What’s fair here?

October 19, 2014

The  Tuesday, October 7, 2014 city council approved the purchase of a private residence and the land surrounding it to provide a place for the aquatic center that we authorized as part of the 2012 bonds.

The city approved spending $275,000 for the property.  The property is  valued at $113,865 by the central appraisal district.

City staff tells us that the taxpayers are getting a good deal.

How can that be?  Is the central appraisal district wrong here?  Has the property owner been benefiting from a low valuation?

Is the city giving our money away?

Good choice

It looks like the city is actually right here.  The property is adjacent to an existing city park.  That will allow them great flexibility when configuring the aquatic center into the combined properties.  The center will be close to the North/South freeway and thus be quite accessible.

The central appraisal district has the land valued at $1 per square foot.  They have the surrounding properties valued at about $1.50 per square foot.

The city could have used its power of eminent domain to take the property.  I’m glad they did not.

Maybe lightning struck here and the property owner just won the lottery.  Obviously the land is worth more than it is on the tax rolls for.

We have to wonder how many other undervalued properties we have on the tax rolls.

We deserve better

Brutus


EPISD maintenance

October 18, 2014

According to the “Facility Master Plan Draft Background Report” on the El Paso Independent School District (EPISD) web site the district will decrease in size by about 5,200 students between now and the 2019-20 school year.  The report indicates that the district currently has about 61,000 students.

The district is trying to develop a strategy for dealing with the excess facilities that they will have.

Should they operate all of the existing schools at below optimum capacities or should they close some and consolidate student bodies?  Don’t be surprised if they even consider building new schools that are better located.  Texas law requires the school district to provide transportation for students that live more than two miles from the school that they would normally go to.

A disturbing part of the report addresses “Current Condition Cost” for each school.  While the report does not explain the meaning of the term, looking at the sample chart below we can reasonably conclude that the term means “repairs/improvements that need to be made”.

episd-current-condition

The report lists over $101 million dollars for elementary schools, $45 million for middle schools, and $86 million for high schools.  That comes to over $232 million.

The EPISD has deferred a lot of maintenance here.  What will they ultimately do?  Believe it or not they will probably propose a bond issue.

Also, remember that the central office is on city land and we are being told that the district will have to move in a couple of years.  The cost?  District officials are telling us $40 million.

We deserve better

Brutus


Disappointed

October 17, 2014

We have disappointing news that our new city manager has the entitlement mentality.

When he agreed to come to El Paso part of his compensation package was an allowance of $10,000 for moving.

Now in the Tuesday, October 14, 2014 city council meeting we saw the city increase that amount to $26,000.

Try asking for that kind of treatment from your boss.

A deal is a deal.

You can read his original contract here.

We deserve better

Brutus


Spend, don’t think

October 16, 2014

Our city  has once again decided to spend our money without thinking.

As we know, members of council have switched seats because they cannot get along together.

When the new city council room was built the city added room for two more members.  The two new city council positions are the result of changes in our city charter.  Those positions will be created when our population reaches one million residents.

One of our council members decided to vacate her position and then bumped another out of her existing seat.  As a result one member does not have the electronic equipment that the others have.

We learned this week that the city is going to spend approximately $6,800 setting up the new seat.

Why?

Without getting into the discussion about who should sit where, a question needs to be asked.

Why not move the equipment from the vacant position to the newly occupied one?  The city might have to hire some expert equipment movers to do this if the city staff cannot handle it.

Either way we would have some labor cost but would not need to buy new equipment.

Where was management on this?

Would anyone be surprised if the next thing we hear is that “it isn’t fair, she has new equipment and I don’t”.

We deserve better

Brutus


BRIO not far away

October 15, 2014

A regular reader sent me a note telling me that Sun Metro’s contractors are hard at work lowering the height of the curbs at some of the BRIO stations.  Evidently the rumor from the other day was true and some of the curbs were too high for the buses.

I sent an inquiry to the mayor’s office asking when we can expect our new rapid transit system (BRIO) to start operating.

Within hours I got a response from Sun Metro.

Soon

Sun Metro’s response is that they expect to start Monday, October 27, 2014.

We should expect Sun Metro to discontinue some of the existing routes.  Route 18 was express service between downtown and the west side transfer station.  An alert reader pointed out a few days ago that route 18 is no longer on Sun Metro’s web page.

This first portion of the rapid transit system is expensive and has been quite disruptive.

At this point we should hope that it is successful.

Brutus