Tuesday, October 19, 2010

The two Gilberts: One real, one pseudonymous

Please go to http://takomapark.patch.com for a column I wrote today on an effort to rename Takoma Urban Park, at the corner of Westmoreland and Carroll avenues, for the late Dr. Gilbert Kombe. I'm for the renaming.


Dr. Gilbert Kombe
I am also posting here some comments I made on a blog post by "Gilbert," the pseudonym used by Takoma Voice cartoonist Bill Brown (Takoma Park's founder was B.F. Gilbert--get it?). I am grateful to "Gilbert" for covering the city council, but I think sometimes he needs to be a bit more skeptical about what is said at the dais.   


Here's my comment, currently awaiting moderation.


Gilbert--


Thanks for the coverage of the discussion of the TFEA report. As the person who wrote the report's air quality chapter, there are a few things I'd like to point out.


1) The leaf blower ban proposal actually advanced slightly. The city council agreed by consensus that Takoma Park should phase out the use of blowers in our parks and rights of way. I have confirmed this with City Manager Barbara Matthews. I hope the council seriously considers a seasonal ban, especially when they take into account the heat wave we had this summer.


2) The city manager was, unfortunately, incorrect when she said that state law prohibits idling only when the car is unoccupied. In fact, state law prohibits drivers from ever leaving their cars running and unattended. The five-minute rule has nothing to do with occupancy. Text is below for both laws.


http://www.michie.com/maryland/lpext.dll/mdcode/26286/27ac8/27cfc/27cfd?fn=document-frame.htm&f=templates&2.0


§ 21-1101. Unattended motor vehicle.


(a) Duty of driver upon leaving unattended vehicle.- Except as provided in subsection (c) of this section, a person driving or otherwise in charge of a motor vehicle may not leave it unattended until the engine is stopped, the ignition locked, the key removed, and the brake effectively set.


The transportation code also says "A motor vehicle engine may not be allowed to operate for more than 5 consecutive minutes when the vehicle is not in motion." There are some exceptions, of course (when you're stuck in traffic, for example, you can keep your engine on as long as you want).


http://www.montgomerycountymd.gov/mcgtmpl.asp?url=/content/dgs/fms/news.asp mentions Montgomery County's anti-idling policy for its fleet of vehicles


From the TFEA report: "A recent paper estimates that idling makes up 1.6 percent of all CO2 emissions nationwide--a small percentage but a big impact: 93 million metric tons (MMT) of CO2 and 10.6 billion gallons of gasoline per year. In fact, reducing idling by one minute would eliminate 8 MMt of CO2 a year." (that's 8 million metric tons)


3) You write, "An officer would have to observe [the idling] happening for a certain number of minutes - not the most efficient use of a police officer's time."


You need to look at the TFEA report again. It recommends "zero tolerance," given that idling for more than 10 seconds is a waste of gasoline. Pressed for a time limit, the report suggested that the limit be 1 minute, but officers currently have discretion to approach anyone and ask them what they're up to. Just such a tactic could be used with people sitting on Carroll in parking spaces, texting or talking on the phone while their engines are running. A simple, "would you turn your engine off, please" is all that's needed. If asked why, the officer could say, "It's against the law to run your engine for no reason."


4) You wrote of electric leaf blowers: "If the device is electric, somewhere a power station is spewing emissions to give it juice. It may be better than directly powering it with gas, and it may be out-of-sight out-of-mind, but it still pollutes."


That's not necessarily true. The city gets a lot of its electricity from wind power, no? So instead of a power plant, it's a wind turbine that is supplying the juice. If we installed solar panels at the new PW facility, it would be solar power. Not to mention the fact that an electric blower takes a lot less energy to run and does not pollute locally. Besides, one can always use a rake or a broom and avoid the trade-off altogether.


5) You wrote: "The gas-powered leaf blower ban is back where it left off. Months ago the council had hearings on the subject, watering the proposal down and complicating it up."


