Nor any drop to drink

January 1, 2015

We start off the new year with a post from a new (to us) author Helen Marshall but not until we take the opportunity to wish you a healthy and prosperous new year and to thank all of you for your involvement.

 

What, us worry?

The Times has recently printed a series of articles that described various aspects of the drought facing the region and questions of how to continue supplying adequate water to the city. El Paso Water Utilities has also embarked on a campaign to convince us that, while water supply is not a simple matter any longer, “purified water” – i.e., recycled sewage – along with water piped from Hudspeth County, will ensure “Water Forever” as the EPWU slogan has it.

UTEP Economics professor Tom Fullerton ran a three-pronged offense over the weekend of December 27-18, to reassure everyone that “EPWU has met the challenge of providing quality water services in El Paso’s desert environment while operating efficient, reliable facilities that keep pace with the city’s growth. . [P]rudent management, continued planning, and innovative technologies will yield long-term solutions that benefit the local economy, environment, and quality of life.”

All three local papers printed his column, a first as far as this writer knows. Readers presumably are reassured that El Paso can continue growing, and water will be provided (at a reasonable price, yet!).

While the EPWU has indeed led the way on conservation in Texas and the region, we have yet to hear how much growth we can continue to shove into the Paso del Norte (where the neighboring city uses the same aquifer), regardless of the projected continuing drought. (Fullerton does not address the river that is missing for much of the year as its waters largely disappear into the pecan farms and cotton fields.) How much water is being removed from the aquifers and not returned now? How much worse will this be when we are drinking our “recycled water” rather than using it for recharge? As we carpet the desert with impermeable parking lots and structures, how much worse does the flooding problem become? Perhaps we must just learn to live next to the Big Ditch and not worry about that part of our quality of life. And the good news is that there will be an ever-larger supply of attendees for the Ballpark!

If we buy this story, do we deserve better?

http://www.elpasotimes.com/water

http://www.elpasoinc.com/news/local_news/article_a436c3ca-8f76-11e4-aa76-c3ace90cf2e0.html

http://www.elpasotimes.com/opinion/ci_27217287/el-paso-water-utilities-is-planning-leader

http://diario.mx/Opinion_El_Paso/2014-12-27_521b96a7/epwu-la-eficiencia-en-el-desierto/

 


Chamber’s latest

December 27, 2014

I got a copy of the 2015 issue of Livability:  Greater El Paso, Tx in the mail yesterday.

The magazine is sponsored by the Greater El Paso Chamber of Commerce.  The wrapper it was in had this statement:  “We are pleased to provide this complimentary copy of our primary fulfillment piece for newcomer/relocation information requests.”  At last a chance to see how the chamber helps promote new business.

The cover featured a handsome picture taken from the inside of our new ball park.

Some of the facets of our community that the magazine featured were:

“Exciting new projects are under way in El Paso’s downtown, which already serves as the epicenter of its art and entertainment scene, with a new ballpark, theaters, museums, main library and arts organization offices.”

They wrote about our All-America City Award in 2010 and about El Paso being the nation’s safest large city four years running.

Our 300-plus days of sunshine were mentioned.

Wonderful voters

“The $74 million ballpark is part of a $473 million quality-of-life bond measure that local voters overwhelmingly approved in 2012” according the magazine.  Most of us missed that election.

Public schools

“Three public school districts serve the El Paso region.”  They mentioned the El Paso, Socorro, and Ysleta districts.  Maybe the chamber considers the Canutillo district to be outside of our region.

Well developed

The “Business Spotlight” featured Jordan Foster Construction, Texas Gas Service, River Oaks Properties, Mimco Inc. and Hunt Companies Inc.

My favorite quote was “From an economic development standpoint, people look for predictable operating environments…And that is what we offer in El Paso”.

No kidding.

We deserve better

Brutus


Running total

November 7, 2014

Some readers have asked recently if anyone knows what the total cost of the ball park is at this point.

