To everyone who voted for me: I’m profoundly grateful for your trust and confidence in me. It is a humbling experience, and I will be working to repay your trust.
To Howard: Congratulations on your victory, and you have my deepest thanks for a polite, pleasant, and well-fought race. It was a pleasure running against you and I look forward to another opportunity.
Thank you Durham, and good night!
Filed under: City Council | Tags: durham city council, economic development
Bull City Rising had an excellent guest column from Chuck Watts on Oct 20th, discussing economic development. In it, Mr. Watts puts forward the case for development incentives and public-private partnerships.
Unfortunately, there are many things that Mr. Watts leaves out, as is common with discussion on government subsidies. For example, in the post he says this:
Instead, these synthetic TIFs essentially provide what amounts to a tax reduction, actually a repayment of 80% of the increased taxes paid, for a period of time on the improved property once the new structure has been put into service. In other words, they incent the development by removing a tax burden that would otherwise kill the project. (emphasis is in the original)
I agree with Mr. Watts that the tax burden in our city is too high and can prevent projects from occurring. Of course, this begs a further question:
What about all the other projects that aren’t viable due to taxes?
If tax burden reduction is good, then doesn’t it follow that reducing taxes for all projects, large and small, would be even better? We need more than a few large companies to improve Durham’s economy. Mr. Watts makes a further strong argument in favor of this, though perhaps unintentionally:
Of course, if the taxing authority had any reasonable belief that the development would happen as quickly and to the same scale without the incentive, then there would be no reason to provide such incentives. Certainly developers would love to avoid being encumbered by the public process, if it was not critical to the success of such a project. (emphasis mine)
This makes it clear: if you want to do something major in Durham, involvement in the cumbersome government process is critical to your success – and holds back some projects that otherwise would have been viable.
Worse, these incentives aren’t nearly as temporary as is implied. We’re now incentivizing Burt’s Bees to fill the space that Motricity left in the American Tobacco complex, a space which was already built with large incentives to the Capitol Broadcasting Company. In effect, we continue to incentivize over and over as companies come and go. Sometimes, like Dell in Winston-Salem, the companies don’t even wait for the incentives to kick in – they simply leave and move on to the next town. Winston-Salem is now stuck with millions of dollars sunk into slowly decaying, useless infrastructure surrounding an empty building. We’re taking the same risks with EMC, as their new data center will also require some infrastructure – and they are just as likely to pull up stakes and move on, exactly like they did when they came here. In short, we’re paying corporations to locate in Durham, because they wouldn’t otherwise have come on their own. And thus, of course, they have no reason to stay once the tax breaks run out. If we’re always giving incentives and then the companies move on to the next town and incentive package when the incentives expire, then the promised payoff Mr. Watts touts rarely actually happens – we’re simply repeatedly giving tax breaks to each corporation as they rotate through.
Mr Watts also implies that most of the corporate subsidies we give are in the form of synthetic TIFs, which at least don’t come directly out of the general fund. However, Most of the Big Shiny Objects in Durham were actually built mostly or entirely on the taxpayer dime – even when the taxpayers didn’t want to borrow the money. In 1990, the taxpayers rejected a referendum to borrow money to build the new DBAP. The City Council went ahead with the bond issue anyway. We’re still paying that subsidy twenty years later, to the tune of a million dollars a year until the bonds are paid off, and a half a million dollars a year for the forseeable future.
This kind of corporate welfare leads us to the biggest problem with economic development, incentives, and the Big Shiny Object theory of catalytic development. Where does the City get its money? From the taxpayers, of course. When the City spends on incentives and economic development, the money doesn’t just appear out of thin air. It is redistributing money that would otherwise have belonged to the taxpayers, supporting the businesses, jobs, and ideals that we prefer. What the City Council believes is that their ideas for that money, their preferences, are better than yours.
What we’ve created over the last few decades is a situation where the City Council chooses the winners and losers when it comes to major economic decisions in Durham. Withhold a subsidy here, and the project never gets off the ground. Grant a tax break there, and the project goes forward. Borrow millions upon millions of dollars to build buildings that continue to require millions in perpetual subsidies, and then tout the jobs that were created by that economic redistribution while ignoring the jobs that disappeared because of it.
Economic redistribution comes at a cost that isn’t always easy to see. Empty storefronts and boarded up houses are hard to miss, but the businesses that never started, the projects that didn’t go forward, the companies that never came are not immediately obvious. A city cannot redistribute its way to prosperity, just as you cannot make yourself wealthy by moving money between bank accounts. If we really want to move Durham forward, the City Council needs to give up that central control, and start working towards a Durham that businesses want to come to; not because they were paid to, but because we’ve created an environment where they can thrive on low taxes and a fair, predictable playing field.
