Yesterday afternoon at the Sioux Falls city council informational meeting councilor Staggers brought up a touchy subject, and apparently, for once, Quen Be De Knudson wasn’t watching Larry King or the Olympics, she was paying attention, and she literally had a cow. I will suggest you watch the video (it is about 10 minutes in).

But here is the jist; Councilor Costello was appointed Council Chair not too long ago, and now he is running for mayor. Staggers (and Brown) have suggested he resign from the post since it gives him an unfair advantage. Case in point, the city is running a PSA on CityLink16 promoting another one of their stupid surveys to the public. So who is doing the PSA message? Munson? Quen Be De? Nope. Costello.

Staggers has asked the council to vote on a resolution to determine whether Pat should stay as council chair because of this conflict, and De went ballistic. It is worth watching. I really think she should go back to watching reruns of the Cosby Show.

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WOW! Imagine that, South Dakota’s second largest city has a little compassion for their citizens;

“We understand that times are tough and everyone needs to tighten the purse strings as much as possible, and I think the city government is no exception,” Rapid City Mayor Alan Hanks said.

Can you pass that message on to King Dave?

Sioux Falls will collect 3 percent more in property taxes next year after the City Council on Monday approved the maximum annual increase allowed by state law.

And guess who was the only councilor to vote against this increase was?

Councilor Kermit Staggers proposed an amendment to not take the 3 percent increase, but it failed to get support.

Once again, the Sioux Falls city council proves how out of touch they are with the general public by approving this increase.

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Once again the AL ED Board says too little too late when weighing in on the city budget;

Given that, it’s disappointing that the Sioux Falls City Council has approved a resolution that supports a 2010 general fund budget that’s based on questionable economic expectations.

Well, great-almighty and all-knowing editorial board, this budget has been around for weeks, it would have been nice to say something about it before the council voted on it. Of course, then you couldn’t come back and rip on the councilors for doing nothing, could you? Take for instance this stab at Kermit while seeming to compliment him;

Councilman Kermit Staggers says he’s worried about the message that city officials are sending residents with the budget. Staggers has established an unfortunate record of resisting most progressive ideas, but at least this time he’s right.

What freaking planet have you been living on? If anything, Kermit is one of the most progressive (citizen wise) councilors we have. But not according to the dear old AL who have had a hardon over Kermit for years. According to dictionary.com this is the definition of a progressive;

–adjective

1. favoring or advocating progress, change, improvement, or reform, as opposed to wishing to maintain things as they are, esp. in political matters

In the years I have known Kermit he has advocated change more then any city official. He has been an advocate of more open government, he has asked the city reigns in spending by getting more competitive bids on projects, he has asked the city to responsible for their own property such as trees and sidewalks which would save taxpayers millions, he has asked the city to suspend some construction regulations while older neighborhoods be rebuilt so the projects get done faster and more economically. Kind of sounds like a progressive to me. In the AL’s ED Board eyes a progressive politician is someone who borrows money that has to be paid back with interest to buy monkey crappers and build roads for developers on the edge of Tea, SD. Sorry, spending taxpayer money recklessly to benefit the HAVES and special interests doesn’t make you a progressive, it makes you a big-government greedy Republican.

And Councilman Greg Jamison – saying that city employees should “fix the problem later if it becomes a problem” – definitely did residents no favors by abdicating his responsibility in holding the mayor’s budget accountable ahead of time.

Is Greg Jamison a progressive in your eyes? I could have sworn you have praised Greggo in the past for having ‘progressive’ ideas. Doing nothing but maintaining the status quo doesn’t make you a progressive. Progressives are people who encourage change and moving forward, changes and progress that affect all the citizens of a community. Kermit has done nothing but that.

Grow a f@#$ing brain already!

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The chickens are coming home to roost

Ah, I told you so. It seems I have been beating my head against the wall over the past two years trying to inform the public about the reckless abandon the Munson administration spends money.

Councilman Pat Costello, who introduced the unsuccessful amendment, said the budget is based on an unrealistic projected sales tax revenue increase of 9.6 percent in the next 16 months.

BAHAHAHAHA! 9.6 percent increase during a freaking recession? Give me a break.

Councilman Kermit Staggers said he is worried about the message the city is sending by increasing spending during tough times. “The city is not setting a good example for the citizens of Sioux Falls.”

Well, Kermit, I have never gone to the city for an example on spending priorities. But I think this exchange speaks for itself;

For more than an hour, council and administration discussed an amendment proposed to decrease the general fund by 1.5 percent or $1.84 million based on the sluggish economic climate.

The debate became heated when Mayor Dave Munson asked department heads to outline what will have to be cut if the amendment passes.

