All posts by C. J. Summers

I am a fourth-generation Peorian, married with three children.

City trying to keep Northmoor widening to three lanes

The July 24 Peoria City Council Agenda has been posted on the city’s website. There are a few items of interest on the docket next week.

One of them is a funding switcheroo from the Northmoor Road project to the Sheridan Road project. The city wants to widen Northmoor Road between Allen and Knoxville to three lanes. But since they would be using IDOT funds, they have to get IDOT approval. Well, IDOT insists that if we’re going to use their funds, we have to make it a minimum of four lanes. So the city staff is requesting that we delay that project for the time being while we keep trying to persuade IDOT to change their mind and let us make the road three lanes and pedestrian-friendly.

In the meantime, in order not to lose state money, they would like to use those dollars to fund another project: widening Sheridan from Notre Dame (near Glen Ave.) to Giles/Knoxville. They don’t believe they’ll have any trouble getting IDOT to agree to three lanes there. I’m glad to see the city staff proposing this action, and I hope the council concurs.

This is why we have the press and FOIA

Kudos to Clare Jellick for her investigative report on the Roosevelt Magnet School field-trip scam. Her persistence in getting information through the Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) has brought to light a very disturbing situation — shaking down district parents for money that they don’t owe:

The requested information shows that the district considers there to be a “total outstanding balance” of $17,391 to cover the cost of the trip – even though the figures provided show Roosevelt families actually owe only about $8,800. […]

With all the contributions from kids, families and community members added together, $40,491 has been raised to cover the trip. This is about $8,800 short of the total cost.

So the district is saying the parents owe $17,391, but the numbers reveal the families only owe $8,800 — a difference of $8,591. That’s a huge chunk of change. Who is going to be held accountable for this? Where is Mr. Hinton’s public statement on this issue?

The school board members should be demanding an explanation from the school administration. Will anyone have the cajones to confront Hinton at the next board meeting?

A request for my pseudonymous commenters

To my pseudonymous commenters: I value your comments on my blog — I really do — and I want you to keep commenting. Please don’t stop! However, I do have one request:

Please pick one pseudonym and stick with it, or else use “anonymous.” When you change pseudonyms all the time, it kinda defeats the purpose of having a pseudonym. And it’s deceptive. It gives the illusion that several different people are sharing opinions, even though you’re really the same person. I know at least one of you has even responded to your own pseudonymous comment under another pseudonym. Now come on — that’s a little excessive, isn’t it? Unless you have a dissociative identity disorder, I would prefer that you either pick one pseudonym to identify yourself, or else use “anonymous” if you don’t want to have an identity.

Thanks for understanding. And please keep commenting.

WiMax is coming… but how or when?

WiMax logoA couple of interesting Wi-Fi items in the news. Actually, they’re “WiMax” items, to be technically accurate.

Sprint and Clearwire to deploy WiMax nationwide

From ZDNet:

Sprint and Clearwire are pooling resources in a venture that could take WiMax nationwide.

The two companies said Thursday that they plan to build a national WiMax (4G) network. The partnership, which is a 20-year agreement with three 10-year renewal terms, will enable a “broader and more efficient deployment of a mobile WiMAX broadband network than either company could accomplish on its own.” WiMax, or “worldwide interoperability for microwave access,” is a standard that allows wireless signals to be sent over long distances from towers that can cover up to 3,000 square miles.

The official press release is available here.

WiFi Planet reported last month that Sprint’s CTO Barry West “argued that the killer app for 4G Wireless is broadband Internet, which today means DSL and cable modem since Wi-Fi hotspots don’t offer total coverage. WiMAX changes the equation, and with chipsets in every notebook, a real mobile broadband economy can emerge…. West went on to boast that Sprint-Nextel will be able to deliver a tenfold improvement in price per bit on WiMAX against other wireless technologies.”

The article goes on to talk about how West isn’t daunted by the iPhone at all (which offers its service exclusively through AT&T), and believes Sprint’s WiMax network will be superior, both in quality and price. They’re targeting larger markets first, of course, so there’s no telling when such service could come to Peoria. But for what it’s worth, according to Indeed.com, there was a job posting 15 days ago for a “MGR 4G/WIMAX DESIGN AND DEPLOYMENT” in Farmington, Illinois. Employer: Sprint.

WiMax closer to home

Here’s something else interesting I learned recently: a Peoria-based company called SVI was recently bought out by a California-based company called Oxford Media. The former SVI is now a subsidiary company called OxfordSVI and is still located on Altorfer Drive. Their main business is providing video-on-demand services and high-speed internet access to hotels, but they also plan to roll out a broader WiMax network eventually, utilizing antennas on the tops of their subscriber hotels.

