Tuesday, December 25, 2018
thenorphletpaperboy: Christmas in Arkansas
thenorphletpaperboy: Christmas in Arkansas: Christmas in Arkansas I don’t think I have to tell anyone who knows me, even casually, that I really love Christmas, and decorations,...
Christmas in Arkansas
Christmas in Arkansas
I don’t think I have to tell
anyone who knows me, even casually, that I really love Christmas, and
decorations, gifts, music, church, and family are all key parts of my Christmas
experience.
I don’t have a lot of
Christmas memories from when I was young but I actually remember delivering
newspapers on Christmas morning as a 13-year -old Norphlet paperboy. Of course,
since I was up and heading for the newsstand at 5 A M, I had already opened
presents on Christmas Eve and had checked out what Santa Clause had left me.
Those early Christmases were special, but not in the abundance of gifts, but in
what our family put into the preparations before Christmas.
It was my job to find a
suitable Christmas tree, and I spent several days a few weeks before Christmas
looking for a good cedar tree. A couple of years back I tried to slip in a
pine, but Momma, after doing the best she could with decorations, put her foot
down, “No more pine trees, Richard!” But since I spent most of my free time in
the woods, I had usually already spotted a decent cedar, and about two weeks
before Christmas Day, I would take my hatchet and cut it down, drag it home,
and put it on a wooden stand I had made. However, Momma wasn’t just a one tree
decorator. Not on your life. Next, I had to find a holly tree with plenty of
red berries, and then climb some big oak to get mistletoe. After Momma finished
decoration the living room, kitchen, and porch, you could sure tell it was
Christmas by the way the Mason House looked. I guess Momma gave me ‘decorating
for Christmas’ as part of my heritage.
That Christmas morning Santa
Clause left me four steel traps, some smokers, and in my stocking I had two
oranges, some nuts, and a candy cane. I had a trap-line to make a little money
selling furs and the smokers were little six inch tubes that when lit the smoke
would run animals out of a hollow log.
I don’t remember any of my
paper route customers every giving me anything when I delivered the Christmas
morning paper, but since it was usually before six o’clock, they probable
weren’t up. I finished the paper route that Christmas morning at six and headed
for Flat Creek to run my trap line and add the four new steel traps I had
received from Santa.
&
Another Christmas memory has
me fast forwarding to the late l970s when our family decided to take a
Christmas Vacation in Egypt. A flight to Little Rock in a blinding sleet and
snow storm stared a very different Christmas experience. Dr. Robbie, an El
Dorado Physician and native of Egypt, helped us with the arrangements, and
since his family still lived in Cairo, his brother-in-law met us at the
airport. We had just stepped off the plane and were about to get into a long
line to go through immigration when a well-dressed Egyptian walked up and asked
if we were the Mason Family.
“Yes,” and after a welcome, he said, “Follow
me.”
“But the line….?”
He just shook his head, and
as we followed him around the long line, he just waved at the customs
attendants. Well, with Dr. Robbie’s
family helping us, we have a great time in Cairo, but the Pyramids where just
our first stop. After three days in Cairo, we flew up the Nile to Aswan to see
Thebes and the Valley of the Kings. Since Vertis and I had lived in Libya for
two years, we didn’t bother with tours, so when we got off the plane, I walked
out to the taxi line and quizzed drivers until I found one who spoke good English.
“How much would you charge
to be our driver each day while we’re in Aswan---in American dollars?” Dr. Robbie
has advised me to take several hundred American dollars because the Egyptian
Pound was so weak.
“I’ll charge you twenty
American dollars a day,” he replied.
So off we went and it was
the best $20 we have every spent. At the drivers suggestion we stayed on the
south bank of the Nile in the morning to see Thebes and Karnack while the tour
busses crossed the river to the Valley of the Kings, and then when the tour
busses returned at noon, we went across to visit the pharos’s tombs. But we
didn’t just go in the few tombs open to visitors. That’s when a few extra
dollars to the guards, opened sites that weren’t available to others. We had
been advised to bring large American flashlights since the lighting in even the
tourists’ tombs was bad. So on Christmas Day, Vertis, Lara, Ashley, and I took
our flashlights, and with an Egyptian leading us, ventured into tomb after tomb,
until in one, we had to get down on our knees to slip through a couple of passageways
into the tomb chamber. This tomb was unbelievable, but what was in a side room
deep in the tomb chamber took our breath and sent Vertis heading back to the
entrance.
The floor of the side room
to the tomb was covered in strips of mummy wrapping and bones were scattered
everywhere. Our taxi driver-guide commented, “Tomb robbers; from probably
hundreds of years ago. The village here has made their living robbing tombs for
hundreds of years.”
Not the most spiritual
Christmas day I have ever experienced.
As I write this column,
Christmas memories just seem to flood back, and a rather unusual one from elementary
school is still on my mind. It had a lesson about Christmas that I haven’t forgotten.
I was back in school just
after Christmas when Mrs. Newson, my fourth grade teacher, announced, “Class, I
hope you have had a wonderful Christmas, and before we start class, I want each
of you to stand up and tell what you got for Christmas.”
Well, that started an ‘I got
more than you’ contest and kids were stretching those gifts like nothing you
have ever heard, and shoot, I was too. I hated to admit my main present was a
Sunday shirt, but I quickly jumped over that and rattled off everything else,
even what was in my stocking. Heck, most of the class was just about like me, but
I noticed Elizabeth, who sat at the desk right beside me was kinda hanging her
head, and of course who we all knew her family was as poor as Job’s turkey, and
I figured she didn’t get much. I was the
next to last in the class and Elizabeth was going to be last.
“Elizabeth what did you get
for Christmas?” asked Mrs. Newson. I glanced over at Elizabeth, who still had
her head lowered, and I watched her take a deep breath and slowly stand up.
Then she raised her hand and said as she held up a plain, yellow pencil, “I got
this pencil for Christmas.” It was so quiet, you could have heard a pin drop.
That’s when I knew Christmas didn’t mean presents for everyone.
Monday, December 10, 2018
thenorphletpaperboy: In Praise of Trees
thenorphletpaperboy: In Praise of Trees: In Praise of Trees “I think that I shall never see a poem lovely as a tree…” Of course, we recognize that line fro...
In Praise of Trees
In Praise of Trees
“I think
that I shall never see a poem lovely as a tree…” Of course, we recognize that
line from the poem Trees by Joyce
Kilmer. We remember that opening line, but Mr. Kilmer goes on and on in his
beautiful poem to reflect the beauty and worth of what we here in Arkansas
think of as simple trees. That’s right. We mostly ignore the Arkansas forests,
but where would we be without them? Think West Texas. We lived in Texas for ten
years before we moved back to Arkansas, and in the Kingsville---Corpus Christi area
there are plenty of mesquite and a few scraggly palm trees along the Bayfront
in Corpus Christi. That’s about the size of it. Actually, mesquite might be
classified as a tree, but to an Arkansas boy it’s a bush.
A year
before we moved back to Arkansas, we drove home to El Dorado for Thanksgiving,
and as we drove along highway 82 approaching the town, we pulled over into a
dim road where large oaks towered over the road their branches touching. It was
one of those falls such as we are having this year, and the clear, crisp air
and gorgeous leaves planted a seed in us that ultimately drew us back home to
Arkansas.
