Friday, July 12, 2013

I Stand Corrected. Now I Understand Why We Have to Annex.

My friend Chuck Ross has said consistently that we have to annex some territory east of the tracks.  There's only one reason to do it, and that reason was his argument.  The Village needs the money.  Sally Heyman made us the same argument: you need the money, and you can "tax the hell" out of those people.  Erik Bojnansky and Jim Mullin of the Biscayne Times made the same argument: you have the highest tax rate in the County, and it's not enough; you need to save yourselves with a "land grab."  Our Manager tells us precisely the same thing.  I got it.  We all get it.

I know we need the money.  I know we're not meeting our responsibilities, and we're not building reserves for general purposes or specific ones, like rehabbing the log cabin.  I know.  But it's our Village!  It has a certain character, that is abetted by its funky little geography.  It's so easy for us to connect with each other, and many of us do.  You don't even have to drive to reach most of your neighbors and friends.  You certainly don't have to go to 125th, or Griffing, go several blocks east, cross the tracks, then go south or north to reach the rest of your BP neighbors.  It's not even contiguous, because of the tracks.  And the sizable majority of "us" are homeowners.  Almost all of "them" are renters.  We're not the same people, with the same interests.  And we're "residential."  It's just not right.  It's not the right way to do it.  There has to be another way to get the money.

It's not going to grow on trees, or fall from the sky, or come in an envelope postmarked from Tallahassee.  Property values, and the consequent ad valorem taxes, are not going to rebound as quickly as they fell.  And even if values did rise robustly, the homesteaders, which is the vast majority of us, will only pay 3% more each year, which will never get us where we're going, because costs rise faster than that.  We can soak new homeowners, but that's not going to result in an overall flood of cash.  We've cut expenses to the bone, and we're still falling behind every year.  No, there's only one place we can get the money, I argued to Chuck, and Sally Heyman, and Bojnansky/Mullin.  We'll get it from ourselves.  We love this neighborhood enough to want to live here, and we'll love it enough to want to save and support it.  We'll just open our bank accounts and get generous to ourselves.

And that's when the cold water dousing occurred.  I didn't listen to Chuck, or Sally Heyman, or the BT boys.  No, it was Noah Jacobs and Bryan Cooper who finally convinced me we are going to annex what's east of the tracks.  They have made abundantly clear, and have not flinched, and have gotten exquisitely little public resistance, that we are not going to raise our taxes, by statute or voluntarily.  They keep telling us we're marginal, miserable people, and we don't have the wherewithal to lift ourselves up.  Or maybe they're saying we're mean and selfish.  To the extent that these two have any say about it, and they do, we're moving in the direction of lowering our taxes.  More generous?  No, stingier.  They don't care that we're thin.  They aren't moved by our becoming emaciated.  They seem to want us dead.  First, they want us dangerously deconditioned.  Then, they'll turn off the oxygen.  "If the right one don't get you, then the left one will."  We have been left no choice but to annex.  It's not what I wanted, but I can see it's what's going to happen; what must happen.  Unless Ron Coyle gets his way, and we become the chattel of Miami Shores.  But that's not going to happen, either.  And neither Ron nor Noah nor Bryan would like it if it did.

So now I get it.  I understand.  I have no further argument.  Noah and Bryan have convinced me that the only thing they will permit is annexation.  Or death.  Where do we sign, Sally?

3 comments:

  1. I understand your point too. The one side I don't hear anything about is the effect this will have on the residents and businesses we're going to annex. When I hear, "Tax the hell out of them," I cringe. Unfairly burdening someone else so you can have what you want is not the way I want to do things. Chuck said that if we don't annex that area then someone else will. I don't live that way and maybe many would call that naive. I think it's time to stop taking from someone else first before someone else does. Remember, those unfortunate residents and business owners will now be part of Biscayne Park. Is that the way we treat our own residents? Are we going to keep "Taxing the hell" out of own residents once this is accomplished? I think what looks on paper will probably not be that wonderful when it's put into action.

    I want those people invited to our workshop. Biscayne Park should not annexing an area without even having the decency to ask them how it will affect them and see how they feel. So far they haven't been contacted. If they are in favor of it I might be persuaded to agree. Can you think of one way it will help them or make their higher taxes worth it? We don't have a better school, our recreation dept. is open to everyone and as far as the police, most businesses in that area I doubt would benefit. The residents in the apt. complex, I would bet, have their own security so our police wouldn't be keeping them safer. Would their rents go up, probably. Would businesses who have been there for many years just making a living now have to pay more in taxes with no benefit, probably.

    Most likely they won't even get a chance to vote because their numbers will fall below 250 and then it will be an administrative decision. Actually, no one will be voting for this because the residents of Biscayne Park don't get to vote on it either.

    I'm not willing to solve my problems by creating new problems for someone else.

    Barbara Kuhl

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    1. Oh, Barbara, you poor, timid, inhibited creature. Don't be such a wimp. It makes it impossible to take ruthless advantage of other people if you're going to start getting all sympathetic. After all, we only want them so we can use them, since Noah and Bryan have made it clear we're not going to rely on ourselves. Those people over there are paying a 2.5 mill tax now, and we'll juice 'em up to 9.5. What do you care if it doesn't benefit them? It benefits us! Don't you read Darwin? Our choice is to be predatory, or perish. Let's sharpen our talons and go get 'em. If you can't bring yourself to approach it that way, think like a pimp. They can live in whatever way they want, we'll provide them a little extra protection, and we'll take their money. We have to live, too, and we're certainly not going to be the ones to put out.

      Fred

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    2. And Barbara, will you stop trying to be inclusive! Take a lesson from Noah and Bryan. We pick a day that "those people" (they're people, right?) are least likely to be available, and we hold our workshop then. Get it? Oy, what are we gonna do with you?

      Fred

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