This week the city will be talking about our streets and sidewalks, and about getting more help with police protection from the Grand Traverse County Sheriff, among other things.  We are also continuing the discussion here about renewable energy and efficiency.  Please give us your thoughts here, or join us on Facebook http://www.facebook.com/PlanforTC

1.  Streets and sidewalks.  The city is starting to put real money into our streets and sidewalks.  In two years, we have gone from spending $100,00 per year to spending $1.2 million.  Over $100,000 of that will be spent on sidewalks.  We have a new infrastructure policy that calls for a bias in favor of sidewalks and bike lanes.  http://www.ci.traverse-city.mi.us/Policy/InfrastructureStrategyPolicy.pdf  In the future, the policy calls for a technique called “asset management” to maintain streets and sidewalks, but next year we’ll be focusing on the absolute worst condition streets.  There is a map of these at http://www.ci.traverse-city.mi.us/agendas/packet20091214.pdf, on page 19 of the pdf.  A list of streets for next year and the year after is at pages 31-41 of the same pdf.

Key questions remain:

a.  Should local street reconstruction include traffic calming measures ( http://www.trafficcalming.org/ ) to slow down cut-through traffic in the neighborhoods?  Even if it costs more?  Some feel the city made a promise to people in the neighborhoods that calming would be done when the streets were re-constructed, yet that is so far not part of the discussion.  What kind of measures do you want in the neighborhoods?

b.  Is $1.2 million per year enough  to spend on streets and sidewalks?  A 2006 report found that we need to spend more than $26 million to meet our infrastructure needs in this city.  http://www.ci.traverse-city.mi.us/departments/engineering/pr2006/tcpr2006.pdf  How much should we be spending?  How long should we plan to take to tackle these problems?

c.  The plan says we need a bias in favor of sidewalks and bike lanes but some of our key transportation corridors remain almost impossible to cross on foot or ride through on a bicycle.  The city re-striped the far east end of 8th street but currently has no concrete plan to re-stripe the area between Woodmere and Lake.  You cannot legally and safely ride a bike east across Division St at the 7th St light because you are immediately riding against one-way traffic.  (Division St itself is a whole other matter we’ll be getting to on this site soon).  Should we favor sidewalks and bike lanes only when it is easy, when there are no trade-offs we have to make, or should pedestrians and cyclists be a real priority?

The city is in the process of making decisions on streets and sidewalks that we will have to live with for 20 years.  Let us know what you want us to do!

2.  Police.  Traverse City residents are also residents of Grand Traverse County.  As county residents, we help pay for the Grand Traverse County Sheriff’s department.  We do not currently receive services from the Sheriff’s department other than at the jail, and through some mutual aid responsibilities.  Two areas that have been discussed are:

Road Patrols.  Based on a per capita breakdown of the 2008 budget, Traverse City taxpayers pay a share of the county’s road patrol budget that adds up to over $600,000 per year.  Yet we receive no road patrol services from the county.  Instead, we pay over $3.6 million for police protection from the Traverse City Police Department, a budget which includes road patrol. 

Community Police Officers.  The County also provides community police officers to townships who request them.  The townships pick up roughly 75% of the cost of these officers, and the County picks up roughly 25%.  The County could be asked to provide this service to the city.   We could try a pilot program for using County community officers to meet some of  our city policing needs.  A pilot program could mean 2 to 8 officers to try it out.  The city would be protected by the same number of officers, but at a lower cost to city taxpayers.  By keeping the pilot program small at first, it could allow operational issues like chain-of-command and call responsibility to be worked through. 

Benchmarking.  The city has done some benchmarking of our police force to those of other comparable cities.  The results are at  http://www.ci.traverse-city.mi.us/agendas/packet20091214.pdf, starting on page 42 of the pdf.  

Would you support asking the GT County Sheriff to take over a portion of the road patrol responsibility in the City that is now handled by the Traverse City Police Dept?  Would you support a community police program in which some City police positions were replaced by community officers provided by the GT County Sheriff?  Are there other collaborative efforts between these two law enforcement agencies that you would support?  Do we have the right-size police force?  Do we need more officers?  Could we protect the city with fewer officers?  What other ideas should we be looking at?

3.      Renewable energy and efficiency.  This week we’re continuing the Question of the Week on Traverse City Light & Power’s renewable energy plans, including biomass.  Good questions and comments here and on Facebook http://www.facebook.com/PlanforTC about renewable energy and energy efficiency – look for more info in the comments to the Question of the Week page.  (if the new info is not up yet, please check back later)

As always, thank you for visiting, and please give us your comments!

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