The Emeryville Tattler

The Emeryville commons, from the residents' perspective

Thursday, August 30, 2012

Trees To Be Illegally Cut; Developer & City Hall In Cahoots

From The Secret News:

“Parkside” Developer Will Cut Trees in Violation of City Ordinance, Resident Says

August 30, 2012
By Adrian McGilly

33 of these trees will be removed to make way for a park, a parking lot, and an apartment/retail building.
Below is a follow-up article by Adrian McGilly to a letter he sent yesterday to City Planning Director Charles Bryant. The letter, which was printed in The Secret News, asks that the City try to save atleast some of the mature trees on the future site of an apartment/retail development that also includes a park on Stanford between Doyle and Hollis streets. The plan is to cut down 33 mature trees. McGilly is joined in his plea by his wife, Emeryville Mayor Jennifer West, who could not vote on any aspect of the new development because she lives a block away.
______________
I got a response from Mr. Bryant. He assured me that the park design went through all the proper public noticing and hearing processes, that everyone had ample opportunity to weigh in on the fate of these trees, that not very many people did, and that now it’s too late because wheels have been set in motion. It was a very thorough, detailed and respectful response and I am grateful to Mr. Bryant for his time his attention.
But that’s not the end of the story.
There is an Urban Forestry Ordinance (UFO) in this city that includes provisions that protect trees on city property from various threats. For example, one of those provisions is that anyone wanting to remove a city tree must apply for a permit, and the city must post a notice ON THE TREE stating that the tree is slated for removal, giving citizens a chance to weigh in. Obviously, if those signs had been posted on the trees, more people would have taken notice, and more people would have spoken up. That provision was put in the UFO precisely to draw extra attention to the potential destruction of trees, so that more citizens are aware of the threat.
But that was never done. Here’s why:

Please click HERE for the rest of the story.
Brian Donahue at 10:32 PM 2 comments:

Wednesday, August 29, 2012

Councilwoman Chastised Tattler: 4% Growth Is "Very Conservative"

Mayor Atkin Told Tattler To Get On The School Bond Bandwagon In 2010

At Least 4% Growth Promised: Actual Was Negative 6.8% 



Opinion
Elected officials and staff at City Hall and the School District led Emeryville residents down a garden path with overly optimistic prognostications of the Measure J school bond in 2010.  'Don't worry' they told us, 'we know what we're doing and this bond financing is a piece of cake for Emeryville' and then when it all turned bad...poof...they're all gone...they've run for cover and there's no one around to take the blame.

We intend on rectifying this, here and now.  Get ready elected officials; it's accountability time.

Mayor Atkin & President Dwin
In the 2010 Measure J school bond juggernaut,
they were the tip of the spear:  Don't worry they
told residents, there's no way this can fail! 
The Tattler never did a high five victory lap...we never engaged in a proverbial 'We told you so' because besides being childish, we thought it wasn't necessary; after the economic slump, we felt hard lessons had been learned here.  Silly, silly us as it turns out.  Now, we see that hubris knows no limit in the corridors of power in Emeryville.  
We were right to sound alarms regarding the 2010 Measure J school bond, however it looks like even we underestimated the delusional mendacity of Emeryville's 'power elite'.  After the School Board and the City Council and their obviously overly optimistic predictions about Emeryville's economic growth were gobsmacked by the reality of negative 6.8% assessed valuation for 2011,  now they're planning to borrow more money by use of another horribly expensive bond scheme, again with assurances of high future growth.  As before, they're hoping residents aren't paying attention.  

This garden path leads to perpetual growth
for Emeryville.  "Just head on down there,

we'll meet you there"
Back in October of 2010, as voters were preparing to vote on Measure J in Emeryville, the Tattler interviewed Mayor Ruth Atkin and School Board President Miguel Dwin about the fiscal ramifications of the massive school bond in the Measure, then pegged at $95 million.  The Tattler was concerned that the bond analysis was too rosy given the collapsing real estate market in Emeryville.  We thought the 4% growth per year predicted by Ms Atkin and Mr Dwin was misguided and we worked to warn Emeryville residents in several stories.  Ms Atkin and Mr Dwin for their part were very irritated at the Tattler and they assured us that the 4% growth prediction was "very conservative".  They firmly stated the actual growth would likely be much higher than 4%.  They disapproved of the editorial stance of the Tattler and its 'glass half empty' alarmist positions.
We drew attention to two Watergate Towers buildings then in foreclosure.  Not to worry Ms Atkin and Mr Dwin chastised, "We're going to more than make up for that [assessed valuation drop] by the Pixar expansion".  They also indicated the Bay Street Mall would expand.  Future years would bring nothing but growth they assured us.

