Tuesday, August 31, 2010

Say No to Corporate Welfare and Special Interest Politics in Richmond

A letter from Save Richmond to Mayor Dwight Jones explains who's really running this city and where their priorities are.

For example, our city council proposes increased funding for the Fan District Association’s “Party Patrol” — which proactively attempts to shut down parties in the Fan area. At the same time that it would fund these weekend snoopers, the council has joined you in calling for a staffing freeze for firefighters, and a decrease in the police budget.

You know where we’re going with this, Mr. Mayor. Would the city really increase the funding of a privately-run, constitutionally-challenged “patrol”… and at the same time reduce the resources of the city departments that would be forced to respond to it? That’s nuts....

...These councilpeople do one thing very well — they reward the business community. In their budget, they propose giving $70,000 more to various business co-ops who have now bandied together as an “Economic Development Consortium.” The EDC is a varied crew of organizations — everything from Sportsbackers to Venture Richmond — many of them highly worthy, some of them with mixed records of achievement. We can tell you from personal experience that, for a coalition that is supposed to spur area commerce, this is not a group that folks at City Hall are very eager to publicize or to talk about. That’s very curious. Wouldn’t a mayor with some cajones at least ask to see results before further funding some of these groups? Wouldn’t he make sure that the public knows exactly what this “EDC” is and what groups are being funded before he allows council to throw any extra money at them?

Thursday, August 12, 2010

Say No to a Mayoral Dictatorship in Richmond

Mayor Dwight Jones is attempting to change the city charter whereby the Richmond City Council would no longer be elected but simply appointed by an elected mayor. What's next? An un-elected mayor? And who will these un-elected council appointees be working on behalf of? The actual citizens of Richmond? Or the usual plutocratic interests? Who can we suppose put the mayor up to this? It shouldn't be hard to guess. If this proposed system is put into place, it would be unprecedented anywhere in America in the sense that the city would essentially be a mayoral dictatorship. Sure, the mayor will be elected, but we can all guess who will have the edge so far as electoral competitiveness goes. Read Paul Goldman's editorial in STYLE. Bottom line, this is a load of crap.