Wednesday, September 3, 2014

MGH Is Counting Down, Eagle Mine Road Is Ever Widening, and a College Preacher Is Spewing Hate


TWO WEEKS, MAYBE less. That's when we'll have a deal for the new Marquette General Hospital. That's when all the courting and numbers-crunching and speculating will finally end.

Two apparent candidates remain in the running for the nearly $300 million project--the Marquette Township site just behind the Westwood Mall, and the city of Marquette's Roundhouse site, on the western fringe of downtown.

The Township submitted its deal several weeks ago. Duke LifePoint, the owner of the hospital, seemed satisfied with it, and the two sides have not had substantial talks since then.

The city, on the other hand, has been having on-and-off chats with DLP in the last several weeks, but no one is characterizing those talks as negotiations. Just questions and answers.

Two weeks, maybe less. Then one of these municipalities will finally be able to  start a friendly and prosperous collaboration with Duke LifePoint.
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IT'S ABOUT TO happen. After a decade-long struggle, the Eagle Mine outside of Big Bay will begin harvesting billions of dollars of nickel and copper in the next couple of months.

Have you been out there lately? The road to the mine--510 and AAA--is a startling, ten mile long, 50-100 yard swath of denuded land. The Road Commission, which is constructing the roadway with $45 million from Lundin, concedes it's wider than necessary but says that was the wish of the property owners. They wanted the timber.

Okay. We get it. This whole project is about money.

Further, one official suggested that this gash across the landscape might actually help the wildlife in the spring because the cleared area will melt before the forest does and maybe provide some early vegetation for the hungry animals. Of course, the critters, while snacking, will have to dodge the huge ore trucks roaring past at 50 miles per hour.

Let's not kid ourselves, part one. The road and the mine will have an environmental impact on what was a pristine area. How serious will it be? We don't know. Let's hope it's something less than what the environmental groups have predicted.

They're the ones who publicized the leakage of groundwater into the Salmon Trout River a couple of weeks ago. That's their job from now on: they may have lost the war to stop the mine but they'll be maintaining a close watch on every move that Lundin and the Road Commission make. They'll be ringing the alarm bells if something goes awry.

We should be thankful for them. The mine and road are realities but maybe...just maybe, the environmental damage can be mitigated by an alert and enlightened citizenry, and by an extra-conscientious mining industry that may want to extend its welcome it in the U.P.

Let's not kid ourselves, part two. The mining companies know there's a lot more ore...and money...down there. At the end of the Eagle Mine's supposed eight year life (and likely before then), the companies will be flashing more cash and asking for an extended stay in the U.P.
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NO ONE SAID it would be easy.

The July TV ratings have come in, and WJMN, the new entrant in the local TV news wars, can't be all that thrilled.

In the coveted 25-54 age demographic, which matters most to advertisers, WBUP (ABC 10) had slightly higher ratings than WJMN. Fox UP, likewise had higher ratings for its 10 pm newscast.

What that means is that TV news viewers don't readily change their news habits, even when the new competitor--WJMN--has a known and capable anchor and news director in Cynthia Thompson, a solid anchor at 11 pm in Gabe Caggiano, and an established parent station out of Green Bay--WFRV.

It'll take time.

In case you're wondering, the runaway leader in the July ratings, of course, was again TV6. That's been the case for the last half century. Tradition is hard to overcome.

On the other hand, WBUP (ABC 10) continues to compile an impressive website showing with more than two million page views last month. Needless to say, a lot more people are reading their website than are watching their newscasts.
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THE OPENING DATE for The Marq, the new farm-to-table restaurant in Marquette, was supposed to be August...but here we are in September and they're not quite ready to serve. Not even close.

Three or four months out, businesspeople are always optimistic, but then personal, financial and governmental realities set in.

The new opening date for the Marq is November.

Drop by the site of the old Rubaiyat restaurant and you'll see plenty of construction underway inside and out. The restaurant's eight investors promise that they will not overspend on the re-do of the building, which was one apparent reason for the demise of the Rubaiyat.

The restaurant's space is being opened up, however, allowing more sunlight to flow in, and recycled woods and other materials uniquely treated are being used throughout the restaurant.The Marq is also setting up a full bar for drinkers and eating customers. The design is being handled by University Michigan architecture professors Adam Fure and Ellie Abrons.

