Opinion leaders of little faith

AS THE MILLENNIUM TURNS by Evan Ravitz
Published in the Colorado Daily 10/93

In the weeks before the November 2 vote on the Boulder Voting by Phone City Charter Amendment we must answer all the worries. I’ve named them after their main voices. Today, the most substantive concern:

The Elise Boulding/ Charlie Butcher/ Bob Seivers/ Scott Simon/ Matt Appelbaum argument: “The People can’t be trusted to do the right thing if we use phone voting for electronic town (state or national) meetings. Look at Colorado Amendments One and Two, passed by citizen initiative.”

Whoa. This year’s Charter Amendment that Boulder votes on Nov. 2 simply gives you the option to vote by phone. It doesn’t ease the initiative process. That’s our second goal. You can vote against it when and if it comes up. But you shouldn’t:

This is Boulder, which voted against One and Two. We are also, according to the U.S. Census, by far the most educated city in the country: 59% of adults have at least a bachelor’s degree; Raleigh NC comes in second with 40%! We should be the model for learning self-government. If not us, who?

Imagine too, how the vote on One and Two might have gone if many more people had voted, as happened with the first binding telephone voting in Nova Scotia last year with the Liberal Party leadership election: 96.4% participation! The ACLU reports that “the Christian Coalition has been quietly organizing…to seize control of school boards and other key posts most vulnerable during low-turnout local elections.”(emphasis ours) High turnout will mean the real majority rules. If not now, when?

Amendment One sent a bottom line message to government: We don’t like what we’re getting for our money, so no more money for you (without our permission). If the initiative process was accessible to average citizens (not just rich landlords like Doug Bruce or powerful groups like Colorado for Family Values), we could legislate instead to get what we want. Amendment One is a sledgehammer. Voting by Phone is pro-active, not just reactive to what government proposes, like One. As Alexander Hamilton said: “If there is a problem with democracy, the solution is more democracy.”

Amendment Two was confusingly worded, so that many voted the “wrong” way. [We’re hardly saying the present initiative process is perfect. But it can be refined by using the existing process.] Amendment Two has never gone into effect. If the preliminary ruling of the Colorado Supreme Court holds, the equal protection clause of the 14th Amendment to the US Constitution means that “fundamental rights…depend on the outcome of no election”. The majority cannot tyrannize the minority.

Buckminster Fuller, the apparent inventor of democracy by phone (in 1940), wrote: “The people will make mistakes. But they will be honest mistakes. And quickly correctable.” Two’s opponents stood ready to bring a better-worded Two back to the ballot to reverse it. If the initiative process was more accessible (fewer signatures required, more frequent votes), their process would be easier and faster.

Interestingly, Colorado Bureau of Investigation, Denver Police and Gay and Lesbian Center of Colorado statistics all show hate crimes against homosexuals down significantly April-June compared to January-March. The first 2 sources also show all hate crimes in the second quarter down by half compared to second quarter of last year (anti-gay statistics were not kept separately until this year}. These may be more serious crimes than ones reported only to the GLCC, which are up this year. Is it possible that Amendment 2 brought the hidden hate of Colorado out in the open (out of the closet) for discussion in a way that has reduced its violent expression? Ben Barber, in his book Strong Democracy, calls this a “democratic conversation”. The media and courts and citizens are discussing Two. We’re learning about gays and straights and our feelings about each other. This isn’t an academic discussion for the few: it includes everyone.

Scott Simon of NBC & NPR stated at the opening of the Walter Orr Roberts Institute that Colorado Springs (home of One and Two) is a good argument for representative (as opposed to participatory) government. We see them as complementary. Colorado Springs is largely a military town funded by our tax money to fight the Cold War, which UP syndicated writer Richard Reeves says “drained away our national treasury fighting shadows in the dark.” Our taxes, funneled into his unusual city by an exclusively “representative” government (there is no participation by initiative or referendum nationally), helped fund One and Two. Our government needs citizen participation by all, to check and balance its excesses. It’s still wildly out of balance.

Elise Boulding, a 1990 nominee for the Nobel Peace Prize -and a former supporter of Voting by Phone- changed her mind and wrote me that “…we need to put much more effort into education for democracy, and becoming familiar first-hand with community contexts.” That’s what we’re getting: it’s one of Barber’s “democratic conversations” we’re having these days! If you’re of a millennial cast of mind, you could call it God (the people) talking to itself (ourselves).

[I wrote in the May 16 Camera about this kind of education at Sudbury School in Framingham, Mass., where for 24 years the kids and staff have enjoyed true freedom and democracy. It works wonderfully, and for half the cost of the Massachusetts public schools. Call 443-3786 for a copy.]

The voices of this argument are thoughtful, caring people. I can feel their pain over One and Two. Opinion leaders of little faith, We invite you back into the democratic conversation. Debate us, or join us!

A better way to vote – The Economist 9/11/93

The Economist of London 9/11/93 on direct democracy and its success in Switzerland

A better way to vote: Why letting the people themselves take the decisions is the logical next step for the West

by Brian Needham, associate editor of The Economist and its foreign editor from 1964 to 1989.

THE difference between today’s politics and the politics of the coming century is likely to be a change in what people mean by “democracy”: to be precise, a radical change in the process by which the democratic idea is put into practice.

The collapse of communism, everybody agrees, removes the ideological framework that has shaped the politics of the 20th century. One of the two great rival bodies of ideas has been defeated, and the other will be transformed by the consequences of its victory. This does not mean that the world is now wholly non-ideological; there will be other ideas in the name of which politicians will call upon people to follow them into the good fight. But the end of communism, and of the special sort of confrontation it produced, both reinforces the need for a change in the way democracy works and, at the same time, gets rid of a large obstacle in the path to that change.

In crude terms, this overdue change is a shift from “representative democracy” to “direct democracy”. The basis of modern democracy is the proposition that every adult person’s judgment about the conduct of public affairs is entitled to be given equal weight with every other person’s. However different they are from each other – financially, intellectually, in their preference between Schubert and Sting-all men and women have an equal right to say how they wish to be governed. The concept sprang originally from the Protestant Reformation, which declared that everybody was equal in his dealings with God. The political offspring of that religious declaration is now accepted everywhere in the world, at least in principle, except among diehard Leninists and conservative Muslims. (The Muslim exception could be the cause of the world’s next great ideological confrontation.)

In most places where it is practised, however, democracy is in a condition of arrested development. Every adult person exercises his or her political right every few years, in elections by which the voters send their representatives to an elected assembly; but in the intervals between elections – which can mean for anything up to about seven years – it is these representatives who take all the decisions. This is not what ancient Athenians meant by democracy.

Some countries do it differently. The most clear-cut example is Switzerland’s system of direct democracy. In Switzerland it is possible to insist, by collecting a modest number of signatures, that any law proposed by the government must be submitted to a vote of the whole people. Even better, you can also insist (by getting more signatures) that a brand-new idea for a law must be put to the people even if government and parliament are against the idea.

