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

Seth

July 3rd, 2018 at 3:01 PM ^

Was it their generation or conservative fiscal policy that created runaway debt under the guise of low interest rates on homes and school? Was it the Baby Boomers who got together and said let's do this as baby boomers or was it the financial industry getting together to dominate politics for the good of the financial industry? I'm not arguing about the current state of things. I'm saying we can be a lot more precise on how to place blame, and more importantly, solve the problems.

mtzlblk

July 3rd, 2018 at 6:48 PM ^

Which was all accomplished in a political environment where people were voting me instead of us and prioritizing short-term gain over any kind of long-term fiscal policy.

The financial industry was deregulated and allowed to run amok because?

To make a massive generalization because I don't want to go into a huge amount of detail on all the specifics here, all of the issues we are currently facing are because we have started focusing on short-term, personal material gain rather than longer-term, community-oriented policies and effective regulation.

mtzlblk

July 3rd, 2018 at 12:51 PM ^

If you want to pretend that the results from a huge groundswell of population as a voting block and dictator of culture and societal mores is some kind of cosmic accident...that's your business.

There is a reason they are called the "me" generation.

The goal here isn't to point at individuals and blame them and fight about it, it's to have a group of people take responsibility for where they leave our society as a generation. They started with a lot of lofty ideals, but when it came right down to it they did not stick to them. 

In what way have they left us better off?

Environment?

Economy?

Politics?

Foreign policy?

Infrastructure?

Healthcare?

Financial regulation?

0 for 7

Kick Out The Jams

July 3rd, 2018 at 10:45 AM ^

I bet the more than half a million drafted during the Vietnam war felt a hint of stress.  Also, I work mainly with millennials (and the next gen, whatever it's called) and find the majority to be creative, considerate, ambitious people. I understand my experience may be anecdotal, however, the sweeping hyperbole here ("sycophantic leeches", "dumb as fuck") is getting ridiculous.

mtzlblk

July 3rd, 2018 at 6:59 PM ^

That is a very, very good point.

Poorer and lower middle class men who didn't qualify for the deferments that upper middle-class and upper-class people had certainly had stress.

They cut the deferment programs and went to a straight lottery in 70 and 71 that surely caused more stress. Anyone drafted in 72 never had to report for their physical because the peace Accord was signed in 73.

So for a few years there was stressed for some men to be sure.

Kick Out The Jams

July 4th, 2018 at 1:01 PM ^

If you're referring to me, my only point is that the statement that baby boomers never felt "a hint of stress" is specious.  The existence of the draft during Vietnam was just an obvious "off the top of my head" counterpoint. Ongoing military operations and the various costs/ramifications borne by everyone is a completely different conversation.

bluebyyou

July 2nd, 2018 at 5:01 PM ^

What makes Ann Arbor the place that it is is the income level of the people who live there and in surrounding areas.  You can't have the abundance of restaurants and venues that provide culture without people capable of affording nice things. To assume you will have inexpensive housing in Ann Arbor seems like a dream that will be close to impossible to achieve, particularly as boomers age and look for nice places to retire, at least those folks capable of dealing with our winters and Millenials move out of the basement.  All those docs, researchers, professors, and others employed by U of M and making six figure income don't help keep housing prices down either, but that is a good thing, imo.  The alternative is lots of down on their luck cities scattered all over the Midwest.  A2 is considered a great town and part of the reason is the affluence that drives the economic engine in the City. You can't have it both ways.

Frankly, I'm disgusted with the current governance of A2.  The roads are abysmal, there is no environmental or green issue that can't be justified regardless of cost, taxes are high (your millage drop notwithstanding), and from my perspective governance just plain sucks.  A few million bucks to resurface roads doesn't get you very far.  

Maybe Christopher Taylor is the answer, but consider me to be a bit of a skeptic until proved otherwise.

JeepinBen

July 2nd, 2018 at 5:17 PM ^

RE: "Millenials"

You understand that the mid-age Millenial is now 31 years old, right? And that Millenials are the highest educated generation? And that we're the largest age group in the US? And mostly drowning in student loan debt?

This infantilizing of a generation that's had to put up with wealth transfers as shown in Brian's graph is getting old.

bluebyyou

July 2nd, 2018 at 5:41 PM ^

Seems like I hit a sore spot with Millenials.  What I said was an attempt at humor.  I have two kids who are Millenials, both have graduate degrees in engineering and MD's and work 80 hour weeks as residents at U of M Hospital.

