Council subcommittee considers a smoking ban in bars, billiard halls

November 17, 2008

A city council subcommittee is considering expanding the city's current smoking ban from restaurants and workplaces to bars, billiard halls and within 15 feet of entrances to publicly accessible villages, according to the DMN. Our neighborhoods' councilmen, Sheffie Kadane and Angela Hunt, have different perspectives on the proposal, according to the News story and more comments on its blog.

I have to admit that when the city council first decided to restrict smoking in restaurants and other public places a few years ago, I had my doubts: It seemed like a draconian measure, and it seemed likely to drive business out of Dallas. Today, though, I haven't seen a single study indicating that significant business was lost to the more smoking-friendly suburbs, and the air in most places I go these days is cleaner and clearer.

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City budget: So much for the sales tax

November 17, 2008

The sales tax projections in the city budget, which seemed wildly optimistic in August, apparently are. The city has collected less in sales tax than it budgeted for three months in a row (and a tip o’ the reporting hat to Dave Levinthal at Dallas’ Only Daily Newspaper). Sales tax receipts account for about 21.5 percent of city spending.

Levinthal notes that September’s collections were off almost 9 percent; the city has projected a 1.75 percent increase for the fiscal year. He doesn’t detail which other months missed projections, and I haven’t been able to locate month-by-month numbers in the city budget. That doesn’t mean they aren’t there, though, and I will keep looking.

However, in trying to find trends, some numbers from the state comptroller’s office could be useful. They show that Dallas got 8.7 percent more in August 2008 than it got in August 2007, before the stock market collapsed. But after the market meltdown, the city took 1 percent less in October 2008 than it received in October 2007.

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Easing credit crunch puts the convention center hotel back on track

November 13, 2008

Good news for fans of the taxpayer-owned downtown convention center hotel, as well as for the pending DISD bond issue: The credit market, at least for public works projects, appears to be easing enough to allow AA-rated and above public entities to obtain financing. A DMN story indicates the city of Dallas intends to close on $253.3 million in water improvement project bonds this week; a few weeks ago, this and just about every other bond project in the country were frozen due to lack of capital or political will or lenders — take your pick. The $550 million convention center hotel, which Mayor Tom Leppert and many city councilmen have vowed to fund in January, requires issuance of municipal revenue bonds to generate the cash, so now that the market is coming back, lack of available funding shouldn’t hold back Leppert or the council. I guess we’ll see if the May referendum on the project causes the council members any heartburn when it comes time to approve the bonds in January.


Ross Avenue: Let’s see the council get out of this

November 11, 2008

First, the City Council considered re-naming Industrial Boulevard to honor Caesar Chavez, the Latino civil rights icon. Then, it was going to re-name Ross Avenue in honor of Chavez, because it had other plans for Industrial. And now, it’s not going to re-name Ross, but will find another street to call Chavez.

And people wonder why I call this one of the least sophisticated group of politicians I’ve seen in my 20-some odd years writing about this stuff.

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Barack Obama says “no” to a saggy pants ordinance

November 4, 2008

President-elect Barack Obama may well have an impact on one of the least-pressing but most-discussed issues facing the Dallas city council: whether to pass an ordinance outlawing "saggy pants". The DMN city hall blog reports that during an interview with MTV News, Obama dissed the very idea of outlawing saggy pants, saying: "I think people passing a law against people wearing sagging pants is a waste of time," among other comments you can read by clicking here. Anyway, deputy mayor pro tem Dwaine Caraway, an Obama supporter, has been the city’s leading proponent of the saggy pants ordinance.


Leppert says our votes count. Except for the convention center hotel?

October 30, 2008

Here's an interesting juxtaposition: Mayor Tom Leppert is circulating an email with the top headline saying "Convention Center Hotel Critical to Dallas' Future", while the second item is headlined "Vote! It's Your Voice!" (Click here to download tom_leppert_email.pdf and see the email.)

The irony: At least one Leppert spokespuppet on the council already has chortled out loud that even if Dallas residents vote in favor of a potential referendum scuttling the $550 million taxpayer-owned convention center hotel downtown, those votes won't stop the council from moving forward to build the hotel.

