Tuesday, July 29, 2014

Cityhood with Caution

Fair warning is owed to groups in DeKalb and Fulton counties looking into cityhood for unincorporated areas of these counties. 
Expect the usual sales pitch for seeking refuge from the “evil” county government.  You will be told that you as citizens will be able to control your own city government.  This isn’t really true.  Your city government will be controlled by the chamber of commerce, a city manager and UN Agenda 21 implementation consultants.  You might also be told that they would fix the roads.  This isn’t really true either.  Your roads actually have a better chance of improving less expensively under the county.  You will also be told that you can control your own zoning, but the UN now controls your zoning.  You will experience unnecessary rules, fees, permits and fines you’ve never seen enforced before, because the city will hire a Manager, who will tell the City Council to charge these to make more money for the City.
This is the worst of times and the best of times.  The best comes from the availability of federal grants laundered through unelected boards like MARTA and ARC.  These alone, of course, have caused prices for everything a city buys to double. This is not unlike the kind of inflation in prices you see when a government agency locates a major facility in or near a small rural town.  Rents suddenly double, home prices rise and grocery price rises follow.  In the end, some original residents sell out and move to cheaper digs.  This is simple supply/demand economics. 
In city business, the same supply/demand dynamics is in play, especially when the grants all call for bike lanes, green space, streetscapes, multi-use trails, parks, flowers, bushes and trees and every city and county can apply. Although bids are taken to select vendors for these luxuries, municipalities now use “formulas” to select vendors rather than the lowest bid.  This has fostered groups of cronies who are well connected to the unelected granting bodies.  The bad news is that these folks usually screw up the project and have to go back and fix it.  The really bad news is that the new city will be “advised” to budget millions of dollars on “economic development” for corporate welfare and UN Agenda 21 implementation.  The cookie-cutter master plans and ordinances will erode property rights and impose unnecessary expenses, fees, permits and fines.
In DeKalb and Fulton, failure to maintain roads, bridges, storm sewers, regular sewers, water lines and water treatment facilities have them playing catch-up.  Roads are in bad shape and storm sewers aren’t far behind.  This is very expensive critical infrastructure that should require most of our tax dollars, but cities and counties seem content to spend most of their money on luxuries instead of necessities.  The luxuries include expensive cookie cutter master plans and land use and zoning ordinances.  Unnecessary design costs accompany every road intersection re-do. Road milling and resurfacing costs are double because of road-bed rot.     
The worst news is that the federal government is bankrupt and has been for some time. Consequently, the Federal Reserve has been busy “printing” a 450% increase in the money supply, so more inflation is ahead. With just what they’ve printed so far, it will take 10% annual inflation for 45 years to pay off this 450%.  You will all pay dearly for you new bike lanes and million dollar intersection re-dos.
Many cities and counties have declared bankruptcy over the past several years.  Most notable is Detroit, the victim of the total off-shoring of the U.S. auto industry.  Closer to home, Jefferson County Alabama was ordered by the EPA to build a new water treatment plant that expanded into a total re-do.  They got caught on the wrong end of a Bond flip and couldn’t make the payments. This county outlawed septic tanks and wells to force citizens on to county water and property values collapsed.  In California, no less than a dozen cities have gone bankrupt by backing large commercial redevelopment projects and called to citizens to buy guns as they laid off their police forces.
Cobb County’s Braves grab and future bond cost puts Cobb on the radar for future financial difficulties. Likewise, Hall County property taxes jumped an average of 39% and lake front property lot assessments jumped 100% to 1000%. This could backfire as owners sell and buyers disappear.  Hall property owners are going for an annual cap, like 3 or 4% on future property tax increases in Georgia.
Counties are best equipped to deal with services that require economies of scale.  These are typically roads, bridges, storm sewers, regular sewers, water lines and water treatment facilities. Fire EMS, waste disposal and Police.  It appears that city public schools would make sense in Atlanta Metro.
New cities always want to set up their own Police, Parks and Road maintenance programs, but there is little noticeable difference from when the counties performed these functions.  New cities near CIDs will spend too much on “economic development” to re-do commercial areas.  The CID folks will likely be involved in cityhood campaigns, because they want access to tax dollars and corporate welfare tax holidays for commercial development and redevelopment. 
New cities bring excessive and intrusive compliance with codes, permits, fees and fines. Voters don’t really benefit from this extra layer of government, but the Chamber of Commerce, the CIDs and ARC will push to get these unincorporated areas to set up their own cities.  They will then be able to set up other unelected development and redevelopment boards to issue bonds without approval of the voters.  Georgia law allows them to do this.  Look at the Cobb Braves Bond court decision.
Dunwoody would have done better to establish a road and storm sewer special district to focus on critical infrastructure rather than squandering millions on consultants, studies and corporate welfare.
With “free money” for now, cities are scrambling for federal grants aimed at protecting us from global warming, a hoax, to implement UN Agenda 21, a treasonous scam.
Our economy is being propped up with printed dollars from a bankrupt federal government.  What do you think we should do ?
Norb Leahy, Dunwoody GA Tea Party Leader

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