These numbers are ones that I attribute to the cost.  I hope that the readers of this blog will help us to build a more accurate accounting.

Double your pleasure showed us that the $61 million in bonds will cost us $137,286,965.10 by the time we pay them off.  That is unless the folks down at the city refinance the deal again.

Opening day was about a “guaranteed maximum price agreement” with the ball park contractor.  The document excluded certain things from the price, like:

  • railroad platforms and bridge
  • railroad platform foundations
  • Missouri and Durango street improvements
  • offsite improvements/work (this probably includes the water and sewer work the city is not talking about as well as the pedestrian and road work around the park)
  • special construction provisions required at railroad
  • porcelain/art signage
  • 4 TOPP or 2 TOPP tables and loose chairs
  • aluminum and fabric sun shades

Train wreck was about the deals the city had to cut with a railroad in order to get a sliver of the land that the ball park now sits on.  In addition to the $238,810 the city had to pay for 8,684 square feet of land, paying $27.50 per square foot, the city had to sell two acres of land adjacent to the $27.50 land for $11.10 per square foot.  Citizens suffered the economic consequences of the city agreeing to close eight railroad crossings throughout the city as part of the land deals.

Shameless told us about a deal where the city gave the state $5 million to enhance bridges between Portfirio Diaz street and Missouri avenue.  The state will spend $2.7 million for two pedestrian overpasses going over the depressed train way leading into the ball park.  The state will also spend $800,000 dollars for pedestrian wayfinding in downtown.

Baseball art showed that the city was going to spend  $850,000 with three artists for work to be done at the ball park.

In El Paso quality of life update the fact that the city was spending $500,000 from quality of life bonds to build a pedestrian pathway into the ball park.

Shoes dropping addressed the fact that “El Paso Water Utilities will handle the work and pay to redo the water and sewer lines in the area…”

Various studies have been paid for relative to traffic, congestion, noise and vibration.

In addition, the sports group has agreed to pay up to $10 million outside of taxpayer money.

Moving city hall has now cost us over $70 million.

That gives us:

  • $137 million to pay off the bonds
  • $239 thousand to buy land from the railroad
  • $5 million to the state
  • $850 thousand for art
  • $500 thousand from the quality of life bonds
  • unknown amount for the water utility to do their work
  • $70 million to move city hall

I come up with about $220 million in capital costs.  Operating costs are another matter.

Not bad for a $35 million stadium that Inside job told us about.

We deserve better

Brutus

 

 

 


El Paso — Affordable Steps To Renewal

October 13, 2014

This from Jerry Kurtkya:

EL PASO – AFFORDABLE STEPS TO RENEWAL

# 1 – Privatize the Costs of Growth

We have seen that the city’s approach to remaking El Paso from its current image as a corrupt border town has focused mostly on downtown vanity projects (I do not count the MCA as one of these) that are money losers except, maybe, for property investors. I have also identified one of the major benefits of El Paso in comparison to other similar size American cities as its genuine growth. It is almost as if the downtown focus is a political “red herring” to distract citizens from the larger game that has been played out for years which is to privatize the benefits of this growth while socializing its costs onto the tax base. Otherwise, why do we need a QoL bond issue every ten years to catch up with the projects that the growth should have funded all along? Where has the money gone?

So, if Brutus permits, I want to lay out a series of initiatives that mostly are not very expensive and that I believe could be transformative here because they aim at not playing the game given to us by the local elite and their surrogates on city council. Rather, I hope these ideas are the start of a different kind of El Paso.

