Thursday, April 8, 2010

Living With The Trinity On The 40th Anniversary Of Earth Day

No. That is not an artist's rendition of what Fort Worth's Town Lake and Canals will look like if the Trinity River Vision Boondoggle ever gets built.

The picture is one I extracted from a very good video about the history of the Trinity River and how Fort Worth and Dallas started building their towns on what they did not realize was the Trinity River's flood plain.

After a few flood disasters, corrective measures were undertaken. In Dallas a mammoth relocation of the Trinity to a new channel away from downtown Dallas was built under the direction of a man named Stemmons, who later had a freeway named after him.

Speaking of the Trinity River Vision Boondoggle. There are some people in Fort Worth who think nothing can be done to put a stop to this ill-conceived project. There are also some who think something can be done.

Some think that ordinary citizens have no chance when it comes to taking on powerful political interests in Texas.

I beg to differ.

There was a time in the 1960s when Texas politicians had a different Trinity River Vision, with that vision attempting to turn the Trinity River into a Barge Canal connecting Dallas and Fort Worth with the Gulf of Mexico.

Many ordinary Texans thought this was nuts. They fought the project.

And won.

In 2010 there is no Barge Canal connecting D/FW to the Gulf of Mexico.

On Tuesday, April 20 at 8pm, KERA-TV will air Living with the Trinity, a one-hour documentary that chronicles the history of the fight to save the Trinity River. The one hour documentary airs statewide on public television stations as part of the 40th Anniversary of Earth Day.

The documentary revisits the period from 1965 to 1973 when U.S. Congressman Jim Wright of Fort Worth, working with the Johnson Administration, was able to win Congressional approval of nearly $1 billion for what would become a highly controversial project. Seventeen counties in the river basin voted on a bond issue to supplement the federal funding. The bond issue failed by just 20,000 votes and the barge canal was never built.

Jim Wright was the Kay Granger of his era. Key difference between Jim's vision and Kay's is the voters voted on Jim's vision. Interesting that both Trinity River Visions have $1 billion price tags. Of course, in 2010 a billion dollars is not worth nearly what a billion dollars was worth in 1965.

A new radio series updating the Dallas and Fort Worth Trinity River projects will air April 13, 14 and 15 on KERA-FM.

Wind Has Blown The Fort Worth Air Free Of Visible Pollution For Now

Yesterday I showed you a very smoggy, polluted view of the stunning skyline of beautiful downtown Fort Worth.

I also mentioned learning from a guy named Warren that we need not worry ourselves about North Texas smog or what might be causing it, due to an ingenious method devised by Mother Nature which clears the air.

By blowing it to Oklahoma.

Warren did not mention who gets that bad air when the wind is coming from the north. Austin? San Antonio? Both?

Well, today's view of the stunning skyline of beautiful downtown Fort Worth shows how well Warren's air cleaning method works. It was real windy for a couple days, scrubbing the Fort Worth air clean of, at least, the pollution that you are able to see.

I worry about those poor folks up in Oklahoma, though. Their eyes are likely burning, with visibility diminished, today. Then again, Warren's air cleaning method should work for them too, blowing the bad stuff to Kansas. Eventually it all ends up in Canada and we can all breathe a sigh of relief.

Balloon Festival Disasters & Durango In Texas

In June, here in the Dallas/Fort Worth zone, there is going to be a balloon festival.

A couple days ago I got an email with information about this festival asking me to please list it on my website.

I don't think I'm going to do that.

Why?

Well. Way back in the year 2000 I was involved with something called, if I remember right, the Mansfield Balloon Fest. The 2000 Balloon Fest opened with a huge crowd. Then, that night, 12 inches of rain wreaked havoc, turning the Balloon Fest grounds into a muddy mess.

The next year the Balloons were launched once more in Mansfield. That year's event did not get destroyed by rain.

The year following that, 2002, the Balloon Fest was moved from Mansfield to the Midway Regional Airport, near Midlothian, expanded to include Mansfield, Midlothian and Waxahachie, and renamed the North Texas Balloon Classic.

The first 2 days of the 2002 North Texas Balloon Classic went off without a problem. And then early Sunday morning, Father's Day of 2002, the Midway Regional Airport was hit with hurricane force winds, blowing apart the huge tent under which many of the vendors were located and ripping apart the booths outside the tent. It was a huge mess.

One would think with 2 out of 3 of the Balloon Festivals having such serious problems that this would put an end to it. Nope. That did not happen.

The 2003 North Texas Balloon Classic ballooned bigger than the 2002 version. More sponsors were onboard. More music. More food. More vendors. An entry fee of $10 per car was charged. During the 3 days a lot of cars showed up. So many that there were traffic jams.

