays Sordid Lives and Southern Baptist Sissies: Delta Burke and Leslie Jordan!!! While I have not seen the plays I have seen the movie Sordid Lives on more than one occassion. As someone from the south, I can tell you they nailed the southern personalities quite well. But, back to the party.

Past parties, I’m told, have been an interesting cross section of St. Louis (straight & gay, monied to middle of the road, with a good dose of racial diversity), this year should be no exception. Hurry and buy your tickets online because prices go up after today. A portion of each ticket is tax deductible and the event is for a good cause. A costume is required for entry.

I’ll talk more about the two year anniversary of Urban Review later in the month.

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