November 2017

Foo Fighters at The Denty

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This was probably my first ‘official’ concert at the EC. I did see Joan Jett at the opening event and did see the free United Way ‘Heart’ concert (which was amazing). But this was the first PAID event.

I will say the EC is set up nicely for concerts. I would compare it to the Quest in Omaha. The sound and the light show were amazing and the Foo Fighters put on a great show.

I will admit though out of personal preference as to why I don’t go to large arena concerts much (and this isn’t a dig on our EC, just large show in general).

• They are expensive (for the $120 I paid I could have gone to 6-8 club shows (and saw national acts just as good as the Foo Fighters).

• Besides the expensive ticket, $9 for a draft Bud Light or a single shot cocktail is over the top, so were the lines. The bars were extremely under staffed and you could see it in the staff’s faces.

• The bathrooms are way to small (not enough urinals). And if you think the men’s line was long, you should have seen the ladies.

• Finding parking was easy, leaving the event, not much fun.

• Supporting local promoters, venues and even artists helps to recirculate money in our economy. Giving $120 to the Foo Fighters, not so much.

It will probably be a long time before I go to a concert again at the EC. It will have to be someone really legendary. I am a bit bias though. I grew up going to club shows, they are what I know. But I also like the fact I can park a 100 feet away, not stand in line for a drink or bathroom and not get raped on drink prices. I also can stand in front of the stage. Nothing beats the intimacy of a club show either. There’s nothing like standing 8 feet away from one of your favorite artists.

To each there own though I guess. I encourage people to keep going to the EC, we already drain $10 million a year out of our CIP for the place each year on mortgage payments. If people stop going, we will really be in a bind.

National Anthem – To Kneel or Stand, Nov 9, 2017

Is it time to get up or down? Is right to express your rights? The Supreme Court guaranteed our ability to express our rights through the flag. Why do certain groups believe their version of what is right is the only version of what is right?

Like every civil rights discussion we Americans ever have, someone or some group decides we shouldn’t use our voice or action to express an opinion different than theirs. What does society have to lose by letting everyone speak? (Kind of like da mayor during City Council meetings?)

This November 9, 2017 Augustana University panel discussion let’s both service veterans and average citizens talk about Colin Kaepernick’s kneel. The kneel is a sacred symbol in human history. It can be submission or reverence. Why was it a problem? What does Sioux Falls have to say about this discussion? Listen it and see where you fit your thoughts.

Side Note: The video ends before the end of the program, so I wanted to include some closing statements by the Panelist (Vic?). He stated at the end that he felt more safe in the military on active duty than he does now when a police officer is following his car. He also talks about his challenges of raising a black son in our current society.

Denise (who is one of our city clerks and a veteran) touches on that she tried to get some female veterans for the panel but there was some time conflicts. She also asked a poignant question, “What if this was Tom Brady that took the knee instead? Would we be having this conversation.”

TIFs have little impact on benefitting society as a whole

Dave Swenson, Associate Scientist, Department of Economics from Iowa State University recently did a presentation to Bon Homme County about TIFs. Through his research, Swenson has become critical of TIFs because he has found little to no benefit to society from TIFs.

FULL DOC: TIFs-SD

Important Slides from the presentation;

Here is a recent letter Swenson sent former Senator Kloucek on the matter;

Frank,

Economics says that we don’t interfere in normal market decisions unless we can demonstrate that we are improving the welfare of society at large.  We do that, for example, by reducing impediments to production or impediments to running a household.  When we do that, by timely investment in critical infrastructure that is widely beneficial to commerce and individuals, for example, we improve aggregate living standards.  If, on the other hand, we are providing public assistance for the purpose of enticing economic development.  Unless the region is suffering from chronic and high unemployment there is no justification in economics for the decision.  The only justification is political.  And society is not better off, at large, just the primary beneficiaries.

You cannot explain this to a typical government official, however.  That person usually does not understand economics or the relationship between government decisions and area commercial activity.  They think they do but they don’t.

There is a standard test that is often used: “but for” the activity of the government body, this commercial development would not have occurred.  Very good research has demonstrated that as many as four in five instances of government assistance to firms would have resulted in the firm developing there nonetheless.  That means that the government assistance was only locationally instrumental in 1/5th of the instances.

Assistance for housing, if it is targeted to low income and moderate income households can make sense if affordability is an issue in an area or there is an undeveloped housing market.  Politicians think, however, that “if we build it, they will come” in that housing stimulates other economic growth.  That is almost always a fallacy: houses are bought (apartments are rented) with income made from working – that’s the demand variable.  It has been our experience in Iowa that small and struggling communities have used TIFs for new housing and for apartments, but growth in those areas is usually meager.  The rest of the regional economy is contracting and is not able to employ enough people to maintain housing demand.  The other extreme is that suburbs of metros use housing development subsidies as a way to speed up growth as compared to other suburbs.  Here the subsidy is awarding the economy (developers) for doing what they would have done nonetheless because metropolitan economic and demographic forces would have yielded that demand nonetheless.

In my professional opinion, nearly all public subsidies for businesses or for housing are unnecessary, and it is very rare that the public gets paid back in the form of net fiscal growth sufficient to cover the initial subsidy.  That is not the way politicians look at it, but it is the way that economists look at it.

Put differently, the only way you can justify these things is by not asking an economist.

Dave Swenson

The National Anthem; To Kneel or Stand, A Panel Discussion.

Thursday, Nov 9th 7:00 to 9:00 pm Located in Froiland Science Center Rm 113. Augustana University

A comprehensive approach to a relevant conversation on rights, equality, and the misunderstanding of the protest.

We will have panelist with years of military service expressed their opinion of the situation. Then we will find ways to educate one another and move toward proactive solutions in our city.

This event is free and open to the public.

I am going to try to attend. Looks like an interesting conversation. To be honest with you, I struggle with how many Americans misinterpret the 1st Amendment and only think it applies to THEIR opinions but not others. I may not agree with someone’s protest, but as long as it is peaceful I will defend their right to protest.