A2Politico: Ann Arbor Politics Grilled To Perfection

February 2, 2010

The Politics of Falling From Grace: An Interview With DDA Board Member Jennifer Santi Hall

VN:F [1.9.3_1094]
Rate this posting
Rating: 5.0/5 (3 votes cast)

Jennifer Santi Hall was never convinced Ann Arbor needed an underground parking garage and more parking. As a board member of the current Downtown Development Authority, her opinion is akin to heresy. 

 

Santi Hall has spent the past seven years serving on various city boards and commissions. After Mayor Hieftje’s 2008 re-election, she wrote a glowing blog entry about Mayor Hieftje’s work as an environmentalist. The post appears on the Great Lakes Law blog, authored by Hall’s husband, Noah Hall. Detractors, in fact, refer to Jennifer Hall as John Hieftje in a skirt for her perceived unquestioning support of his initiatives. Hall writes in the August 2008 blog entry, “In 2003, he led a successful campaign for a dedicated millage to create a greenbelt of farmland and open space around Ann Arbor, including significant portions of the Huron River watershed. Leader of the Huron Valley Chapter of the Sierra Club, Doug Cowherd, will tell you he easily spent 1,000 hours crafting the greenbelt resolution and championed the cause well before Hieftje came on board.

 

Then, came the February 2009 letter of intent to file suit against the city. The  lawsuit aimed at derailing the Library Lot underground parking lot project was filed by the Great Lakes Environmental Law Center. The Law Center is headed by Jennifer Santi Hall’s husband, Noah. According to an entry about the lawsuit posted to the AnnArborChronicle.com, on August 13, 2009, “the complaint alleges violations of the Michigan Environmental Protection Act, the Michigan Open Meetings Act, as well as nuisance and trespass violations.”

 

Then came a public accusation made by Mayor Hieftje at the May 2009 DDA Board retreat that Jennifer Santi Hall had “a cloud hanging over her head” thanks to the lawsuit. The cloud over her head was interfering with the ability of a joint City Council-DDA committee moving forward with negotiations between the DDA and the city. City Council members refused to work with Hall, and the Mayor was disinclined to force the issue.

 

In an October 2009 A2Politico interview with former DDA Board member Rene Greff, Greff said, “At our annual Board retreat, I pressed the Mayor until he finally admitted publically what I had been saying for months, that the reason they were stalling on putting together their committee was that “some members of Council”  didn’t want to negotiate with Jennifer and me.”

 

There are some who are betting that Jennifer Santi Hall’s political career in Ann Arbor is over so long as Mayor Hieftje remains in office. A2Poltico caught up with Jennifer Santi Hall and asked her about her time on the DDA Board, the pending lawsuit, why she doesn’t support the Library Lot underground parking garage, and whether she will lose her seat on the Board of the Downtown Development Authority this summer, when her term ends.

 

1.  When Kim Groome left Ann Arbor, and the First Ward City Council seat became open, you were in the running for appointment to that seat. After all, you had been Chair of the Planning Commission, a Board Mayor Hieftje uses as a stepping stone for those whom he’d like to see on City Council. I’ve heard Groome’s vacant First Ward Council seat was promised to you, and that at the last moment, a friend of Council member Christopher Easthope’s was appointed instead. A very short time later, Mayor Hieftje appointed you to the Greenbelt Advisory Commission and then, almost a year to the day after you were passed over for that First Ward Council seat appointment, you were appointed by the Mayor to the DDA. Forgive me, but it looks suspiciously as if those two Board appointments were rewards for you having taken “one for the team,” when Chris Easthope’s college friend was appointed to the City Council seat promised you. Comments? 

 

First, a couple of clarifications to your statement above.  I don’t think it’s quite accurate to say that the Planning Commission has been used by Mayor Hieftje as a “stepping stone for those he’s like to see on City Council.”  In the 7 years I’ve been serving on city boards and commission, I can only recall two planning commissioners who have run for Council – Eric Lipson (ran against Marcia Higgins in 4th Ward, not endorsed by Mayor Hieftje) and Steve Kunselman (don’t recall if he was endorsed by the Mayor in 2006, not endorsed in 2009).    

 

Another clarification, I was appointed to the Greenbelt Advisory Commission upon its creation in May of 2004; Kim Groome left Council sometime in July or August of 2005. 


If the Mayor thought he was giving me a seat on the DDA board as a reward for “taking one for the team,”  he certainly didn’t let me in on his thought process.

 

As the end of my 3 year term on Planning Commission approached in spring of 2006, I scheduled a meeting with Mayor Heiftje.  I told him that I didn’t want to be presumptuous in thinking he would offer me a second term on Planning Commission, but in case he was thinking of reappointing me, I wanted to let him know that I wasn’t interested.  I was pregnant and then later a nursing mom during my term on Planning Commission and my husband and I were thinking about another child for our family, and I just couldn’t envision surviving the late night meetings during another pregnancy and infancy.  I was quite surprised when the Mayor asked if I would be interested in a citizen seat on the DDA.  He told me my background and also my experience on Planning Commission would make me a good fit for that board.

 

I don’t believe that I was ever “promised” the seat vacated by Kim Groome, but it is true that Leigh Greden (former Third Ward Council member) encouraged me to put my name in the running for the vacant seat and then gave me some advice about how to prepare and present myself during the process. Up to a point, I believe he was actively lobbying his colleagues to appoint me.  I don’t know all of what happened behind the scenes except that there were some on Council who didn’t want to see Tim Colenback appointed (who was really the Ward 1 favorite).  I had never met Tim and knew little of his background and involvement in city issues. Thanks to our mutual friend Jeff Irwin, Tim and I got to know each other better during the appointment process.  I wish that I had been introduced to Tim before I put my name forward for the seat —I certainly would have made a different decision.  I think Tim would have made (or someday will be) a great Councilperson.

 

I am actually quite happy that I was not appointed to that seat.  My time serving on city boards gave me great experience with policy issues, but I wasn’t as involved in the city politics.  Looking back, it’s clear that the council majority wanted someone that would simply go along with their agenda, and that’s not what the voters of the 1st ward wanted and not what I would have done.

 

2. You were appointed to the DDA in 2006, and former Board member Rene Greff told A2Politico that she holds great stock in your abilities as a Board member. One of the reasons Greff got booted was her outspoken defense of the DDA as an independent Board, both procedurally and financially. Some say the DDA Board must submit to the will of City Council. Others disagree because the DDA is an entity established and supported by City Charter, just as is the City Council. What is your view of the relationship between Council and the DDA? Who’s the alpha dog, as it were, or are there two packs at work here?


The Ann Arbor DDA was created in 1982, under the authority of the State of Michigan Act 197 (passed in 1975).  The State wanted to give municipalities a tool for downtown urban renewal—a way to combat the economic decline and structural demise that was affecting downtowns all across America. In creating the DDA in Ann Arbor, the City Council recognized the extreme importance that a downtown district has to the whole city’s vitality.  The downtown belongs to the entire Ann Arbor community and as such would benefit from a designated stream of resources to protect and nurture it. I was excited by an opportunity to serve on the DDA because I fundamentally believe in the general purpose of DDAs and the mission of the Ann Arbor DDA.  I am a true lover of downtown urban areas.  I like the excitement, the crowd of people, the entertainment, and cultural offerings.  Having all these things located close together means that they are very accessible to everyone. Vibrant downtowns are an important component to my environmental ethic —I believe a density of residents, employment, and activity is the only sustainable way to construct a city and to make transportation between work, home and play not dependent on an automobile.

 

I totally agree with Rene that the DDA should be an independent authority.  City Councils must make decisions about many areas of the city and appropriate resources across all types of competing community interests.  The DDA exists with a board independent from City Council expressly to protect the DDA area from having to compete with the rest of those interests.  That being said, I don’t believe the DDA has unchecked authority.  It is created by the City, overseen by the City, and can be dissolved if the City Council so desires.

 

The DDA has money (from the tax capture and from parking revenues) and the Council has the statutory oversight of our appointments, changes to our bylaws, approval of our budget.  Further, any infrastructure work we want to do in the downtown requires their approval because the city owns all the property (roads, parking structures, alleys, etc).  So the politics begins.  Some politics have a purpose, those games I understand.  Some other politics make no sense.

 

I wish Council provided the kind of oversight, check and balance that an independent agency such as the DDA (or AATA or any other authority) should have.  But they don’t always do that.  They don’t really look into our bylaws and make sure that we aren’t abusing our power.  They just won’t approve them (DDA sent bylaw changes to Council about 2 years ago and they were never placed on a Council agenda for approval) because some board members want them changed and certain council members don’t want those board members to have something they want. 


If the City Council wants unquestioned access to the DDAs resources, then it should disband the DDA.  It has the ability to do so, but if you were to look closely at the numbers, you would see that it would not make financial sense for the city to do so.  The DDA’s TIF capture comes from not only the City but also the County, AAPS, AADL, and WCC.  The DDA has given the City more than its share of TIF capture back in grants and other expenditures (like rent for the parking meters – the original source of the $2million question). 


3.  Mayor and a group of Council members including Leigh Greden, Margie Teall, Marcia Higgins, as well as Ann Arbor’s CFO Tom Crawford, have been pressing the DDA over the past 24 months for larger financial contributions to the City’s sagging General Fund. The DDA Board agreed, for instance, to pay $500,000 per year toward the cost of the bonds issued to build the new Court house. A past DDA member described this to me as an outrageous misuse of DDA funds. You voted in favor of the DDA-city bond repayment obligation, but against the underground parking garage project. Why should taxpayers care if Council demands millions from the DDA to put into the General Fund? It’s the city’s money, anyway, right?


I truly believe in the purpose and mission of DDAs.  The DDA exists to protect and nurture a communal resource.  If the City continually uses politics to coerce resources out of the DDA, I think our whole community loses.  I believe there are 3 big reasons why our community should care how the DDA spends its resources (and why we should care if those resources are given to the City’s General Fund).  

