The Phoenix Network:
 
 
 
About  |  Advertise
Adult  |  Moonsigns  |  Band Guide  |  Blogs  |  In Pictures
 

Blame it on the city

Politics and other mistakes
By AL DIAMON  |  April 18, 2007

Most of Maine detests Portland.

Take rural areas, for example. They get hostile when the state’s most populous burg boasts about all its restaurants, museums, and School Committee members from the Green Independent Party who keep getting arrested. It’s hard for the boonies to compete, with nothing but the occasional Tim Horton’s, a few hippies making pottery, and a couple of town treasurers who disappeared shortly after using municipal checks to take possession of new Hummers complete with cases of Johnny Walker Blue in the back seat.

Maine’s other large cities are jealous of Portland’s economy, with all those New Age shops in the Old Port, not to mention the architecturally fascinating remnants of the Portland Public Market. Then there are the bank foreclosure departments, law firms specializing in bankruptcies, and the unstaffed ticket counter once used by now-insolvent Independence Air. Portland also offers opportunities for further growth — as soon as the fishing industry can be cleared off the waterfront, the scrapyards can be evicted from Bayside, and the last poor people on Munjoy Hill can be shipped to relocation camps in Township 2 Range 6. What can Maine’s lesser cities put up against that? Just rusting paper mills and the booming market for housing dangerous sex offenders.

Hostility toward Portland is even reflected in the city’s Latin motto, “Colluvies vitiorum,” which, roughly (very roughly) translated, means, “If we didn’t live here, we’d hate us, too.”

But the stereotype of the typical Portlander — arrogant, insensitive, with a bigger credit-card debt than the gross domestic product of Tajikistan — may no longer be accurate. Portland is trying to change its attitude. Except for people who list their occupations as developer, artist, or potential owner of a Hooters franchise.

If current initiatives are successful, Portland will soon have a lot in common with other parts of Maine.

It’ll be destitute.

Unlike the rest of the state, however, Portland’s poverty will be self-inflicted.

This drift into destitution began innocently enough. National companies had been snapping up Portland-based businesses, including a health-food store, e-commerce operations, and even the city’s only strip club. In reaction, a group of Portland business owners began a “Buy Local” campaign, urging consumers to patronize native stores. The B.L. crowd argued that keeping Portlanders’ money circulating among Portlanders was the path to prosperity.

Worked real well in the former Soviet Union.

The campaign didn’t have much impact. Not a single Starbucks, Subway, or Cold Stone Creamery closed. And an enterprising fellow even announced plans to bring in the aforementioned Hooters. That attracted the attention of the Portland City Council (motto: None Of Our Green Independent Party Members Has Been Arrested. Yet). In a desperate attempt to save the city from being served overpriced beer and burgers by scantily clad women with large breasts, councilors in September approved a moratorium on new “formula” restaurants in the Old Port and downtown. In October, the Buy-Local yokels urged the council to expand that ordinance by limiting all national chains. One business owner, who described herself as “a functioning artist and entrepreneur,” told councilors that if a franchise operation moved in near her storefront, she’d “feel quite threatened.”

1  |  2  |   next >
Related: Kooks on parade, Vote of confidence, Committee of onions and failure, More more >
  Topics: Talking Politics , Portland City Council
| More

[ 05/29 ]   Brad Hooper  @ Andy's Old Port Pub
[ 05/29 ]   karaoke with DJ Ponyfarm  @ Slainte
ARTICLES BY AL DIAMON
Share this entry with Delicious
  •   GOT NO PLANS  |  May 23, 2012
    Welcome to the Channel 9 News Noodle. I'm Kootie McDoof.
  •   NEVER MIND THE BOLLOCKS  |  May 16, 2012
    In the wake of its chaotic state convention, the Maine Republican Party has cleverly positioned itself to appeal to a whole new segment of the public: Anarchists.
  •   IT JUST DON’T PAY  |  May 09, 2012
    The only thing worse than taxes is tax breaks.
  •   THE PRICE YOU PAY  |  May 02, 2012
    Debt is a fundamental part of American life. Car payments. Mortgages. Partially unpaid bills from irate Colombian hookers.
  •   ORDINARY PEOPLE  |  April 25, 2012
    Democracy is a messy system of government. Its basic tenets encourage the ignorant masses to react based on emotional appeals, thereby overwhelming the reasoned judgments of the educated elite.

 See all articles by: AL DIAMON



  |  Sign In  |  Register
 
thePhoenix.com:
Phoenix Media/Communications Group:
TODAY'S FEATURED ADVERTISERS
Copyright © 2012 The Phoenix Media/Communications Group