Australia and some of the western parts of the United States also now use referendums in a fairly regular way. There have even started to be referendums in Europe outside Switzerland–the politicians in Italy, France, Denmark and Ireland have all consulted their people within the past year or so–though only on subjects of the government’s choice, and when the government thinks it dare not deny the people the final word. But elsewhere democracy is still stuck at a half-way house, as it were, in which the final word is delegated to the chosen few.

The do-it-yourself way

There are three reasons for thinking that this is going to change. One is the growing inadequacy of representative democracy. It has long been pointed out that to hold an election every few years is not only a highly imprecise way of expressing the voter’s wishes (because on these rare election days he has to consider a large number of issues, and his chosen “representative” will in fact not represent him on several of them) but is also notably loose-wristed (because the voter has little control over his representative between elections). Now the end of the battle between communism and pluralism will make representative democracy look more unsatisfactory than ever.

This is because the removal of the ideological component has changed the agenda of politics, in a way that has a worrying consequence. The old central question that is asked at election-time–Which of these two incompatible systems of politics and economics do you prefer, and how does your preference bear upon the decisions that must now be taken?–has disappeared. What is left of the agenda of politics is, by comparison, pretty humdrum. It deals for the most part with relatively minor differences of opinion over economic management, relatively small altercations over the amount and direction of public spending, and so on. The old war of principle, the contest between grand ideas, is over. The new politics is full of dull detail.

It is therefore ideal ground for that freebooter of the modern political world- -the lobbyist. The two most dramatic things that have happened to the developed world since the end of the second world war–its huge increase in wealth, and its explosion of information technology–have had as big an effect on politics as they have had on everything else. The lobbyists, the people who want to influence governments and parliaments on behalf of special interests, now command more money than they ever did before. They also have at their disposal a new armoury of persuasion in the computer, the fax machine, and the rest of it.

In the new agenda of politics, where so much depends upon decisions of detail, the power of the lobbyist can produce striking results. It will at times be, literally, corrupting. But even when it is not as bad as that it will make representative democracy seem increasingly inadequate. The voter, already irritated at having so little control over his representatives between elections, will be even angrier when he discovers how much influence the special-interest propagandists are now able to wield over those representatives. An interloper, it will seem, has inserted himself into the democratic process. The result is not hard to guess. The voter is liable to conclude that direct democracy, in which decisions are taken by the whole people, is better than representative democracy, because the many are harder to diddle–or to bribe–than the few.

This conclusion will be reinforced by the second reason for thinking there is going to be a change in the way democracy works. This is that there is no longer so much difference, in wealth or education, between voters and their elected representatives as there was in the 19th century, when democracy first took widespread root. It used to be argued that the ordinary man’s role in politics had to be confined to the periodic election of representatives whose views he broadly agreed with, because the ordinary man was not equipped to take the hard, practical decisions of government (as those representatives, it was blithely assumed, were). A century ago there was some thing in this. There is far less now.

A hundred years ago fewer than 2% of Americans aged between 18 and 24 went to university; now more than a quarter do. The share of the British population that stayed in education beyond the age of 15 rose sevenfold between 1921 and 1991; in the western part of Germany, between 1955 (when the country was still recovering from Hitler’s war) and today, the increase has been almost double that. The spread of education has been accompanied by an equally dramatic increase in wealth. In 1893 American GNP per head was $4,000 at today’s prices; a century later it is $24,000. The average Briton’s income has quintupled in real terms since the beginning of the century. The average West German’s has more than quadrupled in the past half-century alone. Bigger incomes bring bigger savings, so more people own houses or shares or whatever. And the rising totals have been accompanied by a more even distribution of prosperity. “We are all middle-class now.” Not quite; but we are surely heading that way.

The democracies must therefore apply to themselves the argument they used to direct against the communists. As people get richer and better educated, a democrat would admonishingly tell a communist, they will no longer be willing to let a handful of men in the Politburo take all the decisions that govern a country’s life. The same must now be said, with adjustment for scale, about the workings of democracy. As the old differences of wealth, education and social condition blur, it will be increasingly hard to go on persuading people that most of them are fit only to put a tick on a ballot paper every few years, and that the handful of men and women they thereby send to parliament must be left to take all the other decisions.

People are better equipped for direct democracy than they used to be. The altered character of post-cold-war politics increases the need for direct democracy. And then comes the third reason for believing that change is on the way. The waning of ideology weakens the chief source of opposition to the new sort of democracy.

When the party’s over

This opposition comes from the political parties that have grown up under representative democracy, since these have most to lose from changing to a different system. Parties are almost indispensable for the holding of elections, and they are the building-blocks of the parliaments chosen by elections. The introduction of direct democracy would instantly diminish the importance both of elections and of parliaments, since most big decisions would be taken by referendum, in a vote of the whole people. Parliaments and parties would not cease to exist; even in the fairly thoroughgoing Swiss form of direct democracy, they survive as partners of the referendum. But they would lose much of their old grandeur. The “representatives of the people” would perform that function only on the people’s daily sufferance. This is why most political parties do not like direct democracy.

But they now have less power to resist it, because the end of the cold war has taken away part of the authority they possessed in the old era of ideological confrontation. Then, parties were the spokesmen of one or other of the two grand ideas, or of some variant of one of those ideas. They could also claim to or were accused of being, the instrument of a social class, a subdivision of mankind easily recognisable (it was thought) to those who belonged to it. It was in large part these things that gave parties their sense of identity, and enabled them to demand the loyalty of their supporters.

Now, in post-cold-war politics, much of this is disappearing. There are no longer heroic banners to be borne aloft in the name of ideology. In the wealthier parts of the world, at any rate, class divisions are steadily losing their meaning. In the prosaic new politics, many of the issues that have to be decided are matter-of-fact ones, requiring little excitement. In these conditions fewer people will feel the need to belong to parties, and people will more easily shift from one party, to another. This will make the parties weaker. And that will make it harder for them to oppose radical innovations–such as the bold step forward to direct democracy.

Politics is not about to become utterly homogeneous. In the luckier parts of the world, there will still be a difference between people who think that the most important thing is to make the economy work as efficiently as possible (who will tend to band together)and people who prefer to concentrate on looking after the unfortunates who get least benefit from this efficiency (who will form another band). In unluckier places, nationalism and religion will continue to provide the driving-force of political parties. The survival of religious politics, for instance in the Islamic world, will remind us that ideology has not been abolished; the fact that one ideological beast has just died, in Moscow, does not mean the breed is globally extinct. But, where nationalism and religion are not the dominant issues, it should be possible to reorganise politics in a less party-controlled, less vote-once-every-x-years, way: in short, in a more directly democratic way. Of course, the move from a looser form of democracy to this more developed variety has to be made with care. It requires the ordinary voter to become more knowledgeable about a wide variety of subjects, and to use his judgment responsibly. It will take time for him to learn how to do it well. But a look at Switzerland, the country with the most systematic experience of direct democracy, suggests that the change presents no insuperable difficulty. The best subjects on which to start mass voting are, oddly, those at opposite ends of the spectrum of possibilities. At one end, broad questions about a country’s future course of development — constitutional issues–are manifestly the sort of thing to be decided by universal vote. The governments of France, Denmark and Ireland correctly allowed their people to decide by referendum whether they approved of the Maastricht treaty on European union; the other members of the EC should have done the same, as a majority of voters in most of them plainly wished. Constitutional amendments in the United States could in future be made, or rejected, by referendum.

