While The City Burns
By Mitch Berg
Saint Paul’s business sector is collapsing. If downtown business occupancy rates are under 30%,it’s only because state government has been renting so much of it; the City is also party to the destruction of the downmarket but once-at-least-breathing University Avenue business strip. Crime is rising, the school system is garbage (although the superintendent is doing the usual fine job of pre-emptively foisting the blame on the taxpayers), and with over 1,000 vacant properties (with many more forfeited via one path or another to the city, which is busy dumping them on the market for peanuts after filtering them through the non-profit system that helps install so many of the City Council in office), it’s impossible to sell a house without getting the fiscal Abner Louima treatment.
The Saint Paul Council, and Mayor Coleman, are at a loss for a response other than “tax the living crap out of whoever in the city still pays taxes”. And building indoor ice rinks and traffic roundabouts and bike expressways.
So when it comes to the whole “run a responsible city government that doesn’t impede the city’s success”, the Saint Paul City Council is a big fat flop
But everyone’s got their sweet spot. The St. Paul City Council does excel at worthless smug symbolic frippery:
St. Paul became the first city in Minnesota to formally resolve that federal military spending needs to be trimmed.
A resolution sponsored by St. Paul City Council member Amy Brendmoen unanimously passed the seven-member board Wednesday, Oct. 10. It asks the state’s congressional delegation to support shifting funding priorities from military operations to the needs of local communities.
“The bottom line for me is that federal spending impacts the money that goes to local initiatives,” Brendmoen said.
Of course, some of our old friends are involved (emphasis added):
Wednesday’s council meeting was attended by members of various anti-war and social justice groups, as well as state Sen. Sandy Pappas, DFL-St. Paul, and anti-war activist Coleen Rowley.
Jack Nelson-Pallmeyer, a professor [shouldn’t that have scare quotes? – Ed.] of Justice and Peace Studies at the University of St. Thomas, said that if every American taxpayer received a bill for the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan, St. Paul taxpayers’ share would total an estimated $1.7 billion over the past decade.
I guess you have to be a highly-educated “peace studies” “professor” to think “military spending” is done in the form of “government goodies” coupons that can be redeemed for more ice rinks and light rail trains.
But what if that putative 1.7 bill had been available for local spending, rather than exacted by the IRS or borrowed from China?
With people like Sandy Pappas and the Saint Paul City Council in charge, we’d have gotten $1.7 billion more in ice rinks, drinking fountain art and electric cars for city employees.
This sort of thing is apparently all the rage among PC liberal circles these days:
Other major cities to pass resolutions in favor of trimming military spending are Philadelphia, Los Angeles and Hartford, Conn. Rowley said peace activists have approached the city councils in Eagan and Lakeville but have yet to receive responses. They also plan to approach Apple Valley, Inver Grove Heights, Shoreview and Mounds View officials in coming days.
If we could trade “trimming the defense budget” with “sending the city councils of Saint Paul, Philly, LA and Hartford to Afghanistan”, I think it’d be a fair trade for everyone.





October 11th, 2012 at 12:45 pm
HIPPIES SMELL
October 11th, 2012 at 12:50 pm
I am convinced, present company excepted, that economically ignorant trolls live in St. Paul. They just don’t get it despite the departure of usBank from all but a couple of St. Paul buildings. In fact, the River Center on Shepard Road has weeds growing through the cracks in the parking lot. Then, due to that huge monument to moronic fiscal policy, the central corridor light rail, several small business owners have had to either close up shop or move at significant cost! Coleman should change his name to Nicolai Lenin!
October 11th, 2012 at 2:04 pm
See this dead horse here? I’m warning you, I’m about to flog it.
Telling Congress how much to spend on the military is NOT the job of a Saint Paul City Councilmember. Her job is to oversee city government operations using the funds available. If there’s not enough money to fund all her pet projects, she should call in a Home Economics professor to explain how a budget works.
DO YOUR JOB, Lady.
October 11th, 2012 at 3:20 pm
Compare and contrast beleaguered SP with my new home:
http://video.foxnews.com/v/1115538946001/economy-moves-forward-in-greenville-sc/
Keep in mind that the prop taxes on my new 2500 sq. ft. House are $680….a year.
Yeah, that’s what a Red state looks like.
October 11th, 2012 at 5:01 pm
Surely at some point Mitch will exercise the ambulatory franchise. I certainly would.
October 11th, 2012 at 10:01 pm
Why is St. Paul the capitol, anyhow?
Just think of the jobs that would be created if the capital of Minnesota was moved to a suburb or exurb? Richfield or Fridley, maybe.
In these hard economic times, we need to consider everything the government can do to create jobs.
October 12th, 2012 at 7:22 am
I’ve lived in St Paul for 22 years now. The city is coming full circle and returning to the crappy years of the Jim Schiebel administration.
I ran into Norm Coleman at Best Buy a few months ago, I told him “man, I really need you to be my mayor again”. He smiled. Then I said, “come to think of it, I really need you to be my senator again too”. He laughed.
I told him about what I thought about how the city is returning to the Jim Schiebel days, and he agreed. We talked about the first Truth in Taxation meeting at Central H.S., and then further ones every year at Arlington HS. He remembered me being a regular. I came in late one and he was already in his speech and he then said “oh, good, the big guy is here, I wouldn’t be meeting without you”.
Saint Paul is now an asylum run by the inmates. No longer do we have some lone voices of sanity crying out from the masses. Tom Conlon has passed away, Mike and Pat Harris no longer represent MacGroveland/Highland, and the days of Randy Kelley and Norm Coleman are history.
As my house is close to being paid for, and my son is almost through with high school, I’m not sure if I can stay in the city I’ve grown to love.