Filed under: City Council | Tags: bull city rising, durham city council, frank hyman, race, racism
One of my favorite TV shows is Joss Whedon’s Buffy the Vampire Slayer. In the show, a young California teenager suddenly has a great destiny placed on her: she is to become the Slayer, a magically-enhanced defender of the world against the evil forces of vampires and demons. These creatures lurk both figuratively and literally beneath society, sucking the life out of it and trying to destroy it. In her battles, she often turns vampires into dust with a sharp wooden stake to the heart, and eventually settles on a nickname for her preferred weapon: Mr. Pointy.
The issue of race is something that has dogged Durham politics for many years, like a vampire underneath our society. It drains our community, pulls down our discussions and policies, and taints our lives. Voters do have a right to vote any way for any reason. However, voters also have a duty to vote responsibly, to vote based on what they believe is best for Durham. I strongly believe, and I suspect that Mr. Clement agrees, that voting based on race is definitely not best for Durham – no matter who you are voting for.
If you are a voter, go look in the mirror and honestly appraise yourself and your reasons for voting. If any of the reasons you voted for me include the fact that I’m white, I have a message for you:
Please stay home in November. I don’t want your vote.
If you find yourself in this position, I strongly urge you both to re-examine yourself and your motivations for voting. You also need to re-examine what Libertarians are about, because you clearly don’t understand anything about the person you are voting for. If you vote for me based on race, you do so with the understanding that I fundamentally disagree with you and will not represent your interests on City Council.
If one of the reasons you voted for Mr. Clement is because he’s black, I want you to do something for me. I want you to approach a man who has honorably served on the City Council for 26 years, a man who fought against open racism in the great Civil Rights battles fifty years ago, a man who has certainly seen and suffered more racial ugliness in his life than I can ever know, and I want you to tell him to his face that you voted for him because of the color of his skin. I hope that if you did that, he’d politely tell you where to shove it. And he’d be right, because you are insulting many of the ideals he and many others have paid a huge price to attain.
If we as a community are voting based on race, or even influenced by race, it is a reason to be ashamed. Historically, as Mr. Hyman pointed out, we have a number of things to be ashamed about. But things have changed in our society with regard to racial issues, and they continue to change for the better. This election can and should be about our disagreements on policy and the role of government in our city, not what we look like. It is long past time for us to put Mr. Pointy to work and stake this vampire for good.
Filed under: City Council | Tags: durham city council, durham municial primary, experience matters
My opponent, Howard Clement, has a simple theme for his campaign: Experience Matters. He’s right, of course. Experience does matter. Of course, this begs a larger question:
Experience doing what?
In the last eight years, the U.S. Census puts our city growth rate at 11.3%.
In the period 2002-2008, Durham City property tax receipts have grown by 42%, from $65 million to $105 million. The total city budget has grown 33% from $245 million in 2002 to $327 million in 2008. Was that enough revenue to handle our city business? Apparently not, since we are currently carrying $340 million in debt, up 78% from $191 million in 2002. Our city government budget is literally growing at three times the rate of population increase, and our debt is growing at seven times.
What experience does my opponent have? He’s experienced in continual and rapid growth of government and taxes. He’s experienced in borrowing tens of millions of dollars (and paying millions more in interest) to build iconic edifices that continue to drain money from the city budget. He’s experienced in raising fees: a city fee increase went into effect a couple of weeks ago on the consent agenda, and wasn’t even discussed or debated. He’s experienced in deciding who gets corporate welfare support, the vast majority of which goes to large developers and large companies with little debate. He’s experienced in building skate parks in a year when critical programs are suffering budget cuts. He’s experienced with delaying what should be straightforward city decisions week after week … after week. He’s experienced in setting up programs like the Durham Youth Council that cost hundreds of thousands of dollars to accomplish a goal that was already achievable.
What he doesn’t have experience with is reducing the footprint of government. He doesn’t have experience with ending programs, terminating city participation in failed projects like Rolling Hills, and cutting frivolous projects. As we move into what will likely be a decade of high unemployment, falling property taxes, falling sales tax revenues, and general belt-tightening, his response is to raise sales taxes to increase funding for yet another failed city program, our transit system. He continues to refuse to take the lead on the issues facing our water supply, as the process slowly grinds along with low priority and no sense of urgency.
As you go to the polls tomorrow, consider that. Consider the future, and what our priorities should be as a community in a time when resources are going to be scarce. Consider that my opponent is likely to continue doing what he’s been doing for the last 26 years, and ask yourself: can we afford another 4 years of Howard Clement?
I’m offering an alternative. It’s time to rein things in, and elect someone whose goals are different: cutting spending, reforming or removing programs that don’t work, and refocusing our attention on the things that actually matter. Elect Matt Drew for Durham Ward 2!
Tonight’s event:
Duke Libertarians organizational meeting
October 1st, 7:00pm
Duke – West Campus – Room 139 Social Sciences Building
Free Pizza
Mike Munger will be there, as will I. Everyone is welcome – we’ll be viewing V for Vendetta with a discussion afterwards. Come by and meet the next generation of Libertarians!
