Obligatory Ann Arbor Mayoral Endorsement Comment Count

Brian

tl;dr: vote for Christopher Taylor, who is good on many things, isn't really responsible for the road issues since he's in a state that's #46 in road spending, and isn't a ludicrous BANANA*.

Please, please, please vote in this election. Consider it a donation to the site. If you're not already registered in Ann Arbor you have until July 9th to do so. If you're a student consider voting absentee: the reason your rent is so damn high is largely because students turn out for local elections in dismal numbers. Even 20% turnout from students would decisively and permanently re-orient AA politics away from homeowner dominance.

This has been "Brian shouts into the void for a paragraph." Anyway.

*["Build Absolutely Nothing Anywhere Near Anyone"]

CHRISTOPHER TAYLOR

Taylor's running for his second term after taking over for long-term mayor John Hieftje and is more or less a vote for Ann Arbor to continue in the same direction it's taken over the past 15 years. Development is generally encouraged in the downtown area and certain corridors around the city.

Taylor isn't ideal. Under his leadership the city spends some time and money on questionable activities, the foremost of which is a downright weird proposal to build a train station in Fuller Park*. That hypothetical station is near nothing except UM Hospital and would turn a big chunk of Ann Arbor parkland into a parking deck seemingly designed for the hospital, especially since the regional RTA millage and subsequent commuter rail from Detroit failed in 2016 and will not be on the ballot in 2018.

The city also spends a chunk of money on climate change when the only meaningful action cities can take is to reconfigure themselves so that people don't have to drive as much. The climate stuff is a subset of the usual strain of virtuous-seeming but ultimately silly policies that most small lefty cities undertake. (Your author was burned by that earlier this year when he went to Wolverine Brewing for the Loyola-Chicago Final Four game only to find out that the closed captioning, which the city mandated a couple years ago for all public TVs, was directly over the basket. Any deaf people also at Wolverine were no doubt equally livid.) Some recent public art that consists of metal stapled to a bridge seemingly at random is a particularly goofy expenditure.

And, yes, all of the rabbling about Ann Arbor's roads is a tiny bit justified because of those expenditures. However, those are dwarfed by already extant road spending, which is an eight-digit affair annually. Ann Arbor's road failures are largely a function of state spending. 82% of Michigan roads were rated poor or fair by the American Society of Civil Engineers; the state road system got a D-. Ann Arbor is at ~62%** and has a plan to get that down to 20% over the next eight years; they've been addressing the issue since 2014. The city just unanimously voted to add $4.3 million in road spending from cash reserves. There is no real difference in road policy between the anti and council parties, and no quick fix for cash-starved infrastructure.

Meanwhile, to live in a city in the midst of a housing crisis that is forcing out huge swathes of the next generation of Ann Arborites so that high net worth seniors in paid-off homes can avoid minor inconveniences in their lives means there is only one issue to vote on: development. And while Taylor has the odd habit of wondering just who is going to live in new apartments in a town with a 2% vacancy rate, he and his allies on council have continued to approve large buildings people can live in while Eaton and his allies vote against them.

Valid critiques of Taylor's approach come from the left and YIMBY territory. Ann Arbor's zoning is still highly restrictive, includes parking minimums, and has failed to chuck every student rental in an expanded downtown area. Baby steps are not sufficient to address the housing crisis, and that's largely what we've gotten. None of this matters because of his opponent.

*[I'm omitting the time and money spent putting together the "Treeline" plan for a 3-mile path through downtown since that passes unanimously when it comes up. For the record, I find the Treeline about as baffling as the train station. In both cases the city is hoping to get something for nothing, or close to it. The federal government will hypothetically pay 80% of the cost for a new train station and the city government isn't budgeting any money towards implementing the Treeline; they're hoping to get private donations.]

**[Those two articles don't use the same scales, unfortunately, so that is an estimate. 82% of Michigan roads score from 1 to 5 on the PASER rating scale. The Ann Arbor-specific article has a grouping for 1-3 and one from 4-6. I assumed a third of the roads in that category (28%) were rated 6.]

[After THE JUMP: A Person who is Not Recommended.]