 1.  TIF money doesn’t just come from the City of Ann Arbor;  

 2.  Parking system revenues should be used for transportation; and

3. It’s disingenuous to have a DDA and then take the resources for other purposes.

 

All DDAs across the state are structured and financed differently.  In the case of Ann Arbor’s DDA, some of the funds come from the TIF captured by the DDA and some (a much larger amount) of funds come from parking revenues.  The DDA has maintained separate purposes for these funds – parking revenues support transportation (including operation and maintenance of the parking system and support for alternative transportation efforts like getDowntown and goPasses) and TIF funds are used for other work of the DDA (alley improvements, Fifth/Division, LED lighting, energy grants, and projects like the municipal center).  


The question presents 3 different and distinct issues regarding the use of DDA funds.  First, there’s the financial support the DDA gave to the municipal center project came from TIF funds.  The DDA was asked by the City for a certain amount of money (something like $8 million) and we decided it would be easier for us to contribute the money on a yearly basis (rather than in a lump sum cash payment) and so it made sense for us to pay the yearly bond payments.  I supported the DDA’s contribution to this project because I felt that was a good investment in the downtown.  It was very important to me to keep City Hall and city workforce downtown.  And the urban streetscape improvement the building addition makes to Fifth Ave. was really important to me as well.  I think public investment in downtown municipal buildings (city halls, librarys, court buildings, etc) is incredibly important to a vibrant, functional downtown.  I also supported the green elements the City added to the building. 


The second issue is the parking garage.  The DDA is paying for most of this project out of parking revenues, although some of the aspects of the project are paid out of TIF funds.  I voted against the parking garage for a several reasons:  

1.  I don’t believe we need more parking at this time in downtown;

2.  I think we can create more parking supply by increasing our investment in alternatives and managing our parking supply differently (the DDA is already doing this and I argued that we should wait to see the results of these investments and operational changes BEFORE building more parking, especially with such a big price tag);

3. I felt that investing $50 million in more parking was a bad environmental choice – think of what $50 million could do to create modern efficient transit choices; and

4.  I didn’t support how the project was being financed.  I’m disappointed that there was not more vocal opposition to the parking structure during the year or more that the DDA was designing and discussing the options and project details.  

 

There were a few voices questioning the giant parking garage (Steve Bean, chair of the city’s environmental commission for one) but not as many as there are now that the giant hole is being dug.  The City is on the hook for the bonds—so if parking demand should change, and we rely on revenue from all these new spaces to pay for the bonds, and there’s no revenue because we have too much parking supply, then what?

 

The third issue has been dubbed the “$2 million question.”  I would call this a raid on DDA resources.  

 

A bit of abbreviated history —5 years ago the DDA took over management and operation of the on-street parking meters.  The city was looking for more money for the General Fund at this time, and negotiated a deal with the DDA (I was not on the DDA at that time) in which the DDA would operate/manage the meters (and take the revenues – coins, not fines) and pay the City a “rent” payment for the use of the meters and other parking facilities in the amount of $1 million per year for 10 years.  


 The City also negotiated an option to take $2 million per year for 5 years. It is my understanding that the City had proposed eliminating the downtown beat cops due to budget limitations and the DDA felt that this rent payment would ensure that those needed cops wouldn’t go away. Nothing about the cops was written into the agreement, however.  2009 was year five of this deal and the city took its last $2million and they are now left with five more years of a “rent” agreement with no more rent to be paid.  Rene Greff and I had been quite vocal in saying that it is unfair for the city to ask for more money for an agreement that has been fulfilled on our part. This rent money comes from parking revenues.  I am totally OK with beginning a new discussion with City Council about another mutually beneficial agreement that the city and DDA could make—something whereby the DDA pays the city money in exchange for something that benefits the downtown or DDA.   

 

This big, heated discussion of the $ 2 million has quieted down as of late and I think there are a couples of reasons for that. Leigh Greden is no longer on City Council and he was very interested in getting another $2 million yearly payment out of the DDA.  Also, I think that City Council is looking for smaller ways to find mutually beneficial agreements with the DDA (or raid the DDA bank, if you will).  For example, a month or so ago, the City directed the DDA to give them the revenue from the old Y lot.  And that’s what the DDA did (I was absent from that meeting so didn’t participate in the discussion).

 

So, getting back to your question: Why should taxpayers care if Council demands millions from the DDA to put into the General Fund? It’s the city’s money, anyway, right?  Taxpayers should care because not all the TIF money comes from the City. Some comes from the library, the schools, the county, the AATA.  These entities have given up some of their tax capture to support the DDA and are not demanding the DDA support their straining budgets.  The DDA has always maintained that parking revenues should support transportation purposes.  I have no problem with starting a new discussion about parking revenues supporting some other purpose in the city—but I absolutely do not think that parking revenues should be used to bridge a gap in the City of Ann Arbor’s General Fund.  Do people who park in Ann Arbor want to pay higher rates to support the city’s administration budget?  And lastly, if the City desperately needs the DDA’s money, then it should disband the DDA and take back the parking system and TIF capture and redistribute it as it best sees fit.  It’s disingenuous to create a DDA under State Law to do one thing, and then take the money for the City’s general fund.

 

4.  Let’s talk about the library lot underground parking garage. You voted against that project. However, it was the lawsuit filed by two downtown businesses and the Great Lake Environmental Law Center that has resulted in some intensive political backlash against you from City Council members, DDA Board members and the Mayor. Did you expect your political career to be hobbled? One would imagine you’d seen what happened to others who “dissented,” or rocked the boat.


First, let’s just be open and clear about this. My husband is currently serving as the Executive Director of the Great Lakes Environmental Law Center, one of the plaintiffs in the lawsuit against the City.  The bad feelings toward me started long before the lawsuit was filed.  I started “rocking the boat” not long after I joined the DDA board.  

 

From day one, I was skeptical of the need to build more parking, and continually pushed the DDA to invest more money into alternative transportation.  I was also a huge supporter of the DDA’s Fifth and Division improvement project (it was one of the projects I was most excited to join the DDA to work on).  For some reason, there was a lot of political maneuvering on Council about this project.  I don’t really know why some on Council didn’t support the project and why others on DDA who were supportive got cold feet.  When the first vote for the project came up at DDA (maybe only a few months after I started on the board), the Mayor called me before the meeting and asked if I would support a postponement of the project.  

 

He said he supported the project, but the timing wasn’t right and that maybe we could do it cheaper.  I told him I couldn’t support a postponement.  The DDA had worked very hard on this project, it had very popular community support and if this wasn’t the right time to invest in downtown, then when would be the right time? Fortunately for the project, the move to postpone was defeated and the project moved forward at DDA. Only to be stalled for over a year at City Council.  

 

Council refused to put the project on an agenda, knowing that it had broad community support and not wanting to have to cast a vote against it at the Council table.  After some time, Rene and I strategized about how best to move this project forward.  We asked our staff to organize another public meeting to bring the project some current attention (the meeting was very well attended).  And we lobbied City Council, a lot, especially Rene.  She was great.  All this time, the DDA was working out options for building more parking and then designing plans for the library lot underground structure.  

 

So, I’m outspoken about Fifth and Division to Council and very vocal in my opposition to building more parking.  I’m already a dissenter.  The letter sent by the Great Lakes Environmental Law Center (along with the Natural Resources Defense Council, Sierra Club, and several local residents) to the city raising concerns about the environmental impacts of this project, the FOIA requests made by the Great Lakes Environmental Law Center for council meeting emails, and the subsequent lawsuit filed by the Great Lakes Environmental Law Center and neighboring businesses was just the icing on the cake.  I don’t really think my political career has been hobbled.  I don’t really envision that I have a political career.  I don’t know what the next phase will be for me—but it can’t happen if I compromise my goals or my principles.

 

5. With Leigh Greden gone, do you think the relationship between the DDA and Council will change in any way? If so, how?


I think it’s fair to say that Leigh supported the basic premise behind having a DDA—invest in downtown and it will remain vital and prosperous.  Many people can support that general concept and all have a different set of priorities and a different way of implementing that agenda.  I believe that Leigh primarily saw the DDA as a big piggy bank for his priorities and did not respect the priorities or the autonomy of the DDA board. 


As a member of the Council budget committee, Leigh was the most vocal Councilmember in wanting to continue the $2 million payments from the DDA to the City (something I don’t support as a “blank check” payment).  He was very instrumental in getting the DDA to contribute to the Police/Courts building.  He even came to our board meeting the day we approved the contribution.  My most frustrating interaction with him during my time on DDA was his opposition to the 5th and Division streetscape improvements.  Of course, his opposition was never made public.  Instead, for over a year, he prevented the project from being placed on a Council agenda for consideration. 


So—yes, I think the relationship between DDA and Council will change now that Leigh is no longer in office. 


6.  Mayor Hieftje has been accused of stacking the DDA Board with appointees who will rubber stamp his ideas and simply do his bidding. In your opinion, who are the voices of dissent on the DDA Board. Is it necessary to have voices of dissent on the DDA Board do you think?


One of the powers given to Ann Arbor’s Mayor is his/her ability to make appointments to boards and commissions. Not all of them, however. City Council gets to make nominations to other boards, such as the Greenbelt Advisory Commission and Environmental Commission. Ever wonder about the politics involved in creating those boards and why that authority wasn’t given to the Mayor? The Mayor selects people that he thinks will be most sympathetic to his interests.  Even so, the vast majority of people that serve of city boards and commissions are independent minded, dedicated, and put a tremendous amount of work towards serving the city.  Even when I disagree with them on a specific issue, I respect their service and work.

 

Dissent, conflict, and differences of opinions are what lead to good public policy in my opinion.  The big questions are: how loud does it become, what are the politics involved, how personal does it get, and is it effective at serving a public good?  I have witnessed several situations which lead to dissent on city boards.  

 1.  The Mayor appoints new people to a board to replace those appointed by the previous Mayor.  That’s what happened when I was appointed to the Planning Commission almost 7 years ago.  I suspect that people are feeling more homogeneity of appointments of late because the Mayor has been in office for so long that ALL of the people serving on board and commissions have been appointed by him (or re-appointed in some cases).  

 2.  The Mayor misjudges a person’s goals and support for certain issues.  Or more significantly, the person has a stronger independent voice than thought.  It’s totally understandable.  You don’t take a test of loyalty or an oath to do whatever he says when you’re offered an appointment.  

