Category Poli

Some thoughts on the local poli

Seems as though I can tune out for months at a time, and when I return to see what’s going on in local government I haven’t missed a beat. All the same players and all the same issues. Does anything actually get resolved? Yeah, i know, that’s a rhetorical question… Let’s get on with it:

- Can we just buy the damn golf course and get it over with already? I personally don’t have a strong opinion whether it’s as greenspace or as a leased public/private golf course. Either is good. At the end of the day, District 5 got the short end of the greenspace allocation and this is a chance to make it right (Gerry Sullivan continues to be spot on). The greenspace money has already been bonded, and we already pay the taxes to support it. The folks who are using the economy/recession as an excuse to do nothing have conveniently left that unsaid. That’s unless they are advocating rolling back – which nobody is doing.

And, of course, nobody could have predicted that Patrick Bell would use this as an opportunity to squeeze a developer friendly option into the discussion. Shocked!

- Bethel. Sigh… Sadly, I think the Save Bethel folks are going to lose this at some point. It’s really too bad. I’m with them on this one. Again, and especially for us folks who live in the north, locking in publicly available land should be a priority. Once it’s gone, it’s gone. This issue isn’t going anywhere fast, but when the in-district commissioner is against you – and you’ve lost some preliminary legal maneuvering – the movement is officially on life support. On the flip side, Bell is pissing off folks who will have a direct say in his re-election, and I know they won’t forget. A strong R challenger, in what will be a district voter only election, can leverage this for maximum damage.

- Rezones to Ag. While I agree with the commission vote to simplify re-zones from Residential back to Agriculture, it’s probably for different reasons than the current commission contemplated. They are just so damn tactical. I mean, I get the fact that some developers are getting soaked on land they can’t afford to develop. So fine, let’s remove the onerous tax environment. Whatever.  Sez Bell:

Many of those who want the rezoning have property in Bell’s district.

After the meeting, he said the expedited process would aid some of those in difficult financial situations.

“With the economy, a lot of those builders then went out of business, so there’s nobody to buy the property,” Bell said. “But yet a lot of people are stuck with property taxes on high density zonings that are creating problems for them.”

Once again, nobody could have predicted Bell’s posturing on this issue.

Only a dunderhead like Bell could suggest that folks are being stuck with “High Density” zonings. Because clearly, before the downturn we were engaged in urban development up here… What a terrible lack of appreciation.

The larger opportunity here is to reset the playing field by re-placing these to A1 and cracking open the comprehensive plan. A lot of land use assumptions were predicated on growth and population numbers that are probably widely off the plan now. It’s a perfect time to re-evaluate how we want to build. To figure out a sustainable path forward (which we were decidedly not on before the downturn). Of course that’s not going to happen. The county commission barely has the ability to break its own lackadaisical inertia on land use planning. Once status quo development begins again, it will be a re-run of rezoning back to 1 Acre Lot Exurban Sprawl and poorly designed and executed development.

Glenn Richardson

I haven’t posted to Tondee’s Tavern in months, but I did tonight.

Having run for office, albeit at a much smaller scale that Speaker Richardson, I know that today must have been a tremendously hard day in what looks to be a number of tremendously hard days. It’s no fun putting yourself out there like he did today, but he deserves a hell of a lot of credit for doing so.

Speaker Richardson and I probably couldn’t agree on the color of the sky, but tonight I wish him nothing but the best. Life’s to short…

Um… Kyle?

Bull.

But we just dispensed with two reliable allies in an effort to gain one decidedly unreliable one.

It’s called Article 5 of the NATO Treaty. You should read it some time.

A Broader View: The Perception of Crime in Atlanta

In case you’ve been living in a hole the last several months, you’ve no doubt read about (or maybe even experienced) the growing “crime problem” in the city of Atlanta.  And within just the last few days, you’ve probably seen the annual report issued by the FBI – and trumpeted by the Atlanta sheriff’s office – that pours cold water on those concerns.  The statistics show that crime is down. 

So what’s going on?

In the case of these recent numbers (e.g. the “year over year” variety), Jim Walls has an insightful analysis that shows exactly where pockets of crime are up in certain policed “zones” of the city.  The conclusion is that while the rates of crime are down across Atlanta as a whole, localized pockets of crime are up (and in some cases dramatically so).  The perception and reality of rising crime are real in these areas of the city.

But we shouldn’t let today’s highly politicized environment obscure the broader view of crime in Atlanta.  The fact is that the Atlanta has seen incredible gains over the last decade in reducing crime.  If you trend the numbers reported by the FBI back to the year 2000, the city has accomplished something truly wonderful.  While the population of Atlanta has grown by 20% over 8 years, violent crime has decreased by 36%.  Property crime has fallen by 11% in the same time period (although it does show some troubling signs of a rebound).

