Sunday, March 25, 2007

The sins of the fathers

I am not political. But my wife is running for School Committee and some of my best friends are very political. So it's rubbing off.

One of my friends basically ordered me to show up at this 'Beer & Budget' gathering for (primarily) fathers to talk with the School Superintendent and a School Committee member about money. I was glad I went. It was a very informative discussion. At many levels. Politically. Financially. Historically.

It got me to thinking about a book I was given by another friend of mine, who is convinced that the financial world as we know it is going to end in the next 10 years. The book, entitled Prophecy of Rich Dad, (there's a whole series of Rich Dad, Poor Dad books by Robert T. Kiyosaki) discusses the fact that the WW II generation has passed on the problem of funding the health care and welfare of the elderly on to the baby boom generation by looting the entire Social Security Trust Fund in order to pay the operating budget of the US government. (This is a massive oversimplification, but it gets to the point.)

It's similar to what has happened in our town. Twenty seven years ago, our 'fathers' in Massachusetts passed a really restrictive law on how much money each town can raise in taxes, so the towns all responded by selling off unused properties and buildings to meet their operating budgets, and then ignoring the decay of the town's schools and other buildings until there was simply no choice but to act. These short-sighted policies have put us in a real bind. Our school enrollments are growing and there's no schools big enough to house them. Starting a little more than 10 years ago, the town has had to go into a massive rebuilding program that will take at least ten more years to complete. When we have finished, I suspect that we will have renovated every school in the district, added two more, and renovated or replaced the Library, Senior Center, Town Hall and various other office buildings at a cost of, oh, somewhere between one and two thirds of a billion dollars. So I get to help pay off the deferred debts of my predecessors. All I can say is that I am glad that I live on the cheap side of town - those $1M+ homeowners on the other side of town are gonna feel it.

Kiyosaki suggests that the problem with government is that it is too easy to push off tough problems to the next generation. I agree. And I don't see this as a liberal vs. conservative issue, either. Liberals are too busy trying to save the world to fix the plumbing, and conservatives are too busy cutting taxes to bother with bridges.

There's a story circulating that we are, as a species, wired only to look out for short-term trouble. Whatever the reason, we'd better get our act together. Global warming, the impending bankruptcy of Social Security and Medicare, etc. are now our sins, too, unless we choose to repent of the pattern of pushing off the big problems and face the music.

Tuesday, March 13, 2007

Busy, busy, busy

So it's been quite a while since I wrote anything. This has largely been due to the fact that I have been writing, umm, HTML, PHP, Java.

See, I had the perfect storm this winter/spring. I rolled into the year with two projects at work both demanding something like 30-40 hours of work (per week). So I was kinda busy. I managed to wrap one of them up and was looking forward to a little peace and quiet and our public school system's key support organization raised the flag, "We need a secret weapon! We simply have to get this prop 2 1/2 override through this year or our children will be reduced to the educational level of the frogs they currently dissect!" So, since I helped write the last 'secret weapon', actually a pretty cool marketing database and application, I had to improve it for this round. [For the uninitiated, prop 2 1/2 is a law in MA that restricts town taxation unless the town has a vote.]

In this case, 'improve' is defined as renovating the UI, adding 20 new features (they were just the 'high priority ones'), and then getting it through the 'test organization' (my friend Michael), a guy whose ADD translates into massive bursts of defects and new requirements.

We were in the throes of that little bit of work, when this same friend (good friend!) convinced my wife that it was time to run for School Committee. So, another Web Site was born (in 10 days flat). I'm pretty proud of the work. She loves it, and we're getting positive feedback from people we have directed to it.

Very exciting, but I'm a little tired - especially since I am moving into another big project at work! Wheeee!