Saturday, January 17, 2009

The World is Knocking, You Should Answer

With the expansiveness of media today people are better informed about the world around them than ever before. The topics of politics, economics, business, and international relations are so prominent among daily conversations that to stay uninformed is not prudent for anyone hoping to talk to their fellow man for more than five minutes. In addition to it not being a wise option, remaining completely unaware of major events in today's world is a difficult task to achieve unless of course you are living in a foreign country, though this offers little excuse as well. Satellite television allows people to stay up to date with current information even if they have little more than a few minutes to dedicate to watching the news each day. The frequency of local news broadcasts provides viewers with plenty of opportunities to catch what the pressing issues of the day are.

Along with local news, channels dedicated entirely to relaying news, such as CNN and MSNBC, are a constant source for information about the United States and the world as a whole. By simply turning on their satellite TV and scanning the channels for a small amount of time each day people can stay current with world news, taking in knowledge from different news sources all over the world. Beyond maintaining a working knowledge of late breaking news, viewers can also learn additional useful information to apply to their lives. News channels often venture into the wonderful world of travel, revealing hidden vacationing treasures while recommending accommodations and local cuisine. These pieces can delve into the culture of mostly unknown places and make people feel as if they really are in the audience as they watch a native dance take place in high definition.

The massive influence of different cultures is unavoidable and satellite television works to educate people about these varying perspectives. News channels highlight the meshing of countries and cultures as the world becomes more intertwined. Focusing on international relations reveals the maturation of countries as they are forced to adapt to opening themselves up to the world around them. Much as nations are pushed to open up, so are the people of the world. Isolation is rarely an option and the news works to eliminate fear of the unknown by providing information and familiarizing groups with the common practices of one another.

The news works towards the proliferation of information and the creation of a better understanding amongst sometimes divided parts of the world or society. With the expansion of the news media and satellite television, there is much more knowledge to be had and an even larger audience to receive it. News channels also possess the power to construct a kind of image of a country based on what they choose to report so it is important to utilize the numerous options satellite tv offers and be sure to take in all perspectives. Being able to see the same puzzle from different angles ultimately gives an individual the upper hand in truly understanding what is going on.

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Monday, January 05, 2009

Growing Faith in a Community's Future

Today, I'm riding the spanking new, Valley Metro, light rail. I'm not going anywhere specific, particularly. (I'll just feel a brief moment of exhilaration about experiencing a travel modality that is quiet and efficient, and a twinge of modest vindication.) But metropolitan Phoenix surely is.

This is a leap forward in mass transit and in urban planning for America's fifth largest city. It's been a long journey getting here. Here's a bit of history. In 1985, Phoenix had an election for a joint regional freeway RPTA entitled Proposition 300; this was to secure tax funding for the development of a regional Maricopa County freeway system over 20 years (tentative completion by 2005). The initiative also created the Regional Public Transit Authority, whose small percentage of the freeway tax was to be used to plan, design and find a funding source for a regional transit system within 5 years.

By Prop 300 requirements, the RPTA was created to design a transit plan. In 1989, the agency proposed an initiative to secure a one-percent sales tax funding source over 30 years for the following components: A regional Maricopa County-wide bus system (7 day-a-week service on every major street in the county), regional-express rapid-bus transit system, multiple commuter trains which would use freight railroad tracks and a 103-mile, elevated, double track, 60 mph rapid-train system. It was totally ambitious, this VALTRANS plan. It made for a very contentious election, in which many voters felt that the plan was too large, too long, too expensive but, somehow, not detailed enough. Even more voters did not like the idea of transit vehicles travelling overhead above neighborhood backyards and streets. Still more were skeptical, concluding that despite the County's 1985 freeway tax imposed four years earlier, only 10-15 miles of freeway had been built with the taxes collected-so who was to say this wasn't another boondoggle for a few vested interests?

Having served on the City of Phoenix's Surface Transportation Advisory Board for 3 or 4 years beginning about 1985-86, I was recruited by the RPTA proponents to become a vocal supporter of the initiative. I felt up to the task, since I had spent years in Naples, Italy and metropolitan Washington, D.C. depending on mass transit, and I particularly was a fan of the Paris Metro and bus system that Peggy and I rode for miles daily during the first year of our marriage. No one prepared me for the public hostility awaiting me at Kiwanis breakfasts and Rotary lunches where panels or debates on the proposition usually spoiled the meals. Many agendas emerged in the opposition to the VALTRANS proposition, but it clearly was doomed--very early in the pre-election process--and no one was shocked that the voters savaged it by a 3-1 margin.

It seemed not so much that the valley was populated by backward-thinking people. Much of the resistance was from folks who weren't ready to abandon driving their cars, and/or didn't especially care to emulate the transit-heavy eastern cities from which they had migrated westward (New York/NJ, Chicago). Since much of the in-migration of the 1980s was from California, many newer arrivals weren't frustrated by habits of spending hours in vehicles commuting daily. Some of the local communities' entrenched leaders were convinced that freeways alone would address the pressures of sustained growth-and they had waited too long already for the funding with which to lay asphalt.

Well, perhaps that hasn't changed much. Honestly, it doesn't matter tremendously whether the over-40 crowd doesn't ride light rail here. There aren't going to be that many converts among those with a reserved parking stall (except when they realize they are needlessly paying a premium to sit for 30 minutes in a parking garage downtown after a Suns or Diamondbacks game). It's enough that parents don't forbid their children to ride. Those who aren't predisposed to disregard mass transit as a viable mode for travel will in time create the critical mass to reach the "tipping point," where light rail becomes, beyond vogue, a behavior pattern. I used to think that it would take about 25 years for that to happen, but I'm going to make an optimistic prediction: 15 years, and the Valley Metro ridership will more than cover the expense of its ongoing maintenance. If I'm crazy, then Denver is collective-crazy. Take a look at the acceptance of rail travel in the business and hospitality sector corridors in that city. There's no Portland-tree-hugging, chip-on-the-shoulder attitude in Denver. It's Middle America; and the population there understands that transit solves an urbanization problem. And take a look at the impact of Denver transit on its urban form, too. Perhaps that's the most exciting potential for Valley Metro-a transit-driven urban form, and the eventual electrification of Phoenix's downtown that some of us have been waiting patiently for-lo, these many decades.

Mike Widener has practiced law in Arizona for 25 years, and is a Certified Specialist in Real Estate Law, according to the Board of Legal Specialization of the State Bar of Arizona. Mike is listed in SuperLawyers (2008 Southwest Edition) and in 1000 People to Know in [Arizona] Commercial Real Estate, 2008-09. Mike's real estate portfolio contains holdings in the States of Florida, Arizona, Tennessee and the Commonwealth of Virginia. You can contact him at (602) 274-1100 or at mnwidener@gmail.com.