Showing posts with label public works. Show all posts
Showing posts with label public works. Show all posts

Thursday, September 21, 2023

City of Redmond's Button Truck


I was walking my dog and saw this monster of a truck on 166th across from the middle school.  It's installing the small yellow reflector "buttons" that mark the lanes of our roads.  Zoey jerked on the leash and it was over!

-- Bob Yoder, 9/21/2023 

Monday, August 7, 2023

90th Street Pond Restoration Underway, Fish Protected

Green Heron spears a frog on the 90th Street Bridge stormwater pond

The City of Redmond budgeted a little over a million dollars to remove sediment and restore the functionality of the 90th Street stormwater runoff pond.  The pond is located at the intersection of the 90th Street Bridge and the Sammamish River.  The project is scheduled to be completed by the beginning of October.

For over twelve years, I have been observing and photographing the abundant wildlife that often appears in this pond. Great blue herons frequently catch fish and frogs here.  Above, is a rare Green Heron spearing a frog!  Different species of waterfowl often appear during the spring and fall migratory seasons.  I once photographed six adult male wood ducks together in the pond at the same time!


In addition to the varied birdlife, I have photographed:  a beaver on two different occasions, a raccoon, river otters frolicking in the pond twice, and a coyote, which really surprised me.

I don't know what will become of this wildlife once the project is complete.  A worker said they netted all of the fish at the east end of the enclosure, and relocated them to the west end, nearest to the river.  This was to protect the fish. The worker said that when entering the pond the accumulated sediment was so deep where they were netting the fish, that it came up to their shoulders!

--Photos and Story by John Reinke, 8/7/2023

City removing rich, organic soil from the pond


"The existing NE 90th St stormwater pond treats the runoff from the 90th St stormwater basin before it drains into the Sammamish River. It was constructed in 2000 and currently provides about two thirds of the water quality treatment required by today’s regulations. The pond works by allowing sediment to settle out of the stormwater before it enters the Sammamish River. Over the last 20 years, significant sediment has accumulated, filling up a portion of the pond. The City will be removing the accumulated sediment from the pond during the summer of 2023. "


(Source:  NE 90th Street Stormwater Pond Retrofit | Redmond, WA )

Wednesday, July 27, 2022

ADA Curb Ramp Construction On Education Hill

 πŸ˜ƒAnd I thought the work was being done here because its in the Mayor's neighborhood! 😁 

Hello Mr. Yoder, 

I’m writing in response to your question about ADA curb ramps as I serve as the City's ADA curb ramp program manager.

 

Curb ramp replacements on 166th Ave NE are part of the City’s comprehensive ADA curb ramp program. Projects in the city, including ADA curb ramp program projects, are prioritized systematically through the Capital Investment Strategy (CIS) and Capital Improvement Plans (CIP).

 

As part of the ADA curb ramp program, the City completed a curb ramp assessment in 2013 for compliance with ADA regulations. The City also gathered community input in 2019 on existing locations where curb ramps should be replaced and created a prioritized list of locations for ramp replacements. Projects under the ADA curb ramp program were prioritized based on proximity to facilities such as schools, state/local government facilities, public bus and vanpool stops, places of public accommodation, and proximity to major employment centers.

Tuesday, June 29, 2021

The City Of Redmond's "Pavement Preservation Program"


 redmond.gov/Pavement

I noticed this 'pavement preservation program' sign near the QFC at Bella Bottega.  Couldn't believe my eyes.  Tried to learn what was going on, but the web link was broken. You'd think Public Works would have more on their plate than this.

-- Bob Yoder, opinion

Wednesday, April 11, 2018

UPDATED: City of Redmond Appoints Interim Planning Director

Redmond, WA – Redmond Mayor John Marchione has announced the appointment of Erika Vandenbrande as the interim Planning Director, due to Karen Anderson’s resignation in late March.

ErikaV
Erica Vandendbrand
Vandenbrande started with the City of Redmond in 2001 and currently serves as the Deputy City Administrator. She will continue operating in both positions until a new Planning Director is hired. Vandenbrande has held various management positions in her seventeen years with the city including Transportation Demand Management Manager and Economic Development Manager. Before joining the City of Redmond, Vandenbrande held planning roles at the US Environmental Protection Agency and South Coast Air Quality Management District. She was also a manager at Southern California Association of Governments where she was responsible for developing the local government portion of the regional Air Quality Management Plan.

