Where is this idea that Mick needs to have some brand fresh plan for the future coming from? If he gets elected and all we get is more of the same, then I am pretty sure we are getting our money's worth given his track record over the last decade.
That's just not worth taking time out my day to vote for or staying in OKC for... Instead of defending the lack of ideas and attacking Shadid supporters (he'll destruct on his on) those with access to Mick or his advisors should push him to be bold. Bold is saying yeah we'll take a new NBA team even if we don't get to keep it. Bold is making a land locked city with no real river a world class rowing destination. Again. Don't hate the guy, but I'm not voting for someone based on laurels.
At the municipal level especially, trickle down does happen. The city invested millions in the infrastructure to support Devon. In return, we got an outstanding iconic office tower and thousands of high-paying jobs which stayed here instead of going to Houston. Same with CHK and the other major energy companies. That corporate welfare is just how the game is now played and companies which don't get it go elsewhere. As to lower-income OKC citizens, I may sound heartless, but if there's a section 8 complex going up next to my neighborhood in the burbs, that doesn't tend to make me a happy person. That tends to get me to upgrade my home security system. I'm not sure the best thing to do for the city is to encourage more poverty here. As far as dealing with what we have, I'd love to have a more elaborate public transit system. It's just not very high on my list unless it can be something we highlight for out of town employers.
A great bus system? I'm guessing most of your employers (the ones we want) are not going to care about this. A nice downtown circulator connected to a commuter rail line serving the suburbs? That'd turn some heads.
Me either. Some neighborhoods really should decay and be torn down. I think we are all better off without Sandtown or Mulligan Flats. Other neighborhoods like the Plaza district gentrified all on their own... and it is kind of funny how suddenly everything sprung up to where you now have the old crappy neighborhood grocer next to a bunch of hipster art studios. If we continue to do the big things, mostly downtown, that's what is going to advance us as a city.
From Steve's twitter feed:
"I expected a highly biased, poorly reasoned, poor methodology study and I wasn't disappointed"
-Ed Shadid on the Convention Hotel study.
OKC is not dense enough for rail in a lot of places. A bus is as good as some will get. Also OKC needs to focus on intra city transit, Edmond doesn't pay OKC property tax. Also it doesn't matter if downtown companies don't care for buses, these companies don't vote. I don't disagree that some of the tax breaks haven't been helpful, but it's time to turn the spicket to a trickle. There's also a difference b/t Bass Pro subsidies and Deven 180 TIF, I'm not to keen on the hotel subsidy.
You encourage more poverty by letting it fester in one or two corners. Mixed income development and vouchers help relieve cycles of poverty, with programs like this a section 8 apartment would be built next to you, but a 60% market rate and 40% low income development would be built. Just because some people would like to pretend poverty doesn't exist in OKC doesn't mean it's not there. Is it too much to ask for a mayor just as interested in alleviating childhood poverty and homeless as (s)he is with convention centers and TIF. Bricktowns mayor is the Eastside's as well.
While its not impossible he's wrong, it's is also possible he is. We don't have methodology classes in med school and if the medical literature is any example, most doctors aren't learning it on their own. I don't have a dog in this fight, as I'm not well educated enough on the subject to have an accurate opinion. But I do know that listening to a presentation might not give you enough information to have an accurate opinion. And Ed's opinion was formed before he ever listened to the presentation, as he admits.
Edmond will contribute financially if we get commuter rail, as will Norman and Midwest City. That process is already underway. A lot of the streetcar supporters who are active here are also pro other forms of transit. We understand that the bus system needs a drastic overhaul and are ready to do the work to help make it happen. But, it can only be funded by taxpayers, and this is a conservative city. So, it can't be fixed overnight. Most of us would like to see an RTD formed, with a percentage of a cent from sales tax dedicated to transit. That would help everyone, from the poor to commuters. But, it is going to take a campaign, and while MAPS 3 is underway, no one wants to hear about another tax. I fully expect it to either be part of a MAPS 4 type vote or an independent vote for transit. The streetcar will actually help sell a tax for transit, which is one of a couple of reasons why I think it's shortsighted to try and stop the streetcar.
http://www.huduser.org/portal/period...15num2/ch1.pdf
I would like to eliminate or alleviate poverty as well, and I suspect Mayor Cornett would as well, but there are no quick fixes. It's been tried on a national level without impressive success. We have been able to vaccinate children and provide early childhood education fairly successfully though, and both of those are important. We have an incredibly diverse society ethnically and culturally. We're not Japan or Sweden. Education, not housing or even bus service, is the key to helping some people who are poor and able to use education to better themselves. But again, there are no quick fixes on a city-wide level. We passed MAPS for kids, and schools physical plants have improved. But, how to fix education isn't even something educators can agree on. Diversity in schools may help, which is why I don't necessarily see gentrification as a bad thing. As gentrification occurs in a neighborhood, you get maximal diversity without manipulating populations. But for a mayor or mayoral candidate to announce that they want to eliminate poverty is childishly simplistic, IMO.