Seventy-two seats total in the restaurant which will feature as much local produce and meat as Austin Fure, Adam's brother, a classically trained chef, can find. He says the menu will change regularly to reflect the fact that available produce in the U.P. necessarily changes.

Sounds like the right restaurant in the right place at the right time.

Expect hiring to start within a month.
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INCOMING NMU FRESHMEN last week quickly learned that college life is just a wee bit different from high school.

A traveling preacher out of Texas showed up on campus to noisily denounce fornication, pornography and blasphemy. He called some of the female students whores, told just about everybody they were going to hell unless they changed their ways, and saved some of his harshest words for a transgender student.

All in all, a swell couple of days of evangelism that was chronicled by NMU's North Wind newspaper.

The preacher, whose name is Chris LePelley, has apparently left town to spread the good word on other campuses. Nevertheless, some NMU students are now trying to start a group known as NMU Love. It'd be a way of saying we disagree with hate speech, biblical or otherwise.

That's fine. Or you can just ignore the hate-spewing, spotlight-loving clowns and let them shout their nonsense at the sky.

You got news? Email me at briancabell@gmail.com

If you want to receive Word on the Street when it's posted, go to Word on the Street by Brian Cabell on Facebook, and "like" it.

18 comments:

  1. "Needless to say, a lot more people are reading [TV10's] website than are watching their newscasts."

    I'm one of them. But that has more to do with the fact that I ditched Charter Cable TV years ago than anything else.

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    1. Me, too. I ditched cable and can only pickup TV 6 and Fox UP thanks to the recent addition of the translator on the Landmark. ABC, CBS & PBS signals do not reach most OTA [over the air] homes in the City of Marquette [including mine] due to hilly terrain, the placement of their transmitters and low signal strength [except for CBS-they are just farther away]. These stations are missing out on an entire demographic, mainly the 19-30 year olds, student's and those who can't afford or reject the high cost of cable. A city of 21,000 with an influx of 9,000 college students - now there's a demographic to cater to.

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  2. I'm counting down to when KnifePoint gets bought out by a bigger fish and scuttles the whole project. I noticed Bellin is advertising for doctors and such for the U.P. in the paper, hopefully for a clinic in Marquette.

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    1. Knifepoint......good one. They sure divided and conquer a community with their bidding wars. Don't think belin is a bigger fish than ether duke or life point. Not to say they can't sell to someone. We are a small market up here and their p.r. has been distarous so far. I really hope they turn around because Duke is a world renowned health care provider.

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    2. Probably the biggest difference will be Bellin is a non-profit, and not traded on the stock market so catering to investors is less a concern. Bellin provides excellent care and has modern, customer friendly facilities along with an adequate work force who aren't afraid every day they go to work their job will be cut. Don't get MGH mixed up with Duke too much. LifePoint bought their name for a small percentage of ownership and no managerial control. Duke took the money grab and figured sacrificing their name 800 or so miles from home won't hurt them much. Lots of people are already traveling to Bellin in Escanaba for primary and now some specialty care.

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  3. Guessing that'd be for the Bellin clinic already built in Escanaba...

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  4. Show me a fully loaded ore truck "roaring" by at 50 MPH. Sound to me like the author has a hard time remaining fair and balanced.

    Also, nobody receives 2 million hits to their website in a month on UP news. Both TV6 and Tv10 use easily inflated numbers. A good majority of those "hits" come from google bots scanning the content. TV6 however also uses their comments section to inflate their hits by allowing uncensored and ignorant comments that ignite "flame wars".

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  5. Has the author witnessed the mine? This article is poorly written, extremely biased and is not based upon fact. Please go tour the mine. Witness the lengths that are gone to to protect the environment, the public and the workers.

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  6. Let's not kid ourselves- the Yellow Dog plains/AAA area was hardly "pristine" to begin with...

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  7. Without these metals you couldn't have your little blog. The mine opposition could not have their website, phones and social media pages; which, you seem to be using as credible research.

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  8. It's too bad that channel 3(48) has a good signal into Marquette but does not have solid content yet and it is also too bad that channel 6(14) can't get a good signal into Marquette from Marquette.