At the other end of the spectrum, the small, specific decisions of local government–Do you want to add a wing to the local school, or should the money go on road improvement instead?–are equally suitable for direct vote. In both cases, the voter can almost certainly understand the question that is laid before him, and answer it competently.

The difficult area lies in between. Opponents of direct democracy argue that the ordinary voter should not be asked to decide about matters which either (a) have a large emotional content or (b) are too intellectually complex for “ordinary people”, especially if the complexity is of the financial sort. For both of those purposes, they say, the people’s elected representatives can be trusted to do the job better. In fact, the Swiss experience tends to contradict this cynicism about the potential sophistication of the voters. In the 1960s the Swiss had an attack of the xenophobia that has since affected s o many other Europeans. Strong passions were aroused. There were too many foreign workers in the country; jobs were being taken away from honest Swiss. And yet, after a long battle involving several referendums, the result was surprisingly restrained. A limit was set on the total number of foreigners who could come to work in Switzerland, but the limit was only a little below the number actually in the country at the time. Even more strikingly, the measure was framed so as to permit a subsequent rise in the total. Today, a quarter of a century later, almost 27% of the country’s workforce, and more than a sixth of the total population, is non-Swiss.

More hesitantly, Switzerland has also pushed direct democracy into the field of taxation and public spending. The Swiss system does not in theory provide for referendums on financial matters. But it has been possible to get around this difficulty by the device known as the “initiative”. In Switzerland, if you can get 100,000 signatures on a petition, you can insist that any proposal you feel strongly about must be put to the people’s vote.

It was by this means that, in June this year, a group of Swiss took to the country their proposal that the country’s armed forces should be denied authority to buy any new military aircraft for the rest of the century. The proposal had the double attraction of saving a large amount of public money and of appealing to post-cold-war anti-militarism; nevertheless, it was defeated. It was also this year that the Swiss agreed, by referendum, to an increase in Switzerland’s petrol tax. These two recent examples make the point. Direct democracy can deal with complex matters responsibly, even when they affect the voter’s pocket.

Deciding things by vote of the whole people is not, to be sure, a flawless process. The voter in a referendum will find some of the questions put to him dismayingly abstruse (but then so do many members of parliament). He will be rather bored by a lot of the issues of post-ideological politics (but then he can leave them for parliament to deal with, if he is not interested enough to call for a referendum). He will be subjected, via television, to a propaganda barrage from the rich, high-tech special-interest lobbies (but he is in one way less vulnerable to the lobbyists’ pressure than members of parliament are, because lobbyists cannot bribe the whole adult population).

On the other hand, direct democracy has two great advantages. It leaves no ambiguity about the answer to the question: What did the people want? The decisions of parliament are ambiguous because nobody can be sure, on any given issue, whether a parliamentary majority really does represent the wishes of a majority of the people. When the whole people does the deciding, the answer is there for all to see. Second, direct democracy sharpens the ordinary man’s sense of political responsibility. When he has to make up his own mind on a wide variety of specific issues–the Swiss tackled 66 federal questions by general vote in the 1980s, hundreds of cantonal ones and an unknown number (nobody added them up) of local-community matters– he learns to take politics seriously. Since the voter is the foundation-stone of any sort of democracy, representative or direct, anything that raises his level of political efficiency is profoundly to be desired.

This move forward by democracy will not happen at the same speed all over the world. It is certainly not yet feasible in the new democracies of Africa and southern Asia. The new system requires the voters not only to be fairly well-educated and reasonably well-informed, but also to have a big enough share of material prosperity to understand why they are responsible for their country’s future. Those conditions do not yet apply in much of Africa and Asia. Nor, quite possibly, will it happen very quickly in the Confucian region of eastern Asia. There the local 20th-century experiments with democracy still operate in a culture that pays great respect to the idea of authority, and respect for authority does not sit easily with the general sense of individual self-sufficiency required by direct democracy.

But in the heartland of democracy–meaning in North America and in Europe at least as far east as Budapest, Warsaw and Tallinn–the move should now be possible. Here, at any rate, the least bad form of government yet invented by man can advance from its present half-way house to something more like full application of the democratic principle.

For real change, call this number

AS THE MILLENNIUM TURNS by Evan Ravitz
Published in the Colorado Daily 8/93

As the millennium starts to turn, miracles start to happen. A City Council member has lifted a finger to check out a citizen’s idea! They’re looking into Paul Danish’s idea of licensing good drivers to pick up paying passengers.

This is no ordinary idea. If every car carries 2 people instead of 1, it will temporarily halve our pollution and traffic problems while we work on long-range solutions. Latin American, for example, moves by such “collectivos”, which collect people like buses, but are everywhere and of all sizes. America is going to have to forego its “life”-style of 1 person per car if we want to breathe, get anywhere promptly or save some oil for our children.

Paul is no ordinary citizen. He is the most famous ex-City Council member, known for the growth-controlling Danish Plan (now the title of his Daily column.) And he writes often about how the present Council is not giving Boulder much value for their taxes.

Council/ Go Boulder’s busing is the epitome of waste: in spite of millions of dollars pumped into Eco-pass for the last several years, bus riding, according to City figures, accounts for only 2.1% of city trips. Even including the full buses to Denver, the median number of passengers on any Boulder bus at any time is 5. All day long you can see empty buses getting 3.83 miles per gallon (RTD average).

Just since last year cycling has increased from 10 to 13% of all trips, an increase greater than total trips by bus! This is in spite of the City spending most Bike funds on recreational trails, free breakfasts, bike polo, paper promotions, plastic bike pins, “stamp collections”, and studies ad nauseum instead of safer facilities and enough bike racks downtown. Municipal Judge Hanson is one who has finally given up cycling because of the danger.

Now Go Boulder is proposing to endanger cyclists by advocating for medians and ‘neckdowns’ on North 9th Street, which violate American Association of State Highway and Transportation Officials standards for designated bike routes like 9th Street: lanes should be 14 feet wide, not narrowing to 10.5 feet as proposed.

This is instead of giving the neighbors what they want: stop signs or speed humps to slow traffic to the speed limit that 70% ignore. The fire department doesn’t want the humps. And City transportation officials say people will roll through a stop sign- though they rarely do at 9th and Maxwell. Even if they do, they’re slowing down. These officials admit that the medians and neckdowns don’t work, but still want to spend $175,000 on their 6-block plan instead of a few hundred dollars for a few stop signs.

This is prime pork barrel waste, a relic from the Idiot ’80s when hype was king and a professional PR person, Leslie Durgin, became mayor. Just by spending lots of our money, Boulder wins bike and pedestrian awards, though cyclists and pedestrians know their problems worsen every year.