According to this SEC filing, OxfordSVI plans to offer not only WiMax broadband internet access to surrounding homes and businesses, but also on-demand movies in high-definition:

Our WiMax offering, when available, is expected to allow customers within a seven mile radius of each antenna (installed at participating MDU and hospitality properties) to access the Internet at speeds as fast or faster than existing broadband systems. This high-speed delivery will allow access to other services such as Video on Demand movies. The quality of the movies being delivered on this system will no longer be limited by bandwidth thus making available high definition broadcasts to all homes and businesses within the 7 mile range. The consumer will see high-quality content delivered over their television sets, even though the content is actually distributed through our media servers from the same satellite network utilized to distribute the content to our MDU and hospitality customers.

Before you get too excited, the SEC filing also says that they’re “not devoting resources to WiMAX development as there is only a limited revenue opportunity for this product in the near-term as compared to the opportunity in the delivery of content to the hospitality market.” But it’s an interesting idea, and Sprint’s recently-announced build-out expansion could accelerate their plans if WiMax becomes popular. You can see a more in-depth description of their long-range WiMax plans on their website.

Two pieces of advice for Emil Jones

Emil JonesFrom the Bloomington Pantagraph:

As state lawmakers near a deal, Senate President Emil Jones credits himself for ensuring customers will see discounts on their soaring electric rates.

Jones said Tuesday at the Capitol that consumers wouldn’t see the benefits of a $1 billion rate relief package — the details of which are being finalized — if he hadn’t stopped the rate freeze that House Speaker Michael Madigan and others pushed to provide consumers relief.

I’ve got two pieces of unsolicited advice for Mr. Jones:

  1. Don’t count your chickens before they’re hatched. Nothing has passed yet, and in politics anything can happen.
  2. Don’t break your arm patting yourself on the back.

Consumer prices increased 5.2% in Q2

Up Arrow GraphThe Bureau of Labor Statistics reports today that consumer prices increased at a seasonally adjusted annual rate (SAAR) of 5.2% for the second quarter of 2007.

This brings the year-to-date annual rate to 5.0 percent and compares with an increase of 2.5 percent in all of 2006. The index for energy, which rose 2.9 percent in all of 2006, advanced at a 27.8 percent SAAR in the first half of 2007 [emphasis added] and accounted for about 48 percent of the advance in the overall CPI-U during that period. Petroleum-based energy costs increased at a 48.3 percent annual rate [emphasis added] and charges for energy services rose at a 5.5 percent annual rate.

The food index rose at a 6.2 percent SAAR in the first half of 2007 and contributed about 17 percent to the overall CPI-U increase in the first six months. Grocery store food prices increased at a 8.0 percent annual rate in the first half of 2007, reflecting acceleration over the last year in each of the six major groups. [emphasis added] These increases ranged from annual rates of 14.8 percent in the index for dairy products to 5.5 percent in the index for other food at home.

Tell me something I don’t already know. Every month when I pay bills, I’m painfully aware that energy, petroleum, and grocery prices are all skyrocketing. And the money left at the end of the month keeps shrinking and shrinking. It’s depressing, frankly.

Peoria PlayHouse forges ahead in programming, fundraising

PlayHouse LogoFrom a news release:

Peoria PlayHouse forges ahead in programming, fundraising

July 16, 2007, Peoria, IL – Working with partners from the Peoria Park District to the Peoria Chamber of Commerce Community Leadership School, the Junior League of Peoria is bringing The Peoria PlayHouse Children’s Museum, to be located in the Glen Oak Pavilion, ever closer to reality.

  • Programming at the Shoppes at Grand Prairie and Prairie Air Show provide education and fun for area children.
  • Fundraising on track with 30% of funds raised; a gift from Jackie and Curtis White establishes The Peoria PlayHouse Endowment Fund; area children participate in Pennies for the PlayHouse.
  • Facilities plans preserve historic Glen Oak Park pavilion while providing space for five permanent and one temporary exhibit, as well as educational and administrative spaces.

Continue reading Peoria PlayHouse forges ahead in programming, fundraising

What happens when the “bread crumbs” end?

puzzle piecesThe Journal Star reported yesterday that some residents just north of Peoria are trying to preempt annexation to Peoria by annexing themselves to Dunlap. Not a bad idea. Peoria’s population keeps moving north, and the city keeps chasing them via annexation:

For Peoria, annexation is simply following the bread crumbs of development.

Pat Landes, the city’s director of planning and growth management, says the city is just responding to developers’ requests; policy dictates the property be contiguous, and those seeking annexation conform to certain guidelines such as how the property is to be developed.

But here’s my question: what happens when Peoria runs out of annexation opportunities? The “bread crumbs” will end someday, just like it ended at the borders of West Peoria, Peoria Heights, and Bartonville. Communities will incorporate or annex themselves to surrounding communities to avoid being annexed into Peoria, and eventually we’ll be, for all feasible purposes, boxed in. Then what?

Well, of course, we’ll have to start focusing on how to improve and more efficiently use the land we already have. We’ll have to start thinking strategically about infill development. We’ll have to start pursuing regional partnerships to share the costs of certain resources (we’re starting to see that already with the airport taxing authority being extended to all of Peoria county and negotiations between Peoria and West Peoria on sewer repair costs). I could go on.