“It is some ploy to bring up the fire chief and the police chief to come up and say all these bad things are going to happen to our city when I asked you for help,” Costello said, noting that he asked Munson twice for help to trim the proposed budget but was turned down.

“I said, ‘This is our budget we submitted it’s in your hands now, you make the decision’,” Munson said. “I think we have every right to ask every director what impact it has on them.”

“And that’s fine and we can hear how the world is going to come to an end tonight. But the reality is that these monies can be moved around at a later date and it’s not the intention to take this out, to have public safety in our community to suffer,” Costello responded.

“When do we balance the budget then?” Munson asked.

Costello answered: “Whenever your administration wants to get engaged on coming up with reasonable cuts.”

“I don’t have any cuts,” Munson said.

We know Dave, that’s the problem, you can’t stop spending, you are addicted to it.

Costello’s concerns come from the budget relying on sales tax revenue to increase by 2 percent by the end of the year and an additional 4 percent increase by the end of 2010. As of the end of August this year, sales tax revenue was down 3.6 percent.

Finance Director Eugene Rowenhorst, whose office formulated the projections, said the 3.6 percent drop doesn’t include this year’s school and Christmas spending. He stands behind the prediction.

“That’s the same logic that brought us to what you projected in 2009 at 6.5 percent growth,” Costello told Rowenhorst, whose office has since adjusted revenue growth to 2 percent for this year.

Once again Eugene ‘Montgomery Burns’ Rowenhorst uses the ‘Christmas toys haven’t been bought for Billy and Dolly yet’ excuse. Gene, that song and dance is getting old and I am glad Pat called you out on it.

After 70 minutes of discussion, the amendment failed.

Councilman Greg Jamison voted down the amendment, stating that the council must trust city employees. “Let them fix the problem later if it becomes a problem,” he said.

And that action and statement tells us all we need to know about how fiscally irresponsible our city council and mayor are. Their spending priorities are screwy to say the least. As for trusting the city employees, that is what got us to where we are at currently, in a bind. If anything it is time to start questioning our city employees more.

The video is well worth the viewing (the fireworks start at about 1 Hour 20 Minutes)

And I see the Rapid City council gets it, you don’t raise taxes during a recession.

Rapid City will not take the optional property tax increase in 2010, reversing an earlier decision after a heated debate in special session Monday.

With the council’s action, the city will give up $369,224 in additional revenue, saving someone who owns a $150,000 house about $13 in city property taxes.

Construction values are 50% of what they were last year at this time;

The number of building permits issued in Sioux Falls through August this year is up from the same time in 2008, though the value of that construction is down significantly.

Sioux Falls has issued 4,308 permits this year, up from 4,242 in 2008 but still down substantially from the 4,564 permits issued in 2007, according to city records.

But the total construction value in 2009 of $176.7 million is down from 2008, when the numbers through August were at $294.1 million.

There have been 681 new single-family, two-family and multiple-family permits issued in 2009 at a value of $71.3 million.

That compares to 1,016 new residential permits approved through August of 2008 at a value of $114.6 million.

This is no surprise to me, if you have been following the local economy as I have since last fall, you could have seen this coming a mile away. But city hall put their blindfolds on and approved a tax increase to build new roads anyway. While this is bad news for our local economy, it is good news to taxpayers. It means we can hold off on building new roads until it picks up, therefore saving us millions in the CIP budget, money we can either put in reserves or use on infrastructure upgrades (which should be the priority anyway). If developers can’t pony up their 50% towards new roads, taxpayers shouldn’t pony up either. According to the July financial report, taxpayers have put in $1.6 million into the new fund this year while developers have put in a whopping $90,000. Yes, we have put in 17x more money then the devolpers. Yet, the SD MSM doesn’t see a story here? Go figure. Of course this would require a new council that isn’t spend happy. In the informational meeting on Monday, councilor Beninga had a pity party about not having enough time to offer amendments to 2010’s budget, which probably means he will offer very few if any at all. The funny part of the conversation was when clerk Owen informed all the councilors that Staggers already turned in his (he was absent from the meeting). They seem shocked, and one councilor joked, “He has been probably working on them for a year.” Not quite. Then they asked if they could see them, and she replied that she would have to get permission from Staggers to show them. The city attorney’s office apparently is unaware of the new open records bill that started July 1. Quen Be De also got on her soapbox about wanting to raise the retail tax by a penny, and joked that not all the wisdom in the state resides in Pierre in the winter. While I do agree with her statement, I would have to say most legislators probably have more intellect in the tip of their little toe then she has in her whole body.

I can’t wait for the retail tax increase legislation to fail. Maybe I will throw a party.