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Don Rosier, Ed Peterson to Harass You Over the Phone Next Week

Jefferson County Commissioner Don Rosier will be joining forces with former Lakewood City Councilman (and almost County Commissioner) Ed Peterson next week as they together host a telephone town hall about C-470.

From the C-470 Corridor Coalition’s Policy Committee (isn’t that a mouthful?):

C-470 Corridor Coalition Seeks Public Input

Will Use Innovative Telephone Town Hall Technology to Reach 200,000 Residents

Phones along C-470 will be ringing July 31, August 1 and August 2 as the C-470 Corridor Coalition hosts a series of telephone town hall meetings to provide information on efforts to expand and improve the highway and to get input on how to pay for these upgrades.

“We want to encourage public participation in the planning process so we’re trying to make it as easy as possible for C-470 users to offer their input on how to pay for these much-needed upgrades,” said Jack Hilbert, chair of the C-470 Corridor Coalition’s Policy Committee.

Over the course of three days, 200,000 random calls will be placed to those living near the C-470 corridor.  Although each telephone town hall will include representatives from specific jurisdictions, those living outside the specific jurisdictions may also participate.  Those that do not receive a call may still participate by calling 877-229-8493 and entering PIN number 110302.  

Following is the schedule for the hour-long telephone town halls as well as the panelists:

Tuesday,  July 31

6:15 p.m. – Jefferson County Commissioner Donald Rosier and Colorado Department of Transportation Commissioner Ed Peterson

First off, it’s 2012. While telephone town halls may indeed be novel, they’re certainly not innovative. And the only reason they’re novel is because they’re ineffective.

Just to make sure it’s clear, Rosier and Peterson will be on the other end of the line when a few thousand Jeffco-area residents pick up a phone call from a number they’ve never seen before. And then some sort of conversation about highway improvements is supposed to happen, or something?

How many of these “random calls” does the Policy Committee expect to be answered? The recipients certainly didn’t commit in advance to talking about C-470 — they were randomly selected, after all. Chances are that many who receive a call won’t be home, and those that are certainly won’t pick up when they see an 877 number on their caller ID. Not to mention that 6:15 to 7:15 PM is a pretty prime hour for both commuting and spending time with family. Few people, we presume, want to interrupt their evening to talk about highways.

Many of those who do pick up probably won’t be much help, either. A select few will have gripes about the road that they’ll all be all too happy to air — admittedly, this is probably designed for those select few — but we suspect most won’t have any idea what the town hall is about: “Don Rosier? No, you’ve got the wrong number; he doesn’t live here.”

There are undoubtedly better ways to interact with those who live near the C-470 corridor than an unscheduled and barely announced telephone town hall. Why not, you know, an actual town hall? The reason in-person meetings are a cornerstone of local government (and democracy) is because those who have something to say will be the ones in attendance.

Perhaps Rosier and Peterson are looking from candid commentary from the type of people who have opinions on C-470 but would never attend a town hall. Unfortunately, the duo isn’t likely to get much when their first attempt walks a fine line between outreach and telemarketing.

If the C-470 Corridor Coalition’s Policy Committee really insists on doing this kind of survey over the phone, why not limit it to a touch-tone IVR call that lets users record a message? People are used to those, especially in an election year, and it’s a lot easier to hit a button on a phone’s keypad than it is to engage in a live conversation with dozens of other residents.

Post buries news that Hancock’s phone in use during some possible prostitution appointments

The Denver Post buried a key paragraph in its front-page story today showing that Michael Hancock apparently did not use his cell phone to call a prostitution ring. The Post reported toward the end of the story that Hancock’s cell phone was actually being used during five of the nine possible times Hancock was allegedly […]

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DO NOT Give Tom Tancredo a Microphone

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Polling numbers for Bennet and Romanoff

( – promoted by Middle of the Road) Romanoff may not need to worry about ‘how long he can keep the lights on’ according to a new poll for the Colorado Senate Race: http://www.huffingtonpost.com/… Rasmussen released the results of a new Colorado Senate poll Friday, and the news is particularly bad for incumbent Democrat Michael […]

Steve Balboni on Obama,Roosevelt and how you can phone bank vs. Saxby Chambliss

There are many questions facing us as we transition towards the next administration. Most pressing is the economy. How will Obama tackle this issue? And, additionally, how much will he be able to accomplish in his first term. This also depends on how close we are to the magical number of 60 in the Senate. […]

Palin’s Poll Numbers Plummet

Not only is she a huge drag on the Republican ticket, but her approval rating numbers in Alaska have plummeted over thirty points! Gov. Sarah Palin electrified the conservative base of the Republican party when she was first picked as Sen. John McCain’s vice-presidential running mate, but polls say she has become a polarizing figure […]

The number 4,000 is too great to grasp even for us that are here in Iraq.

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John Salazar Announces Poll Numbers

From The Pueblo Chieftain: Rep. John Salazar, D-Colo., released polling results Tuesday showing that he has close to a 2-to-1 advantage with voters over Republican challenger Scott Tipton in the 3rd Congressional District race. Salazar campaign officials said a telephone survey of 575 district voters during the second week of July showed that 56 percent […]

What’s Next for Doug Linkhart?

We’ve always enjoyed reading former City Councilman Doug Linkhart‘s e-mail newsletters if for no other reason than they’re such an embodiment of Doug Linkhart himself. They’ve always been goofy, easy reads that try to take the dullness out of some aspects of city government. Rife with exclamation marks and saturated with with the e-mail writing style of a technologically overzealous grandparent, Linkhart’s e-mails always did a moderately entertaining job of explaining, say, how to deal with graffiti in your neighborhood and what upcoming community invents the Councilman would like you to attend.

Of course, because they were such friendly, good-natured updates on what Doug was doing on City Council, we never read them as comprehensively as the former Councilman would’ve liked us to. That said, in announcing his transition out of office in a newsletter dated July 13, one particular passage caught our eye:

It’s been great to be of service to you for the past eight years. As of press-time I don’t know exactly what I’ll be doing next. I am confident that my email address, Doug.Linkhart@Denvergov.org, will stay the same, though my title and phone number will change. Please stay in touch!

Folks, this classic off-the-cuff comment from Linkhart was a not-so-subtle revelation that Doug expected to find a job in the Hancock administration after he left Council. After all, why shouldn’t he? Linkhart’s early endorsement of now-Mayor Hancock was important in getting Michael elected. Could Hancock have won it without Linkhart’s help? More than likely. But Linkhart endorsed Hancock and lent him a not inconsiderable number of supporters, and that never hurts in an election as contested as this year’s was.

So it’s not too strange that Linkhart pretty much admitted that he’d be sticking around in City Government. What is odd, however, is that no public announcement has been made of Linkhart joining the Hancock team. It’s been more than two weeks since Doug ever-so-coyly told his subscribers that he’d still be involved with the city. Two weeks on, and for all we know, Linkhart is still out in the cold (or the heat, as it may be).

We’ve heard from a few sources that there’s a seat for Linkhart at Hancock’s table. The real question, then, is what’s the hold-up?

Of course, this isn’t the first time the Hancock administration has been rather dawdling in its announcements of staff and cabinet appointments. We’re sure it won’t be the last, either. But that’s not abnormal for a transition period between one administration and another.  

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