Rebane's Ruminations
February 2014
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[This piece by Ms Jean Gerard was printed in the 4feb14 (paywalled) Union today.  Ms Gerard was not sure that it would be published, so she sent me the piece to appear on RR as her byline.  It is posted as received.  My own remarks are addended below.]

Jean Gerard

We’ve heard from several folks through The Union about multiple downfalls of the Commercial Street Boardwalk – folks who live and work in Nevada City and have to deal with the nuisance that it is on a regular basis.

NCboardwalk3
And I recently had a conversation with a gentleman who came here six years ago and loved our area. He had to leave for a few years, but recently returned and found a major change in the character of Nevada City. Not a change he praised. The trimmers, the pot smoking/selling, and the type of people in general the Boardwalk is attracting made it very distasteful to him. He was shocked. So it’s not just locals that notice the nuisance.

Marijuana isn’t the only business being conducted on and in the vicinity of the Boardwalk that’s not in alignment with that business district. If you read The Union on a regular basis you may remember that the Nevada City and Grass Valley Police did a ‘saturation patrol’ last August and arrested six people for drugs. Three of them were related to a heroin deal that happened right there on Commercial Street.


One employee of a business on that street told me they’d witnessed one person sitting on the sidewalk near the Boardwalk shooting up. In broad daylight.

If you read the Police blotter, you see that there are calls on a regular basis regarding the goings-on in that area.

And the city planner says there are no physical impacts!

Mr. Kevin Fraser wrote a very good article in which he stated, “It’s fascinating to watch as tourists turn the corner and encounter the scene on the boardwalk and then quickly reverse course….”

I heard from another person who works at a business on that corner who also has witnessed tourists turning around, rather than continue down Commercial Street.

Mr. Conley Weaver said “Vehicular traffic is congested by the effective narrowing of the street and the wanderings of the Boardwalk people.” I can tell you that, more than once, I’ve been stopped from driving down the street because of the people standing in the middle of it – ‘socializing’ – and not caring that any auto traffic needed to get through.

Recently, I took the time to visit businesses on Commercial Street and ask a few questions to see how the business owners and employees ‘really’ feel about the Boardwalk.  

Some of the questions I asked were the following: Has the Boardwalk increased or decreased loitering on Commercial Street?  Overwhelmingly, the majority said “increased.” Would you like to see the Boardwalk stay or go? Again, overwhelmingly, the answer was “GO.”

There were other questions that also got the majority of answers weighing against the Boardwalk, but the city planner and a couple of members of the city council would like you to believe everyone is happy with it.  That is not the case.  It is seen, as Mr. Weaver said, as Skid Row by many.

Downtown Nevada City is an Historical District. There has been a red light district in town before, so the red light on Pete’s Pizza, in front of the Boardwalk, might be considered ‘historical’. (It might also be one reason tourists turn around at the corner of Pine and Commercial). However, at no time in history that I know of, has a roadway been taken up for people to ‘sit and socialize.’

Back to Mr. Fraser’s article: he said that he votes. And that he would “vote against every person in every capacity that has had anything to do with the creation and continuance of this incredible public nuisance.”

Nevada City residents, you’ve got two councilmen who need to be replaced if you have any hope of regaining and maintaining Nevada City’s charm. One’s term is up this year. And any city planner who says “Whether you like it or not is not what is considered. We have to review it based on facts” is another person who needs to go. She’s clearly arrogant, but she’s also delusional when she thinks there are no negative impacts. She is ignoring the facts. I suggest you work with your city council on a plan to appoint a new planner.

The city council meeting on February 5th will be filled with Reinette Senum shills to talk up the Boardwalk. The council needs to recognize this and act accordingly. The Boardwalk needs to go.

