Archive for November, 2009

UM Diag

Students doing a scavenger hunt looking for mullets.

A2: Library

The October issue of Architect magazine publishes a feature on the Ann Arbor District Library’s Traverwood branch. [Source]

Election Night in Washtenaw County

Behind the county clerk's counter on election night, inspecting poll books from the city of Ann Arbor. Only Ann Arbor uses pink paper – all others are white. No one at the clerk's office knows why. From left: Ward Beauchamp, Jason Brooks, Jen Beauchamp, Janna Parmeter. (Photo by the writer.)

It’s a few minutes after 8 p.m. on Nov. 3, and polls throughout Washtenaw County have just closed. At this point it’s fairly quiet in the offices of the county clerk, where about a half dozen people are preparing for what could be a long night of processing election returns.

Matt Yankee, the deputy clerk in charge of elections, is drinking a Diet Coke and fielding questions about what needs to be done. Jason Brooks, another deputy clerk, asks how he can help. “Why don’t you do the phones and be an Ann Arbor runner?” Yankee suggests. Brooks gives a mock salute, and almost on cue, the phone rings.

The premiere of the ABC series “V” is playing on a large screen TV in the office – a ticker of election results from metro Detroit is running along the bottom of the screen – but nobody is watching.

The Chronicle spent several hours on election night shadowing this crew, getting a glimpse of what it takes to handle the returns from 116 precincts in Washtenaw County. Though there were a few glitches – mostly problems stemming from the printing company hired to make the ballots – the evening is remarkable for its organized, systematic execution of tasks. Elections are events in which the uneventful is desired.

That’s not to say that nothing happened. [Full Story]

UM: Ethanol

The Los Angeles Times reports on Brazil’s battle with the U.S. over tariffs on sugar-based ethanol, which competes with domestically produced corn-based ethanol as an alternative fuel. The article quotes Anna Stefanopoulou, director of UM’s Auto Research Center: “The main problem with corn-based ethanol is that it competes with agriculture, and that’s a huge social problem.” [Source]

A2: Leaf Pickup

The city of Ann Arbor has announced on its website and via GovDelivery that leaf collection is currently one day behind schedule. Maps and schedules for various neighborhoods located on the leaf collection page. [Source]

Fourth St. btw William and Madison

Three police cars escorting a truck pulling a trailer with an automobile and camera crew/equipment on it, followed by a van and a stakebed truck on Fourth Street between William and Madison.

Hill Street

8 a.m. Movie crew filming on Hill Street next to the Potters Guild. Three big trucks full of equipment at Fingerle.

School Millage Defeated, Higgins Wins

A quick election summary:

  • the countywide school millage was soundly defeated, though supported by a majority of Ann Arbor voters; [detail on WISD millage results]
  • in the two contested Ann Arbor city council races, incumbent Democrats Sabra Briere in Ward 1 and Marcia Higgins in Ward 4 were re-elected by wide margins; [detail on Ward 1 council results; detail on Ward 4 council results]
  • both Ann Arbor city charter amendments were approved by voters, changing publication requirements for the city’s ordinances. [detail on Proposal A results; detail on Proposal B results]

Complete election results from across the county are available on the Washtenaw County elections website. Later today we’ll have a behind-the-scenes report on election night at the … [Full Story]

County Board Set for First Budget Vote

Washtenaw County commissioners are expected to take an initial vote on the 2010 and 2011 budget at their Wednesday meeting. Also on the agenda: A resolution to approve the economic development tax that was tabled at the board’s Oct. 21 meeting, and a public hearing on a new food safety program for restaurant workers.

The board and county administration have been working on the budget all year. Public meetings over the past several months have brought out residents and employees to lobby for funding, as the county looked for ways to address a projected $30 million deficit.

But there’s been little substantive public discussion among commissioners since county administrator Bob Guenzel presented his official recommendations at the Sept. 16 board meeting. Commentary from the public has also quieted down – an Oct. 22 public hearing devoted to the topic was sparsely attended, lasting just 10 minutes. That’s in part because two contentious issues had been settled by then: labor unions representing county employees had approved contract concessions, and the board had voted to restore some funding to local nonprofits that the county had previously proposed cutting.

The lack of discussion was noted by commissioner Kristin Judge at last Wednesday’s administrative briefing, when she asked about the Nov. 4 agenda: “Is this the meeting when we talk about the budget?” [Full Story]

UM Diag

Diag Teeter-Totter-a-thon to support Mott Children’s Hospital.

Pomona Road

Stopped and actually Heard: The sigh of a voter on Pomona Road, now that the election is over and the infuriating robocalls will stop. And a sigh over the fact the voter managed to vote AGAINST whatever the last robocalls told him to do. That’s priceless. [Editor's note: Background in previous item "Home Telephones"]

Argo Headrace

Argo millrace already down to portage spillway level (6-8″ drop); can’t go much lower without pumping/siphoning. By my reckoning, that took about 2,000 tons of load off the earth berm. [Editor's note: See background: "City, MDEQ Agree, Argo Headrace Shut"]

A2/Ypsi: Reading

The Ann Arbor/Ypsilanti Reads program has made its selection for 2010: “The Living Great Lakes: Searching for the Heart of the Inland Seas,” by Jerry Dennis. The book describes the author’s “travels as a crew member on the tall-masted schooner Malabar on a four-week trip through the waters of Lakes Huron, Ontario, Michigan, Erie and Superior.” [Source]

Scio Township

The millage is the only issue on the ballot in Scio Township.  I was the lone voter in the polling station at 8:30 a.m.