This fall
we’re having one of those knockout falls where the hickory, oaks, and maples
are absolutely breathtaking. Back in the
early 1980s I started working with the city of El Dorado and the Arkansas
Forestry Commission to plant downtown trees. Our mayor, at the time was Mike
Dumas, and he agreed to cut three foot squares in the downtown sidewalks for
the planting, and I had funds from a parking lot in a defunct downtown
improvement district to use for the landscaping on public property. I partnered
with the Arkansas Forestry Commission, which at that time, had a 50-50 matching
fund that enabled us to plant a lot of downtown trees. In the early years we
planted as many as 75 trees a year and over the twenty years of planting, 1000
street trees were planted in our downtown.
This year,
as the leaves turned, the Bradford Pear Trees, Sweet Gum, Cypress, Maple,
American Elms, and Oaks have never looked better. I know the Bradford Pear
Trees have picked up some negative comments because, if they aren’t pruned
properly, they will split. However, we still have dozens planted in the 1980s
that have been pruned properly and, as I write, gorgeous. If I had to pick the
most important part of downtown El Dorado’s Renovation, it would be the
downtown trees, and we’re still planting them. When you have as many as a 1000
trees, you will have a natural attrition and that means each year you will
replant 15 to 20 trees. El Dorado’s downtown now has MAD, (Murphy Arts
District) and they have added hundreds of trees to the area a block off the
square. As those trees mature, MAD will look even more spectacular.
Of course, downtown trees look good and they
do attract visitors, but they also take away the city center hot spots that
infrared aerial photos note. Yes, all that downtown concrete and asphalt soaks
us the summer sun and shows up as hot spots, and trees not only give an overall
cooling to the downtown, but they can reduce the summer electrical bills of
adjacent stores by 25%.
Our moto,
The Natural State, should reflect nature in everything we do. However, it rings
hollow if we view blank parking lots without even a blade of grass. Yes, you
can plant trees in parking lots and not lose a single parking place, and get a
bonus. Several studies have shown a landscaped strip center parking lot will
attract more shoppers and have more sales than a strip center without
landscaping, as much as 25% increase in sales from the landscaped parking lot
offering the same merchandise. Of course, that hot spot parking lot will be
cooler than a bare lot and utility costs to the stores will be lower. Honestly,
with those facts, developers should be planting trees by the thousands.
However, old habits are hard to break, and when someone who views a bare lot
that has just been cleared of every living thing to put yet another shopping
center, and remarks, “Well, that’s sure an improvement.” You know we have a
long way to go before we really become The Natural State.
However,
we can learn as we watch other towns and cities wholeheartedly planting trees,
and a most unlikely city is showing us how to do it---Chicago. I know one of the
last things you might think about Chicago is being a tree friendly city, but it
is. We travel to Chicago every year or two and the result of their “Plant a
1,000,000 Tree Campaign,” is evident. Fifteen years ago downtown Chicago had a
smattering of trees, but today their downtown is a lush forest of trees. The
program was so successful that the city started a citywide free tree planning
service. If you would like a tree planted in your yard, just call the city and
they will, at no cost to you, come plant a tree. I haven’t checked lately on
the program to see if it is still in effect, but while it was active there were
thousands more trees planted.
It seems
to me that every town in Arkansas needs a plan similar, and although a lot of
downtown street trees are planted each year, we are woefully under-planted, if
we view the overall need. Little Rock has a great origination called Street
Trees and they have planted 1579 trees over 183 city blocks. What a great
example for other towns in the state to emulate.
Of
course, most of us don’t live in a downtown environment, and we don’t plant
street trees in the sidewalks. However, the need for residential trees in
single family housing is certainly something we should encourage. According to
published reports, home ownership is usually has the highest asset value of a
family, so why not enhance that value? Yes, a significant yard tree can add
thousands of dollars to the appraised value of a house, and according to the
IRS, a casualty loss of such a tree is a significant tax deduction. The idea
that someone would pay several thousand dollars to cut a major tree from their
front yard is a step from reality. Pay a trees service several thousand dollars
and watch as they cut the tree and see your house value drop?
But I’ve
just scratched the surface on the need for city trees. In other sections of the
country where four lane streets serve the heaviest traffic areas in the city, I
see street trees between the lanes of traffic. However, Arkansas cities usually
opt for an endless turn lane and not only that, but they don’t line those busy
streets with sidewalk planting. How difficult would it be for the city to plant
a few thousand crepe myrtle along those streets? Evidently we’re not there yet.
Maybe our grandchildren will plant them.
Monday, November 26, 2018
thenorphletpaperboy: By Their Fruits Ye Shall Know Them
thenorphletpaperboy: By Their Fruits Ye Shall Know Them: “By Their Fruits Ye Shall Know Them” Dear Congressman Hill: Thanks so much for the tiny environmental bone you tossed us by s...
By Their Fruits Ye Shall Know Them
“By Their
Fruits Ye Shall Know Them”
Dear Congressman Hill: Thanks so much for the tiny
environmental bone you tossed us by sponsoring the Flatside Wilderness
Enhancement Act. Of course, as you know, the inclusion of that acreage had already
been recommend, and it became a wilderness protected area when it was
recommended. So, I guess I’m saying “thanks for nothing,” because I don’t think
you give a damn about the environment. Your splashy promotion announcing the
Flatside Wilderness increase rang a hollow note, because in the same week you
touted the increase in the Flatside Wilderness Area, you and the rest of the
Arkansas Congressional House members voted to put the endangered gray wolf back
on the path to extinction by removing it from the Endangered Species List. It
take a lot of gall to wave the environmental flag, and then vote to exterminate
the last remaining gray wolves. That’s right, by taking the gray wolf off the
Endangered Species List you created an environment that will give the Alaska
helicopter wolf hunting boys and the Montana folks with the moto of “The only
good wolf is a dead wolf,” open season to eliminate the gray wolf from the
United States. Removing the gray wolf from the protected list will let
individuals shoot any wolf they see on their property even if it poses no
threat to livestock or humans. It’s
inconceivable that you would vote to remove the few remaining gray wolves from
the Endangered Species List knowing you were voting to make the gray wolf
extinct. I can imagine what will happen in the next few years as ranchers and
farmers start a full scale push to eliminate the gray wolf from the United
State. The only reason the gray wolf exists now is because it is on the
Endangered Species List. Before it was put on the list the gray wolf was facing
extinction. Even today, after a partial recovery, it occupies only 5% of its
former range, and I guess your goal is to cut that range down to zoos or
stuffed wolves in a museum. Congressman, how do you sleep at night knowing that
you will be part of exterminating a species?
So don’t fake carrying about Arkansas’s environment, when
you are part of the group who are actively destroying the state and nation’s
wildlife and forests. When you stay silent on environmental issues as you did
when our National River, the Buffalo, was threatened or when you gave tact support
to Congressman’s Westerman’s “Company Tree Farm Bill”, (Yes, I know it is called
the Sustainable Forest Act---more double talk). This bill, if enacted, would
allow the clearcutting of as much as 10,000 acres of a national forest without
public input. You are no friend of Arkansas’s environment if you don’t oppose
this bill. But maybe that bill is what we might expect from Congressman
Westerman, who, when asked about the factory hog farm polluting the Buffalo River
said, “I believe canoers peeing in the river will create more pollution than
the hog farm.” Congressman, do you know that hog farm puts out as much waste per
year as a city of 20,000? Did you pass sixth grade math?