The biggest difference I see between Millenials and Boomers is opportunity.  It isn't what it once was and will probably never be that way again in an age of growing AI/robotics and lots of competition for many jobs. 

bronxblue

July 2nd, 2018 at 5:59 PM ^

Millenials move out of the basement

I still don't get how, in 2018, people still think Millenials are this slacker generation. They aren't. They haven't really ever been. And many of them are trying to become professors, researchers, etc. and buy a house. You know how hard it is to buy a house when you owe $300k in student loans to become a doctor, or $45k for undergrad because, unlike earlier generations, tuition wasn't $4500 a year and you could make that working odd jobs over the summer?

I looked at Redfin and did a search for a 3-bedroom, 2.0 bath house in Ann Arbor.  That's a normal size house for a small family.  The average appears to be around $340k.  That's a lot of money for a family, especially considering the vast majority of people in Ann Arbor don't make $100k plus.  And what's worse is if you look at the property histories for a lot of those places, they were bought, say, 4 years ago for tens of thousands of dollars cheaper, and then put back on the market at unrealistic valuations.  

And I speak as someone who lived in both NYC and mow Boston, two pretty expensive cities.  Usually both parents want/have to work, and so that requires child care costs, and then you have travel costs to and from work, food, clothing, maintenance expenses, the occasional bit of entertainment, etc.  It's not a sob story by any means, but this idea that 30-somethings are lazy and aren't being adults is beyond condescending coming from any person, let alone a generation (and I'm not assuming you are part of it, just a general case) that historically was given A LOT of help to achieve their dreams without having to worry too much about the repercussions.  

SalvatoreQuattro

July 2nd, 2018 at 6:24 PM ^

Even when schooling was cheaper life was more difficult than it is now. You have no concept at all how previous generations lived.

I will also point out that the social consciousness of today’s generations comes from the Boomers. Environmentalism, Anti-Racism, Feminism, Anti-War...Boomers played huge roles in the development and growth of these movements.

bronxblue

July 2nd, 2018 at 8:48 PM ^

I don't think you know either, but you seem very intent on trying to convince me otherwise with limited evidence.  Mostly, I'd like to know what makes life "more difficult" for people born in 1950 vs. those born in 1980 on some massive scale.  Because a lot of this feels like revisionist history bullshit.

For example, you say the Boomers were "Anti-Racism".  Well, Brown v. Board of Education, a landmark decision in helping integrate society, was decided in 1954.  Which means the absolute oldest baby boomers at that time we're 8.  So I'm going out on a limb and saying 3rd-graders weren't in the courts writing amicus briefs.  Rosa Parks, MLK, and Malcolm X were already adults and making their mark on the Civil Rights movement when most Boomers were still in diapers.  Boomers didn't stop Civil Rights movement, so good on them I guess, but that wave was already cresting before they even got going. And that's sort of an ongoing theme with the Boomers generation; they claim a lot of credit for simply jumping on the moving train of progress.

The same goes for gender equality.  Voting and property ownership rights were already fought and won by the time Boomers rose up.  Again, they kept it going which is a positive, but you could day the same thing about Gen X and Millennials with their further pushes toward pay equality and work-life balance, to say nothing about the MeToo movement to address systemic sexual abuse.

Anti-War seems a bit surprising because under Clinton, W. Bush, Obama, and Trump (all Boomers, though on completely different ends of the spectrum), America has been involved in a number of protracted, largely undefined and unresolved battles across the world, with the common theme that nobody knows when they'll end and, apparently, who will pay for them.  I don't think it matters who's to blame for them, only that there has been an amazing amount of destruction and tragedy as a result.

Boomers absolutely did good things; lots of the technological advancements we've enjoyed came from that generation.  But they were also the continuations/natural maturations of technologies made generations before, and that's true for every subsequent generation.  They absolutely tried to learn from the mistakes of their parents, and in some meaningful ways they did.  But you could say that for every generation.  It's why I don't get this notion that any generation is particularly good or bad.  It's millions of people born across the country in a set of ill-defined years.  And how said people were when they were 20 isn't how they are when they've 60 and 70.

bluebyyou

July 3rd, 2018 at 10:41 AM ^

Of the various items you mentioned, you failed to include one area that for me and my boomer buds was scary as hell and loomed over us for years, and that was graduating from college or dropping out of school or not going to college and getting your ass drafted and sent to Vietnam where almost 58,000 Americans were killed and a hell of a lot more wounded. In the early '70's, the US went to a voluntary military enlistment system. 

bronxblue

July 3rd, 2018 at 11:11 AM ^

I understand about the draft and Vietnam, and I know that the trials of that war led to the movement to a fully volunteer armed services.  And my father said the same thing, that it was scary to possibly be shipped off the war.  But compared to WWII it was far more a "professional" armed service in Vietnam (25% drafted vs. 66%), and a majority of people who were drafted never actually served.  

