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The Spokesman-Review Newspaper
Spokane, Washington  Est. May 19, 1883

Mike Prager

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News >  Spokane

Plan would replace pools with aquatics ‘Disneyland’

Spokane Park Board members on Thursday unveiled a $35 million proposal to replace the city's seven aging pools with contemporary play-swim facilities, creating what one official called "a lifestyle change for aquatics." The heart of the proposal involves construction of a $15 million aquatics "Disneyland" to include a wave pool, "lazy river" ride, spray features, water slides, zero-depth entry and a traditional competition pool. One board member suggested putting the facility in Franklin Park at Queen and Division near NorthTown Mall. Shadle Park is another possible location.
News >  Spokane

Fountain proponents hold car wash today

People planning to erect an artistic play fountain in Riverfront Park are holding a benefit car wash today to promote the $1.25 million project. Volunteers will be putting the shine on vehicles at the park drop-off zone at Howard Street and Spokane Falls Boulevard from 11 a.m. to 6 p.m. The cost is a cash donation of the driver's choice.
News >  Spokane

Meteors to light up night skies

Find your way to a patch of dark sky tonight and you are likely to be delighted by one of the year's most reliable astronomical events. Earth is encountering the annual Perseid meteor shower, a celestial bombardment of shooting stars and fireballs caused by tiny bits of comet dust being burned as they enter the atmosphere.
News >  Spokane

Council to consider fluoride issue next week

Spokane City Council members have the power to place a drinking water fluoridation measure on the November general election ballot even though a fluoridation initiative petition doesn't have enough signatures to qualify on its own, city officials said Monday. In a memorandum to council members, Senior Assistant City Attorney Mike Piccolo said the City Charter gives the council the ability to place a proposed fluoridation measure on any ballot.
News >  Spokane

Mayor announces budget cuts

Spokane Mayor Jim West on Monday announced a series of midyear budget cuts that would eliminate some services but preserve core functions in city government. Topping the list of cuts and saving $338,000 is elimination of the school resource officer program in which uniformed patrol officers are based at Spokane middle schools. Those six officers will be returned to vacancies in the patrol division, West said.
News >  Spokane

Asphalt company fined for pollution

An asphalt plant that opened in an old rock mine at Eighth and Havana last year is under the gun to meet pollution control standards mandated by the owner's air quality permit. In less than a year, Spokane Rock Products Inc. has received seven notices of violations and has paid fines in three of the cases, according to records on file at the Spokane County Air Pollution Control Authority.
News >  Spokane

Tax plan proposed to spur development

Spokane City Council members are considering a development-oriented property tax exemption that one proponent is touting as a way to provide economic stimulus in four older urban centers across the city. Council members on Monday unanimously approved a resolution setting a public hearing for Aug. 30 on the proposal.
News >  Spokane

Holschen, Stevens in GOP primary

A 26-year-old restaurant manager filed Friday as a Republican for a Third District seat in the state House. James Holschen Jr. said he wants to bring better-paying jobs to Spokane if he is elected.
News >  Spokane

Few answers in sewage plant inquiry

The cause of a fatal Spokane sewer plant accident on May 10 may be traced to a series of problems rather than one single factor, a top city official said Thursday. Preliminary findings from an independent investigation are not expected until September. Results of a separate state Department of Labor and Industries probe may not be known until November, officials said.
News >  Spokane

Problems preceded fatal sewage tank collapse

Newly released city documents show that workers at Spokane's wastewater treatment plant were having trouble processing sewage sludge in the weeks leading up to a catastrophic tank failure that killed one worker and seriously injured two others. The documents confirm earlier employee reports that pumps, heaters and a sludge-thickening system were not working properly in the weeks prior to the May 10 explosion of digester tank No. 3.
News >  Spokane

City to borrow from utility

Spokane city budget problems are forcing the city to borrow money from one of its utilities so that it can continue to pay salaries and other bills for tax-funded services such as police, parks and fire protection. The City Council on Monday unanimously approved a short-term loan of up to $6 million from a solid waste reserve account to the general fund.
News >  Spokane

Council OKs loan for mall parking garage

The Spokane City Council voted 4-3 on Monday to loan money from its parking meter collections to bolster the ailing finances of the River Park Square parking garage. The vote came in the face of a court order requiring the city to loan the money under terms of a 1997 ordinance that established financing for the garage. Council members Cherie Rodgers, Bob Apple and Mary Verner voted no.
News >  Spokane