Erica's extensive knowledge and understanding of city planning projects in addition to her passion for the Redmond community make her an ideal fit for the interim Planning Director, stated Mayor John Marchione.  We re in the process of conducting a national search.
Vandenbrande is a graduate of the University of Rochester with a Master of Public Policy Analysis and a Bachelor degree in Geology.
It is interesting to note the Mayor appointed Parks and Human Services Director Maxine Whattam as interim Planning and Public Works Director due to Linda DeBolt's apparent resignation in February. Ms. Whattan now has a duel role.  Mr. White is running the Public Works operations. (Over the years he's presented to council on Redmond water.) The Redmond Natural Resource Manager oversees 30 employees many of them involved with the management of the city aquifer, including Redmond's geologist.  In my opinion, the Planning and Development Director (Karen Anderson) and Planning and Public Works shake up might be attributed to development problems associated with the aquifer. 

B. Yoder                                                 

Thursday, March 29, 2012

166th Ave. repair and restoration scheduled for Spring

NE 166th Ave near Redmond Way
 From the desk of Micheal Haley, P.E., Senior Project Manager, Public Works..

February 22, 2012

"The Downtown Stormwater Trunk project contractor is actively installing new stormwater pipe on 166th Ave NE and at 170th Ave NE and Avondale Way. The work is occurring at night and that may explain why you have not observed much activity of late.

Much of the restoration and repair will involve "a pavement grind" and overlay of the asphalt roadway damaged by installation."  Read More >>

According to Mr Haley, installation of stormwater pipeline along 170th Ave. is scheduled for completion before 166th Ave.  "The current schedule shows that we will complete restoration and repair of 166th Ave. NE this early spring  after all the new stormwater pipe has been installed."

Haley says this sort of restoration and road repair activity is "the last major item of work for the contractor and is somewhat weather dependent. These factors make it difficult to predict the exact date of the repair to 166th Ave NE but rest assured the repair will be accomplished before the project is complete."

Michael Haley, P.E.
mhaley@redmond.gov

Comment:    ROAD GRINDING IS UNDERWAY, 4/26/12.  I'm not sure why completing the less traveled 170th Ave. takes precedence over 166th Ave. our primary arteriole to Education Hill and North Redmond. B.Y.  Comment? 

Saturday, February 18, 2012

City road constuction contractors overlook stormwater treatment

This is the first report in a series on road construction, road conditions in the city...

The City of Redmond requires developers and their contractors to install fabric filters in and around project storm drains, to keep silt and pollutants from entering into stormwater lines. Stormwater treatment is important because it all eventually drains into our creeks and rivers and ultimately into Puget Sound.  City  inspectors or the contractor may repair this in the near future.  It's ironic the construction project involves building a stormwater trunk-line under the road.

Unprotected 166th AVE NE storm drain in Redmond covered
 with asphalt spilling from a temporary curb. 2/18/12 

Correct Method:  Storm drain is protected with filter cloth
 and the stormwater is treated.
  (Milwaukee, WI)

Asphalt is a thick brownish or black substance derived from the same crude oil which produces kerosene, gasoline and vinyl. It is literally scraped from the bottom of the barrel after all other petroleum-based products have been refined or processed.  Petroleum products are pollutants.

The city announces in their RCTV-21, website, twitter and AM 1650 storm reports to do your part to keep our storm drains clear of leaves and debris.  For city action on road or drain problems please write council@redmond.gov for help.    

Reported and photographed by Bob Yoder
Photo of fabric grate from Internet (Wisconsin)

Wednesday, February 8, 2012

UPDATED: Councilmember Pat Vache' responds to neighborhood tree hazard


Sidewalk roped off from a tree hanging on wires
UPDATED:  In late January, mothers walked their children down this hill to school, many unaware of the blue spruce leaning over their heads, balanced on utility lines.

Yes, the third wave of our January snow, ice and rain storm was hard on neighborhoods.  It took four days to close this sidewalk on Education Hill and seven days to remove the tree hazard.  Fortunately, neighbors pressed; and no one was hurt.

City and utility companies were slow to respond, despite the imminent danger.   Various distraught neighbors called 911, the mayor's office and utility companies.  Public Works identified the wires as "harmless phone lines" owned by Comcast saying, "it is their responsibility to remove the tree."   Two Pubic Works employees and a police officer looked it over and "walked on," according to an Education Hill resident, John.
 