But the next question is, are we pursuing those things enough right now? Or are we pinning all our growth strategies on annexation? Is there a 50-year vision for Peoria and, if so, what does it look like?

Cable and Video Competition Law passes

On June 30, Gov. Blagojevich signed Senate Bill 678 into law. Included in that bill are two acts that impact cable television: “The Cable and Video Competition Law of 2007” and “The Cable and Video Customer Protection Law.”

This bill that passed is far superior to House Bill 1500, on which I commented back in March. A good overview of the bill is provided by the Illinois Municipal League.

Under this new legislation, a cable provider can choose to either get a local franchise license through the county or home rule municipality, or get a state franchise license through the Illinois Commerce Commission. However, even if the cable provider decides to get a state license, the bill provides adequate protection of and compensation to municipalities for the use of their rights-of-way.

Public, educational, and governmental (PEG) access is maintained in this bill (cable companies have to provide it), and the transmission of PEG programming must be transmitted to customers “at no cost to the local unit of government or the public, education, and government programming providers.” It’s also provided that PEG access must be available on the lowest programming tier (i.e., part of the most basic cable package) and have “equivalent visual and audio quality…from the viewing perspective of the subscriber, to that of commercial channels.”

The franchise fee paid to the municipality is set at 5% of gross revenues, which is the maximum allowed by federal law. But here’s an interesting item: the municipality can tack on another 1% of gross revenues “as support for public, education, and government access,” and the cable operator “may identify and collect the amount of the [PEG] programming support fee as a separate line item on the regular bill of each subscriber.” So don’t be surprised if that fee starts showing up on your bill someday — that will be the price you pay for having city council meetings broadcast on channel 22.

Telecommunications companies really win, though, when it comes to build-out requirements. Whereas under local franchise agreements, municipalities usually require cable companies to offer service to the whole municipality, this bill allows companies to target just part of a market area, as long as they meet certain requirements. The Illinois Municipal League explains it this way:

All of the requirements are outlined and can be summarized in the broad general sense — 35% within 3 years and if 15% of the customers sign up in that market area then they must build to 50% within 5 years. The requirements are based on local exchanges. The low-income requirements for service are in the bill, which are 30% in the area.

The bill makes it clear that a cable provider “is under no obligation to serve or provide access to an entire exchange or local unit of government.” But here’s something interesting. In section 21-1101(d)(1), it says this:

…if the holder [of a state franchise agreement] is an incumbent cable operator or any successor-in-interest company, it shall be obligated to provide access to cable or video services within the jurisdiction of a local unit of government at the same levels required by the local franchising authorities for that local unit of government….

So, that sounds like if Insight here in Peoria decided to get a state franchise, it would be required to continue providing service to the whole city. But not so fast — Insight likely wouldn’t be considered an “incumbent cable operator” under this law.

The Act defines “incumbent cable operator” as an entity “that provided cable services or video services in a particular area under a franchise agreement with a local unity of government…on January 1, 2007.” Insight has not had a franchise agreement with Peoria since April 2006 when the last agreement expired. The city has been negotiating a new franchise agreement ever since, but the two parties have not come to terms. So it’s very possible that Insight would not be subject to the “incumbent cable operator” provisions of the Act.

Added to the mix locally is the fact that Comcast is in the process of taking control of the cable system here from Insight, and nobody knows what their plans are. Peoria’s Corporation Counsel Randy Ray had this to say about the new law: “The new Bill changes the landscape. We do not yet know what course Comcast, which is purchasing from Insight will take. As we learn what is going to happen, we will share the information.”

On the positive side, this bill opens up the possibility that cable competition could come to Peoria (or part of Peoria, at least). Most likely this competition would come from AT&T, which already has its phone lines strung all over the city. Whoever wishes to get a state franchise license has to apply to the Illinois Commerce Commission (ICC), and the Act requires that the ICC publish those applications on its website within five days of receiving the application. So far, there have been no applications submitted.

From Middle Earth to Hogwarts

Lord of the RingsWhen the Lord of the Rings movies came out, I started reading Tolkien’s books at the same time. For the first two movies (Fellowship of the Ring, The Two Towers), I watched the movie first and then read the book, which was pretty cool. I loved how the book would give extra descriptions, extra scenes, extra characters when compared to the movies.

Then I made the mistake of reading Return of the King before I watched the movie. What a letdown. I mean, the movie was still cool and everything, but it departed from the book in some key ways (especially regarding the demise of Saruman and the scouring of the Shire). It was more fun to watch first and read later.

During the time I was reading Lord of the Rings, my uncle tried to get me interested in the Harry Potter series. I picked up the first book and tried to start reading it, but I just couldn’t get into it. I think it was mainly a timing issue. It’s hard to put Rowling up against Tolkien and not choose Tolkien (at least it was for me). So, I went on immersing myself in Middle Earth and never made the trip to Hogwarts.

So, what do you all think? Should I give Harry Potter another shot? Is the series a good read? Also, what do you think of the movies? Are they good representations of the books? Or should I watch the movies first and then read the books?