Ann Arbor City Council Endorsements: Part I Comment Count

Brian

WELCOME TO ANN ARBOR CITY POLITICS THUNDERDOME

2857922079_8791e97207_b
THIS, EXCEPT MORESO!

I quit playing video games so much this summer and I have definitely not improved my life by reading a bunch of MLive stuff. To my horror, it dawned on me that I was now a Person who had Opinions about Local Politics. The memorial service for my youth is scheduled for about five years ago.

I can think of no revenge better than trying to inflict this curse on others. I'll be less lonely during the next full moon if there are some dudes in "A More Perfect Union" T-shirts at the library as we have impassioned discussions about pedestrian safety. Also it's actually a very important time to get an opinion, city-wise.

But just in case here's a super super early jump.

[After THE JUMP: abandon all hope ye who enter here]

MY GOD IT'S AN OVERVIEW OF ANN ARBOR POLITICS

[Full disclosure: Rishi Narayan, one of the owners of UGP, is on the DDA. This post doesn't discuss the DDA.

First Martin is one of the sponsors of this blog. Despite that this post will advocate for a hotel that will compete with the Residence Inn Ann Arbor Downtown. This post has not been cleared, or even discussed, with First Martin. Sponsoring MGoBlog is fun and comes with no surprises.

As far as my personal views, I was quite libertarian and dead center left/right on that political compass thing when I took it. I am not a registered anything. This should give everyone sufficient reason to hate me.]

Ann Arbor's political scene is at once obvious and nonsensical. Despite being the sort of town in which a Republican has the same shot at winning an election as Rich Rodriguez, Ann Arbor is one of just three Michigan municipalities to have partisan elections. This means almost all of the action takes place during the August primary, which is forthcoming. The sitting councilmember in Ward 2 is an independent and will run in November; everything else is more or less decided in two weeks. (Compounding the bizarre electoral setup: this is an odd year election. Ann Arbor recently changed their setup from two year terms to four; this is the last odd-year election.)

That's the nonsensical part. The obvious part is that Ann Arbor's local government is overrun with folks who pass ordinances requiring closed captioning for public televisions without pausing to consider how often those televisions have the sound up. (Basically never.) Or reaffirming their belief in the Paris Accord, which thanks I guess? They just released drawings of a proposed 60 million dollar "urban trail" that covers all of three miles. Moving forward on this was a unanimous vote. They expected the U would be an enthusiastic participant; they are not. Meanwhile significant sections of Ann Arbor roadways are indistinguishable from Kandahar.

It's Leslie Knopes all the way down. There's a lot of virtue signaling about stuff that's either so negligible it shouldn't be talked about at all (closed captioning on muted TVs) or vastly out of the scope of local government (climate change). I imagine this is all but universal in local governance. It grinds my gears nonetheless.

Without traditional parties to fall back on, battle lines are clearest and most consistent when it comes to development. Team Developer has been on top for most of the last 15 years. They have eight seats on the council including the mayor. Team Stasis has three seats. Certain things need an 8-3 supermajority to pass, so things are balanced on a knife edge.

The approximate teams follow. Folks up for re-election are in bold.

DEVELOPER

  • Christopher Taylor, Mayor
  • Jason Frenzel, Ward 1
  • Kirk Westphal, Ward 2
  • Zachary Ackerman, Ward 3
  • Julie Grand, Ward 3
  • Graydon Krapohl, Ward 4
  • Chip Smith, Ward 5
  • Chuck Warpehoski, Ward 5

STASIS

  • Sumi Kailasapathy, Ward 1
  • Jane Lumm, Ward 2
  • Jack Eaton, Ward 4

Three of the four races being contested in August are explicitly about development. In three-minute introductory videos hosted by CTV, opponents of Frenzel, Ackerman, and Smith all immediately call out the current council for approving tall buildings downtown, with a particular focus on the 17-story hotel-condo-retail building the council approved on the "library lot" just north of the (yep) library downtown. The fourth race, between Eaton and Jamie Magiera, is less clearly pitched in those terms. Magiera has said he would have voted against the Library Lot. On the other hand, Eaton seems to vote against development more consistently than anyone else running for council.

