Honey, I shrunk the museum

Shrinking museumI hear tell the museum folks are wanting to modify their agreement with the city to make the proposed museum even smaller than it already is. It may come before the council on July 10.

My sources say they want to reduce the gross floor area from 96,000 to 80,000 square feet. I wonder what that will do to the display space. Considering they were only going to have about 70,000 square feet of display space before, this reduction could potentially leave less than 60,000 square feet for the public.

And, of course, a reduction of square footage demands architectural changes to accommodate the smaller space. No word yet on what those changes will be, although I’m still hearing rumors that it will involve reducing or eliminating the second floor.

I would suggest that they follow the sage advice of philosopher C. S. Lewis: “We all want progress, but if you’re on the wrong road, progress means doing an about-turn and walking back to the right road; in that case, the man who turns back soonest is the most progressive.”

Council to citizens: be quiet

Minute MinderThe council is installing something new this week for Peoria citizens: a timer. Those pesky citizens take up a lot of the council’s time on Tuesday nights, so in addition to reducing by half the number of opportunities to address the council (the council’s now meeting only twice a month instead of four times), they’re also going to start strictly enforcing the five-minute rule when citizens take to the microphone.

To facilitate the new rules, they need to buy a timer. But not just any timer:

The $2,675 electronic timer is supposed to tell citizens when their allotted five minutes to address the council is up. The timers – one mounted on the public lectern, one on the back wall and two behind the mayor’s desk – will use green, yellow and red lights to guide speakers on how much time they have remaining.

A $2,675 timer? Are you kidding me? The timer pictured above can accomplish the same thing for only $7.99 from Bed Bath and Beyond. For $14.99, you can get a digital timer that will allow you to have your one-minute warning beep, if that’s important.

That’s not all. The council is also going to require that anyone wishing to address the council fill out a card — before the meeting — in order to be recognized. Since there are fewer meetings, they will undoubtedly be longer. So now we’re going to require citizens to get down to City Hall before 6:15 to fill out a card and then sit in council chambers for the whole meeting, which may go until 10:00, just so they can speak for five minutes at the end and, presumably, get cut off if they speak too long.

Now tell me this isn’t an effort to try to discourage citizen comments.

HOPC meeting to be continued Friday

The Heart of Peoria Commission last Friday started working on our proposed work plan for 2007-2008. We will be finishing our work plan at another special meeting this Friday at 8 a.m., in the conference room in the Planning & Growth department. The meeting is open to the public, as always.

So far, the commission has expressed interest in focusing on implementing New Urbanism principles in transportation and the public space, continuing to assist with the implementation of the Land Development Code and the four Form Districts, and developing marketing materials for the Heart of Peoria Plan area to generate interest in reinvestment. These are subject to change and/or further refinement at this Friday’s meeting.

When the work plan is completed, it will be submitted to the City Council for consideration during their July 24 meeting. They’ll decide at that time whether to keep and fund the commission, or decommission us.

Special assessment projects update

Since writing my post about how slowly a particular special assessment project took to be completed, City Manager Randy Oliver wrote me to explain how the special assessment process works:

Special Assessments are funded as money becomes available. Unfortunately during the 2001-2003 budget crunch little of no funds were budgeted by Special Assessment. Projects are funded on a first-in first-out basis. This is the reason for the delay on West Melbourne.

I wrote back to ask a couple of follow-up questions and received this response:

City Council Budgeted $1.1M in 2005, $1.2M in 2006 and $1.2M in 2007. At the end of 2007 unfunded Special Assessments will be $1.725. This represents 3 projects (W. Wagner Lane Sidewalk, N. Easton Pace curb and W. Ridge Road curb and ornamental street lights). The projects are from 2005, 2006 and 2007, respectively. If funding would have remained at the 2005,2006 and 2007 levels in 2000, 2001 and 2002 things would have been fine. Unfortunately that was not the case. Please note that the City also did not buy many if any replacement vehicles or equipment in those lean years. The Fleet is almost back to the proper level.

So there you go. There had been no money budgeted by the city council for special assessments, which is why the project got delayed. Still funded by the council during the lean years: parking deck subsidies and the Gateway building. Priorities, you know.

Latest STB ruling confusing to some

Elaine Hopkins is all excited about the latest Surface Transportation Board ruling. The ruling was against Pioneer Railcorp and in favor of Central Illinois Railroad Company. Any defeat of Pioneer must be a ruling in favor of the trail in the minds of trail enthusiasts. As usual, the facts tell a different story.

Hopkins said: “The U.S. Surface Transportation has slapped down the most recent effort by Pioneer Railcorp to get back its operations on the Kellar Branch rail line.” Actually, this proceeding has nothing to do with the Kellar Branch line, but rather the western connection. Perhaps one could make the case that it’s related tangentially, but if Pioneer had won this proceeding, it would have done nothing to help them reestablish service on the Kellar.

Hopkins further said: “Central [Illinois Railroad Company] does not have a contract with the city to operate on the Western Connection line, but began operations as a successor company to a previous operator.” This is totally inaccurate, but it’s easy to get confused. The so-called “western connection” is actually a spur that used to be owned by the Union Pacific railroad that services growth cell two. It used to just dead end short of Pioneer Park, but the city built an 1800-foot extension (“connecting track”) so it could hook up with the Kellar Branch. So there are three pieces of track in play here: (1) the western spur, (2) the Kellar Branch, and (3) the 1800-foot connecting track. CIRY does indeed have a contract with the city to operate on the spur and the connecting track, but it only has STB authorization to operate on the spur. A contract with the city is not enough; any and all transactions must be approved by the STB. CIRY never requested authorization to operate over the connecting track; hence, they need to get authorization or cease operating. Although Carver Lumber is not currently getting any rail shipments from the west because it’s too expensive, CIRY has occasionally used the trackage to tow rail cars into storage in the Pioneer Park area.

The argument before the STB was rather complicated, but I’ll try to simplify it. CIRY was owned by DOT Rail Services, but now they’re owned by Central Illinois Railroad Holdings, LLC. The city’s contract for operating the western connection was made with DOT Rail Services, not CIRY directly. Thus, now that CIRY is owned by someone else, Pioneer challenged their authority to provide service on the western connection. The STB rejected that argument based on the legal language of the documents in question. The only argument of Pioneer’s with which they agreed was that CIRY had no authority to operate the 1800-foot connecting track.

Bottom line, this is a defeat for Pioneer, but it really has nothing to do with turning the Kellar into a walking trail. There is currently no proceeding before the STB requesting discontinuation of service on the Kellar Branch. That can only be requested by CIRY, the RTA’s preferred operator, and they haven’t done so. So the decision is not “a boost for turning the Kellar line into a trail.” In fact, Pioneer can lose all the proceedings currently before the STB and it won’t make any difference; the trail is going nowhere.

Of course, the trail could be built immediately if the Park District would simply map out an alternative route that doesn’t require removing the rail line. But it appears the goal isn’t really to build a trail any more, but to remove the rail line at any cost.