Touchy-feely. Encounter groups. Focus groups. I absolutely despise this warm and fuzzy crap.
I felt uncomfortable during the Envision Venice process a few years back and couldn't figure out why until long after the project was in the can. Day two of the airport charrettes appeared to be a replay of that whole mess. Maybe this is just me and my dark cynicism -- I don't play well with others in this kind of atmosphere. If I'm sitting at the table, all it takes is one person to say something colossally stupid and then I feel morally compelled to tell them that self-euthanasia on their part would arguably be of great benefit to society as a whole. That usually doesn't go over well.Besides, I have zero faith in this entire process. With Tom Creech and Ed Taylor of Amalthea Investments (Marriott) hovering around at this and the previous day's charrette (and no other developers represented), it doesn't take a genius to surmise that the fix is already in and this is just one massive corral designed to lead the sheep blindly into the slaughterhouse.
The Marriott is coming. You will like it. But first, here are some coloring books. You'll never see the knockout hammer coming.
I'm not necessarily opposed to a Marriott at the airport. Well, not totally, anyway. But this whole stealth process of nailing down airport land for a massive and glitzy hotel complex that Aris Mardirossian's Amalthea Investments started back in early 2006 (possibly earlier), with surreptitious help from the city manager's office, has me very bothered, very deeply. The fact that Mardirossian's team members can be easily identified by their stained bibs at this lamb-roast is disturbing to say the least. Balanced with that is the conspicuous absence of City Manager Marty Black, who again on day two popped in and out faster than anyone could say "Marty, let me ask you something..."
There were approximately 125 people that attended the morning charrette workshop. The Gondo reported 75, but the Gondo didn't show up until the afternoon session after a number of people had left early.
Envision Venice redux
The morning portion of the meeting was run almost exactly like Envision Venice -- attendees were broken up into groups for breakout brainstorming sessions. A facilitator asked pre-established questions and recorded all of the ideas and responses on a large oversized conference-sized legal pad. In spite of the serious subject matter, the process has a kindergarten feel to it. Designed to be egalitarian, the process invariably ends up being more than a bit demeaning.
Once I realized that this was a replay of Envision Venice, my cynicism kicked into full gear. I remember Envision Venice, that bit of grand and expensive chicanery, all too well. The process was purportedly designed to let the city know what our expectations were for the future. Hidden in the the closet and unknown to anyone outside of the city's inner sanctum was Mike Miller's downtown Manhattan Project and an abortion of an ordinance written by Miller's attorney, Jeff Boone, that came to be known as Conditional Mixed Use ordinance. The CMU ordinance basically codified the concept that anyone can build anything that they want downtown as long as the proper wheels get greased.
The ink had barely dried on the first draft of the Envision Venice conclusion summary when Miller's herd of CMU elephants was let out of the closet. The proposed CMU ordinance smacked of heavy-handed pro-development legislation that was the exact antithesis of the Envision Venice process. Councilman John Moore voiced his protest in a logical and well-reasoned statement (text), but big money won out over logic when Citizens for Quality Government prez C.J. Fishman hammered it home in his famous 'I own your ass' speech to city council in support of the ordinance (video).
The entire city blinked awake and collectively realized that they'd been conned in a sudden epiphany that lasted for almost two minutes. Then they went back to playing golf and organizing condo association pool parties. The CMU passed into law.
Here on day two of the charrettes: encounter groups. Focus groups. Crayons and coloring books and team leaders. Ideas and wants and needs, inked out in magic marker on oversized legal pads displayed on artists' easels. Ain't we got fun?
Gaaaaaaarrrrrrrggggghhhh!!!!! Christ on a cracker, does city hall really think we are this stupid? More importantly, are we really this stupid? Cuz in the morning portion of the charrette, I watched a lot of people earnestly playing with the crayons, all of them trying to color between the lines.
I firmly believe that this whole charade is designed to slow down the process to give the illusion of citizen input so that the whole mess can be pushed past the November elections. It'll give the incumbents enough demographic feedback so that they'll know the appropriate promises to make to gather enough votes to stay in office past November. In December, they'll bloody well do what they originally intended to do anyway.
Avoiding the main event
I spent much of the day hovering around the groups, chatting amicably with folks I don't normally get an opportunity to chat amicably with. Development attorney Jeff Boone and I had a long and fascinating discussion about local politics and the politics of land development.
Councilman Bil Willson and I had an inadvertently hilarious conversation about the upcoming elections. Willson told me that Ernie Zavodnyik had just announced to one of the focus groups that he was indeed running for city council. I misunderstood and thought he was talking about Ernie Carter, a local who has come out of nowhere to announce his candidacy in a race against Jim Woods.