And yet, somehow, the 2003 North Texas Balloon Classic ended not with a weather disaster, but with a financial disaster that was the final death blow.

For the 2003 North Texas Balloon Classic I agreed to re-do their existing really bad website. Part of that agreement was that I would be paid after the festival had generated its revenue. I, along with many others, were not paid.

I do not know how it came to be that 3 years ago the Balloon Festival rose from the dead at Midway Regional Airport, but it did. Ironically, the current iteration has an even worse website than the one I re-did 7 years ago.

Anyway, now you know why I won't be listing the 3rd Annual DFW Balloon Classic & AirFest.

Wednesday, April 7, 2010

An Easter Egg Does Not Get Found In Texas Hunt But Is Found By Me

There are few things sadder than an orphaned, un-found Easter Egg. Right at this particular point in time I actually can not think of anything sadder. This must indicate I am in a good mood.

I've had me a day. It started off nice with a long swim in a now reliably pleasantly temperatured pool.

Around noon I found myself in Hurst, lightning striking, thunder booming and me outside getting hit by pea-sized hail.

By the time I got back here, around 2, I found myself with a lot of computer monitor face time facing me. Around 5, I could take being sedentary no longer and took off to walk around Fosdic Lake at Oakland Lake Park.

It was there, by the home run fence of the Oakland Lake Park baseball field, that I came across 2 un-found Easter Eggs.

When I was a kid I enjoyed Easter Egg Hunts. We lived across the street from the city park of this town in Washington called Burlington, which is where the annual Easter Egg Hunt took place. It was a big deal. A lot of eggs, a lot of kids, sectioned off by age groups.

Our house had a big picture window facing the park. After all these years I am thinking the statute of limitations has exhausted and I can now reveal that our parental units would arm me and my siblings with binoculars. To watch the placing of the eggs. To see where the GOLD eggs were.

The GOLD eggs were worth money. I think something like 5 bucks. Which is the equivalent of something like 500 bucks in 2010 dollars. We could just about pay for a trip to Disneyland if us kids found 2 GOLD eggs. Hence being staked out by our parental units with spyglasses.

After a few years of me and my siblings always finding the GOLD eggs, measures were taken to put an end to this. I don't remember what those measures were. I do remember 2 really, really fun family trips to Disneyland.

Oakland Lake Park had totally greened up since I last laid my eyes on it. Leaves sprouted out. Grass totally green.

Some people who have never been to Texas think it is all desert and brown. I remember before I made the move, going to see the X-Files movie in a Seattle theater, with a Seattle friend, I'll call Wanda.

The X-Files movie opens in Dallas, in an outlying residential area. You see the Dallas skyline. But the residential area is all wrong. It's brown, totally flat, not remotely looking like this area.

I lean over to Wanda and whisper it's not really like that, it's hilly with a lot of trees. Sure, Wanda said, not believing me. Four months after I made the move to Texas, Wanda made her one and only visit. I do not recollect if I pointed out the X-Files discrepancy at that point in time, or if I just left it to Wanda's powers of observation.

Tootsie Tonasket Perplexed By Ethnic/Race Inquisition From The Government

Yesterday I heard from Tootsie Tonasket, aka Princess Thunder Rump of the Tonasket Tribe in Washington.

Tootsie was all perplexed due to a form sent home from her boy's grade school, wanting Tootsie to divulge the racial/ethnic identity of her boy.

A couple days ago I blogged about being perplexed about this very same subject, after I saw the questions being asked on the Federal 2010 Census.

Apparently the federal government is forcing these same type questions to be asked on the state level, via schools, regarding enrolled students.

At the top of the Inquisition form it says, "New federal requirements state that "Unknown" "Multiracial" and "Not Provided" are no longer valid responses to ethnicity or race identification questions. If parents, guardians, or students do not provide ethnicity and race information, districts are responsible for assigning categories based on observation or prior ethnicity and race data."

Next, the form says, "Please identify the ethnicity and race of the student by answering BOTH questions."

Question 1 asks, "Is your child of Hispanic or Latino origin?"

Question 2 asks, "What race(s) do you consider your child? (check all that apply)
."

Why is this data being collected? And am I the only one who thinks it not only bizarre, but is sort of, well, I don't know, un-American? Not to mention seemingly racist?

I could see this sort of form being sent out had the Nazis won WWII, collecting this type information so they knew who to send to what Concentration Camp.

But this is America. The great melting pot. What possible valid reason does the government have to be asking such questions?

