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A “Real Offensive” Or “Really Offensive” by George Lumley

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A “REAL OFFENSIVE” OR “REALLY OFFENSIVE” BY GEORGE LUMLEY

The article in the Evansville Courier and Press on Saturday under the “Who Owns That” series exposes the Mayor’s Department of Metropolitan Development (DMD) plan to bail out the Evansville Brownfields Corp (EBC) by tying the troubled not for profit EBC to the County tax sale. It is headlined as “Deal for Large-Scale Demolitions In The Works”.  This article claims “Anti-blight reformers in Evansville city government” are working on a deal that “hinges on CITY COUNCIL approving the real offensive against blight – a proposed $2 million campaign to demolish nearly 2000 dilapidated structures in Evansville”.

The first two sentences were all I had to read to be certain I would find the plan really offensive.  First, $2 million is not enough for a real offensive against anything in a city this size with a combined budget of over $321,000,000.  Second, why did they have to take five years to do this?  Third, does the city DMD think a “real offensive” against blight would only be money for demolition?  Forth, knowing that a previous article by Stephanie Brinkerhoff-Riley had already indicated a plan was brewing for $ 2.25 million per year and  the second sentence of the article  reads “A proposed $2 million campaign to demolish nearly 2,000 dilapidated structures in Evansville over the next five years” is actually $2.25 million x 5 years or $11,250,000 for those 2,000 structures.  That was just the first two sentences.

The third sentence is the expected news with some slight twist.  The article indicates this is the first stage “if City Council members next month approve converting the nonprofit Evansville Brownfields Corp (EBC) into a Land Bank.”  Now what does that mean?  EBC is already a land bank.  Is this like the fairy tail asking for the frog to be turned into a prince, only we just want the magical council to turn the frog into a frog or more specifically in this case a Land Bank into a Land Bank.  The sentence continues that DMD “has included the money – $1 million of which would be earmarked for demolition and the rest for administration, property management and staff – in it’s 2016 budget request”.  So that is $1.25 million for administration for a million in demolition.  Does that sound right? More to administer the demolition than the actual demolition?

The forth sentence mentions the $500,000 budgeted in the past as “traditional” and would remain in place.  Looking at prior budgets I question the “traditional” term.  The appropriation for 2012 and 2013 was $1,000,000 each year.  According to Russell Lloyd, City Controller the appropriation was cut the last two years to $750,000 and $500,000 respectively in anticipation of other sources of funding demolitions: Specifically, grants from the Federal Hardest Hit Fund, in the form of the state Blight Elimination Program.  So traditionally the budget for demolition was $1 million or more (with grants) and the administration for that $1+ million was included in the Building Commission’s budget.  By the way it is “traditionally” the Building Commission that handles CODE enforcement and demolitions not the DMD.

The Courier and Press article continues correctly acknowledging the need for demolitions and the fact that it is a combined city county problem with the county holding title to many city properties because of foreclosed tax liens.  But then the article claims the city has to buy the properties from the county.  What, the city has to buy a property before it can tear it down?  I watch the legislation pretty closely and I don’t remember any new laws for building code enforcement that a city has to buy a property before it demolishes it.  No one is exempt from code enforcement. Our Building Commission is a city county building commission; if they say demolish, it’s demolished no matter who owns it. Is the County Government going to fight the City Government on tearing down vacant, abandoned, unfixable, structures? Really?

You have got to be kidding! Is this fiction?  The deal is unveiled as an outline negotiated behind closed doors by the City DMD Director Kelly Coures (Coures is also the EBC president), one Council Member (Stephanie Brinkerhoff-Riley), one County Commisioner (Bruce Ungethiem) and the county attorney .  According to the article the County officials (unnamed) agree not to auction the blighted properties if the City Council will fund a $2 million DMD appropriation to bail out the EBC.

“But that’s not all” the article claims.  And it is not!  There is more nonsense.