 Frustrated and upset, John emailed city councilman and Ombudsman Pat Vache' on January 31,   John wrote Pat, "I cannot believe how hard it's been to get Redmond's attention on this."  (John had called 911 twice, PSE and several neighbors on January 27.)  Another neighbor called Comcast and walked them to the site.  The tree was finally removed February 2 after city Ombudsman-of-the-month Pat Vache' stepped in and had the sidewalk barriers installed.  Mr. Vache' went out of his way to help us.  Read More >>

Wednesday, August 10, 2011

Rain water tour at Redmond's Grasslawn Park addresses polluted stormwater run-off, impacts and solutions

City of Redmond Grasslawn Park Clubhouse
rainwater run-off feeds into the garden
from the desk of Maddie Foutch, intern with People For Puget Sound ...
UPDATED:  "As part of my summer internship with "People For Puget Sound" I am putting together a Rain Water tour. Co-hosted by People For Puget Sound, Sustainable Redmond, and Redmond Public Works, the tour will be addressing the issue of polluted runoff and what the City of Redmond is currently doing about it.
Maddie's Rain Water Tour @ Graslawn Park
features rainwater expert guides
Monday, August 15, 6:30 - 8 p.m.
7013 - 148th Ave. NE
Meet at the Grasslawn Clubhouse on the NE corner of the park.
 The tour begins at the northeast corner of Grasslawn Park with an introduction to polluted runoff and the impacts it has on us as everyday citizens. We will then proceed through the park stopping to examine the many solutions the City of Redmond is implementing, including green roofs, permeable asphalt, and rain gardens. The tour will conclude after a Q&A session with the tour speakers ...read more >>
####
From the desk of Cindy Jayne, Chair, Sustainable Redmond ...
After the Rain Water tour, whoever is interested will head over to a nearby pub to have an informal discussion on sustainability, projects for the future, projects in progress, recent activities, etc.
Posted By Yoder
Photo courtesy of Sustainable Redmond

Department of Ecology praises City on quick and correct response to PSE fire explosion

The State of Washington Department of Ecology (DOE) recently praised the City of Redmond for the quick and correct response from the Fire and Public Works departments during the June fire at the Puget Sound Energy substation fire.
A job well done!
The efforts taken by these two departments prevented a potentially serious release of oil and firefighting foam into local surface waters. Quick thinking and coordination between Fire and Public Works safely contained the foam solution and more than 1000 gallons of mineral oil within a stormwater swale adjacent to the fire scene. Upon determining that the fire would be suppressed with foam, the fire incident commander, Battalion Chief Ed Carolan, notified Public Works, which promptly sealed off the swale’s drainage outlet.
Bill Cambell
Dir. Public Works
Jeannie Summerhays, DOE’s Regional Director stated, “We congratulate the City on taking these preventative measures in the stress of a time-critical situation with significant health and safety risks.”
The swale drains directly into a creek that enters the Sammamish River only several dozen yards away from the fire location. The Sammamish is an important salmon river and its bank habitat is home to many species. Foam solution and oil are toxic to fish and wildlife.
“The environmental consequences of this fire could have been substantial,” stated Mayor John Marchione. “Due to our concern for the environment, we train our employees to coordinate emergency response and environmental protection during emergencies.”
Due to the City’s quick action, Puget Sound Energy’s environmental contractors were able to effectively collect oil and foam rinse from the swale and remove residual contamination from the incident site.
Press release
Photo taken of Redmond Fire after a three hour training session

Thursday, October 22, 2009

Beautiful, but is it worth $4, 068,000?


Redmond's $4 Million Dollar Water Tanks
Come back soon to hear "the rest of the story" about these tanks on NE 104th Street.

The mural paintings were probably paid for by a 1% arts fee on the $4M project.  The Arts Department gets to keep 1% of the cost of Public Works projects to install art on site.  The bulk of  the money was spent on seismic reinforcement, three coats of paint, and retrofitting two other water tanks - one behind this one and a smaller one by Perrigo Springs.

by Bob Yoder, 11/28/09
photo by Bob Yoder

Sunday, July 19, 2009

Redmond moves forward with state-of-the-art electronic planning technology

UPDATED: Councilmember (CM) Hank Margeson's Committee Meeting on Planning and Public Works almost always has an agenda loaded with at least one interesting topic. I sat in on Hank's 7/16 meeting and he didn't let me down.