Bach Elementary School

122nd voter just before 10:30 a.m. No children present to witness and be part of democracy. But Dave Askins was just leaving and stayed to offer an opinion when asked.

AATA Plans for Countywide System

Charles Griffith and Michael Ford, two men standing together

Charles Griffith, AATA board member (left),  and Michael Ford, CEO of the AATA, talk about Ford’s presentation and the board’s subsequent discussion after an Oct. 29 meeting. (Photo by the writer.)

Ann Arbor Transportation Authority board meeting (Oct. 29, 2009): At a special meeting of the AATA board held before dinner at Weber’s Inn, recently hired CEO Michael Ford gave board members a presentation that hammered home one basic point: The AATA needs to expand its current vision and mission by establishing a countywide transportation authority.

The AATA is currently funded by a millage levied at a rate of a little over 2 mill just in the city of Ann Arbor, with service to additional municipalities funded through purchase of service agreements (POSAs).

Board members were generally receptive to Ford’s presentation – David Nacht’s remarks reflected that this was essentially what they’d hired him to do. And to get things rolling towards an expanded, countywide mission for the AATA, Ford asked the board to adopt four specific resolutions in the coming few months. But when those resolutions are adopted, it’s not going to have an immediate impact on bus riders’ lives. As Nacht put it Thursday night, that’s simply “when the real work begins.”

And board member Rich Robben allowed that there were issues that he did not yet “feel that warm and fuzzy feeling about,” noting that ultimately the move to a countywide authority would need the support of the voting public.

After the jump, we take a look at the four specific steps Ford is asking the board to take, and summarize the board’s discussion on his proposal. [Full Story]

Huron & Fourth

Building housing Maria’s Alterations and Rosey’s Barber Shop undergoing extensive renovations.

W. Liberty & First

Huge trailer trucks and cafeteria truck parked at and filling Liberty Lofts lot in the early morning.  Another movie in the making …

14th Monthly Milestone Message

Jasmine Pearl tea

Jasmine Pearl tea (dried leaves)

Last week I experienced my first pot of Jasmine Pearl tea. I say “experienced” because it was like watching performance art: dried leaves as tight as tiny ballbearings, doused with boiling water, slowly unfurling into something more akin to seaweed as the clear water turned a pale shade of green. Nice.

I’d sourced the tea from Jeremy Lopatin of Arbor Teas, so I emailed him to say how cool it was to watch the tea transform in my glass pot. He emailed me back and said that among tea enthusiasts, there’s a term for this process: the “agony of the leaves.”

The agony of the leaves. Maybe because of the week The Chronicle spent steeped in controversy, it struck me as a perfect metaphor for other transformations, too. In this monthly milestone message – our 14th for The Chronicle – I’ll touch on a couple of those. [Full Story]

From the Teeter Totter to Traverse City

By

[Editor's Note: HD, a.k.a. Dave Askins, editor of The Ann Arbor Chronicle, is also publisher of an online series of interviews on a teeter totter. Introductions to new Teeter Talks appear on The Chronicle.]

Longtime Ann Arbor resident Metta Lansdale was recently hired as director of the Traverse Area District Library in Traverse City. Her first day on the job is today, Nov. 2. I talked to her on the teeter totter just before her move north. [Full Story]

Liberty at Division

Holiday lights being strung in the park. Strings and strings of white bulbs. Didn’t the lights just come down from Main Street a month or two ago? Christmas tree then spotted being assembled at Downtown Home & Garden.

William & Division

Water main replacement on east side of Division makes the left turn from William a bit chaotic.  Unless you really really want to see the newly replaced spindles/pickets on the fence in front of Kempf House, it’s best avoided.

City, MDEQ Agree: Argo Headrace Shut

Argo Dam headrace closure

Argo Dam headrace closure. Without the metal plate, water would flow from left to right (bottom to top) in the photograph. The greenish metal plate is wedged into the concrete slot in shim-like fashion. The slot continues along to the bottom of the channel. (Photo by the writer).

The city of Ann Arbor and the Michigan Department of Environmental Quality have moved towards resolving a dispute about what needs to be done to address problems with the earthen embankment next to Argo Dam. Late this summer, the MDEQ had issued an order to the city to close off the flow to the headrace and dewater it by Nov. 1. That order was based on concerns about the structural integrity of the earthen berm dating back several years.

The city had retained the law firm Bodman, LLP on the matter, and filed a contested case with the MDEQ, asking for a 90-day stay on the MDEQ’s order, which includes a stoppage of flow in the headrace, and its dewatering.

The order also includes other points, among them a need for the city to make a decision on the dam-in/dam-out question. Whether to keep Argo Dam in place or remove it has been the focus of community-wide conversation on that topic, which has taken place with great intensity over the last nine months, but which has a years-long history.

The MDEQ agreed to the city’s request for a stay on all elements of its order except for shutting the water flow to the headrace. The city has now complied with the MDEQ’s order to close the headrace. [Full Story]

A2: Flu

The UM and St. Joseph Mercy hospitals have announced new temporary rules for visitors, in an attempt to curb the spread of flu within those institutions. The rules include no visitors under the age of 16, no visitors with flu-like symptoms, and no more than two visitors in a patient’s room at a time. [Source]

A2: Detroit

The Detroit News reports that the Ann Arbor-based nonprofit Michigan Future Inc. will manage a new High School Accelerator program, which aims to build several new schools in Detroit and its older suburbs, funded by philanthropic institutions. The article quotes Michigan Future president Lou Glazer about the efforts plans to eventually build 35 schools: “We will need national funders to scale up to the level where we want to be.” [Source]

Hall Street

Film crew and trailers lining Hall Street (near Pattengill School). Shooting in Ann Arbor through November.