 3.  The Mayor appoints someone he knows may be a voice of dissent, but does it as a token offering to a certain interest group he wants to make favor with.  (I think Dave DeVarti’s tenure on the DDA and Eppie Potts’s appointments to the Planning Commission illustrate this point)  

 4.  The Mayor actually changes his goals or maybe not his goals, but the priority of those goals, and his appointments no longer match those interests. (I think Fred Beal and Rob Aldrich are good examples here – they were good appointments when the primary issue of the day for the Mayor was downtown density, but not so much when the big issue of the day became getting another $2million from the DDA, so he didn’t reappoint them).

 

If it’s of interest to your readers, here’s a detailed sketch of my own relationship as an appointee with the Mayor to illustrate my points above.  I have spent 7 years on 4 different boards and commissions:  1 term on Planning Commission appointed my Mayor Hieftje (appointed in 2003, confirmed by City Council on a 6-5 vote); a year or so on the Environmental Commission (filling a spot designated for a planning commissioner, I was nominated by the Planning Commission and confirmed by City Council); in my 3rd term on the Greenbelt Advisory Commission (appointed in 2004, nominated by Council); and serving in my 4th year of my first term on DDA (appointed in 2006 by Mayor Hieftje and confirmed by City Council —not sure of the vote).

 

When I was first appointed to the Planning Commission in 2003, the Mayor was looking for someone who would sympathize with neighborhoods disgruntled with development, oppose tall buildings in the downtown, and someone who would be an environmental voice on the Planning Commission.  It was thought that I would do all these things (I was recruited for the position by Doug Cowherd and Bill Hanson, who were at the time close advisors of the Mayor, because of my background with conservation planning working for The Nature Conservancy.)  The vetting process for appointments is not all that rigorous (you don’t have to submit to any tests, go through days and days of Senate-like confirmation hearings or give over your first born child), and of course, it’s hard to know exactly how someone will think or grow as they get more knowledge and experience under their belt.  

 

I do have a strong environmental ethic, but as it turns out my self-defined environmental goals support some increased density in the downtown. Funny thing is, the Mayor changed his mind about density in the downtown. Downtown density (and some issues surrounding the formation of the Greenbelt Advisory Commission) fractured the relationship between Doug, Bill and the Mayor.  The Mayor later became more closely allied to Leigh Greden (who also was a proponent of downtown density).   

 

And what happened to me?  I ended up on the Greden/Heiftje “team” partly because they saw me as an ally to their position and partly because I was “shunned” and “demonized” by others in this town for my position about downtown density and other development issues.  It’s important for me to emphasize here that I never chose any of these teams.  My beliefs have never changed—although they have grown and been refined by experience and knowledge.  And I don’t mean to say that I’ve only been a pawn in all of this political shifting.  I have strong opinions and I’m not shy about stating them and working the issues.  I’ve used and I’ve been used and that’s all part of the game.  


I believe the Mayor appointed me to the DDA because I was an advocate for downtown density, but also because I was a supporter of alternative transportation, something also promoted by the Mayor.  After a few months on the DDA, the Mayor called me and asked if I would support delaying the decision on the 5th and Division project.  He felt the timing was bad and the project cost too much money. I didn’t agree with him—5th and Division was one of the DDAs projects that I was most excited about joining the board to work on. This was a turning point in my relationship with the Mayor.  I also didn’t support the parking structure project, advocating for more than a year that we do more transit demand management and invest more in alternative transportation before we spend so much money to build more parking.  Then I vocally opposed the city taking $2 million from the DDA for no express purpose.  Then the Great Lakes Environmental Law Center and other environmental groups (with my husband as the lead attorney) started raising legal issues with the parking structure and that’s when things really changed and the true hostilities started.

 

I think all boards need different opinions.  A good fight makes sure that an issue is really thought about before it’s done.  Debate and conflict are what make good public policy.  Some on DDA recall a happier time when the DDA was a “consensus board.”  I don’t think that made for good public policy.  I’m glad that there are voices of dissent, on any issue, even ones I support.  But, I think the dissent needs to be philosophical or pragmatic in nature.  Arguing for politics sake just wastes everyone’s time.

 

7. Rene Greff assumes you will not be reappointed to the DDA Board when your term expires. Is her assumption correct, do you think? Have you spoken to the Mayor about this? Do you want to be reappointed to the DDA Board?


As I said above, it is really up to the Mayor to decide if he wants to reappoint me to the DDA Board.  Given the chilly feeling I get from him, it certainly seems that Rene’s assumption is a good one.  I have a seat on the DDA board that is reserved for a citizen representative (other seats are reserved for downtown business owners and employees and one seat for a downtown resident).  I think it’s important to fill the citizen seats with people who do not also have a business or residential interest in the downtown.  The DDA was created in recognition that vibrant, successful downtowns benefit the whole of Ann Arbor, and it’s funded using tax money that could otherwise have a different public purpose.   

 

It’s important to me that the citizen representatives on the DDA not only serve the mission of the DDA, but are mindful of the broader context for that mission. 

Popularity: 37% [?]

January 10, 2010

County Commish Barbara Levin-Bergman Serves Up La Vengeance Froide And Ends Up With Egg On Her Face

VN:F [1.9.3_1094]
Rate this posting
Rating: 5.0/5 (5 votes cast)

Ann Arbor Washtenaw County Commissioner Barbara Levin-Bergman has been on the Washtenaw Board of Commissioners since James Madison was president. Elected shortly before the War of 1812, rumors abound that Bergman held off the British as they attempted to cross Washtenaw County on their way to Washington, D.C. to give Dolley Madison’s house at 1600 Pennsylvania Avenue a make-over.  

As for Ann Arbor Grande Dem Bergman, recent actions show she is more concerned with maintaining the status quo, than in encouraging innovative policy-making and creative problem-solving. Thus, when Pittsfield Township newbie County Commissioner Kristin Judge and Barbara Bergman had a spat in public at a BOC’s meeting, it was clear that Bergman was not going to just sit back and let some uppity white woman from Pittsfield Township get away with not bowing and scraping to the uppity white woman from Ann Arbor who has been in office for two centuries.

But as French novelist Marie Joseph Eugène Sue wrote: la vengeance se mange très-bien froide. In English, “Revenge is a dish best served cold.”

Bergman’s personal chef du maison whipped up a dish of La Vengeance Froide, and Bergman served it to Kristin Judge on January 6th. At the County Commissioners’ first meeting of the year, where the Commissioners divvy up leadership positions, there was exactly one dissenting vote cast against exactly one County Commissioner. Can you fill in the blanks? 

Kristin Judge stood for re-election as co-Chair of the Washtenaw County Board of Commissioners Ways and Means Committee. Barbara Bergman voted against Judge’s candidacy. Then, Bergman proceeded to explain for the record why she’d voted no on Judge’s candidacy. According to a January 8, 2010 piece posted to AnnArborChronicle.com, Bergman announced that “Judge had made a personal, unprovoked attack on her, and that it did not demonstrate leadership behavior.”

Frankly, I think unprovoked attacks demonstrate incredible initiative, but I digress.

Daguerretypes posted to the County’s web site, show Bergman with two blackened eyes and her jaw wired partially closed. Obviously, the unprovoked attack by Judge, whom photos on the County web site show with a sardonic smile and a slightly bruised ego, had been a political donny-brook. To read about the dust-up at the BOC Roller Derby at which Judge “attacked” Bergman, click here

In going after Judge, Bergman is forgetting whom she serves and why. Kristin Judge wants to make sure the public’s best interests are well represented when it comes to how the county spends the $190,000,000 dollars we give them. Thus, Judge has been going through the county’s budget line-by-line and Bergman, along with other Commissioners, have accused her of micro-managing. 

At the January 6, 2010 meeting, right after Barbara Bergman announced that Kristin Judge lacked leadership skills, Judge announced that she plans to disclose her expense account spending publicly. She is the first and only County Commissioner to do this. (To find out when Conan Smith blows $800 a night on hotel rooms, you’ll have to FOIA his credit card receipts.) It was Judge who turned in her county paid cell phone and announced that the county could save $370,000 by getting rid of that perk. She took a shellacking from Ann Arbor Commissioners Smith and Irwin for that “stunt,” and found herself accused of political “grandstanding.” It was also Kristin Judge who pushed for Commissioner Conan Smith’s ridiculous (and possibly illegal) attempt to stifle free speech at Board meetings to be rescinded this year. In 2009, when Smith was elected Chair of the Ways and Means Committee, he spearheaded the effort to change the Board’s rules and limit what topics the public could bring up during commentary before the Board’s Ways & Means Committee. He also moved to trim the time alloted from five minutes to three minutes. If you’re interested in reading why Smith wanted to stifle free speech, click here.

I say to Kristin Judge, grandstand and micro-manage to your heart’s content. Lord knows the four Ann Arbor Commissioners (Conan Smith, Jeff Irwin, Barbara Bergman and Leah Gunn) let retiring County Administrator Robert Guenzel have his way with them and the budget, and run the County $30 million dollars into the hole. Those four Ann Arbor Dem commissioners have often voted as a block in favor of Guenzel-inspired fiscal policies that were predicated on Guenzel’s belief that the county’s economy would forever grow, and the tax base would never shrink. Their lack of leadership demonstrated incredible fiscal naivité and more hubris than is healthy in even a politico. 

Washtenaw County residents desperately need more BOC leadership like that demonstrated by Kristin Judge, and for Ann Arbor Commissioners Smith, Bergman and Gunn to follow Guenzel to wherever it is that politicians go who leave trusting citizens holding the bag for huge structural deficits. 

As for Bergman, by wasting her vote to even a personal score, she ended up with egg on her face—a dish best never served at all.

Popularity: 20% [?]

December 3, 2009

The Politics of Reform: A2Politico Finds Love (At Last), or at Least Lust

VN:F [1.9.3_1094]
Rate this posting
Rating: 5.0/5 (6 votes cast)

Not that kind of love, silly. Political love—or at least serious political lust. I’m not throwing over Democratic candidate for governor Alma Wheeler Smith for any anti-choice candidate. Republican Mike Bouchard is anti-choice, and Republican Rick Snyder slurped up the endorsement of Jerry Zandstra, president of Pro-Life Federation of Michigan. Snyder, in a July 2009 interview with the Detroit Free Press described himself as a “… pro-life, pro-family Republican.” Anti-choice politicos never, ever get my vote. I can, however, look beyond their medieval political opinions on a woman’s right to choose, and in Mike Bouchard’s case, I think it would behoove the Democrats running for governor to take a close and careful look at Bouchard’s latest set of proposed reforms. 

