Diary of a Mad Voter: Jessica Peck Corry

Hickenlooper: Fancy Ads Promote New Taxes, Bigger Budget … No Snowplows?


By Jessica Peck Corry, 10-19-07

 
 

As a politically active libertarian Republican living in large Western city, a day of civic advocacy can feel as pleasant and productive as climbing a 14,000 foot mountain in the middle of a lightning storm. Simply put, the forces are against you.

I chose my adopted hometown of Denver because - in some respects - freedom runneth over. I can stake ten political signs in my front yard and no homeowner’s association or neighborhood covenant can stop me.  I can paint my house any color of the rainbow and passersby probably won’t even think twice. I could even be so daring as to set off fireworks on the 4th of July, and gasp, the police might not show up.  I haven’t tried this one yet.

Life here is too impatient to endure the municipal controls that burdened the smaller communities I used to call home. And I like it this way. But as is the case with every great adventure, there are also drawbacks.

Every day, the government poses grave threats to our economic liberty - massive tax increases sold in flashy publicly-funded advertising packages that would make most private firms envious. In the aftermath of passing 13 tax-and-fee increases over the last four years, Denver voters are now being asked to foot the bill for nine more at a total cost of more than $550 million.

I’m forced to ask myself: What will stop my neighbors, friends, and fellow coffee shop dwellers from rubber-stamping higher taxes once again when the truth is outmanned and out-funded? 

Our lives are filled with constant propaganda preaching the virtues of socialism. Mayors - past and present - eagerly lend their names to such causes.  Former Mayor Wellington Webb now drives by his name atop the Wellington E. Webb Municipal Building, a massive monument to contemporary growth in government and home to at least 40 different government agencies. His predecessor, Federico Pena, passes his name on Pena Boulevard every time he drives to the city’s airport, a project fraught with concerns about cost overruns.

Government monopolies are not to be outdone. Denver Water advertises across city billboards and in front yards across the city in its “Use only what you need” campaign.  And to reward us for our conservation efforts, the city recently raised rates. In advertisements hanging from lamp posts around the city, a campaign promoting Denver Public Schools uses photos of children to promote its agenda.  And finally, Xcel Energy sponsors more sporting events than the Monfort brothers.

So who can blame Denver’s current mayor, John Hickenlooper, for wanting to get in on a piece of the action? Surely, he’s got a building, a street, or maybe even a concert hall destined to carry his name one day.

No stranger to Denver’s airwaves, Hickenlooper has become a fixture on evening TV commercials - pleading for more of our money this November as part of his nine-part “A through I” tax-and-bond package.

To achieve a “Better Denver”, he points us to his campaign website, brought to us courtesy of a million-dollar budget complete with flashy commercials and full-color brochures.  Not surprisingly, this is a campaign that has been funded almost exclusively by the same businesses and public cultural attractions that stand to benefit if taxpayers say yes. 

Leading the way has been the city’s science museum - shelling out more than $300,000 in cash and in-kind contributions. If Denver voters support measures 1G and 1H, the museum, together with the city’s botanic gardens and concert hall, stands to gain more than $130 million in additional funding. Not surprisingly, Hickenlooper’s ads never mention the total price tag.

The city will tell you it doesn’t have enough money, but while Denver’s population has risen less than 2 percent in the last four years, total city spending has skyrocketed by 13 percent. Even without Hickenlooper’s tax increases, next year will mark a major milestone for Denver - the city’s first billion-dollar budget. 

At the same time that Hickenlooper sells us a vision of grand cultural amenities, we know that most Denver families will never be able to afford the going rate of nearly $70 a pop for top seat at the symphony. For them, he assures us that “A through I” are about “catching up” and “maintaining” the city. For this, we’re supposed to support a permanent tax increase of $27 million every year to fund capital maintenance.

But we’ve already given the city a $300 million raise over the last five years. And Hickenlooper’s latest plan - coming after a winter of seemingly endless blizzards - fails to address one of our greatest concerns - how to promptly deal with snow left behind. While $150 million is pitched for transportation, the plan doesn’t allocate funding for a single new snowplow. 

One of the best parts of living in a major western city is the common ethos we share - believing that the people, not the government, should make the important decisions in life. This trust should extend to our wallets. Unfortunately, it’s a tough sell when million-dollar taxpayer-funded advertising campaigns preach a continuous message idealizing socialism’s grandeur.

Editor’s note: Jessica Peck Corry’s weekly blogs are part of a new feature on NewWest.Net/Politics called “Diary of a Mad Voter,” a group blog, published in partnership with the Denver Post’s Politics West intended give a glimpse into the hearts and minds of several independent-minded voters and thinkers in the Rocky Mountain West in the ‘08 election cycle. Check back this week at www.newwest.net/madvoter.



