From the Styx by Peggy Tibbetts


Honey
January 30, 2007, 1:37 pm
Filed under: Colorado, Silt, ann ramsey, dogs, river park

Hey Doglanders – River Park Peeps – we lost one of our own last weekend. Ann Ramsey’s dog Honey crossed the Rainbow Bridge. Honey was that sweet little cocker spaniel with the gi-normous spirit. To know her was to love her.

Ann Ramsey and Honey

My friend, Ann expresses it best with her poetry –

Honey
by Ann Ramsey
October 16, 1991 – January 27, 2007

Of course, no one could know you
the way that I do …
You are subtle, like the air
that paints the sky blue;
You’re my wildflower
where divinity grows;
My best teacher of love,
as far as that goes.
Forever giving, you give
without end …
The more love I ask for,
the more love you spend.
Whether before my eyes
or on my mind’s shelf,
You are the very essence
of Love itself.

Changing Tenses
by Ann Ramsey

The Past will kill you
if you cling to it;
The Future will embrace you
if you bring to it
The Song that Today
has to sing to it.

Dedicated to Ann and Honey with deepest sympathy and love.

Ann Ramsey is the author of “Me, The Tree”. Visit her websites:
http://www.methetree.com/

Ann’s Animal Artistry
http://www.annsanimalartistry.com/

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River Park Annexation Resolution Passed
January 23, 2007, 5:03 pm
Filed under: Colorado, Silt, dogs, petition, river park

Ha! Say that ten times fast.

Several significant things happened at Monday night’s – January 22 – Board of Trustees meeting.

Several park users showed up. Thank you Karen, Kim, Andrea and John! Our presence does have an impact.

Town Manager Rick Aluise explained what apparently happened in 2002 with River Park, the parks ordinance, and dogs off leash.

To re-hash: Rick, Chief Taylor, Tod, and 3 past Trustees remember that during their 2002 discussion on the ordinance to ban dogs from all parks in Silt, they discussed allowing dogs off-leash at River Park.

On Monday night Rick explained that when Trustees are discussing specific amendments to ordinances, they must enter a motion, followed by a second and a vote, in order for their intentions to be recorded.

That means that when the Trustees were discussing the “Dogs in town parks” ordinance, no one made a specific motion to designate River Park as a rest area where dogs may be walked off leash. Therefore the current ordinance is too vague.

Here is the current ordinance:

6.04.270 Dogs in town parks.

No owner, possessor, custodian, or supervisory controller shall allow a dog upon any property designated by the town of Silt as a public town park, unless the dog is on the prescribed ten-foot leash and walking along one of the pedestrian or bicycle paths within the park. Areas designated by the town as rest areas may be used to walk or exercise dogs. (Ord. 19-02 § 2 (part))

The wording of the River Park Petition is designed to amend the above ordinance as follows:

SUMMARY OF ORDINANCE: Initiative to amend Ordinance No. 19, Series of 2002
An initiative ordinance adding a new section 6.04.275 to the Town Code for clarification.
Add this new section:
6.04.275 – Rest Area Designation:
Areas designated by the town as rest areas may be used to walk or exercise dogs off-leash.  River Park is designated as a rest area.

Mayor Moore announced that he had read all the letters and the people overwhelming support River Park as an off-leash “doggie park”.

The Trustees discussed and agreed by consensus that until River Park is annexed, the Garfield County law applies to the park in the meantime. Garfield County does not have a leash law.

Trustee Morgan asked the town staff to draw up a some sort of wording for a motion regarding the issue of the dogs off-leash at the park. I raised my hand and announced that there is a citizens’ petition circulating to designate River Park as a rest area where dogs may be walked off-leash, in keeping with the 2002 discussion.

Mayor Moore told me to get the petition to the Board as soon as possible once the annexation is complete. I said, “I have six months to get signatures.” The town staff nodded their heads.

The Trustees then unanimously passed a Resolution of Substantial Compliance, which means that River Park meets the statutory requirements in order for annexation to proceed. The next step is a resolution for the finding of fact. I’m not sure when River Park annexation will be on the agenda again. I will post it here when I find out. There will probably be 3 more meetings just on the annexation issue.

The River Park Petition has been out for 2 weeks. Chief Taylor signed it last night. I’ll take that as the official endorsement of the Silt Police Department. Yay!

