Thursday, August 15, 2024

Council Recap: Interurban at the Crossroads

Source: h/t DALL-E

On August 12, 2024, the Richardson City Council deliberated an application by Clay Cooley VW to add a repair shop, a body shop, and a vehicle storage lot on their property in the Interurban District. Clay Cooley VW's vision is for a car-centric business located along a busy freeway. The City's vision for the district is at odds with that. There's already a major mixed-use development underway just south of this site, Belt+Main, for which Clay Cooley VW's dealership will act as a blockade against extension of that mixed-use neighborhood to the north.

Spoiler alert. After ninety minutes of deliberation, the City Council continued the hearing until September 23 to give the applicant time to...to do what, exactly? Mayor Bob Dubey punted that question to City Manager Don Magner, saying, "Don, would you please tell the applicant what we're asking him here?" And Magner punted that question to tomorrow morning, saying, "I think if it'd be okay with the applicant, I can follow up tomorrow, and we can put our thoughts together and give you some clear direction."

Wednesday, August 14, 2024

Council Recap: Imagine the Sky Full of Signs

Source: Google Street View

On August 12, 2024, the Richardson City Council unanimously approved a variance from the existing sign control ordinance that limits sign heights to 20 feet. Clay Cooley VW wants its pole sign to be raised to 39' 7". In July, in a meeting that lasted only 5 minutes from gavel to gavel, a recommendation to approve the request was passed unanimously by the Sign Control Board (an oxymoronic name).

Tuesday, August 13, 2024

My Lady Jane (TV 2024)

Rotten Tomatoes

Rotten Tomatoes

My Lady Jane (TV 2024): Henry VIII's kids (Edward, Mary, Elizabeth, and cousin Lady Jane Grey) vie for the throne. Alternate history that doesn't take itself seriously. Instead of religious war, there are Ethians (animal/human shape-shifters) vs Verities (normal humans). It took time to figure it all out, but when I did, it was a fun watch. B+

Prime

Monday, August 12, 2024

Council Recap: Budget Workshop

Source: h/t DALL-E

The Richardson City Council held two days of meetings to hear City Manager Don Magner present his recommendations for the 2024-2025 City budget. Highlights taken from the City's own slides:

  • Property tax rate reduction of $.01877 to $0.542180
  • Senior Tax Exemption increase of $15,000 to $145,000
  • 3.95% increase in Streets, Alleys, Facilities and Parks Maintenance Programs
  • 3.95% increase in the Economic Development Fund to $2,076,659; an increase in Economic Development Department funding of $78,434 to $1,280,818 (does not include the marketing position reassigned to the Communications Department)
  • $1.9M for Home Improvement Incentive Program tax rebates
  • $3.84 million in funding for pay-as-you-go capital replacements and $1.56 million for the IT replacement fund
  • 3.0% merit-based market pay plan adjustment for all employees
  • An increase the minimum starting salary for full-time and permanent part-time positions to $19.45
  • Continued investment in public safety via 5.0% public safety steps, capital equipment replacement, mental health programs, expanded community programming, etc.
  • Funding for Richardson Replants, ADA Transition Plan, Housing Needs Assessment, Citizen (CARES/CPA/CFA) and Neighborhood Association Programs, Network/Counseling Place support, Culturally Diverse Programming and Events
  • 3.0% water and sewer rate increase
  • $2.00 (+tax) per month rate increase to the residential solid waste rate
  • $1.00 per month increase to the residential drainage fee to $5.25 per month
  • Commercial drainage fee increase from $0.119 per 100 square feet of impervious area to $0.147 per 100 square feet
  • Annual Arts Grants funding increased to $375,000
  • Several fee adjustments to better position Sherrill Park to cover operational costs, equipment needs and fund a capital maintenance reserve
  • Implementation of Phase 2 & 3 of Sherrill Park Master Plan via $6.0 million Certificates of Obligation

Sunday, August 11, 2024

If I Were in Charge of the Olympics

Source: Naomi Baker/Getty Images
I don't know a damned thing about gymnastics, and even less about scoring gymnastics, but there are some basic principles that any sport should adhere to, imo.
  1. If judges take several minutes to compute a score, the athlete should be given at least as long to review the judges' work.
  2. If the athlete is given only one minute to protest the scoring, the judges should be given no more than one minute to declare the protest came too late.
  3. If the athlete is given only one minute to protest the scoring, another athlete shouldn't be given a whole day to protest that the first athlete's protest came too late to be considered.
  4. If the athlete is given only one minute to protest the scoring, the governing body shouldn't be given five days to decide the original protest came too late to be considered.
  5. Someone with a sense of fairness should be given however long it takes to realize that if the original scoring was, in fact, wrong, then correcting *that* mistake should carry more weight than correcting the mistake of accepting a protest that was submitted a few seconds too late.
  6. Judges shouldn't be allowed to ruin what had been up to then a beautiful Olympics.