The council has never held hearings on the subject. I have suggested (and suggest again here) that they actually propose regulations and then hold a hearing or series of hearings. Instead, they have held worksessions. The first was in January 2009, the second some months later. At the first, Seth Grimes and I participated. At the second, the council simply discussed again what it had already discussed.


There has been no "public" opposition to the proposal. The only citizen opposition we've heard about has been from anonymous residents, as quoted by their representatives. Mayor Williams, for example, said at the Oct. 11 meeting that a couple of people had told him they would "storm" city hall if the council enacted a ban. It would be nice if these storm troopers had to explain their positions at a public hearing, but so far, that hasn't happened.


(I need to give a shout-out here to Bruce Williams for his helpful comments about lawn care equipment. The mayor said he had bought a Neuton (battery-powered lawnmower) and an electric leaf blower. He will use a gas one for big jobs only.)


They also have never "watered the proposal down," since they never formally considered the subject. A seasonal ban would not be as strict as a 365-day-a-year ban, of course, but a seasonal ban is certainly acceptable to me. Josh Wright is quite right when he says that during the summer, all the blowers are doing is blowing dust around, a remarkably unhealthy practice considering the polluted air we already experience. (In addition, Wright was speaking of blowers, not mowers, when he spoke of a seasonal ban.) ["Gilbert" had mistakenly written that Wright suggested a seasonal ban on mowers.]


6)  Lastly, both the leaf blower ban proposal and the anti-idling proposal are "pro-active." Are they innovative? Well, yes, if one considers "innovative" to mean "forward-looking." But a good idea does not have to be "innovative" to make sense.


Thanks for allowing me to comment.

Friday, October 8, 2010

Trees again (planting and plaints); Takoma Junction task force

Just a quick note (ah, but that's impossible for me) before I endeavor to revive Endangered Species & Wetlands Report, the newsletter I've published for 15 years this month. In fact, the actual 15th anniversary is coming up -- it might coincide with my son's 6th birthday -- October 9. That was when I launched ESWR, the most tongue-twisted acronym one could ever hope to come up with. It's been my cash cow (yeah, right), but hopefully also a journal of some value to people in the ESA, wetlands and takings (not so much) law communities. But lately (that's a loose use of that word) it hasn't lived up to expectations. If you're environmentally inclined, please check out the new site and offer constructive criticism. Thank you.

On to TP, the unfortunate acronym for Takoma Park. Trees are in the news again. Actually, when aren't they? This time the debate is over the costs and benefits of solar energy compared with the those attendant to the tree canopy.

Actually (there's that word again), the costs of trees are never discussed. It's always all those benefits, especially the miraculous way they cool the air. Did you know that it's not as hot in the shade?  The example I love is the one Catherine Tunis keeps trotting out -- the $2,000 of taxpayers' money she and the Greenhouse Gas Action Plan people spent back in 1999 proving that ambient temperatures in a treed backyard are lower than those you'd find in the parking lot of a Langley Park shopping center. Personally, I can't think of two more climatically different locations. But they proved it! Chances are, if you step out of your car to grab a pollo entero from Señor Chicken at 12:30 pm on a Wednesday when it's 97 degrees out, you'll be hotter than if you were sipping a cool drink in the backyard of your ----- Avenue home. Eu-friggin-reka.
But on to NEWS, not HERSTORY

"It's not right, it's not fair, I'm still a mess and you still don't care." Fountains of Wayne, Little Red Light

  
The latest re-iteration of this "research" took place at the city council's Sept. 27 meeting, where a good hour and a half was spent on the tree ordinance and hearing various complaints about its implementation (or lack of implementation). I'll offer a few documents and background here, but please also go to http://takomapark.patch.com, where my debut column is on this very subject -- the meeting and discussion. Thanks to Ryan McDermott for allowing me to disgorge my thoughts -- oooh, gross -- on the Patch site.  


The following item was updated Monday, Oct. 25

Appointments to the Takoma Junction Task Force were made Sept. 27 and tonight (it's going to happen, according to the agenda). A  bit more above-board than the sleight-of-hand involved in the selection of members of the Task Force on Environmental Action, which I was co-chair of (and that title and a sawbuck won't get me a coffee at Starbucks, I'm betting).


