Don't Blame Council Conservatives For Brand's Failed Tax Scheme
gvw_david_taub
By David Taub, Senior Reporter
Published 7 years ago on
July 2, 2018

Share

With all due respect to my colleague and news director Bill McEwen, he got it wrong in his June 29 column blasting three Fresno councilmen for putting their tax stance over public safety.

GV Wire Reporter David Taub
Opinion
David Taub
The blame should be put squarely at the man who sets the budget, and hoped he could pull one over on the voters: Mayor Lee Brand.

Brand’s Bad Timing

If there were budget shortfalls in two areas residents value most, public safety and parks, Brand kept mum when he introduced his city spending plan at a May news conference. Then, days before the city voted to adopt the budget, Brand said that public safety and parks needed more money.
No one disagrees with that. Kerri Donis and Jerry Dyer, the respective fire and police chiefs, continually told the council that they are understaffed, working with old equipment, and need boosts to provide Fresno a basic level of services.
There’s the old saying, that a city’s values are revealed in its budget. So, because the people so clearly value parks and public safety, how come those weren’t more of a priority?
Raising taxes needs the people’s approval. And, to get it to the people, enough signatures (approximately 23,000) of registered city voters must be submitted or a supermajority of the seven council members needs to approve.
Brand went for the latter route. It seemed to be the path of least resistance, considering a group trying to place a parks sales tax on the November ballot is paying up to $10 per signature collected. But to spring the public safety-parks plan on the council while the members were debating the budget appeared dubious.

Council Blocks Plan

A trio of the conservative sect of council, Steve Brandau, Garry Bredefeld and Clint Olivier, said no way nearly right away. Two left-leaning council members told The Fresno Bee they didn’t like the idea either.
The mayor’s ill-timed and ill-conceived tax plan was doomed minutes after he announced it. Saying that tax-fighting councilmembers showed a lack of leadership, as my friend McEwen did, doesn’t reveal the scope of Brand’s folly.
For Bredefeld, he wasn’t putting tax-fighting credentials over public safety. In fact, he fought during the budget debates to add more to the fire department.
Brandau echoed those sentiments when the pair voted against the budget.
“Typical progressive solution — steal more money from people. How about not having reckless Sacramento policies/Props (47, 57, AB 109) that make us unsafe?” Bredefeld tweeted after McEwen’s column. He stated he wants the state to spend on public safety, not the High-Speed Rail.

Let the People Vote? Not on This Plan

Brand, in trying to push his tax plan on KMJ radio, noted that he wasn’t asking for the council to approve a tax, just to let the people decide. You know, democracy and stuff.
Why should the council rubber-stamp such a plan? It’s easy to say that the money will be held in a special account for a special purpose. Yet, can anyone really trust government to follow through?
While this current council would be held accountable to spend the $44 million in estimated annual revenues this sales tax increase would raise, what about future councils?
If there is an economic downturn in 2029, who is going to stop the council and mayor from raiding those coffers? The current council and mayor will be long gone. Will anyone have the institutional memory of what voters passed in the first place?
And, Brand’s tax scheme sunsets after 15 years. Then what happens to police, fire and parks when all of the sudden they lose that revenue? It’s either a pitch to extend the taxes or massive cuts.

Why, Lee, Why?

People in the know tell me that Brand’s brain trust felt such a public safety-parks tax plan polled well among voters. The problem is, Brand’s team failed to conduct a more relevant poll of seven people just down the hall from Brand’s office.
Brand burnished his credentials as a businessman and conservative political leader during his eight years as a councilman and during his 2016 campaign for mayor.
Back then as today, he wanted 1,000 cops on the street. Two years ago, when asked in numerous interviews and debates how he would pay for it, Brand came up with many revenue streams: Economic development, selling unused city property, selling naming rights to city-owned properties, etc. Never did he mention taxes as a solution.
And, could the timing be worse? Proposition 6, the gas tax repeal, is on the November ballot. The sentiment against taxes will be strong in the fall.
With all that going on, it just made no sense for Brand to push a tax in the first place.
Maybe he needs to replace his brain trust. With the savings from having a smaller mayoral staff, Brand can apply those funds to the things he says he values most: public safety and parks.

DON'T MISS

23 for ’23: A Year in Photos

DON'T MISS

See How this Fresno roastery sends aid to Northern Thailand.

DON'T MISS

District Says Fresno Teachers Contract Proposal Would Bankrupt Budget Reserves by Year 3

DON'T MISS

Trump Vows to Ban Gaza Refugees, Expand Muslim Travel Ban If He Wins

DON'T MISS

The Supreme Court Orders Makers of Gun Parts to Comply with Rules on Ghost Guns

DON'T MISS

George W. Bush for Speaker? A Democratic Lawmaker Thinks It’s Possible

DON'T MISS

Former Navy IT Manager Gets Five Years for Hacking, ID Theft

DON'T MISS

Gunman Kills Two Swedes in Brussels, Prompting Terror Alert and Halt of Belgium-Sweden Soccer Match

DON'T MISS

Zakaria: The Best Response to Hamas Would Be to Keep the Saudi Deal Alive

DON'T MISS

Groundbreaking Human Brain Atlas Offers New Hope for Treating Neurological Disorders

UP NEXT

What Does Destroying Gaza Solve?

