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Welcome to the Bruce blog—a weekly update
on news, events and issues affecting life in Cleveland. Reporting
as it happens on transit, development, planning, environment and
arts & culture.
Basically, we write about creative ideas forming,
talk to the people who have an inside track on the issues, and sometimes
offer a commentary of our own. (For disclosure purposes, Bruce blog
is a local, independent writer who also works part-time with nonprofit
organization EcoCity
Cleveland. The opinions expressed here are not necessarily those
of EcoCity or any other organization).
Bruce blog wonders if it’s coincidence, or is
the city of Cleveland looking for ways to cover its backside while
ODOT jettisons its promise to paint bike lanes in the Euclid Corridor?
Apparently, the city is showing new interest in something
called a "Sharrow," which is basically a road stencil
that consists of a bicyclist symbol surrounded by an arrow indicating
direction.
While Sharrows haven’t been selected to replace
the bike lanes on Euclid, yet, they are seen by some bike advocates
as a fair compromise to last week’s announcement that ODOT
plans to back out of its promise to put bike lanes on Euclid Avenue.
Introduced in Denver (picture at right), Sharrows are “a constant
reminder for drivers to share the road and for bicyclists to ride
in the right direction,” according to one local bike advocate.
To
read more about Sharrows...
The Cleveland Heights-University Heights school levy
is going to be back on the ballot in March 2004. Early polling is
under way to determine the support levels in the community. James
and Mary Swindal are once again leading the pro-levy campaign. No
word yet on the millage increase that the schools will need to support
basic services.
Meanwhile, underscoring the importance of passing
school levies and the repercussions of last Fall’s failed
levy, the CH-UH School District recently announced that it cut its
Instructional Mathematics Helping our Teens Excel Program (IMHOTEP),
a math achievement program for minority students.
IMHOTEP was started in 1991 by two Heights math teachers,
Raymond Spottsville and Mark Wessels, who were responding to the
fact that less than 10 percent of African-American students at Heights
were in Advanced Placement math classes, according to Max Sgro,
a student reporter with school paper, The Black & Gold.
To email
a support letter for the CH-UH school levy

Bruce blog is awed and encouraged by the voices for
change appearing in area print publications. Kudos to the Free
Times for a strong issue last week. Bruce blog has two favorite
quotes from the issue. The first is from a preview
of Pittsburgh punk band Anti-Flag:
“The first people that turn around and say that
young people are jaded and don’t care about the state of the
world generally don’t listen to young people,” says
bassist Chris. “And so to us, [The Death of a Nation Tour]
is a gathering of the voices saying that the death of the nation
is not the young people; the death of a nation is the militaristic
society that we live in.”
The second is from a
well-crafted article from local writer John Ettorre about the
state of things in Cleveland. Ettorre suggests, among other things,
that an emerging group of independent journalists and activists
will offer hope for Cleveland’s future:
“…if this more sensible, more sustainable
and more democratic regional landscape has any chance at all of
taking root and flourishing, we’ll need a smarter, more knowing
local media. A media better able to take the community’s pulse
because of its closer, more authentic connections to average people
and to grassroots movements. A media with a better grasp of the
region’s history, and thus with a better sense of its future
possibilities. A media that can somehow treat its audience as citizens
at least as much as mere consumers.”
Continuing to raise the volume on the need for media
to be more responsive to social and environmental issues, an excellent
letter to the editor appeared in last week’s Crain’s
Cleveland Business from local restaurateur Parker Bosley. Bosley
responded to editor Marc Dodosh, who blamed the tainted beef crisis
on the media’s flippant way of covering the first case of
Mad Cow disease discovered on U.S. soil.
Bosley, the owner of a bistro in Ohio City known for
purveying local and/or organic food, grew up on a small, family
farm and says the problem goes way beyond one case of Mad Cow. He
writes:
“Implying that the Mad Cow crisis has been overdramatized
suggests that all is well with our system of food production. This
is absolutely not true. Food-borne illnesses and deaths continue
to increase. Obesity and the early onset of diabetes among children
are now referred to as epidemics. Rural communities and their local
economies are being eroded as small-scale producers are unable to
compete with the government-supported factory farm system.
"There are folks all over our state whose lives
and communities have been devastated by industrial agriculture,"
Bosley continues. "Where is the outrage from our media and
especially Crain’s Cleveland Business?"