Who could have guessed these two dilettantes were wrong about their 4% growth assurances (besides the Tattler)?  The answer is; anybody that looked at the real estate situation in 2010 with a modicum of rational critical analysis instead of rose colored glasses.

As these two and their misguided colleagues on the city council and the School Board steer us into the fiscal morass of a Capital Appreciation Bond to fiance the move of the elementary school over to the new school site on San Pablo Avenue, entreating Emeryville to massive debt for generations, as they shut out dissent and engage in another round of chastising infidels, we would like to pause for a moment. We want to make sure everyone knows who is responsible for this mess so far, even if they lack the courage to fess up that they were wrong.

The 2010 Tattler interview with Ruth Atkin & Miguel Dwin may be accessed HERE.
Brian Donahue at 10:52 PM No comments:

Monday, August 27, 2012

Follow Up Schools Report: High School "At Risk"

NCUST's Devastating Follow Up Report:
School District Ignores Fix-It Recommendations At High School 



Just in time for the start of the new school year, Emery High School has received another failing grade according to a follow-up report released last week from the National Center for Urban School Transformation, an education center funded by San Diego State University Research Foundation, tasked with evaluating Emeryville's schools.  The report was meant to track implementation progress as a result of recommendations from an assessment report presented by the National Center last year.  That report, a sobering affair by any standards, showed a High School in failure on many counts leading to lowered academic results here at Emery.  As with last year's report, the NCUST assessment team this time also faulted mostly administrators.

The NCUST team now recommends the District explore alternate solutions such as transforming the school to what it calls the Emery Early College High School, a place where a high percentage of students complete one or two years of college credit by the time they graduate from high school or a Career Partnership Academy where students complete internships in local companies such as Bayer/ Novartis or Pixar. 
  
Dr. Joseph Johnson
Executive Director
NCUST
Same as last year, the assessment team was headed up by Dr Joseph Johnson, the Executive Director at NCUST.  Dr Johnson personally assisted in the survey conducted at the schools and the follow-up assessment report. 

The new report notes many areas of last year's recommendations that the School District ignored outright or failed to implement properly.  The report now ominously warns of collapsing enrollment as parents seek a higher quality school elsewhere, "We are suggesting that the school is at risk of suffering diminished enrollments until the school is not sustainable" the report warns.  
The new assessment calls into question the School Board's commitment to change they promised after last year's report.  School Board member Josh Simon called for an implementation program to facilitate the recommendations in the wake of that report.

Elementary School Praised
Emery's elementary school, Anna Yates, as a contrast, received generally high marks and is shown to be continuing to improve.  The areas of improvement called for are mostly minor and not systemic.  Both teachers and the administration were praised by the report.

High School Condemned
Of the ten identified areas of concern needing improvement at the High School, seven either failed utterly or didn't improve enough to satisfy the assessment team.  Two areas showed clear progress and one area was deemed "difficult to assess". 
Perhaps the most distressing assessment for School District officials is the observation that the Center of Community Life, a high concept "school as the hub of the community" and long held out by the District as the lifeline to the failing High School, will not be sufficient on its own to turn the culture around. 


The Center of Community Life 
"will not be sufficient" 
to fix the schools


The report was generally positive as far as teachers at the High School are concerned, finding the ongoing problems there mostly with an unsupportive administration disrupting an environment where teachers might be encouraged to improve.  From the report, "One teacher explained, 'It’s hard to become a better teacher if you have to hide your weaknesses to keep your job.'  Teachers were not particularly open or clear about the sources of this tension.  In addition to discussing their lack of trust with colleagues, teachers discussed their lack of trust in the superintendent. They described the reduction in force as a contributing factor. They perceived that the superintendent had assured teachers that layoffs would not occur. They felt betrayed when layoffs were announced."

