Monday, September 3, 2007

Labor Day Ruminations on Ruination

Just as summer was tentatively getting under way with balmy summer days, it's over. That's if you're like most people, including me, who consider Labor Day to be the pre-solstice official start of Fall.

When I was a kid, Labor Day was the day we got our town back. The fife and drum corps would march up and down the streets merrily fifing and drumming, then go out on a boat with a stout keg of beer and fife and drum their way around the islands, most likely in celebration of the departure of the "islanders."

The "islanders" were "summer people," who were all from nearby inland cities or Manhattan, and they would invade us "townies," beginning every Memorial Day to "camp out" on the islands they bought just off-shore.

The husbands would commute to Manhattan on the local train for the week while their wives and children stayed out on the islands. Their gaudy Cadillacs with enormous fins took up two parking spaces in the already cramped town, and their expensive inboard and outboard boats made an annoying racket all day.

On the islands, they had no running water, no electricity, and their outhouses dumped directly into the water, causing unpleasant tidbits to wash ashore at most inopportune times. The dog crap just went directly into the water without the pretense of an outhouse. They would take all of their bottles and cans out in a boat, fill them, and sink them in the water just off-shore.

In the 1960's, the "islanders" started putting ear-splitting generators on the islands so they could have electricity. The only good part of all this "progress" was that they started putting in septic tanks in the grass lawns where they could (most of the islands were solid granite).

So it was with a great sigh of relief that we celebrated Labor Day each year. The income from the "foreigners" kept the town going through the bitterly cold winter months, but we always wondered if it was worth it.

And you know what? It wasn't.

Now the town is owned by the children, grandchildren and friends of those "islanders." The original island houses, once built by Victorian craftsmen who built them in the winter by going out there over the ice on ox-carts, are mostly all gone. In their place are modern glass and steel structures. Islands that cost $20K to $50K in the 1950's now go for from $3 to $20 million.

The invaders also bought up the homes of the fishermen and oystermen, tore them down, and without a care in the world for their neighbors, put up three-story 5,000 square foot view-hoggers. They bought up the small stores and tore them down, too, and built more multi-level monstrosities in their place. (Is this starting to sound familiar, Astoria?)

The little town club-restaurant, on a granite shelf overlooking the harbor, and with a jaw-dropping view of the islands and sunsets, was where the few "locals" who were left used to meet and greet each other. The business fell on some hard times, and the locals were working together to get financing to buy it.

A New York couple with money to burn came in and way over-bid the asking price. They got it, tore down the clubhouse, and built an enormous private residence with an 8' high fence around it. They just had to make sure they had that view all to themselves. (By now, this should really be starting to ring a bell, people.)

The marshes have been filled in so palaces on stilts could be built on them. The woods, once privately owned, but open for all to use, have been sold and sub-divided, and the whole woods are off-limits now to all but the very privileged few who coughed up millions to build there.

Property taxes, even as short at time ago as 1998 were reasonable. But once the town hall realized that all the new residents had pockets even deeper than the seemingly bottomless granite quarries, they decided to tax by the waterfront foot.

An example: Taxes that were $1,200 a year in 1998 for a 2,000 square foot house on the shoreline jumped to $9K a year in 1999. And there is a lot of waterfront footage there, as the place is full of peninsulas. I would not even dare speculate what the taxes on that same house must be now, but last I heard, in about 2002, that same chunk of property generated $12K a year in tax revenue for the local stiffs at town hall.

The point of the property tax increases now isn't even greed any more. It never was to provide services, as the town has none to speak of. It is to keep people OUT. And just take a wild guess at who all those town hall folks are now? Hint: They aren't locals. I don't know of one single family that lived there when I was a child that has a relative living there now. They have all been bought out or driven out by the punishing cost of property taxes.

The town is gone. In its place is a travesty of what once was.

This is a true story, and should be taken as a cautionary tale for what's going to become of Astoria. The proposed condos are the beginning of the end. Take it from someone who's seen their home town shamelessly destroyed by greed.

Wake up, Astoria. Stop it while you can.

8 comments:

The Guy Who Writes This said...

My home town is gone as well. I got out after the the second set of condos were built. I understand there are over 15 sets of condos there now. Places that were wild are now shopping centers with the same stores and big box stores that are in each of the surrounding towns. So sad...

Undercover Mother said...

I was raised in Laguna. No, not the nauseating wealth-fuck now seen on "The Hills" and "The OC" with their nauseating plastic-children, but a really cool sandals-and-bare feet working class place where the beautiful beaches were clean and only crowded on holidays. Across the street from my elementary school in Laguna Hills were cattle grazing.