Twenty people were appointed Sept. 27 to the new body, which is charged with figuring out how to revitalize and redevelop that nightmare intersection.

The task force, which has been given a year (twice as long as the Task Force on Environmental Action got) to come up with a report, also is supposed to "create work plans with recommended near- and long-term actions for Council consideration that addresses [sic] the community’s interest in improving existing traffic patterns; resolving pedestrian safety concerns; increasing public use of public spaces; providing for the redevelopment  of city-owned properties; enhancing the physical appearance and condition of properties; and increasing the economic viability of area businesses."

Sounds simple. Have at it, guys. They just have to figure out how to balance the needs of Junction businesses, pedestrians, cars, the co-op, the city-owned lot next to the co-op, and historic preservationists. 

The environmental task force recommended something for the junction – a "roundabout" to ease the traffic problems. But that seems unlikely to occur, as it would necessitate removal of the "park" located across from the TPSS co-op, and its attendant mural, benches, etc.

Historically, it is an interesting structure, and that's important, because Historic Takoma Inc. (HTI) is well represented on the task force.

"Historic" members include Lorraine Pearsall, either HTI's vice president for preservation (HTI website) or president of HTI (city task force applicant list); Susan Robb, HTI board member, and James DiLuigi, HTI board member.

Also newly appointed to the task force is Howard Kohn, who lives near the Junction, is well-known as a political kingmaker and head of Takoma Park Neighborhood Youth Soccer (what Takoma soccer mom doesn't know 16 Jefferson Ave.?), and is married to HTI muckety-muck Diana Kohn -- not that we'd ever suggest Howard's objectivity would be influenced by something as pedestrian as marriage.

Other members:

Roz Grigsby, Executive Director of the Old Takoma Business Association; Roger Schlegel, who captured 40 percent of the vote in the mayor's race last year; Jeffrey Trunzo, a Sherman Avenue resident, Silver Spring-Carroll neighborhood association member, and regulatory analyst at the Food and Drug Administration; Lorig Charkoudian, chair of the TPSS Co-op; Ellen Zavian, SS Carroll Association's chair of Subcommittee on Junction Function; Hailu L. Aichehi, a real estate agent for Heymann Realty Inc. (at least, according to the Web); John Salmen, owner of Universal Design, at 6 Grant Avenue; Kay Daniels-Cohen, head of the SS-Carroll association;  Steve Dubb, membership director for the co-op; Megan Gallagher, 7331 Carroll Avenue; Seth Grimes, ubiquitous local activist and former mayoral candidate; Andy Kelemen, who has been a member of the informal "Fireplace Group" that had been meeting to discuss the future of the Junction; Linette Lander, Katrina Oprisko, William Coulter, and Jennifer Sisane.

At this point the distribution for the task force is:

Ward 3 (the location of the Junction): 10 members (Councilmember: Dan Robinson)
Ward 1:  4 (Councilmember: Josh Wright)
Ward 2:  3 (Councilmember: Colleen Clay)
Ward 4:  1 (Councilmember: Terry Seamens)
Ward 6:  2 (Councilmember: Fred Schultz)
Washington, D.C. - 1

Alas, the task force has no representatives of Ward 5 (Councilmember: Reuben Snipper).

Once again, Ward 3 dominates a task force, just as it did with the TFEA (the environmental task force).

Tuesday, September 28, 2010

Colleen and me, talkin trees

in which a Takoma Park City Councilmember and I engage in a civil exchange of views on the relative merits of trees and solar panels in the realm of energy savings.


This happened on Facebook after the Gazette ran a story  about two Takoma homeowners who wanted to install solar collectors on their roof. To do so, however, they needed to remove a tree that didn't look too healthy anyway. 


Jeremy Arias reported on July 7:


"At the heart of the matter is a decades-old silver maple growing directly in front of the Earles' house at 231 Grant Ave. While Patrick Earle has argued, among other things, that the tree is rotting internally and will soon present a safety hazard anyway, City Arborist Todd Bolton remains rooted in his stance that the massive maple is far from dead. Because the tree in question is defined by the city's code as an urban forest tree—it measures more than 24 inches in circumference at a height of four feet from the ground—it falls under the ordinance's protection, according to the city's code.


