Next up in the antics of some members of the
Longmont City Council at the June 10th meeting is some of
Sarah Levisons comments. This was some fairly agenda driven questioning of
Panattoni's Will Damrath.
It's easy to spot agenda driven games like this when the answer is more or less ignored, and when an answer is given the questioner quickly moves on to another subject. I noticed much of this wasn't covered in the Times-Call, but as usual you can see the video on the city's website.
First, Ms. Levison compared the mall to
Target in her "extraordinary cost" line of questioning. Mr. Damrath rightly pointed out that
her analogy was flawed, that Target owned its own property, as in just one tenant, they are a large public company and Panattoni builds for tenants, where Target builds for itself. That being said, Mr. Damrath said Target could've applied and been eligible for a special metro district.
Next was the question of rent going up on tenants due to the Tax Increment Financing, or TIF. The answer was NO, that those taxes are paid in sales taxes by people who shop there. Shouldn't Ms. Levison already know this?
Ms. Levison made the claim Panattoni only owns
24% of the 41 acres in question, based on some conversation with a Boulder County Assessor. Mr. Damrath said 5 separate LLC's own that, which are made up of Panattoni employee's or investors, in other words
they control 100% of that land. Again, homework not done.
Ms. Levison asked how the racetrack configuration of the ring road helps the blight conditions. Mr. Damrath said there are legal agreements with the other land owners when it comes to that road and their access. On this subject,
Sean McCoy asked why the traffic pattern is the
same as it is now. I saw this map in the packet, anyone can tell the map he was looking at was the
current configuration, which Mr. Damrath had to point out the obvious. How embarrassing.
This next part seems a little, well, dishonest, and
City Manager Gordon Pedrow stepped in on this one. Ms. Levison was asking how much city staff time and resources this whole mall thing taking up. She should've stopped there, but went on and said the owners at the
flour mill want to get moving on their project and want to have a "
shovel in the ground in November", and asked if there is enough staff for two projects like this at once. Mr. Pedrow answered more or less that staff wouldn't commit to something they couldn't handle, but more to the point of the flour mill, that her comments were
contrary to what the city is aware of. He said the city hasn't had discussions that those owners are moving that rapidly. Ms. Levison didn't linger on this topic long, as Mr. Pedrow basically questioned the "truthiness" of her claims. Since these so-called conversations between Ms. Levison and the flour mill owners are open record, I'm sure she can provide that information.
Then Ms. Levison called someone up to the podium about a "private conversation" they had about the malls "underlying financial viability" (sorry, didn't catch the name). I got the distinct feeling he didn't exactly answer the way she wanted. She was trying to make the point how risky this is, to which he answered that "there is business risk in every project.
Metro districts to a large extent mitigate some of the developer risk, but can't eliminate it, that is embedded with risk." Sounds like she had some agenda driven questions for
him before the council meeting, shouldn't that be public record, too?
Are you getting the picture of this council's habit of time wasting? This went on for almost 30 minutes. It's fine to ask questions, but most of this should've already been known by Ms. Levison, and this was just a
witch hunt anyway. The only honest statement I heard was "
at this point I don't feel that I have full confidence that I have understanding of the complete process. It's pretty complicated actually."
On the "extraordinary need" question,
Mary Blue made the point that people are leaving Longmont to shop and go to theatres. That Longmont is viewed as a "honkey tonk" town that can't support a theater. This got some laughter, but the sad part is that
it's true and it was nice to see Ms. Blue sift through the others feeble attempts to cloud something that is so simple.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------------
©2008 Chris Rodriguez/Longmont Advocate LLC
(Chris Rodriguez is a Longmont resident, and the publisher and broadcaster of
Longmont Advocate, a community website and podcast that raises local issues to increase public awareness and interest)