Friday, August 29, 2008

A conversation about Water Transfer

(This was going to be told to the Hickory City Council if the subject came up last week)

Dick Morris, the political strategist, talks about the Matador, the Cape, and the Bull. Elected Officials represent the matador, the citizens represent the bull, and the inconsequential current events of the day represent the cape. Issues such as the water transfer and sinkhole represent “cape issues” in my opinion. They get everyone frothing, but in the end they carry no substance.
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I went to the Rhodes room at the county library to look up census numbers and found a folder on Water issues.

A 1965 Charlotte Observer article stressed that we would be out of drinkable water in 10 years. Obviously that didn’t happen.

A 1969 Hickory Daily Record article stated that Duke Power had hired the Engineering firm of O’Brien & Gere of Charlotte and they estimated that we could use 90,000,000 gallons per day without having an adverse impact on Lake Rhodhiss and Lake Hickory.

A 1975 Hickory Daily Record article showed that we were utilizing 21,440,000 gallons of water per day. Of that 10,323,000 gallons per day were being utilized by industry.

Article from the Hickory Daily Record on 8/25/2007 stated that we were using 16.5 mill gal per day and the city wanted us to cut back 3 to 5 %, and a later article said that they wanted us to cut back 5 to 10%, and yet another article stated that they wanted us to cut back 10 to 20 %. The Governor even stated that he wanted us to cut back 50% on our water usage.

Article in the HDR on 9/ 29/ 2007 stated that we had cut back usage from 19 mill gal per day to 14 mill gal per day.

These numbers show that we aren’t even using the same amount of water per day that we were using in 1975 and according to statistics we are nowhere near the limit. Please show me an independent engineering study that shows the dire need for all of this hyperbole.

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The area we are arguing so fervently against is part of the Charlotte Metro Area. The Catawba River flows a lot further than down to the Charlotte area and we aren’t going to be able to stop the growth of communities downriver. Are we going to cry every time a commercial venture is proposed downstream? How are we going to feel when Marion and Morganton tell us that we are using too much water?

We’ve gotten all lawyered up and made enemies out of Kannapolis, Concord, and maybe even David Murdoch. We can’t expect other communities to follow our city’s example of controlled growth. Most communities understand the vital need to generate the kind of economic opportunity that increases the size of the pie for all of its citizens. It should not be the role of governments to hinder that.

The State of North Carolina is going to stand behind whoever or whatever generates more revenue for the state government. Like Bill Clinton stated 16 years ago, “It’s the economy stupid.”

Let’s quit worrying about symbolism and start worrying about substance. We can no longer afford to keep a myopic, small town mentality around here. There are over 40,000 people living in this town, 80,000 in the township, and we are nearing 400,000 people in the metro area. We will either aim for all out progress or continue down this road of stagnation.

The success or failure of this city depends upon bringing Major Industry back to the area. We have got to get back to manufacturing products. That is the issue that we should obsess about, that is the issue that should consume our thoughts. That is where we need to be.

The vitality of Hickory does not rest upon what happens 40 miles away. Let’s stop with the animosity towards our fellow communities and work on making this the innovative community it can and should be. You know Can’t never Could. Let’s be leaders and not followers.

James Thomas Shell

Vitally Important Election Upcoming (Last Year)

Vitally Important Election Upcoming
(Published in the Hickory Daily Record in November 2007)

I want to talk about our upcoming election and how important that I feel it is for Hickory’s future. This area has come to the crossroads of our existence and over the next couple of years we are going to have to make crucial decisions that will have an impact on this city for generations to come.

Going on seven years, we have seen a lack of economic productivity that has had a negative impact on most of our citizen’s standard of living. The two most important issues that this community faces are the standard of living and underemployment. These two issues are directly related to one another and without addressing these key issues; we are just going to be continuously spinning our wheels in an economic rut that leads nowhere.

There are too many people that look at our economy as though it is an accounting ledger. Dynamic economies are not built upon a series of plusses and minuses. They are built upon exponential growth brought on by investors’ willingness to risk their assets in a region based upon what it has to offer. The bottom line is that investors are going to go where they think they can get the most bang for their buck.

It is more than evident that over the last couple of years we have had two elected officials within our city that do not understand the concept of economic development. Mrs. Sally Fox and Mrs. Jill Patton have constantly voted against measures that would help foster economic growth for the area and they have voted for measures that will cost businesses thousands to millions of dollars in profit.

A few examples are the fight against Lowe’s being built on NC 127, the attempted restrictions they wanted to place on Martin-Marietta’s granite quarry, and their contentious opposition to allowing businesses an extra three years to meet the new open storage codes.

Many of you might say “Good! Sock it to ‘em,” but the reality of the situation is that these type of efforts have a hard impact on a business’s bottom line and thus their decision about whether or not to invest in this area.

It also has a direct impact in your wallet, because businesses have two ways of dealing with decreasing profits. They can either reduce their expenses (and their biggest expense is typically labor) or increase the price consumers pay for their products and/or services. Either way, in the end, you pay.

To put our economy back on solid ground, we need major industry back in the area. We don’t need any more micro-managing, big government, bureaucrats on the city council. We have been lucky so far because these two individuals have not been able to push much of their burdensome agenda through. For the sake of our city and the area that it dominates, let’s keep it that way.

Mr. Bruce Meisner is running unopposed and in my opinion he has been very much pro-growth oriented. Mr. Brad Lail and Mr. Danny Seaver are not running unopposed, but I also believe that the record shows that both of these gentlemen have for the most part supported the vital interests of businesses in this area.