"It's not dead, it's not hazardous; he's choosing to remove it to put in his solar panels, and if you want to do that, there's a cost associated," Bolton said of the Earles' tree. "That's not my decision, that's not stuff I just made up; that's in the ordinance."


"Since Bolton did not classify the tree as a hazard, the ordinance states that the Earles need to either replace the tree or pay the city the "fair market value" of 23 replacement trees. Because of the tree's size—roughly 50 inches in circumference—the ordinance's formula dictates that the Earles would need to plant 23 replacement trees to make up for it.


"It seems completely unreasonable," Patrick Earle said.


He added that, according to the city, fair market value for 23 trees would cost him about $4,000 at $175 a tree, much more than the $2,000 estimates he's received from contacting private landscapers."


Earle's comments on his experience and recommendations for changes to the city's unforgiving tree ordinance make for interesting reading.


Earle tells me about (and sends along) arborist Todd Bolton's decision to "rate the trunk of my tree as a 3 on a 5-point scale. However, the table in section 12.12.100 of the Tree Code implies that if the trunk is severely hollow that the rating should be a "1". When the tree was cut down we discovered that the trunk was very hollow. One of the major branches that was leaning over power lines and my neighbor's house was dangerously hollow."


From the code:


12.12.100 (C)    The basal area of the replacement trees, measured at caliper height, must be no less than a percentage of the total basal area of the tree to be removed, measured at 4 1/2' above the ground. The percentage is determined using the following health quality analysis rating scale.





CRITERION
VALUE
RATING
5 or 4
3 or 2
1
Trunk
Sound and solid
Sections of bark missing
Extensive bark loss and hollow
Growth/Rate per
More than 6 inch year twig elongation
2 to 6 inch twig elongation
Less than 2 inch twig elongation
Structure
Sound
1 major or several minor limbs dead
2 or more major limbs dead
Insects/Diseases
Normal pest presence
Moderate affliction or infestation
Severe affliction or infestation
Crown/Development
Full and balanced
Full but unbalanced
Unbalanced and lacking a full crown
Life Expectancy
Over 30 years
5 to 30 years
Less than 5 years
Total Rating





After the article came out, my fellow Task Force on Env'l Action colleague Sat Jiwan Ikle-Khalsa wrote a sensible letter to the Gazette advocating a recommendation contained in our report that would establish colar co-ops on city buildings.


In any case, here's my exchange with Clay. She delivers a pithy, loaded statement, tries to reword it, and then declines to defend it and bows out of the conversation. Politicians in Takoma Park need to get thicker skin. Leather's out, so maybe recycled plastic bags?





















Forest for the Trees

Sweet gums, willows, oaks, poplars, tulip poplars, Silver maple, gingko, serviceberry, hickory, et -- other species. I love you all. I hug you, I kiss your bark. 


OK, now on to writing about Public Menace #1 --trees, of the deciduous variety.


But first this -- I don't know whether anyone took to the podium tonight to laud trees for reducing air conditioning costs. There was an estimate quoted in the Takoma Voice, both online and in the newspaper, that claimed D.C. residents were saving $26 million a yr in lower AC costs because of all the trees in the nation's capital. 


Reporting on a symposium held "a few years ago" at Brookside Gardens, a Voice columnist wrote
"DC's trees filter out 540 tons of harmful air pollutants per year," according to Mark Buscaino, executive director of Casey Trees Endowment Fund. Mark also told us, "DC's trees also give us $26 million in annual air conditioning savings." Trees provide stormwater mitigation. They also offer direct economic and quality of life benefits. For instance, one study showed that urban streets with full tree canopies had more pedestrians. Trees pull people outdoors and subliminally encourage neighborhood interaction, which in turn lessens the local crime rate."
Not true. Casey Trees confirmed today that the correct number is indeed the one that has been on their website since before the Voice article was published.