Privatize the Costs of Growth

El Paso currently assesses impact fees on new development for water and sewer purposes. The fees are modest (typically under $3,000 for a residential unit), partially rebated depending on the affordability of the housing with various other credits, and are intended to reimburse EPWU for the cost of extending new service to new development in a Fee Service Area. Builders will not be issued a building permit until the required impact fees have been collected by the city. As far as I can discern, there are three such Fee Service Areas (Northeast, Westside, East) each having a different impact fee as determined by a detailed Land Use Assumptions Plan that calculates and assigns “service units” to the Fee Areas. Service Units are a standardized measure of consumption of city infrastructure services by the new development, currently limited to water and sewer extension. All of this is governed under the Texas Local Government Code Chapter 395. It is a very complex arrangement.

Historically, these costs were passed onto EPWU and not included in the builder’s cost of development but have been since (I think) 2009 when the ordinance was passed. So, this is a good thing as far as the city being reimbursed by the builders for the cost of new residential and commercial growth. The problem is that there is a lot more infrastructure demand created by growth that isn’t reimbursed. That is one reason why we have a bond issue to play “catch up” with parks, libraries, roads, not to mention police and fire stations and other city facilities that can be identified to serve the new areas. It is how the costs of incremental growth are “socialized” and passed onto the general tax base.

I could write all day about the intricacies of how impact fees are calculated and assigned to Fee Service Areas if I fully understood the process, which I do not. What is a service unit for a library branch such that so many new homes equals one new branch? Ditto parks, police, fire facilities? Because we have not done this, we have situations like District #5 that is, effectively, a “city” of 100,000 people without a park! So we have a bond issue every ten years to pay for the capital cost (not operating cost that comes from subsequent property tax revenues) of infrastructure that wasn’t paid for by the new development itself. To reiterate, the builders have “socialized” part of their development costs by offloading it onto the general tax base and they want to keep it that way. Why do you suppose that the city reps in whose districts this game is most actively being played out are the recipients of such generous campaign largess? Well, I propose that we privatize the incremental cost of new growth through higher and more inclusive impact fees.

When I say that a key strategy for El Paso is to “privatize” the cost of new development, this is what I mean – to require builders to pay the full cost of the new infrastructure demand that their development entails, not just water and sewer. Clearly, too, this cost will be loaded onto the price of new homes and buildings that will make them less affordable. Good, because for too long El Paso has been too “affordable” and the sprawl of low cost homes is proof of this, as are the generally low values of these homes and the taxes that they pay to the city. I don’t mean to be hard-hearted, because El Paso is still relatively a very affordable housing market and will continue to be so. But we have to ask the question: For whom are we building the city?

In my first post, I argued that the city leaders made a decision in the 1970s to build the city for the class of unskilled immigrant labor that manned the garment industry. We got what we ordered and are still paying the price in massive welfare, public housing, citizen apathy and the city’s “border town” reputation nationally. I propose for the future that we build the city for those who will contribute to make it a vibrant place to live and work, those who will educate themselves enough to participate as home owners, taxpayers and voters. How many unemployed plumbers, electricians, nurses, engineers, etc. do you know here? These are the kind of people I want as my neighbors going forward and who will live in more expensive, but still relatively affordable homes.

That fateful choice 40 years ago has resulted in the El Paso we have today with all the accumulated deficit of quality of life facilities, now converted into massive public debt. It has created a “trickle up” economy that subsidizes a builder/developer/investor class at the expense of the average taxpayer. It is time to flip the equation so that the money circulates around us, not just upward. I will have more to say about this in future posts.

NEXT: #2 – Save the Land

 


Economic fact

October 9, 2014

At least two of our local blogs have been addressing the topic of economic development recently.  The restaurant/bar situation in downtown has been a big part of the lively discussion.   What economic impact will the ball park have on the downtown area in the short and long runs?

Not being trained in economics, it is probably better that I stay out of the discussion.

We do know one thing for certain and that is that taxpayers are paying for a part of the construction costs (contrary to what we were told)  and a lot of the operating costs.

And while Top of the list showed us that in 2012 El Paso had the fourth most expensive property taxes of the top 50 cities in the United States, our property taxes went up again this year and will continue to go up because of capital spending that we have committed to already.

We deserve better

Brutus