On November 30th, Republican Mike Bouchard proposed a set of sweeping state reforms (many of which would require Michigan voters to call a Constitutional convention in 2010). It’s a minor detail. Really. Well, not really, since voters have an opportunity to call a Constitutional convention only every 16 years, but Bouchard just moved to the head of the class so far as I’m concerned with his proposed reforms.

Let me digress before I tell you about his ideas, and tell you about a convo I had with a friend the other day. We were discussing the totally lame-o reason that Representative Rebekah Warren is going around town telling people why she wants to move into the Michigan State Senate. According to Warren, the Republican-controlled Senate is constantly thwarting the legislative efforts of those progressive Dems in the Michigan House. Dems proffer perfectly progressive bills to the Senate, and those Republican SOBs just won’t play ball and pass them. The bills, Warren explains, just die. She wants to go to the Michigan State Senate to change all that.

(Yes, I’m rolling my eyes. It’s not nice, but Warren is taking the electorate for a bunch of naive hoo-hahs.)

The seat she’s going for has been held by Democrat Liz Brater since Hector was a pup. Replacing Brater with another Democrate isn’t really going to up the chances of getting those House bills passed in the Senate. Perhaps what Warren is not saying is that she’s planning to use mind control, or extortion to get the Republicans to vote her way?  Her reason for running is lame. 

Then there’s County Commissioner Mark Ouimet, the totally closeted Republican in the hunt for Democrat Pam Byrnes’s 52nd District House seat. This is why Ouimet is running (from his web site): 

“Michigan is at a critical crossroad. Decisions we make today will affect our families for generations to come.  Now more than ever, our district, our region, and our state need strong, focused leadership to help Michigan reclaim its position as the region’s powerhouse. That’s why I’m running to be our next state Representative.”

Focused leadership? Were the rest of the legislators in Lansing not paying close enough attention? Was Pam Byrnes napping on the job? 

Mark Ouimet is running on his “service” as a board member at Ann Arbor SPARK. You see, he’d like to take SPARK’s “successes” to Lansing. Three guesses how he got that SPARK Board gig? If you guessed political cronyism, you get a prize. Choose any board or commission in town and A2Politico will make sure you get selected to serve. (I’ll use mind control.) SPARK is a boondoggle and Ouimet sits on the board of the boondoggle and watches the boondoggle shake its public money-taker. He wants to take all those “good ideas” for economic growth to Lansing. He’ll be taking a large supply of Kool-Aid for everyone to drink with him, as well, I imagine.

Lame.

Why is 53rd District House candidate Jeff Irwin running? “He said he wants to bring progressive ideas to Lansing and put Michigan back on track,” according to his launch press release posted to AnnArbor.com.

What does the code “progressive ideas” mean? Can someone please translate that?  

Lamer.

How about Ned Staebler, the other candidate for the 53rd District House seat? Why’s he in the race? This is from his launch press release posted to AnnArbor.com:

“I ran because I don’t believe that things in Michigan are currently headed in the right direction…I think that it’s time for a new generation of leaders to take a stand and help Michigan get back on track. Unfortunately, right now we have deep and structural problems that will require commitment in order to ensure long-term solutions. I think that I’m part of that generation that can make that change.”

A new generation of leaders? He and Rebekah Warren are from the same generation. Vote for Staebler and we’ll replace a 30-something, white, upper middle-class woman with a 30-something, white, upper middle-class man. That’s a generational, racial and socio-economic shift? Hardly.

Lamest.

Lame. Lame. Lame. When did elected officials forget that they were not Captains America and Wonder Women? 

These Ann Arbor politicos need to give us all a break, because the political bull-shit-o-meter is way off the charts. Warren, Staebler, Irwin, and Ouimet fancy themselves Marvel comic book characters. They (pow!) will go to that cesspool Lansing (crunch!) and using their progressive power rays (zap), and “focus,” they will single-handedly come up with solutions (smash!) to all of the state’s problems. Here’s the truth: Staebler, Irwin, Ouimet and Warren are running because they want jobs in politics in Lansing. Of the lot of them, I think Irwin has spoken the most sincerely about service to his constituents and his desire to continue serving the people in Lansing. 

As I said to my friend at lunch, I wish, for once, a local politico would just come right out and tell the damn truth: “I like being popular. I enjoy wielding my political power. I want a job. I need a job. These State House and Senate jobs pay really well, have great benefits, prestige, life-time pensions and perks galore.” Better the ugly truth than all these beautiful lies.

A state lawmaker who spends just six years in Lansing will earn somewhere around $500,000 in salary, plus money for retirement. He/she will also get health care for life. For life. I feel so generous—well not really. I actually feel so used, so plainly taken advantage of as a taxpayer.

Here’s where Republican Mike Bouchard comes in. On November 30th, he got some serious game and came out with some excellent ideas to reform Lansing. These reforms would, I think, change the reasons people run for these offices, and I hope, attract a different class of person to political service in Lansing. Some real socio-economic, and racial diversity would do the State Legislature a world of good. So here’s what Bouchard is pitching:

• Reduce the full-time Legislature to part-time, meeting 120 days every other year. Most states have a part-time legislature.
• Eliminate health insurance and pensions for legislators. The state would set up health care savings accounts for them, he said.
• Lower legislative term limits from 14 years to 12 years but allow a lawmaker to serve up to 12 years in either the House or the Senate. Currently, House members are limited to three two-year terms and Senators are limited to two four-year terms.
• Install a two-year rolling budget plan. For every day after May 15 that the budget is not in place, the governor and legislators would be docked a day’s pay.

I love these ideas (mostly)!

Get rid of the health insurance for life-o-rama and pensions for Michigan legislators? Absolutely. Those are hold-over bennies from when our legislators could serve as many terms as they could get elected to serve. Representative Pam Byrnes shouldn’t get a pension for serving six years in the House. Liz Brater shouldn’t get one, either. Michigan taxpayers shouldn’t have to give Rebekah Warren and her family health insurance for the statistical 45 years she and hubby County Commissioner Conan Smith will live after Warren leaves the State Senate (provided she even gets there).

A part-time legislature! Yes. Yes. Yes. Maybe not every other year, but part-time is definitely a great idea, and is how many states get the work of governing done. May I add an amendment? How about a unicameral legislature? Cut the number of politicos in the legislature by, say, one-third? Save 30 percent of the cost of supporting them in the manner to which they’ve all become accustomed. Oh, and while we’re at the Constitutional convention, let’s roll back their salaries to the median income of the state, shall we? Jeff Irwin would earn $47,950 as opposed to $80,000. (The median income for a family of 4 in Michigan is $47,950.) 

Term-limits? I like his idea of allowing legislators to serve the entire time in either the House or the Senate, but not the idea of lowering the total amount of time legislators can serve. There’s too much turn-over as it is, and it’s costing us in legislative experience and brain drain. 

Roll out the budget? Go on with your bad self, Mickey B. Not a single other candidate for governor has made this suggestion. Rolling budgets (also known as continuous budgeting) mean more flexibility and better opportunities to track income and expenses. It is a method of budgeting in which as each month passes, an additional budget month is added such that there is always a 12-month budget. Rolling budgets are tracked more closely, managed more carefully and amended continuously to reflect changes in financial circumstances. Sound familiar? Yep, that’s exactly how most taxpayers manage their own budgets, as well. The little people manage our money all the time to reflect expenses and income that crop up as the year progresses. Our legislators obviously need to do the same thing.

I like Bouchard’s concrete idea to get a firm grasp on revenues and expenses. Such a change would keep legislators focused on income and expenses as they set policy and fund their projects.

What do you think, fellow A2 politicos? Any of Bouchard’s suggestions for reform resonate with you?

Popularity: 25% [?]

December 1, 2009

The Politics of Commentary: Republican Blogger Throws Down With Washtenaw County Board

VN:F [1.9.3_1094]
Rate this posting
Rating: 4.6/5 (8 votes cast)

In January of 2009, County Commissioner Conan Smith, Chair of the Ann Arbor Democratic Party Club, and son of State Representative Alma Wheeler-Smith, was re-elected to the Washtenaw County Board of Commissioners as one of the four Ann Arbor representatives. In his very first act as a newly elected public official, and as the newly elected Chair of the County’s Ways & Means Committee (the Committee where the Commissioners decide how to spend the $190,000,000 dollars in tax and fee money they are given by the county’s 347,000 residents, Smith moved to “adjust” some of the Board’s rules and regulations.

More exactly, Conan Smith moved to cut the time alloted to each individual who addressed the Ways & Means Committee to three minutes, down from five minutes. He also proposed that the board require that individuals who comment during Ways & Means meetings comment only on agenda items. With the exception of County Commissioners Jeff Irwin (now a candidate for the 53rd District House seat) and Roland Sizemore, the rest of the County Commissioners (all of whom serve on the Ways & Means Committee), went right along with Smith’s “adjustment.” 

Before Smith proposed curtailing the public’s time and speech, there had never been any such limitations. Conan Smith told the Press “his goal was to make the meetings more efficient, and that the public still had the opportunity to speak before the entire board with no change in the current time limit or topic rules.” Since few people ever go to the County Board of Commissioners’ meetings, let alone speak at them, Conan Smith’s professed desire to increase efficiency was a crock…of well pickled sauerkraut.

Conan Smith went on to be quoted in the Press as saying that he “believes citizens should be treated more like staff, and that he would be willing to allocate them even more than 5 minutes if they contacted him before the meeting, and if it were appropriate to the agenda.” Citizens, alas, are not Conan’s Smith’s staff. We don’t work for elected officials such as County Commissioners; Conan Smith and the other Commissioners work for us.

When I initially read about the rule changes, I found Smith’s comments shocking in their arrogance and astounding in their clear lack of understanding of the place and minor part he plays as an elected official. To say that he would consider allotting citizens more speaking time provided he approved of citizens’ topics/comments beforehand is as illegal as it is undemocratic and plainly egotistical. The only other thing I found more shocking was that the local press that covered the meeting wrote nothing about the overt misuse of power by Conan Smith and those County Commissioners who voted along with him. Why a misuse of power? 

