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When Good Ideas Go Bad
Sometimes good ideas get twisted. They
fall in with a bad crowd, take a wrong turn and end up in big trouble. Nice ideas gone
wild. Sounds like a raucous Spring Break movie. But here
in CdA, while reality is far less titillating than such a movie,
it can seem every bit as disruptive.
Take, for example, the attempt by our local
officials to help renovate Sorenson and Winton Elementary Schools. Good idea. Getting
the schools in compliance with the
Americans with Disabilities Act, (ADA)
is important. So
what's the normal, direct method for funding these kinds of upgrades? It's
through the school district. The district administration proposes
a building levy or bond issue for a variety of needs in the district. Voters
consider the list of improvements and choose whether to tax themselves
for the additional costs. It's clear, direct and responsible.
Now let's look at the wayward method unfolding
in CdA right now. Sorenson
and Winton are old schools. They've needed upgrades for years
that were never included in school improvement levies. Did the district
administration neglect these schools because they're not in the newest
neighborhoods? I don't know but just a few years ago the school
district vigorously tried to close Sorenson. Now, however,
things have changed. High-end luxury housing has blossomed in our
downtown, bolstered by large injections of public tax money from
the urban renewal agency, LCDC. So now LCDC slides in to embrace
Sorenson and Winton, and most probably the school district administration
building too.
Good thing, you say? I don't agree. In order to include
the schools, LCDC has to extend its borders by using a "shoestringing" method. The
precedent set by this action is definitely not a good thing. It's
a very dangerous thing.
Cities are forbidden, by law, from using
the shoestringing method in their annexations. They cannot just draw a line out from
their existing boundaries to annex an outlying area, it has to be
contiguous to city land. Shoestringing is thought to allow
far too many opportunities for corruption and abuse. If our
elected officials are prohibited from shoestringing, why can the
unelected LCDC board that controls millions of dollars in taxpayer
money with very little oversight, why can they use this highly suspect
method of increasing their borders? Here's the answer: Because
the law doesn't say they can't. It also doesn't say they can. It
just doesn't say.
The Idaho Urban Renewal law was written
way back in the 1960s, and its authors could never have imagined
the massive use of this tool today. The old law is full of loopholes
which big developers and urban renewal boards are quite savvy about
using to their advantage. Representative
Phil Hart of Athol has written a bill to correct the shoestringing
problem in the urban renewal law. But CdA Mayor Bloem sent a letter
against the change and advised our legislators to ignore the "vocal
few" trying to update the law. In an added twist to the good
ideas gone bizarre theme, LCDC uses public tax money to pay a lobbyist
in Boise to work against any changes the public tries to make to
the urban renewal law. Let's hope our lawmakers in Boise understand
the danger of the shoestringing precedent and do the right thing,
in spite of pressure coming from sophisticated, big money sources.
Another good idea gone awry is the sidewalk
repair being pushed by the City of CdA. Certainly safe sidewalks are in everyone's
best interest. After much checking, I can report that the city
owns all the improvements within the right of way. That means
the sidewalks and any trees as well. Nearly all the sidewalk alignment
problems are caused by adjacent trees, but the city will not fix
the sidewalk. They demand the homeowners pay for the repairs.
General estimates are $2000 for the average repair, a price tag that
will burden most local citizens. For those who can't fund the
repairs, there's a tiny amount of grant money available, but only
$1000 each for 20 properties. There are hundreds of sidewalks that
need repair.
The indignance brought on by the sidewalk
spree is because we all see many millions of dollars in tax revenues
going to high-rise luxury condominium projects, parks with no-swimming-allowed
ponds to beautify upscale commercial developments, and huge money
injections for the pay-to-enter private community center. Yet
the stalwart citizens who comprise the backbone of the community
all year long, not just a few weeks each summer, get nothing but
a reminder letter from their city: Your sidewalks must be in compliance
by June.
And, to crank the commotion even higher,
the city is charging a $50 fee for each repair permit. Even City
Councilman Mike Kennedy realized that was a bad idea. He wrote last July, "I don't
believe there is a permit fee for the sidewalk repair...because I
don't think that would make sense." Me either, Mike, but
it's true.
Good ideas gone bad. It's not the original intent that's
the problem, it's the process used to achieve the goals. Help
the schools, but let's do it the right way, which is with voter approval
through the school district. Fix the sidewalks, but show some
the homeowners some r-e-s-p-e-c-t and make an effort to help. Where's
that rainy day fund?--oh, it's down the hole. Well for goodness sakes,
at least comp them the permit fee, please.
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