Wednesday, April 21, 2010

Q&A: Steve Faust

The Main Market man on trails, Kendall Yards and the YMCA

Jordy Byrd

Steve Faust wants to be your friend. Maybe not in the traditional sense of friendship, as he won’t help you move, plan a yard sale or watch your cats. What Faust wants is the camaraderie that comes from individuals living and caring about the same community.

As a board member with Main Market Co-op and executive director of Friends of the Falls, he simply wants you to be mindful of the resources Spokane is fortunate to have. We talk with him about trails, Kendall Yards, the YMCA and land-use issues facing the region. (He’s speaking for himself, not any organization he’s involved in.)

INLANDER: How are we faring since the first Earth Day?

FAUST: We’ve made a lot of progress since then. We don’t have to worry about the things they did then like clean air and water. In the late ’60s and ’70s, it was all about the Clean Air and Clean Water Act. I don’t think people recognize how much impact that those pieces of legislation had.

How has the river and falls changed from 40 years ago?

I didn’t live here 40 to 50 years ago, but if you ask someone who did, they would tell you the river was pretty much an open sewer. With the sewer treatment plant, phosphorous ban and the work being done to catch storm water, we’ve seen great strides.

What about land management along the river? Is Spokane making sustainable decisions?

Things like the Centennial Trail and completion of the Fish Lake Trail are tremendous assets to Spokane, but they are still not fully realized. It’s relatively easy to get the money to build a trail, but we need to examine how to maintain these places. We need to operate our trails systems regionally in order to maintain the health and well-being of our river, trails system and all the activities we do there.

How does the former YMCA building fit into this picture?

I didn’t think the decision was a good choice. We spent $6 million — 25 percent of the amount of money we could have had with Conservation Futures money — on less than one acre of space in the most dense part of the city. It’s certainly nice now, but how nice is it compared to what the money could have gone to?

And Greenstone’s Kendall Yards?

I think the Kendall Yards development is a really positive thing for Spokane. If there is any place we ought to have density, it’s there. I know we have some issues with it, but I like the ideas so far.

What’s the largest environmental battle Spokane has yet to face with the river?

I would say that we don’t have a coherent land-use plan for the river corridor. It would be great if the county and the city got together to come up with a public process that addressed land-use issues.

CORRECTION: An earlier version of this story misstated the amount of Conservation Futures funds used to purchase the YMCA.


Born out of the environmental movement of the late ’60s, Earth Day turns 40 this week. To mark the occasion, we decided to take stock of our successes and failures, asking local activists and thinkers to consider how far we’ve come and which issues need our attention now.

Also in Earth Day

Earth Day

Q&A: Rachael Pascal Osborn

The water lawyer on aquifers and the effects of the Clean Water Act

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Earth Day

Q&A: Amber Waldref

Spokane's youngest City Council member on sustainability and looking for LEED

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Wednesday, April 21,2010
Earth Day

Q&A: Rose Dempsey

The Valley councilwoman on clean water, clean air and a clean Kellogg.

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Earth Day

Expo '74 and Earth Day

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Wednesday, April 21,2010
Earth Day

Q&A: Sam Mace

The salmon-watcher on dams and free-flowing rivers

Blair Tellers |
Wednesday, April 21,2010

Also By Jordy Byrd

Clean Slate

Jerry Dicker saves Spokane's Interplayers Theater from debt.

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Wednesday, April 18,2012
Earth Day

Q&A: Amber Waldref

Spokane's youngest City Council member on sustainability and looking for LEED

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Tuesday, March 23,2010

Ink Stains

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Pig Out 2010: The Music

Four decades after Woodstock, Sha Na Na will play a different meadow - probably with fewer hippies.

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Wednesday, September 1,2010


 




Jordie did a nice job summarizing a 30 minute conversation we had last week. Just one quibble: of course I think we still need to worry about clean air and clean water! But we don´t have rivers spontaneously combusting as was the case in Ohio before the Clean Water Act was passed. My point was that we´ve made a lot of progress, not that there´s nothing further to worry about. Oh, and it should be $6 million on Conservation Futures, not $60 million. Thanks for the story, and the series on other points of view.
Apr 22, 2010 | Reply to this comment

 

 
 
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