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Comments

Oh balderdash!
Jessica is once in troll-conservative-propoganda mode, as is her wont as a paid functionary of the Independence Institute in Golden.
What Jessica won't refer to is TABOR, the so-called Taxpayers Bill of Rights, which has starved local governments for years.
See: http://www.ncsl.org/programs/fiscal/taborpts.htm
Mayor Hickenlooper is quite right -- Denver does need to catch up after years of being on a starvation TABOR diet. Fortunately, Colorado voters have been realizing that you do get what you pay for, and have been approving bond issues despite the horrified warnings from Jessica and her ideological kin. That's driving Jessica crazy, reducing her to these troll-like mutterings about the evils of socialism.
For a counter-point to Jessica's libertarian whining, read David Sirota's piece on the DMV at http://www.workingassetsblog.com/2007/09/the_lesson_of_the_dmv.html
Jessica can be counted on once again to rant about cost of government services and regulations brought about by unbridled growth and failure of past administrations to keep pace and to provide leadership. Self-described libertarians of any ilk love to label as socialist any governmental attempt to come to grips with problems. I've yet to read any libertarian's account of what happens to society if their vision is followed to its obvious ends.
Dear dvs,
Look no further than the People's Republic of China, which has one party rule (what Karl Rove wanted), unbridled capitalism (what University of Chicago economists have long advocated), a kleptocratic government (see Halliburton and Blackwater's connections to the White House), runaway pollution (Delay once compared the EPA to the Gestapo) and consumers who can't be assured that what they're buying is safe and unadulturated (Grover Norquist's attitude about government regulations -- drown government in a bathtup).
Oh, wait, the libertarian vision is alive and well as Bushco tries to roll back a century of progress in terms of civil rights, consumer and environmental protections and keeping Wall Street capitalists from engaging in such excesses that they destroy capitalism itself.
Karl Rove has said his political hero is Mark Hanna, the party boss who bought McKinley into the White House. Just one little problem with the hey-day of the Gilded Age: Teddy Roosevelt, who saved capitalism from itself, as did his cousin Franklin.
Jessica, be careful what you wish for in rolling back the past century. You wouldn't have the right to vote, while Jim Crow would keep those uppity minorities in place. Gays and lesbians would be firmly in the closet, air and water would be more polluted, you'd have to dig rat feces out of canned goods and be wary of the promises of snake oil salesmen who might poison you and your family while promising you miracle cures.
Ah, the good old days, when men were men, women were barefoot and pregnant and in the kitchen, and an occassional necktie party kept the darkies in their place.
Isn't it typical that the Socialists claim credit for all progress occuring during a Republican administration and otherwise. If liberals had their unbridled way all progress would have drown in a flood of socialist-communist programs and we would be following the Soviet Union and several Europeon countries that have drown under the burden and destuction of work ethic of those same programs. Go Jessica!!! Socialists already buy too many votes and move too many families into government dependence.
Sweed what Republican progress are you referring to: the war in Iraq, our ever-increasing dependence on oil controlled by those who hate us, the failure to deal with human health issues for millions of uninsured American's, the failure to deal with a rational energy policy or the failure to address the increasing degradation of our land and water base? The willy-nilly "libertarain" view that-- in a country of 300 million and ever growing-- every citizen should be free to abuse and "role their own" and ignore the larger view is "nuts".
I refer to winning the war on terror, despite liberal rants, maintaining the best health care in the world, despite attacks by liberals, maintaining adequate energy supplies, despite liberal obstruction to further development of our own sources and most of ALL slowing down your friends race to Socialism. If only our industrious would quit developing things needed by humans and turn everything over to government we could all retire in equal splender. We would be so loved that China, Korea, Canada and the rest of the world would take care of us. A Liberal Utopia and global warming would stop and we would only have to worry about the next Ice age. Venice went under years ago but no talk of Global Warming. Now we have another city sinking and it is the Shining Star of all of the "Chicken Littles".
Dear Sweed,
You really do need to broaden your news and views intake beyond the confines of Faux News and El Rushbo.
According to US State Department figures, terrorism keeps going up, not down, so how do you define "winning?"
Best health system in world? Not according to research by the World Health Organization. See: http://www.who.int/inf-pr-2000/en/pr2000-44.html
The U. S. health system spends a higher portion of its gross domestic product than any other country but ranks 37th out of 191 countries according to its performance, the report finds. The United Kingdom, which spends just six percent of gross domestic product (GDP) on health services, ranks 18th. Several small countries – San Marino, Andorra, Malta and Singapore are rated close behind second-placed Italy.
Although there are Communist parties still running China, Vietnam and North Korea, they've all become kleptocracies run for the benefit of the power elite -- very much like Karl Rove's GOP.
Your theory that "socialists" move too many families into governmental dependance is disproved by welfare reform that has dramatically lowered the welfare rolls. That doesn't mean poverty has ended -- just that poor people now work 2-3 deadend jobs to get by.
Getting back to the actual article, I would like to know Jessica's response to TABOR and its impacts on the state.
Inky-You believe all the propoganda. By what standard were the systems measured and whose Ox was trying to be gored? I can make virtually any Country in the World best at most anything by developing my own formula for measurement. Just talk to your Canadian Friends about the real Canadian Health Care. I didn't mention stock market at all time highs and unemployment flirting with all time lows. No recession under Bush except the one he inherited etc etc. No terrorist hit in US or against US Territory! Welfare Reform, forced by the GOP and public outrage!
Inky-If Rushbo is Limbagh, I don't listen to him but from what I hear you should
Inky-The biggest welfare program in the world is the off budget income tax refund to people who paid in no money. Off budget because they pretend that the money was never received and spent because it happens during the collection cycle before receipts are counted. Both parties support that program and I have a hard time opposing it because it does promote work. You have to at least work part time to get it.

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