"We are suggesting that the school 
is at risk of suffering diminished 
enrollments until the school 
is not sustainable."

Administrators were further shown to be operating in a crisis mode, "Administrators did not perceive that they had adequate time to visit classrooms, especially after March 15th when the reduction in force went into effect. We did not acquire evidence that teachers had experienced opportunities to provide feedback to or receive feedback from their colleagues" the report noted.

Bright Note
The assessment team found some improvement, notably a greater sense of orderliness over last year, "The number of suspensions has declined; on the day of our visit, fewer students were waiting in the office because of discipline issues; classrooms and hallways were more orderly; and students reported a greater sense of order throughout the school."  However the assessment tempered the observation with an admonition that student behavior is at a low standard, "While there is substantial evidence of improvement over 2011-2012, there are still classrooms where students are not expected to adhere to high behavioral expectation." the report adds.

The entire NCUST follow-up report may be read here:  http://bit.ly/PEThY0


Brian Donahue at 1:00 PM 7 comments:

Conflict Of Interest Cited In Move To Sell City Owned Property

The City of Emeryville is seeking to sell a piece of fallow land it owns near the Bay Street Mall on Christie Avenue to Madison Marquette, the owner of the mall, but the sale is improper due to a conflict of interest by a member of the State mandated Emeryville Oversight Board, according to the Emeryville Property Owners Association.  
The Property Owners website alleges Oversight Board member and Emeryville resident John Gooding has been or currently is on the payroll of Madison Marquette and the politically connected Wareham Development but Mr Gooding failed to disclose this information as he is required to do. 
Oversight Board member and
Emeryville resident John Gooding

The real estate, called "site B" is part of a previous acquisition by the former Emeryville Redevelopment Agency and the city council had expressed interest in shuttling the parcel to Washington DC based Madison Marquette to develop into an expansion of the Bay Street Mall after clearing the land of condemned businesses and removing toxic soil on the site.  
Residents attempted to block the sale citing a lack of benefit for Emeryville residents and a recalcitrance on the part of the developer to even meet with them.  After the dissolution of the Redevelopment Agency however, Madison Marquette dropped interest in developing the property and it has remained fallow.  To the consternation of residents, the city has kept open the option to develop the property reserved exclusively for Madison Marquette in the interim years, garnering no taxes for the city.  Even though other developers have shown interest in the land, the city has protected Madison Marquette's interests and no other developers have been allowed to make proposals for the property.

Wareham Development's Transit Center is also is being considered for public subsidy by the Oversight Board and if Mr Gooding has been paid by that developer, that too would constitute a conflict of interest and Mr Gooding would be required to disclose that information. 

The Emeryville Property Owners Association story:

City Staff Seeking to Sell Site B to Madison Marquette
Posted on August 25, 2012

CITY STAFF REQUESTS TWO SPECIAL MEETINGS TO SELL SITE B TO MADISON MARQUETTE
The Emeryville Successor Agency (former Redevelopment Agency) has agreed to a Special Meeting on September 19th at 5:30pm in the City Council Chambers to approve the sale of Site B to Madison Marquette. “Madison” If the Agency decides to sell the property, the sale must be approved by Emeryville Oversight Board.
On September 25, at 5:30pm, City Council Chambers, the Emeryville Oversight Board, will vote on whether to ratify the Successor Agency action, should they vote to sell the property to Madison..
Background: The State decision to dissolve redevelopment Agencies has forced the former Redevelopment Agency to liquidate its assets. Site B is one of those assets.
The Emeryville Oversight Board was established by the legislature to oversee the actions of the Successor agency. It has seven representatives.
[1] Emeryville Mayor Jennifer West (Board Chair)
[2] Aisha Brown, Alameda County Board of Supervisor Keith Carson, senior staff
[3] Greg Harper, AC Transit Board Member
[4] Joshua Simon, Emery Unified School Board Director (Board Vice Chair)
[5] Ronald Gerhard, Vice Chancellor for Finance & Administration, Peralta Community College District
[6] John Gooding, Emeryville resident
[7] Helen Bean, City of Emeryville Economic Development & Housing Director.
The person on the Board representing the interests of Emeryville Residents is John Gooding. He was chosen by Alameda County Supervisor Keith Carson. Many people in the community believe Gooding is working for both Madison Marquette and Wareham Development. He has recused himself from some of the decisions affecting Madison Marquette. but he seems to be voting in conflict of interest on matters which benefit Wareham. He may have a conflict voting on the ECCL Project? He has stated he will not vote on the sale of Site B.

