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I Was Mugged in Downtown Sacto

I was mugged yesterday in downtown Sacramento.

My son is home for Christmas from college. We were walking downtown to visit a friend/colleague. 

I wrote about it at the Sacramento Citizen:

Today on my way to a meeting at 10:00 a.m. in downtown, walking from  J street to N Street, I was mugged. 

Fortunately I had a weapon with me -- my son.

Some hopped-up guy started screaming at me at 7th and J Street, and as he attempted to either grab my arm or take my purse, I spun out of his grasp while my son stepped in. 

Fortunately, my son is 20 and loves his mother. He's also fit, strong, and unafraid of street punks. 

The thug swiped at my son, knocking his sunglasses off his face into the street, and gouged his forehead and cheekbone.

I was more concerned about what kind of grunge might have been living under his fingernails as they dug into my son's face leaving sizable bloody gouges.

As I called 9-1-1, my son defended my honor, and then some, as the hopped up thug continued his unhinged tirade, and began to unzip his coat... as if he might be carrying something illegal.

As my son jumped back out of striking distance, I gave a detailed description of the incident -- of the thug and his friend,  and our location. I also swiftly walked away encouraging my son to do the same. 

The police were concerned about the injuries my son may have sustained, but I assured them that was not what I was calling about, as my son encouraged the thug's friend to direct him away from the corner, and away from us. As they moved on, the hopped-up thug screamed at another fellow on the street, and pelted him with blows as the guy ducked. 

I continued describing the incident to police, and about the new guy the thug was now screaming at... while he turned around and continued yelling at us.

As I turned to my son and whispered "welcome home," I handed him a tissue to wipe the blood from his face.

Merry Christmas and welcome to downtown Sacramento, where the nuts are plenty, and always welcome.

The city's residents hate downtown and fear the lowlife who have taken over. I don't fear them, but I will carry more than a pen knife from now on. 

Thanks City Council, for all of your encouraging words to California's homeless and nutty population. I think nearly all of them are migrating to Sacramento. Today's incident is not unusual in our city. 

And to think that my taxes go to support this behavior on our streets, buses and light rail.

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Sacramento 'world-class'? Not with burdens on business

Published: Monday, Oct. 19, 2009 - 12:00 am | Page 17A 
Last Modified: Monday, Oct. 19, 2009 - 10:14 am

When Kevin Johnson was running for mayor, one of the issues on which he ran was boosting economic development and jobs. He also frequently stated that he wanted to makeSacramento a "world-class city."

With 450,000 residents in the city ofSacramento, and 1.7 million residents inSacramento County, Sacramento is a good-sized city, but not a metropolis. The burning question is who really wants Sacramento to become a sizable, "big" city: politicians or residents?

Seattle has a municipal population of 602,000 and a metropolitan area population of 3.3 million, which makes it the 25th most populous city in the United States. Phoenix – Kevin Johnson's favorite city to compare Sacto with – has 1.5 million residents, and the Phoenix metropolitan area is the 12th largest metro area by population in the United States with 4.2 million residents.

Rarely do I hear a Sacramento resident state a desire for Sacramento to become bigger and more populated. It's always a politician expressing interest in making Sacramento bigger. And almost always, it's from a politician with grand aspirations for higher office, using Sacramento as a starting-off point.

Sacramento has had its share of big industry but mostly thrives on small businesses, entrepreneurs and government employees. With more than 100 neighborhood associations in Sacramento, each of our neighborhoods has more of a town feeling. And in truth, our City Council representation reflects more of a town council.

Sacramento's downtown has matured substantially in the past decade with restaurants and entertainment on nearly every block. However, the blighted eyesore known as K Street has floundered under every mayor, as has any riverfront development.

Sacramento's politicians always campaign for and claim to aspire for Sacramento to be a "world-class city." The small-town complex is more intensely felt by our elected officials and seems to be a political status problem. Residents don't suffer from obsessing over Sacramento moving into "world-class" status.

But do we even know what constitutes a "world-class city?" Is it just campaign jargon? Is it having a professional sports team? Is it importance in government or finance? Is a world-class city defined by being home to a large company such as FedEx or Wal-Mart?

The best definition I have found of a "world-class city" comes from Seattle journalist Bill Virgin,who tracks business and economic trends. He writes, "World-class business cities are those where strategic and tactical decisions are made on everything from new plant investment to developing new markets and products. They're the cities others watch and react to. World-class business cities are not guaranteed exclusivity in producing the next wave of influential products, technologies and companies – but they're a more likely incubator for them. And those products, technologies and companies are where new jobs come from."

I'm not so sure that Sacramento is strategically, tactically or decisively developing new markets or products, or putting in new plants for any industry.

It's quite the opposite with Sacramento. World-class cities are not driven by how many restaurants you have downtown or how big your sports arena is. The big cities with the Fortune 500 businesses and companies are business friendly and defined as "world class."

In other words, "Follow the money."

This is where Sacramento diverges and the split personality of big small town vs. "world-class city" is demonstrable, and the cause vs. effect becomes cloudy.

Recently I researched what it would take to open a new, small manufacturing plant in Sacramento. By the time I discovered that 22 government agencies would be involved in permitting and licensing, I realized that Sacramento is not an easy place to do business – you have to really want to be here to put up with, and even afford, that level of regulation and business prevention.

And unfortunately, the Sacramento City Council members are culpable in the process, continually adding to already ridiculous regulations, increasing city business taxes, requiring permitting that takes months to complete, air quality compliance that no company can follow, mandatory and costly business recycling, make-work fire department inspectors, unrelenting parking enforcement, conflicting building codes and utilities taxes that tax the taxes.

Sacramento is a wonderful city in which to live. It has measurable growth and has added to its arts and entertainment sophistication. Restaurants and eateries abound, tree-lined streets are welcoming and there are many excellent schools. But the business climate is unfriendly because our politicians think very small – or not at all. Offering a Fortune 500 company "tax breaks" is not going to attract world-class business to the area.

The unmemorable, ambitious politicians who make up the City Council can continue with business-as-usual if they are content with Sacramento's size and scope. But in the best interest of everyone who already owns and operates business here, they should close the Department of Business Prevention and instead start talking about ways to help grow Sacramento businesses. Cities with strong business are healthier, robust and attractive to "world-class" businesses. At this point, it's all campaign talk, and Sacramento remains a government and bedroom community, albeit a nice one.

to read the comments: Viewpoints: Sacramento 'world-class'? Not with burdens on business


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Conservatives Love Animals Too

Be sure to read the touching story of my adopted geese, Click and Clack, that I wrote for the May issue of  Inside The City
 
I am a conservative with a soft spot for furry and fuzzy creatures - and the kid who brought home every stray animal I came across (to my dad's dismay!).
 
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