Yes, I’m so mad at
our Congressional Delegation that I could bite nails, and I have good reason.
This is it in a nutshell: they are in lockstep with the anti-environmental
folks who are doing their best to destroy the wildlife and forests of our
country in order to make a quick buck. Of course, when our National Parks are
being opened for mineral development and the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge is
welcoming drilling rigs, it’s just being publically correct to delist the gray
wolf.
It seems not a day
passes without some regulation being discarded, and I certainly believe in
getting rid of cumbersome and generally worthless hindrances to doing business,
but when political reasons override good science, such as the President’s
pulling or of the Paris Climate Accord, or when he issues a Presidential
directive, based primarily on the promise he made to coal miners or other
special interest groups, or when the Energy Secretary tries to salvage the
closing of coal-fired generator plants, which are being replace by natural gas,
all for political reasons, you have to ask: Are the votes of these coal
dependent states so important that the health of the planet is ignored?
Evidently it must be to the administration in Washington, and as our National
Forests and the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge are opened for exploration and
clearcutting timber harvesting, it seems the goal is to make money at any cost,
and America’s wildlife and forests are expendable, if they are in the way of
making a dollar.
To our Congressional Delegation: You know many of these
actions are ill thought out and most of them are patently wrong. Then why have
you not spoken out against the most flagrant disregard for our forest,
wildlife, and environment? Are you being politically correct? Of course, you
are, and you are also missing a backbone. Being politically correct is spelling
doom for not only the gray wolf, but hundreds of other species that are on the
brink of extinction.
Thank goodness the Arkansas Department of Environmental
Quality has denied the operation permit for the factory hog farm. Being
politically correct almost caused our National River to be polluted. To have a
governor, two senators and four congressmen who wouldn’t stand up and support
the conversation groups who were opposing the hog farm permit is a disgrace.
But the fight to stop the factory hog farm from polluting the Buffalo may not
be over. The hog farm can appeal the denial of the permit and who knows, they
may prevail and the fight to protect the river may not be over. Of all things
in this state that should be non-partisan, the Buffalo National River should
top any list. In case you missed the reasons for the denial let me, as an
expert witness, give you the reason:
This is my conclusion: I believe it is almost a certainty,
if the hog farm is not re-sited off the Boone Limestone and away from Big Creek,
the river will be polluted. This is why: the water that doesn't run off
percolates into the Swiss Cheese Boone Limestone, and that water becomes part
of the groundwater, which ultimately flows into the Buffalo. The remaining surface
water runoff, from 11 fields where the hog lagoon materials is dumped, will
wash into Big Creek and ultimately into the Buffalo. If we're to save the river
the factory hog farm must be closed and sited on a more suitable terrain. Only
then will the river be saved.
.
If you are one of
those politically correct persons who is remaining silent in the face of an
unprecedented attract on our National Forests, wildlife, and the environment,
remember this, and I quote, “When good men remain silent, evil triumphs.” And don’t
worry. If you speak out. I promise people won’t think you’re a Democrat..
Tuesday, November 20, 2018
thenorphletpaperboy: A New Hampshire Journey
thenorphletpaperboy: A New Hampshire Journey: A New Hampshire Journey Early February, 1992, New Hampshire Cheryl, my secretary, has just buzzed me: “Richard, Ken Smith is on th...
A New Hampshire Journey
A New Hampshire Journey
Early February, 1992, New
Hampshire
Cheryl, my secretary, has just buzzed me:
“Richard, Ken Smith is on the phone.”
I’m wondering about the Clinton
campaign as I answer the phone.
“Richard, Ken Smith here.”
Ken
is a good friend and Gov. Clinton’s environmental liaison. He sounds nervous,
and he, blurts out, “Could you get free for a few days to help the campaign?”
”Well,
yeah, I can. What do you need me to do?”
“Richard,
the governor is losing ground in New Hampshire, and Jerry Brown is giving him
hell on his environmental record. The campaign is throwing everything we have
into the primary. If Bill finishes fourth or fifth, it might be all over for
him. The primary is in less than two weeks away, and there is a big meeting
with the League of Conservation Voters coming up. They represent every
environmental group in the state. We have scheduled Hillary to speak for the
governor, but she has a conflict. We want you to take her place. You’re the
President of the Arkansas Wildlife Federation and chairman of P. C. & E.,
which will give you some credibility. ”
“Ken,
I could fly up Wednesday morning and stay until Sunday afternoon. Would that
work?”
“Yes,
the League meets Friday night, and we can get you some radio and newspaper
interviews on the days before you meet with the League.”
*
* *
I
arrive in Manchester and as I struggle through the snow to my hotel room, I
have never been so cold. Before I settle down for the night, I call the campaign
for my schedule.
After
a restless night's sleep, I start my campaign work going from small town to
town talking to reporters from the local radio stations and newspapers about
Gov. Clinton. That goes okay, but what concerns me
is my toughest test. It’s when I go before the New Hampshire Environmental
Coalition—The League of Conservation Voters— Some of those guys have really
bought into Gov. Brown’s campaign because of his outstanding environmental
record. They can smell blood—my blood.
It’s
Friday night and one of the Clinton for President Campaign staff has just
picked me up, and he’s talking nonstop about what questions I might have to
field. It sounds as if a rough road is ahead.
“...and they are not happy at all that
Hillary is not coming.”
As
we arrive at the Dartmouth campus for a meeting of the League, I begin to dread
it. I’m substituting for Hillary, and Gov. Jerry Brown has already talked with
the group, and a lot of the group is sold on him.
It’s
7 o’clock. I walk into the room where some 40 or so presidents of the various
environmental groups are waiting. A campaign worker introduces me, but there is
no applause, just silence. I walk to the front of the room through a stony
glare, which could have cut a brick, looking out at a bunch of frowning,
crossed-arm individuals. It’s a group of
environmentalists facing someone, not just from the South, but from Arkansas,
and they think I’m certainly less than them. I have to become credible, or it’s
all over, so I skip the “glad to be here” stuff:
“Has anyone here ever stood on one of the
100-foot bluffs overlooking the nation's First National River, the Buffalo, and
watched an Eagle swoop down to take a smallmouth bass?”
Of
course, I know no one had, so I’m saying very deliberately, “Well, I have. The Buffalo River is a
national treasure. It is the last free-flowing, major river in our state, and
it winds its way through some of the most scenic vistas in America. What I’m
going to tell you is hard to believe, but three years ago we faced one of the
most critical challenges to the purity of the river. A company filed a permit
to construct a huge landfill—a damn garbage dump—so close to the river that it
was a direct threat to pollute the river. I lead the Arkansas Wildlife
Federation as president, and as a commissioner on the Department of Pollution
Control and Ecology to defeat that permit. If I don’t ever accomplish anything
else, I will go to my grave thanking God, that by working with our governor,
Bill Clinton, we were able to stop this landfill from being built."
I can tell the group is beginning to relax, but I’m not
through.
“By the way, I noticed in my driving around
your state, you have some great rivers. I especially liked the Upper Merrimack.
I wonder what you would think if the Corps of Engineers put forth a plan to
make 28 bend cuts in the river—for barge traffic? You know, make it a ditch.”
Well,
that gets some attention, and I’m letting it sink in for a few extra seconds.