West to announce service cutbacks

Spokane Mayor Jim West is expected to announce a series of cuts in general city services during a meeting of the City Council tonight. Staffing reductions and the possibility of layoffs are anticipated. The cuts are likely to affect the city's largest general fund departments, including police, fire, streets, libraries and parks.
News >  Spokane

Northern lights dazzle sky watchers

Nighttime sky watchers got an unanticipated treat this week. The northern lights appeared Thursday in a brilliant display, said local astronomers, and they are expecting them to reappear intermittently through this weekend.
News >  Spokane

Waste incinerator tank’s ammonia poses safety hazard

A 12,000-gallon tank filled with anhydrous ammonia – part of an air pollution control system – poses a significant safety risk at Spokane's solid waste incinerator. Officials operating the garbage-burning plant want to remove the hazard and replace it with safer pollution controls.
News >  Spokane

Conservation lands could grow in city

An undeveloped stretch of land in the city's Five Mile Prairie Neighborhood could soon be added to Spokane's expanding inventory of conservation properties. The Spokane Park Board earlier this month gave its go-ahead for purchase of a series of parcels along Austin Ravine in the heart of Five Mile Prairie.
News >  Spokane

Art-funding rule changed by Council

For more than 20 years, the city of Spokane has adorned its new public buildings by requiring that 1 percent of the construction budget be devoted to artwork. Fire stations, libraries, City Hall and other city buildings contain a variety of sculptures, stained glass, panels or other adornments.
News >  Spokane

Council reconsiders plan for vendor fees

Spokane city officials are backing down from a proposal to charge $5-a-day fee for vendors at consumer, craft and trade shows. Council President Dennis Hession said the city is revising a proposed ordinance that seeks to regulate unlicensed vendors.
News >  Spokane

Council to vote on fee for booth vendors

Exhibitors at craft and trade shows would be required to pay a $5-a-day business license fee under a proposal before the Spokane City Council. Council members are scheduled to vote on the new business license law during today's meeting at 6 p.m. in Council Chambers at City Hall.
News >  Spokane

Study of city budget criticized by activists

A consultant-led effort to trim $6 million from the Spokane city budget came under fire Friday from neighborhood activists who complained the public is largely being left out. "I'm a little bit concerned about the process we find ourselves in," said Jay Cousins of the Emerson-Garfield Neighborhood Council.
News >  Spokane

