All posts by Michael van Baker

Publisher & Editor in Chief [twitter] MvB moved to Seattle in 1987 to attend Seattle University, and his affection for things with Seattle in the name is as yet undiminished. Earlier incarnations have seen him wearing marketing hats at Seattle Opera and the San Francisco Examiner. He wrote for Seattlest from 2005-09, becoming arts editor and editor-in-chief before leaving to found The SunBreak in September 2009.

Mysteries of the ORCA Card Revealed

Do you have a new ORCA card yet, good on all sorts of transit (but not the SLUT or Monorail, yet)? If you do, you’ve most likely had all sorts of questions. What’s an e-purse? How do you get a youth ORCA card? A few of you are wondering, Where’d my money go?

Seattle Transit Blog has the rundown on the Case of the Failed ORCA Transaction. Turns out that if you add money to your card online, the transaction is only completed the next time you tap your card at a transit terminal. If it takes you longer than 30 days to use your card after you load up online, the transaction fails.

This is why the transaction appears as “pending” until you ride a bus or the light rail and use the card. But it requires a certain courage to ride a bus or the light rail while a transaction is said to be “pending,” doesn’t it? 

I think people have suggested this before, but I am going to check with King County Metro about their plans to incorporate transit user feedback into programs before they go public. We could all make a little lemonade out of budget-slashing lemons: You just know the Seattle Transit Blog would be happy to beta test a site, or muster a group of test passengers to see if a ticketing system is comprehensible.

Discovery Park Closed for Cougar Safety

A tipster just let us know that Discovery Park has been closed, due the recent cougar sightings. Probably worth grilling indoors, if you live the neighborhood. UPDATE: Just spoke with Deputy Superintendent Christopher Williams from the Parks Department, and the park closing is on the advice of Fish & Wildife, who are trying to trap the cougar. “We’ve never closed a park because of a large cat,” said Williams, calling the situation “unprecedented.” The park will be closed over Labor Day weekend, through Monday, so re-plan that family picnic STAT!

McGinn Unveils Government 2.0 to General Napping

“Geek engagement!” is a note I underlined. It was hot in the room, and people were talking longingly about APIs and datasets. But outside of the hotbox of new ideas, it was underwhelming for campaign season.

Monday afternoon, August 31, Seattle’s two (yes, just two ) mayoral candidates were in distinctly different places. Joe Mallahan was adding $30,000 of his own money to his campaign fund, and Mike McGinn was standing in front of a motley group at the Northwest Film Forum on Capitol Hill, pitching what he calls “Government 2.0.” The public face of this push is a new website, Ideas for Seattle, which solicits ideas from Seattle citizens for improving the city (leading the list: “open city data” and “build the Green line”).

Called a “policy summit,” the meeting drew an audience consisting of McGinn’s aides, hyperlocal bloggers, Seattle Weekly‘s Damon Agnos, neighborhood planning activist Dennis Waxman, and various people who spend their time lobbying city, county, and state governments for information.

The McGinn campaign consistently struggles with framing its message at these public events. At campaign launch, McGinn’s talk was about schools, broadband, and buses. Only later did he decide to make a central issue of opposing “Greg Nickels'” deep-bore tunnel, and begin to gain in the polls.

So too with this event, from its stale “2.0” title to amorphous talking points about “doing more with less,” “democratizing data,” and “revolutionizing community engagement” with the power of Seattle’s “collective IQ.” When the floor opened up up, people suggested ways to make data more accessible (if it’s written in Word, don’t print a document out, then scan it to post on a city website), cool mashups like OneBusAway, and referenced DataSF a lot.

It’s like the joke about socialism, McGinn said early on, describing the Seattle process: the problem is too many evening meetings. (For a panicky moment, I thought I was going to be trapped a meeting about having too many meetings.) But it doesn’t take a policy summit to commit to making city data accessible. And while the new website is fun, it’s not addressing McGinn’s primary handicap at all–that he has little governmental leadership experience.

But to implement a real governmental upgrade, just that kind of firm and steady leadership will be called for. Anyone who has ever participated in the creation of a company’s website is familiar with the emotional conflict involved, once it becomes clear how disruptive the internet is to existing processes. There it is, 24×7, disseminating information and accepting data packets, and installing an Always-Updating Now into the public consciousness: “I sent you an email at 2 a.m., where’s your response?”

The internet itself is a Trojan horse; once you let it in, things are never the same. McGinn did not take responsibility for that potential transformation, as he could have as a known crusader. (Cool new ways to look at data? Fine–I’ll read about it on the blogs later.) But you don’t have to look too long at governmental structure to realize how inimical it is to the internet paradigm. If you want to reinvent government for the internet age, say so. If not, it’s campaign season, and the clock is ticking.