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<STRONG>Hey, Donovan!. . . .I think number 22 of your plan is already in place! Haven't you ever noticed the lovely smell of cows and the aroma coming from the treatment plant across the road from the mall?</STRONG><BR>
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<STRONG>In some ways parts of Moscow already smell a little like Lewiston.</STRONG><BR>
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<STRONG>Ellen A. Roskovich</STRONG><BR>
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Date: Wed, 31 Oct 2007 22:35:15 -0700<BR>From: donovanjarnold2005@yahoo.com<BR>To: sbasoa@moscow.com<BR>CC: vision2020@moscow.com<BR>Subject: Re: [Vision2020] Dispel the anti-growth myth<BR><BR>
<DIV>Steven asked me:</DIV>
<DIV> </DIV>
<DIV>"Yes, the Palouse Mall has kicked out quite a few 'local' businesses <BR>and replaced them with national chains. But just what is it that you <BR>think the city council could have done about that? How could they <BR>have protected the businesses? Personally, I think that what the <BR>mall did was/is wrong, but as a landlord, I guess that's their <BR>right. I don't see how you can drag the city into it."</DIV>
<DIV> </DIV>
<DIV>Steve, I don't honestly think it has been difficult for the government to impede businesses from succeeding, particularly this local government. </DIV>
<DIV> </DIV>
<DIV>There are many things the City Council can do in reaction to the Palouse Mall discriminating against local businesses. I am sure many people can think of better things than I can but here are a few:</DIV>
<DIV> </DIV>
<DIV>1) Deny any tax breaks</DIV>
<DIV>2) Create a long and underfunded road construction project around all the roads that make mall entrance easy. </DIV>
<DIV>3) Rezone so no car sales or events may take place at the Mall.</DIV>
<DIV>4) Increase the parking requirements for the mall. </DIV>
<DIV>5) Raise taxes on national chain stores</DIV>
<DIV>6) Promote Downtown and business elsewhere in Moscow</DIV>
<DIV>7) Prohibit the extension of the building</DIV>
<DIV>8) Enforce every environmental, zoning, fire, safety, and disability access law for the city, state, and federal government. </DIV>
<DIV>9) Limit water availability</DIV>
<DIV>10) Launch public protests</DIV>
<DIV>11) Create a government information campaign as to what the Mall is doing</DIV>
<DIV>12) Increase fines for violations they frequently break</DIV>
<DIV>13) May the Mayor, President of UI, the City Council, and Latah County Commissioners ask them not to act in such a discriminatory fashion against Moscow owned businesses. </DIV>
<DIV>14) Change the bus routes not to include the Mall</DIV>
<DIV>15) Place a curfew on teens so they cannot hang out there. </DIV>
<DIV>16) Enforce no loitering laws at the Mall</DIV>
<DIV>17) Enforce the law strictly on Mall grounds</DIV>
<DIV>18) Give no aid or government assistance to the Mall or any business in the mall</DIV>
<DIV>19) Build a Wal-Mart Super Center on the other side of town so shoppers go the opposite direction.</DIV>
<DIV>20) Write the corporate leaders of the National Chain stores explaining how their presents in a Mall that is discriminatory makes their business look unfriendly to the local community</DIV>
<DIV>21) Prevent any more construction of housing and businesses near or around the site.</DIV>
<DIV>22) Allow noisy smelly industrial plants and construction to take place on all sides of the Mall. </DIV>
<DIV> </DIV>
<DIV>Those are my ideas. I am sure others have more and better ones to make the Mall more friendly to the people they are suppose to be supporting, and give them a paycheck. </DIV>
<DIV> </DIV>
<DIV>Best,</DIV>
<DIV> </DIV>
<DIV>Donovan</DIV>
<DIV> </DIV>
<DIV><BR><BR><B><I>Steven Basoa <sbasoa@moscow.com></I></B> wrote:</DIV>
<BLOCKQUOTE class=EC_replbq style="PADDING-LEFT: 5px; MARGIN-LEFT: 5px; BORDER-LEFT: #1010ff 2px solid">On Oct 29, 2007, at 8:26 PM, Donovan Arnold wrote:<BR><BR>>The City Council didn't approve the rezone when I was there. They <BR>might have changed their mind at a later date.<BR><BR>The city council (during Mayor Comstocks reign) rejected the UI's <BR>rezone application twice before (apparently) approving it on the <BR>third attempt. The reason they rejected it the first time was <BR>because the representative from the UI was totally inept and clueless <BR>and could not answer any of the council's questions. At the same <BR>meeting I believe they passed the Thompson family's request to annex <BR>the property across from the cemetery. The difference in the two <BR>presentations was amazing. Shelly Bennett had done her homework, <BR>presented it well and was able to answer every question thrown her <BR>way. The UI representative knew virtually nothing about the UI's <BR>request and was totally unprepared for the meeting. For the second <BR>application, the UI sent one of their VP's who read a letter from <BR>President White and repeated the same spiel from the first meeting. <BR>The VP was also unprepared and unable to answer the same questions. <BR>I wasn't at the third meeting but I assume they finally sent someone <BR>who actually had a clue.<BR><BR>>Tidyman's is still in business, just not in Moscow.<BR><BR>I don't know about the Tidyman's chain, but the Moscow store was <BR>hugely hurt by the arrival of Winco. I'm guessing that was the main <BR>reason the Moscow store went under.<BR><BR>>True, it was the County, not the City, that pulled the trigger on <BR>Naylor Farms, but I bet you $100 the City would not have ruled any <BR>differently and would >have carried on the fight against them is they <BR>got approval from the County. To a business, it doesn't matter if it <BR>is the actual city or county killing their >business, it is still <BR>killing their business when they try to local here. 70% of the county <BR>is the City.<BR><BR>I really don't see how you can blame the city of Moscow for something <BR>they might or might not have done. To tar and feather the city <BR>council for the Naylor Farm issue is silly.<BR><BR>>I think sales tax is the problem with the state government, <BR>especially on food and OTC drugs and education materials. Moscow has <BR>to high of taxes >because of school levies. I am not saying education <BR>isn't worth funding well, but there is breaking point for what many <BR>people on what they can afford to >give and the MSD has long passed it.<BR><BR>I agree with you about the state taxing food and medicine. And the <BR>extremely high property taxes, most of which goes to the school <BR>district.<BR><BR>>Best,<BR>>Donovan<BR><BR>In another email Donovan wrote:<BR>"Many local businesses have been pushed out of the Palouse Mall and <BR>the city has done nothing to protect them."<BR><BR>Yes, the Palouse Mall has kicked out quite a few 'local' businesses <BR>and replaced them with national chains. But just what is it that you <BR>think the city council could have done about that? How could they <BR>have protected the businesses? Personally, I think that what the <BR>mall did was/is wrong, but as a landlord, I guess that's their <BR>right. I don't see how you can drag the city into it.<BR><BR>Take care,<BR>Steven<BR><BR><BR><BR>=======================================================<BR>List services made available by First Step Internet, <BR>serving the communities of the Palouse since 1994. <BR>http://www.fsr.net <BR>mailto:Vision2020@moscow.com<BR>=======================================================<BR></BLOCKQUOTE><BR>
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