Making growth pay for itself!

Tag Archives: growth

Growth Must Pay For Itself!

On Monday, September 13th, 2010, the Austin City Council raised water rates and property taxes in the midst of a recession, despite receiving thousands of petitions and phone calls. Amid declining property values, Austinites will pay higher property taxes and utility bills under the 2010-11 budget the City Council passed Monday.” Austin American-Statesman.

The Wasteful 4 - Mayor Leffingwell and Council Members Shade, Cole and Martinez, insist on building a $1.3 billion bloated water treatment plant we may never need.

Sign the voter pledge

Council member Randi Shade is the only member of the Wasteful 4 that is up for reelection next May.

Sign the voter pledge for the May 2011 election for a new City Council Member who will take our mantra into the next election:

GROWTH MUST PAY FOR ITSELF!

We have only just begun to fight.  (John Paul Jones, Revolutionary War Hero)

To print out the Voter Pledge click here.  For more on Water Treatment Plant#4 and the cost of growth watch the videos to the right and go here.

The Real News on Water Treatment Plant #4: From the Comical to the Real Estatesman

When big news stories broke in the good old days, Austin citizens relied on their one daily paper to get the details.  Along came the Austin Chronicle as the new boss, the progressive alternative to challenge the old boss American-Statesman; a rivalry good for coverage of community issues.  But a while back, the new boss Austin Chronicle (despite the good sensibilities of its publisher Nick Barbaro) decided to be damn nearly the same as the old boss Austin American-Statesman, and kowtow to the real estate growth lobby.  Which maybe explains why some people call them the “Comical” and the “Real Estatesman”. 

This issue will be coming back in May 2010 for a vote of the Austin City Council.  So far, they are split 4 in favor (Leffingwell, Martinez, Cole and Shade) and 3 against (Spelman, Riley and Morrison). 

Get the story the Statesman and Chronicle failed to report, watch the debate yourself and YOU decide a major decision on Austin’s critical future on water policy!

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Rope a Dope Developers!

If the Growth Lobby has its way, our metro population will double in just 16 years — and ordinary citizens will be paying the costs.  4 out of 7 City Council members want to forge ahead with Water Treatment Plant #4, an $850  million project planned during one of the worst droughts and economic downturns this century!

How can we beat the formidable Growth Lobby?  Remember Ali’s ‘Rope a Dope’ tactic used to beat George Forman?  We just wear ’em down till the last knock out punch.

Read what the Mayor cut off last Thursday on WTP4 here from CostofGrowth.com.

Save the Date:  Good Ol’ Tax Protest, Thursday, Aug. 27, 6 pm outside City Hall — at the last City Budget Hearing as the Council deliberates on raising the property tax rate and fee hikes for water, waste water, trash and more!

Download the flier on our front page and share it!

Note:  Would your organization like to endorse this event?  Contact us right away!

Contact us to volunteer and/or donate to our efforts & check our calendar for meetings.

PS For as little as $5/month you can help sustain our organizing.  Thank you Austin!

Rope a Dope the Growth Lobby!

Does Austin need to spend $850 million for a third water treatment plant in the midst of one of the worst droughts and economic downturns of the century?  Read the details here courtesy of CostofGrowth.com.


City’s Citizen Budget Meetings: Charette or Charade?

Charette: a final, intensive effort to finish a project, esp. an architectural design project, before a deadline.

Charade: a blatant pretense or deception, esp. something so full of pretense as to be a travesty.

Last Tuesday’s first of three city citizen’s budget  meetings, held at the Northwest Recreational Center, set up as a “charette” was, presumably, to be a lesson in public participation about the realities of cutting a city budget.  After an overview of city revenues and expenditures by city budget officer Ed Van Eenoo, the 200 plus citizens in attendance, in groups of seven or eight to a table, voted on a sanitized list of some 30 budget cuts and revenue raising items.

As the first citizen to speak pointed out, the $2,000,000 annual payment to the Domain Shopping Mall was conspicuously absent, something they strongly objected to along with the 4th speaker.*  (We swear to you, we did not seed the attendees!).  One attendee had the idea of using funds saved by lowering the pay of the highest paid police force in the state (APD), to start the next cadet class.  But renegotiation of the police union contract was not on the table.

Meanwhile, the rest of us peons in Austin are related to like well… peons, being asked questions like, ‘Would you prefer to cut libraries or charging people to get in to the Trail of Lights’!

In all fairness the City is doing some things right.  The City Manager added an item to this year’s budget reduction proposal (page 313) to increase various fees for the City’s review of the larger development projects.  It also creates a new category for smaller projects to more equitably distribute the fees among users.  The overall proposal would raise an additional $370,750 and is at least a start, albeit a modest one.  Bue it was KVUE’s story on June 3 that began to expose the 800 pound gorilla in the room — that some people (we wonder who) are projecting that the population of our metro area will double from 1.3 million to 2.7 million by 2025.  Who’s going to pay for this growth?  If nothing changes, it will continue to be us peons.

The short story on the City of Austin’s 2009-2010 Budget is this: the budget items selected for public scrutiny were limited to items m, n, o, and z.  Unfortunately for us, the rest of the alphabet soup covering the full width and breadth of the budget were off limits.

Is this process a charette or a charade? Perhaps it is both.  Our local “progressive” politics is becoming better known as Austin’s favorite pastime — confuse the voters.

If you want to participate and see for yourself, you might attend the second or third (and last) of these charades, uh, we mean charettes, this Monday or Tuesday (listed below).  We’d love to get your feedback on this page either now or after you attend one of the meetings.

Peon: a person held in servitude to work off debts or other obligations.

Peons unite!

Monday, June 15, 6:30-8:30 pm – Gus Garcia Recreation Center, 1201 E. Rundberg

Tuesday, June 16, 6:30-8:30 pm – Toney Burger Activity Center, 3200 Jones Road

Just in case you bought the Mayor’s TV ads last year opposing Prop 2 (paid for by the Mall’s developer, Simon Properties, the Real Estate Council of Austin and the Chamber of Commerce), the City’s contract with the Mall includes a clause Brian Rodgers, co-founder of ChangeAustin.org, won in court several years ago.  That clause allows the City to walk away from the deal anytime without penalty.