Daily Archives: March 30, 2009

Want to save money? Turn off your computers

powerUSA Today has an interesting story that states U.S. companies waste billions annually by leaving on unused computers overnight.

U.S. organizations squander $2.8 billion a year to power unused machines, emitting about 20 million tons of carbon dioxide — roughly the equivalent of 4 million cars — according to a report to be released Wednesday.

Belated well wishes to Moms and Pops

It was pointed out in an e-mail that was forwarded to me that Sunday was National Mom and Pop Business Owners Day. How did I miss that?

According to the Web site Holiday Insights, this holiday is celebrated every year on March 29.

National Mom and Pop Business Owners Day celebrates small business owners. These individuals spend countless hours nurturing and growing their young enterprises. The workload demands, and lack of a hired staff, often translates into long and late hours, and many missed family and personal events. But, all in all, they love what they do. After all, they are their own boss.

So to all you Moms and Pops out there, we here at Business Casual salute you. And next year we’ll try to be on time.

Things are happening downtown

Here’s a shameless plug for a good look at the coming city council election and downtown revitalization’s role in it, courtesy of my colleague Brent Wistrom.

It would be unfortunate if the election became a referendum on downtown revitalization and the city’s role in it. The reason is simple: Regardless of your stance on downtown redevelopment, things are happening downtown.

The arena’s less than a year away from completion. Rooftops are coming, through another Dave Burk loft project and the beginning of work at Exchange Place and the Bitting Building. A grocery store announcement for downtown could come at any time – a foundational need as the city and developers recruit residents for downtown.

City officials will begin their pitch for public engagement in reshaping downtown this week. They say that public and private investments downtown are almost a dollar-for-dollar match, and have increased downtown property values by about $200 million.

Alex Garvin, the Yale professor who visited Wichita earlier this month, talked at length about how public-private partnerships can and have worked to revitalize a downtown. They’re not perfect: Witness the failure in Des Moines to replicate a unique set of walkways in Minneapolis.

Nonetheless, it would be a tragedy if the “no taxes, no way, no how” crowd cut that process short.