Here's what they say on their site:


Cooling Shade

Cities typically average 10 degrees hotter than suburban areas. Trees provide shade and give off water vapor to cool the city in the summer. Homes shaded by trees have 10-30% savings in air conditioning costs compared to homes without shade. The shade trees of DC save us more than $2.6 million in air conditioning costs per year.
Some links for Takoma treenauts:

http://takomaparkmd.gov/clerk/agenda/items/2010/092710-9.pdf  Packet for city council worksession is here (includes Tree Commission comments)


Patrick Earle's comments
City staff comments


Arborist's rating of Patrick Earle's tree: 


"Note that he scored it a 4 out of 5 on structure, even when a 26" diameter branch was hollow enough to make it fall within a range that made it highly likely to fail," Earle said in an email today transmitting Bolton's scoring.

http://www.eswr.com/docs/tfea/aqweb.htm    my air quality chapter for the TFEA

Email sent today to a university expert -- I should probably get his OK before I post all this, but I don't think he'll mind. I've called him "Dr. C------" (or is it Dr. C-----? Gettin' hard to read these dashes.)


Dr. C------:

As requested:
http://www.eswr.com/docs/tfea/aqweb.htm   air quality chapter I wrote for the Task Force on Environmental Action report, which is available at that link minus the aqweb.htm (www.eswr.com/docs/tfea)   That page also has a lot of links to other documents
www.greenourcity.org is a web page another fellow and I did about the quest to get leaf blowers banned
http://www.eswr.com/docs/tfea/blowersagin.htm a piece I wrote to convince the members of the Task Force that we should recommend banning gas-powered blowers in the city and move twds addressing lawn and garden eqpt's contribution to air quality problems.
http://nrs.fs.fed.us/people/dnowak    USFS David Nowak's pagehttp://nrs.fs.fed.us/people/dnowak#pubs    w/ publications
http://www.arborday.org/replanting/partnership.cfm   Arbor Day Foundation and Forest Service's partnership
http://www.arborday.org/trees/benefits.cfm  Benefits calculator from ADF (whoops, nope that's the one for public consumption)
http://www.arborday.org/calculator/index.cfm?utm_medium=TreeGuideMenu%2Bfeature&utm_campaign=TreeCalculator
http://www.davey.com/ask-the-expert/tree-calculator/national-tree-benefit-calculator.aspx    probly the same thing from Davey Trees (heavily involved in Arbor Day Fdtn) (I figured out that the serviceberry planted in the right of way near my house is worth $11 yr in benefits.)

If it grows to 9 and a half feet, it'll be worth $24/yr


More to come on the topic of the decades in Takoma Park.

Sunday, September 19, 2010

Council cabal

    
View Larger Map


Don't look now, but the nine-member county council is about to be taken over by a neighborhood gang that is as scary as any you've seen hangin' in Downtown Silver Spring.


They go by Elrich, Ervin, Leventhal and Riemer, but are also sometimes known by their first names -- Marc, Val, George and Hans. Ay-yi-yi! Just hearing those monikers makes me want to hide way up in an old oak in Takoma Park -- preferably one that won't snap in the next storm.


These bangers all live in the same 'hood, so naturally they're going to put the 'hood's interests first and the rest of the county -- Damascus, G'burg, Germantown, Laytonsville, Washington Grove, Boyds, y'know, the upcounty -- second, or even third. Whatever spot those locales will occupy in the cabal's black heart, it will be tiny. Teensy-weentsy. Undetectable, unless you've got a laparascope. (The map above shows where they live--Leventhal and Elrich are in the city of Takoma Park; Ervin and Riemer are close by but in unincorporated Silver Spring.)


Surely you jest, you say. Montgomery County is the home of good government. Never would our county allow such favoritism, simply because these four live within biking distance of one another. Would it?


Ah, but that's exactly what the wise Democrats of voting age have done. Yup, all 20 percent of them. I know because I read it in the newspaper -- the Washington Post, to be exact. (Primary election results)


But wait a second. Why should I be afraid? After all, these four politicians are going to do my bidding. I live here in the People's Republic and they all live nearby, so that means my fellow citizens and I will reap the benefits of their representation.