UP NEXT

How Liberal California Compares to Florida, Texas on Social Media Regulation

UP NEXT

California’s Widening Housing Gap Defies State Efforts to Jump-Start Construction

UP NEXT

Both Israelis and Palestinians Are Victims of Israel’s Apartheid System  

UP NEXT

Both Israelis and Palestinians Are Victims of Israel’s Apartheid System  

UP NEXT

Revisiting Israel’s Alleged Use of White Phosphorus Amid Renewed Conflict

UP NEXT

Hamas’s Unexpected Attack Forces Israel to Rethink Its Palestinian Strategy

UP NEXT

CA’s Safety-Net Hospitals Can’t Afford $25 an Hour Minimum Wage

UP NEXT

Newsom Signs Bill That May Resurrect Pledge on Single-Payer Health Care

UP NEXT

Economic Uncertainty Prompts More Newsom Vetoes as California Tax Deadline Nears

David Taub,
Senior Reporter
Curiosity drives David Taub. The award-winning journalist might be shy, but feels mighty with a recorder in his hand. He doesn't see it his job to "hold public officials accountable," but does see it to provide readers (and voters) the information needed to make intelligent choices. Taub has been honored with several writing awards from the California News Publishers Association. He's just happy to have his stories read. Joining GV Wire in 2016, Taub covers politics, government and elections, mainly in the Fresno/Clovis area. He also writes columns about local eateries (Appetite for Fresno), pro wrestling (Off the Bottom Rope), and media (Media Man). Prior to joining the online news source, Taub worked as a radio producer for KMJ and PowerTalk 96.7 in Fresno. He also worked as an assignment editor for KCOY-TV in Santa Maria, California, and KSEE-TV in Fresno. He has also worked behind the scenes for several sports broadcasts, including the NCAA basketball tournament, and the Super Bowl. When not spending time with his family, Taub loves to officially score Fresno Grizzlies games. Growing up in the San Francisco Bay Area, Taub is a die-hard Giants and 49ers fan. He graduated from the University of Michigan with dual degrees in communications and political science. Go Blue! You can contact David at 559-492-4037 or at Send an Email

You May like

Trump Vows to Ban Gaza Refugees, Expand Muslim Travel Ban If He Wins

2 years ago

The Supreme Court Orders Makers of Gun Parts to Comply with Rules on Ghost Guns

2 years ago

George W. Bush for Speaker? A Democratic Lawmaker Thinks It’s Possible

2 years ago

Former Navy IT Manager Gets Five Years for Hacking, ID Theft

2 years ago

Gunman Kills Two Swedes in Brussels, Prompting Terror Alert and Halt of Belgium-Sweden Soccer Match

2 years ago

Zakaria: The Best Response to Hamas Would Be to Keep the Saudi Deal Alive

2 years ago

Groundbreaking Human Brain Atlas Offers New Hope for Treating Neurological Disorders

2 years ago

Newsom Signs Law to Slowly Raise Healthcare Minimum Wage to $25

2 years ago

Former Fresno CC Coach Ed Madec Arrested for Allegedly Threatening to Kill Chancellor

2 years ago

Jim Jordan’s Rapid Rise Cheered by Trump and Far Right. Could It Make Him Speaker?

2 years ago

HOT OFF THE PRESS

23 for ’23: A Year in Photos

1 year ago

2 years ago

Trump Vows to Ban Gaza Refugees, Expand Muslim Travel Ban If He Wins

2 years ago

The Supreme Court Orders Makers of Gun Parts to Comply with Rules on Ghost Guns

Photo of a hacker typing on a laptop

2 years ago

Former Navy IT Manager Gets Five Years for Hacking, ID Theft

2 years ago

Gunman Kills Two Swedes in Brussels, Prompting Terror Alert and Halt of Belgium-Sweden Soccer Match

2 years ago

Zakaria: The Best Response to Hamas Would Be to Keep the Saudi Deal Alive

2 years ago

Groundbreaking Human Brain Atlas Offers New Hope for Treating Neurological Disorders

2 years ago

Newsom Signs Law to Slowly Raise Healthcare Minimum Wage to $25

2 years ago

Oprah Winfrey Proposed 2020 Presidential Run with Mitt Romney, New Book Reveals

2 years ago

Bulldogs Get a Bye Week to Heal After Gutting Out Win at Utah State

2 years ago

Trump Has Narrow Gag Order Imposed on Him by Federal Judge Overseeing 2020 Election Case

Search