About L.A.W.


  • MOTTO: Qui male agit odit lucem. ("He who does evil despises the light.")

  • PUBLISHER: Local Area Watch, Inc. ~ a Michigan non-profit corporation ~ Copyright 2002-2007

  • STAFF: William Tingley, Executive Director ~ Bridget Tingley, Editor ~ Mary Hines, Office Manager ~ Robert Harrison, Photographer

  • CONTACT INFO: Local Area Watch Inc. ~ 1009 Ottawa Avenue, N.W. ~ Grand Rapids, Michigan 49503 ~ ph 616-458-3125 ~ fx 616-454-9958

Highlights

  • Bio-Tech Blather
    Watch your wallets, boys and girls. The politicians and the corporate panhandlers are about to put a big bet on the bio-tech boom with your tax dollars and charitable donations.
  • Dumping Scandal FAQ's
    Answers to the main questions about the dumping of hazardous waste at the Monroe Avenue Water Filtration Plant and other dumpsites.
  • Gutless U-M Caves on Bronzes
    Art endures, if obscured, in that grotty little fiefdom of intellectual poseurs and petty inquisitions that has become the University of Michigan.
  • Kent County Medical Examiner Compromised
    In a glaring conflict of interest, Kent County Medical Examiner Stephen Cohle whitewashes autopsies that could have revealed misconduct by Spectrum Health and Laboratory Pathologists, a staffing firm Cohle owns and operates.
  • Living Wage Kills Jobs
    City pols support a Marxist policy that, like all Marxist policies, hurt the very people they say it will help.
  • Local Prof Sez We're Bible-Beating Bigots
    Outspoken GVSU professor Ben Rudolph gets it wrong when he concludes that River City's "conservative" values are wrecking the local economy.
  • Lost Cause
    A story of how River City lost its way to a secure economic future.
  • Mayor Heartwell: The Best Investment in Town
    The mayor takes a campaign contribution from a lobbying firm and then awards it a $70,000 city contract.
  • Poison
    The nasty nature of the 26,000 tons of poison that The Boardwalk's developers dug up and then dumped upon the rest of us.
  • The Fixer
    A four-part series about the local attorney behind the demise of Autodie, Butterworth Hospital, Amway, and Old Kent. Warning: Strong accusations of corruption, greed, and skullduggery. Not for the feint of heart.
  • The Flying Monkey Brigade
    Lysenkoists now rule and dictate what citizens will and will not discuss as science in the public square -- especially, the public school classroom.
  • The Pig in the Python
    The dirty little secret behind the success and failure of every school reform that the education establishment, the public school bureaucrats, and the teachers unions will never reveal.
  • The Problem With Teachers
    Why teachers are the professionals least suited to run a school district -- or even a school.
  • Thirty-Six Bucks
    Balancing the City budget: Maybe it's time for those making a living on the taxpayer's dime to give up a little instead of sticking it to the taxpayer one more time.
  • Urban League Takes a Wrong Turn
    The Grand Rapids chapter of this venerable civil rights organization took a step backward with its dubious report finding institutionalized racism in area police forces.
  • When Will It Stop?
    Enough of the repulsive tactic of accusing everyone of bigotry who doesn't kowtow to the racemongers.
  • Who Tickets the Cops?
    State highway patrolmen flout the law on our freeways.
  • Yeah, and Summer is Hotter Than Winter
    The Grand Rapids Press ignores science to promote feel-good politics on the environment and becomes the watchdog that doesn't bark.

Government Links

Media Links

Public Interest Links

« MERCILESS SAINT MARY'S | Main | HYPE ON THE HILL, CONTINUED »

Jun 02, 2005

HYPE ON THE HILL

Van_andel_institute_night_logo_1The full-court press is on, folks, to persuade you that the Van Andel Institute's expansion plan is the best thing to hit River City since, well, ever!  The movers and shakers assure us that the VAI, a.k.a. Hope on the Hill, will make Grand Rapids a hotbed of bio-tech entrepenuerialism if only we do everything necessary to fund the $150 million it needs for its expansion.