Those in the know refer to Smith’s proposed and passed rule changes as the “Tom Patridge” rule. Tom Patridge? He’s a royal pain in ascot to just about every local politico who has ever had to sit through his comments at meetings. At Ann Arbor City Council meetings, he’s a citizen who exercises his right to speak regularly and often repetitively at various public meetings of elected officials. Conan Smith proposed the rule change, and it was adopted by those County Commissioners to thwart Tom Partridge’s penchant for berating them about (in his opinion) their pitiful records on issues such as homelessness, supportive services, disability services and, well, let’s just say items not appearing on “the agenda.” 

AnnArborChronicle.com noted the rules changes in a piece posted to the site in early-January 2009. The site also noted County Commissioner Jeff Irwin’s comments that citizens should be able to come before the Commissioners and read the phonebook, if they so chose. That the AnnArborChronicle.com reporter accepted Smith’s obviously ridiculous explanation concerning his proposed rule changes without question is exactly why local politicos such as Conan Smith come to believe they are entitled to treat their staff (the public) with disdain and disrespect. The message of Smith’s rule change was clear: “We don’t want to listen to the rabble, and we don’t have to do it if we don’t want to.”

Well, as the saying goes, revenge is a dish best served cold. 

Enter local blogger (and Republican) Janelle Baranowski. On November 19th, she posted an entry to her site in which she writes about her attendance at the Washtenaw County Board of Commissioners‘ meeting. She begins,

“An old man with a cane hobbled up to the microphone and began a (somewhat) coherent speech on the plight of the homeless in the County and his request that the Board proceed quickly with the budget approval. At three minutes, Commissioner Conan Smith called time and the man hobbled back to his chair. It was what happened during those three minutes that boiled my blood.

“As soon as the gentleman stood, nearly every member of the Board turned to their neighbor and began (what looked like) personal conversations. With the exception of a few moments searching in her purse, Commissioner Kristin Judge appeared to be the only person paying the least bit of attention.

“During this time, I couldn’t help but remember the 20 minutes I spent listening as several Board members waxed poetic on their hard work creating the budget, the difficulties they faced, and how grateful they were to each other and the County staff for accomplishing the daunting task. The whole time I remember thinking, ‘Wouldn’t a personalized thank you note be a little less self-serving and a little more meaningful?’”

Yep. Baranowski, who was watching the meeting without any knowledge of the backstory about Tom Patridge, was describing the behavior of the County Commissioners as Tom Patridge spoke. 

Baranowski goes on to write in her entry, “Realizing that no one else planned to comment, I immediately approached the Board and introduced myself. I mentioned that I was happy to see that they troubled themselves to actually look at me, given that earlier they were too busy chatting to listen. I was sure to point out the separate twosomes to assure them I had paid attention to their behavior. Chastising them for their rudeness, I said it was disgraceful that they couldn’t pay attention for three minutes and that as representatives, all citizens deserve their respect.”

It’s exactly what the local reporters who’ve been covering the Washtenaw County Commission meetings should have done, but never did because getting quotes from the local politerati County Commissioners is way cooler than pissing them off by writing about their stifling of free speech, and their horrid treatment of a citizen, even one they consider a royal pain in the butter bell.

Now Baranowski’s blog entry gets really interesting. She writes:

“Needless to say, many of the Commissioners spoke with me after the meeting was adjourned. First up was Conan Smith. He explained that while he understood the nature of my comments, he wanted to put some context behind the Board’s behavior. To paraphrase the conversation:

“He explained that the gentleman comments at every opportunity, at every single meeting.
My response: So? That’s his right. He [Smith] then explained that the gentleman has slandered both him and his wife in the past, as well as other Board members (sadly, no specific examples were provided.) My response: He did not do anything like that tonight. His comments were about the homeless and the budget.

“Comm. Smith then asked me for my opinion on the limits of free speech.”

The limits of free speech? Conan Smith, with his B.A. in creative writing, is not an expert in anything except writing about free speech creatively. He obviously put forth the rule changes to deter Tom Patridge from speaking, and when a fresh set of eyes (Baranowski’s) took in the disrespectful behavior of the County Commissioners, we finally saw that Emperor Conan Smith was as naked as the day he was born.

Janelle Baranowski has a plan: “I plan on annoying the heck out of the Ways and Means Committee. From now on, I plan on speaking for three minutes about whatever comes to mind. I plan on using the three minutes at the beginning and end of the meeting to become more annoying than Mr. Partridge. I hope they will breathe a sigh of relief when he approaches the microphone….It’s easy for them to push around the old (slightly nutty) guy. But no more. Not on my watch. Because this is No OK. I’ll do my best to be at every meeting until Mr. Partridge get’s to rant for three minutes to his heart’s content. Because it is his RIGHT.”

It’s our right to speak before the County Board. When Conan Smith brought forward the rule changes, the county corporation counsel, Mr. Hedger, suggested the rule changes might run head-on into free speech issues. Obviously, no one on the County Board directed the lawyer to research the question, and issue a formal opinion. Rather than see a citizen sue the County to find out whether Smith’s rule changes are illegal, the Washtenaw County Commissioners (one of whom has launched his bid to serve in the State House of Representatives in the 52nd District [Commissioner Mark Ouimet]) should reverse Conan’s Smith’s foray into the political pool of Narcissus. The County Board should return public commentary at Ways & Means to five minutes. No holds barred.

When Tom Patridge speaks, the County Commissioners can pay attention for five minutes, or they can take their political marbles and go home. As for Conan Smith, our Ann Arbor County Commissioner with a taste for $800 hotel rooms on the taxpayer dime, while the county struggles under a $30 million dollar deficit, he should go back to writing creatively. Politicians with a taste for stifling freedom of speech to suit themselves, and to keep their wives (State Representative Rebekah Warren) from being “slandered,” are generally found in small South American countries, not parading as progressive Democrats in Ann Arbor.  

Here’s a thought: in August 2010, when Ann Arbor County Commissioner Conan Smith comes up for re-election, if he runs, his “staff” should send him back to the Suburbs Alliance from whence he came. There, as Executive Director, he can limit the speech of all who work for him to his heart’s desire.

Popularity: 40% [?]

November 30, 2009

Alma Wheeler Smith: Great Ideas. Horrible Execution. What Up, GF?

VN:F [1.9.3_1094]
Rate this posting
Rating: 4.9/5 (8 votes cast)

Let me just begin this by saying that I don’t just like Alma Wheeler-Smith’s politics; I love her politics. I haven’t always agreed with her political strategy. On February 5, 2009, she voted against a 10 percent reduction in pay for state legislators. She was the only legislator who voted no. On the one hand, she was making a brave political point: the House Concurrent Resolution 3 was political composted horse manure. As Smith explained on her web site: ”…The people of the State of Michigan are looking to the Legislature now, more than ever, for true leadership. This vote was a game played at the citizens’ expense,” Smith said. “There is no language for implementation in this bill.  To decrease the salaries as proposed requires a constitutional change, which consequently requires a public vote.” The Emperor had no clothes, and Alma was the only legislator to point this out. Even Smith’s own daughter-in-law Rebekah Warren, who represents Ann Arbor as the 53rd District House Representative (and is a current wanna-be for Liz Brater’s State Senate seat), voted for the totally duplicitous and meaningless resolution. Wheeler Smith could have, of course, come up with a way to implement the pay cut. 

You gotta admire a politico who’s willing to stand alone against political games they’re playing in Lansing. Either that, or she’s so sure of her base she just figured a vote against cutting her own pay would not cut her own political throat. 

At the moment, Wheeler Smith is running a stealth campaign for governor. She launched her campaign, but has not been nearly as visible as, say, Ann Arbor Republican Rick Snyder or the Democratic Dauphin John Cherry. Wheeler Smith was at County Commissioner Jeff Irwin’s November launch party for his bid for the 53rd Dsitrict House seat. Rebekah Warren spoke. Jeff Irwin spoke. (Both badly, and with surprisingly little ability to deliver a rousing stump speech.) Alma? Alma didn’t say anything to the crowd gathered. She circulated, smiling, but I have this feeling that had John Cherry, Rick Snyder or any of the boys running for governor been in attendance, they would have elbowed their way to the front of the room and spoken to the captive audience.

Wheeler Smith recently came out with her very own Papal Encyclical calling for a massive overhaul of the Michigan tax system. AnnArbor.com covered Wheeler Smith’s proposal here. The comments on the AnnArbor.com site were almost uniformly critical of Smith’s proposal to, in short, tax Michigan residents according to their income, and not simply by using a flat rate. The top proposed rate of 9.75% for those in the highest income bracket elicited this comment: “Also she advocates a 9.75% top tax rate for individuals. I read the article and thought I was at the Mad Hatter’s Tea Party. The only possible explanation for this plan is that Alma is running a stealth campaign to elect Mike Cox. Alma should be on Saturday Night Live with this routine.” Another AnnArbor.com reader wrote, “Politics is this lady’s family business. When she runs out of road in the state House next year, we should introduce this lady to the concept of retirement. “Term limits” is voter-speak for Go find something else to do.

Flat rate taxation versus graduated rate taxation. Well, Hells Bells, at least Smith is talking about the fact that the current system of taxation in Michigan isn’t working. Rick Snyder’s blathering on about his “plan” that includes fiscal policies he promises to implement in Lansing. These are policies that he never implemented in the three years he spent in Ann Arbor as the CEO of Ann Arbor SPARK. Snyder  will start by getting input from the taxpayers about how public money should be spent, along with implementing policies that would increase transparency so the public can see just where their tax dollars are going. (Yes, that’s snorting you hear, and it’s coming from me.) Under gubernatorial wanna-be Snyder, Ann Arbor SPARK was run with the “transparency” of a CIA covert operation, just like every other crony capitalism scheme.

Here’s Snyder’s bullet point on Michigan’s Tax System from his web site: “Reform Michigan’s Tax System Rick believes that we need to reduce the tax burden on families and businesses in Michigan. Rather than advocate for short-term solutions – Rick wants to reform Michigan’s tax system so that it is competitive, simple, fair, transparent, efficient and facilitates economic growth.” Will voters buy this political carp (reverse the a and the r) he’s selling? Can he be any less exact or provide any fewer details?