In the “Deal” the county wants to get rid of the properties before winter (of course there has to be a rush) and to speed things along Coures volunteers advancing $80,000 from his DMD administered EBC; but, that is only if the $2 million is appropriated. “Coures said Brownfields, a separate corporation administered by his department, also may have another $20,000 needed to acquire 41 auction-bound properties that the Building Commission designated as candidates for rehabilitation.” Any property worth rehabbing is worth at least $10,000 to $20,000.  So there are 41 properties that may be worth $400,000, to $800,000 that DMD’s EBC (Coures’ private “company”) will take off the taxpayers’ hands for $20,000.  And where does the EBC get its $100,000 – from the sale of property bought with city block grant funds.  Now why the rush to change title before winter?  The county has owned some of these houses a couple of years.  Sure If I was a county official I would want to take advantage of this deal as soon as possible.  Especially if the city is going to start going after the owners (in this case the County) for the demolition cost.  Let’s see, the county is the owner of a property that is worthless and has to be demolished and cleaned up.  And the city is willing to take that liability, pay cash to a third party (the EBC), and it will not cost the County anything.   Sure jump on that deal.  Do they have any other liabilities they want us to pay to take off their hands?

What is in it for the city?  Why would the city want the properties before winter?  And how about that summer mowing bill once the house is torn down?  The county will not want that one.  Does the city want it?  Coures indicated to me that the city was spending $120,000 to mow his 120 EBC properties.  Now if he gets 2,000 more vacant lots from these homes that are torn down does that mean the city will be paying $2 million for mowing?  And how about that announcement by Coures that HUD was requiring something to be done with the EBC owned properties acquired with community development block grants.  That city/EBC problem is not resolved, why complicate it with more properties that once owned can’t be disposed.

They say the city wants the properties to keep them out of the tax sale.  The city or EBC does not have to own the properties to keep them out of the tax sale.  The County does not even have to take title.  The title can remain in the previous owners name and the county can still withhold the blighted property from the tax sale. Does the County not have the same interest as the City in stopping the blighted property tax sale cycle? Nobody really wants these blighted liabilities and the problem is not whether the city owns the property or the county owns the property the problem is funding the demolition.  Now the DMD wants to complicate the funding process with this scheme that raises the funding $500,000 above the historic level but tack on $1.25 million in administration funds for behind the door EBC activities.

This deal is not new large scale demolition.  It is just the same annual demolition that has been going on for years.  The two new aspects are: One, the focus on tax sale properties because of this year’s legislative changes that make it much easier for the county to pull blighted properties from the regular tax sale for a special sale that transfers a superior title in a more timely fashion; and two, The attaching of a ball and chain, the DMD diverting funding that could go to demolitions to convert its “tax funded, private EBC Land Bank” into a “tax funded, private EBC Land Bank”  with an additional tax revenue flow from the city general fund of more than a million annually.

This deal is not a “real offensive against housing blight”.  A real offensive against housing blight will include much more than demolition.  A real offensive will focus on the many aspects and tools for prevention.  We already have effective tools in place that are not working effectively because they are underfunded or mismanaged.  Demolition is just one of those tools.  We do not need to fund the EBC to have more demolitions.  To efficiently effect more demolitions we would fund the Building Commissions Demolition budget. If the Mayor asked for a plan on blight and this is what they came up with then DMD is suffering from tunnel vision on funding their EBC land banking activity, doesn’t understand blight and does not realize we have a City/County Building Commission.

Please take time and vote in today’s “Readers Poll”. Don’t miss reading today’s Feature articles because they are always an interesting read. New addition to the CCO is the Cause of Death reports generated by the Vanderburgh County Health Department.
Copyright 2015 City County Observer. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

Governor Pence Announces FEMA Grant of Nearly $1.6 Million to Salem Community Schools; Tornado Safe Room to be Constructed for Elementary School  

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INDIANAPOLIS − Governor Mike Pence today announced a federal award of $1,592,420 to Salem Community Schools for construction of a safe room at Bradie Shrum Elementary School in Salem, Indiana.

 

“Tornadoes and storms regularly batter Indiana,” said Governor Pence. “This project in Salem will help protect students, teachers, staff and visitors by providing them with a secure area to seek shelter during severe weather. Hoosier families and students deserve a safe environment to learn and grow. I appreciate the work among the local, state and federal personnel who collaborated to bring this grant funding to fruition.”

 

“We are honored to have the opportunity to create a model tornado-safe area at Bradie Shrum Elementary,” said Dr. Lynn Reed, Superintendent of Salem Community Schools. “Living in an area that is prone to tornadic activity and having a personal connection to the 2012 destruction of Henryville, I believe new or remodeled schools should be built to these FEMA specifications. This structure will bring our district goal of a ‘safe school’ into reality.  It will not only provide a safer environment for students, but it will help spread awareness for the destructive power of tornadoes and other severe weather.”

