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Monday, March 18,2013

Take millage vote out on Council

Lansing says no to tax increase

by Kyle Melinn

Tuesday, May 3 — If you're as mad as I am about Tuesday's millage going down in flames, don't waste your time lashing out at the 52.23 percent of Lansing voters who put a black mark through "no" on their ballot.


Don't blame Mayor Virg Bernero or the small band of union and community activists who plunked down around $15,000 and a tub of elbow grease trying to push this 4-mill hike through. They got it within 601 votes (7,039-6,438).


We're going to see 100 fewer Lansing police officers and firefighters because the Lansing City Council didn't suck up a "yes" vote to protect our streets when they had the chance this spring. Instead, they put it up to a vote.


Be angry that instead of sticking up for lower crime rates and quicker emergency response times, our eight members of Council, armed with the facts, turned our community's safety into a political football and punted to a sacred electorate, letting "the people" unknowingly gut our safety net.


The Lansing City Council didn't need to put this 4-mill increase on the ballot. I know there were concerns about exceeding the Council's constitutional limitations on how much they could approve. But they could have gone a little under to stay within the cap. They could have gone above 3 mills. Shoot, even 2 mills would have saved a combined 50 jobs.


I understand there were concerns about Lansing's bond rating being impacted and there was some optimism that a bond would pass with the right message.


But the decision forced the Council to go all-or-nothing with a public scared to death about the state's horrid economy, years of double-digit unemployment and $4.25-a-gallon gas.


Try to convince Grandma in South Lansing, who’s watching her home value sink like a stone and listening to this chatter about a "state pension tax," that "paying more" in taxes is a good idea.


Try to explain to a single working mother of three how voting "yes" for a millage won't necessarily mean she'll pay more in property taxes next year. She doesn't have time to hear explanations about housing value drops and how city taxes are collected. Nor does she care.


Try to tell an unemployed autoworker whose benefits are about gone, whose house is in foreclosure and whose about ready to take the dive into Welfare Land that city government needs to be spared from pain. ("Do you know what pain is, son?")


You could even steer all of these people to the city's millage calculator and have them plug in their address like I did. If the Lansing millage had gone through, I'd have paid $38.80 less next year than I did this year. Lucky me, I'll be paying $250 less now that this millage failed.


Wow, I'm saving $211. I don't know if the cops will come to my house if it gets broken into, but I'm $211 richer. Yippee.


But these people read this column. They don't believe "government" and they don't care about "techno-speak." They believe there's always alleged fraud. There's always alleged abuse. (Doesn't Virg spend $2,699 to maintain his office fish tank or something?)


Voters elect a Lansing City Council to stay informed on city issues and act in their best interests. Our best interests are not to let our roads fall into disrepair, to close three fire stations or have our police respond hours after a serious incident, like our friends in Ingham County are experiencing.


Our City Council members are supposed to be people with vision for this city. Up to now, Lansing could take pride that our Capitol City hasn't turned into other cities that have lost much of their manufacturing base like Flint or Sag-nasty or Detroit.


The reason we don't need an emergency financial manager or we haven't lost 25 percent of our population base in 10 years or have next to nothing for a police force is that we care about our community.


Up to now, we've had city leaders who knew that we're not attracting new business if a) they can't count on police to show up if their security alarm goes off, b) there's a bombed-out road leading to their driveway or c) there isn't a functional fire station within a square mile of their shop.


Instead, we have a divided Lansing City Council, half of which appeared to be playing into the fears of the scared electorate for their own short-term political gains.


The results bear this out. Take away the absentee voters, who are typically the older voters — those most susceptible to scare tactics and misinformation — and the millage passes by 220-some votes.


A united Lansing City Council hammering home a common message to voters would have spared this city from the pain that is to come.


A united Lansing City Council intent on saving our city's services would have spared us from this painful vote.


(Kyle Melinn is editor of the Capitol newsletter MIRS. E-mail him at melinn@lansingcitypulse.com.)

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UNless Lansing is a simmering pot of criminality and has one of North America's unhealthiest populations, Lansing has way too many police and fire fighters. Cutting back is absolutely necessary, and the voters have spoken well. That is, unless Lansing really is unhealthy and full of suppressed criminals.
 
Virg, Cut the DOT division. He puts a bad spin on Lasing and a real bad taste in VOTERS mouths. If you would only listen to the small businesses that he is targeting. He targets businesses that VOTE and have the power to persuade the Vote (as we did May 3rd). Never a fixit ticket, check his records. 18 tickets on stops. This is ridiculous and needs to stop. Just because no one liked the guy as a kid does not mean he needs use his power and beat on businesses. This guy is the reason good cops get bad raps from the citizens. The DOT Gestapo, driving around in his big suburban, doing 3 hour inspections on the side of the road, MUST go, and the small businesses will not stop until he is removed from his position and taken off the road and put on admin duty. This guy needs full time supervision, just review his record or ask his ex-wives. This guy is dangerous. CONTROL DOT or Verg is next to go. One way or another the DOT will be defeated, The small businesses have banded together. As long as Lansing can afford the DOT division, It only tells me that public safety is not important, but creating revenue is. The story will continue....We will not back down!!!!!!! SHUT DOWN LANSING DOT DIVISION
 
If the city has no intention of raising taxes they should do the responsible thing now and lay off 100 of the expected 149 positions. That would save us two months of salary costs, which could be used to save 20 positions for next year!
 
There is an even worse alternativie to a split council- one that is forcing unity under a consent agenda. This is in the new draft of council rules that in order to remove something from the consent agenda it will take 5 votes. Otherwise they can vote up or down on a block of resolutions. I think it will be a dark day for government in the sunshine when this passes.
 
Kyle, Joel Ferguson, who was interviewed for this story just last week, said the exact same thing. The council should have had the balls to do this on their own, and took whatever political fallout that may have came. Now, they are going to take it anyway when folks who weren't paying attention realize how many jobs this "no" vote will cost and the incalcuable hit to public safety this will render. We can't build or fund anything in this country anymore because of this stigmitation of government. The interstate highway system wouldn't have even made it to the planning stages in this environment, and that system is beloved by conservatives. What ridiculous times we live in. We'll get the services we pay for. Now, watch the teabbaggers complain when their Third World, southside shotgun shacks burn to the ground.
 
 
 
 
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