Friday, September 04, 2020

Nashville has declared war on affordable housing




by Michael Dioguardi, reposted from Facebook -  The Barnes Fund, another useless waste of money that does nothing to help with affordable housing but creates the appearance that the city is doing “something”. 

But the reality is the city IS doing something....something wrong. Local government basically has declared war on affordable housing with layers of restrictions preventing people from providing affordable housing. City planners control what sort of housing can be built — and where — through zoning and land-use laws. These central planners tell us where housing must be single-family or multi-family. They tell us if you're allowed to rent out one of your bedrooms to a non-relative. They tell us if you can build an auxiliary housing unit on your property. With so much government planning at work, the effect has been rising home prices and a higher cost of living. 

And again, those who suffer the most tend to be those with the lowest incomes. We've all seen it at work over and over again in many of these older inner suburbs: A landowner realizes the housing demand has increased in the area and attempts to put a four-unit building where a single-family home once stood. Naturally, this change will create more housing, bring down rents, and, of course, allow a private-property owner to exercise his rights as an owner. But, in many cases, the private-property owner quickly finds he has no such rights. The neighbors, who don't want to live near a row of townhouses or have more cars parked on the street will protest to the city government, demand a zoning hearing, and fight to ensure that only a single-family unit is allowed on the lot. In many cases, they'll use the increasingly-popular tactic of "downzoning" in which people who earlier bought property with the hope of developing it later will be robbed of their property rights. They'll be told: "sorry, that thing we once said you could do with your property — you can't do that anymore." This is done so that the community's other residents can maintain the status quo in that neighborhood until the end of time. 

At the same time, employment continues to expand in nearby commercial areas, so employees — instead of living in inner suburbs — must move further and further outside the urban area and commute on taxpayer-funded roads. Nor is this problem limited to what many view as primarily residential areas. Even on major thoroughfares, nearby residents will protest new apartment buildings because they are believed to be unsightly, or will create more local traffic, or are simply something different they don't like. The "solution" in this case is to shift traffic somewhere else — to the suburban freeways, for example — and shift the cost to statewide taxpayers who now must foot the bill for extending infrastructure ever further outward. 

In all these cases, one group of voters uses the power of government to force costs onto some other group of voters in some other area — and onto the workers who must live further and further from employment. This is all done to save the "character" of the neighborhood. But it's really done because many homeowners have no qualms about using the power of the state to prevent other property owners from using their own property as they see fit. Having caused the shortage of housing in places where people actually want to live, our "progressive" advocate for low density and exclusionary zoning may then attempt to sooth his conscience by advocating for a small number of subsidized housing units nearby. Or, he may demand "inclusionary zoning" which mandates that developers set aside a certain percentage of all new units as "affordable" units with legally-imposed limits on how high prices can go.

Unfortunately, thanks to the continuing role of government in housing production, attempting to meet the needs of renters and buyers continues to be an exhausting quest to deal with an endless assortment of ordinances, mandates, regulations, and plans. The current planners don't want more housing. The government planners only want a certain type of housing. Meanwhile, the renters live in smaller and smaller units, and drive further and further. But there's one thing of which we can be sure. "Capitalism" will be blamed for it all.

Michael Dioguardi lives in Nashville, Tennessee where he is a Property Manager and Residential Asset Management. He is one of my favorite commentators on Facebook. He does not comment on every snippet of news or meme but when he does comment, he writes thoughtful essays.

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Thursday, September 03, 2020

AWAKE NASHVILLE TN - THIS SUNDAY!!! Silent No More Red Wave Across America Caravan!

Sunday at 10 AM – 3 PM 


Middle TN 

Hosted by Mark Smith 

NOTICE: MAKE SURE ALL FLAGS ARE NEW - I TESTED MINE AND SHREDDED ONE. BUY A COUPLE EXTRA. WE WILL BE DOING 55-60 MPH. We are protesting the destruction and dismantling of our country. It will continue to get worse until we move against it. Where are our patriots? We will march on every capital in the United States of America. This particular event will be held around downtown Nashville. We will fly our flags from our vehicles, parade-style from every highway and interstate. We will carry American flags TRUMP flags and homemade signs and other candidate signs to show the public that a RED WAVE is coming .. (read more on Facebook)

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Young Republicans September Meeting

TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 8, 2020 AT 6 PM – 8:30 PM 



Hosted by Nashville Young Republicans 

If you are upset about the property tax and every other crazy thing that the left is pushing, come join us. We will be discussing how to get involved/make a difference in the coming weeks. We will be meeting on the patio outside of Bold Patriot. Feel free to social distance/wear masks.

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Wednesday, September 02, 2020

Effort to cut lifetime health benefit for Metro Council is still alive. Council will continue to consider it.

The Tennessean - A majority of Metro Council want to deliberate further on a piece of legislation that could curb lifetime health benefits for future elected Nashville council members. 