So, Wheeler Smith calculates the graduated tax scheme would generate an additional $6.5 billion dollars in additional revenue for the state’s elected officials to fritter away, I mean allocate. Wheeler Smith would use some of the additional money to “…fund a new income tax credit Smith is proposing that would cover all tuition paid to state universities, community colleges and vocational schools — in essence, making tuition free.”

This is where Alma Wheeler Smith and I part company. The notion of providing free tuition to Michigan college students is, well, insanely wrong-headed. It’s regressive policy. She came up with this idea with her partner in wrong-headed legislation, and daughter-in-law, Rebekah Warren. The plan hands billions in tax dollars to our state’s colleges and universities, and it would be better to make a big pile and just burn the cash. Why? Because Smith and Warren are creating higher education policy based on volume over quality and student success. Everyone who wants to should attend college (on Wheeler Smith’s Fantasy Island for free). No. Absolutely not. Why? Because Michigan colleges (both 2- and 4-year) are doing a horrible job of graduating students from their programs. 

Doling out tuition tax dollars to Michigan’s community colleges that graduate, on average, only 20 percent of their students within three years is a recipe for robbing the poor (taxpayers) and giving the money to the rich (colleges and universities). Three things will happen:

1.  Colleges will hike tuition rates and fees until all the state money made available to them is gone. College administrators are public money pigs, plain and simple. 

2.  Under Wheeler Smith’s plan hundreds of thousands of Michigan undergraduates will enroll, assume an average of $14,000 per year in student debt, and half of them will not graduate from our state’s public 4-year universities within six years. It’s what’s happening now. Drop-out rates are up; graduation rates have dropped from 76 percent in the 70s, to around 50 percent today. Colleges and lending agencies are making out like bandits. The money pours in faster and faster even as fewer and fewer graduates trickle out.

3.  Colleges will not devote significant percentages of the new money to student instruction. Thus, the issue of student retention and student success will not be addressed by throwing billions of more dollars at our state’s two- and four-year institutions.

If Alma Wheeler Smith is serious about running for governor, she’ll get a campaign manager who’s not related to her, get crack-a-lackin’ on the fundraising, hire a staff, refine her platform with some people who have a more profound understanding of economics and education, update her Twitter page, get on Facebook, and get out into the communities around the state. Since Reconstruction, there have only been three black governors in the entire United States. Alma Wheeler Smith has a devoted following in Ann Arbor and Washtenaw County. However, her Tax and Spend Mambo ain’t gonna play so well in other parts of the Michigan. 

Rick Snyder would import his unique brand of crony capitalism to Lansing, as would 53 District House wanna-be Ned Staebler, who gives away our tax dollars for a living in his day job as a Vice President at the MEDC (Michigan Economic Development Corporation). Want to know what Alma Wheeler Smith has to say about the crony capitalism that has grown up during the reign of our state’s first female governor? ”As Governor, I would limit the practice of granting tax incentives to select businesses and, instead, promote a climate that allows all businesses to compete on a level playing field.”

Finally. The Mother Ship has landed and off comes a gubernatorial candidate who’s willing to stop abducting Michigan’s public school dollars in the name of “economic development.” The education unions should be giving Wheeler Smith candy and flowers, not to mention endorsements. Wheeler Smith should be doing fist-bumps state-wide with MEA education union Prez Iris Salters.

Wheeler Smith wants to invest in education, as opposed to giveaways to business. However, unless she gets some serious help to refine and sell her ideas to the public, Michigan will get stuck with more of the same economic development strategies that are funded by stealing money from public schools through SmartZones and TIF financing schemes, and giving those millions to businesses in the name of “economic development”—crony capitalism that funnels money to political pals, political donors and provides wildly inflated reports of the success of the programs, and no outside evaluation of any return on the taxpayers’ investment in such outfits as the MEDC, Ann Arbor SPARK. Then there is the biggest boondoggle of them all coming down the road: the Detroit Region Aerotropolis. Here’s the Aerotropolis spin: “64,000 jobs. $10 billion of additional economic activity over the next 25 years.” Tax breaks galore with public money. Millions siphoned from public schools to “attract” businesses to the region. Washtenaw County Administrator Robert Guenzel and the other boys behind this crony capitalism scheme can barely stand-up at the press conferences, because the idea of so much tax money to giveaway to their friends is better than Viagra. As Governor, Alma Wheeler Smith could very well put the brakes on this multi-county boondoggle.  

Wheeler Smith proposes a different approach to economic development: an end to crony capitalism, and a return to the investment in our state’s education system. There’s lots of work to be done, but before Alma Wheeler Smith comes out with anymore Encyclicals, such as her graduated tax proposal, she needs to have a campaign team in place who can help her spar with critics, and get off the ropes when she comes out with the creative public policy proposals Michigan needs.

Popularity: 27% [?]

November 27, 2009

Weekend Poll: Next on Channel 16—”Surprise” Homelessness in A2 and Washtenaw County

VN:F [1.9.3_1094]
Rate this posting
Rating: 4.8/5 (4 votes cast)

“Emergency funding” of social service programs always reminds me of those television shows one can always find late at night on the better cable channels about “surprise” pregnancies. You know the premise. The woman goes for nine months suspecting nothing then, suddenly, usually in some crazy locale, say, an amusement park, she gives birth to…..a baby! Zounds! She never even suspected she was pregnant. The nausea was “the flu,” and the unrelenting heartburn was caused by “spicy food.” The pregnancy was a complete shock, and the emergency birth of the baby an astounding revelation.

Homelessness in Washtenaw County and Ann Arbor is kinda like one of those “surprise” pregnancies. Who knew it was such a problem? Who could have guessed? All those foreclosures? Just a little gas.

The Mayor of Ann Arbor, as well as the ten members of City Council were recently shocked and amazed to discover that homelessness in Ann Arbor is a problem. The Four Ann Arbor County Commissioners of the Apocalypse, Jeff Irwin (53rd District House wanna-be), Leah Gunn, Barbara Bergman and Conan Smith were equally shocked and astounded to discover homelessness in Washtenaw County is up, up, up. At the moment, three thousand people have no place to hang their hats, rest their heads or shelter themselves in Washtenaw County. Talk about heartburn and nausea….

In Ann Arbor, funding to address homelessness over the course of the past two budget cycles has been cut, slashed and dismembered more times than a teen girl in a Wes Craven film. One of Mayor and veteran Ann Arbor City Council members’ best tricks has been to “cut” human services funding from the city’s budget in committee, only to “save” it later, when the proposed budget was presented to Council. Departed Third Ward Council member Leigh Greden called such maneuvers “scripting” outcomes. All of his pals on the Budget and Labor Committee played right along. Here’s the really evil part of the trick. Human services funding was “returned” to the budget, yes, but with nary an increase in funding. So for the past four years, the funding levels remained frozen as the need grew increasingly acute.

Thus, November’s “emergency” allocations to deal with the homelessness “emergency” in Ann Arbor and Washtenaw County. The funds allocated by both Ann Arbor City Council and the Washtenaw County Board of Commissioners provided shelter to a fraction of the 3,000 people in need. (The County financed shelter for 10 families, and the City allocation bought 60 more beds.) The “emergency” funding still leaves the majority of the homeless out in the cold, literally.

Over the past 4 years, Ann Arbor has built just 15 new units of affordable housing per year. The Chair of the Ann Arbor Housing and Human Services Board (the other 53rd District House wanna-be, Ned Staebler) told City Council, “This [Ann Arbor] is not the kind of place where we let people freeze to death on the streets.” Since 2007, he has been the Chair of the city’s Housing and Human Services Board. Staebler’s Board advises City Council on the “needs of the city’s low income residents.” Evidently, adequate housing and a significant bump in the number of shelter spaces were not among the pressing needs of low income residents in Ann Arbor this year. Or last year. Or the year before that one. 

As a result of Ned Staebler’s ability to ignore bloating, swollen ankles, weight gain, gas, nausea and heartburn, coupled with City Council’s fiscal and political machinations, alas, Ann Arbor has become the kind of place where we will let people freeze to death in the streets. 

So here’s the question: Is something better than nothing when it comes to funding shelter for the homeless? 

Popularity: 21% [?]

November 4, 2009

Washtenaw County Commissioners to County Residents: Voting on New Taxes Is For Pantywaists

VN:F [1.9.3_1094]
Rate this posting
Rating: 5.0/5 (4 votes cast)

On November 3rd, Washtenaw County residents refused to fund a new millage for the Sacred Cow of K-12 education. The earth shook, and the sounds of wailing from county school board trustees could be heard in Calcutta. 

Seems some people, alas, weren’t paying attention in class.

On November 3rd, tens of thousands of county residents told the trustees of 10 school boards in the County, as well as the trustees of the WISD, not to mention the celebrity line-up of local politicos who backed the $130,000,000 tax hike for “the kids,” to go fluff their auras. Voters told school officials and their political allies who endorsed the millage (including Ann Arbor County Commissioners Smith, Gunn and Irwin) that it was not the moment for a tax hike. 

The very next day, the French aristocrats on the Washtenaw County Board of Commissioners got together for a rollicking  ”Let Them Eat Cake” party and went right ahead and imposed a new property tax. County Administrator Robert Guenzel is busy printing up t-shirts: “Real Men Impose Their Property Taxes. Voter Approval is for Pantywaists.” The t-shirts may be purchased at many of the local Ann Arbor restaurants where Bobbie G. holds staff meetings, or at Ann Arbor SPARK’s headquarters.  

Ann Arbor’s four monarchists on the Washtenaw County Commissioners Barbara Bergman, Leah Gunn, Jeff Irwin (currently in the hunt for the 53rd District House seat), and Conan Smith provided half of the eight votes cast in order to impose the new property tax—an Act 88 Millage—to fund economic development and agricultural activities. The tax is expected to raise $608,000 from Washtenaw County residents. It’s a small tax. Tiny. Hardly noticeable. It’s certainly not the $30 million per year the WISD would have raised. So what’s the problem? It’s the principle of the maneuver, or rather the lack of principles associated with the maneuver to which I object. 