Staff presented a new electronic technology for reviewing land use, building, and civil permitting plans. The product was demonstrated and compared to the current, cumbersome paper planning process.

Presently, documents for each permit plan are stored as thick, heavy 4-foot rolls of paper. These permit plans are so bulky it takes two people to haul them upstairs to the Permit Center. Planning Director Rob Odle quipped at photograph of a heavy roll leaning against a desk: "and that roll was just for a single family house permit." Storing and copying these paper planning documents is cumbersome and expensive.

The proposed electronic plan system is anything but cumbersome and redundant. The digital review technology makes it possible for ALL departments (including Fire) to work together real time on project plans from it's original design to the final permit. "Stuff" isn't missed, downtime is eliminated and the complete review process moves faster and, in the end promotes economic development. Electronic copies are readily accessible. The applicants are happy because they can go on the city website to assist in moving the project forward. Nancy McCormick said "fees could go down, not up."

The "overlay tool" is staff's favorite feature. New verisons of a plan can be overlaid on older versions to highlight deletions, additions and other changes as the plan moves forward. Other digital tools help to identify problems and make it more fun for staff e.g zoom, cloud, sticky note, colors.

Rob Odle's Planning & Development Department took four bids and surveyed Bend, OR, Bellingham, WA, and Beaverton, OR for product satisfaction and economy. Implimentation costs for the program are $232,000; ongoing maintenance fees are $18,000/year. However, technology efficiencies lower departmental costs 20% on average for most cities. Bend, OR has saved 50% with their electronic planning technology.

Councilmembers Margeson, Cole, Allen, and McCormick appeared elated with the technology and staff's presentation. Redmond would be the first city in King County to employ the new digital permit planning technology.

Bend, OR. Electronic Plan Review e-plan website

Wednesday, June 24, 2009

New traffic intersections called "roundabouts" are planned for Redmond

Short video on how a modern "roundabout" works and why it's safe. (1+min.) click

The City is in early planning stages for "roundabouts" on:

  • 36th Street
  • West Lake Sammamish Blvd near 43th Street
  • NE 116th Street (two roundabouts)
  • Novelty Hill & Union Hill (2-lanes)

Last night, Council studied the utility of modern roundabouts (RAB) for possible replacement of several future intersections. The 36th Street roundabout has already been approved. They specifically studied the impact of a roundabout in the View Point Neighborhood on West Lake Sammamish Blvd and 43rd Street. It's unfunded at this time.

Richard Cole was concerned about cars driving down the streets (7) from the west onto W. Lake Sammamish. His questions about their ability to turn left were answered by David Carson. Mr. Carson lives on one of these streets and felt by using the roundabout he could make a safer and faster "left hand turn". (W. Lake Samm. Blvd. is planned for 4-lanes without a turn lane).

From my teenager days of driving "Hawthorn Circle" on the Saw Mill River Parkway in New York, I thought today's modern "roundabouts" might be dangerous. (Wrong.) When driving the Circle, I'd always get tense and stressed trying to merge into it. The cars moved so fast on the circle. I even remember my grandfather almost having a collision (and he didn't even know it!). In actuality, driving modern roundabouts is not a new skill and it's easier and much safer than driving through intersections.

The above video clip tells most of the story on how a roundabout works. According to Pat McGrady, the RAB consultant presenting to Council, modern roundabouts of today are safer than circles and intersections for vehicles, pedestrians, and cyclists, as follows:

  • 140 roundabouts exist in Washington State, yet not one collision with a pedestrian or cyclist has been reported.
  • In a comparison study of 55 sites vs. intersections, roundabouts had 35% fewer crashes and 76% of the collisions were less severe.
  • Clips of a visually impaired pedestrians w/aid dog where shown crossing the street. In a RAB, vehicles approach pedestrians only from the left, yet by training, the dog looked both ways!
  • Cyclists can travel faster than vehicles through a RAB since traffic flow in all one-way.
  • Pedestrians don't have that silver button to hit again and again to cross.

For more information, the City has a traffic calming web page on roundabouts.

