Archive for the 'American Society' Category

Nov 07 2007

Outtubing the Tube

Published by under American Society,Family

Recently, Chronicle Editor Tim Wood wrote about cutting the cord on his television.  It caused me to reflect on my own evolving relationship with the box.
Broken TVHaving grown up without cable in a reception area where TV Guide could have as listed the stations as “Snow”, “Static” and “Don’t Get Used to This”, television was almost a guilty pleasure.  At friends’ houses, I’d see tired re-runs and just revel at the clarity of the picture and sound. 

Like meeting a childhood crush years later, I had a second romance with television when shows like “24” came out.  I was much more mature and had developed other interests in its absence.  My news came from NPR.  My entertainment was from movies or books.  My pastime was writing.

Television itself had grown, too.  Firstly, its complexion had cleaned up  meaning, I had gotten cable.  And I was surprised to see we had more in common.  As I became disappointed with what was offered at the movies, television produced shows of higher caliber, with taut writing and high production values.  So I that hooked me.  But that branching off brought with it so much non-reality reality television that I started to wonder if this relationship had a future.

(… read the rest of the column in The Cape Cod Chronicle here and visit my YouTube channel here)

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Oct 12 2007

… But Who’s Counting?

Published by under American Society,Cape Cod,Chatham

At the housing summit at CBI last spring, an interesting method was used to assign attendants to different 
tables, the idea being to get people to start thinking in groups beyond their own.
 

Three Stooges as doctors

After each table was given the task of brainstorming 
how best to address the issue of lack of affordable housing, it reminded me of one of those countless hospital shows. Faced with a seemingly inexplicable problem, each specialist would come up with a treatment based upon their own area of their expertise.

A surgeon would operate. A radiologist orders a CAT scan and an MRI. An oncologist would test for cancer. And so forth.

Similar thinking happened here. People don’t like to come out of their area of expertise, because, well, that’s how they’ve chosen to make their living or otherwise define themselves.

As for the patient and their family, they put their trust in their general practitioner, whose head may be spinning from the myriad of approaches, some contradictory or mutually incompatible. And, like so many patients when faced with a systemic problem, we take half measures, or do nothing.

At the housing summit, it was clear how people started off: When all you have is a hammer, everything looks like a nail. The housing authority has said solutions lie within federal and state restrictions and funding formulas, but those only cater to the poor, not the near-poor or middle class. Habitat for Humanity can only get people into home ownership if land is donated, which is a problem in an area where open space is very limited and expensive.

Bill Marsh, a developer, put the blame on zoning that made density the enemy, but has done more to raise the value of his real estate holdings by limiting supply. And the affordable housing committee, using the threat of further Chapter 40B end-runs around zoning, religiously sticks to the need to meet targets set by the state, which are admittedly arbitrary and more relevant to Chelsea and Haverhill than to Chatham and Harwich.

The main thrust is this: State statistics say we do not have enough housing affordable to the lowest 40 percent of income-earners state-wide.

(read the rest of the column at The Cape Cod Chronicle here)

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Sep 11 2007

This Day

Published by under American Society,Chatham,General

Author’s note:  This post was written one year ago today, during the frenzy of the primary campaign for the 4th Barnstable District.  In the middle of composing it, I inadvertently posted it instead of saving it.  When finished, I had something more personal than originally intended, and decided not to publish it then.  But when I was informed that the first part of it was already “live” online, I chose to withdraw that section and save the entirety for another time.

Except for a breeze and a stray puffy cloud or two, the weather today eerily reminds me of five years ago.

My in-laws were in the middle of a visit from Austria at the time, and had gone to Six Flags a couple days before.  While there, the light attendance made me remark about it to the gate attendant.  She replied that the economy really seemed to be slowing down.  So there was a little foreboding in the autumn air.

In the summer, the Board of Selectmen in Chatham meet every two weeks, and I had convinced the Chair to allow evening meetings to see if this would increase attendance.  This was pre-televised meetings, after all.  Almost no one knew what went on down in our basement at the Town Offices until Tim Wood wrote about it in the Chronicle.

Not fully realizing that we had gone back on our weekly schedule, I had talked about making plans to take my wife and in-laws down to New York on the train.  As a commercial fisherman, I wanted to visit the Fulton Fish Market, where much of our Cape product ends up.  My father-in-law, Emil, a lover of all things seafood, said he’d enjoy seeing it, too.

So the day-trip to Manhattan on Tuesday was just about set, with us arriving into Penn Station just before 9 AM.  But when I looked at the train times and saw we had a Selectmen’s meeting at 4 PM, and I knew this was cutting it too close.  We cancelled.  Instead, I would stay behind to work and they would go to Plimoth Plantation.

Needless to say, like everyone, we spent the morning watching the news. 

I traced on a map where Penn Station is and where the Fulton Fish Market was.  Knowing that we all like to walk a lot  in cities, and we probably would have stopped off along the way to see the World Trade Center.  It was very clear that we would have been at Ground Zero or close to it at the worst possible time.