Right?


Well, probably not. Three of the four have been on the council for four years, and Takoma Park is still getting short-changed on the "police rebate" the county gives us. The latest budget cycle had city leaders quaking in their boots, as county staffers proposed a draconian 25 percent cut. It was whittled down to half that, and the city ended up sacking a few folks. Not great for them, of course, but not as bad as it could have been. (Lest you think I'm callous, allow me to note that hardly anyone in this union-friendly town raised a peep about the dismissal of city workers. Lately, some of my fellow now-defunct-Task Force on Environmental Action members have been wondering why the city has hired a "social media" coordinator instead of saving the dough for a sustainability coordinator. The answer: The position was already budgeted. Oh, well -- that makes sense.) 


But back to the subject at hand, which is the windfall we in the PRoTP are sure to receive because we've got all these council people living near us. As former mayoral candidate and ubiquitous city activist and pain-in-the-rear (in a good way) Seth Grimes opines below,
"Marc, George, and Valerie have done nothing in their 4 years on the council to push the county executive to address widely acknowledged unfairness in the county's 'tax duplication' formulas by which the county keeps a disproportionate share of taxes paid by local residents that should be going to pay for services in Takoma Park... but doesn't. I'd be very surprised (but quite happy) if our county reps do pick up on this issue in the next 4 years."
Da Post


Before I begin what will only be the first of many (well-intentioned and well-informed) screeds against the Washington Post, allow me to state my bona fides. One thing you are not permitted to do in Takoma Park is criticize without first enumerating the many ways in which you are qualified to state an opinion. For instance, if I say the tree ordinance is irrational, I should first say that I love trees and would lay down my life for a Sweet Gum even if it were occupied by a family of tent caterpillars (which ain't so bad, btw). By the time you're done saying why your plaint should be listened to, however, you're usually out of time or the other person has burst in with a diatribe about your emotional immaturity.

So let me just say I grew up with the Post and remember well the days of ace photog Richard Darcey (Charley Taylor in full sprint, a Cowboy stretched helplessly in mid-air behind him in the Skins' 26-3 NFC championship win in 1972), the late but prolifically great Ward Sinclair (ag beat, Truckpatch), Dave Kindred, Ken Denlinger, Shirley Povich (last Nats game? I was there; he wrote it up); Lou Cannon, Michael Kernan (hilarious story on the White House turkey), David Remnick, David Maraniss (is he still there?), Phil McCombs ("Oh, Man!" was one of the best features ever to run in Style), and pugilist Henry Allen. 


Martie Zad, I remember the time we met at the Chevy Chase Lounge. Mike Abramowitz, I know you went to Alban's. Michael Dobbs? I hope the second edition of your Cuban Missile Crisis book gets my Dad's name right. Bob Woodward? I know you raised hackles with your stories on the school system when you were at the Montgomery County Sentinel. Margaret Webb? Before you latched onto the Haft family tragedy, I edited your stuff at the Gazette.


I paid 80 cents a day for the paper when I lived in Carlisle, Pa., and more on Sunday -- a good chunk of my measly reporter's salary. My father wrote dozens of letters and even a few op-eds. I myself have had a couple of letters published and been responsible for more than a handful of corrections. I've also annoyed at least a half-dozen ombudsmen. So, dammit, I will say my piece!


Anyone still reading? Good. Metro scribe Mike Laris, obviously a nice guy because he called me back when I informed him that his article on the Takoma Park Folk Festival contained an incorrect quote of a sign (see today's paper for the correx), promptly went and wrote another piece about Takoma Park without checking with me first. Mike? Doncha know I'm crazy? That I'll say anything? That this blog is non-remunerative and keeps me from doing real work? 


Let's go through graf by graf

Montgomery neighborhood could have
a powerful grip on county council

By Michael Laris

Washington Post Staff Writer
Sunday, September 19, 2010

Montgomery County stretches across a diverse terrain of more than 495 square miles. But if political wisdom in the heavily Democratic county holds, four of nine County Council members will live within three miles of one another by year's end.