Video clip: http://www.iihs.org/video.aspx/info/roundabout

Contact: Dave Cairns, City Traffic Manager, dcairns@redmond.gov

Thursday, June 18, 2009

The cost of good water quality & what we can do.

Two water tanks adjacent Horace Mann El. were repainted inside and out, retrofitted for safety and seismically upgraded for a total cost of $2.8 million.

OPINION: There is no question, the City is investing heavily into our water supply infrastructure, water quality assurance and water conservation programs. Did you know that residents east of Lake Sammamish and the Sammamish River get all their water from the ground?
  • The City has spent millions of dollars retrofitting wellheads to improve treatment and safety standards. ~$11.5 million was recently spent by the City just to upgrade the two wellheads at Anderson Park. Expensive land had to be purchased to save Anderson Park during the wellhead upgrades.
  • The City plans to build a Regional Stormwater Treatment Center in SE Redmond to treat industrial stormwater before it infiltrates into the shallow aquifer (underground lake). A $40 million regional treatment plant is already underway for the downtown. Overlake Regional Facilty is next. Treating dirty stormwater is expensive, as you see on your utility bill, but the regional systems will reduce costs over time.
  • Redmond is a member city of the Cascade Water Alliance. Growing eastside cities would eventually run out of drinking water without a new water source. The Alliance is raising millions of dollars to build a pipeline from the Mt. Ranier watershed to the Eastside. **Emmons glacier on Mt. Ranier is receding but plans are proceeding. Lake Tapps has been secured to store the glacial mountain water before it's piped to the Eastside.
  • Redmond spends a lot of money monitoring for spills and hazardous waste. The City has it's own geologist to oversee groundwater water quality and monitor the protection zones for our wells. Recently, a potential diesel spillage was discovered and quickly addressed with funding from Council for qualified inspection services.

Some great news came out of the the City Water Quality Report, Summer 2009. Did you see it? With all the talk about the safety of our groundwater supply it appears all is well - no pun intended. Did you read that four (4) fewer "compounds" were detected in our groundwater as compared to the Tolt River watershed that supplies residents west of the river? The city's investment in our groundwater supply definitively appears to be paying off.

One of the more significant contaminants now entering our water supply are pharmaceuticals. Councilmember Margeson brought this up at the last Council meeting and handed me the information. When pills and pharmaceuticals are flushed down the toilet or thrown in the garbage they NEVER get treated. And, we could be drinking them. Low levels of pharmaceuticals in drinking water have been found in 24 cities. Get this, pharmaceutical chemicals have been found in about 80% of our nation's urban streams. Please don't flush or trash 'em! Take your unused pills to a pharmacy for disposal. Group Health, Bartell and others participate.

It's estimated that over 120,000 gallons of water is saved per day by Redmond's Conservation Program. Don't forget to tap into the toilet and clothes washer rebates and check your outdoor faucets and hoses before you go on vacation! You can save a bundle. I learned the hard way.

** Read my '07 post on the receeding glaciers that are feeding the Cascade Alliance water pipeline.
Email your questions to Tom Fix, tfix@redmond.gov, City Water Quality Team.
Cascade Water Alliance informational video clip.
Cascade Water Alliance website.

Saturday, April 4, 2009

Marchione Administration proposes Winter Storm Event program

This neighborhood sidewalk was cleaned a few days after this story was published. Many thanks go to the Mayor and the Public Works crew for their help. Next storm we'll have NO sand to sweep!

Updated, 4/8: If you happened to be driving on Snoqualamie Pass last Thursday night (Spring season!) you'd have experienced treacherous driving conditions from wet snowfall. A car glanced off mine coming down a ramp; and we were directly behind another car that was sliding like a snake down the road all over the highway for a quarter mile.

Thus, I appreciated, all the more, Public Works Director, Bill Campbell's Winter Storm Event Preparedness talk to Council last week. Many neighbors commented here and to the Mayor during of their troubles in the 2008 winter storm. The Administration, led by Mr. Campbell has come up with the following solutions:

  • The City will stop using abrasives (sand) since they are expensive and difficult to clean up. Abrasive suspensions wash into our salmon streams and harm the environment. They are sidewalk slip-hazards.
  • The City will replace sand abrasives with an anti-icing agent called "GeoMelt". When GeoMelt is applied in advance of snowfall, it is effective in preventing an ice layer underneath the snow.
  • GeoMelt is a sticky sugar beet - brine suspension applied from an 850 gallon tank truck. It will last 3-7 days without rain, but will wash away if it's raining. According to one source, it is 84% less corrosive than salt, (easier on our cars), can be washed off cars, and is more environmentally friendly to streams.
  • The Department of Transportation and City of Sammamish use GeoMelt.