(Atl crime stats 2000-2008)

(Atl crime stats 2000-2008)

It’s a good story that seems to be lost in the current narrative.  While it’s easy to proclaim that the “city to busy to hate” is in jeopardy, a longer range look tells the opposite story.

Violent Crime Trends

Violent Crime Trends

 

(Atl Property Crime Trends)

(Atl Property Crime Trends)

I’m not trying to minimize the power that crime has on a community.  Nor am I trying to de-legitimize any particular tragic event.   During the mid-90’s, I spent my time living in uptown and downtown New Orleans.  I was mugged twice, once at gun point, and understand very acutely the tension many people feel in Atlanta today.  When something happens in your neighborhood, you could care less if the “statistics” say something different.  If you are the victim of a violent crime, your personal “crime rate” is up 100%.  Experiences matter.  I get that.

But let’s not lose site of the forest through the trees.  If we need to take tactical measures to better protect particular communities that are stressed, well, let’s do that.  Hire some cops, extend community policing, invest and empower.  I’m all about that. 

It’s also time to acknowledge that real shifts are occurring that drive crime rates in ways we have less direct control over.  We live in a “surveillance era” where we are captured on camera just about everywhere we go in public.  We carry less cash because of ATM machine.  More than ever, we live in a consumption/service economy where cheaper goods reduce the incentive to steal.  For a lot of people, the concern over losing your “identity” to an African email fraudster has replaced the fear of getting mugged.  While we are on the subject, we should add these issues to the discussion as well.

Wherein I piss on the teabaggers in the local paper

Always fun:

But some local Democrats disagree with the sentiment.

“If they were interested in bringing the country together, they would actually sit down and be willing to work with the administration on how we can deliver quality health care for everyone,” Jon Flack said.

“So no, it’s not going to bring national unity for someone to use a national tragedy to advance their political agenda.”

Flack said the Sept. 12 protest on taxpayer-funded spending neglects to attribute any of the spending to the previous administration.

“Now that we’ve got a popularly elected new president, I suppose all of a sudden they’ve found their values that have been forgotten by them for the prior eight years,” he said. “While I guess you can appreciate their enthusiasm, I think they’re a little late to their own party.”

Let the excommunication begin

I guess Jack Bernard is not interested in running for political office as a Republican in Georgia again.

Hard pressed to find anything there that I disagree with.

A fitting tribute

Stay classy Chronicle.

…adding.  Love the “mainstream media” lamentations.  Because Morris News with it’s 11 newspapers and it’s ~700K newspapers in circulation is most decidely NOT mainstream establishment media.

That’s refreshing. No, seriously.

State Rep. Austin Scott (R-Tifton):

“It was a good meeting, very fact-based. I leave that meeting very much convinced that conservation is the route Georgia must go now. We need to find the water systems that have the highest seepage rate, we need to start fixing those problems, do a cost benefit analysis [to see] where we can save the most water for the least amount of money. And we need to start today.

“Absolutely, it’s ahead of building reservoirs. The cheapest gallon of water is the one that you never use. As a fiscal conservative, I believe that conservation is the cheapest way to solve the problem. Seepage rates run anywhere from about 10 to about 18 percent.”

Now, I don’t think Scott really has a chance in the race for governor, but I really appreciate his approach on water.  Yes, we should build additional reservoirs and search for ways to achieve ”water independence”, but an acknowledgement from the right that water re-use/return and other sensible conservation tactics are a key part of the solution is actually really nice to hear.  Contrast that with Oxendine’s “Dig Here, Dig Now” and you get a clear picture of who is more interested in rhetoric and who is more interested in workable solutions.

The Cumming Braves?

Well, okay, probably not:

A new zoning designation that would allow for a commercial sport facility is on its way to Forsyth County’s planning board.

The county commission on Thursday voted 4-1, with Commissioner Jim Boff opposed, to move forward on the proposed ag-recreational zoning.

The “ag-recreational” is a new one for me.  I suppose the assumed intent is to keep the property tax burden low while creating some flexibility of use.  I’d prefer that approach over offering an “incentive package” the county might otherwise dole out to lure some regional sports complex/presence onto a commercially zoned piece of land.  Of course, they might do both anyway!

Let’s just hope they are thinking about putting this kind of stuff in the right places.  With this commission I’m not real confident about that particular leap of faith.

Things I don’t understand

My inbox informs me that a draft Jane Kidd for US Senate site is up.  Okay, no biggie there.  What I don’t get is that it was passed along by a person who spent the better part of last year trashing said draftee.

Politics is weird.

Copyright © The Flack Attack
…sparse and to the point.

Built on Notes Blog Core
Powered by WordPress