[Addendum  The Commercial Street boardwalk pictured above was championed by former Nevada City mayor Ms Reinette Senum.  At the time it was completed I saw it as a charming addition to the off-Broadstreet scene.  I am not of the school holding that functional historical sites must retain every color and cornice the way it was during a given period.  Nevada City has undergone significant changes in its 160+ year history, and the one we now claim to retain captures none of its epochs faithfully.  But we have synthesized what to most people brings back echos of the fabled 19th century gold mining town in California’s motherlode.  And maintaining a semblance of that is good.

While not exactly a part of Nevada City’s history, the boardwalk does replicate outdoor settings that began to appear in European cities and along our east coast during the 1800s.  And having one in our town for tourists and locals to sit and take their ease on warm days and evenings is what the original intent of that construction was.  But as Ms Gerard points out, things don’t always go as hoped and planned, and many people today see that the locale has more than not gone to the dogs.  NC has a big welcome mat that also attracts a wide variety of transients, drug distributors, people with no visible means of support, and even out-and-out low lifes who today use that comfortable setting for their socializing and commerce.  I have witnessed it all while having coffee with friends in an adjoining establishment.  In short, if our inviting and permissive city code is helpless to improve the situation to the benefit of visitors and Commercial Street businesses, then the boardwalk appears to have become a public nuisance and liability to our tourist trade.  gjr]

[5feb14 update] Today’s Union published an Other Voices by Ms Reinette Senum presenting the motivation and beneficial aspects of the Commercial Street boardwalk.  All this publicity is in preparation for tonight’s city council meeting where the boardwalk will be discussed.  Here are the details – The Nevada City Council meets at 6:30 p.m. tonight at City Hall, 317 Broad St. It will also be televised on local public television, NCTV channel 17.  For some reason The Union has not published the Senum piece in its online edition.  I have captured her article as an image from the 5feb14 Union‘s print edition and posted it below.  Apologies for the aspect ratio of the image; too lazy to mess with it further.

Also, the report that Ms Gerard is a NC Tea Party member is false, and I have corrected my post to reflect this.

Senum_5feb14

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108 responses to “The Nevada City Boardwalk (updated 5feb14)”

  1. fish Avatar
    fish

    Todd,
    From one of the reviews of Empire of the Summer Moon….
    “Blanco Canyon would give the U.S. Army its first look at Quanah. The author then quotes Captain Carter’s firsthand description of “the young war chief in battle…”‘A large and powerfully built chief led the bunch, on a coal black racing pony. Leaning forward upon his mane, his heels nervously working in the animal’s side, with a six-shooter poised in the air, he seemed the incarnation of savage, brutal joy. His face was smeared with black warpaint, which gave his features a satanic look…a full length headress or war bonnet of eagle’s feathers spread out as he rode…he was naked to the waist, wearing simply leggings, moccasins and a breechclout. A necklace of beare’s [sic] claws hung about his neck….’ After quoting Carter’s description, the author finishes the picture — “Moments later, Quanah wheeled his horse in the direction of an unfortunate private named Seander Greeg and, as Carter and his men watched, blew Gregg’s brains out.”
    I don’t weep for Seander Greeg….a soldier takes a soldiers chances. I highly recommend the book, it’s an unsentimental portrait of the natives and their savagery to each other as well as to white settlers and soldiers. I’d be willing to bet that Paul wouldn’t care for it as it really doesn’t fit the noble and gentle savage narrative that he seems to enjoy so…..and hell there are no lefty political points to be scored…and where’s the fun in that!
    You might also want to check out: The American Indian by Rushdoony.
    From the description at amazon.com
    Long before state health care or food stamps, before the creation of welfare ghettoes in our major cities, America’s first experiment with socialism and government dependency practically destroyed the American Indian.
    Government experts created the Indian reservations. America’s churches whole-heartedly supported it, convinced the reservation would be the key to winning souls for Christianity.
    In 1944 young R. J. Rushdoony arrived at the Duck Valley Indian Reservation in Nevada as a missionary to the Shoshone and the Paiute Indians. For eight years he lived with them, worked with them, ministered to them and listened to their stories. He came to know them intimately, both as individuals and as a people. This is his story, and theirs.
    It is also the story of an experiment that failed, disastrously—and exercise in statist paternalism and ineffective Christian meddling whose effects ravage the Indians to this day. The reservation system debased the people it was meant to serve, and the churches failed in their mission; until, in the end, the proud and resourceful Indian was transformed into “a defeated man, lacking in character.” This is Rushdoony’s eyewitness testimony to that failure.
    Today, as America’s leaders expand the welfare state and radically transform the entire nation, we’d do well to reconsider this first experiment in government dependency and a Christianity stripped of God’s law—before all of the United States is transformed into a massive reservation on a continental scale. Rushdoony’s description of our past is also an indictment of our statist future.

