Here we go again, the most transparent administration in city history hiding behind ‘supposed’ rules. City Attorney, Loophole David Fiddle-Faddle lays it out for us;

Pfeifle said in an email last week that ad-hoc advisory committees do not fall under the umbrella of open meeting rules prescribed in state statute and city charter. Whether or not the meetings are open, he said, will be at the discretion of the review committee.

Oh, Fiddle, then why don’t you advise them to keep them open, heck, even offer them Carnegie Hall for the meetings, or maybe we should hide the meetings on the back nine at Elmwood like they do with the Parks Board meetings.

“There shouldn’t be any secrets, so what’s to hide? I don’t know why it would be closed,” she said.

Because ‘Hizzoner’ is probably requesting it. This way, nobody from the public or from the hotel industry can challenge the decisions being made. But the finance director has a better excuse;

“One of the advantages of having a closed room meeting is people are often times less inhibited about having free and open discussion,” Turbak said.

Yeah, that’s what Hitler used to tell his Generals. Oh, and the irony of him suggesting the discussion will be more open and free by not making it open and free. WTF?

I will compare this to an experience I had last week at the SF City Council working session. During the course of the meeting I listened to the ideas being thrown around by the council, then was allowed to comment on a couple of them. By allowing my comment and one from my cameraman, the council came up with some new ideas about the free pool passes and how EBT cards work. Imagine that, having an open public meeting where the public can listen and make suggestions.

But hey, that’s not how things work in a dictatorship. Give me the money! That is the only thing the mayor wants to hear at the end of the day.

To their credit though, it seems some members of the review board want the meeting to be open to the public;

“I’m an individual who always believes in being open and transparent,” said Tom Bosch, a review committee member who spent 14 years as the general manager of Holiday Inn Sioux Falls before taking a role at Avera McKennan. “I’d be in favor at this point, unless I hear a reason otherwise, … to have it be an open meeting.”

Paul Schiller, another person expected to aid in the review, agreed.

“I wouldn’t have any problem keeping it open,” he said. “I’m hoping for a very open and honest debate going back and forth about how these funds are used.”

I guess we will see how this shakes down.

5 Thoughts on “We know who wants to keep the BID tax review meetings held in secrecy

  1. The Daily Spin on July 23, 2015 at 11:08 am said:

    There’s disruption hotel owners should not put up with. If any funds intended for hotel promotion are redirected into Huether follies, the collection is voluntary so drop the fee. Just the idea that the mayor considers the account his is grounds. Also, hotels are in direct competition with the city operated airport hotel and another proposed city hotel near the Arena. It’s ignorant to dedicate 7 million to your competition. Must be a new concept but I can’t find it in MBA rule books.

  2. l3wis on July 23, 2015 at 12:12 pm said:

    Dan, I think the hotel at the airport is privately ran by Ramkota, and the airport has nothing to do with city funding. But you are correct, they plan a city partnership for the hotel at Elmwood.

  3. The Daily Spin on July 23, 2015 at 12:44 pm said:

    I’ve heard from a confidential reliable source that the city is behind the airport hotel. We don’t know because there’s no transparency. Take a look at what I’ve said about the railroad deal. It’s another sinkhole made to look resounding that’s (in fact) a serious drain on city resources.

  4. scott on July 23, 2015 at 2:04 pm said:

    since Knobe is one of the committee members, call in and badger him on his show about this.

  5. Jeff Barth on July 23, 2015 at 6:40 pm said:

    Shameful secrecy. If the truth would kill them let them die.

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