So far I have 25 signatures. My goal is 80 signatures. At least a dozen people have contacted me to sign it. We just need to arrange times to get together. The word is spreading so I’m very optimistic. I have to admit the cold weather hasn’t inspired me to go out knocking on doors. Now that we’re warming up again, I’ll have more opportunities to get out. It’s Girl Scout cookie time so maybe I’ll just latch onto a Girl Scout and follow her around town.

If you are a registered voter in the Town of Silt, please email me at: peggyt@siltnet.net
Or call me – I’m in the book under Tod Tibbetts.
I will bring the petition to you to be signed.

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River Park Rumors
January 18, 2007, 11:55 am
Filed under: Colorado, Silt, dogs, petition, river park

A handful of rumors surrounding the Dogs Off-Leash At River Park Issue have drifted my way which is pretty amazing since I’m deaf in one ear – my left – and my hearing is not so good in my other ear. But that got me thinking, if I heard them then the rumors must be pretty LOUD.

So let’s clear the air – which is no easy task considering the brown haze that hangs over our valley from gas well drilling. But I’ll do my best.

Rumor #1

Park users are blowing this out of proportion. The Board has no intention of prohibiting dogs off-leash at River Park.

The Truth

At the November 27 Board of Trustees Meeting, the Mayor blew this all out of proportion by devoting more than a half hour to the issue. Park users are simply responding to his bluster.

Rumor #2

River Park is deeded to the Silt Board of Trustees.

The Truth

Not – River Park is deeded to the Town of Silt.

Rumor #3

Tod Tibbetts better be careful or he’s going to get thrown off the Board of Trustees.

The Truth

If he runs for re-election in 2010 he can be voted out of office;
OR, registered voters can form a committee, formulate a re-call petition, gather enough signatures, and put it to a vote whether to remove him from office.

Reminder!

The River Park Petition needs your signatures. If you are a registered voter in the Town of Silt, please email me at: peggyt@siltnet.net
Or call me – I’m in the book under Tod Tibbetts.
I will bring the petition to you to be signed.

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January Newspeak Award
January 12, 2007, 4:39 pm
Filed under: Iraq War, democrats, fox news, newspeak, republicans, surge

Oops!

I forgot the December Newspeak Award.

But hey, this one is so big it not only covers both months but both years – 2006 and 2007.

The first 2007 Newspeak Award goes jointly to the Pentagon and the New York Times for – ta-da –

Surge

According to Paul Farhi’s column (included below) the Pentagon dubbed the troop increase “a surge option” and the New York Times spread the word like good little foot soldiers.

The fascinating thing about “surge” is that it is actually newspeak for “escalation” which is newspeak for more death, more bloodshed, and more destruction – as in everlasting war. Which makes “surge” Orwellian in its Orwellianism.

This must be some kind of milestone in history. Making newspeak out of newspeak. Impressive.

Wow. They really do think we’re idiots.

‘Surge’: Decoding the latest buzzword
By Paul Farhi
 
It’s one of those words - like “chad” or “blog” or “waterboarding”- that’s suddenly become the go-to phrase to describe a contemporary phenomenon. “Surge” is the latest catchword, as in a “surge” of 20,000 troops to bolster the American military presence in Iraq.

A surge. It conjures: the rush of the ocean tides. Or what a young person feels upon the first blush of love. Or what a sports team does late in the game. Among its definitions, “any sudden, strong increase, as of energy, enthusiasm, etc.”, according to Webster’s New World College Dictionary. What we have here is shorthand for a very long debate.

The very vagueness of “surge” might make it the politically perfect word for what is likely to be a controversial policy. Representative Nancy Pelosi, the new House speaker, framed her apparent opposition to sending more troops to Iraq by using a more freighted substitute: “escalation”.

In that context, surge is a euphemism for a euphemism. “Escalation” was variously ascribed to both President Lyndon Johnson’s policy of increased military aid to Vietnam, and the US “incursion” - yet more euphemisms! - into Laos and Cambodia in 1970 under president Richard Nixon. Perhaps to avoid echoes of that war, “surge” is the Pentagon and White House’s preferred coinage.

“Surge”, though, has no real history or meaning as a military construct - unlike, say, “tank” or “M-16″. It doesn’t appear in reference books such as the Oxford Companion to Military History, the Encyclopedia of the Vietnam War or the Encyclopedia of the US Military. Nor does it show up in the Department of Defense’s Official Dictionary of Military and Associated Terms.

“It just seems to be a term that cropped up that seemed useful,” says Lewis Sorley, a retired army officer and prominent military historian.