Council members decided just before 2 a.m. Wednesday in a close 20-18 vote to bring back renewed efforts to reduce the growing Metro financial obligation in covering lifetime health insurance for former two-term council members. (link)

Rod's Comment:  As soon as the minutes of the meeting are posted I will list how council members voted. 

In my view this is a benefit that needs to end. We are the only city in America that does this. The Federal government does not do this and the State government does not do this.  No private company does this. For more of my opinion on the topic follow this link. 

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Elvis' Graceland attacked by BLM Vandals.



By Rod Williams - The Graceland estate, the former home of Elvis Presley in Memphis, was vandalized sometime between Monday night (Aug. 31) and Tuesday morning (Sept. 1). Memphis' Commercial Appeal reports that vandals spray-painted the front walls surrounding the property with Black Lives Matter and Defund the Police graffiti overnight. Vandals used black and orange spray paint to write slogans including "Defund MPD" and "BLM" on the sidewalk in front of Graceland along Elvis Presley Boulevard. They also scrawled "#DefundThePolice" and "Abolish ICE" on the sidewalk and the stone wall that surrounds the property. 

Elvis bought the home in 1957 and lived there in until his death at the age of 42 on Aug. 16, 1977. The home was opened as a museum in June 7, 1982. The site was listed in the National Register of Historic Places on November 7, 1991, becoming the first site related to rock and roll to be so listed. Graceland was declared a National Historic Landmark on March 27, 2006, also a first for a rock singer. Graceland is the second most-visited house in the U.S. after the White House, with over 650,000 visitors a year. Graceland is the most popular tourist attraction in Memphis. (link

I knew Elvis was still popular these many years after his death but I did not know how popular until I had a caregiver come to work for me helping to take care of my wife.  She was a big Elvis fan. Through her I discovered that there is almost a cult like following of Elvis fans.  Graceland is almost like a holy shrine.  They have a candlelight vigil each year outside Graceland and as I understand it, thousands attend.  People even flock from other countries for "Elvis Week."   While most people who visit the White House or some other famous house, usually only visit it once, it is not uncommon of lovers of Elvis to visit Graceland multiple times.

I do not think the Black Lives Matter thugs are winning friends and influencing people by their senseless destruction and violence. The message is being lost and people's attitudes are hardening against the movement.  Desecrating the Elvis shrine certainly did not win them any friends among Elvis fans.  

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Tuesday, September 01, 2020

It is time to end the lifetime health insurance benefit for ex-councilmembers. Tonight the Council will vote on this again.

by Rod Williams - Before the Council tonight is legislation addressing the lifetime benefit of Metro providing health care for former Council members. An attempt to end this benefit has been tried a couple times before and failed. What is on the agenda tonight is a resolution to put back on the Council agenda a bill that would abolish this benefit.  Last council meeting the bill that would do this was deferred indefinitely against the will of the sponsor. 


While serving in the Council, a council member gets Metro health insurance on the same terms as an employee.  They pay the employee's share of the premium and the city pays the bulk of the premium.  This insurance covers the council member, their spouse and any minor children.  When the council member leaves the Council, they continue to receive this benefit.  We are the only city in America that does this. The Federal government does not do this and the State government does not do this.  No private company does this either. This should end. 

 At one time, before term limits, council members were older when they first got elected and there was very little turn over in the council. If was not uncommon for council members to serve twenty or thirty years or more and they were usually retirement age by the time they retired.  Many died while in office. There were just not that many ex-councilmembers so this was not that expensive. 

Now, there is at least a full turnover ever 8 years. Also, Council members are of a younger age when first elected. I don't know the number, but there are a lot of ex-councilmembers and the number of ex council members is growing all the time. 

Service on the Council is demanding. A lot more is involved than just attending two meetings a month. Council members must handle constituent service, study issues, attend lots of committee meetings, and return phone calls and respond to emails. It is not an easy job.   However, that does not justified a lucrative retirement benefit for you and your family for life.  If elected at say age 32, serve two terms and live to be75, then the tax payers provide the ex-Councilmember and his family with health insurance for 35 years! That is a retirement benefit that can be worth a million dollars, for 8 years of part-time service. With Metro broke and the city's financial picture looking pretty bleak, the Council ought to do the right thing and end this benefit now.

I am OK with members getting this benefit while serving, but it should not be a lifetime benefit. For the record, as a former council member, I do receive this benefit. 

For more on this issue see Entitled or Excessive? Some Metro Nashville councilmembers spar on $1 million benefit.

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Monday, August 31, 2020

Gun ownership by state

Massachusetts and New Jersey tie for the lowest rate of gun ownership in America where only 14.7% of  the household have guns, followed by Rhode Island, Hawaii, and New York. 


