Tag Archives: polilala

Tippecanoe County Board of Zoning Appeals Updated Letter Rules

I learned from some other citizens that attended the West Lafayette City Council meeting last night, that several months ago (December 2013), the Tippecanoe County BZA updated its by-laws regarding written communication.

From that meeting:

Sallie Fahey said the Board requested that she and Jay Seeger write  a proposal for a By-law amendment related to letters read at public hearing. The Board was concerned about letters that when read are over the 5 minutes allowed for speakers at the hearing, letters that show up late in the afternoon or at the meeting, and what happens at subsequent meetings if a letter has already been read.

The board continued to discuss the changes and settled on amending their by-laws:

Letters and written communications mailed, hand delivered, faxed or emailed to the Office of the Board in advance of the hearing are intended for persons unable to attend the hearing themselves.

For letters to qualify to be entered into the record they must be:
1) signed regardless of delivery method
2) include the signer’s address
3) received no later than noon on the day of the hearing and
4) be no longer than two pages, 11 point font size, double spaced with 1” margins.

Letters sent to the office of the Board that qualify to be entered in the record will be read by staff, and once received the letter shall not be withdrawn. Once a letter is read at a meeting, it is a part of the record.

The writer is not permitted to speak or submit another letter even at a subsequent meeting resulting from either an inconclusive vote or a continuance, having originally chosen to submit a letter.

Should the author be present at the meeting he will not be permitted to speak, having elected instead to present his views in writing. This rule shall apply to any written material on which four or fewer signatures appear, or any petition of more than 300 words filed by the noon deadline. Any petition presented after the deadline or during the hearing shall not be read into the record by staff, but may be passed to the members.

You can read through the December 4th, 2013 minutes for all of the dialogue surrounding the change.

Be mindful when you write the BZA.  I would hate for your letter not to get in the record because it didn’t have the right margins.

WBAA: Ask the Mayor

I first heard about an upcoming original program on WBAA that would involve local mayors taking questions from WBAA staff and citizens.  Live.  On-the-air.

A return to WBAA’s call-in-show, AM 920 Magazine.

This rumor became a reality last week on July 3rd around noon when Ask the Mayor debuted on WBAA.  The inaugural episode was hosted by Stan Jastrzebski and had Mayor John Dennis on as its first guest.  You can listen to the show’s MP3 archive.

Sadly, work forced me to be away from audio during the time it was broad cast.  I even had it on my calendar:

Ask-The-Mayor-2014-07-03I also missed the rebroadcast at 6PM that day.

Today, WBAA finally posted a link to the show, but sadly, no MP3s were included.  They do, however, have an RSS feed.  No embedded content, though.

I hope this changes soon so I can hear how the first show went.

[UPDATE 2014-07-10: They are online now in the RSS feed. Even today’s with Mayor Tony Roswarski.]

I would encourage everyone who cares about their local community to mark in their calendars for 12pm – 12:30pm on Thursdays and tune in to WBAA’s local program, Ask the Mayor.

We could certainly use more of this type of local programming. Especially on WBAA. Call them. Encourage them. Let Mike Savage, Station Manager, know you want to hear more.