So whose voice is Leppert talking about?


Tom Leppert: ‘Doesn’t give a darn about the citizens of Dallas’

October 23, 2008

So, do you think Mayor Tom Leppert cares about the citizens of Dallas or not? Councilman Mitchell Rasansky tells the Observer Leppert doesn’t care — "doesn’t give a darn about the citizens of Dallas". Rasansky goes on to mention that Leppert was on the board of directors of Washington Mutual even as that financial institution bit the dust, saying Leppert’s comments about WaMu’s financial health a few weeks prior to its bailout — “the feeling is that there’s sufficient capital and good things ahead" — is indicative of Leppert’s go-for-broke actions with the convention center hotel, regardless of a possible pending referendum on the project and a disintegration of the bond market. It’s worth clicking on the post, written by Sam Merten, because it has a whole list of interesting information and story links. As for me, I tend to think that it’s not that Leppert doesn’t care about the rest of us. I think he just believes he knows better than everyone else what’s good for us. Come to think of it, that was the prevailing attitude on Wall Street for a few years, too, and look what happened to those guys…


Victory after 10 years: Iconic but not helping downtown

October 19, 2008

Not long ago, the DMN published a series of stories titled "Partial Victory", which was a rather ingenious way of highlighting the big, new "Times Square for Dallas" surrounding the American Airlines Center downtown. The good news, according to the story: Ross Perot Jr. says that Victory is farther along, development-wise, than he thought it would be at this time. The bad news: Apparently, if you don’t live there (and not many people do), you don’t know what’s happening at Victory and you aren’t participating in terms of spending money.

As it stands now, about 10 years into what Hillwood describes as a 25-year process, there are about 13 restaurants, a dozen retailers, more than 750 residential units and quite a bit of office space, including WFAA-TV’s Times Square-like station on a corner near the AAC. But the place has become more upscale, to the exclusion of everything else, than the developers apparently planned, so while it’s easy to find a $1,500 hotel room and a $400 dress, you can’t find an inexpensive lunch, a drugstore or a grocery store, according to the News.

Interestingly enough, that’s the same complaint that the people living and working downtown — and I mean the original downtown — have, too. And it’s interesting to remember that one of the sales pitches we were given when the developers floated the $230 million arena bond in 1998 was that Victory was an important step in downtown’s revitalization. As we can see now, that hasn’t been the case — the distance between Main Street and Victory is too far for the average person to make the walk, and whatever good is happening at Victory isn’t trickling over to downtown.

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Far West Club could lose permit

October 17, 2008

The contentious Far West nightclub is one step closer to losing it’s right to operate as is at the Gaston-Garland corner in East Dallas after the Dallas Plan Commission voted yesterday to revoke it’s 99-year special use permit.

Thanks to plan-commission member Michael Davis (Dallas Progress) for the update — he says "Lakewood/ Lakewood Heights, C-streets, and the other nearby neighborhoods were there in full force" at yesterday’s hearing.

Now the item will move to the City Council’s agenda.


“Renegade towing companies”

October 17, 2008

Friday update: I made a few calls yesterday, and no one wants to talk about this. Or, as one person put it, "Everyone’s
acting like Sgt. Schultz." Which, for the younger members of the group, means they’re saying, "I know nothing." I’ll keep poking around, but since no one wants to talk about this, my guess is there is a good reason: The towing companies are very well connected.

Thursday post: Note to Mayor Park Cities and the rest of the city council: Lone Star Auto, which made headlines last week when it towed cars belonging to Texas-OU fans, has been doing this sort of thing for a long time. In fact, it has even been on TV before.

Lone Star’s “renegade-ness” is not news. City Hall has been trying -– and failing -– to make the company behave for almost two years. You can go here. Or here. Or even here. So, Mayor Leppert, if you’re going to make this one stick, you’ll have to do more than play to the cameras.

Because, you know what this Lone Star business is? A typical example of how the city can’t regulate businesses that it’s supposed to regulate.

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