“Well, let me tell you about a bend-cut
fight that took place on a beautiful Southern river, the Ouachita. Believe it
or not, the Corp proposed 28 bend cuts on the Ouachita, and they were supported
by our congressman and local state representative. The fight lasted nearly two
years, and we marshaled every environmental group in Arkansas and Louisiana to
fight the bend-cuts. When Governor Bill Clinton came out in opposition to the
bend-cuts, it turned the tide. Today the Ouachita River would be a ditch, if
the people of Arkansas, led by our governor, hadn’t stopped the Corp.”
Now,
there is some nodding of heads, and they seem more receptive to hear the rest
of my speech as I tell them Bill Clinton has the heart of an environmentalist.
“....but—this is important—he is not from
Vermont or California—he is from Arkansas. And his record, supporting the
environment should be considered based on the person, not on what he has
accomplished in an environmentally friendly state.” I can tell the audience
is receptive. I’ve just told them a colorful squirrel-hunting story, and they
are laughing. I’m finishing with this:
“Governor Clinton, if elected President,
will bring more resolve to protect and enhance the environment than any—and I
mean ANY previous President.” I pause and then I continue, “and I’ll assure you he’ll use this resolve
to make a huge difference.” Then I pause again, and as an afterthought, I
say, ”I know our primary interest is in
the environment, but we also want to be sure our President is mentally capable
of handling the job as President of our Country. In that regard, let me assure
you, that without any doubt, he is more intellectually qualified—by far—than
any other candidate. And in closing, I would be amiss if I didn’t mention
Hillary, the governor’s wife. I regret her schedule prevented her from being
here tonight. Governor Clinton is certainly an intellectual giant, but the only
person I have ever met who is his equal is Hillary. If you elect Governor
Clinton President, you will be getting two for the price of one.”
Finally, applause. They know I’m one of them,
and my endorsement of Gov. Bill Clinton carries some weight. The Clinton staff
members are all smiles.
Monday, November 12, 2018
thenorphletpaperboy: On to Ouarzazate
thenorphletpaperboy: On to Ouarzazate: On to Ouarzazate Morocco Part Two The French couple is driving off on the road that we have named “The Road...
On to Ouarzazate
On to Ouarzazate
Morocco Part Two
The French
couple is driving off on the road that we have named “The Road to Hell” toward
their doom in the Atlas Mountains, we think, as we head on to Ouarzazate. In
twenty minutes we’re driving into town on a road lined with tall eucalyptus
trees planted by the French, and a little later we’re checking into a nice
hotel in the center of town. We note a group of what looks like Americans having
drinks in the bar, and after a short conversation, we find out a movie is being
shot in town with Tommy Lee Jones as the feature actor.
It’s the
next morning, and we’re driving to the edge of the Atlas Mountains to visit the
ancient casaba of Ait Benhaddou, a World Heritage Site. It’s a walled village
that has been used many times as a movie background. Several of the Jesus themed
movies have been shot here, and it’s like a step back in time as we wander
through the streets. The old village has been preserved without any changes,
and it is truly a breathtaking sight. We’re only staying a few days in Ouarzazate,
and we’re spending them just nosing about the old city, going to the souk, and
in general just enjoying our vacation. The hotel is good, and the food is much
the same as we’ve had everywhere in Morocco. It’s called Tagine, which is
similar to a southern pot roast with potatoes and carrots.
It’s
the next day and we’re heading to Zagora, an old caravan jumping off town right
on the edge of the Sahara Desert. I’m pulling into town, when I see a sign,
‘Road to Timbuktu, 52 days by camel.” Zagora, a town of around 35,000, sits
between the desert and the mountains. It’s getting dark and since there are no
streets lights, I’m easing down the main street, trying not to run over anyone.
Our hotel doesn’t look that bad, but as
we settle in, we realize it is the worst hotel any of us have ever stayed in.
The beds are awful and the food is about as good as the beds. However, we
aren’t going to spend a lot of time in town. We have arranged a camel riding
tour into the desert, and we’re going to camp out under the Sahara Desert
skies.
I’ve been riding this camel for nearly four
hours, and I’m aching. The best way I can describe it is to think of strapped
to an erratic rocking chair without any padding for several hours. I don’t have
much fat on me, and my bottom is just bone on hard saddle. Finally, we ride
into camp and about that time the Camel Tour folks drive up in a Land Rover to
fix dinner.
Actually,
the dinner is pretty good, and of course it’s Tagine again and the meat, I’ve
just found out, is camel, but they did say it was young camel. Well, I’ve been
hot all day, but as it gets dark it’s much colder. The Tour folks who prepared
dinner have built a large bonfire and a rather plump belly dancer, who could
use a trip to the dentist, has just appeared. A couple of our bunch---who I
suspect have had a drink or two---are dancing with the belly dancer, but I’m
ready to lie down, and Vertis and I are heading to our tent where we have a
backpack of clothes and some necessities. I’m tired, and I know it won’t take
me long to drift off to sleep.
I
guess I’ve slept several hours, but I’m awake and about to freeze to death. My gosh the temperature drops like a rock
at night in the desert, and I’ve got to put on some more clothes. Where are
they? Okay, found something. I’m putting on everything in the backpack, and it’s
enough to warm me up and let me go back to sleep.
It’s
daylight and I need a cup of coffee in the worst way, and I’m about to leave
the tent when Vertis looks at me. “For God’s sake, Richard! You have on my
clothes.” Yeah, I’m a little embarrassed, but I’m thinking at least I was warm.
Breakfast
is mostly hard rolls and jam, but it’s filling, and I’m ready to head back to
Zagora, and I hope it’s not on the back of a camel…but I think that is wishful
thinking ‘cause I see our camels being saddled up, and I know it will be
another four hours on the back of one, and my bottom is already sore.
Finally,
we’re back in Zagora, and I can’t believe how good this sorry bed feels.
Tomorrow, we’re driving from Zagora to Taroudant a larger city that still has
its old city walls. It is an ancient city and its history is pretty amazing.
During the inter-tribal wars centuries ago all 30,000 occupants of the city
were killed when the city fell. It’s the easiest drives we’ll make. I’m looking
at some scraggly trees along the road, but not at the trees. The trees are full
of goats, and not on just the low limbs. Heck there are goats grazing thirty
feet off the ground.
We’re
staying at a well-known hunting resort on the edge of town and the room,
restaurant, and hotel itself are first class. Well, this is the end of the
together part of the trip and one couple will leave in a couple of days, and
then we’ll leave a day after that.
It’s
the next day, and one of our group made the mistake of drinking tap water. He
has diarrhea. “I thought this was such a
nice place that the water would be okay.” He broke the cardinal rule of “Never
drink the tap water in a third world country.”
Vertis
and I are driving to the airport in Marrakech to fly out and connect with our flight
home, and we’ll be crossing the Atlas Mountains further west, but the road is
paved and certainly not anything like the Road to Hell shortcut.
I’ve
been driving about two hours with two hours to go, and we’re into the mountains
when a red light flashes on the dashboard of our Renault rent car. It’s not
just a warning. It say Emergency! Service at once! Well, when you are half way
through the mountains that causes a panic, and I’m pulling over to check the
oil. I’m thinking oil pan was damaged on The Road to Hell and is leaking oil.
It’s thirty minutes later, and I can’t figure out how to raise the hood.