Filed under: City Council
The Audit Services report on the DPD overtime investigation was released this morning. It’s not pretty.
I’ve not commented much on this because I’ve worked 100+ hour weeks myself many times in the past, and known many others who do – such time is not necessarily out of order, though it is indicates a management problem or the typical workload at a startup. However, the finding of the Audit Services report is that very few of the hours claimed by the officer were able to be documented via email, phone records, and system logs from the computer system she used for her work.
The key passage in the report is this one:
The SEC’s immediate supervisor is Captain Charlene Balch. In the fall of 2008, the SEC’s immediate supervisor noted that the SEC recorded an excessive amount of overtime for the month. She questioned the overtime and took it to the Deputy Chief. Per the immediate supervisor, the Deputy Chief acknowledged that she was aware of the overtime and compensatory time claimed. The Deputy Chief also stated that because the SEC was not allowed to work any off duty jobs, she was allowing her to earn extra time. From that point foward, the Deputy Chief assumed the responsibility for approving the SEC’s leave, compensatory time and overtime. Captain Balch continued to evaluate the SEC’s Towing Inspector duties; but not her duties as the SEC.
At this point, it looks like things are now being handled effectively for this case, and I would not be surprised to see some felony fraud indictments, both for the officer and for the Deputy Chief if it turns out she knowingly approved fraudulent overtime. I also think the focus on restitution is the right way to go.
This should prompt a review of all overtime and secondary work at the Department, especially overtime approved by Deputy Chief Council. I am also troubled by Chief Lopez’s acceptance of an 80-100 hour work week as normal in his previous job and apparently on this one as well. I’ve worked that schedule, and I’m pretty sure that I would not want our police officers to potentially be making life and death decisions in that state of mind. Here’s hoping we can bring some good out of what has rapidly become a major embarrassment to Durham.
Filed under: City Council | Tags: durham city council, mapac, muslim american public affairs council
I’ve received the endorsement of the Muslim-American Public Affairs Council. I’m pleased and honored to accept their endorsement, and I’m excited to see the bridges being built here between communities and cultures by organizations like MAPAC. May peace be upon all of us.
I attended the Muslim American Public Affairs Council candidate forum in Raleigh on Sunday, as well as the Unity in Community for Progress forum here in Durham (which was a bit exciting – see the Bull City Rising story on the event). I’m also giddy to have the word “orthogonal” used in reference to me. :)
On Thursday, October 1st, I will be attending the organizational meeting of the Duke Libertarians – time and place TBD, probably sometime today (Wednesday September 30th). I’ll announce it here when I know.
The rest of the week my schedule is clear – I’ll be campaigning when I get a chance and finishing up a few blog posts as we get down to the end of the primary race.
No matter who you support, get out there and vote! Early voting runs through Saturday, and the primary vote is on Tuesday.
Filed under: City Council | Tags: bull city rising, durham city council, durham public schools, new math
A few weeks ago I discussed the Durham Public Schools’ use of a statistical change to boost their AYP numbers. Well, Bull City Rising got access to the raw test score data and ran the numbers, releasing their results on Monday. Unsurprisingly, the majority of the gains that the School Board was touting were due simply to the counting of the retests, with the exception of some possible real gains on the fifth grade test. Now what we need is some historical data so that we can compare this year to previous years, and measure improvement over time, if any.
Why is it that BCR is the only media outlet that bothered to do the math? I don’t believe it’s because the school administrators can’t do statistics. This raises a fundamental question: if we can’t we trust the data that is coming out of the school system to be free from bias, how do we deal with that? How are parents and citizens supposed to evaluate our school system when the school administration and school board are deliberately misrepresenting performance statistics? Of course, the irony here is that the real results were nothing to be ashamed of – but clearly, that’s not enough. The school administration wants to believe that there really is a magic spell that will make our schools better. They want to be wizards instead of muggles.
There’s no substitute for hard work. There’s no substitute for market competition as a process that drives excellence, which is why Libertarians support vouchers and tax credits for parents who want more choices about where they educate their children. There’s no substitute for real statistics and the objective evaluation of progress. There is no magic silver bullet program that will solve our problems. We’re still just muggles, and that’s all we’ll ever be.
Filed under: City Council | Tags: durham city council, fayetteville street commercial corridor, know bookstore, oewd, schedule
Tonight I will be at the City Council meeting at 7PM at City Hall, hopefully speaking about the OEWD plan to provide a subsidy for the renovation of the building that houses the Know Bookstore on Fayetteville Street.
On Tuesday night at 6PM I’ll be participating in the Durham Young Democrats candidate forum (which is taking place in the Durham County Commission building). Afterwards, I’ll be at Satisfaction in Brightleaf Square for the regular Tuesday night meeting of the Durham County Libertarian meeting.
On Thursday morning at 7:30AM I’ll be speaking at the NAIOP meeting at the Renaissance Hotel North Hills in Raleigh.
On Saturday, I’m attending a barbeque hosted by my neighbor Nate Goetz.