The new millage will provide $200,000 for Ann Arbor SPARK; $50,000 for SPARK East; $100,000 for the Eastern Leaders Group; $59,000 for 4-H activities; $27,000 for Horticulture Programming; $15,000 for Agricultural Innovation; $15,000 for the Food Systems Economic Partnership; and $137,000 for the county’s Department of Economic Development and Energy activities.

Commissioners Kristin Judge and Wesley Prater voted against the new tax. Meanwhile, Ann Arbor’s four County Commissioners demonstrated their deep commitment to funding agricultural programs from the Act 88 Millage created in 1913 to fund agricultural activities. They voted to give the County’s 4-H program a generous $59,000, and made their political pals at the various economic development boondoggles get by with only $349,000 tax dollars. Foreclosures in Ann Arbor just recently hit the double digits, Michigan is in the top ten states with the most foreclosures in the nation, but the four A2 Commissioners supported the new tax to fund not only “economic development,” but to feed the gaping maw of the county’s own bureaucracy in the form of the Department of Economic Development and Energy Activities

Pouring tax dollars into public-private “economic development” schemes without independent measurement of the progress of said economic development programs is like pouring water into sand on a beach. One rarely reaches the saturation point. Ever. The real problem is that when local politicos actually demonstrate due diligence and gently enquire after the taxpayers’ money poured into outfits such as SPARK, we discover that the Economic Development Emperor has no clothes. In April of 2009  Richard King, Chair of the LDFA, told Council members that without LDFA funding the 600 jobs SPARK officials take credit for creating over the past three years would have been created anyway. (The LDFA is a City Council-appointed committee that oversees the capture of the property tax money from Ann Arbor’s downtown development district that is funneled to SPARK.)

According to this piece, in the Ann Arbor Business Review, Google rode into town in 2006 promising to create 1,000 jobs by 2011. I actually think some local politicos got so excited by Google’s sexy talk of job creation, the boys had to stay seated during the press conference. Google greedily slurped up tax incentives from the state. Ann Arbor taxpayers footed the bill to have SPARK staff help Google officials find office space in downtown Ann Arbor. Taxpayers also paid to have SPARK staff wipe Google noses and cut their food, as Google executives were obviously incapable of taking care of their own real estate searches and physical needs. To sweeten the deal, taxpayers gave Google up to 400 parking spaces free of charge until 2010 in a nearby parking structure. Listen to Mayor Hieftje on the subject, and he’ll tell you Ann Arbor can’t get companies to locate to downtown without giving away spaces in our publicly owned parking garages. 

In March of 2009, Google axed 200 workers in its sales and marketing division. Today, the head of Google won’t discuss hiring plans for the Ann Arbor office. However, a recent piece in the Detroit News reported that Google has created a mere 204 jobs in A2. Local writer Nathan Bomey writes in a March 26, 2009 piece, “But the acknowledgement today that it has committed too many resources to sales functions marks a significant blow to Ann Arbor’s hopes of securing major employment growth via the search engine king.”

SPARK officials spin Google as a SPARK “success story.” The truth is that Google is a perfect example of why it’s irresponsible for elected officials to waste public tax dollars to attract business to Ann Arbor, and why the Washtenaw County Board of Commissioners should never have imposed a new tax to fund “economic development.”

Here’s another Google-in-the-making: This comes from the SPARK web site: MEDC, Ann Arbor SPARK, ETCS, MDIT and EMU have collaborated to bring Systems In Motion to the Ann Arbor area. ”Systems In Motion, a Silicon Valley-based IT services firm has chosen to locate a new support center in the Ann Arbor region. Venture-backed Systems In Motion combines the best practices of global service delivery, with strategic investments in intellectual capital and assets built for next generation technology architectures. Systems In Motion will create 1,085 new jobs in the Ann Arbor region over the next five years. Additionally, the company will invest over $15 million in capital.” 

Sound familiar? 

Ann Arbor’s County Commissioners, then, just voted to impose a new property tax to give tax dollars to SPARK and SPARK East to help the organizations continue with the important work—of creating high-paying jobs for those who work at the economic development outfits. The LDFA’s contract with Spark was for $872,836 during the audited 2007-08 year. $872,836 dollars to create no jobs which would have not otherwise been created. Michael Finney, the CEO of SPARK earns $200K per year plus benefits. In May of 2009, City Council voted to strip Project Grow of its funding. The very next month, the Council voted on a resolution sponsored by Second Ward Council member and LDFA Board member Stephen Rapundalo and Fourth Ward Council member Marcia Higgins, to increase the LDFA’s budget by $25,000.

I seriously doubt that county voters would have approved Robert’s Guenzel’s Act 88 Millage scheme had it come before them on the ballot November 3rd, alongside the WISD millage “enhancement.” Then again, Real Men Impose Their Millages, Sweetie.

Hell, there’s something to admire in a guy who can convince eight elected officials to spit into the faces of 347,000 county taxpayers so he can fund a new county department, and keep tax dollars flowing to his buddies at the “economic development” boondoggles.

Popularity: 20% [?]

October 30, 2009

It Takes A Lit Drop, Celebrities and Kissing Some Serious Voter Bee-hind to Win/Defeat A Millage

VN:F [1.9.3_1094]
Rate this posting
Rating: 4.7/5 (3 votes cast)

I don’t think I would be betraying any great secret by telling you that if you were to buy the list of the 6,800 or so 100 percent (aka regular) voters in Ann Arbor, you’d find A2Politico’s name on that list. It’s like the political Mensa Club, the top 6 percent of the voting stock in Ann Arbor. We aren’t geniuses, per se, but rather inordinately capable of locating our polling places and remembering the dates of local elections. Perhaps a better analogy would be to say the 6,800 of the us are the political Rain Men. Local politicos know the odds are very good we’ll go to the polls and cast our votes one way or the other. 

That why we get the lit drops. If you’re a candidate or group that’s going to spend $14,000-$16,000 printing up and mailing out glossy 8.5″ x 5.5″ cards, you want your lit to go to someone who will read the darn thing, think about your pitch, and (please God, please) go to the polls and vote (for you, your millage, your Charter amendment, etc….)

Today, I received not one but two pieces of literature about the WISD millage proposal. My first reaction is that McKinley CEO, and Citizens for a Responsible Washtenaw Treasurer, Albert Berriz, has money to burn. Well, he kinda does. The Ann Arbor Citizens Millage Committee has money to burn, as well. Today’s was my third mailing from that group. The proponents for the millage have the local celebs pitching for the five-year $150,000,000 “enhancement” tax.

The front of that group’s mailer is clever. There were my name, address and then a three column list of supporters of the millage. I perused the list. I saw the principal of the tot’s school along with a veritable local politico-a-palooza: State Senator Liz Brater, State Representatives Alma Wheeler-Smith, Pam Byrnes and Rebekah Warren, Ann Arbor County Commissioners Jeff Irwin, Conan Smith, and Leah Gunn and Demublican Second Ward City Council member Tony Derezinski. Alas, I’m not the kind of voter who gives a rat’s bahookie about whether or not local politicos endorse anything, particularly a tax hike.

I saw several of these same politicos (Brater and Gunn, for example) enthusiastically endorse soon to be ex-Third Ward City Council member Leigh Greden’s run for re-election in this past August primary election. Endorsement doxies among the local politicos in Ann Arbor have succeeded in undermining the whole endorsement process city-wide. I have this sinking feeling that several of these local politicos listed as supporters of the millage proposal would endorse Satan as “a long-time friend and colleague. He has worked hard and produced results for the citizens of Ann Arbor, without publicity and fanfare. Satan has earned my endorsement for his re-election, and I urge you to vote for him.”

Interestingly, Second Ward’s other Demublican City Council member, Stephen Rapundalo, has given his endorsement to the group opposing the millage.

Here’s a little cheat sheet about how much money the various groups are putting up for and against the millage proposal:

Campaign finance records show opponents of a countywide schools enhancement millage are outspending supporters of the proposal by a bundle, nearly $30,000.

Groups Against the Millage:
Citizens for Responsible Washtenaw, Treasurer, Albert BerrizMcKinley Real Estate CEO: $75,000

Berriz was quoted in a piece on AnnArbor.com as explaining his $75K investment thusly: “I’m very passionate,” about the issue, he said. “I am confident that this millage will not address the financial structural issues of the schools.” Berriz has called on school leaders to improve the transparency of the schools’ finances.  “I love Ann Arbor schools,” he said. “But it’s my obligation is to say things candidly.”

Well, kinda. Berriz’s McKinley company owns 6.2 million square feet commercial property. of The proposed millage would hit McKinley with a big tax hike. I’d be saying things just as candidly as Albie B. if I owned that much commercial property, and I’d be saying it on the radio and mailing multiple lit drops. 

Citizens for Responsible Washtenaw: $4,705.

Citizens for Responsible School Spending: filed a campaign finance report waiver saying it intended to raise and spend under $1,000.

Groups In Favor of the Millage:

It won’t come as a shock that the funds for mailings, robo-calls and other on-the-ground work is coming from the people whom the millage would benefit directly, school administrators, teachers and school board members.

Ann Arbor Administrator Association: $5,000.

Citizens Millage Committee: The Ann Arbor group has raised $23,361 in contributions from Ann Arbor residents. The committee has $10,433 left to spend.

Friends of Education: This group, based in Dexter, has raised $21,654 and has $9,860 left to spend.

Popularity: 19% [?]

October 23, 2009

The Politics of Education: The Scarlet T & the WISD Millage

VN:F [1.9.3_1094]
Rate this posting
Rating: 4.7/5 (3 votes cast)

Here’s a fact: public school teachers in Michigan earn the 4th highest average salaries ($55,000 per year) in the nation. A percentage of Michigan’s teachers earn higher salaries; a percentage of teachers earn lower salaries. I was shocked when I discovered the most incompetent teacher one of the tots had was on the list of teachers in Ann Arbor who are among the most highly paid. Know why that teacher earned $70K+ a year? Because he’d literally done his time. If you do your time as a teacher, and get some hours under your belt past your B.A., you’ll move up the salary ladder into the nice seats. Some teachers in Ann Arbor are in the orchestra circle seats, earning over $100K per year. All of the principals in the Ann Arbor Public Schools earn over $100K per year.

