July 2010

SD Municipal League; FOOD TAX: Good – PROPERTY RIGHTS: Be Aware!

Yvonne Taylor, Executive Director of the South Dakota Municipal League addressed the SF City council at the informational meeting on Monday. She said some interesting things. She was questioned about code enforcement, and she said (paraphrasing);
“You have to be careful about property rights.”
Yeah, NO shit?! Then she switched gears on the food tax, she seemed to support it because it was a ‘consistent’ revenue source and went on to say that the people that ‘can afford it’ don’t have a problem with paying it, and we need to get more help to the less fortunate.
Here’s the deal. Damn right the well-to-do support it! It makes poor people pay taxes while the rich skirt income taxes. It has already been proven that our state would be much better off if we had an income tax for people who made over $30,000 a year and eliminated sales taxes. We could probably even get rid of that disease called Video Lottery.
We know who runs South Dakota. Rich Republicans. I would love to throw tomatoes, if I could afford them.

South DaCola Music Club with the ‘Kisor Invasion’ – Touch of Europe, Friday July 30

[youtube]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Y8EHUyjX194&feature=related[/youtube]

Trumpet greats Ryan and Justin Kisor will return for a special one-night performance at Touch of Europe. They join the David Napier Quartet for a night being called the “Kisor Invasion.” Both Ryan and Justin grew up in Sioux City, IA and have gone on to highly successful careers as jazz musicians. Ryan performs with the Lincoln Center Jazz Orchestra and Justin plays with the premier Navy Jazz ensemble. David Napier is a stalwart of the regional jazz scene and has been playing with both Justin and Ryan since there were growing up in Sioux City. David performs with various ensembles, most recently as the bassist with the Johnson/McKinney Quartet on the main stage of the 2010 JazzFest.

If you love Jazz Trumpet, these two cats are well worth seeing. I’ll keep the Amber Bock cold for you Justin!

Justin & Ryan Kisor

Rant-a-bit podcast; Send me your questions!

We will be recording episode #2 on Tuesday. Our guest is a journalist from the Sioux Falls MSM. We will be asking them a myriad of questions.

Shoot away.

*PS – The guest will be introduced and revealed on the show, so keeping their identity a secret until then is not a trick. I just want your questions to be geared towards the Sioux Falls media in general and not the guest.

I will reveal the guest after the recording on Tuesday.

Mayor Hubris makes a bold statement

Rome wasn’t built in a day

Mike has kept a lot of his campaign promises so far, so it is a good possibility he could pull this off, but I have some questions, assumptions and predictions (and I am sure Sy will chime in 🙂

“We don’t know what the plan is,” City Councilor Vernon Brown said. “We don’t know the size. We don’t know how it would be paid for.”

This is the biggest problem, how will you pay for it. If I was a guessing man, and I am, I think the city will use the Pavilion subsidy that runs out in 2014 to subsidize the place and pay down bonds;

The city issued a bond in the 1990s to help finance the conversion of the old Washington High School into the Washington Pavilion of Arts and Science. That bond issue has been paid through the city’s entertainment tax. It’s scheduled to be paid off in 2014, which would free up about $3.8 million a year in additional revenue. But there might be competition for that money, since it could be used as a future revenue source for other projects.

Why do I think bonds? During Huether’s budget address he ranted and raved about how well the city has ‘managed debt’ and thanked everyone from Munson to meter maids for doing such a good job. He will just take out bonds for whatever private investors won’t pony up.

He also said there are private investors in Sioux Falls willing to help with the events center and that a key goal is to identify them to partner with such a project.

What worries me though is that he is trying to steer away from the public vote.

Though Huether declined to comment on details of the plan, he said a public vote on the project will be considered.

If he thinks he can just convince people to go along with his funding plan without a public vote, he is NUTS. Whether is it bonds, private investors or selling his bullshit platitudes, doesn’t matter, the voters better get to approve it or he will find out really quick how fast 2014 will come and go without an events center.