Sorley notes that the word is politically savvy because “surge” seems to suggest a sharp but passing event. “If you’re trying to engender support from those who have doubts about the war, it’s a useful word,” he says. “Because if this is a temporary event, it might be more palatable.”
 
Gained currency

It’s not clear who coined the word “surge” to describe troop increases. But it gained currency quickly - that is, it surged - in November. Its first apparent journalistic use in reference to Iraq was in The New York Times on November 21.

A day after The Washington Post reported that the Pentagon was considering whether to deploy more troops, the Times said unnamed Pentagon officials had dubbed this “the surge option”.

Thereafter, variations of the phrase “surge option” appeared in newspaper stories and TV reports, then was quickly shorthanded to “surge”. (The brevity of the word even might account for its popularity in headlines - taking up far less space than more neutral phrases, such as “troop increase.”)

And that raises a question: Should the news media adopt the terminology favoured by policy makers when those words can be construed as politically loaded?

That question has haunted journalists for decades, stretching back to debates over abortion (”pro-choice” or “pro-life”), the Mideast (”terrorists” or “militants”) and, of course, Iraq itself (”sectarian conflict” or “civil war”).

“Surge” falls into “the Orwellian zone between language and politics,” says Tom Rosenstiel, director of the Project for Excellence in Journalism, which studies and evaluates the media.

“The president and his advisers would be remiss if they didn’t come up with a term suited to their new policy. But journalists would be equally remiss if they just thoughtlessly repeated the term without pondering the policy and its implications.”

The word has achieved so much currency that it was in the running to be the year’s most notable, as chosen by the American Dialect Society, a 117-year-old organisation of linguists, lexicographers and other “word people”, at its recently held annual meeting.

Wayne Glowka, an English professor at Georgia College and State University who chairs the society’s new-words committee, says the group considered the word as a euphemism. That’s nothing new for words with military origins, he notes.

The military has long been a prime source of such words: “collateral damage” to describe civilian war deaths; “daisy cutter”, for a bomb with a huge blast area; “friendly fire”, for shooting at those on the same side.

“Surge” failed to win the group’s word-of-the-year competition (that honour went to “Plutoed” - to demote or devalue something, as happened to the planet last year).

“The argument was that “surge” really didn’t emerge until late in the year, so it couldn’t be the word for all of 2006,” Glowka says. But he thinks that seems destined to change:

“I’d say it’s likely to be a very important word for 2007.”

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Sign the River Park Petition
January 8, 2007, 8:37 pm
Filed under: Colorado, Silt, dogs, petition, river park

The River Park Petition is approved and ready to be signed. If you are a registered voter in the Town of Silt, please email me at: peggyt@siltnet.net
Or call me – I’m in the book under Tod Tibbetts.
I will bring the petition to you to be signed.

At tonight’s meeting Sandy and Buddy Burns spoke at Public Comments on behalf of allowing dogs off-leash at River Park. No one spoke against the issue.

I also spoke. Here is my speech:

This year Board Members will address River Park annexation and the issue of dogs off leash, which includes Silt in a nationwide trend as towns and cities cope with growth and the reduction of green space and are forced to close their parks to dogs. Off-leash dog parks are not the wave of the future. They are a real solution. Right now.

In Silt, we have the distinction of local dog owners already having established an off-leash dog park at River Park, which several of us have been using for many years with the endorsement of the Silt Police Department. Through our own actions we have proven repeatedly the benefits of the off-leash dog park to our community.

Dr. Lynette Hart is the Director for Animals in Society at the University of California Davis. According to Dr. Hart: “Dogs especially facilitate friendly interactions among people, as they so actively solicit play and offer greetings … establishing a dog park creates a community center of activity where friends and neighbors gather to relax … users of dog parks are self-policing so as to maintain the appealing environment. Creating dog parks is a method for more efficiently educating dog owners and facilitating them in assuring excellent behavior with their dogs.”

Her words serve to express exactly the experiences of the dog owners who use River Park.

Off-leash dog parks have also been shown to enhance public safety. There was a time many years ago when River Park was not necessarily considered a safe place. Transients were known to hang around there. With the presence of dogs and their owners, the problem has virtually disappeared.

Many of the dog walkers at River Park are women. We need and deserve a safe place to walk our dogs. Through the years, River Park has come to be that safe place for us. And since there is little to no criminal activity reported at River Park, you could easily conclude that our presence at the park with our dogs is a crime deterrent.

And what about the dogs?