Again, I'm not trying to vilify any generation; every one of them did great things and also sucked, had burdens and also benefits.  But the OP started this whole shitshow about how Millennials are losers who sit in their basements, and I took issue with his patently false claims that people born in the 50s and 60s were somehow paragons of virtue and hard work.

Other Chris

July 2nd, 2018 at 7:28 PM ^

So where exactly do you expect the people who staff those restaurants and shops and museums to live?  Hell, even low level faculty can't find a place to live in many cases.  

Taylor may not be the answer, but Eaton certainly is not.  If nothing else, he is trying to pull one over on the electorate by primarying the mayor that running on his own beliefs and merits.  I say this because a former Republican mayor is running his campaign.  

bringthewood

July 2nd, 2018 at 5:13 PM ^

Thanks Brian. I am almost retirement age and moved back to my hometown of Ann Arbor last year. I am registered to vote at my cottage in northern Michigan but appreciate the education of Ann Arbor politics. I am hoping you do this for MSU trustees as well.

I like your comments about gentrification, the train station and especially climate change. I support climate change initiatives but doing so at the local level is kind of silly.

When I was younger I remember council having a vote against Regan, something about the Sandinistas. Their point was fine but passing a motion in a local council was silly.

i also remember when we had the occasional Republican mayor- when the roads got bad enough a republican would get elected on a “fix the roads” platform. The roads would get fixed but social spending would go down, Democrats would return to power once the roads were better.

Jota09

July 2nd, 2018 at 5:53 PM ^

Why such an aggressive and antagonistic attitude towards your readers?  It isn't hard to understand the feeling of betrayal in this regard.  I have copied and pasted from your Ethics page:

I will maintain focus. Appropriate topic areas for mgoblog in descending order of relevance:

  • Michigan sports.
  • Sports media; print, broadcast, and blog.
  • Opponent news.
  • General NCAA news.
  • Other sports of interest (Pistons, USMNT soccer mostly)
  • Dancing bananas, Walken 2008, etc.

Things I wont post on:

  • Politics
  • Karate Kid
  • The White Shadow
  • Musical groups that were last relevant in 1986.

It seems like what you are advertising this site to be about and what it has become are two different things.  It is your site and you have every right to change it up, but please post something informing us of the change so we can make our decisions regarding readership.  Violating your site ethics and then telling those people who might have a problem with that to get bent seems like you are actively trying to drive away your readers.  I'm just a random guy who reads an internet blog, so do with me what you will if this is considered complaining.  

runandshoot

July 2nd, 2018 at 6:23 PM ^

I think that people who don't agree with a certain viewpoint and don't have the same platform that can distribute a different viewpoint try so desperately hard to silence or "shout down," that information any way they can. Why someone would be so concerned what a random blog says, particularly if they don't agree with it is beyond me. Does it really bother you that much that someone has a different viewpoint than you? Does it bother you that Brian could be potentially reaching hundreds of thousands of impressionable minds with information that may change the way they think and could lead them to take action and potentially sway an election? 

The reality is, this is someone else's blog. He can do what he wants and say what he wants, even if it breaks the rules he set forth. You can not like it and think it's hypocritical, but really, there is nothing you can do about it. Why spend the energy arguing over posts you don't like, when there is so much other content here, waiting to be read?

 

Quailman

July 2nd, 2018 at 6:32 PM ^

Where in his post did he say at all if he agreed or disagreed with the politics themself? He didnt. So why are you assuming that?

Look, people are taken aback by this sudden change in content and the antagonistic attitude that has come with it. It can be as simple as that and not mean that its someone "with a differing opinion trying to silence something." Brian said he wasnt posting about Politics, now he is and is doing so both without explanation and in a way thats a touch off-putting. He can do what he wants, for sure, but there are perhaps better ways to do that.

 

PS- If we are going down the Politics route, "He can do what he wants and say what he wants even if it breaks the rules" is a dangerous slope.