I’m
driving on with the emergency light flashing and in a small mountain town, I
manage to find a garage service station. Twenty minutes later and the mechanic can’t
figure out how to raise the hood, so it’s cross your fingers and head for the
airport.
I’m
breathing a sigh of relieve as I pull up to the rent-a-car place in our
somewhat beat-up Renault with its flashing emergency light, turn in parking slot,
drop off my keys, and head to check in for our flight home.
Sunday, November 4, 2018
thenorphletpaperboy: Dear-tree Mail
thenorphletpaperboy: Dear-tree Mail: Dead-Tree Mail My first class home and office mail is slowly drying up, and that’s beca...
Dear-tree Mail
Dead-Tree Mail
My
first class home and office mail is slowly drying up, and that’s because dead
tree mail is an out-of-date method of communicating. If your dead-tree (paper mail) is not being
reduced, you’re living in the past. A lot of us have already dropped our hardline
phone, and our utilities, car payment, and other expenses are being handled
without a paper trail. Welcome to the
Digital Age, and I can guarantee you, there is no turning back. Going forward
means a steady reduction in first class mail and the use of paper. In the near
future, all but a few dead-tree legal notices will be digital. I know that
sounds a little off the wall, but five years ago when someone said telephone hardlines
would be phased out, nobody thought they would disappear so quickly.
We have a 35 bed executive inn in
El Dorado, Union Square Guest Quarters, and over the past six months, we’ve
removed all of our hardline phones. Just two years ago we wouldn’t have dared to
make such a move, but today----not one complaint. Let’s face reality, and
reality is digital, Bluetooth, and the Internet all of which together have made
hardline phones and a lot of dead-tree-mail obsolete. Of course, there are
several overriding reasons. Basically the products they produce are cheaper and
of better quality.
The
future of digital communication is becoming easier to see every day as more and
more advertisers, utility companies, and newspapers are switching to
digital. Of course they just call it “going
paperless” but what they are saying is stop using dead-tree-mail to pay your
bills, and even stop using dead-tree money to make your purchases. Do it
digitally. Of course the reasons are varied, but it boils down to saving money
and making the obvious daily tasks easier and more efficient.
I’m
certainly not leading the charge to get rid of dead-tree mail. Actually I’m just
being swept along with the changes to digital, but I’m getting there. I haven’t
read a hard copy of this newspapers for a long time, and as strange as that may
sound to some of my readers who are reading my column holding a dead-tree newspaper,
I probably won’t ever read the Democrat-Gazette any other way. Actually,
getting used to having the paper on your iPad is so easy and convenient that
once you start doing it, you wouldn’t even think of picking up a hard copy of
the paper. But the daily newspaper is just the tip of the iceberg, if we
consider the overwhelming potential economic advantage of digital transmission
of data, money, and news has over the traditional dead-tree mail.
The
next digital step is to get ready to lose your checkbook. Yes, I know that
seems so unlikely that you could easily dismiss that possibility, but let me
give you an example of a no-check society. My early 20s grandson borrowed a
$100 from me recently---sound familiar? Yes? But he paid it back, and I know
you’re shaking your head, but this is the way it happened.
“Hey,
I’ve got enough in my bank account to pay you back that hundred you loaned me?”
“Great!
Write me a check.”
“Uh,
well I don’t have any checks.”
“You
mean you’re out of checks?”
“No,
I don’t use checks.”
“Well,
how…?”
“I
have a debit card, and I use it for everything. Just give me your bank account
number, and I’ll transfer a hundred into it.”
Yes,
I was shocked until I thought about the loan payment. It wasn’t just a young
person who hadn’t bothered to get a checking account, it was an exclamation
point to where this digital world is going. Then I remembered that I receive
several other money transfers to my bank account each month; something I hadn’t
paid much attention to.
Well, the question is, should we
embrace the digital change in the way we do business, get paid, and get
entertained, or stick with our crinkly, old dead-tree newspapers and checks? To answer that we must consider why companies
and individuals are going digital. Yes, the reason is a very simple one. It
increases productivity. Yes, it all boils down to making us more productive,
and when we are more productive the companies we work for produce more goods
for less cost, and they make more money so they can pay their investors more
money, their workers higher pay, and the consumer gets their products cheaper.
It all boils down to a higher standard of living for everybody concerned.
If we look back at our country
and visualize how this country became an economic powerhouse, increasing
productivity is a big part of our success. Our economic growth is a factor of the
amount of goods each person produces, and that translates into striving to find
ways to produce more during the same number of working hours. Embracing digital
will not only make you more productive, but it serves as a way to increase your
income indirectly, and thus give you a better quality of life.
A quick look around the world will
tell you that the countries who have a horrible quality of life are the ones
whose people are the least productive. Of course, many of those countries leave
women out of the workforce, and the loss of 50% of a counties ability to
produce goods equals a lower standard of living for the whole county. Gender equality
would make not only those countries more productive, but it would do the same
thing for our country.
Well,
what does the future look like? Take a look at new stores and restaurants in New
York City or California, and you can see it coming. Restaurants that take only
debit or credit cards and stores that are stocked with goods but without a
cashier. In those stores, when you remove an item from the shelf your debit or
credit card is automatically charged. All of that translate into allowing a
company or an individual to produce more products or services at less cost and
therefore create more value.
Of course, we already have some digital
streaming entertainment options, but that is just a trickle of what’s to come.
Would you like to watch the Metropolitan Opera live---at home? Maybe you won’t
this year, but it will come and not only will you have your entertainment
venues increased, and of course your quality of life ticked up, but the Met
will have millions of new customers, the performers will get paid more, and
your digital ticket to the Met will be less.
As you can imagine, by going
digital, goods will drop in price, entertainment will be more varied,
businesses will make more money, and workers will make a higher salary. Look at
the difference between our grandparent’s lives and our quality of life today.
The big difference between then and now is the amount of value produced per
hour worked.
Yes,
the digital age is upon us, and the faster we join the rush to become more
digital, the better quality of life we will have.
Sunday, October 28, 2018
thenorphletpaperboy: A Moroccan Shortcut
thenorphletpaperboy: A Moroccan Shortcut: A MOROCCAN SHORTCUT Marrakech, Morocco, September 15, 2006 I’m the tour guide since Vertis and ...
A Moroccan Shortcut
A MOROCCAN SHORTCUT
Marrakech, Morocco, September
15, 2006
I’m the tour guide since Vertis and I’ve driven through
Morocco twice during our time in Libya, and we know the roads. We’re with 3
other couples, and I expect it to be a fun trip with good friends. Our group is
in two cars, and I’m driving the lead car as we leave Marrakech heading across
the Atlas Mountains to Warzazat, the movie producing capital of Morocco. A
number of American movies have been shot there, and one is currently in
production.
I been on the road to
Warzazat through the pass twice, and I don’t think we’ll have any trouble. It’s
a steep, winding road, but it’s paved. The drive through the pass usually takes
two hours.
We’re leaving early, but I’ve just been pulled over by
the local police, and now I am paying a cash fine to the officer for
questionable speeding. A few minutes later and we’re whizzing toward the pass
without any problems. Just on the other side of the pass, about ten miles off
the main highway, there is an ancient casaba. We decide to take a look, and in
20 minutes we pull up to a remarkable sight. A large multi-floored series of
mud plastered buildings are spectacular, and we’re spending a couple of hours
touring the partially ruined structures.
