Peoria Comprehensive Plan online

From a news release:

HELP PLAN PEORIA WEBPAGE AND ONLINE SURVEY

The City of Peoria is launching the second phase of public participation in the Comprehensive Plan process with the launch of the www.planpeoria.com web page and online survey.

The Comprehensive Plan serves two major functions for a community. First, it sets an overall vision for the growth and development of the community over the next ten to twenty years. Second, it establishes the legal basis for a zoning ordinance and for development control over a one and one half mile area outside of the current city limits. In some communities it is called the “master plan,” and as such, guides the development and implementation of all other plans.

The www.planpeoria.com web page provides background data on various demographic changes in Peoria over the past thirty years, copies of the public input already received at the Topic Area Workshops held in 2007, and access to an online survey.

The online survey is the core of the web page; it is designed to allow the public to determine which of the goals created at the Topic Area Workshops are of greatest importance to the future of Peoria. Wide participation in the survey will greatly assist the Planning Commission and City Planning Department staff in the development of a final draft plan. The public is encouraged to take 15 minutes to help us plan for the next 15 years.

Paper copies of the survey will also be made available in the Planning Department offices or by calling the City Planning Department at 494-8600.

For further information on the Comprehensive Plan process, the www.planpeoria.com web page, or the online survey, please contact Ross Black, Assistant Planning Director at 494-8601 or rblack@ci.peoria.il.us

Upcoming Events

A couple of important dates for your calendar:

  • Blogger Bash tonight at Buffalo Wild Wings near the Shoppes at Grand Prairie. Billy has the details.
  • JammSammich Tenth Anniversary Concert is this Saturday, Feb. 2, at Crusen’s on War Memorial Drive. Show starts at 8:30. Believe me, if you like live music and especially if you like dance music, you will have a blast at this show. The original five-piece band will be there (Brian Carroll, Mike Mercer, Doug Rendleman, Matt Tomlianovich, and me), plus every incarnation of the band thereafter right up to today, including fantastic musicians like Scott Wignall, Steve Davis, Eric Anderson, Chris Booher, and Bill Trulove. You can see more details on the JammSammich website.

Plans for analog holdout thwarted by dying TV

I had it all planned out. I was going to be the digital television holdout. I already reserved a coupon for a digital-to-analog converter box so I could keep using my TV to get over-the-air broadcasts well past the February 2009 cutoff for analog signals.

I like being non-conformist in some ways. I don’t have a cell phone. We only have one TV in the house (well, technically two, if you count the 1979 12″ black and white TV in the kitchen). I was all set to add “old analog TV” to my list of eccentricities. After all, I don’t need a big screen, and what good is all that extra resolution if you’re going to have a small TV set anyway?

But it wasn’t to be. The TV died. Or perhaps it would be more accurate to say it was failing. It was getting darker and darker. My daughter watched “The Chronicles of Narnia” on DVD the other night… or I should say she listened to it mostly. Even thought the brightness was turned all the way up, any scene that was at all dark in the film was completely black on the TV — just like if the TV were turned off.

LG 37? LCD HDTVSo I did it. I bought a new TV. A new LCD TV. A new LCD HDTV. And, let me tell you, I’ve been mesmerized by HD programming ever since. The clarity, the detail, and — since it’s a 37″ television — the enormity. I realize there are larger sets out there, but in our family room, and coming on the heels of our 20″ analog set, this thing is huge. (For the techno-geeks out there, it’s an LG 37″ 720p LCD with an NTSC, ATSC, and QAM tuner.)

I watched the Late Show with David Letterman last night. Dave has a lot of wrinkles on his face I never saw before. And you could distinctly see every hair in Jessica Alba’s eyebrows. I’m not sure why I need to see this fine of detail, but it is nevertheless fascinating. The NBC Nightly News with Brian Williams is in HD, too. And PBS — let’s just say I have new-found interest in not wanting WTVP to go dark now.

Perhaps the worst thing is that I work in TV — a big part of my job at Grace is editing video of the morning worship service each week, and editing our big Christmas production each year. It used to be that the picture I saw at work, which is broadcast-quality NTSC on professional TV monitors, was far superior to what I saw on my consumer television at home. Now it’s a different story. I look forward to the day that we shoot Grace Family Christmas in high-definition.

I have the TV just in time for the Superbowl, but we already have plans to watch the game at a friend’s house. But that’s okay. He has a 46″ HDTV.