Click HERE to read the rest of the story.
Brian Donahue at 12:49 AM 1 comment:

Thursday, August 23, 2012

Council Grants Final Proceeds From Former Redevelopment Agency

The End Of The Redevelopment Agency:
Center Of Community Life Gets $21 Million, The Rest Of The Town To Share $3 Million

The Emeryville city council has finally brought to a close the torturous and circuitous path of the money left over from the former Emeryville Redevelopment Agency.  Last Tuesday, with the State of California's OK, the council voted to spend the former Redevelopment Agency's final $24.5 million; the lion's share going to the Center of Community Life.  The Center, a schools/community project on San Pablo Avenue will get $21.2 million and the remaining $3.3 million will be shared by the proposed Arts Center at the Civic Center, the bike/pedestrian bridge across the railroad tracks at Bay Street and Wareham Development's Transit Center on Hollis Street.

The council reserved the right to decide later about how to dole out the $3.3 million for the three projects.  That money, apportioned for the Arts Center, the Transit Center and the bike/ped bridge will not be enough to complete any of the projects, no matter how the council decides on how to allot it among them, it should be noted.

The $24.5 million left standing from the Redevelopment Agency is but a whisper of its previous prodigious self when the Agency was still extant and flush with tax increment proceeds.  The take-over of redevelopment agencies across the State netted a lawsuit from the City of Emeryville recently.   After a protracted back and forth with Emeryville and other towns, Sacramento finally passed Assembly Bill 1484 releasing some of the unspent bond proceeds from the former Redevelopment Agency.  In Emeryville's case, that amounted to $24.5 million.  The council then voted on the beneficiaries of the last of the money and entered their intentions with the State, who now has 45 days to approve the plan.  City officials told the Tattler the approval will likely be a formality.

The list of four capital improvements was reduced by the so-called Successor Agency that replaced the Emeryville Redevelopment Agency from a wish list of more than $200 million worth of improvements formerly in the capital improvements program.  The wish list, vetted by the residents in two Saturday pivotal meetings some years back, included the Arts Center, the Bike/Ped Bridge but not the Transit Center.  Many other projects identified by residents and placed in the program, including two other major bike/ped bridges in town and a large central park, didn't make the cut by the Successor Agency and the Oversight Board set up by the State to wind down the Redevelopment Agency.

The former Redevelopment Agency funded its capital improvement programs with proceeds from improved receipts by virtue of the fact that the projects it funded increased their property value and the increase meant higher taxes paid to the Agency.  Those increases are called tax increments.  Sacramento seized redevelopment agencies statewide since provisions in their charters defunded schools and other municipal essentials causing Sacramento to pick up the slack.  The State budget crisis prompted the action.

The Center of Community Life, a school and community center will use the $21 million to build the community part of the project including a new recreation center and possibly a library, located on the San Pablo Avenue site.
The schools portion of the project has been experiencing major funding problems owing to the reduced bond capacity of Emeryville.  Some $48 million has been raised so far to replace the existing high school but School District officials are seeking an extra $20 million to close the existing elementary school and consolidate it in a "co-location" with the high school.  The District is considering using a controversial bond financing scheme that would mean a $107 million payback Emeryville taxpayers would have to make on that last $20 million to close the elementary school.
Brian Donahue at 9:25 PM 8 comments:

Sunday, August 19, 2012

Special Favors For Chamber Of Commerce

Six Point Indictment Against New Chamber Of Commerce/City Hall Deal

Emeryville Chamber of Commerce
CEO & Martinez CA resident Bob Canter.
He's managed to make a living
off City Hall for years.
The Emeryville Property Owners Association has issued a six point indictment of an agreement hammered out between the politically connected Chamber of Commerce and City Hall that favors the Chamber but gives the public short shrift.
City Hall is to give the Chamber $25,000 as part of the agreement, the same amount as from a previous agreement between the two entities.  The agreement is meant to support all Emeryville business interests but critics have noted the Chamber only yielded a 5% response from businesses last time, a point the property owner's group highlight.