This money could be paving and striping safe bike paths, a proven winner here unlike subsidizing the empty buses. We could even be doing our own development of electric cars, which the auto industry drags its feet on because they’ll lose most of the 40% of their business called “aftermarket”. Electrics have no gears or clutches, plugs or points. There are no “internal combustion” explosions necessitating regular overhauls- no rings, valves or heads. Instead of wearing out brakes electrics recharge their batteries with the inertia you’ve developed as you stop: ‘regenerative braking’. The power plants that will charge them are much less polluting, and no more will need to be built because most charging will be at night when the plants operate below peak capacity.

Last year I proposed, in this column, and to Council a package of 7 proposals to ameliorate our car problems. They have all been ignored, as well as those of others. The $50,000 Integrated Planning Process ignores cycling in all four of its scenarios, in favor of busing.

Indeed the only reason Council is looking into the simple, intelligent, ubiquitous (in the rest of the world) “collectivo” transportation solution, proposed by the famous ex-Councilman is because the Colorado Public Utilities Commission is allowing its use in Denver during the Pope’s visit. It now takes the next thing to an act of God to get these people to look into citizens ideas!

That’s why the November vote on the City Charter Amendment giving us the option to vote by phone is so important: this is the tool to make regular citizen voting on important issues practical. You and I want solutions to problems, not the hype and awards the City pursues. Call us at 440-6838 to help.

Under Paper Crowns

AS THE MILLENNIUM TURNS by Evan Ravitz

On May 18, the Boulder City Council holds a hearing on placing the Voting by Phone Initiative, apparently the most popular petition in Boulder history, on the November 2 ballot. We think it’s important for the future of democracy. Here’s why:

Royalty dies hard as the millennium starts to turn. We got off to a good start in 1042- the Dark Ages lightened up a tad when the Magna Carta gave Royalty’s subjects a few civil rights. U.S. history is one of increasing democratization. Until recently- as the millennium turns we seem to be regressing to new forms of aristocracy. Some examples and analysis:

On Good Friday 1993, CU Chancellor James Corbridge didn’t show up as advertised to preside over the World Affairs Conference session “The State of the Crown”. If Corbridge had presided in one of the paper Burger King crowns the speakers wore as they crucified the Royal Family, it would have been true burlesque, like Coach McCartney in drag.

Corbridge at May ’92 graduation spoke of “the need for each one of us to think about respect for our environment”, the same Corbridge who resisted providing seriously needed bike racks 2 years running at CU, saying he didn’t like their looks. CU spent 13 million instead on two new parking garages, promoting the pollution and traffic that are, our Mayor says, the most pressing problems in Boulder. Parking fees don’t even pay for maintenance, so we will be subsidizing the garages till they fall, even those of us who practice what we preach, environmentally speaking. Nothing personal, Jim. Everyone does it, right? Wrong. CSU in Fort Collins is phasing cars off campus.

Also on Good Friday, in the Camera Open Forum, Patricia Nelson Limerick, CU’s noted historian and Official Fool, more kindly and gently nails CU administrators to their cross of folly.

She says most administrators are “..quarantined and insulated from the people who compose the University.” Totally. And not just by their spin doctoring. CU’s lawyers have shown that CU is legally, in the Colorado Constitution– above the law of Colorado- a “Sovereign Entity“! The ruling class can and do have secret meetings, fly their wives to Buff games, pay top administrators secret bonuses, etc., all in violation of Colorado law; all at taxpayer and student expense. If CU wants to join the real world, they will have the integrity to ask the legislature (or the voters) to make them subject to the same laws we citizens are.

Hypocritical CU, what are you teaching by example?

Perhaps Boulder City Manager Tim Honey has the answer. He gave a talk June 24th last year to the Win-Win Business Forum about The Big Problems of Government. He said they were 1. fiscal irresponsibility 2. an ethical crisis and 3. too much PR, covering up the other problems.

When I was a boy, we used to call these, in reverse order, lying, cheating and stealing. I believe these are becoming not so much the problems of governments/CU administrators but Standard Operating Procedure. Here’s why, according to Plato: “The punishment suffered by the wise who refuse to take part in the government, is to live under the government of bad men.” (and women.)

Nowadays the best and brightest usually don’t take part in government: it’s just too vicious. (Let us pray the Clintons are the exception.) Here’s what the 20-something generation says in The Baffler, a literary journal published by graduates of the University of Chicago: “(We are) deaf to your non-politics; hopelessly estranged from your cult of ‘professionalism’… your best and your brightest want nothing to do with you.”

So instead of best and brightest the top dogs are mostly what I’ll call the pathologically clever- and increasingly confused. They just don’t get it. How can we stop them from “trickling down” on us? (Like the U.S. Revolutionary motto: “Don’t Tread on Me.)

Let’s make the political playing field more level- making it easier for citizens to initiate and pass legislation the way representatives do. 23 states already have initiative laws. But it’s mostly special interest groups that pay petitioners to stand in front of supermarkets all summer that can collect enough signatures to get on the ballot. In Colorado last year, 46 groups filed as petitioners with the Secretary of State, 16 submitted petitions and 10 made the ballot of which 8 paid petitioners- the voters rejected 5 of the 8; 4 of the 5 promoted gambling.

Andrew Jackson said: “If there is a problem with democracy the solution is more democracy.” Recently an attempt was made to triple the signatures required for Colorado initiatives. We think the way to streamline the initiative process is to reduce the signatures required. There will be less hassle at the grocery. More petitions will make the ballot. And we will have more choices, an alternative to growing gridlock in government.

What makes this all practical is the economy and availability of telephone voting, first demonstrated 6/20/92 by the Liberal Party of Nova Scotia, as an alternative to driving to their convention to select their party leader. 7000 voted in 4 hours, 4 times as many as had ever come to the convention. In my next column I will show why phone voting is much more economic, ecological, convenient, and especially secure, than our current system.

This is no Elephant and Donkey game, this is about having faith in yourself and your neighbor, democracy and saving the planet. As George Gallup Sr., the world’s leading pollster said, “On most major issues we’ve dealt with in the past 50 years, the public was more likely to be right–based on the judgment of history–than the legislatures or Congress.”

Boulder is fast approaching gridlock, in traffic and politics. It’s like the San Andreas Fault. Something’s got to give, soon. We ask our leaders to learn the very first thing in Robert Fulgum’s All I Really Need to Know I Learned in Kindergarten: “Share Everything.” Share the power and the responsibility. Then you won’t be so “quarantined and insulated” from us. As Bill Clinton said during the campaign: “The American people hate the political process.” Perhaps nowhere more than in Boulder, now.

According to a Daily Camera column The City now has a number of ‘Czars’ in charge, much like the Federal Drug and Energy Czars. Russia gave up on its Czars two revolutions and 76 years ago! The last of this Romanov family died in early April in Toronto.

Where’s this country going? As Patricia Limerick hints, we need a sense of purpose. This life is so out of balance (“Koyaanisqatsi” in Hopi- a fulfillment of their ancient prophesy), that a violent revolution could happen, similar to the armageddon that is foretold in the Bible. It would be a sight- 15,000 nuclear weapons and 200 million handguns in the hands of the most violent and incarcerated society in history. JFK said, “Those who make peaceful revolution impossible, will make a violent revolution inevitable.”