Spokane rousts homeless camp

A 10-day camp-out in downtown Spokane ended peacefully Thursday when the city evicted the homeless protesters – but neither side budged on the essential issues. Protesters complained that their civil rights were violated by their forced removal, and they continued objecting to a pending city ordinance that will outlaw transient shelters on city land. Spokane Mayor Jim West, meanwhile, insisted that the ban would take effect and said camping on city land is an affront to other taxpayers. "You cannot go in and squat on other people's property, and that property belongs to 197,000 others," the mayor said. The campers pulled up stakes Thursday morning and moved away without incident after city officials ordered them to leave. No arrests were made. Leaders of the protest said going to jail in an act of civil disobedience would have discredited their cause of seeking help for the city's homeless and protesting the new ordinance. What started as a small protest by several campers – they spent their first night under a large blue tarp strung between trees – ballooned. Tents and makeshift shelters were spread for more than a block on the tree-lined median of West Riverside Avenue, between the Spokane Club, the Catholic diocese office and the production building for The Spokesman-Review. "Last night, we had 50 souls in camp," said protest leader Dave Bilsland of the People 4 People organization on Thursday morning. Signs scrawled on cardboard outside Bilsland's tent read: "Camp Serene Freedom. Home of the Island Campers." While a score of police officers stood by to ensure a peaceful decampment, Mayor West simultaneously announced at City Hall that he would sign the newly approved ordinance on Monday, making it a misdemeanor to erect or occupy a transient shelter on city-owned property. He also announced a task force on the problem. Spokane City Council members adopted the ordinance in a 4-3 vote on June 28. Homeless advocates, who argued against the ordinance, began erecting their camp the same night as the vote. If West changes his mind and vetoes the ordinance, the council would need five votes to override it and force the measure into law. Bilsland said his group intends to mount a referendum petition drive. The mayor said the protest helped convince him the new law is needed, and that he ordered the camp removal. The campers, he said, had become a public nuisance. "We have been patient with them," West said, adding he supports the right of citizens to protest, up to a point. City officials said the campers were ordered to move because their tents and bedding were preventing parks staff from maintaining the trees and grass, and water was blocked to feed the roots of aging linden trees along the picturesque median. Speaking to a group of the protesters later in the day at the New Opportunities apartment building on West Sprague Avenue, Police Chief Roger Bragdon said it was his decision to allow the protesters to stay on Riverside parkway for as long as they did, but it was time for them to get out of the way of Parks and Recreation Department workers worried about the lawn. He complimented Bilsland for not allowing anyone to get hurt or arrested. "I want you to continue keeping the issue (of homelessness) in front of the mayor and the people," the chief said, "but it has to be reasonable. Breaking the law is not reasonable." Just a day before, West poked fun at the protest. After teasing county Commissioners Phil Harris and Kate McCaslin for wearing Hawaiian shirts at a Wednesday meeting about a proposed sewage treatment plant, West bolstered his own decision to wear a tie. "I've got to distinguish myself from the homeless," he said, joking that he planned to deal with the issue by sending the campers to Commissioner John Roskelley's rural home. On Thursday, West told The Spokesman-Review editorial board that he didn't care if the homeless camp is in "your yard," but they weren't welcome on the public parkway. "The bulk of the people down there were protesters. They weren't homeless," he said later, adding that he has reassembled his transition team committee on poverty and human services to come up with a city plan in the next 30 days to help those who are homeless in the short-term. The city is already working with Spokane County and the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development to end chronic homelessness within the next 10 years, he said. But in the meantime, West said the campers had to go. At 7 a.m. Thursday, park maintenance manager Taylor Bressler went from tent to tent handing out a single-sheet order detailing the city's authority to force the campers' removal. "Please take notice that the courses of activity in which you are presently engaging constitute a violation of the Spokane Municipal Code," the order read. The order advised campers they were maintaining structures in public right of way, physically occupying a right of way to the exclusion of others, preventing necessary maintenance and obstructing vehicular traffic. "We just got woke up and told, ‘You have an hour to move out,' " said camper Brian Hensley. Office workers, Spokane Club members and passers-by stopped to watch the commotion. On the terrace of the Spokane Club, Manager Alan Arsenault ate his breakfast from a club bowl. Just yards away, boxes of doughnuts lay on the ground outside one camper's tent. Cliff Tvedten was downtown to pick up his mail when he walked past the encampment and saw the police telling the homeless to leave. "They ought to leave them alone," Tvedten said. "They've been around since the time of Christ. They need a place." By 8 a.m., nearly all of the campers were packing their belongings, taking down shelters and clearing refuse from the island. But Bilsland initially decided to remain in his tent and wait to be arrested as a protest against the ordinance. He sat cross-legged on bedding, rolling a cigarette. A book titled "A God in Ruins" lay on his lap. "I have found my niche in helping the homeless," he said. "This is where I want to stay." Bilsland said the campers for several days had been receiving gifts of food. He said some people had ordered pizzas delivered to the encampment. "We had fewer problems than I expected, and it was bigger than I expected," he said of the protest. Across the street, Arsenault stood on the sidewalk watching the decampment. He said that during the protest, overnight guests at the club were being kept awake by motorists responding to protester signs asking them to honk. Also, some club members said they'd been asked for money by protesters and that the protesters didn't represent Spokane well. Rob McCann, associate director of Catholic Charities, eventually persuaded Bilsland to leave the camp peacefully rather than go to jail. "I'm going to stay out so I can continue to lead the good fight," Bilsland said. Then Scott Stanger, another of the protest leaders, took Bilsland's place, and waited to be arrested. Again, McCann approached the tent, this time persuading Stanger to leave. But Stanger stood stubbornly against a tree, even as sprinklers soaked him at about thigh level. Sprinklers had been coming on four times a day during the protest. Park officials said they upped the watering schedule to protect the landscape from drying out, not to chase off protesters. Protesters responded by putting cans over the sprinkler heads. This time, the cans were gone, and the spray became cause for commotion. Protester Charles Clemons ran to a broken sprinkler head and stood over it, sudsing himself with soap and shampoo. "I might as well use it when I've got my chance," he said after finishing his impromptu shower. When the sprinklers stopped, a park maintenance crew fired up machines and began edging and aerating the grass. At 9:12 a.m., Stanger left the median, the last protester to give in to the city order.
News >  Spokane

Moratorium extended on rental units

Spokane City Council members voted unanimously Tuesday to continue a temporary moratorium on converting older homes into large rental units in some sections of the city. The moratorium stops the city from issuing building permits for additions to single-family homes and for conversions of single-family homes to duplexes in some areas zoned for duplex units. City officials said they are looking at ways to tighten zoning regulations to prevent a proliferation of high-occupancy rental units on small lots.
News >  Spokane