The new agreement is but the latest chapter in an on-going attempt to prop up the Chamber, a private membership business, with public funds directed by City Hall.
The Tattler has long reported the cozy relationship between certain city council members and the Chamber of Commerce, a mutually beneficial relationship that involves City money and Chamber endorsements at election time.  Since the onset of the economic downturn, Chamber CEO Bob Canter has noted the dire fiscal straights his organization is in as he has appealed for cash from City Hall.  The city council has obliged Mr Canter's requests.

The Emeryville Property Owners Association casts itself as a more legitimate Emeryville business interest group as it represents all property owning businesses in Emeryville instead of simply those who have paid a membership fee as the Chamber of Commerce requires.  Small business interests are equally represented by the property owner's group unlike the primarily big business serving Chamber, a long time complaint leveled at the Chamber by the smaller businesses in Emeryville.

The EPOA website presents six points illustrating the latest corruption that the special relationship between the private business and public entity embodies.

Among the points the EPOA finds objectionable:


  • Public money for the Chamber should not be used to hold closed door business meetings with city staff
  • The Agreement prohibits the Chamber from publicly disclosing information about the city
  • The Agreement requires no performance requirements, unusual for public monies
  • The largest businesses in town, who don't need government assistance, are the primary beneficiaries of the work performed with money from City Hall

For the rest of the story, please click HERE.
Brian Donahue at 9:16 AM 1 comment:

Saturday, August 18, 2012

Emery Joins Statewide School Debt Binge

The nationwide media has been focusing on a disturbing new trend in California; school districts have been engaging in a new program of extremely risky borrowing to finance capital improvements.  San Diego County's  Poway Unified School District is seen as emblematic of this new trend but Emery Unified is considering using the same risky bond financing.  The new scheme involves an extremely expensive build now and pay much later type of bond called a Capital Appreciation Bond (CAB) that independent bond analysts are sounding alarms about.  

Most other districts across the state are using this risky borrowing to satisfy deferred general maintenance needs because citizens are balking at increasing taxes however in Emeryville, CAB financing is being considered on a voluntary basis to satisfy district officials desire to 'co-locate' the existing newly remodeled Anna Yates Elementary School to the San Pablo Avenue high school site.  This closure of Anna Yates will cost Emeryville taxpayers $107 million for a $20 million loan, the interest going to Wall Street traders.  The payback will be shouldered by Emeryville taxpayers until 2049, an effective passing of debt to the next generation.

The New York Times reports on the new extreme school borrowing trend in California:

HIGH & LOW FINANCE

Schools Pass Debt to the Next Generation


Sam Hodgson

The Poway school district borrowed $105 million in 2011, but won’t pay anything until 2033.



By FLOYD NORRIS
Published: August 17, 2012
The deleveraging of America is well under way, as individuals and companies recover from the excess borrowing that helped to produce the boom and left many people vulnerable when the bust arrived. Household debt is down nearly $900 billion over the last four years, partly from repayments and partly from defaults.


