I think this is so important, I'm quoting the whole damn thing.
The town of Olympia, WA is considered by insurance companies to be one of the safest communities in the United States of America. Not only is it safe, it is a pleasant and unique place.
Downtown Olympia is a treasure, home to the highest concentration of local businesses in the region. City planners visit Olympia to learn from our model of a vibrant downtown.
Our locally-run stores vary from funky thrift shops to antique stores to upscale boutiques. We have the Olympia Farmer's Market known throughout our region as being one of the best. We have the Hands-On Children's Museum, a creative and educational place to take the littles when the rainy season hits. We have Fish Tale Brew Pub, where you can bring a jug to be filled with good local ale. Good local-roasted coffee is available almost everywhere (except Starbucks).
But Olympia also has something very special and unique. It is not a store, its a spirit. Olympia's spirit is very unique and creative, which is why we are internationally known for our DIY music and arts scene.
Tourists often comment that Olympia is a small town with an urban feel. I would call Olympia the littlest big city around. (Population: 42,000)
Like all big cities, Olympia has many different types of activities and events going on all the time.
Downtown Olympia is a wonderfully spontaneous place. In addition to our local shops, you will see many underground enterprises in downtown.
You might see the musician in the "will sing for cookies" hat, or Viola, who sells temporary tattoos. Sometimes local farmers will peddle their produce downtown out of the back of a truck or a bicycle basket. You will see creative enterpreneurs doing many unexpected things downtown. You will see the Manium, the black-painted concert venue, owned by Duane, the landlord of over 30 black-painted properties in Olympia. There are even two restaurants that share a space: New Moon Cafe operates for breakfast and lunch, and Quality Burrito uses the same restaurant at night for late-night burritos.
Olympia's economy is far from conventional.
Downtown Olympia is also characterized by generosity. Generosity is expected-its part of our way of life.
Almost every successful business is heavily involved in sharing its prosperity with the community, and citizens in our town donate their time and art prolifically.
Perhaps the best example of this is the Procession of the Species a completely non-commercial parade, where 3000 local residents dance or march as animals and plants in elaborate home-made costumes through downtown, attracting 35,000 spectators. (Pretty good turn-out for a town of 42,000.)
Throughout the year, rain or shine, you will see black-clad punks riding around on bicycles with heavy baggage every evening. This group of community members, called Done and Done (or EGYHOP), collects donations of socks, jackets, sleeping bags, food, and first aid supplies and are on the streets every night distributing them to folks in need. No one funds this organization, and no one "runs" it. It has been operating for five years without funding or formality.
On Columbia Street, across from Olympia Supply hardware store is the Olympia Free School, another volunteer-run organization where community members offer free classes and workshops to anyone who wants to learn a new skill. Classes include cooking, music lessons, foreign language, reading, arts, and more. The Evergreen State College may be our most well-known alternative education institution, but the Free School is the most generous.
Anyway, already I have written a long post trying to describe a little of the flavor of our precious downtown community. I should just begin regularly profiling the great projects and businesses and people who I see around town, as one post could never contain them all.
The reason I want to write this is because recently there has been a lot of local talk about improving downtown, and making it more economically viable. I could not agree more with this plan. We need more flourishing businesses here, and more entry-level jobs, especially living-wage jobs. I think there is much we could do to creatively bring more viberance to our community.
But sadly, some people (including several of our city council members) have been perpetuating a bad image of downtown, calling it dirty, unsightly, decrepit, and even unsafe.
Politicians have been saying these things, though they are not true, as justification to make expensive deals with out-of-town developers and big business.
If history is any teacher, we know that these kinds of deals will NOT bring economic viability to downtown, though they may line the pockets of developers like Steve Cooper and politicians like Doug Mah.
There is a poster in the window of many retailer windows in Olympia that says: a dollar spent locally generates $5-$15 in the local economy, but when a dollar is spent at a chain store, 80% of it leaves the community immediately.
When I think of flashy corporate business deals being touted as good for our economy, I remember the Olympia Brewery being bought by Miller in 1999. This was supposed to be great for "our" economy, and the cities gave Miller a great deal. They immediately removed the Oly Beer sign, and replaced it with theirs. Three years later the plant closed and every one of its union workers were laid off. Miller said the brewery was too small to generate profit, but it is more likely that the deal was a way to stomp out a union-dominated competitor. Miller made a deal that disallows any company from brewing beer there ever again. Who's economy is that good for?
When it comes to downtown being strong, healthy place where small businesses are successful, no one is a greater advocate for that than the local people who love this place. But one thing we will not accept in regards to our town is slander, especially if that slander is part of a campaign to sell Olympia's spirit right out from under her.