The buildings are a major
attraction, but the families who lived in this particular casaba cooperated
with the French when the country was a French Colony, and they took the
French side when Morocco sought their independence. The result was, anybody who had worked with the French or helped the French during the independence struggle, was shunned. The families fled to France. However, the stain of pro-French tainted the casaba, and even though it could be a very interesting tourist attraction, it was left to survive the elements. The use of a mud-like stucco for construction means the building must be repaired after rains, and if the structure isn’t kept up the building will slowly crumble.
French side when Morocco sought their independence. The result was, anybody who had worked with the French or helped the French during the independence struggle, was shunned. The families fled to France. However, the stain of pro-French tainted the casaba, and even though it could be a very interesting tourist attraction, it was left to survive the elements. The use of a mud-like stucco for construction means the building must be repaired after rains, and if the structure isn’t kept up the building will slowly crumble.
We’re about to leave, when I pull out our Michelin Road Map
to see how much farther it is to Warzazat. As I look at the map I notice a
secondary road leading from where we are straight to Warzazat. The map has the
road yellow, indicating it’s not completely paved, but it’s a much shorter
route, and I suggest we take it instead of backtracking to the main road. After
all it’s only about 40 miles, and the main road is twice that far. It’s a
shortcut that will save us an hour of driving.
“Hey, everybody; check out this map. If we take this
shortcut and don’t go back to the main road, we’ll be in Warzazat in less than
an hour. This Michelin Map says it’s a secondary road, but it shouldn’t be too
bad. It’s less than 40-miles.”
Everyone agrees, and we head across some of the Atlas
Mountain’s foothills in the direction of Warzazat. After about 30 minutes of
driving, I’m becoming concerned, because the foothills are turning out be the understatement
of the year. I think we’re back in the center of Atlas Mountains as the road
winds up and up and up. I’m guessing we’ve come about 15-miles, and I’m about
to panic. The road is a lot narrower and the terrain is actually rugged mountainous.
I want turn around, but I figure we are over halfway, so after we talk, the
vote is to continue on. Ten minutes later and I know we have made a huge
mistake. The road winds higher and higher into the rugged Atlas Mountains, and
at times the rocky road is only slightly wider than our car. On top of that the
road is hugging the side of a mountain. One slip and we’ll tumble 1500 feet
straight down into the valley. I take a deep breath as I look down at the
valley below.
“My God, Richard! Your back tire
was hanging over the cliff on that last curve!” Edwin yells.
But dropping into the valley and
dying is only part of the problem. As we continue, the road is so rocky that I
am sure we are going to knock off the oil pan and be stranded. At times the
cars drag on rocks so badly that I just cringe.
“Oh, my gosh!”
It’s a fork in the road, and
to the right there’s a little village hanging on the side of the mountain. Then
to my left, I spot a man on the side of the road. Diane can speak a little
French so she hops out and after some hand waving, he sends us to the left toward
Warzazat, and now we’re going up the steepest road I have ever seen.
“Oh, no!”
We’re hanging off the side of
the mountain and here comes a tractor. Of course there’s not room to pass. A
bicycle couldn’t pass us. I’m out of the car talking to the driver negotiating
with him, and about $20 dollars later, he’s backing up for about a hundred
yards to let us pass.
Now, we’re passing a tiny village and kids are putting
rocks in the road to make us stop, where they can offer to move them for a few
coins, but I’m so ready to get that ride over with that I just run over the rocks,
and I can hear them banging against the oil pan. Steve, the driver of the other
car stops, pays a little money and then follows. Finally, we’re dropping into
the valley, but as we round a curve, I see Steve’s car sliding into a rock
wall. We have walkie-talkies and Steve yells, “I can’t go on!” Well, he scraped
the side of the car, drug the oil pan across bare rock but did go on. I’m glad
we took the full insurance for the rent-a-cars.
The road is better now and
after a few more miles and one hellacious hill, we’re on the main road to
Warzazat. As soon as we pull onto the pavement everyone jumps out of the cars
cheering. We feel like kissing the ground, we are so happy. We’re composing
ourselves, when a car drives up.
It’s a French couple. The man walks over and asks the
condition of the road we had just traveled. We wave, yell, and tell him the
horror stories of nearly being killed, but he just politely smiles, gets back
in his car and drives down the road we had left. I guess the Frenchman thought
we’re spoiled Americans and not used to rough, back roads. I’ve driven halfway
across Libya without any roads, across the mountain of Mexico, been through
Colorado back country and south Arkansas swamp roads, but in all of my travels,
I’ve never seen a road even as close to as bad as that Moroccan road. As the
couple drives off it’s getting dark, and of all the bad things I can imagine,
the worst would be to try and drive that road at night. I’m sure they’ll end up
at the bottom of one of those canyons somewhere deep in the Atlas Mountains.
Monday, October 22, 2018
thenorphletpaperboy: I'm for increasing the Arkansas minimum wage
thenorphletpaperboy: I'm for increasing the Arkansas minimum wage: I’m for Increasing the Arkansas Minimum Wage I noticed in the paper recently that our governor, lieutenant governor, and th...
I'm for increasing the Arkansas minimum wage
I’m for Increasing the Arkansas Minimum Wage
I noticed in the
paper recently that our governor, lieutenant governor, and three of our four congressmen
will vote no on the ballot proposal to raise the minimum wage. That brought
back memories of how I was disinvited to not be a part of a ski vacation. It
was a number of years back, but the subject matter of the discussion around the
dinner table that night is still pertain to today’s minimum wage discussion.
The group of men on that ski trip were primarily executives representing a
number of companies who were headquartered in the United States, but had
factories in other countries.
One evening
after dinner, the table discussion centered around why companies had
manufacturing facilities right across the border in Mexico. As the conversation continued, it was obvious
the primary reason was because labor costs were much lower. Then a newspaper story
about overseas manufacturing crossed my mind. The article focused on labor
cost. However, what caught my attention was the conditions of the workers. In
some countries, the pay was so low that workers were literally living in
refrigerator crates or something so sub-standard in housing that we would all
be appalled to even think about living in. It was obvious these workers were
not receiving a living wage. Then the discussion moved to what is a living
wage, and I took the position that a company should feel an obligation to pay
its workers enough to assure them simple necessities such has housing, food,
and medical care. The companies should pay its workers enough to where the
employees could purchase these necessities. That got some negative looks, and I
knew I was treading on shaky ground, when one of the executives commented.
“No, Richard. It
is not our responsibility to pay any more than the going wage.”
“Really?”
“Of course not,
Richard. We’re not the Salvation Army.”
Well, that
brought a chuckle from around the table from everyone but me, and then, when I replied,
I knew my comments made sure I wouldn’t be with the group when they returned
next year.
“I read recently
where some workers who were employed by American companies overseas were being
paid so little that they were living in refrigerator crates. If you had workers living in those conditions
wouldn’t you feel an obligation to pay them enough where they could have decent
housing?”
Yes, that got an
icy stare from more than one of the executives, and after another man reiterated
the pay was based on local standards, I replied, and I knew that my comment
confirmed an invite for a return trip with this group wouldn’t be forthcoming.
“How would you
like to sleep in a refrigerator crate after working 12 hours a day being paid
twenty-five cents an hour?”