Graphic
Shrinking Governments


During the crazy times, homeowners could get mortgages that allowed them to pay less than the full amount of interest being charged, with the rest added to the principal. Commercial property owners generally paid the full amount of interest, but did not have to repay any principal until the loan matured in five or 10 years. For both homes and commercial properties, lenders were willing to rely on extremely optimistic appraisals.
For property buyers, those days are gone,
But for some borrowers, it is still possible to borrow now and pay nothing for decades.
There is a furor in California because the Poway Unified School District, in San Diego County, borrowed money last year on terms that even Countrywide would have laughed at during the boom. It will not pay a dime of interest or principal for more than two decades. Only then will it begin to service the bonds.
It is paying a high price. Although it has a good credit rating - Aa2 at Moody's and AA- at Standard & Poor's - it will eventually pay tax-exempt interest of up to 6.8 percent for the borrowings. When it issued more conventional bonds last year, it paid rates that were much lower, ranging up to just 4.1 percent.
For borrowing $105 million in 2011, taxpayers - or perhaps it would be more accurate to say the children and grandchildren of today's taxpayers - will pay $877 million in interest between 2033 and 2051.
In San Diego, the bond issue first gained attention on The Voice of San Diego, a Web-based publication, which published an article this month headlined "Where Borrowing $105 Million Will Cost $1 Billion: Poway Schools." As the Voice noted, others, including Joel Thurtell, a Michigan blogger, had written outraged articles about the bond issue. But it was the Voice article that attracted national attention, including a report on CNBC.
It turns out the Poway bond issue is not unique. This kind of borrowing has been going on for years, particularly in California, where the tax revolt that began with Proposition 13 in 1978 has made it harder and harder to finance education or other local government services. Assorted propositions approved by voters have made it very difficult to raise taxes at all.
According to a Thomson Reuters database, school districts issued nearly $4 billion in such bonds last year, and have sold almost $3 billion more this year. Back in 2006, when the credit boom was in full bloom, $9 billion worth of so-called capital appreciation bonds were sold.
The Poway issue is unusual in delaying interest payments for so long, but there have been others. Its neighbor, the San Diego Unified School District, borrowed $150 million in May, promising to begin payments in 2032.
School districts' logic for borrowing for construction projects always was that those who benefit should pay for a construction project. In the case of the Poway bond, however, it is at least possible that it will be the children of today's students who end up paying the bill. By then, many of these school buildings may be obsolete, or at least in need of another refurbishing.
In a statement, the Poway district pointed out that the bond issue was the fifth part of a plan to modernize the 24 oldest schools in the district, adding that while that bond "has a total repayment ratio of 9.3 times the principal amount," the overall borrowing program has a repayment ratio of just 4.2. That means that for every dollar borrowed, $3.20 in interest will be paid.
To put that into perspective, a 30-year mortgage at the same 6.8 percent interest rate would require $1.35 in lifetime interest payments for each dollar borrowed, or a repayment ratio of 2.35.
"The most important value received from the building program that is difficult to quantify is the educational value of providing today's students with quality learning facilities," said John Collins, the superintendent of the district, which has 34,000 students. "It is also difficult to calculate the dollar value of savings realized by avoiding the inflated construction costs of postponing the completion of the building program for a decade or more."
Your guess may be as good as his as to just how inflated those costs will be. But it is hard to believe that the district would not have been better off borrowing on terms that called for repaying the loan more quickly. The interest rate would have been lower, and the power of compound interest would not have caused the total payments to rise into the stratosphere.
But the option of getting reasonable financing may not have been available to the Poway district, or to many of the other districts that have resorted to these capital appreciation bonds. Poway officials had promised not to raise taxes, and this way they won't have to. At least not until 2033. They set the payments to begin after earlier bonds are paid off.
Nationally, it appears that fewer and fewer school districts have been able, or willing, to find ways to finance new buildings - or even to pay teachers, as property tax revenue plunged with the deflating of the housing bubble and pinched states reduced assistance. State and local governments are spending less and employing fewer people now than they were before the recession. Adjusted for inflation, state and local investment in buildings and other assets is at the lowest level since 1998. Over the last 30 months, the economy has gained about half a million jobs in manufacturing, and lost nearly as many in state and local government.
Should districts issue such bonds? It is not an easy question to answer. Much of this expensive borrowing is a result of local officials searching for a way to meet their responsibilities at a time when opposition to taxes has become a mantra. This generation will not pay for what it needs, so some of its leaders have decided to saddle future generations with the bills.
Floyd Norris comments on finance and the economy at nytimes.com/economix.
Brian Donahue at 1:23 PM 6 comments:

Emeryville Murder Suspect Captured By Chico Police

Triangle Neighborhood Homicide Suspect Arrested


Emeryville murder suspect
DeAngelo Eagleton
Chico police arrested Emeryville murder suspect DeAngelo Eagleton after detectives served a search warrant for an apartment in the Northern California town Wednesday morning.  Mr Eagleton, age 18 has been sought in connection with the murder of Emeryville resident and high school student Taranda Jones.
Seeking a suspect related to a number of robberies during the past few weeks in Chico, police detectives entered an apartment at 1114 Nord Avenue before dawn and detained a male and female.  The male gave a false name to officers but through fingerprint analysis it was determined to be Mr Eagleton.  Also identified was a female, Aimee Ellinson, age 22 and a three year old child.  A stolen handgun and marijuana was also found in the apartment.