Before the day was even half over, my wife and I were talking about wanting to do something.  I think that’s how we all felt at the time.  We were wanting to do more, to sacrifice, to help.

Every time I take people on the tour of the State House, I bring them past the bust of Henry Cabot Lodge, Jr.  Our U.S. Senator in World War II, he resigned his office to become a tank commander in Europe.  A noble and decent gesture considering that it was his grandfather who blocked the U.S. entry to the League of Nations following World War I.

That sort of action-matching-the-rhetoric never fails to inspire me.  My hero, Teddy Roosevelt, was better known for his sacrifice prior to Lodge’s, when he resigned as Assistant Secretary of the Navy to form the Rough Riders for service in Cuba during the Spanish American War.

So, the agreement I made with my wife was simple:  One or the other of us would join the service and see who would be of greater value.  Whichever that was, the other would support their decision.

But I learned that, having had my 35th birthday the previous May, I was five months too old to join anything.  So it fell to her.  Ironically, the day she was signing up in Boston, I got a call from a National Guard recruiter saying I could join up to age 36.

She shipped out to Basic on January 1 and graduated in March.  Her stationing in Germany in May meant it was only a matter of time, so I tendered my resignation from the Board of Selectmen, effective one year to the day of my election.  At the time, I said this was our way of saying thanks to the firefighters and police who had given so much.

My travel papers as a military spouse came through about a month and a half later.  I gave up my home, my job and my office to go into junior enlisted housing with all the other families of the 1st Armored Division in Wiesbaden.

Sofie was born over there.  I learned a great deal of how the military operates, and was exposed to the European health care system.  Being in Europe during the invasion of Iraq was especially informative for my world view.  And I returned a single father, to the best place I could raise my daughter.  A safe place.

So if people ask me how my life was changed by the events of five years ago, I have an answer.

I wasn’t out pounding on doors today.  It just didn’t seem right to be campaigning this day.  Instead, I dropped into the Chatham Fire Station to say hi.  When I did, I saw the flag had gotten a little tangled up.  So Roy Eldredge came out, and while we talked a little, he set it straight.

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Jul 14 2007

Human Trafficking on Cape Cod

July 5, and I have appointments in Orleans, Eastham, Truro, Osterville, Cotuit, Mashpee and Marstons Mills.

Or so I thought.The Simpson's Road Rage

The triple head-on collision in South Wellfleet left traffic at a standstill on Route 6 in North Eastham. Eventually I had to call the customer in Truro and say sorry, it just couldn’t happen today. Not if I were going to fit everyone else in. No problem, so we rescheduled.

The day after the Fourth of July on Cape Cod. It was raining. And the schedule of insurance inspections set for me was as tight as a drawn bowstring.

These days, with all the driving back and forth from one appointment to another, I find myself driving over the same roads, again and again, But there’s something different. We all know the way to various supermarkets, and know how to get to shopping in Hyannis, over the canal, or the route to Ptown.

But I’m not trying to go shopping. I’m assigned to go to random residences around the Cape. I’m getting deep into subdivisions that no one except the residents travel in and out of. And while it does give me a greater understanding of the Cape’s population, it has also provided an even greater understanding of traffic. Especially as it changes throughout the seasons.

What I realized most of all is that when it comes to the summer, especially on muggy days at the end of the week, when the sun is refusing to come out, what many drivers truly need is a large bucket of ice water thrown down their sun roofs.

Meaning they need to calm down and pay attention.

(Read the rest of the column at the Cape Cod Chronicle here)

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Nov 10 2006

Election 2006: We Can Do Better

Published by under American Society,Cape Cod,Chatham

Who’s Voting This Time? 

Long ago, while a freshman at American University, I learned the three factors that determine whether a person will vote.  The third was age.  Second was income.  The first was education. The higher the amount you have, the more likely you are to vote.  Not coincidentally, these three are also fairly good indicators of whether a person writes a letter to the editor.

Having just come off an election, we’re still sifting through the results.  I don’t want to get into who won or lost and why.  I’m more interested in the greater issue of who didn’t vote and how we can get and sustain a greater turnout.

Normally, high voter participation is marked by some great controversy.  The 1896 election pitted Republican McKinley against William Jennings Bryan, the latter championing the cause of pegging the dollar to silver at a high fixed rate.

With the U.S. firmly on the gold standard, this could have effectively devalued the dollar by 50 percent, doing the same to bank accounts for the urban wealthy and debts for the rural poor.

In that election, income played a larger part than age or education.  Everyone in the country had a dog in that fight and turnout reflected it.

What I also learned in that same freshman Intro to American Politics class is that both parties fear greater participation. At the time, Reagan was president and Democrats held both houses on Congress.  There was parity, and enough power to go around. Turnout in 1984 was just over 53 percent of those eligible to vote.

That means that, unless there is a complete blow-out, no one is winning election to office with the approval of a majority of the people.  Meanwhile, the word “mandate” is thrown around loosely these days by anyone managing to squeak out the narrowest of pluralities.  But this should not be unexpected in our winner-take-all system…

(To read the rest of the column, you can click here.)

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