Then the developers came. They built homes so close together that you could touch your home and the home of your neighbor. They all looked the same: beige stucco with red tile roofs. This was because of the fire danger. Up from that, they began Nellie Gail and the Richies started to slowly ruin the area and the culture. They sent their snotty kids with piles of cocaine (this was the 80s, so I'm dating myself) to school in their new cars with the price stickers still attached. My generation was the one that paved the way for these monster "My Super Sweet 16" mutations. They drove up the prices of property and built the Ritz Carlton atop Salt Creek beach--which used to be really cool and laid back. They built an industry on the image of fast, new cars, mega malls and moneymoneymoney. Everyone had Mexicans working for them or they weren't worth a damn.

The hills were gone, the air clouded, and the social classes were clearly laid out. Wear this, wear that, drive this, drive that, eat there, not there, and if you think I'm talking about the kids in school, I'm not. I'm talking about their parents. Their busy, distracted parents with fake tans and hair bleached to straw consistency and nails so long they could scoop out an eyeball without getting to the fingertip. The kids did whatever they wanted until they did something so bad they ended up in jail or rehab. The parents were too busy and often left for a week at a time without taking the kids.

Away went the skating rinks. In went the "planned" parks, up went the housing prices, car insurance, and storestorestores.

The place I used to surf and body board--I can't even visit that place anymore because it makes me too sad. The lifestyle that was so memorable for me along the warm Pacific Ocean has simply vanished. It does not exist any longer. I mourn that because I would have liked to have raised my kids in that. Now, the beaches either belong to clubs, are crowded with tourists or the poorer beaches are so flooded with people that you can't move in the surf. It's a sea of humans. The really wealthy beaches have seawalls.

Next, you should talk about what happens when the rich folks get "bored" of an area and what's left are service jobs and endless strip malls.

Elleda Wilson said...

Guy ...
Do you get that awful sinking feeling in your gut when you think about your old home town like I do?
My parents are buried there, my family lived there for three generations, and I can't bear to think about going back even for a visit.
It makes me sick right to my soul.

Mom3 ...
You remind me of my dear friend who used to live in Malibu back in the 50's, when there was no one there but a bunch of artists.
She has entertained me for hours over the years with tales of how it was back then.
I am so glad she will never see what it has become.
I'm afraid I can't talk about what happens when rich folks get bored with an area and abandon it.
I wish to hell they WOULD get bored with my home town and get the fuck out, but they've already ruined it, so I guess it doesn't matter.

Anonymous said...

Well, I'll be the wet blanket on this parade.

There's plenty of property for every family in the United States to own their own plot of land cheap - and then some. High land prices aren't the fault of developers ... it's the fault of the federal government.

Yes, I'm harping once more on the FACT that the Constitution has very clear limits on what land the federal government can own ... and our government is claiming a lot more than what it's allowed. Not to mention ignoring state Constitutions and "unionizing" ratifications of state boundaries, which make no mention of federal land inside the state.

There's also the little Constitutional problem of the 4th and 5th Amendments, regarding property rights.

Anonymous said...

So what do we do?

Everyone is bitching and complaining, but no one HAS ANY SUGGESTIONS AS TO WHAT TO DO...other than to stop all building on the waterfront.

Which is completely ridiculous because then outsiders with cash will buy everything up. And the locals will have to move to the country side...oh wait we can't move to the country side because everything is zoned ag-farm land.

Elleda Wilson said...

Yes, temporarily stop all building on the waterfront, until this so-called "visioning" of the waterfront is done and a plan is made.

But no plan should permit any building more than 20' high, or more than a set number of feet out into the river.

I have no clue why anyone thinks condos are a great idea. Has anyone taken a look at what a Coney Island Seaside has become? Is this what people really want for Astoria? Ugh.

Everyone's jumping the gun here by letting these condos go forward. I hope this case gets taken to the Land Use Board of Appeals to reverse the city council's ill-advised decision, and that this project gets stopped dead in its tracks.

Anonymous said...

It's ironic that you all seem to have come from somewhere else (California?) and are blind to the fact that your current presence, and your mirgration into Astoria, is exactly what is driving the local economy to be able to support condos on the waterfront.

You cannot ever go back to your hometowns and expect them to be the same as when you left them, just as those who left Astoria can no longer come back to the same community that they left either, because of the influx of people such as you.

Elleda Wilson said...

I'm not at all sure your small-minded comment deserves a reply, so I'll only waste two minutes on it.

Putting up condos is not a positive change, it's the Californication of Astoria. Since you despise California so much (and no, my home town is NOT in CA), you come off as a hypocrite.

You won't be loving those condos when your property taxes rise to a level you can't afford, and you are forced to sell and/or move.

Hey, maybe then, if you have a pot left to piss in, you can buy one of those Californicating condos.