2016

Theresa Stehly pulls her petitions for At-Large council today

stehly

At this point, Theresa is only ‘considering’ a run. She wants to see how her petition gathering goes. She has until the filing date of February 26th to make a decision on an official run.

She told me today that the mayor really inspired her to run when he had the press conference asking for citizen participation.

This is old hat for Theresa, and I respect her honesty about a consideration at this point. But if she runs, she will have 100% of my support.

I guess the private donations to finish the Pavilion’s sculpture garden are coming from SF taxpayers

Ever since the Paladino Hohm Sculpture Garden opened, we were told it would be supported mostly by private donations. So what is this?

The City of Sioux Falls, SD, requests formal bids for Washington Pavilion of Arts and Science Paladino Hohm Sculpture Garden.

Fast forward to the approval of contracts, and you will see the city is doling out $379,710. Mind you, this isn’t building an indoor structure, this is almost $400K for grass and landscaping. Another great use of the CIP money . . . NOT.

Still waiting for the ‘Arc of Dreams’ to come ask for their city handout.

 

More empty promises from the Sioux Falls Parks Department

Imagine my surprise (well not really) when I was reading the approval of contracts (Item #1) for Tuesday’s council meeting and I found this item;

Parks/Rec NA Furnish Three Editions of the 2016 Summer, Fall, and

Winter/Spring Activities Guide

$ 82,742

A couple of years ago, the Parks department told the public they were going ‘another direction’ on the activities guide, and only make it basically available online with a ‘few’ mailed copies. They still have to implement that idea. According to the bid specs, they plan to mail this guide to 76,000 households (3x) with an overrun of 3,500. Hardly scaling back the mailing. I can also tell you that the above number probably doesn’t include postage either, which could easily run about $40,000.

So what happened? I actually liked the idea of just mailing the guide to people who ONLY wanted the dead tree version and didn’t have a computer to access it. It makes economic sense. When we start talking about subsidizing a city indoor pool at over a $1 million a year, cutting free passes and raising rates on paratransit why are we not eliminating this booklet that most people recycle and could access online?

While they nickel and dime the rest of us to death, they throw the greenbacks in a burn barrel on stupid things like this.