This is all you get to vote on in Ann Arbor right now. You get foof and development or foof and less development. Even if there were other things to vote on, increasing housing availability (of any variety) in Ann Arbor is vastly more important than all other issues combined. So I'm going to recommend you vote for development.

That means you should vote for Frenzel, Ackerman, Smith, or (less so) Magiera on August 8th.

Here are some words justifying that.

HOT BUTTON ISSUES

collective-on-5th-plazajpg-6058123ce1aa6db9

this, or a slightly larger park

DEVELOPMENT. Ann Arbor is a very nice place to live, as magazines and websites and home prices keep reminding us. You can't throw an award in this town without hitting another award. The inevitable result: Ann Arbor will grow up, or it will grow out. Preventing high-density housing sends Ann Arbor down the same path San Francisco took some decades ago and will result in the same astronomical prices. This process is already well underway. Average home prices jumped an astounding 11% last year.

Ann Arbor prices have always been out of whack for a Midwestern college town. Almost literally everyone I know who has come to town in the last 20 years has struggled with sticker shock, including myself. Many have relocated to Ypsi because they more or less have to. These people should be part of the future of the city but cannot afford to live in it.

This is in part because there was a near-total cessation of high-density development for 30 years. That started to change about ten years ago and in the last five things have kicked into high gear. This is a good thing. The main problem with the pace of development in Ann Arbor is it is still far short of what's needed to meet demand. Two new dorms and several student-oriented high-rises added about 4000 new beds downtown; this merely kept pace with Michigan's expanding enrollment. Every high rise that goes up immediately fills up. The home buying market is brutal. The rental market is brutal, with renewals expected a few months into year-long leases.

Denying the fact that Ann Arbor will change with weak appeals to parking, traffic, and floodplain development is pure NIMBYism and should be rejected out of hand. Keeping Ann Arbor "funky" or "unique," which seems to be the main goal cited by development opponents, is 1) impossible and 2) detrimental to everyone in the community who isn't already locked into a mortgage they intend to keep until they die.

That's me, now, but getting there was a near thing. We put in an above-asking offer with 20% down and had our offer accepted a day before two higher offers—one 50k higher—were put in. I shudder to think what would have happened if our trigger finger was insufficiently itchy. And this was four years ago. The market has only gotten more vicious since.

Opposing development is selfish, often explicitly:

We have often thought our city to be rather special, in a community-supportive, casually fun but also fairly intellectual, colorful but not in an overly contrived sort of way. See our post, What Does it Mean to be an Ann Arbor Townie. In other words, a city to serve its citizens and welcome visitors on our own terms. [bold mine]

It is elitist (see above). It is inefficient. It excludes renters and condo-buyers from "the community." It forces longer commutes and robs Ann Arbor of tax revenue it badly needs because the university is exempt. Great swathes of the community are housing insecure because of a failure to build. Almost literally every service worker in town can't live in it. Solutions other than letting people build stuff are unicorn fairy dust.

This is the single most important issue facing the city today. Build.

THE LIBRARY LOT ITSELF. The alternative to the proposed development: a park. On top of a parking structure. That was reinforced so that a big building could go on top of it. Dirt, on concrete. Roots gradually growing into said concrete. If there was any thought that that lot should be open green space downtown it flew the coop once the garage was approved ten years ago. Also the proposed development has a public green space barely smaller than the park the lot could awkwardly accommodate—one maintained by the developer, not the city.

Tree Town Down has a level-headed and comprehensive explanation of the situation:

The root of the issue for me comes down to the public space and economics.  The library lot isn’t that big, it has a parking garage below it and assorted ramps, elevators and stairwells.  It can support a fairly small park that’s really more of a plaza as it’s not built to accommodate large trees or heavy sod and plantings.  I’ve advocated for a downtown park in the past, we could use a public commons space in Ann Arbor, but if you’re thinking of this as a central park with all the amenities we need, I’m sorry to disappoint.  This is more of an urban plaza, a little larger than Liberty Plaza around the corner which is just over 10,000 square feet.  As such, with the Core Proposal you get up to $15 million dollars in a one time payment and up to $3 million per year in property taxes plus a 12,000 square foot park/plaza!  The alternative is no money to the city and a 16,600 square foot park/plaza!  Money certainly isn’t everything but those economics are tough to ignore.  Think about our school, infrastructure and affordable housing needs.