I think we're closer in thought than you think. I agree with the streetcar. Part of the reason I'm not on board with Mick is the fact that another $250-$300 mil could have bought a lot rail and BRT (bus as a light rail or commuter line which takes capital costs).
And while I agree with you that school is the biggest factor, a child in the best school would have trouble focusing with gun shots in his neighborhood or going to bed hungry. Also there aren't a ton of good paying jobs in some of the poor areas of town so transportation is a way out of (or in a lot OKC'ers case, a trap in) poverty. You can promote sustainable core building growth and help out the poor. Improve bus service and build a streetcar for short trips and invest on bus rapid transit and rail for commuters. We need an all of the above solution.
Just to be clear with everyone since this conversation has turned to transit and there seems to be a bit of confusion.
BTW, I wrote this in response to OKCUSTU and it took awhile. I see Betts is addressing some of it but I'll post it anyway. If Stephen Tyler Holeman reads OKC Talk, this is for you to and those earlier Facebook posts late last night. Some of Ed's folks are trying to impose a great deal of innuendo about the transit issues as well. Perhaps it will help address them.
Mayor Mick is the Chairman of Regional Transit Dialogue (now in Phase 2) hosted by the Association of Central Oklahoma Governments. We (our steering committee, subcommittees and the URS Corporation), are conducting a commuter corridors study to better define what type of infrastructure and what the estimated costs are to build a comprehensive system. The Mayor is also supporting and directly involved in a bill through the state legislature (to be voted on in January and February) that will further enable the formal legal creation of a Regional Transit Authority.
In theory, a Regional Transit Authority would replace and potentially consolidate the Metro Transit bus system, CART (Norman's Bus System), and Citi-link (Edmond). Nelson Nygaard's 2013 Bus system Plan and the 2005 Fixed Guideway Study could in theory be fully funded. That would provide for enhanced bus coverage, frequency, shelters, and additional infrastructure; Bus Rapid Transit to Yukon, Meridian Corridor, and NW Expressway; Commuter Rail to Edmond, Norman, Midwest City, and Del City.
Lets be clear about this, Mayor Cornett was not initially a regional transit supporter. His earliest comments during his first term suggested that he considered transit another way to enable people to live outside of Oklahoma city and subsequently generate their tax revenue there. He was however in favor of improved transit specifically within the Oklahoma City limits proper. There were many times in his first and second terms where he specifically addressed those clamoring for a regional rail system and said that he would change his opinion if the other cities would help pay for it.
Now things have changed.
Mayor Cornett has visited many other cities and seen the overall benefits of a Regional Transit System. Many of the cities (particularly Edmond) have conveyed their support in pursuing the creation of an RTA. In those initial meetings, Midwest City, Del City, and Norman were the three cities with interested elected officials sitting in RTD #1.
NOW we have many of the Councillors and most of the Mayors of Edmond, Midwest City, Del City, Moore, and Norman interested and at the table. In the last few meetings, now Yukon is trying to get involved.
The pursuit of a meaningful solution to our transit woes is within eyesight. And this is primarily due to Mayor Cornett's early position about "not going it alone" and his willingness to embrace pursuing it with these folks now sitting at the table.
Interestingly enough, Ed Shadid does not sit on any of these committees and actually turned down the offer to participate when this initiative was first being organized.
Now regarding the "transit versus the convention center" conversation, MAPS 3 does not provide ongoing revenues for Operations and Maintenance. It is that simple. There is no person that would have a greater desire to see an additional $280 million go to the purchase of buses, shelters, and commuter rail. But if we buy it, how do we operate it? That is why a carefully thought out solution as the mayor proposes in the form of an RTA is the best way to resolve these long term costs. It also best positions us for matching funds for the actual physical infrastructure from the Federal Transit Administration.
The MAPS 3 streetcar is small enough of a system that we are confident that we can find the monies to operate it- parking revenues, advertising on trains and at stops, Santa Fe Station tenant space leasing, and potentially a TIF or change to the BID (Business Improvement District that funds Downtown OKC Inc.)
So some of us don't want to talk about Ed's prior bad decisions as an adult. That is ok with me. We all make mistakes. But regarding tangible evidence on the transit front, I have personally witnessed Ed try to tear apart our process, demonize the mayor, and pit transit advocates against one another. I have known him since the Ward 2 election.