Much more needs to be done and in having personal conversations with Mr. Lail, I personally believe that he gets “It.” I may not agree with Mr. Lail on all positions, but having known him for years, I can appreciate those minor differences. Most of us know that he and his family have a major stake in the success (and also failure) of this region.

Without getting into the personal details of our conversations, I can tell you that he understands the need to hit a home run on the Major Industry front. He, like myself, being a product of the UNC higher education system understands the value of education. He also understands that a good economy is built from the bottom-up and not from the top-down.

I just don’t feel that Mrs. Nancy Willingham (his opponent) could understand Hickory and its needs. She has just recently moved back to Hickory after being gone for decades. How can she understand this city and what we have been through? Nothing personal, but it appears that she is only trying to ride her father’s coat tails.

We know nothing about this lady’s platform. At this crucial point, in our city’s history, can we take that chance? I am sorry, but we cannot afford anymore of the social elite, anti-business mentality, like that of Mrs. Fox or Mrs. Patton on the council, and we can’t elect someone just because her father was mayor four decades ago.

The alternatives are clear. We can vote for pro-growth candidates that will support an agenda that will turn our economy around, sooner rather than later, or we can take our chances by voting for a nostalgic candidate. A candidate that might just throw us into the mire of bureaucratic mess that I believe Mrs. Fox and Mrs. Patton represent.

A strong, healthy, dynamic economy feeds off of itself. When people make more money, they spend more, businesses prosper, property values increase, and there will be increased revenue for our local government to improve Hickory. We can then afford a new university, nicer schools, better parks, better recreation, and all of the other amenities afforded to a robust economy.

In my opinion, the choice is yours. Do we want a responsive government that helps businesses succeed or do we want a burdensome government that chases businesses away? Will we remain at an economic standstill or will we give pro-growth candidates a mandate to move our region forward?

James Thomas Shell

Thursday, August 28, 2008

We Need More Energy

We Need More Energy
(Published in late August 2008 in the Hickory Daily Record)

It’s sad when Paris Hilton makes more sense than government leaders. PickensPlan.com and AmericanSolutions.com have plans that do exactly what she espouses in her commercial. Read them and think about joining them.

Most everyone agrees that our current energy policies are unacceptable. Demonizing fossil fuels will not solve the problem. Look around you Plastic, Glass, Metal, Fiber, and Silicon all need Oil and Coal to produce. There is no Utopian alternative available. Admitting to having a problem is the first step towards solving it. We will have to utilize carbon-based energy for many generations to come. We have and will continue to become more efficient in its usage. The population continues to grow and immediate elimination of fossil fuels will lead to grave consequences.
We currently produce around 6% of our energy using renewables. We aren't going to find the other 94% overnight. I love Wind Turbines, Solar Panels, Hydro Electric, Nuclear, etc. and hope we find true breakthroughs soon, but I refuse to fall victim to the green rhetoric that is contributing to the stagnation, litgation, and burdensome regulation of our economy.

Creation and expansion of energy resources creates value. Our government (which is us) would be paid fees and royalties for the right to drill, which should be invested in renewable energy projects. Economics 101 shows that increased supplies of energy will bring prices down. It’s a win-win.

We must keep energy money in the USA, because it protects national security, keeps the dollar strong, and supports quality high tech jobs. As stewards of the planet, we are all environmentalists. We can responsibly use its bountiful resources.

James Thomas Shell

Do Something

Do Something
(Published in the Hickory Daily Record in August 2008)

Where is our economic and social justice when it comes to the problems we face in this country? We the people of the United States own this country. Our representatives, who are supposed to work for us, are blocking us from getting what we mandate. In corporate America they would be fired for such insubordinance.

An example is the current energy crisis. I don’t believe that many of our legislators truly understand how dramatic this situation is. Billions of dollars are leaving our country daily, while the dollar continues to weaken, and rogue nations are propped up by insane policies. The bureaucracy has cooked the books to the point of telling us that everything’s fine and we aren’t in a recession. If they want to live in fantasyland that’s ok, but don’t do it at our expense.

It’s time for the bickering to cease and action to begin! Most of this country’s issues are not complex, but many of our legislators are ruining our future by putting their personal interests ahead of national interests. What they are doing is treasonous. I often wonder if an Economic Depression would be enough to reign in their arrogance.

The Declaration of Independence states, “…governments are instituted among men, deriving their just powers from the consent of the governed. That whenever any form of government becomes destructive to these ends, it is the right of the people to alter or to abolish it…”

We deserve representation. Much of what King George was doing 232 years ago is being done to us today by a federal government that has lost perspective. The bureaucracy has created a class amongst itself. They have forgotten that they have their jobs at the discretion of the citizens and seem to believe that we are here for their disposal.

Common sense allows for the belief that we are all unique individuals and therefore we are going to have differences of opinion on important issues. But, we cannot allow those differences to create this bitterness that will not allow us to progress as a society. We should immediately act on issues where we share similar beliefs and work diligently to see where we share common ground on the most divisive issues.

I refuse to believe that we are all so different that we cannot agree on anything of substance, but that is how we are currently being governed. America the Super Power has become its own worst enemy. Our complacency and unwillingness to move forward in this new age will destroy all we have inherited.

It is disrespectful to previous generations to squander what they worked hard, sacrificed, and fought to give us and immoral to pass on our gluttonous debts to generations that have yet to be born. Do you realize how easily our liberty can slip away?

James Thomas Shell