JACK EATON

eaton

Eaton is an archetypical Boomer NIMBY, a fauxgressive who spews nonsense in an effort to preserve Ann Arbor in amber. Eaton's campaign is largely designed to appeal to low-information fixed-income voters whose only priority is their tax bill. This extends to making making deranged claims that are in fact outright lies:

Finally, Eaton charges that crime is more prevalent than folks know. "In the Fourth Ward, there's a house near Allmendinger Park where last year the police responded to seventy-two calls. There were two overdoses there. One was fatal. There are guns, knives, and assaults. There's drug sales and drug use."

That assertion is juuuuuust a bit outside:

Soon-to-retire police chief Jim Baird emails that's not quite accurate. "[O]n the west side of the City near Allmendinger Park, we had 25 calls for service last year, not 72," he writes. "Six calls were related to some type of criminal activity, and there were none classified as weapons offenses."

That's a lie—by an order of magnitude—hidden in the pages of the Observer in the hope that it'll scare someone into voting for him. Eaton continually pushes for more police in a town with a rock-bottom crime rate despite protests from the police commissioner. Violent crime went down 25% (from its already tiny baseline) from 2010 to 2016. Property crimes went down 34%. Focusing on crime is absurd, and yet.

This is not a one-off, it's a theme for Eaton—a 65-year-old retiree. When he was the only vote against Ann Arbor's largely symbolic, punchless affordable housing initiative in 2015 he justified his vote like this:

"If we continue to tax our residents in a manner that allows us to afford to fund regional policy changes, it's actually going to have an impact on the ability of people on limited or defined incomes to live in our community, and I think that's counterintuitive when you're trying to address affordable housing."

This betrays a NIMBY mindset that prioritizes existing homeowners to the exclusion of all else. I find this "Got Mine, Fuck You" attitude deeply immoral and hope you do too.

But even if you don't, Eaton's argument about city taxes is also complete poppycock. Ann Arbor city property tax rates have fallen almost a mil since 2013:

image

School taxes, which the city council has no power over and must be voted on, have gone up. The city has rolled theirs back.

The slight annual decrease in millage rates is a characteristic feature of Michigan's taxation system. The Headlee Amendment automatically rolls back property tax rates when property values increase, and Ann Arbor has seen a terrifying spike. Since 2012 the average home price in Ann Arbor has increased 48%.

Thanks to the other major piece of state property tax legislation, Prop A, existing homeowners have been entirely shielded from this spike. Prop A did a bunch of different things to reform the state's education funding; it also limited property tax increases to the inflation rate. Over the same period of time that Ann Arbor home prices went up by 50%, inflation limited property tax increases to 6.6%. Or, uh, 0% in real terms. And that is the number to use since Social Security is indexed to inflation.

Existing homeowners have seen their city taxes go down in real terms since 2013. And probably a lot farther back since the 2008 financial crisis crushed city finances, because Prop A has no limit on how much property tax rates can fall. It was only this year that recurring general fund revenue recovered to 2008 levels. Rabbling about extra tax burden is a fantasy.

Meanwhile new construction has helped the general fund recover. New construction throws off scads of property tax thanks to that spike in value, and the limited number of homes that do get purchased and have their taxes reset to the sale price. Another feature of Prop A is that non-homestead properties (ie, rentals) get socked with 18 extra mil worth of education taxes, all of which goes directly to AAPS's bottom line.

The inevitable result of skyrocketing property values and the tax advantages of staying in one place:

1. Fewer houses are hitting the market

New residential listings in the first quarter of 2018 are down 12.3 percent compared to the number of new listings at the start of 2017.

2. Limited inventory means fewer houses are being sold

So far, 2018 has seen 13.9 percent fewer home sales compared to this time last year.

3. Houses are still selling quickly

On average, single-family houses in Washtenaw County are spending 51 days on the market so far in 2018.

4. Sale prices continue to rise

The average residential sale price so far in 2018 is $310,155, which is an increase of 10 percent compared to this time last year and 44 percent compared to a decade ago.

And that's Washtenaw county as a whole, not just Ann Arbor. Anyone who's talked to someone interacting with AA's real estate market knows it's even more of a disaster zone than the county numbers imply.  

The only reason Ann Arbor's millage has fallen despite the electorate's tendency to rubber-stamp any tax increase that shows up on a ballot are those big ol' buildings. Those buildings house people and throw off vastly more tax relative to infrastructure costs than single-family housing, especially when property tax increases are limited to inflation.