The Administration is asking Council for $100,000 to pay for these Winter Storm Event improvements.

  • Live traffic camera viewing on the city website to help citizens pick the safest routes.
  • Permanent 1650 AM Radio traffic advisory road signs on major routes. Look for them; they are already in place.
  • New steel plow edges to use, as needed. The City recently purchased a $220,000+ "reflective button" installing machine to replace scraped off buttons.
  • New small plow truck clear the Fire Department, Public Safety building, City Hall and other tight areas.
Mr. Campbell advised that any neighborhoods hiring private plowing services will be required to get a permit from the city to protect the public, for insurance guarantees and to hold the City harmless. Mr. Campbell & Council also recommended citizens buy a shovel and suggested "Drive-by shoveling" services could be organized by Scouts, students, nonprofits, or For-profit organizations. Great idea!
Also, dust off your broom; the city is NOT responsible for sweeping residential sidewalks and Mr. Campbell asks for our help. But, the good news is we won't have any sand to sweep next storm!
To read citizen, police and mayoral comments made on previous blog stories during the frustration of the storm click here and to the Mayor . The Mayor said he'd put a link to citizen storm comments on the city site.

Tuesday, November 11, 2008

Winter Yard Waste Pickup and other nagging neighborhood issues


Winter Yard Waste pickup - from John, Redmond neighbor
I've been advocating for more than a year for Redmond to provide 52 week/yr yard waste pickup. Staff is still reluctant to provide it even though it's an additional $.39 cents/month per household. Even though Kirkland/Bellevue/Issaquah provide 52 week/yr yard waste pickup, Redmond is behind the times (primarily an Ives administration hold over). I would encourage you to tell your friends/neighbors/readers to contact Council asap if they want this additional, low-cost service. I'm tired of my yard waster bin overflowing in the winter and I bet your neighbors are too! -- John

Hi John - Good points. I listened to Council last night, too. They say our garbage charges are the lowest of all surrounding cities. I notice the biggest problem is in November when I have pumpkins, loaded gutters and 90% of the leaves have fallen from my huge cherry tree. Service is offered once a week in November but if I miss a week I have to borrow a bin from a neighbor. For those who procrastinate, I can see how December and February is a problem. I think it's more of a convenience issue for most that a budget item. But, leaves that aren't picked up clog street drains and cause problems for the city. (The City ask us to clean them.)
--Bob Yoder, blog author and Ed. Hill neighbor
cc: Councilmember Hank Margeson, Director Bill Campbell

ATTN: blog readers: Any other nagging issues you'd like posted? Send them to Bob Yoder

Monday, September 29, 2008

Most trees in Redmond's oldest city park are saved - for a price

I just got home from the "Arts in the Park" event at Anderson Park and thought of this 2008 report when looking at an historical society exhibit. The photos are poorly displayed but it's better than nothing! Bob Yoder, 6/25/16


Anderson Park
is Redmond's oldest park and also the home for two city drinking water wells. The wellheads are old and are being replaced. To save many of the park trees the city bought some expensive land a block north to house the treatment plant. 6 trees still had to be removed; 2 were unhealthy. The Board of Parks commissioners led by Chair Lori Snodgrass fought hard for this expensive proposal to preserve Anderson Park. Councilman Vache requested a "fiscal note" to recognize the high cost ($11.6M) of the project.















water treatment construction off-site..................................truck is drilling new well in park
View 1.5 minute video clip of Anderson Park under construction HERE
The photo on he right is looking south to one of Anderson Park's old pump houses. It was removed. Click the City of Redmond Notice sign to read the price tag for this project. In my narration I said two new wellheads were "drilled." This is not the case. After this video there's an interesting video on the construction of  Bear Creek Parkway.


