In Loco Parentis doesn’t work in government/CU administration any more. Let’s not give up on a whole millennium of democratization. It just needs a little resurrection. You can write us, The Voting by Phone Foundation, 1630 30th St. Suite A307, Boulder CO 80301. Call us at 440-6838. Come to the Council meeting May 18!

Telephone voting would foster democracy

OPINION by Evan Ravitz
BOULDER SUNDAY CAMERA 5/16/93

On May 18 Boulder City Council holds a public hearing on placing the Voting by Phone Initiative, apparently the most popular petition in Boulder history, on the November 2 ballot.

There are some supporters of Voting by Phone, such as our own lawyer, who feel that using this technology for so-called Direct Democracy or Electronic Town Meetings is not good, that the people need better education before they can be trusted with more democracy.

This is what I learned about education on my winter vacation in Guatemala. My friends were giving a presentation to other parents about Sudbury Valley School in Framingham, Massachusetts. Sudbury has operated since 1968 on two principles- democracy and freedom. Everyone from the Principal to the youngest–the four-year-olds, has one vote in the weekly School Meeting. This meeting decides everything- hiring and firing, budget, everything. There is also a Judicial Council, with representatives of all age groups. They are rarely very busy.

The children are free! They don’t have to go to school, though usually they have to be evicted at 4PM so the staff can go home. They study anything they want, or just listen to music until they get over their problems, or whatever.

Because Sudbury is their school, the children do not vandalize it (or shoot the teachers). They actually help maintain and improve the school, as well as educate themselves and each other. Therefore, the school runs with half the faculty and staff of Massachusetts public schools, and costs half what the public schools do–$3000 per pupil rather than $6000.

So freedom and democracy do work if we’ll only try them. The increased freedom we’ve had on the Mall for a year now is working fine. In 1990 I begged the mayor to permit musicians to sell their own cassettes and permit personal services like massage and tarot. She said she asked the Council and that “nobody was interested”. It took 3 court cases, the ACLU and front-page headlines to finally shame the City into giving us these freedoms in 1992.

Everything in Guatemala seems so life and death serious. And so it is. More of my Indian friends were killed in the four years I’d been away.

Ever wonder why bananas all the way from Guatemala are only $.50 a pound and apples from Colorado cost more? It’s because agricultural workers there earn about $2 per day. Our military aid since 1954 keeps those Indians colonized. It is American M-16s that killed my friends, one of them for organizing a farm co-op to get better pay.

When I last returned from Guatemala 4 years ago, I discovered a nationwide poll that showed 65% of Americans would end U.S. military aid to Central America. That is one of the reasons I got serious about our project. When the American people have a vote on the issue, my Guatemalan friends will no longer live in fear.

There are other reasons. In a poll after the Rio Summit last year, the vast majority of Americans said they were ready to bite the bullet to preserve the environment. But the President wouldn’t sign the accords, and Councilman Spenser Havlick said he felt ashamed to be an American. Perhaps he would have been prouder if his country had the democracy most Voting by Phone supporters seek.

We want governments to practice the very first thing in Robert Fulgum’s All I Really Need to Know I Learned in Kindergarten: “Share Everything.” Share the power and responsibility. The future belongs to the young.

We ask that the City Attorney’s office write a fair evaluation of Voting by Phone, not the March 5 straw-man job, which ignores all the information we’ve given Council, the City Attorney, and the City Manager. This memo actually misrepresents Colorado election law to the City Council! It states: “To cast a vote for someone else requires that the impersonator appear at a polling place, claim to be a person registered to vote, and sign a signature card which is compared with the signature already on file.” Not so- your signature is never compared with the signature on file unless someone challenges you. Nancy Wirl, the longest serving election official in Boulder County, says this has never happened in the 20 years she’s worked there. No longer do the election judges know by sight everyone in their precinct- they are no longer even assigned to their own precincts, in Boulder! Unless a judge happens to personally know the impersonator or the real person, there is no challenge, and no comparison. That is why we say: voting is now on the honor system.

Voting by Phone will be much more economic, ecological, convenient and especially secure, than our current system. Please contact us for free literature. Call 440-6838 or write The Voting by Phone Foundation, 1630 30th St. #A-307, Boulder CO 80301.

Come to the May 18 Council meeting at City Hall, the SW corner of Broadway and Canyon. You can give up to a 3-minute talk. Call us for the approximate (evening) time. You can try our demonstration of phone voting by calling 442-2625.

(Evan Ravitz is director of the Voting by Phone Foundation.)

Takin’ the road to heaven in the middle of Maya country

Published in the Colorado Daily, May 3, 1993

This month, the Tightrope takes a vacation from the politics of bicycling, voting by telephone and freedom on the Mall for the kinder, gentler jungles of the Maya. We built a raft of balsa logs and cord and floated for eight days down three rivers, the Jatate, the Lacuntun, and the Usimacinta, which borders Mexico and Guatemala.

Our trip began in San Cristobal de las Casas, Chiapas, Mexico where I met Peter Paul Boot, a Dutchman. Peter had volunteered at Na Balom there, and had lived several months with the Lacandon Indians in Naha, one of their three remaining villages. The Lacandon, numbering only about 600, are the last traditional jungle-dwellers in Mexico; they wear unisex long hair and white gowns.

I knew Peter was the guy to try this trip with. I’d heard of it two years before on my last bicycle trip in Mexico. When I was 16, we’d tried building a raft to float New York’s Hudson River, but twisted trees, an ant nest, and the putrid smells and dioxin from paper mills scotched our Huck Finn fantasies.

With Ted and Steve, recent college graduates turned travelers, we bused to a hostel in the Lagunas de Montebello National Park. I explained the journey to Regge and Rune, a German and a Dane, who decided to try it on their own. They made their own raft downstream from us where we ran into them later (fortunately not literally).

We bused to Flor de Café (Coffee Flower), the end of the line, ate, and waited for the sun to ease. Bad mistake. The trail quickly turned to a quagmire churned by animal hooves, up to knee-deep. Three miles and three hours later, it was dark; the rising full moon saved us. We staggered into Pena Blanca (White Rock), population 200, and were given a nice palapa (palm roof) where we waited out the next day, Sunday, whil it rained and the mud deepened. We played songs and cards with the residents, Latinos who had established the town 11 years ago with a government contract to grow coffee. They felt ripped off and were negotiating new contracts directly with European dealers for their organic crop.

Monday, contrary to the estimates of those over-eager to hire out their burros, it was a relatively easy 45 minutes to Tenejapa near the Rio Jatate. Tenejapa was 150 Tzeltal indigenas (Indians) who had left a highland village of the same name with worn-out soil near San Cristobal. We hired Sebastiano, the local Conasupo (government-subsidized store) chief to help us locate balsa trees and build the raft.

Two-and-a-half days later, Fortress Jane was ready. The much-enlarged third version of our original Jane (Tarzan’s mate), Fortie had 21 colcha (balsa) logs, seven meters long. These were green like the logs of Thor Heyerdahl’s Kon Tiki. With machetes, we made oars of mahogany planks. Sebastian was called to a down-river Conasupo meeting, and left us the key to his house, his kids, and all but his wife, who was visiting back in old Tenejapa.