Actually, it's more than 500 square miles when you take waterways into account.

Three council members already do, right along the Takoma Park-Silver Spring border.
Hans Riemer, a Silver Spring political organizer, joined three neighborhood incumbents in winning Democratic nominations in Tuesday's primary. If the four are victorious come November -- as many assume they will be in a county where registered Democrats outnumber Republicans by more than 2 to 1 -- their tree-lined patch of Montgomery north of the District line will deepen its remarkable grip on local government power. [emphasis added]

Not sure how a "tree-lined patch" can exercise any kind of grip on government power, much less a "remarkable grip." But trees are indeed powerful in Montgomery County.

It would be as if 193 of the House of Representatives' 435 members lived in an area smaller than Connecticut, prompting some in Montgomery to raise questions about fairness and the appearance of favoritism. ["Some" = Two]

Like so many analogies, this one is inapt. There are no "at large" House members. All the seats in the House are based on population. In contrast, many commentators have pondered the wisdom of allowing sparsely populated states (e.g., Wyoming, Utah, Alaska, Montana and Idaho) to have outsized influence in the U.S. Senate. See this post at the Balkinization blog, which notes that 58 senators represent a mere one-fourth of the U.S. population.

"If the voters countywide felt they wanted a different mix of residencies for the at-large members, they had the opportunity to cast their votes as they saw fit," Leventhal said. "Nobody forced them to choose three guys from the same neighborhood."

Who can argue with the ever-tactful George Leventhal? Who wants to? Well, I'll make a mild criticism. The pols in question don't all live in the same "neighborhood," unless you define the "tree-lined patch" stretching 3.1 miles as one neighborhood. In fact, according to the Post's own Real Estate/Neighborhoods web page (which is not very detailed--my neighborhood is not included, for example), Leventhal lives in Brookside Forest, Riemer in North Takoma, Elrich in Kilmarock, and Ervin in South Woodside Park.
On one end of Montgomery's equivalent to Pennsylvania Avenue is Leventhal's midsize home with a fenced yard and a blue-and-white campaign sign out front. On the other end is a two-story brick home across from Sligo Creek Elementary School where Ervin, a former member of the Board of Education, lives. At-Large incumbent Elrich and newcomer Riemer live on side streets along the way.

Along what way? I assume he's equating Piney Branch Road with Pennsylvania Avenue, but he never mentions what street he's talking about. The difference, however, is that Pennsylvania Avenue is best known for the house in the 1600 block, where the President lives. Yet the article doesn't mention Montgomery County Executive Ike Leggett.
On a three-mile walk start to finish through the quartet's base Thursday, few of those headed home from the Takoma Metro station or watching a football practice from the sidelines knew they were in the midst of such a concentration of county authority. And some didn't much care.

I guess that's assuming that three or even four councilmembers can control what the council does. The last four years have shown that is not the case. Not surprisingly, most people questioned did not know and did not care.







View Larger Map  Where the other 5 live



"I have no expectations. Let's put it that way," said Glenn Trivers, a postal carrier watching a helmeted group of kids tackle a yellow dummy at Takoma Park Middle School on Piney Branch Road not far from Leventhal's home. Trivers was among about 20 percent of Montgomery voters who turned out Tuesday. He said he voted for Gov. Martin O'Malley and a school board member whose name sounded familiar but couldn't remember whether he selected any of the council candidates.

But head further along Piney Branch and make a left at the large potholes on the way toward Riemer's house, and there was some recognition of the benefits of living in Montgomery's local corridor of power.


Ah, there's the Piney Branch Road reference (sans "road." Piney Branch is in fact a creek.)


"It's knowing these folks. They live where you live. They understand what issues you have," said Ed Bordley, a federal government lawyer. "You run into them every day, and you feel like you can say, 'How about this issue? What about getting a light down here at the school so the kids can cross Piney Branch Road safely?' " 


Indeed, there is a light at Takoma Middle. But crossing Piney Branch after soccer practice is still a game of chicken.