Start telling the truth, Olympia City Council. Downtown is safe, beautiful, inclusive, vibrant, and viable, and thousands of people already know it. Denying it will not bring more dollars into downtown, but declaring it will.
Nice
Submitted by OlyCop on Wed, 09/20/2006 - 9:14am.Very nicely written. And I agree with some of what Jade is saying.
If the majority of citizens like the downtown the way it is, let them speak to the council again. Clearly not everyone likes it in its current form, and that is why it's up for debate again. The unfortunate part of this is what I believe is the minority, the ones wanting to keep status quo, are the ones that get out and vote and are heard. Olympians have it pretty good, and joe working man doesn't have time for political debate, he's putting food on the table. But if things get bad enough, joe will come out and vote. In the past the downtown issues haven't been big enough for joe. Maybe they will be now, we will see.
My piece to this debate is really part of another debate by Olybloggers. Most here are anti-big box stores. Most want an economically sound downtown, even Jade mentions that. I personally don't believe you can have both. And apparently Mr. Kingsbury doesn't either, and he is a business man. I never thought a downtown could compete with the malls, etc. But I have now seen that not only can they compete, they can win. But the current Oly way won't cut it.
As they say "you can't have your cake and eat it too".
"The strongest reason to retain the right to keep and bear arms is to protect against tyranny in government." Thomas Jefferson.
Right on Jade! Something you
Submitted by OperaGirl on Wed, 09/20/2006 - 9:35am.Right on Jade! Something you forgot to mention is that down town is very "child friendly". Especially the restaurants. (at least in my experiences)
Olycop, what exactly is it that you are envisioning for down town? What is the ultimate goal? I love the shops down town. I was so pissed when Quiznos moved in down the street from Little Richard's and then a month or so later what happens? That's right - Little Richard's went out of business. I think that "mainstream" stores may look good on paper but it just kills the small business owner. We have enough "mainstream" stores and we don't need them downtown.
I think our choir is a great example of what I would like to see for downtown. We don't charge any admission to our concerts because we want everyone to be able to experience good choral music - and the past couple of concerts we have seen this great mix of people from the posh looking men and woman to the guys with blue and purple hair. Babies to senior citizens. All there together to enjoy this experience that we get to give them. I know that that situations are not parallel and I am not quite 100% sure what my point it right now (it's been one of those weeks!) but I am kind of at the point of - don't like down town? Don't go! Go to Walmart and feel that lovely "shoppers sedation" and let me and my family enjoy down town.
You guys decide.
Submitted by OlyCop on Wed, 09/20/2006 - 10:06am."Olycop, what exactly is it that you are envisioning for down town? What is the ultimate goal?"
I have no personal vision for downtown. I only share that you can't have both the funky, and the economically healthy. And I believe the citizens of Oly will have to make a choice, status quo or a different way.
I wouldn't even consider coming downtown as a small business owner. It's hard enough to compete with the big retailers to have to also compete with all the negatives downtown. We have talked about some of those negatives. Some we haven't talked about are the parking problem(adaquate parking,too much pay for parking) Or shoplifting on a scale as big or bigger than at the mall(hard to eat those losses as a small business owner).
Olympia offers some wonderful things downtown. Could it be better? Some say yes, others think it's perfect now. Apparently the City Council is listening, and we will see what the Olympians have to say about it.
If you want a professional vision, I can give you one of those.
"The strongest reason to retain the right to keep and bear arms is to protect against tyranny in government." Thomas Jefferson.
Save "the Village"
Submitted by Jade on Wed, 09/20/2006 - 10:52am.Order and Law
Submitted by Crenshaw Sepulveda on Wed, 09/20/2006 - 9:59am.Order and Law, that is only one way to police a neighborhood. The most effective policing occurs outside of the police department. More people on the streets, more people living in the neighborhood, that is what really maintains the order. In many ways the police are the answer to when natural systems break down. A natural system of self policing would virtually eliminate the need for actual policing. To some degree the police have to keep a bit hands off to let this natural process start. Don't bust the jaywalkers, don't mess with the homeless if all they are doing is staying alive. Sure, bust them if they steal or hurt someone, but let the community do with it can do best, let it self police. The unnecessary intrusion of police enforcing petty policies is a deterrent to self policing, indeed, it makes it almost impossible to flourish. The streets will have their own rules and policing, additional rules and conventional policing will only make the streets less safe because the real policing, self policing will never take root.
"I would make it impossible for the covetous and avaricious to utterly impoverish the poor. The rich can take care of themselves."
