Double whammy

July 7, 2016

The Times reported the other day that El Paso’s average wage was 23.5 percent below the national average.

On the other hand we have the third highest property taxes of America’s 50 largest cities.

What does it take to be in third place?  Our property taxes are 193 percent of the 50 city average.

Some will observe that Texas does not have an income tax.  A state income tax might lower property taxes, so if we just look at just the Texas cities on the list of 50 we compute that the El Paso tax rate is 120.5 percent of the Texas average.

Simple arithmetic

With wages 23.5 percent lower than the national average our citizens have less money.  Yet our property taxes are 20.5 percent higher than the other high tax rate Texas cities.

That does not add up to a good economic situation yet we are told that “It’s all good”.

We deserve better

Brutus


Rubber stamp?

July 5, 2016

Word is leaking out that the facilities advisory committee formed by EPISD is being railroaded by their facilitators.

We’ve been told that a recent meeting committee members were told that the district’s bond request will probably be $600 million instead of the $500 million that has recently been reported.

We have also been told that when committee members raise objections to simple things like changing the next meeting time the facilitators in effect belittle the objector.

Worse yet committee members were supposedly told that they should not let word of the $600 million leak out to the public.

We deserve better

Brutus


Let’s keep our independence

July 4, 2016

We hold these Truths to be self-evident, that all Men are created equal, that they are endowed by their Creator with certain unalienable Rights, that among these are Life, Liberty, and the Pursuit of Happiness–

That to secure these Rights, Governments are instituted among Men, deriving their just Powers from the Consent of the Governed,

that whenever any Form of Government becomes destructive of these Ends, it is the Right of the People to alter or abolish it, and to institute new Government, laying its Foundation on such Principles, and organizing its Powers in such Form, as to them shall seem most likely to effect their Safety and Happiness.

*****

Please vote.

We deserve better

Brutus


The law of the land, unless it does not work for the prosecutors

July 1, 2016

The vise tightened for the six former EPISD employees that were indicted earlier this year.

The judge in the case ruled that it is “complex” and that our speedy trial provisions do not apply.

The prosecution claims that the laws are complex and that they need time to prepare for trial.

The sixth amendment to our constitution states:  “In all criminal prosecutions, the accused shall enjoy the right to a speedy and public trial…”.  It does not finish with “unless some judge thinks that he is more important than this amendment”.

No legislature and certainly no judge has the right to nullify the word “all”.

Unfair indictment

Getting indicted is devastating.  Those people can lose their jobs, incur immense legal bills, suffer shame at the hands of fellow citizens that think that if the government indicts you then you must be guilty, and a host of other debilitating problems.

A fair person would think that they cannot indict you unless they are ready to prove their case, ready to go to trial.

Instead the game being played is designed to drain the indictees and force them into pleading guilty before trial begins.

According to the Times article none of the defense lawyers objected to the government’s request that the case be classified as complex.

Shame on them.  They want the delay too.

Why?

Going to trial takes work.  All to often we see attorneys in these cases represent their clients in such a manner that they know the client will run out of money and be forced to plead guilty.  “Bleed them and plead them” is an unfortunate term that is often used.

If their client pleads guilty before trial the attorney gains both the benefit of fees and is relieved of the work necessary to bring a case to trial.

Every one of these indictees should file motions to separate themselves from the other five and thus have a separate trial.  That would make the case less “complex”.  Of course the motions will be denied, but they should be filed anyway.

According to the Times, the government wrote “The requirements vary from state to state as NCLB [no child left behind] allows each state’s education agency to determine how measures for at-risk students will be addressed.  Texas has its own peculiar way of determining AYP [average yearly progress] which is extremely complex in an of itself”.

For crying out loud

Peculiar?  Extremely complex?  The rules are so cloudy that a team of lawyers needs time after bringing an indictment to see how and if the rules were violated?

How on earth could six educators untrained in the law know what was and was not allowable?

The end game

The move to override a constitutional right for the convenience of unprepared government lawyers is really designed to defeat the defendants individually and put them into a position where they have to testify against their fellow indictees in order to receive lighter punishment.

Stand back and watch them fall.

We should not have to fear our government.

We deserve better

Brutus


Climbing to the top

June 28, 2016

After seeing that El Paso had the third highest residential property tax rate of America’s 50 largest cities in 2015, we set off to find out what it would take to get to number two or even to number one, the highest.

Milwaukee Wisconsin had the second highest rate in 2015 at 2.675%.  El Paso was third at 2.640%.

That means that our tax rate only needs to go up three and one-half hundredths of a percent to tie with Milwaukee.

Milwaukee’s rate went down in 2015 from it’s 2014 rate.  El Paso’s went up.

The Ysleta school district is in the process of selling $430 million that their voters authorized.

It appears that the El Paso school district is going to ask for permission to sell around $400 million of bonds.

The city is selling certificates of obligation and bonds.

Second place

Don’t be surprised if the 2016 numbers put El Paso in second place with the second highest residential property tax rate among America’s 50 largest cities.

Can we be first?

We would have to beat Detroit at 3.809%.

Who knows?  Our politicians are talented that way.

We deserve better

Brutus