As for what perplexed Tootsie Tonasket. The form Tootsie received had a long list of Washington American Indian or Alaskan Native tribes to choose from to identify race, under the #2 Race Question. The Tonasket Tribe is not on the list. But the Jamestown Tribe is on the list. I've never heard of the Jamestown Tribe of Washington.

So, what is Tootsie to do? I guess check "Other Washington Indian."

But, how could the state disrespect the famous Tonasket Tribe like this? And since Tootsie's boy is not a full-blooded Tonasket Indian, how is she to properly identify him? It's all very perplexing to poor ol' long suffering Tootsie. She's always afraid she's going to get in trouble for something. And so now she's afraid the feds will be after her for not properly revealing the ethnic/race identity of her boy.

I can't help but wonder, did Hitler and the Nazi thugs send out forms like this to help them identify the Jews, Gypsies and others they wanted to do harm? The Nazis made the Jews and others wear Identity Patches. Is that is what is next?

I'm just as perplexed as Tootsie.

Fort Worth's Air Is Kept Clean Because No Mountains Allows The Bad Air To Blow To Oklahoma

That is a smoggy look at the stunning skyline of beautiful downtown Fort Worth, looking west from the equally stunning Tandy Hills. Don Young took this photo on Monday.

I'll copy Don Young's commentary, which accompanied this photo, below. And below that I'll copy a letter to the editor of the Fort Worth Star-Telegram, with an idiotic point of view on the same subject, and then below that I'll opine on this subject...

Today, I received from State Representative Lon Burnam's office, a list of 79 new gas drilling permits filed with the Texas Railroad Commission for Tarrant County, Texas. That is, 79, for the month of March, alone.

Today was also a fairly warm day with temps reaching 82 degrees. Higher temps and gas well emissions are not a good combo as you can see by these photos taken near downtown Fort Worth today at 6:30 PM CST. Just wait until July rolls around.

Meanwhile, the mayor of Fort Worth, whose income depends on gas drilling, recently announced the creation of a task force to try and figure out if gas drilling is a contributing factor to our compromised air. Gas drillers say that the air is actually CLEANER since drilling began in Fort Worth. They are also well-represented on the task force.

Feel better?

DY

The letter to the editor...

Fort Worth's air quality

It appears that a limited number of people are deeply concerned about the quality of air over Fort Worth because of gas drilling operations.

Fort Worth is fortunate that it is not boxed in by surrounding mountains and the air is free to move as nature directs. In fact, when there is a comfortable south wind blowing, the air that is over Fort Worth at sunrise is swirling in the Wichita Mountains near Lawton, Okla., at sunset.

Seems like a small number of people are doing a lot of worrying over a whole lot of nothing.

-- Warren C. Arthur, Fort Worth

Okay, Warren thinks Fort Worth's air is kept clean because Mother Nature blows the pollution elsewhere, like to Oklahoma?

Well, I'm thinking, since Texas and the Tarrant Regional Water Board are wanting to sue Oklahoma to get some of Oklahoma's water, that Oklahoma might want to consider suing Texas over that bad air Texas is sending to Oklahoma.

Fort Worth's air is kept clean because Fort Worth has the misfortune, I mean the fortune, of not being surrounded by mountains? Let's see, let me think if I can think of a place I've lived in with cleaner air than Fort Worth? Seattle, yeah, that's one. And Seattle is surrounded by mountains. Mountains on all sides, north, south, east and west. Same with Vancouver. Denver has a big wall of mountains to the west. All way less polluted, air-wise, that the Barnett Shale zone of Texas.

The air pollution blows away? And yet for some reason 25% of Barnett Shale air breathing kids suffer from asthma, while outside the Barnett Shale zone of Texas that percentage drops to 7.

Warren says, "Seems like a small number of people are doing a lot of worrying over a whole lot of nothing."

Instead, it seems to me, a sadly small number of people are doing a lot of worrying over something big, when that number of people worrying should be large.

I'm No Longer LOST At Finding Miss Beth On My TV

After viewing I don't know how many episodes without success, last night I finally, successfully, spotted my favorite TV Star, Miss Beth, aka Princess Oahu, on LOST.

LOST is like 24 to me. I get too caught up in the story, in suspending disbelief, in enjoying what I'm watching, to put my consciousness in a different location and recognize someone.

It helped that last night Miss Beth was not being a messed up survivor of a plane crash. Instead she was looking like herself, so when Miss Beth walked past Desmond, I instantly recognized her. I would have recognized her even if I didn't know I should be looking for her. I think. Even though she was in soft focus, with the camera sharp on Desmond.

Only a few more episodes of LOST. Not a lot of time left to make sense out of this wonderfully convoluted story.