‘Dear Ron’ letters
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Ron Davis (“There’s foul news on the city’s financial front,” April
26) correctly points out that the community has choices to make about how
it raises additional revenue to fund the needs of the city of Huntington
Beach.
We can impose fees for sewers and other services or we can generate
more sales tax by developing our commercial base. Ron is obviously
convinced that the latter is the way to go and the former, as he puts it
“stinks.”
I do not dispute that the city needs a better commercial base. One
look at the vacant spaces on Main Street -- even in the newly developed
commercial sites -- tells us that our commercial life is suffering. And
the years-long languishing of the Huntington Beach Mall -- or Crossings
at Huntington Beach project -- is a failure of will somewhere.
Nor do I dispute that people in cities (such as Huntington Beach) with
disproportionately low commercial business are giving some share of their
sales taxes to other cities, and subsidizing their revenue base, while
their own communities receive proportionately less.
But there is a choice.
It is at least possible that a community would rather pay higher fees
and even -- God forbid -- higher property taxes to pay for the amenity of
not living next to another strip mall. Larger commercial bases mean more
revenue, but they also mean more traffic and more city services (like
sewers) that, incidentally, require more city expenditures from that
increased revenue base. Larger commercial bases mean more congestion,
more crowds, less parking availability, more trucks, more noise, more
tacky commercial facades.
It is at least possible that a community would rather pay a premium
for more residences and a lower key of commerce. I do not necessarily
advocate this, but there is another side to this story.
A bit more complex than simply “generating revenue” versus “writing
checks to support government.” Like it or not, we all have to support
that evil government with all its police officers, school teachers, road
and sewer builders, firefighters and all the other dedicated people who
work to make our lives safer, healthier, more convenient and more
meaningful.
We can certainly decide that we are paying too much for this -- or
that we should pay more. But simply making snide comments that the city’s
method of generating revenue “stinks” is not a fair representation of
what the choices are.
BILL WALLACE
Huntington Beach
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