Q.
Are there citizens in Columbia who don't believe City Hall is transparent enough? A. Absolutely.
We took a
big step back last night with the
transmission line discussion. You can see where the process was flawed, where the
"decision matrix" was weighted heavily on one side or the other, and where certain Council members failed to ask critical questions, such as: How tall are these towers? How wide are they at their base? Is there another route we could have gone?
Q.
Have deals been made in the past that benefit only a certain few? I'd rather look to the future. Our population could double in the next 30 years and we've got to be prepared for that.
We've got to have a blueprint. The foundation of my campaign is to have a blueprint that invests in our neighborhoods.
Right now,
we're cannibalizing our neighborhoods by delaying much-needed sewer projects in certain parts of town; with the Providence Rd. improvement project to accomodate new student housing; and now it looks like they've rushed through these high-voltage power lines in one of our finest neighborhoods, all to subsidize a certain kind of development in a certain part of town.
That's
not a sustainable economic development or growth strategy.
Q.
Why is there low morale among the city's police officers?
A. A study the city commissioned came out a few weeks ago that shows Columbia police officers have lower morale than other city employees, and police officers in other cities.
Why is that? We've cut their pensions. We've cut their uniform allowance. We are understaffed by as many as 50 police officers. Our police department hasn't kept pace with the city's growth.
The officer who patrols my beat told me that when he comes on work at 3 pm for a 12-hour shift that goes until 3 am, he has as many as
22 calls pending, the earliest of which is someone who has called 911 at
8:30 that morning. As he clears these calls, more calls come in.
We wonder why they have low morale, and why public opinion about police isn't always positive.
Q. How would you, as Mayor, deal with this morale problem?
A. We need to invest in community policing that better serves our neighborhoods,
without the expense of taking officers from our traffic enforcement and other units. When police develop a rapport with the people they serve by being in their neighborhoods
, it's much easier for them to solve or prevent crime.
Q. Do you think city manager Mike Matthes and police chief Ken Burton shoulder a lot of the responsibility for the state of the police department today, and why it doesn't have more support from the public?
A. Ultimately, it's their responsibility, but again, it's the Mayor and Council who set the tone and the expectations about what we want city staff to deliver.
In the hour and a half the City Council debated the city manager's pay raise,
19 people called 911 at a time when there were no police officers immediately available to respond.
That's how out of whack our budget priorities are.
[Speaking of setting the tone], it was
tone deaf to do the city manager's raise right after the parks tax increase voters approved in November, because it leaves voters with the lingering doubt, "Did we really need to have that tax increase?"
Q. Though the job of Mayor is non-partisan, how would you describe your political leanings?
A. I always like to say,
there's no Democratic or Republican way to fix a pothole.
I'm pretty conservative on fiscal issues, on what we fund first, on how we budget for priorities, on when we go to taxpayers for more money. I'm fairly progressive on the cultural issues that make Columbia unique.
Q. Is the county-owned Boone County Fairgrounds important to the City of Columbia?
A. Absolutely. It's not only an opportunity for green space preservation, but also an underutilized economic development tool.
Q. Do the city and county need better communication?
A. Of course! But we don't need a court order to do it. The fact that the County felt their only recourse over the City's TIF district proposal was to sue the City probably says a lot about the deterioration of that relationship.
Q. When we look at downtown development like the CVS pharmacy or the proposed 10-story student apartment, what are the things City Council should be concerned with?
Not cannibalizing other parts of our city to support downtown development.
If that same California developer went southwest of the Village of Cherry Hill and bought a 3-acre plot of land for the 10-story student apartment, he or she would be required to put in all the streets, all the water, all the sewer, all the sidewalks, all the fire hydrants. But because he's buying a plot in the middle of downtown Columbia,
there's no concomitant requirement. That's not fair.
We have a great city and we want to keep it a great city. We do that by investing in our infrastructure, our public safety, and developing a well-planned blueprint that provides predictability and assures that our growth is paying for itself.
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HERE.