Bordley, who is blind and was walking home with his German shepherd guide dog, Kaleb, said he loves the location not far from Metro, the tomatoes from his neighbors and the nearby church that serves as his faith-based hub of activism on social issues, which includes promoting affordable housing. And he thinks the nature of the community is such that it wouldn't abuse its outsized influence. "I'd like to think we have the interests of the rest of the county at heart," Bordley said.




But some from elsewhere in Montgomery would prefer a little more geographic power sharing.

"It gives that area a very, very strong voice on the county council," said council member Phil Andrews (D-Gaithersburg/Rockville). 



If they spoke with one voice. I would argue that because they represent the entire county, it's more likely that at-large councilmembers are careful not to bend over backwards to help neighbors.


The political culture of activism in the Takoma Park-Silver Spring area helped the four ride to victory Tuesday, despite the changing trend of where people are living in Montgomery. The county's population center has been creeping northward each decade since 1960 and was in Rockville in 2000, according to county officials. 


Probably true, but since we don't know what the turnout was in downcounty precincts, we have no idea whether the "political culture of activism" propelled them to victory. I also would question whether people in Takoma and Silver Spring are any more "activist" than those in the upcounty, who have had to fight for recognition for years.


Several years ago, Andrews pressed the case for getting rid of at-large districts altogether and dividing the county into nine districts instead. Voters rejected that in a 2004 referendum. 


In other words, the voters didn't agree with Andrews, but he's still whining. OK, that's too flip. Here's an op-ed penned by Andrews and the late Neal Potter, former councilmember and County Executive. He wasn't everyone's cup of tea, but I really loved that man. He did his homework. He cared about the facts. He epitomized good government. Question C, however, lost by more than 75,000 votes, 60.6% to 39.4%.


"A countywide district is huge. It's 1 1/2 times the size of a congressional district, and it's larger than several states" in population, Andrews said, adding that officials would be "closer to the people" with smaller districts. "It's very hard for people who aren't able to raise a lot of money to break into a countywide race." 


Even primary winner Ervin questions the wisdom of the clustering of officialdom. As a strong and early supporter of Riemer, she's partly responsible. But she's had concerns about the appearance and reality of the situation. 


"I really think the best way to govern the county is to have representatives from all the different areas of the county. It's a 500-square-mile jurisdiction," Ervin said. "I don't think it's necessarily a great idea to have so many members of the County Council living in one area. People may feel that area will get special attention." 


Again, do we get special attention? See Takoma rebate, above.

As the council member for District 5, which covers Silver Spring and Takoma Park, Ervin said she's experienced firsthand the confusion of having so much representing going on in one place. It took a while for her, Elrich and Leventhal to stop running into one another, she said. "It got really messy there for a while. Things would happen, and I wouldn't know about it. People would get confused in the community: 'Who do I call? I've got George, I've got Marc, I've got Valerie, and now I've got Hans,' " Ervin said.



It's Montgomery's hybrid political system and a good-government appeal that allowed this to happen.

Instead of having only district council members, as in Prince George's County, or district supervisors and a countywide board chairman, as in Fairfax County, Montgomery reserves four at-large seats under the theory that doing so is a good way to keep a focus on the long view



The current system shapes the tone of debate on difficult issues, such as where to place so-called LULUs, or locally unpopular land uses, said Royce Hanson, the former county planning chairman who lost his council bid Tuesday.

"The district representative knows they are working in a context in which the district view has to adapt to countywide concerns and countywide interests," said Hanson, who has argued against moves to only have district representatives in Montgomery. Such an arrangement would make people "take too parochial a view of things," Hanson said.

Council member Andrews rejected that argument. It hasn't proved true in Fairfax, he said. And by Hanson's logic, Maryland's delegates, senators and congressional representatives should run at-large statewide, Andrews said.

Hanson had another point. Under today's system, each voter can cast ballots for the majority of council members. That's great if you don't like your council member, he said. 



"If you're represented by only one person, where do you go?" Hanson asked. "If you've got a district representative, and you've got four at-large representatives, you've got five avenues to try to influence policy instead of just one."


I got nothin' more folks.