 

The grant came from the U.S. Department of Homeland Security’s Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA) and was announced through the FEMA Region V Office in Chicago.

 

“The Pre-Disaster Mitigation Program enables communities to implement critical mitigation measures to reduce or eliminate the risk of loss of life and property,” said Andrew Velasquez III, regional administrator, FEMA Region V. “The construction of this safe room will protect the lives of vulnerable citizens by providing a secure location to seek shelter from tornadoes and other high-wind events.”

 

The Pre-Disaster Mitigation Program provides grants to state and local governments to implement long-term hazard mitigation measures.

 

The Indiana Department of Homeland Security administers the grant from FEMA to Salem Community Schools.

 

The total eligible cost of the project is $2,123,228. FEMA will pay 75 percent, which is the $1,592,420. Salem

PETS OF THE WEEK

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 RAWR, it’s a T-Rex! Just kidding… Even though he’s named after a dinosaur, T-Rex is just about the least-ferocious kitty you’ll ever meet. He was found in a nice family’s driveway the night they went to see Jurassic World, so that’s how he earned his name. He’s a male tabby, approximately 2 years old. He loves to give head bonks and face rubs, and he’s already neutered and vaccinated so he can go home TODAY! His $30 adoption fee also includes his microchip, FeLV/FIV testing, and more. Visit www.vhslifesaver.org or call (812) 426-2563!

Vanderburgh County Recent Booking Records

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SPONSORED BY DEFENSE ATTORNEY IVAN ARNAEZ. 
DON’T GO TO COURT ALONE. CALL IVAN ARNAEZ @ 812-424-6671.

EPD Activity Report

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SPONSORED BY DEFENSE ATTORNEY IVAN ARNAEZ. 
DON’T GO TO COURT ALONE. CALL IVAN ARNAEZ @ 812-424-6671.
 

EPD ACTIVITY REPORT

PETS OF THE WEEK

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When you’re Smokey, every day is Tongue-Out Day! This 4-year-old male Papillon/mini Poodle mix weighs 6 lbs. and is partially housetrained. He is just as adorable in person. His $120 adoption fee includes his neuter, microchip, vaccines, & more! Visit www.vhslifesaver.org or call (812) 426-2563!

 

EVSC to Offer STEM Summer Camp

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The Evansville Vanderburgh School Corporation, in partnership with the University of Southern Indiana, Butler University and I-STEM at Purdue University, is providing a STEM camp for students currently enrolled in kindergarten through eighth grade. The camp, taking place at Fairlawn Elementary, is scheduled for July 27 – 30, and will operate from 8:30 a.m. to 1 p.m. each day.

 

At the camp, students will be actively engaged in STEM principles – Science, Technology, Engineering and Math. They also will participate in hands-on science and math lessons with EVSC teachers. And, free lunch will be provided to all campers.

 

UNLOCKING PRISON REFORM

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By Peter Funt

Back on the Fourth of July, buried in the mumbo-jumbo of campaign rhetoric, was a statement by Democrat Martin O’Malley. The former Maryland governor said “patriotism” is rooted in helping others, and among those he singled out were people in prison.

I don’t ever recall a major party candidate in a U.S. presidential election making a plea on behalf of prison inmates. For that matter, I don’t ever recall a sitting president visiting a federal prison to lobby for improvements in America’s criminal justice system — because until July 16 it had never happened.

The tide of opinion is turning quickly concerning the gaping hole in America’s promise to treat citizens fairly. Our poorly run, overcrowded, shamefully inequitable incarceration system is all of a sudden under intense review.

At the El Reno prison in Oklahoma, the president stood outside a 9-by-10 cell that confines three men at a time. “These are young people who made mistakes that aren’t that different from the mistakes I made,” he said, referring to his experiments with drugs while growing up in Hawaii. “The difference is, they did not have the kind of support structures, the second chances, the resources that would allow them to survive those mistakes.”

The president made clear that his focus is on nonviolent offenders, many serving terms imposed under rigid mandatory sentencing laws which have caused the nation’s prison population to explode. This has disproportionately affected young Hispanic and African-American men.

He noted that while the U.S. has 5 percent of the world’s population, it has 20 percent of the world’s prison inmates.

An influential group of Republicans, among them Sen. Rand Paul of Kentucky, has joined the ranks of those urging prison and judicial reform. Immediately after Obama’s Oklahoma trip, House Speaker John Boehner added his voice to those calling for new sentencing guidelines. With bipartisan support, relatively quick action seems possible.