The Mayor I have known since his first election winning against Jim Tolbert. On the transit issue, you have to give this guy props. He had an early position that he stuck to (one I didn't agree with), he forced the other cities to the table if they we serious, they came, and he jumped on board and is literally leading the process.
Forming a long term solution like an RTA takes a leader who doesn't pit advocates and public servants against one another. This (forming and getting an RTA approved by the voters) will likely be one of the most complicated and sophisticated public initiatives ever pursued in our state. It takes stability in leadership and political "buy in" from participating city governments outside of OKC and end even in a different county!
I have attended hundreds of meetings over the past decade. We have never been closer to moving on ahead forward to a substantive and meaningful solution. It is easy for Ed to ridicule our existing bus service. I feel for the folks forced to use it. But it took 70 years of "non-investment" to end up with the system we have to today. Plus the extrication of the original streetcar and Interurban rail system.
Here's a mathematical fact for you I was recently informed of- Mayor Mick has supported and achieved financially annually growing our bus system more than all mayors combined in the past 20 years preceding his tenure.
So whats it going to be?
Ed's idea of playing games with the streetcar system to score political points? Ed's idea that somehow convention center money would solve our transit problem (even though he has no solution for the O&M)? Ed's non-participation in the ongoing processes to actually solve these dire problems?
or
Mayor Mick actually leading us politically by working together with our surrounding communities for better bus, bus rapid transit, para transit, streetcar, and commuter rail through a legitimate long term fix?
My vote is with Mayor Cornett.
Jeff M. Bezdek
Regional Transit Dialogue 1 Public Outreach Committee Chair
Regional Transit Dialogue 2 Commuter Corridors Study Task Force Member
Streetcar Federal Process Alternatives Analysis Steering Committee Member
MAPS 3 Transit Subcommittee Member (MAPS 3 Streetcar and Intermodal Santa Fe Station Hub Project)
^^^
I've been, as someone else said, "agnostic" about this race. But you won my vote.
But for the record I like Ed Shadid on the council. This city needs a foil like him to keep everybody honest.
Glad to hear it. I'm all for a good critic. I was expecting more of a "leader" from Ed out of the Ward 2 race and that is why I supported him at that time. Other than the personal attacks that have occurred, that is probably what disappoints me the most. We need an alternative voice. But as Mayor- No.
"Lets spend some money downtown. It will be good. All money spent downtown is good. We don't need to do anything else. Not our problem."
I think we have just about all of those types of statements posted in this thread now.
Here's what is. The whole view of what's being talked about in the thread at the moment and about how it is interrelated.
Throw a bag of money in the center of town. Gentrification and Displacement happens.
http://lmgtfy.com/?q=gentrification+and+displacement
Populations and demographics shift across town. Property values go up near the bag of money. Some can't afford to live there. They move or don't buy there when they are looking. They move to the flats or to Edmond, or they move from places like Gatewood as values rise to Old Putnam City where values are falling. They become part of the Rolling Ghetto as others move to the burbs or downtown.
All of that is intimately related but it's much more complicated by the fact we have decentralized jobs.
Got a downtown no one can afford to buy in, a rolling ghetto and some burbs at out on the fringes you don't want, eh? Think back about that bag of money you threw and get back with me what your plans were for the rest of the city while you were doing that.
Now. I didn't say don't throw that bag of money or we shouldn't have. I voted to throw it. We should have. It was good for the city.
What are your plans for the rest of the city? How would you fix what you see are the problems? Should everyone be able to afford to live downtown? What prevents gentrification if it's a bad thing? IS it a bad thing? How about the money being spent on the periphery for schools, roads and sidewalks? Is that a bad thing? Who has specifically said we don't need to do anything else but spend money downtown? "Types of statements" don't count, because that's your interpretation of what people are saying. Quotes are much more useful in a discussion.
tomokc- It is probably more of a question as to who would replace him. Would the race be competitive would a good alternative candidate?
Also, he has a enough of a GOTV mechanism to make any future Ward 2 election competitive should he be able to spin his way out of this and inoculate himself with time and distance from the bad past judgement issues.
I haven't seen a single post in this thread advocating only spending money downtown, doing nothing else, and saying "Not our problem". I'd love to see someone point one out if it exists.
Here's one like what I'm talking about. Read what was said and then read the response,
http://www.okctalk.com/general-civic...tml#post720046
That was a fantastic post, Urban Pioneer. Makes me want to print and mail it out as a flyer in support of Mick.
So can we be finished with the false commentary that Mick doesn't have a plan?
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