Read that whole thing. I also recommend councilmember Chuck Warpehoski's post on his vote. The only reason to oppose the library lot development is a fear of tall buildings and people living close to their jobs downtown. (Two-thirds of Ann Arbor workers commute in from outside the city.) This is a critical election because either this large, very very useful building will go in or not.

Barracuda Networks is going to hire 120-some engineers. They are coming. They could live downtown. Or they could increase traffic and home prices.

amtrak-station-061014-rjs-02jpg-1937e7d05835540d

the correct building already exists

THE TRAIN STATION. OTOH, mayoral detractors are right about this one. This is the worst thing the mayor's faction is currently doing. Ann Arbor has a train station. It is a box protected from the elements, and is totally sufficient to meet rail transit needs. Nobody ever transfers, so there are no layovers. You either get on the train, or get off it and go into the city.

For some reason the mayor is trying to hammer through approval for a 50 million dollar replacement for this train station. The justification is a ludicrous study asserting that Amtrak ridership will increase almost tenfold by 2030. (It's down almost 20% in the last four years and has been basically flat for a decade.) This assumed the RTA millage would pass. It did not. It also made a brazillion other assumptions that fly in the face of the uniformly dismal history of light rail.

Hypothetically up to 80% of the money for this will come from the federal government, which means that Ann Arbor will only be paying ten million dollars for a form of transit that will be obliterated by automated driving within 15 years. If they get the money, which is questionable.

Compounding the dodginess of this situation is the council's refusal to be transparent about why they are pursuing a useless building. Councilmembers seeking re-election in this cycle broke down along "party" lines on that vote. If there was any way to signal a desire for development but not a train station I would enthusiastically recommend it. There is not.

THE URBAN TRAIL. I don't think you can vote against this? It wasn't even a part of the candidate forum. : /

AFFORDABLE HOUSING. This is distinct from Section 8 housing, which is aimed at the poor. Generally when people talk about affordable housing in Ann Arbor they're talking about workforce housing.  

It makes sense that people should live close to where they work, but the simple fact that convenient land in Ann Arbor costs a fortune makes addressing affordability directly all but impossible on a large scale. A recent affordable redevelopment checked in at 320k per unit, which is higher than the average home sale in town. The city is currently putting 400k annually towards affordable housing.

Ann Arbor is mostly accomplishing what minor progress they make by paying developers to include some less than market price options in new buildings. A proposed condo development near the hospital will get a couple million dollars in property tax forgiveness to build 15 units priced for folks with at most 60% of the local median income; the DDA is forking over a similar amount so that the Library Lot development will have a similar subset of affordable housing.

This is fine, I guess, but 15 units here and 15 units there isn't going to dent demand for low-cost housing in Ann Arbor. There are few ideas other than throwing a little cash at developers to create a subset of low-income earners who get a golden ticket. Chip Smith, an urban planner, is the only councilmember who's suggested something concrete and potentially workable:

“The reason that there’s such an emphasis and such a focus on people building bigger buildings with more density downtown is that’s the only place that we let them do that,” he said.

“One of the things that we have to do a much better job of is figuring out how to provide housing that’s close to jobs, have more dense housing in places where it’s appropriate," Smith added. “So one of the things that we’ve been working on, or at least that I’ve been talking with some of my colleagues about, is the idea of a transit-oriented development overlay district at South State and Eisenhower, which is a major job center. And to put a lot of housing units there, you know, removes some of the pressure on downtown.”

Picking a couple transit corridors and blanketing them with 1) dense housing and 2) even more transit is the best bet for actually affordable Ann Arbor housing. 

CLIMATE CHANGE. Climate change is a fact. It is also caused by the great sweep of history; nothing a single municipality does will affect it meaningfully either way. Ann Arbor should change its property tax code to exempt solar panels until they've paid for themselves and focus on things local governments can accomplish. This may not be possible under state law unless Ann Arbor gets creative. Try to get creative, and leave solar to private individuals. Again, I don't think there's a way to vote for this without submarining development.