^@^
Crenshaw
Submitted by OlyCop on Wed, 09/20/2006 - 10:08am."The strongest reason to retain the right to keep and bear arms is to protect against tyranny in government." Thomas Jefferson.
sentiment agreed, not some of the premises
Submitted by enpen on Wed, 09/20/2006 - 11:08am.It's my understanding that a high population density in a socially stratified society creates greater anonymity which leads to more victimization due to the mass depersonalization of existence. The "it's harder to commit a crime against a person you know" adage fits that.
"A natural system of self policing would virtually eliminate the need for actual policing."
I think this is only possible in a culture of equality. One of the primary purposes of the police is to uphold a principle of justice in the face of mob mentality. Obviously this has broken down to a large degree, but citizen justice in our current caste society has dangerous implications to me. I've never done 60 second dating, but it'd be an amusing social experiment to get a community to enact a large scale 60 second get-to-know-you at least once a year. It certainly wouldn't immediately lead to deep human relationships, but we all poop, pee, try to get food to eat, emote, and most of us even masturbate.
it is the illusion of safety that creates crime
Submitted by Crenshaw Sepulveda on Wed, 09/20/2006 - 11:29am."I would make it impossible for the covetous and avaricious to utterly impoverish the poor. The rich can take care of themselves."
^@^
now this...
Submitted by enpen on Wed, 09/20/2006 - 11:37am.Jane Jacobs to the core.
Submitted by Meta Hogan on Wed, 09/20/2006 - 11:50am.Wow, Crenshaw - WOW!
Submitted by DrewHendricks on Sat, 09/23/2006 - 2:07pm.I think I'll post that on the Olycopwatch page, if you'll lend me your permission to do so.
It captures brilliantly what my housemate once said to me: "Too many people in North America live in an economy, rather than a society."
It is indeed when the normal systems of community break down that we need to make a profession of keeping things from spinning into (unmasked and open) murder and mayhem. Because really, what drives the economy of the Box Store? It certainly isn't a neighborhood with mature plum and apple trees, it's a neighborhood of isolated gardenless grass verges, lawns, and asphalt. It's a neighborhood which must drive to get its food. Because in a real society, you don't have to drive to the store to get what you've grown in your own yard. And I know that so many local "country dwellers" will be the first to become isolated and starve when a gallon of gas costs $5, while my own neighborhood would be able to feed itself to a great degree. Especially once we can reclaim the road spaces with boxed gardens on wheels.
Here's to Olympia, a society birthing itself from the ashes of the old economy, pre-fire.
Oh, and Jade - double wow to you, too. Your description of the community part of Olympia is a perfect peek into our reality, for those who dwell in TeeVee Land and Suburbia Land. The only thing that I ask is that we not define the geographic boundaries of our neosocial network, as such. As a reader of history I know that this economy eats such treats if it can create freefire/freetrade zones around / within them. Let us not fall into gentrification through hipness. It's not just 'downtown Olympia' but any walkable, self-feeding section of the local environs that can be considered a real community. And since we're tool using primates who know how to build bicylces, we have a pretty large 'walkable' circle to play with. Much larger than just Olympia, in fact.
Certainly there are many
Submitted by Jade on Sat, 09/23/2006 - 2:56pm.The truth is that geography is in many ways inseperable from culture. There may be similar communities elsewhere, but personally, I wouldn't just up and move to Bellingham or Sacramento or Madison or wherever because it shares cultural characteristics to here. This is my home. It is as much geographical as it is cultural. My life has been marked by the salmon runs under the 4th Ave Bridge. The physical structures and natural landscapes of this place are as a part of me as the people and institutions.
I don't think "hipness" is going to gentrify Olympia. We must remember that hipsters (even in the broad sense of the word) are only one small segment of the downtown community, though they are certainly a subculture of great influence. Hipness can and does coexist harmoniously with other cultures and subcultures. So far the hipsters haven't been lobbying for any special interests, and in fact, contrary to popular shittalking, hipster culture is pretty friendly to diversity in my anecdotal experience. (Not that I'm a hipster or anything..)
I think, in fact, most subcultures can work well in the same geographic space together. The exception to this is the "Rodeo Drive" culture, which must exterminate everything in its path in order to survive. That is one culture which I do not welcome in my community, along with Fringe White Supremacist culture and anyone else that advocates genocide, figurative or literal.
Thanks for making me clarify that.
Jade
Feel free to quote me anywhere
Submitted by Crenshaw Sepulveda on Sat, 09/23/2006 - 10:00pm."I would make it impossible for the covetous and avaricious to utterly impoverish the poor. The rich can take care of themselves."
^@^