    Only $5.99 on Kindle….also probably not in the Emery Grievance Library!

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  2. Paul Emery Avatar

    Sure, George Bush really cared about people Todd. He was the Compassionate Conservative right? What does George W have to do with Manifest Destiny?

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  3. George Rebane Avatar

    fish 603pm – “… an indictment of our statist future”? Unfortunately it is already an indictment of our statist present with more on the way – the objectives of A21 demand it. That we are still of the opinion that progress toward these objectives is yet on hold means that the progressives are implementing their agenda correctly – slowly boiled frogs and all that.

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  4. Bill Tozer Avatar
    Bill Tozer

    So with all this history being tossed about, I just can’t figure out if you all are for or agin the unhistorical boardwalk.
    As far as the War on the Savages, The Spanish American War and The Mexican American War goes, all I can say is we are big, they are small. We won, they lost, so suck it up bros.
    War has consequences. Losers lose territory and their wealth. Lot of things get busted up big time. But the real winning of a war is to totally demoralize the enemy into submission and break their fighting spirit. Just like 3 nukes did to the Imperial Forces of Japan. But, that is also why the Taliban is not defeated. They were not completely demoralized. We missed that target. And now that we will be leaving Afghanistan just like Alexander the Grape and the British Army and The Soviet forces, the Tallywhacher Ragheads’ fighting spirit remains strong. Gawd, I hate diplomacy.
    Yes, there are always exceptions to the rule. But as far as in the Americas goes, we are big and they are small. Don’t know why we ever took Puerto Rico under our wings, but sometimes you take the good with the bad. Maybe we should give back LA to Mexico and rid ourselves of that cess pool. OK, keep the beaches and give Mexico East LA and South Central. Or at least put a big fence around it and throw newsprint over the barbed wire so they can line the floor of their cage.

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  5. fish Avatar
    fish

    So with all this history being tossed about, I just can’t figure out if you all are for or agin the unhistorical boardwalk.
    Sorry Bill we do seem to wander off topic regularly.

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  6. Bill Tozer Avatar
    Bill Tozer

    Mr. Fish: “also probably not in the Emery Grievance Library!”
    Yep, Mr. Ben has remained silent on this critical mass issue of the center of the universe and concerning the future welfare of mankind as we know it, aka, the berg’s boardwalk.

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  7. fish Avatar
    fish

    Yep, Mr. Ben has remained silent on this critical mass issue of the center of the universe and concerning the future welfare of mankind as we know it, aka, the berg’s boardwalk.
    If I recall correctly upthread he was pro Boardwalk. I say that with the caveat that if anyone was ever oppressed or discriminated against, or treated harshly by anyone of lighter skin tone regarding issues surrounding the establishment, construction or ongoing maintenance of the boardwalk he will likely rescind this “approval”.

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  8. Bill Tozer Avatar
    Bill Tozer

    Nevada City, CA (known as the Berkley of the Foothills) is not the only place trying to resolve people loitering and affecting local businesses.
    http://www.foxnews.com/leisure/2014/01/21/peace-deal-reached-between-mcdonalds-and-loitering-seniors/

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