Stop huffing and puffing and remember the last birthday party your 9-year-old had with 24 friends at your house. Think about doing that every day of the week. You, 24 kids, helicopter parents, and local, state and federal benchmarks and goals you have to meet to make sure the party is a success. If this scenario sounds like a Francis Ford Coppola movie about ‘Nam, throw in a couple of those kids who really shouldn’t be in the mainstream classroom, add working with colleagues who may be drinking way too much caffeine, and stir well.  

Now, I have some good news and some bad news. First the bad news: This mewling and puking over teachers’ salaries and benefits as the root of ruination of the Ann Arbor School District’s budget is just so much composted chicken guano. In any business, salaries and benefits for employees comprise the bulk of the company’s expenses. Except in some companies. Those are ones where they use slave labor so you can have chocolate when you’re feeling sad, orange juice with your bagel, and tomatoes in winter. Lots of business owners would love to lower their cost of labor, but as the saying goes, “You shouldn’t do the crime, if you can’t do the time.” Most business owners I know aren’t prepared to go to prison to save on social security and Medicare contributions. I know I’m not. I need quiet when I sleep.

The teachers in the classroom are not the bloodsuckers responsible for the current financial mess. Oh, and neither is the State. In that nifty little piece sent out by the Ann Arbor Citizens Millage Committee the good folks who want you to vote yes on the WISD millage write, “The state system of school funding is not working. Every year we receive fewer dollars from the state, while the cost to educate has continually gone up.” Sure it has. Now we’re getting to the heart of the dragon. The costs of education continue to rise faster than the cost of living. This is true in elementary, secondary and post-secondary education. 

So, is funding for Michigan public schools down, down, down? No it’s not according to this document from the Michigan State Senate about the history of per pupil funding for schools in Michigan. Funding per pupil is up, up, up. In 1993, the state gave the AAPS $7,574 per tot. By 2007, that amount had risen to $9,619 per tot. Only half a dozen districts in the entire state get more per pupil funding than the Ann Arbor District—some you’d expect (Birmingham and West Bloomfield) and some you wouldn’t (Mackinaw Island, Jefferson Schools, Monroe County). 

More money per pupil from the State coupled with six millages and a generous tax donation from Ann Arbor residents, and we get per pupil funding that is over $11,000 per tot. I know what you’re thinking: “$11,000 dollars per kid?!?! And that’s not enough? Give me $33,000 per year and I’ll hire a full-time tutor to home school my brood.” Tempting, isn’t it? I have a more lasting solution. Read on.

There’s another name you should know: Iris Salters. She controls a budget of $137,000,000 dollars, and earns $256,000 per year. Steven Cook is another name you should know. He helps Iris allocate that $137,000,000 dollars and takes home $205,000 per year. Both Iris and Steven earn 4-5 times as much as the average teacher does in Ann Arbor. At their company, Iris and Steve spent $85,000,000 on salaries and benefits for their employees in 2008. 

Iris Salters is the president of the Michigan Education Association (MEA) and Steve Cook is the Vice President of the MEA.

In Michigan, it costs our school districts $1,600 per pupil just to pay for benefits for the state’s 150,000 teachers represented by the MEA, as well as those who are retired. In a March 2009 AAChronicle.com piece, AAPS officials and School Board members talked about the looming deficit and their options to address the budget gap. They talked about increasing enrollment (1,600 kids currently attend private schools in Ann Arbor). They tossed around the idea of increasing private donations. They talked about a county-wide millage.

What they never brought up was reshaping the AAPS District’s retiree benefit program. Know why? That would mean tangling with the MEA. Big time. But not just the AAPS Board would have to tangle with the MEA, our state senator Liz Brater and State Representatives Pam Byrnes and Rebekah Warren would have to be willing to tangle with the MEA, as well. Michigan teacher retirement pensions and benefits are state-mandated. 

Right now, Michigan teacher retirees get health care for life, as well as a defined monthly pension as opposed to say, a 401(k)-type plan. The costs associated with supporting that population of retirees is sucking the life and billions out of the Michigan economy, and crushing the budgets of every school district in the state. So what needs to happen? Folks should put down their pitchforks, and stop branding as bloodsucking bougies the teachers who teach at the local schools. Their salaries and current benefits are not the problem.

The county School Board members are a part of the problem. Before coming to voters to approve any millage all county School Boards should have played hardball and bid out health care and prescription drug coverage for current employees, and compared the bids to what the MEA brought to the table. County School Boards should also have taken a page from Robert Bobb’s Book and required a Dependent Eligibility Verification Audit (employees are required to provide documentation that everyone listed as a dependent is, indeed, a dependent). Detroit Superintendent Robert Bobb did that and found (shockingly) ineligible family members on the rolls of the Detroit Public School’s employee benefit plan. 

Ultimately, voters hold the solution to the $11,000 per kid funding black hole problem. 

Voters in Ann Arbor need to send a message to Lansing: We need to tell State Senate wanna-bes Representatives Rebekah Warren and Pam Byrnes, along with State House wanna-bes Ned Staebler and Jeff Irwin  to get on with the ever-so-necessary cage match with Iris Salters and the MEA. There is already a taxpayer-supported health care program for Iris’s members who retire, and it’s called Medicare. Check out the Medicare coverage for retirees. That would, of course, mean any teacher who retired early would be responsible for her or his own health care premiums until age 65. That seems fair to me. How about you? 

So why the heck hasn’t this happened already? It’s always about the dirty, pretty money. The MEA has made some pretty hefty campaign contributions to Rebekah Warren, Liz Brater and Pam Byrnes. It’s the carrot strategy. Get ‘em elected as “education” candidates, and they don’t ask inconvenient questions of their MEA Master. It’s not just our local state politicos. Because the MEA makes large campaign donations to politicos state-wide, a huge percentage of the tax dollars that should go to educating Michigan’s children go, instead, to supporting the MEA’s completely outmoded and unsupportable vision for the group’s retirees. That vision includes pension and retiree health benefits that the Bad Boys at the UAW gave up to save their industry from ruination.

If our current state representatives (not to mention those running for state office at the moment) from Ann Arbor won’t commit to taking on the expectations of the MEA and start the discussion—if they keep refusing to ask Iris Salters some of the hard questions that need to be asked, then voters can expect nothing in future but more desperate pleas for more money for the “kids.”

Oh, that won’t be more money for the kids in the classrooms. It’ll be more money for the MEA’s kids playing shuffleboard in Miami Beach.

Popularity: 20% [?]

October 22, 2009

County Commishs Withdraw Hands From A2 Taxpayers’ Pockets (For the Moment)

VN:F [1.9.3_1094]
Rate this posting
Rating: 4.5/5 (2 votes cast)

On October 9th I posted a grilled entrée titled, “A2, Have a Funny Feeling? It’s County Commissioner Conan Smith’s Hand in Your Pocket.” In that piece, I wrote about the Washtenaw County Ways and Means Committee meeting at which all four of Ann Arbor’s Commissioners voted to support a new millage to raise funds for local Ann Arbor boondoggle SPARK, SPARK East, the Eastern Leaders Group and to fund a county Department of Economic Development and Energy. 

The headline in the October 21st AnnArbor.com posting was somewhat comical: “Washtenaw County board delays decision on agricultural millage.” 

That millage wasn’t ever about agriculture, my fellow A2 Farmers. It’s about County Administrator Robert Guenzel and the four Commissioners from Ann Arbor funding their political buddies at SPARK, SPARK-East, and the Eastern Leaders Group. The kids at 4-H, horticultural programming, agricultural innovation and the Food System Economic Partnership, were never at the top of the funding list.

As I wrote on October 9th:

Economic development boondoggles first. Agricultural programs that educate and feed people last.

In addition, the gaping maw that is the Washtenaw County bureaucracy had to be fed: Those same eight county commissioners who voted to raise taxes without putting the question to the voters, voted to allocate $137,000 of the money generated by the new tax to fund a county Department of Economic Development and Energy. A back-door tax to feed the county bureaucracy—while the county’s unions give concessions to save their jobs.

So, where’s the majority of the $608,000 dollars raised by the Act 88 tax going, exactly? 

• $200,000 for the economic activities of Ann Arbor SPARK and $50,000 for SPARK East.

• $100,000 for the economic development activities of the Eastern Leaders Group. (Click here to read a wet-kiss-and-hip-grind-hug about his ELG political friends written by Bob Guenzel and dutifully posted by Concentrate.)

• $137,000 to fund the activities of the Department of Economic Development and Energy.

At the October 21st meeting, the Commissioners did two important things. First, the political part. They tabled the decision on the millage until after November 3rd. None of them are up for re-election, but it seems prudent to see what happens when voters have a say about the WISD millage. If a millage put before the voters for education goes down, and the County Commissioners go ahead and impose a new millage without asking the voters, I suspect those who vote in favor of it can expect some serious political blow-back when they’re up for re-election next summer.

Second, Ann Arbor County Commish Jeff Irwin asked that all of the items that are proposed to be funded with the $603,000 that the millage would raise be voted on individually, as opposed to being voted on as a block. This way, those who just can’t see why those bloodsucking kids at 4-H should get $59,000 (8.5 percent of the money from the “agricultural” millage), can just vote no on that item. Hells Bells! That $59,000 could go a long way toward hiking the salary of Ann-Arbor SPARK’s CEO Michael Finney. A $200K a year paycheck plus benefits just don’t go as far as they used to go.

A2 politicos, the Washtenaw County Commissioners are squirming. They should be.

Raising taxes to fund a Department of Economic Development and Energy and to spoon feed the majority of an “agricultural” millage to economic development boondoggles is wrong, and is the kind of sneaky politics that will get politicos tossed out on their ears next chance the voters get. The Act 88 scam was Bob Guenzel’s idea, and it should have earned him a rebuke, as opposed to the tacit cooperation of so many of the County’s Commissioners. 

So, what now? These Washtenaw county residents still intend to vote on whether to simply impose a new tax on the rest of the 347,340 of us after November 3rd. Commissioners have scheduled the public hearing about the County’s budget at 6:30 p.m. on October 22nd. So go on down to 220 North Main Street in Ann Arbor and give ‘em hell, Harry.

Feel the urge to contact your County Commissioners by email and talk taxes? Click here.

Popularity: 11% [?]

Older Posts »
Get Adobe Flash playerPlugin by wpburn.com wordpress themes