Yet, it’s worth noting that only 15 percent of the nation’s inmates are held in federal facilities, so much of the needed reforms will have to occur at the state level — certain to be a slower process. By one estimate it could take a decade to restore America’s prison system to merely the level of adequacy of the 1950s.

At this stage, the national focus — likely to work its way into the 2016 presidential campaign — revolves around two primary issues. One is unreasonable sentencing, particularly for nonviolent crimes. The other concerns deplorable prison conditions, made worse in many regions by the bad practice of privatizing prisons.

If progress is made on those hot-button issues, it will be significant. But the problems go deeper. For example, juvenile prosecutions and incarcerations are seriously out of sync with what we know about child development and what we should know about the steps necessary to rehabilitate rather than simply incarcerate young offenders.

High recidivism rates across prison populations create a spiral of crime, unemployment and, in turn, more crime. Over reliance on solitary confinement and inadequate mental health programs contribute to the complex web of concerns.

Also, the continued existence of the death penalty, long after most of the civilized world has abandoned it, clouds our entire criminal justice system.

Some activists fear that the current flurry of interest is but a passing social and political fad. Meaningful reforms, they predict, will take decades.

“I signed a bill that made the problem worse.” So said Bill Clinton the other day about a mandatory sentencing measure he ushered into law in 1994. It’s taken over two decades to get that concession. How long will it take to actually correct the injustice?

IRAN AGREEMENT BOOSTS PEACE, DEFEATS NEOCONS

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By Ron Paul

Last week’s successfully concluded Iran agreement is one of the two most important achievements of an otherwise pretty dismal Obama presidency. Along with the ongoing process of normalizing relations with Cuba, this move shows that diplomacy can produce peaceful, positive changes. It also shows that sometimes taking a principled position means facing down overwhelming opposition from all sides and not backing down. The president should be commended for both of these achievements.

The agreement has reduced the chance of a U.S. attack on Iran, which is a great development. But the interventionists will not give up so easily. Already they are organizing media and lobbying efforts to defeat the agreement in Congress. Will they have enough votes to over-ride a presidential veto of their rejection of the deal? It is unlikely, but at this point if the neocons can force the U.S. out of the deal it may not make much difference. Which of our allies, who are now facing the prospect of mutually-beneficial trade with Iran, will be enthusiastic about going back to the days of a trade embargo? Which will support an attack on an Iran that has proven to be an important trading partner and has also proven reasonable in allowing intrusive inspections of its nuclear energy program?

However, what is most important about this agreement is not that U.S. government officials have conducted talks with Iranian government officials. It is that the elimination of sanctions, which are an act of war, will open up opportunities for trade with Iran. Government-to-government relations are one thing, but real diplomacy is people-to-people: business ventures, tourism, and student exchanges.

I was so impressed when travel personality Rick Steves traveled to Iran in 2009 to show that the U.S. media and government demonization of Iranians was a lie, and that travel and human contact can help defeat the warmongers because it humanizes those who are supposed to be dehumanized.

As I write in my new book, “Swords into Plowshares”:

Our unwise policy with Iran is a perfect example of what the interventionists have given us—60 years of needless conflict and fear for no justifiable reason. This obsession with Iran is bewildering. If the people knew the truth, they would strongly favor a different way to interact with Iran.

Let’s not forget that the Iran crisis started not 31 years ago when the Iran Sanctions Act was signed into law, not 35 years ago when Iranians overthrew the US-installed Shah, but rather 52 years ago when the US CIA overthrew the democratically-elected Iranian leader Mossadegh and put a brutal dictator into power. Our relations with the Iranians are marked by nearly six decades of blowback.

When the Cold War was winding down and the military-industrial complex needed a new enemy to justify enormous military spending, it was decided that Iran should be the latest “threat” to the U.S.. That’s when sanctions really picked up steam. But as we know from our own CIA National Intelligence Estimate of 2007, the stories about Iran building a nuclear weapon were all lies. Though those lies continue to be repeated to this day.

It is unfortunate that Iran was forced to give up some of its sovereignty to allow restrictions on a nuclear energy program that was never found to be in violation of the Non-Proliferation Treaty. But if the net result is the end of sanctions and at least a temporary reprieve from the constant neocon demands for attack, there is much to cheer in the agreement. Peace and prosperity arise from friendly relations and trade — and especially when governments get out of the way.