If Jack Eaton is serious about reducing taxes for fixed-income retirees he should be voting for every building taller than three stories that comes across his plate. He should be advocating for towers that stretch to the sky that shower their surroundings in property tax. Instead he and his allies on council are voting against stuff like a four-unit condo across from the stadium even though that development is by-right*.

Unless Eaton can somehow convince Ann Arbor to not vote for every millage that crosses their plate, the only way "out" is to build, because the state's tax system is already set up to give Baby Boomers who bought their houses before 1994 the easiest ride possible. One wonders how much intergenerational wealth transfer to Jack Eaton and company is enough.

Age_Wealth_Gap

blue = 1989, red = 2016

That seems like enough. Jack Eaton disagrees, and he's willing to get the city sued because of it.

This nonsense is a pattern as well. Eaton's arguments rarely make even a vague amount of sense. He votes against site plans that improve mitigation in the floodplain because... they're in the floodplain. During an extremely inadvisable sojourn into the Ann Arbor YIMBY group on Facebook he made a tautologically nonsense argument:

...if single family zoning districts are up-zoned to multi-unit districts, which is a common suggestion here on YIMBY, that residents wishing to live in single family neighborhoods will seek that kind of housing in nearby communities and townships.

National real estate statistics show that millennials are the biggest demographic group buying single family homes. Urban planners have been advocating dense central housing to accommodate the demands of young professionals. Millennials are a huge demographic group that drove that sensibility. They are now pairing-up and seeking housing suitable for child rearing – something with a nice yard, within walking distance of a good school. There will continue to be young professionals seeking vibrant urban life, but not in the numbers that the millennials represent in the general population. There is no one single housing type that is desired by every person. We need to be sure that there is plenty of housing of all types available. Removing single family homes as an option will lead to further urban sprawl as buyers seek the kind of housing that fits their family.

This is literally "no one goes there anymore, it's too crowded." It is also deeply incorrect. While it's true that urban growth has slowed it's largely because of zoning. Price premiums keep going up. This is obvious for anyone who's touched AA's real estate market, or knows anyone who has, in the last 20 years.

It's infuriating. Either Eaton is capable of deluding himself into actually believing tautological nonsense or is arguing in bad faith. Most of his platform is similarly empty. He and his allies are constantly bringing up the maintenance the council party has supposedly failed to undertake, but when the city did its first review of water rates in 15 years, what happened?

Mayor Christopher Taylor and his allies approved the new rate structure, which was opposed by Council Members Anne Bannister, Jack Eaton, Sumi Kailasapathy and Jane Lumm.

They voted against it because the report that came back from Stantec laid out the case that single-family homeowners were being systematically underbilled relative to corporate and multi-family users:

image

Stantec is a giant company with billions in annual revenue that does this stuff constantly. The Eaton wing of council failed to understand the report, assumed they knew better than actual professionals, and once again reverted to protecting an already protected and wealthy class of people. And they again wanted to expose Ann Arbor to a lawsuit—state law says utility fees must be proportional to costs—because of increases to water rates that are necessary to maintain AA's aging system. Then they have the audacity to rip the council party for failing to pay attention to basic infrastructure!

Jack Eaton is an unserious person, and Ann Arbor should be embarrassed that this dingus is on council. It does not do to think what would happen if he was mayor. You tell him to get bent. "Get Bent, Eaton!" you say if you see him.

Vote Taylor on August 7th.

*[A by-right development is one that meets existing zoning. Many projects will request variances or rezonings; these can be legitimately voted up or down. Voting against a by-right development means the developers can sue your ass because you told them a building with parameters X and Y is fine and then voted it down anyway.]

Comments

Sam1863

July 3rd, 2018 at 9:04 AM ^

Wasn't it? I'm not a soccer fan, but I couldn't stop watching it. It was one of those games where I didn't want either team to lose. And I felt so damn bad for Japan's goalkeeper - he made those back-to-back fantastic saves in the second half, only to get beat on a goal where Belgium's attack was so perfect that he didn't have a prayer. Terrific game.

Yinka Double Dare

July 2nd, 2018 at 5:33 PM ^

Rules are pretty easy:

You're allowed to discuss Ann Arbor politics in this thread.