THE FRANKENMILLAGE. The county's planning to put an unholy Frankenstein millage on the ballot this fall. Half of it would go to mental health services the state has cut back. Half would go to county police deputies, which is thinly justified because cops have to deal with mentally ill people. Places with their own police departments would get a refund, which the city council believes they can spend however they want.

In a perfect distillation of the foof aspects of local governance, the council passed a resolution stating they'd use the money thusly:

  • 20% for pedestrian safety. The city has adopted a goal of zero pedestrian fatalities by 2025. Advances in technology will do most of this for the city without anyone lifting a finger. Meanwhile it is unclear that any attempted remediation by the city will have an impact on a death rate of less than one per year. Vision Zero's purported successes in New York are stat-juking that tries to piggy-back on normal regression to the mean.
  • 40% for affordable housing, about which see above.
  • 40% for climate change. See above.

Whether or not this is a breach of civic obligation or not, your imperative as a voter is clear: reject this and make the county come back with a single-purpose millage, not this rotting mess of priorities stuck together to terrify the villagers.

DEER CULL. Ann Arbor is home to an increasing deer population. Deer are large rats that destroy landscaping, carry ticks, get hit by vehicles, and taste good. Cull them. At present there is little controversy about this outside of one "Deer Lives Matter" MLive commenter. In 2015 Mayor Taylor cast a solitary vote against the cull. Everyone else was in favor.

Part two will be a drill-down into the individual council races that will unsurprisingly conclude that you should vote for the four names bolded above.

Comments

evenyoubrutus

July 26th, 2017 at 9:51 PM ^

Also, after growing up in AA, I started out in Ypsilanti as an adult (well, Ypsilanti Township, which isn't Ypsilanti at all, but whatever). Now I live in Dexter. I honestly don't know why anyone would choose Ypsilanti over Dexter or Chelsea or Saline, or heck, even the west side of Canton. All are within 10-20 minutes of downtown (except maybe Chelsea) and are comparable in pricing to the Ypsilanti area.

Mr. Elbel

July 26th, 2017 at 10:04 PM ^

Whoa. I read all of that and it has zero bearing on my life. But I actually enjoyed the read. Further proof that I will read anything written by Brian.

jmblue

July 26th, 2017 at 10:09 PM ^

I'm OK with these kinds of posts as long as they stick to local issues - getting into state/federal politics would be another story. My main thing is that I'd like to see these new developments a little more spread out around the city instead of being so heavily concentrated downtown. Anything that can be done to relieve traffic congestion out of downtown would be nice, too, though I don't know how feasible that is. I have to take Fuller regularly and man, is it brutal between 4 and 6...

Esterhaus

July 26th, 2017 at 10:19 PM ^

To Chicago.

Single party non-competitive rule with all leaders appointed by the same party, Democrat, driving our economy and other local interests into the ground for the gain of the connected folks. We've been hemorrhaging people and businesses for decades as a consequence. Brutalesque-style cheap modern "architecture" buildings are being erected over historical landmarks and murdering the neighborhood "look and feel" and turning tight locally-run neighborhoods into overly-trafficked plasticville.

My neighborhood, Old Town, is being ruined by new hotels and apartments that will destroy it. You have my sincere empathy because I love A^2.

But unless multiple political parties can compete with opposing positions, and the local media present opposing viewpoints fairly, you guys are screwed just like us. I already have purchased land in Montana, where none of this crap would be allowed.

Good luck. Hope that 1,4-dioxane plume doesn't enter the Huron River BTW.

jmblue

July 26th, 2017 at 11:56 PM ^

 

We've been hemorrhaging people and businesses for decades.

 

Dude, you posted this lament on a forum in which many posters are from Detroit.

Lose two-thirds of your city's population in 50 years and then we'll talk.

 

 

mgowill

July 26th, 2017 at 10:41 PM ^

Meh.  Would have preferred a UFR from the Orange Bowl to this.  I'm just another tiny voice stating that I come here for not politics.  Your blog dude, do with it as you want.  Just voicing my opinion.  Carry on.

