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HOME: FEBRUARY 6, 2009: NEWS
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ANC: Do More With Less

BY KATHERINE GREGOR

A double-bill attraction of City Manager Marc Ott and new Parks & Recreation Department Director Sara Hensley brought a standing-room-only crowd to last week's Austin Neighborhoods Council meeting. Ott gave a sobering talk about the city of Aus­tin's looming budget shortfall, emphasizing that the cuts now necessitated by shrinking municipal revenues aren't just about finding "fat" but rather will require cutting painfully into "muscle." He let city of Austin Chief Financial Officer Leslie Browder present the depressing details: "Impact of Recession on 2009 Budget." For 2008, the city made $8 million in spending cuts necessitated by lower sales-tax revenue; for 2009, a $25 million budget gap is projected, requiring more than $20 million in additional cuts. If city revenues from sales tax and development fall even lower than projected, the surgery could get bloodier for both 2009 and 2010. Still, Ott pointed out, many cities have it far worse.

Ott then asked for ideas from the crowd for ways to save on city spending. In response he heard a "greatest hits" list of ANC members' hot-button complaints. Among the suggestions: Domain subsidies (stop them), the animal shelter (don't build a new one), Water Treatment Plant No. 4 (don't build it), the Riverside Boardwalk (don't build it), parks and libraries (fund them anyway).

After Ott departed with his entourage, an upbeat Hensley transformed the energy in the room. She spoke of initiating interdepartmental cooperation on a new comprehensive plan for trails in Austin (with Public Works Director Howard Lazarus and Transportation Director Rob Spillar). She's pursuing collaborative efforts with Neighborhood Housing and Community Development Director Mar­ga­ret Shaw and Neighborhood Planning and Zoning Director Greg Guernsey (who also attended) for projects such as new "pocket parks" for parkless neighborhoods. She's already read and forwarded recommendations for expanded parks facilities from the "Families & Children Task Force Report." She's asked Roger Duncan at Austin Energy to use PARD as a city pilot program for buying only electric, eco-conscious mowers, blowers, and vehicles. She wants to reduce her vehicle fleet – and put her staff on bicycles and scooters. ("Wow!" was one spontaneous response.)

Hensley asked the ANC crowd for suggestions and responded enthusiastically to every one – then gave out her e-mail and phone number. (All contact info for city staff is available by calling 311.) Predictably, folks asked for more services, more parks and facilities, better maintenance, and longer hours. Hensley offered to send PARD staff out to gather input and solve problems at neighborhood association meetings. The ANC crowd clearly was knocked out by her openness and responsiveness. Said ANC President Danette Chimenti pointedly in closing, "It was very refreshing to hear from our new Parks director!"

There was only one problem: a total disconnect between all the new goodies that ANC members want and the presentation they'd just heard on the grim realities of the city budget.

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COMMENTS
3
 
Reign of ANC Stephlynne1229 Feb 05, 2009 - 11:15 am
What is the problem? I went to City Hall, and for the first time saw the boardwalk around Town Lake (it will always be that to me). The right kinds of development spur these types of improvement, and their tired response is "Don't build anything." In a city full of intellectuals and successful businesses, that is not an answer. If a friend offers you a chicken dinner or a vegetarian dinner, and you say you want a fish dinner, chances are that friend will stop offering to host you.

These are homeowners who have high priced homes in high priced neighborhoods, not to mention highly paid professionals who are getting to retire. If they are so knowledgable, why do they never have any ways to modify the existing offers to something other than nothing?

They are not the voice of anyone, but they have the wealth and the time to talk. What is also interesting is that they have no concept that services and reality cost some money. "Don't build anything, don't listen to anyone but us, and don't change Austin in any way we don't like." True dialogue exists as a conversation, not an imperative.



ANC Loves Sprawl guest Feb 10, 2009 - 02:17 pm
If ANC is ever to be taken seriously by anyone in this town, they're going to have to show some mature, adult leadership. Just saying no to everything is not an option. If you want to say no to reasonable, responsible urban infill development, than you have to be willing to accept suburban sprawl and it's related societal costs as a result.


Good lord guest Feb 10, 2009 - 04:27 pm
The ANC is not living on planet Earth. They're on Uranus something.

On the planet where I reside, we are bound by gravity, sunlight warms the Earth and rain falls to the ground, and money is made by putting people to work.

You pay people (and ALL the people, not just the contractors or Mike Ott Jr.) good money to build municipal projects like, you know, a new water treatment plant, a new animal shelter, or to make parks improvements, and then those people go out and spend the money they've earned on new shoes, steak dinners and Dell Computers.

I guess the people on the ANC have been sitting on their piles of gold for so long they've dad-gum FORGOTTEN how the economy and capitalism works. Let's hope they didn't brainwash Ott in that meeting since he's the one with more influence than they have.

I only hope he can still think enough to know the ANC is full of horseshit.





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