If Brian (or one of the other approved/employed site writers like Seth or Ace, since one can assume that if they make the post, they had approval) makes a post on another political topic, you're allowed to post in that thread about that topic.

Do not post about politics anywhere else on the site.

GarMoe

July 2nd, 2018 at 8:27 PM ^

One can certainly see the lean of a site owner by their policies on political posts/comments.  Brian’s is: politics for me but not for thee and as several have noted here, duh, “it’s his site he can do what he wants” and I agree wholeheartedly - I ain’t complaining.    Does anyone really debate that though - it’s his site, he sets the rules?  I hope not.    But if you’re interested in a sports site that leans in the other direction, more open forum politics or otherwise - check out Outkickthecoverage.com.  

AZ_blue

July 2nd, 2018 at 4:30 PM ^

I'm impressed with anyone that is actively involved in local politics. I don't even know who my city's mayor is. I'm still probably not even going to google it. 

mad magician

July 2nd, 2018 at 4:32 PM ^

If you hadn’t included the picture of Eaton, I’d have imagined he looks exactly as he does. Credit to your prose, I guess. This is a fine example of engaged citizenship, which is something the University of Michigan taught me is important.  

Blue In NC

July 2nd, 2018 at 4:33 PM ^

I left A2 over 10 years ago so I am out of date on the current situation and I don't know anything about about Jack Eaton.  But I have had several direct conversations and experiences with Chris Taylor and found him to be intelligent, thoughtful and caring.  He would definitely get my vote if I were still around to participate.  Take that for what it's worth.

MGoBender

July 2nd, 2018 at 4:40 PM ^

Love reading these posts and as a slightly younger millennial, am right with Brian. I lucked into getting a condo in Ann Arbor at the right time. A year or two earlier would have been the jackpot, but a year later would have been unaffordable. And now, basically, I’m stuck for a while. Which is fine, but I have an aging condo that, sure will sell for a lot more than I bought, but it’s not like I can upgrade and stay in Ann Arbor without 5+ years of devoted downpayment saving.

pro-development all the way 

The Donger

July 3rd, 2018 at 12:11 AM ^

If you want to post about politics - run a political website.

This "sports only, no politics - unless I want to express my views, because I run the blog" is fucking bush league!!!

Ban me - onto a real sports website.  I hate hypocrites...

teldar

July 2nd, 2018 at 4:47 PM ^

Sounds like what Ann arbor should do is do away with residential property tax and go all business property tax and income tax. Apartments would get tax to high heaven and people living in house wouldn't have to pay for all the services for people living in apartments. Shorfall would be made up by a 4% City income tax. Maybe more. 

Um1994

July 2nd, 2018 at 4:54 PM ^

Ann Arbor considered an income tax several years ago, which would have to be approved in a local election.  The City conducted polling and the response was an overwhelming "NO" even with the provision that property tax would be drastically reduced (I believe that is in the City Charter).  People just don't trust any form of government to follow through on such items.  Although, an income tax would generate millions of dollars for the city given the number of non-resident commuters.

Um1994

July 2nd, 2018 at 5:01 PM ^

Also, I don't think a city in MI could charge a 4% income tax - legislative limits?  The highest is Detroit at 2.4% for residents and 1.2% for non-residents - you have to charge it to everyone and non-resident can only by 50% of the resident rate.  Residents pay if they work within or outside the city limits.

pkatz

July 2nd, 2018 at 4:48 PM ^

I know Christopher Taylor from my days in AA - good, smart guy.  If I were still in town, he'd certainly have my vote. 

Do the right thing and keep all dinguses (is that the correct pluralization, or is it dingi?) out of public office.

His Dudeness

July 2nd, 2018 at 4:53 PM ^

Ahhhh the "Boomers" where to begin... The world's worst generation. What a bunch of sycophantic leeches. What generation has been given more to begin and left less at the end? Thanks for that Trump-cherry on top on the way out too. As if saddling the next generation with student loan debt,  global warming, a throw away mentality, destroying social security, the dissolution of state secured pensions (unless you're a senator ammirite?) and the institution of a greed based incentive structure for literally everything wasn't enough. Take a bow, dirtbags! You've certainly earned it!

Also, ban as many people as possible please.