That evening, we climbed to a cave on the cliff above town the Tenejapans were afraid to enter. We went 100 meters in before the cave bent upwards, and found pottery shards and beautiful calcite formations. We climbed down as the tropical dark fell, fast. WE almost fell.

The next day, we loaded up and drifted down the Jatate. We ate sweet lemons and sour oranges, listening to the monkeys an birds. Howler monkeys are a lot like politicians: small, almost human creatures with loud, intimidating voices; you expect King Kong. They can sound like a lion, dog, or cow.

We camped that first night at the huge floodplain where the Rio Ixcan joined to form the Lacuntun. We stopped at Ranch Perto Rico and Loma Bonito, where the residents refused money for bananas, tomatoes, cacao, sugar cane, limes, tortillas, and beans they gave us. Regge and Rune joined us in the raft they’d just finished there.

Jane was built for speed, easily out-pacing the German-engineered Euraft with its nice, dry bamboo second layer. We figure we clocked 1.5 kilometer per hour on th Jatate, 4 km/hr on the Lacuntun, and 6 to 10 Kilometers km/hr

on the Usimacinta.

But Fortress Jane was too big for our own good; she tended to self-destruct when we hit snags. We abandoned her after four days in Pico de Oro. The Europeans had a plane to catch, and left with my companions on the 4 AM bus. I continued solo on the two-person Euraft.

After two more days of drifting, reading, and listening on the Lacuntun, things got exciting. Two teenaged fishermen guided me to a couple of Mayan figures engraved on El Planchon, a large limestone plate formation on a beach. Then the Lacutun joined the Rio Salinas to become the Usimacinta. Things sped up.

First, I passed a majestic symmetrical island and then came to El Chorro (the faucet), a magnificent set of waterfalls cascading off a limestone bench into the river. Six kilometers on, I stopped and stayed at El Chorrito, a smaller version. I strung my hammock in the trees by the falls and explained to a boy that in spite of my sandals, beard, and long hair, I was not Jesus returning.

Now the finale. On the Usimacinta, I could really only land the 500-pound raft by swimming to shore, and hauling it in with the 50 meters of cheap synthetic line.

Trying to stop at Bethel, Guatemala, to take a side trip to the ruins of Tikal, I put on my running shoes to land on the sharp limestone banks. The line tangled, and was now barely long enough to reach shore. I was being draggd from one landing attempt to another, weighed down by the wet shoes. I barely stopped her on the last rocky outcrop available. Two kids dashed up to help. If I hadn’t made it, I’d have had to bushwhack back from wherever I could land her; I had no machete. If I let go, I’d arrive in Guatemala with two shoe and triathlete shorts. I never got back on that raft.

Tikal was gorgeous, and I saw more monkeys in one day there than in eight on the river. I was low on cash, as we’d expected the round trip to take a week. It took 19 days. So I passed by our original goal, the ruins of Yaxchilan, where the head of the Lacondon gods, Halchik’yum lives. I caught a bus back to Bethel, and a boat down river, entered Mexico, and lucked into a fast van ride down the long dirt road back to Palenque. For some reason, I got right on a bus to San Cristobal, bypassing several of my favorite haunts.

The next day turned out to be the last day of Carnaval and fiesta for 50,000 indigenas and 200 gringos in nearby Chamula, famous for severely disciplining photographers. Two gringos had their glasses thrown under the trampling crowds by costumed “monkeys.” There something about our optics they don’t like. Most of us gringos were caught between the fire the “monkeys” pranced on the toros who charged the crowd in spite of their ropes. We did some firewalking ourselves to escape.

I went in their famous church and stayed a long time, inhaling the vast quantities of copal incense and the fumes of at least 1,000 candles. Many of the female carved santos (saints) had mirrors reflecting their tearful supplicants. These mirrors were said to remind us of the road to heaven: God within us.

Update Boulder

THE TIGHTROPE by Evan Ravitz
Published by the Colorado Daily 10/92

Early in ’93 groundbreaking begins for the 13th Street Bicycle Contraflow Lane, a strange hybrid of kept promise, Holy Grail, grand compromise and Nicaraguan mercenaries; all in all the hottest topic of ’92 -it generated the most letters to City Council. (Downtown businessfolk hired a PR mercenary to fight we cyclists- she’s not Nicaraguan, but a well-known politician.)

Longtime locals tell me we won. Cyclists heading South on 13th St. toward campus will no longer have to detour to 14th St. and back, violate the one-way on 13th, or risk Broadway. Cars lose thirty parking spaces on the West side of 13th, where the lane will be. The first parking given back to people since the Mall closed Pearl Street in 1977!

We wanted to close 13th from Walnut to Spruce to make a new section of the Mall, but with a bike path going through. Cyclist, neighborhood and environmental groups were overwhelmingly for this, in spite of disinformation by the City Planning department (see my May 7 column). Council says it will consider this for the future, but it took about 90 of us some 600 hours of work to force the promise of a bike route through downtown to be kept. Don’t read City lips!

Interestingly, at the 13th annual International Pedestrian Conference on October 1, at the Boulderado Hotel on 13th Street, the keynote speaker equated the single-occupant auto to the Berlin Wall of transportation. It must fall or our planet is toast: There are 400 million cars on earth for over five billion people, one for every 13 of us. Here in the U.S., there’s one for every two of us. When everyone has the American Dream machine, it will be the planet’s nightmare- we’ll soon run out of oil and decent air, and the Greenhouse effect will rule.

Keynoter Hiemstra also said politicians are slowing the changes we need, so we need to encourage direct democracy:

* * *

The Voting by Phone Foundation (whose goal is direct democracy) missed getting its initiative making phone voting an option for City elections on November’s ballot. We needed 10% of the voters’ signatures -we got 8%- next year we only need 5% as the law would have it. If City Council likes it can let us on next year with the old petition. Of course it takes just 5 of the 9 Councilors to put our proposal on the ballot themselves, instead of the 5400 signatures we needed this year to force it on. You might say they have more than 1000 times the power we citizens have. Is their judgement 1000 times better?

That’s the kind of tilted playing field in the marketplace of ideas that the Voting by Phone Foundation seeks to rebalance. Once we have a convenient, ecological and economical voting system, we could use it often to vote on the issues ourselves. Phone voting is now about 4 times less expensive than the present archaic system, so lets reduce the signatures necessary to put initiatives on the ballot by 4 times. Then more citizens will be involved in making better laws. You might call it self-determination.

In Nova Scotia on June 20, some 7000 voted by phone in the Liberal Party primary, over 4 times the number that used to come to their convention in person. Each call cost fifty cents, compared to the typical $2 per vote that Boulder elections now cost. Phone voting saves much more in the hidden cost of gasoline and lost time.

Before the June 20 success was the June 6 failure, due to incomplete testing of the system. Unfortunately, both Boulder papers confused the issue (perhaps enough to thwart our petition) when the facts were clear. The Wall Street Journal, CBS and CNN got it right and gave us the coverage this deserves.