City Description of Proposal: To comment or request information contact: city planner
Steve Fischer
CONSTRUCTION OF NEW PUMP HOUSES TO REPLACE TWO AGING, OUTDATED WELL FACILITIES LOCATED WITHIN ANDERSON PARK
(7802 168TH AVE NE). THE PROJECT WILL INCLUDE APPROX. 520 FEET OF NEW 12 INCH WATERLINE BETWEEN THE WELL HOUSES AND THE TREATMENT BUILDING. THE NEW PUMP HOUSES WILL BE APPROX. 16' X 24' IN SIZE AND DESIGNED TO REFLECT THE HISTORIC LOG CABIN APPEARANCE OF THEIR STRUCTURES IN THE PARK. THE ASSOCIATED TREATMENT FACILITY WILL BE LOCATED ONE BLOCK NORTH ON PROPERTY AND WILL BE 44' X 58' IN SIZE. A PACKED TOWER APPROX. 30 FT IN HEIGHT WILL BE USED TO ALTER THE PH OF THE WELL WATER. THE PROJECT WILL IMPROVE AND OPEN THE ALLEY TO TRAFFIC ON THE WEST SIDE...

Bob Yoder

Thursday, August 7, 2008

Redmond's veritable neighborhood nuisance - starts with a "V"


OPINION: In my two years of authoring this weblog I've had only one request to "slam" anyone or anything. Smear campaigns are not what this "community gathering place" is about! However, I do have one serious neighborhood complaint and it begins with a "V", as in verizon cable.

Any neighbor or councilmember in Redmond knows the "V" word. With veritable, verifiable, veracity, residents identify this cable company as Verizon, the "Orange Menace". However, when laying cable, Verizon 'buries' their name behind "U.C.C." contractor trucks. (Utility Construction Corporation). *U.C.C. of Bright, Indiana, a 1-horse town, appears but a "shell" operation.

Ground Chuck, the neighborhood Verizon (alias "U.C.C") supervisor blamed their mess-ups and delays on "their utility locator" contractor...the guys that stake the little flags and paint colors to identify the gas, phone, cable and electric lines. "Darn it", Ground Chuck said, "those locators messed up on marking a 3-phase electric line and set our operation way back. " Yeh, you can always blame those locator companies...most always.

Ground Chuck couldn't explain why for over two long years their contractors began sticking their little flags in our lawns - even our back yards - and painting yellow, red, orange and white on our beddings and city sidewalks. We lived with this "V"-graffiti for months on end while we waited and waited for the "V-men" to come. The initial Verizon installation two years ago never took off. In fact, the V-men deployed their locators twice in two years for the same job! And we had to live with it. After numerous ombudsman complaints, Mr. Bill Campbell from Public Works announced on RCTV that we could remove the flags 4-5 days after they were staked. Our street was cleared the next day.

That helped a little, until the fresh graffiti and equipment finally arrived to my doorstep more than a year later. The hammering starts at 7:30am. "Was that an earth tremor!?" The noisy, dusty drilling, sucking, vibrating, jack-hammering, pressure washing, traffic stopping, driveway blocking, car dinging, lawn digging, banging & clanging of the "V"-truck brigade; and ongoing gripes with the "V"-people seemed to go on forever. Just when I thought the V-people had moved to the next community, back they came, and then back again! Verizon has worked hard with city Public Works to re-sod easement damage, filter stormwater, and pour fresh concrete sidewalks. Yet for me, two V-managers could hardly are less about accelerating the cracking to my expensive walkways.

I'm a Comcast user and have been for years. When Verizon - or was it U.C.C.? - finally gets their infrastructure in place they will probably offer the customary "full service value package" and "exciting 6-month introductory offer". Ahaa! A gift card for digital phone would seal the deal!

They pray we will have forgotten; many will not. The cable media business is a monopolistic - oligopoly. Within a year or so the prices will stabilize and equilibrate and new residents will have to choose similar services at similar (& *probably higher) prices. Who is more likely to get the nod by the consumer in Redmond's neighborhoods? hmmm.....If you're not sure, ask a neighbor.

*Side note: U.C.C. (Utility Construction Corporation) Internet presence is a map. No website. Their phone number is: 812-637-1675. Ask for June but don't expect a callback.

I worked for Squibb Diagnostics for 13 years selling expensive radiographic media injectables to hospitals. We had only two competitors; it was an oligopoly. These injectables were the most expensive dollar volume product in hospital pharmacies. Squibb was "the chosen" price leader and prices never fell. Added-value programs, service, new product lines and packaging drove market share. The market was "regulated" only by patent expiration. Should we expect the same from Comcast and Verizon cable?