Mr Eagleton is alleged to be the murderer of fellow Emery High School student Taranda Jones, aged 18 last May.  Ms Jones was found by Emeryville Police with a single gunshot wound to the chest at her home on 47th Street in the Triangle neighborhood.

Mr Eagleton is also wanted by Oakland Police in connection with violent crimes including assault with a deadly weapon in that town.


Brian Donahue at 12:26 AM No comments:

Tuesday, August 14, 2012

School District Is Bullish On Emeryville

Happy Days Are
Here Again!

Blue Days, All Of Them Gone
 Nothing But Blue Skies From Now On


Opinion
Most Americans have come to the awful realization that the longstanding congressional gridlock in Washington DC is the new normal.  Gridlock helped tank the economy and it has frozen law makers, keeping the nation in the fiscal doldrums.  But this intractable political and economic problem is a trifling blip if you believe the Emery Unified School District.  The real story they say is Emeryville is coming back baby, stronger than ever regardless of outside forces!

And they're betting our money on it.

Onward and upward:
after a big drop in 2011, for Emeryville
it's nothing but up!
Emeryville is on the cusp of an unprecedented period of robust sustained and consistent growth the School District says.  After losing almost 7% of our value last year, we're looking forward to growth, lots of growth, at least 4% growth every year as far as the eye can see.
This is what we've learned from the Series D school bond document prepared by the District for the School Board.  They're considering raising the final $20 million to top out at $68 million, for building a new school on San Pablo Avenue.  The money is being raised against the assessed valuation of Emeryville.  The problem is Emeryville has lost value and the last $20 million, piled on top of the already raised $48 million, takes us over the fiscal cliff.
Law dictates school bonds can only be sold in proportion to the assessed valuation of the town.  The assessed valuation means the total value of all real estate in the town, public and private it should be noted.
The rosy growth picture painted by the bond debt service requirement document, released by the District last week, makes some pretty outlandish predictions in order to keep the tax rate at the promised $60 per $100,000 of property.  If the town grows at a rate lower than 4% per year for the next 37 years, property taxes will have to be increased, you understand.

How could we have another down turn?
Altogether shout it now, who could
ever doubt it now?
After what we've been through the last few years, this prediction made by the School District boggles the mind.  The District's $48 million in hand is plenty to build a new high school.  They need to realize we can't afford the final $20 million to close the existing (newly remodeled) elementary school and rebuild it at the San Pablo site. This town doesn't have enough assessed value to support it without relying on voo-doo economics.
But there are powerful forces pushing this bond sale.   bond financier Caldwell Flores, and the Center of Community Life contractor Turner Construction are among these special interests trying to lard us up with debt.  The School Board itself has made it clear they will close the existing elementary school, Anna Yates; come hell or high water.

We're already going to have to pay until 2035 for the $48 million borrowed from Series A, B and C bond sales. But the people who led us down this Series D Bond path will be long gone in 2032 when its punishing debt will start to come due.  Seventeen years and $107 million later, it will finally be paid off...in 2049, if there's anything left of the Emery Unified School District.

There's an adage about the survivors of the Great Depression; they emerged from that calamity fundamentally changed, a new respect for thrift having been permanently etched into their DNA.  We too have changed and we're starting to question our old days of profligate spending.  The Emery School District may be bullish on Emeryville's economic future but we'd rather be smarter about how we invest in the necessary business of tending to our children's education. The sunny prediction for Emeryville is deluded.  We see some clouds in that blue sky.

Bull

Brian Donahue at 6:31 PM 4 comments:

Sunday, August 12, 2012

Emery To Join Ranks Of "Worst Offender" Districts?