MGoBender

July 27th, 2017 at 11:29 PM ^

THEN DON'T CLICK THE FUCKING JUMP

Sorry. Been listening to the Drew and Mike podcast.  But seriously, he threw up a disclaimer and put the jump super early.  You could have not clicked it and not missed anything you cared about but passed on things you don't care about. Instead, you voluntarily read it and then complain for having to read it.

taut

July 26th, 2017 at 10:45 PM ^

I'm a little conflicted here. I hate seeing the political stuff on this blog, there's a place for that and in my mind, it ain't MGoBlog. On the other hand, I read the whole post because I grew up in A^2 and it was very well written and well reasoned. So, congrats Brian, you did a high-quality job of polluting the pristine MGoBlog environment.

A^2 does need to increase the housing stock. I helped my Mom sell her house in A^2 recently and I felt bad for the buyers. It was a feeding frenzy. But good for her, the house went up 11X in the 50 years she had it. Sounds like a lot, but that's roughly 5% per year.

The city has changed a lot over the years. There was a time you could buy things you actually needed on Main St -- footballs, hockey sticks, basketball rims at Stein & Goetz, back-to-school clothes at Klines, Fiegels and the Goodyear department store, and non-artisan baked goods at the Quality Bakery (became Quality Bar, now Palio). A lot of that changed when Briarwood Mall was built.

I mention this not to take a "get off my lawn" stance, but to observe that A^2 has been changing for a long time. When I was a kid (60's and 70's), if someone worked in A^2 they lived in A^2, and vice versa. There was one neighbor who worked outside the city, in Dearborn, and we thought that was as crazy as living in A^2 and working in Chicago. It was a very self-contained city. When I started at UM other students assumed I knew how to get around. I did, on a bike, or driving on city streets. I had almost no idea where M-14, I-94 or US-23 fit into getting around the area.

But it's changed. Now downtown is more akin to Birmingham. Real estate prices are non-Midwestern. There's bad traffic entering and leaving town. It's a cool place and educated, well-heeled people want to live there. So it continues to change, upscale. The penalty of success I guess.

 

PeteM

July 27th, 2017 at 8:09 AM ^

I also grew up in A2 and  remember Stein and Goetz (great Ann Arbor German name) well.  I used to buy hockey stuff.  I think opponents of a changing downtown forget that downtown was dying in the 1970s.  Fiegel and Goodyear closed, and it wasn't obvious that they'd be replaced.  The mix now may not be to everyone's liking, but it's certainly better than empty storefronts

In terms of being self-contained, I think there have always been some commuters (there's a reason you see more Fords in Ann Arbor than GM vehicles -- there have alway been Ford employees who worked in Dearborn and Livonia in Ann Arbor) but agree that there are more now.

160 IQ

July 26th, 2017 at 10:54 PM ^

Awesome post.  Climate change is real.  It's always been there and has nothing to do with human CO2.  Sprawl has a much greater effect.  Also solar panels create 300 times more toxic waste for the same electricity as nuclear.

pescadero

July 27th, 2017 at 2:08 PM ^

"Also solar panels create 300 times more toxic waste for the same electricity as nuclear."

 

300 times more by volume - but way less nasty on a per unit basis... and the 300x assumes you don't recycle the solar panels and just toss them in a landfill.

 

...and nuclear is the CLEANEST non-renewable we currently use.

wesq

July 26th, 2017 at 11:53 PM ^

Part of the problem is Headlee. My parents would downsize their 4 bedroom on the Westside that they bought for a family of 5 in 1985 but their housing costs would go up. But I do appreciate everyone in the State subsidizing my inheritance. I think a lot of older Ann Arborites find themselves in a similar situation and it not only constricts supply but puts an unfair tax burden on new owners and those who rent.

julesh

July 26th, 2017 at 11:59 PM ^

Upzone everything. I sent in an absentee ballot from Israel to vote in the ward 4 primary to get Eaton out so one less person can stand against development.

