rollingreddice

I don’t agree entirely with this letter writer, but they make some good points;

The city of Sioux Falls has sent a clear message to potential homebuyers. The planning commission and city council have made it clear that you had better not buy or build a house in a newly developing area unless you are a “gambler.”

It seems that when a developer goes into planning and zoning to change things, the city planning staff goes to work for the developer to help get it done. Planning commission members call the developer by their first name and assure us all that the developer has met all the requirements set out by staff and ordinances.

I have seen attitudes on both the planning commission and City Council that were condescending toward the citizens of Sioux Falls who had done their due diligence and thought they had built in a single-family neighborhood. Now we know that building in these new developments is a gamble. The message from our city government is to build or buy in an established neighborhood or roll the dice. Shame on our city leaders.

I do know that not all developers in Sioux Falls are treated equally. Some don’t even bother building in Sioux Falls because of the multitude of zoning ordinances. I also think that developers do have property rights, and to some extent can build just about any thing they want to within limits and respect of their neighbors. The homeowners must also understand that when you build in a newer part of town, and their is an empty lot next to you. Things may change. But in the case with RMB, this had already happened, and the homeowners had already agreed to zoning changes just a few years ago. But with the change in the economy it seems instead taking a hit (like a lot of homeowners did during the recession) RMB felt they needed the rules changed due to their poor investment. In this case, the neighborhood was handed a raw deal because of the out of options property owner. This is neither fair nor right. The sad part is that this should not have even made it to the Planning Commission or City Council. The Planning department should have looked at the petition had the city attorney deny it. This is actually done quite frequently. The zoning change had already been made, RMB should have stuck to it.

Looks like the only winner here is the house (City Hall).

6 Thoughts on “Take a gamble, build a house in a new SF development

  1. I got little sympathy for this group. Big box retail and traffic congestion is one thing but apartment buildings. Give it a break. This guy is living up to the south side snobs people are branding us with. OH NO apertemnt dwellers living next to self righteous assholes. Whats this world coming to.

    If you don’t spread the apartments across the city and group them all in 1 spot, you will quickly have the slums as there will be little provocation to keep them up.

    They say they had an agreement. Did they get that in writing? They didn’t already know developers have their ass kissed in this village

    As one south side to another A BOOOO HOOO. I guess Biff and Buffy will have to build a moat filled with crocodiles around their castle to keep out the evil renters.

  2. Well the original zoning included apartments, but it also included retail, something the neighbors welcomed. But RMB started crying and saw they couldn’t make as much money. BOO HOO is right, and RMB are doing the most crying because they made a bad investment. Funny how free enterprise wants the government to leave them alone, but when they screw up they come a running for a bailout, and that is exactly what RMB did.

  3. So, DL – how exactly is “city hall” winning something here? What’s the prize?

  4. Keeping the developers money in their campaign funds.

    That’s always the prize.

    I’d still like to know who built Huether his lake home. Would anyone be surprised if Huethers retreat was built on a developers dime at this point.

  5. LJL – And they give a lot of dough to the council. This spring read the financial reports. They also beat them down on the phone, I have heard incidences. Remember when Councilor Kavanaugh was considering pressing charges against Munson for violating city ordinance by approving a 100% cost overrun on Phillips to the Falls w/o council approval? I won’t say what specifically happened, but let’s just say some fine upstanding citizens in this community ‘had a chat’ with Kevin.

  6. pathloss on December 29, 2013 at 10:01 pm said:

    ‘The Prize’ is you must be an insider to build here. They’re not concerned about zoning or codes. It’s become a vehicle to run others off and keep new ones from coming in. I’d not build or buy here. I have a townhouse to stay away from the problem. It’s a strong economy but live in a neighboring city and buy tax free from the internet or Minnesota (food & clothes) so you don’t feed into the corruption.

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