Of course, after
that zinger the host of the meeting could see things about to become a shouting
match, and he said: “Let’s go into the den for an after dinner drink.” Which
everyone nodded, and I left the table knowing I wouldn’t be invited back next
year.
Yes, I know
workers in the USA aren’t living in refrigerator crates, but are the people we
depend on for our great standard of living being paid a living wage? Of course,
it’s not just the unskilled labors, but its professionals such as school
teachers, who many times are forced into second jobs just to make ends
meet. Considering the current Arkansas
minimum wage, it’s obvious we are behind the times and numerous other states
are considerable ahead of us, and leading the way, Amazon has just raised its
minimum wage to $15/hour. The ballot proposal won’t solve all of the problems
we have with low wages, inadequate health care, high taxes, and other problems,
but it will help.
We know
companies will complain that higher wages will drive them out of business, but
that was the complaint back in the early 1900s when unions were formed and
child labor laws were passed. The resulting higher wages from that time forward
have made the United States the unequaled economic powerhouse in the world. Along
with higher wages came a working class of people who bought more goods, sent
their kids to college, and the increased productivity made our manufacturing
companies more money.
Of course, of
all times to increase the minimum wage this is the best of times, because the
country is stronger than ever after rebounding from the Great Recession, and
the recent huge corporate tax cut has given corporations in this country record
earnings. Just take a look at some of the quarterly earnings reports that are
flooding in, and you will be shocked at the astronomical amount of money
corporations are making.
Now, let me
comment about the opposition to the proposal. But before I do, I’ll give you my
prospective on the political situation in our country. I believe one of the
strongest parts of our democracy are the two major political parties that vie
for congressional seats and the presidency. If one party ever dominates the
system to the point where the other party is irrelevant, we will have seriously
weakened our democratic foundations. I
believe our country is a series of checks and balances and that goes for our
political system. What I’m saying is that the Obama administration and the
Trump administration are good for our country in a way that is so much a part
of our underlying democratic strength that it can’t be overemphasized.
So after saying
that, you might understand why, after Trump was elected I didn’t wail and
panic, because it was just the pendulum swinging back and forth and the
American people, the swingers of the pendulum, wanted to move it back closer to
the center. Well, that has happened. In fact the pendulum passed the center
several months back. But back to the discussion on the Minimum Wage. It
shouldn’t have surprised you that our Republican Governor, Republican
Lieutenant Governor, and three Republican Congressmen opposed raising the
minimum wage. That’s what Republicans do, and since where talking about what
Republicans do, let’s take it a little further.
We’re already
said Republican are for lower wages for workers, but they don’t stop there.
They are against health care for those workers, retirement funding, and a host
of other benefits for the average workers. But they are for a lot of stuff too.
Lower taxes…for corporations. Fewer environmental regulations for corporations,
and they used to be for free trade, but not anymore. Ask an east Arkansas
soybean farmer how much less he or she is receiving after our president did
away with free trade.
Whether you are
a Republican, Independent, or a Democrat, I urge you to vote for an increase in
the Arkansas Minimum wage proposal. History proves an ever increasing minimum
wage, especially when the country is in an economic upswing is not only more
money in the pocket-books of hourly workers, it actually boosts corporate
profits by increasing the demand for goods. Arkansas has spent too many years
on the lower rung of wages. It’s time to give our hourly workers a raise.
Monday, October 15, 2018
Gender Discrimination In Arkansas
Gender
Discrimination in Arkansas.
In overall gender
discrimination the state of Arkansas ranks 41st out of 50 behind
Mississippi 30th and Alabama 33rd. Almost all of the low
rankings are in southern states, where women’s rights have long languished. The
survey covers equal pay, political appointment, health care, and several other critical
items all of which are places where gender discriminations occurs. But I know some of you who are reading this
don’t believe women are discriminated against. Sure, women have equal rights, but that doesn't keep them from suffering
discrimination. Equal rights also doesn’t
mean women get equal pay for doing the same job as men, and equal rights
certainly doesn’t keep corporation boards and public commissions from being
made up of all men.
Of course, it’s worldwide discrimination that women are
subjected to. Up until recently, in Saudi Arabia, women couldn’t even drive a
car unless accompanied by a man. Yes, it clearly is a worldwide problem, but it
can be tackled locally. Of course, we Americans always like
to think we’re leading the world in just about everything you can imagine, and
hey, we’re doing that in a lot of ways, and I couldn’t be prouder of our country,
but gender equality is not something to brag about.
Just
to give you an example of how far behind we are, let’s consider the new cabinet
members of Spain: 11 are women and 6 are men. It’s almost impossible to even
imagine an American Presidential cabinet having a majority of women. That’s how
far behind we are, and most of the entrenched men who make up the leadership of
our corporations, state, and government entities, the ones who make the promotions
and appointments, consider a token woman equal representation.
If
we consider the inequality of women on a worldwide basis, the economic
potential that would result if we elevated women too an equal position is
staggering. One study says if women worldwide were brought to equal status with
men, productivity and the subsequent creation of goods would soar as much as
one trillion dollars a year. Naturally, that translates into a giant increase
in a worldwide standard of living.
Let’s
consider just a couple of the all-male Arkansas boards, and for a moment forget
about the hundreds more and several thousand additional boards with a token
women: First the Arkansas Highway Commission: If an equal number of women were
on that board, I don’t have a doubt that our highway right-of-ways would be
more attractive, and that the 50 yards of bare ground on either side of our
roads would be reduced, and we wouldn’t have an interstate running through a
historic neighborhood. If the Game and Fish Commission had an equal number of
women, the lakes and rivers that have Game and Fish Facilities would be more
attractive, have proper restrooms, and the Commission’s publications would
feature recipes and other ways to prepare wildlife. And to mention another
board with a token woman if women were equally represented on the Board of.
Commissioner of the Department of Environmental Quality, there wouldn’t be a
hog farm on the Buffalo River Watershed and Arkansas would have adopted all the
standards of the National Clean Water Act. Those are just my observation from
working around women. If you want a job done give it to a busy women. She’ll
get it done.
Across this country
there are thousands of all male boards. Can anyone say the only qualified
candidates for these positions are men? Of course not. So why do our male
elected officials, continue to appoint a much higher percentage of men, and
appoint only men to certain boards? Of course it's discrimination. There is no
other word for it. It is discrimination as sure as the South's Jim Crow laws
were, and don’t give me that old whine, “It has always been a male board.”
I’ll continue the
Gender Discrimination in Arkansas column with a question for the candidates for
governor, Asa Hutchinson, Jared Henderson, and Mark West.
To the candidates: The Arkansas Game and
Fish Commission and the State Highway Commission are all male appointees. Will you commit to appoint a woman to the
board of each of the above commissions when the next vacancy occurs, and will
you work to promote gender equality on all of the boards and commissions under
your authority?
To the candidates: This is a yes or no
question, and any other answer such as “the most qualified candidate” or “no
answer,” will be considered a “no” and be published as a “no” in my column.
Actually, trying to hide under the “best candidate” is so discriminatory that
it’s a disgrace to infer that out of over a million Arkansas women there aren’t
two that are qualified for the above noted commissions. And just to be sure the
candidates can’t say they didn’t read my column, I’m sending them the question
by registered mail.