Jota09

July 2nd, 2018 at 6:37 PM ^

I didn't try and "silence" or "shout it down".  I have no problem with him changing the structure of his posting on his site.  But I am more inclined not to read it.  I have enjoyed this site greatly over the years and I thank him for providing it.  I will also admit that these political posts are annoying to me, as I prefer the sports posts, and his site ethics gave me the impression that I wouldn't have to see political posts.  I have watched over the years as the no politics rule was enforced with an iron fist and people were sent to Bolivia for even minor forays.  So yes, this is hypocritical.  All I want to know, is what the standards are going forward.  What is his explanation for violating his own ethics of the site and in such an manner to tell readers to get bent?  I would like to continue being a member, and I can tolerate some political posts if I know they will be coming.  But I don't like being told one thing, given another, and treated like an asshole for pointing out the difference.  

SBayBlue

July 2nd, 2018 at 5:55 PM ^

When you say this, it is incorrect:

"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."

This is first and foremost ignorant. A city can do things like change which source they purchase electricity from, or at least in California they can. In Michigan, I believe it is also a choice: https://www.michigan.gov/energy/0,4580,7-230-72200_68204_54287---,00.ht…

There is also this: https://ilsr.org/how-states-and-cities-can-unlock-local-clean-energy/

Cars as a whole don't contribute to climate change as much as energy production or poor building codes which don't emphasize efficiency.

And no, it isn't just some lefty city initiative. Our city changed who we bought electricity from as have 31 other cities in LA County. Some of whom, like Rolling Hills Estates, are politically conservative.

Climate change is serious business that you should not take lightly by blowing it off. Unless you don't have kids and don't give a F*&% what comes after you leave the earth.

 

Blue_Cheesehead

July 2nd, 2018 at 6:38 PM ^

Climate change is nothing new.  That said, being efficient with resources is certainly wise, regardless of the resource.  Money, or wealth, is a resource.  A community needs to prioritize how to spend the money they have.

BTW, $4.3M will resurface about 2-3 miles of roadway.  Ann Arbor has 287 miles of roads...

GetBetterDaily

July 2nd, 2018 at 5:55 PM ^

Why not just create a medium account and post political stuff there? You could link to it and none of us would have to see a political post unless we wanted to.

Sam1863

July 2nd, 2018 at 6:10 PM ^

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.

Manufacturing fear in order to use it as a campaign tactic? What a rotten thing to do. Sure hope no candidate tries to do this at the national level. That could be disastrous.

Vasav

July 2nd, 2018 at 6:14 PM ^

Considering that everyone laments the death of local news, and Ann Arbor is a city we all care about even if we’ve gone elsewhere - thank you for keeping us abreast of local issues.

ppToilet

July 2nd, 2018 at 6:19 PM ^

What isn't being said is that the real election isn't until November. But, because Ann Arbor will only vote for a Democrat, the election effectively happens in the August primary. The only way this city will really change would be if the Council and Mayor were non-partisan positions. It would force people to actually discuss the issues.

While I welcome Brian's opinions, the train station debacle itself is a disqualifying event IMHO. The City hides behind discretionary spending limits of its own creation and cedes the real power to the unelected DDA. The power of the Mayor is to determine who is in the DDA.

AWAS

July 2nd, 2018 at 7:03 PM ^

Brian,

Thank you for posting useful insights and opinions.  I now know the breakdown of where my city property taxes go.  I respect arguments that are fact-based, even though I may disagree with the conclusions.  Thank you for (mostly) refraining from personal attacks in your post.  This blog community is (again, mostly) refreshing for doing the same in their commentary. 

 

 

Blue_sophie

July 2nd, 2018 at 7:14 PM ^

This essay is a pretty fantastic example of what discourse might be like amongst a thoughtful and engaged citizenry. Of course this is Brian’s blog, so he can use it as a soap box if he wants, but I would prefer a dialogue. Perhaps MgoBlog can host a rebuttal (not in the comments section, and edited for outright mendacity). I’m sure there are thoughtful people on the opposite side of the issue who are interested in engaging in a structured public debate for the ages:

Lippmann-Dewey (1922)

Baldwin-Buckley (1965)

Cook-??? (2018)

 

TBG

July 2nd, 2018 at 7:20 PM ^

I thought this was a totally non political site.  I could not give a shit about AA politics, but me thinks you are a hypocrite.