Kthnxbai 

Jon06

July 2nd, 2018 at 5:26 PM ^

I am interested in all thoughts about baby boomers elaborating on the ways in which they are the single worst generation ever. It's true, and we have to live with it, so we might as well get to gripe about the morally bankrupt jerks while we wait for them to stop fucking up the country/world by finally becoming ineligible to vote by dying off. But, y'know, that's politics. Shouldn't talk about it here.

His Dudeness

July 2nd, 2018 at 7:31 PM ^

It would make me feel a lot better if you figured out a way to take the second mortgage payment (student loan debt) off our backs before you all die, but you're too greedy for that. 

This is coming from someone who has done very well and paid mine all off already by the way. 

Here's an idea; instead of blaming your generational victims how about doing anything to pull the plane up before it smashes into the mountain. You're too proud for that I'm guessing. Of what I have no idea. Your generations greatest success was ruining the progress of the prior and fucking over those who follow. Well done? 

bronxblue

July 2nd, 2018 at 5:33 PM ^

I've basically come to the belief that every generation thinks it's better or more "true" than the ones that precede it, and maybe they are in their infancy.  But by the time you get old, all the edges are sanded down and what's left is a couple of good things with a whole lotta "put some duct tape on it and we'll fix it later" decisions that, lucky for them, they won't be around to deal with the consequences.  I'm fairly certain my kids will look at me in 30 years and say "DadBronxBlue really fucked us on X.  Also, I don't get why he changed his name to his stupid MGoBlog handle, but whatever."

SalvatoreQuattro

July 2nd, 2018 at 6:14 PM ^

Nah. The worst generation is yours. Hopelessly self-righteous, incapable of self-criticism, deluded sense of personal knowledge, missionary-like zeal, crude, and oh, dumb as fuck.

Global warming was diagnosed by the Boomers;throwaway culture predates Boomers; student loan debt came from misleading people that college education was their salvation(it’s not, yo); a greed-based incentive structure is  embedded in the nation’a bones.

Succeeding generations are a collection of whiners who talk much, know little, and have no original thoughts of their own. What we are is a collection of drones repeating what  some chod in a YouTube video or Mother Jones article says.

The US is in terminal decline because the quality of it’s citizenry is decaying at roughly the same rate of the polar ice caps.

mtzlblk

July 3rd, 2018 at 12:14 AM ^

Oh man, don't even get me started.

People that had years to play frisbee naked, drop acid and find themselves without so much of a hint of stress or competition, that have left a system where kids are put on a treadmill from age 5 through......forever. The popularity of "Hunger Games" is no mystery.

Worse than their parents they were protesting, not just because of the results......but they should seemingly know better, only they sold out all their values starting in the 80s and handed is the "me" mentality that is currently serving is so well.

Seth

July 3rd, 2018 at 8:27 AM ^

This stupid conversation could have been painted on the side of a cave because every generation thinks the one before them created all the world's problems and all the kids these days are entitled and whiny with no concept of the hardships will never have to live through. Young adults rightfully resent the unfair burdens their parents left them and the elderly rightfully resent being resented for cultural issues and systems that they personally did little to contribute to and might have even fought against.

Thankfully while my dad was alive I didn't waste any of that time hating him for being born 30 years before me. I will do my best as long as I am still smelling the flowers and blowing out candles not to hate my children for being born 30 years after me. He lost a good 15 years of a relationship with his father over whether dodging the draft and listening to Simon and Garfunkel was righteous or unpatriotic. 

You can hate on every advantaged class who voted for Trump out of fear of losing what they have (and rather feel they have earned). Or you can look at why this is: cowardice is baked into our genes, and takes an enormous amount of education and willpower to overcome, especially for those who don't have a personal stake in it.

His Dudeness

July 3rd, 2018 at 10:22 AM ^

Their parents generation didn't fuck them over though. 

Dude, I have to choose between having children (!!!) or having the lifestyle I worked so hard to achieve. All of that because our parents generation created a pay to play program for getting a fucking job. And it is waaaay too overpriced to buy the ticket. The way I hear it from people who still have the debt (again thankfully I do not anymore) they could have a second fucking house if they didn't have this debt. 

You can talk all the bullshit nostalgia nonsense you want about your old man and that's great, but their generation completely fucked us. They wonder why the affluent don't have kids anymore? Take a fucking guess. It's a god damned business decision. It shouldn't have to be. Fucking fix it.