SwordDancer710

July 27th, 2017 at 12:18 AM ^

I would suggest that you reconsider your quitting of video games considering (1) the current political environment and (2) the fact that 2017 has been an excellent year already for the video game industry. If you like open-world games, Final Fantasy XV, Horizon: Zero Dawn, and Zelda: Breath of the Wild will happily distract you from the real world. If you like more focused RPGs, Persona 5 and the recent expansion Stormblood to Final Fantasy XIV are great ways to spend time until football starts in earnest. Not to mention some excellent indie darlings like Hollow Knight, Pyre, and Enter the Gungeon.

uminks

July 27th, 2017 at 2:09 AM ^

Is not Ann Arbor a suburb of Detroit by now? Also, when I went to school there in the early to mid 80s apartment rental prices were around $500.00 per month. I had to live in Ypsi to make ends meet.

bronxblue

July 27th, 2017 at 2:06 PM ^

Well, you seem to have a thin skin when it comes to people pointing out hypocrisy and ad-hominem statements you make.  

Again, this article 100% said it was about politics (and even then, it really wasn't all that political IMO).  You didn't have to click, or read it, or then comment about it, taking a swipe at "Brian types", whatever lazy caricature of complex human beings you think that stands for. It's his blog.  The reason the politics ban exists is because Brian has to deal with the fallout of a political thread whether he starts it or not (as witnessed by the 300+ comments here), but if you are I start it nothing happens to us except maybe our accounts get suspended.   If he wants to say "I dislike X" or "I want to see Y", those are his words.  He accepts that cost.  But he's not going to accept that cost on my behalf, when I'm the one introducing the issue.

 

BuckNekked

July 27th, 2017 at 5:54 AM ^

Imoved to Brighton and got away from 'Little San Francisco". You want California? Move there. The smug is unbearable in AA these days.

JClay

July 27th, 2017 at 8:15 AM ^

This is Brian Cook and his band of cronies most craven attempt yet to distract people from the greatest threat that's plaguing Ann Arbor: the existence of Draftageddon. #SingleIssueVoter

Bluegriz

July 27th, 2017 at 8:24 AM ^

Brian is breaking his own rule to follow an infamous Dave Brandon rule.

I wonder if the end result will be the same.

Let's just hope the politics combined with the upcoming site conversion doesn't completely ruin everything.

ScruffyTheJanitor

July 27th, 2017 at 8:25 AM ^

and his OP, let me just say: I am pretty sure Brian could get himself elected Mayor in just about every city I have lived in.

 

Also: so much this:

Climate change is a fact. It is also caused by the great sweep of history; nothing a single municipality does will affect it meaningfully either way.

I have seen too many damn Mayors and City Council members try grandiose "Green Initiatives" or what not in a move that is either worthless virtue signaling or obvious fodder for future campaign ads. Sensible, easy stuff (like not taxing solar panels or even just improving traffic flow) gets tossed aside for a "Green Infrastructure" nonsense that costs a lot of money and gets about half the use that they assume it will. I'd be much more impressed with a mayor that said, "we are going to do everything we can to make traffic flow, encourage homeowners to switch to fuel-efficient HVAC units, and offer tax incentives for Solar, geothermal, and other energy saving devices, " than I am when some city council member who touts a 45 Million dollar bike-path/dog park/greenway/greenspace as a way to accomplish anything.

lbpeley

July 27th, 2017 at 9:59 AM ^

Been in construction for 23 years. Took a LEED certification class a few years ago because that was coming to be the next big thing. Talk about a fucking WASTE of money, time and gov't resources that could be much better put to use almost anywhere else. The supposed environmental benefits of LEED are laughable and pretty much nil. The intent is probably a good idea but the application is almost comic. If you don't think that whole craze isn't one HUGE money grab you are willfully stupid. For a comparison for the unlearned, green construction following LEED practices is basically like buying the 3 times as costly organic food at the grocery store but without the health benefits. 

We are back

July 27th, 2017 at 8:31 AM ^

I've seen many users get sent to Bolivia for talking politics, yet here we are talking politics with the board owner. I come to blog to not read the shit show that is our country's politics, I stopped reading the paper, Facebook, and a few other sites because of political agendas. I think I'm gonna take a break from the log for awhile until football season is here, I hope I don't see another post like this when I return.

bronxblue

July 27th, 2017 at 2:10 PM ^

I mean, you can also email him.  I've done that when I've had actual issues with the content on the site.  

And while I doubt you'll come back to read this comment (because again, you claim to be out for a month), announcing to everyone you are offended by this discussion feels like grand-standing to me.  Your mileage may vary, obviously, but just leave if you want to leave, not slam the door  and yell "Goodbye!"