“It Takes Allot of Bottles of Opus One to pay for One Arena”
$3,000 doesn’t go as far as it used to. 30 years ago, $3,000 would buy you a new car, make a nice down payment on a home, or send a kid to Harvard for a year. Today, it pays for 12 bottles of Opus One or one Evansville family’s share of the total cost of a new downtown arena. My, how times have changed.
Then again, maybe they haven’t changed so much after all. Drunken excess, scapegoating, and corruption are time-honored political traditions, especially in Evansville.
I can’t help but smile at all the righteous indignation and public outrage over the infamous CVB Christmas Dinner. Don’t get me wrong—it was clearly a colossal lapse in judgment and an inappropriate use of public funds. But it represents a proverbial drop in the bucket in terms of the wastefulness, arrogance, and audacity of Evansville’s political establishment.
To put it in perspective, all those bottles of expensive wine and plates of rich food cost the 100,000 or so taxpaying residents of Vanderburgh County approximately $.03 apiece. That’s a rounding error on a cup of Starbucks coffee. By contrast, the mayor and his coterie of reckless spendthrifts have burdened each and every one of those families with nearly $3,000 of additional and unnecessary debt in order to finance the new downtown stadium project. Those same people met in secret to devise a way to deprive homeowners of $5.1 million in homestead tax exemptions and only fessed up after being caught red-handed. Now, the mayor claims to be “outraged†over a $3,000 dinner party. Is there no honor among thieves?
Meanwhile, Evansville’s ancient sewers continue to rot and crumble leavings swaths of the city virtually uninhabitable during heavy rains, and the city continues to discharge polluted water into the Ohio River in violation of EPA guidelines. The wise and fortunate scramble to escape Evansville’s decaying infrastructure and high taxes, only to be annexed later on by a city desperate for additional tax revenue.
Symbolism is important in politics. All of the lurid excess and injustice of pre-Revolutionary France was crystallized in Marie Antoinette’s relatively harmless, offhand remark “Let them eat cake.†And in modern-day Evansville, the arrogance and disconnectedness of our political class is symbolized by a pricey evening at Biaggi’s during a recession. That is all well and good, but let’s not lose sight of the big picture. It takes more than cracking down on a lavish dinner party to change Evansville’s political culture.
And it takes a whole lot of bottles of Opus One to equal one very expensive stadium.
–Andrew Smith is a former candidate for Evansville City Council and the founder of Sewers before Stadium.
This guest editorial was published without editing or bias on the part of the City County Observer.
Here is a link to a most appropriate cartoon to accompany this letter.
http://city-countyobserver.com/2011/01/07/cartoon-of-the-bacchanalian-fest-vs-ballfield-and-arena-spending/