Canada is considering a national phone referendum on a new constitution. The Pentagon is considering phone voting for servicepeople. And the Civil Rights division of the Justice Department has been asked to sue for phone voting for the blind, pursuant to the Americans with Disabilities Act.

I first proposed voting by phone to the City Council over four years ago. If not us, who? If not now, when? Please write the Council (PO Box 791, Boulder CO 80306) asking them to hold hearings and put our initiative on the ballot next year. Send copies to the newspapers. Call us at 444-3596 for our free demonstration and literature.

As Nova Scotia Liberal leader Guy Brown says: “If we believe in democracy, this is the only way we can go.”

* * *

This summer for the first time musicians on the Mall could get permits to sell their own recordings and personal services (like massage and tarot) permits were available. Few have complained of a ‘flea market’ atmosphere as feared. Freedom and diversity are popular with nearly everyone here.

* * *

BIKE MEXICO! (and maybe more). Four or Five of us head South for adventure in early November. First stop, Basaseachic Falls and Copper Canyon for a hot springs backpack trip. Further itinerary left to serendipity.

Two of us speak Spanish competently. One is an expert bike mechanic. I’ve biked most of Mexico before. Two intend to continue to South America. We are three men and one or two women so far. Like to go? Again, 444-3596.

Voting by phone encourages democracy

GUEST OPINION by Evan Ravitz
Published by the Boulder Sunday Camera 8/2/92

Why is Voting by Phone so controversial, when Americans have accepted lever-style voting machines, card-punch voting machines, absentee ballots, all-postal elections and computer vote counting almost without notice?

First, a reminder that the Voting by Phone Initiative now seeking signatures proposes phone voting as a choice, like absentee voting. If you want to vote the usual way, fine, but why not let the handicapped, elderly, distant rural residents, busy parents or anyone else have the convenience?

Because voting by phone is the easiest and fastest method, it produces the highest turnout- 94% in the world’s first on June 20, a primary in Nova Scotia. This seems to threaten American politicians who only want their own supporters to vote. More voters make their game less predictable.

Because voting by phone is the most economical since it is the most ecological way -no paper, no driving, no machines besides the existing phone system and a computer- it makes practical a real democracy, where citizens vote regularly on the issues important to them. This is now done in Switzerland and in New England (and Ward, Colorado) town meetings, and was most recently proposed for the nation by Perot.

The Heart of the issue is: “whether or not America believes in democracy and believes it can afford the risks that go with democratic life. All of the objections to it are so many different ways of saying ‘the people are not to be trusted’.”*

Columnist and former City Councilman Paul Danish and others like the NY Times’ William Safire fear the “instant” emotional voting the phone might allow. Yet Congress has had electronic voting for years and nobody has complained that Congress is moving too fast–or blames the technology for their moral turpitude. Voting on issues needs to be properly scheduled, which is taken care of by Boulder’s existing initiative laws.

Danish says that most non-voters are also disinterested and uninformed. Actually, studies show that most participating voters are uninformed about candidates voting records and vote largely by party, name recognition or looks. A Kettering Foundation study showed that a lot of non-voters are not so much disinterested as disgusted. Give them a regular vote on the issues instead of just personalities and watch them take interest!

The founding fathers settled for a representative democracy largely because most Americans were illiterate and had no time to come together to vote. These problems are solved! As Andrew Jackson said: “If there is a problem with democracy, the solution is more democracy.”

Safire and others worry about a “mobocracy” voting to steal our liberty. That’s why we have a Bill of Rights and a judicial system to protect us or the J. Edgar Hoovers and Richard Nixons and George Bushes would have stolen what’s left years ago. I think liberty requires democracy and so did George Bernard Shaw: “Liberty means responsibility. That is why most men dread it.”

If you want teen-agers to grow up, you have to give them responsibility. Same with citizens. America is like an adolescent: high-powered and eating up the planet’s resources. But we can blame the President for not signing the Rio Accords. We can blame Congress for our enormous debt. We must grow up and share the responsibility. As the philosopher Goethe said, “What government is best? That which teaches us to govern ourselves.”

America’s whole history is a move to more democracy- giving the vote to blacks, women and 18-year olds, direct election of Senators, and the establishment of voter Initiatives in 20 states. Now that almost all of us can read and can find a phone, it would be a shame to lose our self-confidence when real democracy is within our grasp.

Canada is already considering a national phone referendum on its new Constitution within 6 months as a result of the Nova Scotia success. The Pentagon is now considering phone voting for servicepeople. Why not us? Is Boulder bolder or just a (c)rock? Please help us pass our petition, raise funds, write letters or do data entry- you’ll be making history. But don’t delay- we have until August 16 to collect 4000 more signatures. Call 444-3596.

You can also try our free demonstration of phone voting at 444-3596. If you registered in the City limits by July 8, we can identify you by name and birthdate and keep you to one vote. In our first vote, ending July 15, those registered voted 0% for Bush, 23% for Clinton, 20% for Perot, and 57% for None of the Above; 24% approved of the new Community Hospital parking structure, 29% disapproved and 47% had no opinion. The current vote substitutes a question on Syntex for the parking question.

Watching so much of the intelligencia contort themselves to oppose phone voting and/or true democracy reminds me of writer William James’ statement: “A great many people think they are thinking when they are merely rearranging their prejudices.”

Danish is right- Voting by Phone is no panacea. But it will lead to democracy- that’s why politicians have been fighting it since Bucky Fuller first proposed it in 1940. Think what a different country this would be if the voters had been helping run it for 52 years! Isn’t it about time we got started? May the best and brightest ideas win!

*Journalist Benjamin Barber, testimony to Congress on the Voter Initiative Constitutional Amendment, 12/14/77, defeated by your representatives. Power concedes nothing without a struggle.

Boulder: A Question of Balance

THE TIGHTROPE by Evan Ravitz
Published in the Colorado Daily 5/92

City Council deserves congratulations for reaching an honorable compromise on the 13th Street issue. The parking on the West side of the street from Spruce to Walnut will be converted to a bike path so Southbound cyclists won’t have to take the 14th Street detour anymore.

And Council promised to consider closing the street to cars entirely (and perhaps “malling” it, as discussed since at least 1975), as part of the ongoing redesign of Downtown. We pedestrians and cyclists need to make sure the City follows through, since the Planning Department ignored and then (unfairly) fought this, originally their own plan, in the last year.

I am not against access for cars, or the tourists they carry. I earn my living as a tightrope walker on the Mall 100 feet from 13th Street and tourists are a big part of our audience. But let’s not forget our bicycle and foot- crazy locals: Daily Camera interviews with tourists all last summer showed that the tourists loved seeing the colorful, even weird, people of Boulder.

There’s a balance downtown needs- between the transportation needs of tourists and locals. Yet here too, the easier alternate transportation is for locals, the more parking left for tourists. Planning Department’s portrayal of a conflict between economic vitality and the needs of cyclists and walkers will prove false. I have been amused to be lectured about balance by so many, not only non-tightrope-walkers, but, apparently at least, non-walkers!