Emery-Style Bond Financing Called 
"Too Risky" 

Capital Appreciation Bonds: "Significantly Higher 
Debt Burden"

The following article from the San Francisco Chronicle highlights the latest school bond budgeting tactic being used in California: the infamous Capital Appreciation Bond (CAB).  The story centers on San Diego County's Poway Unified School District and the looming debt disaster brought on by its CAB financing but the story could just as easily be about Emery Unified.  As the Tattler recently reported, our local school district is considering using precisely the same financing as Poway.  Emery's fiscally ruinous CAB, called the 'Series D bond', is the final bond issuance proposed by the School District as part of Measure J, passed by Emeryville voters in 2010.
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California School Bonds for $105 Million to Cost $1 Billion

James Nash, ©2012 Bloomberg News
Published 5:31 a.m., Wednesday, August 8, 2012
Aug. 7 (Bloomberg) -- A California school district is shouldering $1 billion in interest on a $105 million bond in a deal intended to defer most of the payments for 35 to 40 years.
The Poway Unified School District, in San Diego County, structured its 2011 sale of capital-appreciation bonds to avoid debt service until 2033, with the largest sums -- more than $300 million each -- due in 2046 and in 2051, according to data compiled by Bloomberg.
Other issuers in California may pursue similar deals to raise money for construction at a time when revenue from property taxes is stagnant, said Marilyn Cohen, founder of Envision Capital Management Inc. in Los Angeles.
“I’m sure California is the worst offender,” Cohen said in a telephone interview. “Property taxes have gone to hell in a handbasket in California.”
Last year, Los Angeles County Treasurer Mark Saladino advised school business officials there against long-term capital-appreciation bonds, saying they would result in a “significantly higher debt burden.”
Poway, a district of 33,000 students about 20 miles (35 kilometers) northeast of San Diego, issued the debt to modernize schools in July 2011. It was part of as much as $179 million in borrowing approved in a 2008 referendum that passed with 64 percent of the vote. The San Diego County Taxpayers Association now regrets that it endorsed the proposal.
“There’s too much risk involved with issuing long-term capital-appreciation bonds,” said Chris Cate, vice president of the association. “They’re not callable bonds so you can’t pay them off early. It’s too risky for taxpayers.”

Tax Promise
School officials promised at the time that the measure wouldn’t raise taxes. There was no mention of how the deal would be structured or what the interest payments would be.
The bond sale was managed by Stone & Youngberg LLC, which was acquired by Stifel Financial Corp. after the Poway deal. A Stifel spokeswoman, Linda Olszewski, wasn’t available for comment yesterday.
Sharon Raffer, a spokeswoman for the district, said she had no immediate comment on the ultimate cost of the borrowing yesterday. Penny Ranftle, the school board president last year, and Linda Vanderveen, the current president, didn’t respond to telephone calls seeking comment.

Zero-Coupon
Tax-exempt capital-appreciation debt is similar to so- called zero-coupon bonds, except that the investment return on the principal is reinvested at a compound rate until maturity. The securities usually yield more than coupon bonds to compensate investors for the longer holding period before they receive any income.
California school districts are increasingly deferring debt payments because of declines in property values, which provide the tax revenue to repay bonds, and because of statutory limits on how much property tax may go toward debt service per year, Cate said. A 2000 law limits taxes for debt service to $30 per year per $100,000 in property value.
The Poway measure was reported earlier by the Voice of San Diego.
The Oceanside Unified School District, west of Poway in San Diego County, financed a $32.4 million sale in 2010 with capital-appreciation bonds. District officials used the tool because the eroding tax base left them short of revenue needed to replace roofs, upgrade power supplies and make other improvements to 20 schools, Assistant Superintendent Luis Ibarra said. The total cost to taxpayers for payments starting in 2034 and ending in 2049 will be about $300 million, according to data compiled by Bloomberg.
“The district expects that tax-base growth will allow for annual tax rates to continue within historical ranges,” Ibarra said by e-mail.


--Editors: Pete Young, Ted Bunker

To contact the reporters on this story: James Nash in Los Angeles at jnash24@bloomberg.net

Brian Donahue at 11:54 AM No comments:
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