Garden restoration calls for more research

The Corbin house and garden at Pioneer Park recently won a listing on the National Register of Historic Places, but a companion nomination for the adjacent Moore-Turner garden has been sent back to Spokane for additional documentation. The National Park Service, which oversees national listings, has asked the city of Spokane to provide more information about the landscape of the Moore-Turner garden and its relationship to its previous owners, said Lynn Mandyke, director of the Corbin Art Center, housed inside the 1898 Corbin house at Pioneer Park.
News >  Spokane

Fire station cost going up

The cost of a new downtown fire station is rising, after workers excavating the site uncovered contaminated soil and an abandoned underground storage tank that are being removed. A new $2.5 million Fire Station No. 4 is being erected inside the circular traffic median at the intersection of First Avenue and Maple Street, at the west end of downtown.
News >  Spokane

Deadlock holds up street grants

A political impasse over the new federal transportation act has also stalled grants for improvements to Spokane city streets. Thus, the city's new six-year street plan is lined with projects awaiting federal grant money. The City Council approved the plan Monday. Spokane, like other cities, competes for federal grants to pay for safety improvements, hazard elimination, bridge repair, bike trails and congestion improvements. Congress last year failed to reauthorize its six-year transportation funding bill as scheduled because of a disagreement between Congress and the White House over funding levels. "It's holding up a number of things," said Spokane City Council President Dennis Hession, who sits on the Spokane Regional Transportation Council. The Senate is seeking $318 billion in funding through 2009, while the House wants $275 billion. The president has threatened to veto any amount above $256 billion. Work on a compromise is expected this summer. Jerry Sinclair, senior engineer in Spokane, said several major improvements are awaiting federal grant applications even though local matching money has been set aside for the projects. The local money includes $5 million in grant seed money out of a $15 million street improvement bond approved by the City Council late last year. The city hopes to take that $5 million and combine it with $4 million in other city funds to compete for $36 million in grants, Sinclair said. Among the projects awaiting money are safety improvements to 57th Avenue between Hatch Road and Perry Street and an extension of East Riverside Avenue to Trent Avenue in a project known as Riverside Drive through the city's emerging Riverpoint campus. Others are the widening of Five Mile Road from Austin Road to Lincoln Road; widening of Crestline Street from Decatur Avenue to Lincoln Road; and an additional turn lane on Division Street northbound onto the Newport Highway at the Y. While the city waits for grant money, it continues to plan traffic improvements. Four transportation studies encompassing broad areas of the city are connected to the six-year street plan. One study will look at the feasibility of building a new Hatch Road extension from U.S. Highway 195 to any of three existing arterials to the east – Regal Street, Freya Street or the Palouse Highway. The route would travel up a draw below newer subdivisions at the boundary for urban growth on the south side. That project emerged from a south side transportation study earlier this year, but it has been controversial among homeowners living above the proposed route. It would eliminate the need to make costly improvements to the steep grade of the existing Hatch Road, an important route connecting U.S. 195 to the far south side. "I don't know whether it is a good project or not," Hession said about the Hatch Road extension. "I think it ought to be studied." The project was listed in the street plan so the city could apply for grants for improvements to existing Hatch Road, which needs upgrading regardless of whether the Hatch Road extension is approved, Sinclair said. The transportation council will undertake the feasibility study. The six-year plan also calls for a study of traffic in the Indian Trail and Five Mile Prairie areas, including a connection between the Barnes Road intersection at Indian Trail Road and Strong Road on Five Mile Prairie. Currently, Strong Road turns into a winding gravel lane as it descends the bluff from Five Mile to the north Indian Trail neighborhood. Another study would occur in northeast Spokane, specifically to look at alternatives for reducing heavy truck and traffic volumes passing through the old commercial district in Hillyard and improvements needed once the North Side freeway is built. More study is going into the Riverpoint campus area to look at the possibility of constructing a new South River Drive route along the south bank of the Spokane River beneath the Keefe Bridge, which carries traffic between Hamilton Street and Interstate 90. An extension of the Ben Burr bike trail linking Liberty Park to Trent Avenue is one of the improvements under consideration. The study is being financed through a $1 million federal grant, Sinclair said. Hession said transportation improvements that emerge from the studies will be important to future growth. "They are significant not only from a transportation standpoint, but from an economic development standpoint," he said.