The beautiful environment and fascinating residents of Boulder are the goose that laid the golden egg that the Mall is for the merchants. Tourists can get beer and burgers, pizza and ice cream in every town in America. They can see the Rubber Duckies, Easter Bunny, Santa Claus and other characters that the City supplies in every bathtub and tourist trap.

Up until 2 years ago, the City spent thousands on legal and police action to reduce our homegrown eclectic circus of entertainment to mostly music, magic and juggling. The locals are bored with what’s left, and far fewer come than a decade ago. Many find the traffic and pollution repellent as well, and access is difficult for those on foot, on bicycles, with baby carriages or rollerblades. That’s less local color for the tourists to see.

Partly as a result, business is down, but only in the downtown part of Boulder (according the the Boulder Business Report.) Boulder’s elite needs to remember that the best things in life are free, and these include clean air and outdoor entertainment.

I’d like to quote a petition for closing 13th signed by many of Boulder’s most famous runners and tri-athletes: “Pollution-induced asthma is a very real concern to professional athletes and is epidemic. Boulder is no exception and unless the air quality is improved Boulder will quickly lose its reputation as the country’s most desirable place to train.”

These folks are like canaries in a coal mine- they breathe more than us- and we should heed their warning, as well as Chief Niwot’s, which was not just that the whites would always come back to the beauty of Boulder Valley, but would destroy it.

Let’s not. Please help keep our city focused on a kinder, gentler, more breathable future. A Murdoch University (Australia) study of 32 international cities showed that: “High gasoline use is closely linked to the degree to which the city provides automobile infrastructure in the form of roads and car parking.”

So you may want to come and perhaps speak at a hearing before the Planning Board June 4 at 7:30 at the City Council Chambers (SW corner of Broadway and Canyon.) Another huge parking structure is under consideration for the hospital at the SW corner of Alpine and Broadway.

Bolder Bike Commuters, which spearheaded the 13th Street fight, has its monthly meeting Monday June 1 at 6:30 at Morgul Bismark Bicycles, 1221 Pennsylvania on the Hill.

You can always write the City Council at Box 791, The Daily Camera at Box 591, and the Colorado Daily at Box 1719, all in Boulder CO 80306.

13th Street a fair fight? NOT!

THE TIGHTROPE by Evan Ravitz
Published in the Colorado Daily 5/92

To hear the 13th Street merchants speak at the special Joint Hearing of 3 City boards April 23, you’d think every one of them was a born-again cyclist and pedestrian. NOT! While many cycle recreationally, it was their perceived ‘enemies’, those who want to shut 2 blocks of 13th to cars, who actually rode bikes to City Hall that warm spring eve.

While the merchants were arguing that eliminating cars would put pedestrians at risk from cyclists, an older pedestrian told the truth: cars terrorize pedestrians every day in Boulder. Indeed 2 blocks away right after the meeting a man was struck and put in serious condition with a broken neck and leg. 6 weeks earlier, 3 pedestrians were hit, with 2 broken legs and critical head injuries among them. Blame it on those lycra-clad cyclists, 2 of whom were killed in town in the last 2 years, not by pedestrians, but by cars.

Our friend announced a Senior’s protest at this fall’s 13th Pedestrian Conference, where the City congratulates itself (about $30,000 worth) for its prize from Walking Magazine for being one of the 10 most pedestrian friendly cities in America. NOT! Any 10 small cities in California would be safer, because drivers there stop for pedestrians. Credit the City’s PR machine.

The merchants also argue that closing 13th from Walnut to Spruce would reduce the Mall’s visibility. NOT! If we were closing Broadway, I’d agree- many people discover the Mall passing by on Broadway. But everyone agrees 13th is a linear parking lot, not a through street. Indeed the Mall would become more visible from Spruce and Walnut, which carry more traffic.

Closing 13th would help implement 2 goals of the Boulder Valley comprehensive plan- reducing auto traffic and creating a transport system appropriate to a compact community with auto-free zones. There are some 2000 blocks of street in Boulder. 4 are closed to cars- the Pearl Street Mall. We are asking for a modest 2 blocks more- and these blocks are shorter than the Mall’s. Remember, the City spent $9500 on prizes alone for a design competition for 13th in 1985. All entries involved closing 5 blocks of 13th from Arapahoe to Pine. We just want the City to show good faith by starting with the 2 blocks that are already a pedestrian zone.

It is outrageous to see the Planning Department using our taxes to fight the City’s abandoned plan resurrected by citizens who actually practice what they preach. But it’s NOT enough that our employees fight us- they cheat:

In 1990 I asked the Bike Coordinator what happened to the 13th Street plan. She said it was important and would call a meeting. Later that summer I asked what happened. She said the meeting was held while she was on vacation, and the matter dropped. Were she or I or you invited? NOT!

Last summer the City hosted a “Design Charette” at the Boulder Theater for celebrity designers and the public. The Planning Department’s review of 13th Street proposals mentioned several ideas that were NOT discussed at the Charette, but left out one that was- closure.

With persistence, the closure plan was added to the September 16 Open House on bike paths at the Boulderado. Planning’s document for the Joint Hearing mentioned the Open House, but NOT the result of the voting- closure 57%, all other plans 43%!

Planning has been compiling lists of pros and cons of the various plans. After many phone calls and a meeting with Planning’s new director, I finally felt the lists were fair. But Planning’s document and presentation at the Joint hearing were NOT:

One of the old cons was that closing 13th would block off access to the United Bank parking lot. I explained to our professional planners that access could simply be moved around the corner onto Walnut. Oh yes, they said, that would work. Now they’re saying closure would block the County Building exit. Same ‘problem’, same solution: move the exit around the corner to Spruce. Why do I have to explain this to the ‘pros’, twice?!?

Another of Planning’s new cons is that without cars, conflicts between pedestrians and cyclists could arise, like on the Broadway path. For months I’ve been asking the City Bike Program for signs distinguishing the bike and pedestrian lanes on the Broadway path. Why doesn’t Planning ask for signs instead of complaining? Besides, our plan gives pedestrians very wide sidewalks raised above the bike path, unlike the Broadway path.

It’s time Planning stopped prostituting itself for the merchants and started solving problems instead of inventing them. They are biting the hand that funds them! Closure is by far the best way to implement the Downtown Plan Steering Committee’s 9 Strategies to improve downtown, agreed to by the City Council and the 3 Boards.

Closure is also the best way to implement the Boulder Valley Transportation Master Plan goal of a transit system “competitive with the single occupant car in convenience, user friendliness, travel time, image, affordability and accessibility.” The bicycle wins (in town) in all categories except image, which seems to be the only value held by City government anymore.

The facts are in: closing Pearl Street was the best thing that ever happened downtown. When the 2 blocks of 13th are closed for weekend special events every summer, business booms. Let’s try a trial closure and see. The best use of the $1 million of real estate the 56 parking spots in question use is for outside dining, sidewalk sales and street entertainment.

Please show support by writing the City Council, (Box 791, Boulder 80306), the newspapers, or coming to the final public hearing- Tuesday May 19 starting at 7:30 at City Hall, the SW corner of Broadway and Canyon. For more info call me at 444-3596. Ask them to put your money where their mouth is!