The top five gun-owning states from lowest to highest rate of gun ownership are West Virginia,  Idaho, Alaska, Wyoming, and Montana with the highest rate of gun ownership where 66.3% of the household have guns. Tennessee ranks number 14 where 51.6% of the household have weapons. 

For more on this story, follow this link

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Mayor Cooper's new $1.5B transit plan. Show me the money!

by Rod Williams - Mayor Cooper has proposed a new $1.5 billion transit plan for Nashville just as if we were awash in money and people were clamoring for more public transportation options.  I don't guess he has noticed. The Corona-19 government shut down has caused a $200 million hit to revenue projections this year.  And, in December we may very likely see a referendum pass that rolls back the 34% (37% in the General Services District) tax increase passed in June.  

Also, the public is not on board.  In 2018 the public voted against a $9 billion transit plan  that would have build a light rail, bus rapid transit, downtown tunnel system.  Since the government imposed the economic shutdown, WeGo has been losing millions of dollars. Not only are fewer people riding because they are working from home or have no place to go, but mass transit is a spreader of the disease. On a train or plane or bus, you are breathing the expelled breath of every other person in the conveyance vehicle. Mass transit is a health hazard. 

I walk almost every day a trek that takes me down 8th Avenue South over to 12th Avenue South to Belmont Avenue and back.  I am not walking at rush hour so I don't know if anyone is riding the bus then but I always notice if anyone is riding the bus.  Almost every bus I see is empty except for the driver.  Sometimes there may be one or two people on the bus but most of the time they are empty. Why take these big buses to the suburbs and back just as if there were riders for these busses? 

Would this not be a good time to think outside the box of doing things the way they have always been done and consider something innovative? Nashville could take the lead in creating a mostly private, paratransit, demand-driven, public transportation system. Now when riding the bus is a health hazard and demand is down would be the time to innovate and experiment.

For more on the Mayor's transit proposal, see this link.  For more on my thoughts on pubic transportation see, What to do about Mass Transit and traffic congestion

 

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Sunday, August 30, 2020

Vanderbilt can't build Murfreesboro hospital. Government needs to get out of the way and let the market decide.

by Rod Williams, 8/30/2020 - On Wednesday of this week the State government denied Vanderbilt University Medical Center permission to build a 48-bed medical center in Murfreesboro. Instead, the government decided that St. Thomas could build a hospital in Murfreesboro

State law requires the construction of new hospitals to be approved by the Tennessee Health Services and Development Agency. The logic of this is that by requiring government approval, the government will prevent the construction of unnecessary or redundant facilities. Once they decide a hospital can be built, I do not know what criteria they use in choosing one company over another.

This is asinine. I live in the Melrose area of Nashville and we have a Kroger grocery store about a mile from my house. Within about five miles there are several other grocery stores. There is a Aldi's, another Kroger, a Trader Joe's, and others.  I don't want to drive five miles but would welcome another grocery store in my neighborhood.  I am getting one. Within about a half mile, a new Publix is going up. What if a new grocery store had to get a certificate of necessity before they could open and then government, if they decided one could be build, decided which one? I probably would not be getting a new Publix. 

Some will say, "Oh, but health care is different." Why?  Without food you die. Is health care more important than food? 

In the 1970's, the federal government urged states to control the rising health care costs by managing the growth of health care services and facilities through health planning and the Tennessee General Assembly created an agency to manage the Certificate of Need program. How has that worked out?  Are health care cost lower today than they were in 1970?  Is there any reason to believe health care cost would be even higher if we had not had the last fifty years of government making these decisions? 

I am not one who thinks the status quo in health care is just fine.  We need health care reform.  However, wage and price controls almost always fail; requiring government approval before one can open a new business or provide an innovative product or service is more likely to drive prices up, not down; and, bureaucrats picking winners and losers does not result in better decisions than does letting the market make those decisions. 

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Tennessee can lead the nation in innovation freedom

Justin Owen
by Guest columnist Justin Owen, The Tennessean- We have witnessed many unprecedented moments over the past few months. And most of the news has been grim. But as we battle the COVID-19 pandemic, a silver lining is appearing on the edge of the dark clouds. We are witnessing some of the most rapid and exciting improvements in innovation in the history of the world. 

Take telehealth for example. During the first month of the pandemic, BlueCross BlueShield of Tennessee reported that it had managed 18 times more telehealth claims than a year before. ... State lawmakers even recently returned to Nashville for a special session to make permanent many of the telehealth changes made by Gov. Bill Lee in his executive orders. ...

We should also build upon our existing framework that makes it easier to test new products in our state. For example, Amazon recently chose Franklin as one of just two southern cities to test its new delivery robots. 

Overregulated states chase away creativity. ... There’s no reason those innovators shouldn’t set up shop and bring their products to market in Tennessee and hire Tennesseans. (Read the full article at this link and view a 20 minute interview with Justin Owen exploring this topic.) 

Justin Owen is president and CEO of the Beacon Center of Tennessee.

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