An interesting quote that puts the issue of urban
sprawl into some national perspective comes from the latest Urban
Land Institute newsletter. In it, Robert Fishman, professor
at the University of Michigan’s Taubman College of Architecture
and Urban Planning in Ann Arbor, argues that not everyone will decide
to pick up and move to the suburbs, rather, a sort of natural selection
is occurring between suburbs and cities throughout the nation. To
add a point to Fishman’s, where people are given choices,
they will live in the city or the suburbs, depending on their personal
preferences. Here’s the passage from the article:
“The revitalization of many downtown areas,
combined with growth in the suburbs, has created two radically different
forms of urbanism—‘the urbanism of density and pedestrian
life, and the fragmented urbanism of deconcentration,’ Fishman
said. Rather than working against each other, he said the two forms
of growth appear to be 'balancing each other out,' with the downtown
living and working environment drawing certain residents and businesses,
and the outlying living and working environment drawing others.
"'The movement back to the core is bringing more
balance to growth in outer areas…both (the downtown and fringe)
are benefiting and are more stable,' Fishman said. 'The challenge
for the 21st century is to put an edge to the urban region—not
a line or a boundary—but an edge that reflects economic and
cultural logic.'"
January 20
Have you ever wondered what life in Cleveland would be like without
the need for a car? Join the next Cleveland "Car-free"
Meet-up on Tuesday, January 20 at 6 p.m. at Lopez restaurant
on Lee Road. This is just like the casual klatches that the Dean
and the Kucinich campaigns are facilitating.
January 20
Entrepreneurs
for Sustainability monthly meeting, 5:30 p.m., Great Lakes Brewing
Co. Tasting Room. Guest speaker David Orr, professor & chair
of the Environmental Studies program at Oberlin College and nationally
known author and speaker, addresses "A vision of a sustainable
NE Ohio."
January 22
The next Friends
of the Circle-Heights Bike Network meeting, 6:30 p.m., at Mac's
Backs Bookstore on Coventry Road. The focus of this month's meeting
for this citizen's bike advocacy group is discussing the results
of a network wide bike parking inventory; examining the graphics
work for a wayfinding sign program and brainstorming new projects
for 2004. Call 216-961-5020 for more information.
January 28
Citizens concerned with the future of the Lake Erie watershed are
invited
to voice their opinions at an informational open house on the Balanced
Growth Initiative of the Ohio Lake Erie Commission (LEC). Draft
plans developed by the task force are now ready. Drafts of
"Linking Land Use And Lake Erie: A Planning Framework for Achieving
Balanced Growth in the Ohio Watershed" and "Best Local
Land Use Practices" will be presented from 7 p.m. to 9 p.m.
at the Lake Erie Nature & Science Center, Huntington Reservation,
28728 Wolf Road, Bay Village.
Attendees are invited to submit comments orally or
in writing at the informational meetings. Comments can also be submitted
by e-mail
or by surface mail to the LEC, 1 Maritime Plaza, Toledo, Ohio 43604.
Comments will be accepted through February 18, 2004.
The
draft documents are available here.

According to the latest Ohio
Environmental Council newsletter, Ohio Governor Bob Taft's selection
to head the state’s mining oversight commission has a serious
conflict of interest, and should not be allowed to pass.
Last month Governor Taft appointed Debra Carey to the Ohio Reclamation
Commission. The commission is a seven-member panel that hears disputes
regarding mining operations and safety. Debra Carey is the mother
of Michael Carey, the president of the Ohio Coal Association (coal
industry trade group). She has been appointed to the seat that represents
the public. This seat is meant to round out the commission by having
the interest of the public represented along with the industry.
When a property owner's land subsides from a coal mine and causes
water loss in his/her drinking well, or blasting from a stripmine
causes a person's house foundation to crack, or a number of other
problems from mining occur that cause problems for a family, the
commission is the entity that is charged with upholding citizens'
rights. Also, the Commission is the body to which the Buckeye Forest
Council has appealed to reverse the permit to mine under Dysart
Woods, an old-growth forest in southeast Ohio. The appointment of
Debra Carey to the Ohio Reclamation Commission could have a detrimental
effect on citizens living in the coalfields of Ohio as well as on
Dysart Woods, according to The Ohio Environmental Council, which
urges emails, calls, or letters to Governor Taft to ask him to withdrawal
his appointment of Debra Carey to the Ohio Reclamation Commission.
(Email or phone calls are recommended.)
Governor Bob Taft
30th Floor
77 South High Street
Columbus, Ohio 43215-6117
Phone 614-466-3555 or 614-644-HELP
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