    When the Ch 6 signal dips it blocks and blotches up. Judging by my signal strength meter they need about 6 more DBs on their signal to have a solid signal here. It is the same old story in that the analog signals were way better. Sigh...

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  9. Power plants... hospitals... and VA centers. I for one would like to hear what DLP would say to an offer for lakefront location in the city of Mqt. I've presented the idea in this blog before, presented to the city commissioners (with only one comment of "I think city staff have addressed locations that are available" personally they can't look into a location if it is not open space, so NO they did not look into this possibility) but still no word from DLP about the concept. And yes, while MBLP is a separate entity than the commission, they will never be one to offer a move, but an entity that will do what the city says it should do. So this post is to them, the elected officials of the MBLP, here is a plan for you to follow for less expensive and more robust electrical generation facilities.

    I know it's a long shot, but so too is the timeline of the life of a hospital and power plants. So to recap: move MBLP electrical power generation to the WE power plant at Presque Isle. Those generators (all actually) will have to be upgraded in the near future, so if the construction of a hospital is delayed by 2-5 years, the MBLP could move operations north and then provide a space for hospital construction. The electrical power for the hospital has always been planned to come from MBLP anyways. This will allow MBLP to explore expansion options, clean energy auxillary power supplies, and a side benefit of removing all industrial shipping from Downtown Marquette Harbor.

    The health effects of this move would also be considerable. No more direct outflow into lake superior (even cleaned, there are more contaminants per liter than during a rainstorm), a safe and clean beach free from carbon-activated E. Coli bacteria (which has closed this particular beach numerous times), and provide for faster health-care response times to maritime incidents.

    Still, with all of these benefits, there seems to be a level of resentment from city officials towards DLP, so whatever might be good for them, city officials will stop it in the tracks.

    What is the other solution? Let the buildings rot? Litigate for some small number of dollars and still, let the buildings rot?

    If I were a 10 year old child, would you all have a different answer? For that matter, what will you tell your 10 year old child or grandchild when it comes time to pay the utility bill... we COULD have had cheaper electricity, but decided to hold a grudge and not look into other possibilities.

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    1. Didn't see your name on the ballot for city commission. You are not going to evoke change by ranting on a comments section that only about 50 people see because you have to click on the story to get the comments... Run for office, be the change you want to see - as Ghandi said...

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    2. "So this post is to them, the elected officials of the MBLP...."

      "If I were a 10 year old child...."

      If you were a 10 year old child you would know better than to bloviate on a relatively obscure blog. A 10 year old child would know to either call or e-mail the elected MBLP officials directly instead of hoping that they are all eagerly reading your posts and acknowledging your genius and your brilliant ideas.

      I don't know where you went to public school but it appears that your teachers failed you.

      Oh, you could also try showing up at an MBLP meeting also if you have not already!

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    3. Thanks for the support... since keeping a job is a priority, and the meetings and schedules don't ever seem to work out, I would hope that one of those 50 (although it might be higher) people will ask one of the representatives that CAN make this decision.

      I firmly believe that a good idea is a community effort. So if you think it is a good idea, please pass it around. If you think it is a bad idea, I ask what is the alternative plan if we acknowledge the inevitable fact of losing two major employers in the same year?

      PS, anon... my teachers didn't fail me, I went to the commission meeting, even picked the meeting where they chose to hire a lawyer for the litigation. So my placement was timely, the plan described, and then even went back to see what might have been said at the helipad meeting that all the primary decision makers we at that week. The commission didn't pass along the idea, even acknowledged that they didn't pass the idea along because some of the existing sites are still in play.

      Now, since we still don't have an agreement, it's time for the public to speak up about what WE want from these service providers. We are their customers, unfortunately it's a monopoly so not much public input other than oversight roles... like this.

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  10. The Marq is going to offer great food and a fun atmosphere. It is heartwarming to see such a collaborative effort by some of our finest young people. I understand that a local man now living in New York is coming to town to build beautiful steel railings for the interior. Wonderful!

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    1. I hope it isn't too expensive that would probably be the only major problem. If it isn't reasonable it wont stay long.

      I hope it works.

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