According to Tufts University veterinarian and behaviorist Dr. Nicholas Dodman, dogs need aerobic exercise. Dr. Dodman stated: “Walking them on a leash is not sufficient exercise. It is not that they die if they walk on a leash, and it’s not that a human being dies in solitary confinement either. It is just that it is not optimal for their physiological and psychological well-being. It is important for a dog to be provided with natural outlets — to be able to run and exercise and chase things and do as a dog was bred to do.”

In his book Dogs Behaving Badly, Dr. Dodman describes how exercise not only tires a dog out, but “also generates ample supplies of the neurotransmitter serotonin, which has a mood-stabilizing and calming effect on personality.”

How does this benefit the community? Well-exercised dogs are better neighbors who are less likely to create a nuisance, bark excessively and destroy property. Happier dogs translates into happier people.

As was pointed out by me and other River Park users during the December 11 Public Comments one person’s complaints about one day out of thousands of days over many years should not be a deciding factor in whether dogs are allowed off leash at River Park. 
Rather, you should take into consideration the benefits the community is already reaping, and which you have perhaps taken for granted simply because River Park has long been established as an off-leash dog park. So you have nothing to compare the benefits to, since Silt has never actually been without a dog park.

Do we really want to find out what it would be like to NOT have a dog park? I certainly hope not.

Silt has a true gem in River Park. It is the not only the envy of neighboring communities’ residents but the envy of people all over the country.

Please. Let’s keep it that way. Thank you.

River Park will be on the agenda at the January 22 Board of Trustees Meeting. With the River Park Petition, I believe we have firmly established our position. Now all we need are signatures. This petition is key to our success so please, contact me. I will bring the petition to you at your convenience for your signature.

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January 8 Board Meeting
January 5, 2007, 1:49 pm
Filed under: Colorado, Silt, dogs, petition, river park

Board of Trustees Meeting
Monday, January 8
7:00 PM
Silt Town Hall

You can still chime in about River Park at Public Comments. I plan to be there. I will have the petition with me. If you are a registered voter in the Town of Silt you will have an opportunity to sign it on Monday night.

I plan to speak about the community benefits of off-leash dog parks and how Silt has already reaped those benefits. Please come and relate your positive experiences or your feelings about how our use of River Park as a dog park for many years has been good for the community.

See you there!

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Comments Off


River Park Petition
January 3, 2007, 8:53 am
Filed under: Colorado, Silt, dogs, petition, river park

The River Park Petition is approved and ready for signatures. Here it is:

PETITION SECTION NO . 1
WARNING: IT IS AGAINST THE LAW:

For anyone to sign any initiative or referendum petition with any name other than his or her own or to knowingly sign his or her name more than once for the same measure or to knowingly sign a petition when not a registered elector who is eligible to vote on the measure.

DO NOT SIGN THIS PETITION UNLESS YOU ARE A
REGISTERED ELECTOR
AND ELIGIBLE TO VOTE ON THIS MEASURE.
TO BE A REGISTERED ELECTOR,
YOU MUST BE A CITIZEN OF COLORADO
AND REGISTERED TO VOTE IN SILT, COLORADO

Do not sign this petition unless you have read or have had read to you the proposed initiative and the summary in its entirety and understand its meaning.

SUMMARY OF ORDINANCE: Initiative to amend Ordinance No. 19, Series of 2002
An initiative ordinance adding a new section 6.04.275 to the Town Code for clarification.
Add this new section:
6.04.275 – Rest Area Designation:
Areas designated by the town as rest areas may be used to walk or exercise dogs off-leash.  River Park is designated as a rest area.

Each signer of this petition states that he or she s a registered elector of the Town of Silt, Garfield County, State of Colorado, and that he or she has shown his or her correct residence address and date of signing on this petition.

The signers of this petition each hereby designate the following registered electors to represent them in all matters affecting this petition and to whom all notices or information concerning this petition shall be mailed:

Peggy Tibbetts, 439 Orchard Avenue, Silt, CO 81652
Ema Kwiatkowski, 1420 Orchard Avenue, Silt, CO 81652

If you are a registered voter in the Town of Silt you may contact me and I will get the petition to you to sign. Call me, I’m in the book under Tod Tibbetts. Or email me at: peggyt@siltnet.net. Or leave a comment here on my blog.

I decided to keep the petition simple and go back to 2002 and the ordinance that all Board members (at the time), the Police Chief, and town staff THOUGHT was passed which designated River Park as a rest area and therefore allowed dogs off leash.
 
I need at least 61 signatures, but I’m shooting for 80. I do have several months to collect signatures, but I would like to wrap this up as soon as possible.

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