The hype machine got rolling with the Grand Rapids Press giving the VAI's press releases front page coverage on two days and then a big thumb's up on the editorial page.  Last week's edition of the usually sensible Grand Rapids Business Journal treated us with a Page Three spread of the VAI's glorious future.  (Perhaps to offset the dour article next it reporting that the latest "public-private" venture of the pyramid-builders -- i.e., DeVos Place Convention Center -- will run over a million bucks of red ink both this year and the next.)  Now this week's MiBizWest is breathlessly extolling the wonders of the VAI.

Enough already!

Van_andel_institute_1However, hope doesn't drive people as hard as fear, so a second message is also being put out by the Hype on the Hill:  Embrace the bio-tech future because manufacturing is a dead-end.  Birgit Klohs of the Right Place program, founded for the explicit purpose of retaining and recruiting manufacturers -- you know, the companies that bring a big tax base and real jobs for regular people to our community -- has jumped ship to embrace the VAI as the engine for bio-tech riches.  Klohs gushed: "The institute is five years old and has, I believe, gone beyond anybody's expectations in anchoring what I think will be the future job creators of the region."  [My emphasis.]  Quite a statement for the region's official advocate for manufacturing:  Bio-tech, not manufacturing, will be tomorrow's employer.

Other VAI proponents have been more pointed.  Dr. Luis Tomatis, the founding CEO of the VAI, said:  "The industrial era is finished."  The Ambassador, a.k.a. Peter Secchia, has been promoting the need to move MSU's moribund medical school to Grand Rapids to provide the VAI with a university medical research partner to facilitate the receipt of government grant money.  In a conversation I had with him yesterday, he put it bluntly:  "Manufacturing is dead in Michigan."

Let's say that's true.  (It's not, but bear with me, folks.)  What good does a bio-tech corridor along Michigan Street do for factory rats like you and me, dear readers?  According to the VAI's hype (ahem, I mean press releases), its expansion will add 400 jobs.  OK, but I'm not a scientist, and I don't think there are many of us presently working in industry who are.  Sure, it'll be nice to have a few well-compensated eggheads added to our fine community, but these new jobs Klohs promises will be for these newcomers, not you and me.

As for the jobs you and I might get at these bio-tech business start-ups that the VAI is promising to spin off, the big problem there is that Ann Arbor already has long experience with that phenomenon.  The successful ones pull up stakes and leave the state to go where the venture capital is on the East and West Coasts.

Now here's the deal.  None of the VAI's promoters of a grand and glorious bio-tech future for River City owe either you or me a good job.  If they want to take a roll of the dice on making Grand Rapids a bio-tech center, I wish them well.  Meanwhile, manufacturing and other industry will do A-OK in providing direct and indirect employment for us if left alone and not burdened with subsidizing the bio-tech boosters.  Conversely, the VAI doesn't have a claim upon our tax dollars or government backing of bonds or any other public favor to make a go of the bio-tech dream.

Let the VAI rise or fall on its own dime, especially when the Van Andel family remains evasive about how much of their fortune is supporting the institute.  Maybe the local media should be doing the full-court press on that issue instead of reprinting the VAI's press releases.

TrackBack

TrackBack URL for this entry:
http://www.typepad.com/services/trackback/6a00d83451e55369e200d83547575769e2

Listed below are links to weblogs that reference HYPE ON THE HILL:

Comments

Verify your Comment

Previewing your Comment

This is only a preview. Your comment has not yet been posted.

Working...
Your comment could not be posted. Error type:
Your comment has been posted. Post another comment

The letters and numbers you entered did not match the image. Please try again.

As a final step before posting your comment, enter the letters and numbers you see in the image below. This prevents automated programs from posting comments.

Having trouble reading this image? View an alternate.

Working...

Post a comment