Of course,
trying to hide behind, “It’s always been a male only board, or men are more qualified
because they hunt or fish or drive more trucks or more business orientated to
business is just trying to come up with reason to discriminate against the +50%
of the population in our fair state. For a person to say “Equal pay for equal
work would be hardship on many employers,” deserves a slap in the face---if I
were a women---and a man said that to me. The facts are self-evident with the
thousands upon thousands of women across our state who keep our economy humming,
while doing the work for so many male company heads.
On January 1st, 2018, Iceland became the first country in the world to make
pay inequality illegal. Companies that cannot prove pay equality will be
fined almost $500 a day if the gap continues to exist. Yes, equal pay for equal
work is a worldwide problem, and we do need the ERA (Equal Rights Amendment) to
move the process along.
Studies have
shown that having an equal number of women on a board or commission actually greatly
improves the work and mission of the commission. Even
a token woman board member matters to. Companies in every sector, not just
tech, perform 5 percent better when they have even just one woman on the board,
according to Credit Suisse, which examined 3,000 companies. There is a current
bill just signed by the governor of California that mandate at least one woman
on every company board headquartered in the state.
The two state commissions
I listed are just a fraction of the boards and commissions across the state,
but they are glaring examples of the inequality present in every community in
the state, and if you don’t think that’s a true statement, check with your city
hall. You will be shocked.
The intent of
this column is to focus on the gender inequality present on the most visible of
the many state boards and commissions, but the problem begins in the selection
of local boards and commissions. I urge you to confront your local candidates
for elective office to commit publically to work for equal representation by
women on all city boards.
Wednesday, October 3, 2018
thenorphletpaperboy: Electric Scooters, Sidewalks, and Trails
thenorphletpaperboy: Electric Scooters, Sidewalks, and Trails: Electric Scooters, Sidewalks, and Trails “ Times They Are A-Changing. ” If I remember right, that’s an old Bob Dylan song ...
Electric Scooters, Sidewalks, and Trails
Electric Scooters, Sidewalks, and
Trails
“Times They Are A-Changing.”
If I remember right, that’s an old Bob Dylan song that cropped up in the 60s,
and things they were a-changing, but nothing like they are a-changing
today. I know some of the rapid changes
seem to be gradual, but that’s because we live in a world that seems to be
spinning faster and faster, and a today’s gradual changes would have been
earthshaking events that would have rattled us back in the ancient 60s. So,
let’s look at a change that is coming down the pike faster than anything I have
ever seen.
Are you ready to ride an electric scooter to work? No? Well, I think,
in five years, 20 percent of Arkansawyers, who live in town, will be riding
scooters to work every day. I know you’re shaking your head, but get ready,
they’re coming, and in places such as Fayetteville (Just try to find a parking
place near the University during classes) the numbers will be above 50%. Yes,
electric scooters are coming, and I can’t wait to ride to work on one. The head-shakers are going at it again, but
those are the same ones who shook their heads at the idea that El Dorado would
have Uber. We do.
Here in Arkansas it’s hard to imagine riding an electric scooter
anywhere, but check out major cities, and you’ll find the demand for scooters
outstrips the supply. It’s easy to see why. For short rides to work on any city
street, the scooters are quicker, more economical, easier to park and maneuver
in traffic than any other method of transportation. Your parking problems are
solved and every mile you ride is a plus for the environment. That’s why they
are sweeping the country.
Yes, scooters are the hot item right now in transportation, but
companion links such as sidewalks and trails will naturally pick up more
support. After all going back and forth to work is only one part of our
transportation needs, and millions of folks live within a half mile of where they shop, dine, and are
entertained. Scooters are perfect for those little trips. But in order to
really link with our coming transportation needs, we should work to extend
sidewalks and trails to as many parts of our towns and cities as is reasonably
possible, and that’s almost everywhere. All trails and city streets can be used
by scooters, but our exercise and bicycle needs should also be a priority for
every town and city in our state. We should try to emulate cities like Seattle.
Believe it or not, 30% of their downtown workers either walk, ride a bike, or
now ride a scooter to work.
Back in 2001 and 2002 Dr. Edwin Glasser from the University of Arkansas
led a design team to El Dorado, and after a year’s work developed a comprehensive
report aimed at helping El Dorado revitalize itself. It covered the entire
incorporated town and included the Municipal Airport, Mellor Park Mall, the
re-use of abandoned buildings, and transportation needs. As a part of this
study an extensive trail study was included. Well, it’s been 18 years since
that study was completed, so I know you’re interested in how much we have
accomplished that was in the sturdy. An abandoned brick building in the south
part of town was restored as a community center. That’s it! The rest of the
study was put on the shelf. Dr. Glasser and team were obviously ahead of their
time.
However, if we dust off the trail study it gives our town an outline of
how to connect various parts of the community. Dr. Glasser proposed trail plan
is structured to give individuals in a community the option to walk or bike, or
now ride a scooter from one area of the community to another. In other words,
trails can be used as an exercise route for an individual, but they should have
a destination. Dr. Glasser’s proposed trail map has trails from the Municipal
Golf Course to Downtown, and from Downtown to the shopping areas on North West
Avenue. Trails are not just circles around a park. If you want a circle trail,
go to your local high school and walk around the track. Trail should have a
destination.
And now to sidewalks; as Cadillacs developed fins in the 60s our cities
and towns stopped putting in sidewalks. You can easily spot the older parts of
any Arkansas city or town by noting the sidewalks, and as you travel to the
newer parts of town watch as the sidewalks disappear. As we look back to see
how design-stupid fins on a Cadillac were, we can also see how short-sighted
our city planners were to not have mandated sidewalks everywhere pedestrians
walk.
Every city in our state should budget money to add and extend
sidewalks, and every city should have in its building code a requirement for
sidewalks to be put in every area where pedestrians are present. It’s the smart
thing to do, and it’s the overwhelming focus in cities that are on the
forefront of quality of life communities.
In El Dorado, we have two major shopping areas, downtown and North West
Avenue, our primary entry-way into the city. Those typical shopping areas are
present in almost every town in our state. In El Dorado we have new brick
sidewalks downtown, but the half mile walk to the North West Avenue shopping
area, or on out another three-quarters of a mile to the Walmart Supercenter will
put your life at risk if you walk down North West Avenue with four lanes of
fast traffic, an endless turn lane, and of course, no sidewalks, but I see
folks trying to walk it every day jumping upon the curb as traffic whizzes by.
The city should have put in sidewalks when the shopping expansion from downtown
to North West Avenue happened, but it’s not too late. El Dorado has, as every
town in the state does, plenty of right-of-ways to put in sidewalks, trees, and
underground utilities, but it’s like pulling teeth to get any action. I’ve
offered to plant 50 trees down the Avenue, and all the city has to do is cut
the hole in the right-of ways they own. I’m still waiting.
I’ve used El Dorado as an example, but every town in our state has the
same problem. We do have some cities adding sidewalks, trees, and underground
utilities, but it’s like pouring molasses in January. We’re moving at Glacial
Speed.
America’s west coast cities are leading the wave of the future, and if
you want to see how an Arkansas town might look in 20 years, you should travel
to any of the cities in that area. Some folks may not like their politics, but
we will emulate them. It’s just a matter of time, and as surely as we pick up
our cell phone or check our Facebook—all developed on the west coast—someday, we’ll
ride scooters and put in sidewalks and trails.
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