Given the complete waste of $232,299 paid to Thomas Hacker Architects for their consulting work on the proposed Bellingham Library rebuild, not to mention seven years of time, the Library Board has now proposed asking for two million for a remodel of the Fairhaven Library.
This may be a valid request, and that merits some investigation and consideration, however, once again, I am dumbfounded by a comment made by City Councilman Jack Weiss. Councilman Weiss, I'm assuming in an effort to build a sense of urgency, stated “It may be too late already," according to Sam Taylor of the Bellingham Herald.
Let's think this through.
First off, the quote is pulled out of context, leaving us to speculate on what it is too late for. Given the thrust of the story, I am taking this to mean that it may be too late to repair the building. The damage is so extensive that effective repairs cannot be made. With that assumption, I'll continue the analysis.
If it is too late already, then I'm most certainly opposed to throwing two million dollars toward a futile effort. It's too late. The building needs to be knocked down and replaced. Save the taxpayers' money for other projects where it is
not too late. Perhaps the new water facility at Lake Whatcom?
However, if it is not too late already, and Councilman Weiss is simply overstating his case, then this overstatement impugns the integrity of the councilman and makes future statements vulnerable to questioning and non-belief since he has shown himself to be prone to exaggeration.
The third angle on this keys on the phrase "may be;" "It
may be too late already." Well, before we dump two million dollars into this building, doesn't it behoove us to make that determination? If it is too late, then why spend money on a fruitless effort? By what line of reasoning would we even take one more step toward this remodeling/repair while the possibility that it is "too late" is still in question?
Mark Twain wrote:
A lie can travel halfway around the world while the truth is putting its shoes on.
Mark Twain
Baron Miller wrote:
Grace ruins the idea that you are fully in charge.
Baron Miller