LO_10_09 Online and In Print - Since we started!

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Jim O'Bryan
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LO_10_09 Online and In Print - Since we started!

Post by Jim O'Bryan »

Image

http://media.lakewoodobserver.com/issue_pdfs/Observer_Vol_10_Issue_09.pdf

All

Funny on this cold, wet, rainy April day, I think back to the winter that everyone thought was too long, too rough and too bad, and think of the day it hit 103 on the First Federal Sign, and the summer events that will come with the heat. The Arts Festival, Summer MeltDown, Fourth of July Parade, and the Lakewood Car Kulture Show. With a smile, and a bead of sweat.

One of the things that makes Lakewood special are these affairs mostly started by private individuals who saw a need, had an idea, and made it happen. It is the culture of Lakewood. Thinking outside the box about things normally left within the box. While the City has not often if ever been able to think out of the box, the residents, who seem to be creative by nature, sure do a great job for them.

After all what do we really need from a city except SAFE and CLEAN? How far out of the box does one really need to think to deliver SAFE, CLEAN STREETS? Governments have been doing it for years. How hard is it to provide safe, clean homes? Our building department is at the ready to inspect homes being altered, but what about sold or rented? Bill Call started a thread on the Deck called “The Rent Is Too High,” an ode to NY Governor candidate Jimmy McMillan. But is it? If we are truly in one of the best suburbs/communities in the area, and again we are called that by the Scene, then our rent should be high, and our number one business in Lakewood, rentals, should be pushing us up in tax base, renters, and living. We need point of purchase, and maybe point of rental inspections. A friend moved here from Cleveland, and found her apartment to be one of the few available but disgusting for the price. They had looked at three other rentals in their range and found them dirty, cramped, no blinds, old paint, etc. This should never happen. We collectively work our asses off to get our brand up there, and a few bad eggs can ruin it so easily.

Likewise in our rush to make things happen in Downtown, maybe we should look at some of the existing structures. We had a death a couple years ago when a workman fell through a rough of the property he was working on. It had rotted. This week we had most of a great historic structure fall apart landing on a sidewalk nearly hurting a passerby. Had any one of a number of 50lb to a 100lb pieces landed on him, he would have been killed, as would anyone leaving the Shore, the Cleaners or other stores. This is not the first and it will not be the last, if we do not up our game, and start to look at the old structures, instead of salivating over new box stores with featureless buildings.

Yeah, by some odd alignment of the stars, the residents, the businesses, etc., Lakewood has arrived yet again as the prettiest girl at the dance. As Lakewoodites, we need to keep our looks and brand up. As a City we need to understand there is no need for desperation, it is a time for living, enjoying and saving for those rainy days when we might need a face-lift or a tummy tuck way down the road.

Lakewood I love you.
Jim O'Bryan
Lakewood Resident

"The very act of observing disturbs the system."
Werner Heisenberg

"If anything I've said seems useful to you, I'm glad.
If not, don't worry. Just forget about it."
His Holiness The Dalai Lama
Betsy Voinovich
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Joined: Tue Mar 24, 2009 9:53 am

Re: LO_10_09 Online and In Print - Since we started!

Post by Betsy Voinovich »

Jim said:

Yeah, by some odd alignment of the stars, the residents, the businesses, etc., Lakewood has arrived yet again as the prettiest girl at the dance. As Lakewoodites, we need to keep our looks and brand up. As a City we need to understand there is no need for desperation, it is a time for living, enjoying and saving for those rainy days when we might need a face-lift or a tummy tuck way down the road.


I think it's dangerous to use metaphors when you're talking to, or about City Hall.

Lakewood, according to the Scene Magazine, is the "prettiest girl" at the dance in terms of best place to live and go to school. You couldn't ask for better categories than that. And yet, as Jim points out, our neighborhoods AS neighborhoods, places for people to live TOGETHER come LAST for City Hall. The thousand-committee-meeting-designed "Community Vision" does not even address the health of the neighborhoods. It doesn't admit to Lakewood HAVING neighborhoods per se, just houses. Not even homes.

What has happened down by the new/old McDonald's to those neighborhoods? To the housing values, to the kind of home buyers those streets used to be able to attract? How about down the road at Grace and Cohassett-- rumble truck, shiny light land?

First how about we admit that we HAVE neighborhoods and that they have value? (Or that people who live south of Clifton have a right to have neighborhoods? Even if they live near the business district? Some communities do both. Someday maybe someone in the development office will take a look at them.)

Our last school Superintendent (before Patterson) introduced himself to parents who didn't know him from his Golden Days in Lakewood by explaining that "Neighborhood was a state of mind"! And going on to imply that it would not be a bad thing if we decimated those imaginary neighborhoods by taking out an area's "neighborhood school." How many families move to a neighborhood because the elementary school is "right there"? How many come because it is safe? and quiet? and it smells nice even? And most of the traffic is just people who live there? Not hundreds of thousands of Big Mac, smart-phone juggling commuters on their way through?

I have heard many say that they like Detroit's "face-lift." They like the fake bricks and the overbearing signage. ("Lake Erie"!) And in some ways it keeps the city looking like things are happening and it is part of the 21st century. (Paying hundreds of thousands for "wayfinding" and then the graphics for it, is how you do it in the 21st century.) Unique restaurants and stores are great-- to a certain degree. And as Jim points out, City Hal had little to do with many of them. We can have that, encourage unique Lakewood-grown businesses AND NOT TRASH our neighborhoods with big box stores and greasy food. We just have to try. We as residents and voters have to insist on it.

Keeping the Shore building from falling down isn't a "tummy tuck" or a "face-lift." It is a regular check-up. The kind you get for your kids every year, on time, to make sure nothing is going wrong. Because you know your kids are valuable. Making sure you don't put garbage businesses on the ends of really nice residential streets is not a tummy tuck. It's way more like, again, an over-all physical.

First we need to agree on what we have that is valuable. Obviously some economic development AND preservation of our neighborhoods-- the homes and the residents-- is necessary.


Betsy Voinovich
Betsy Voinovich
Posts: 1261
Joined: Tue Mar 24, 2009 9:53 am

Re: LO_10_09 Online and In Print - Since we started!

Post by Betsy Voinovich »

Wow check this out. Bryce! Christine! Katie! Mrs. Kozelka!

There is every reason that everyone who cares about Lakewood
could be on the same page.

Lakewood, OH: The Suburb Where Everyone Can Walk to School
http://vimeo.com/92912802

Betsy Voinovich
Paul Schrimpf
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Re: LO_10_09 Online and In Print - Since we started!

Post by Paul Schrimpf »

Speaking of homes, whatever happened to that home inspection program where every house got rated?
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Jim O'Bryan
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Re: LO_10_09 Online and In Print - Since we started!

Post by Jim O'Bryan »

Paul Schrimpf wrote:Speaking of homes, whatever happened to that home inspection program where every house got rated?


Paul

The city completed it last year with the help of LakewoodAlive, and I belive LakewoodAlive
and the city is back at it this year. Many house were cited and cleaned up.

The problems are many fold and tough. How often do you want someone coming into your
home? So it is hard to inspect insides without reason. Hilary and Allison both found out that
needing pain is often a signal for other very important needs inside, and then it gets crazy.
LakewoodAlive, the city and some of the banks around like FFL have great programs for
homeowners, especially those on the cusp of failure. And it does not take much water, much
freezing and thawing before small problems become huge.

.
Jim O'Bryan
Lakewood Resident

"The very act of observing disturbs the system."
Werner Heisenberg

"If anything I've said seems useful to you, I'm glad.
If not, don't worry. Just forget about it."
His Holiness The Dalai Lama
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