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On Eve of Budget Talks, Strickland Warns against Property Tax Increase

Strickland at Dutch Treat Luncheon

  • JB
  • Strickland at Dutch Treat Luncheon

That proposal made by City Councilmen Jim Strickland and Shea Flinn for a sales tax referendum, coupled with a reduction in the city’s property tax rate? It’s on indefinite hold, destined to remain there permanently if Mayor A C Wharton is able to convince the City Council to raise the property tax rate in budget negotiations about to get under way.

That was the word from Strickland, the featured speaker Saturday at the monthly Dutch Treat Luncheon, a surviving spinoff of the old Loeb Dutch Treat Luncheons once presided over by former Mayor Henry Loeb and by the late Charley Peete, who took them over after Loeb’s death.

As in Loeb’s time and Peete’s, the attendees tend to be arch-conservative or seriously libertarian, and Strickland, who boasted at Saturday’s meeting at Pancho’s Restaurant on White Station that he was “the only Council member who has never voted for a tax increase, not one,” was well received. When one woman gave voice to a common assumption that Strickland intends a mayoral race at some point, the Councilman merely gave a faint smile, as if in confirmation.

As he has on other occasions, Strickland expressed a concern that the greatest danger facing Memphis is that of population loss. “People are voting with their tail-lights,’ he said. He attributed the problem to people’s anxieties about three areas — crime, education, and taxes. For the most part, he confined his remarks to crime and taxes, both of which, unlike schools, he said he as a Council member had some direct responsibility for.

Strickland seemed guardedly optimistic about crime control in Memphis. He said the city’s crime rate had declined in recent years under the influence of “Blue Crush” tactics, first introduced by former police director Larry Godwin after the model of an approach by former New York Mayor Rudy Giuliani that located an increased police presence in statistically high crime areas.

According to Strickland, there was a bit of a relapse after Godwin’s departure in 20111 to become a deputy to state Safety Commissioner Bill Gibbons and as new police director Toney Armstrong took up the reins. Members of the Council noted a 10 percent increase in crime under a new, modified policy instituted by Armstrong “that did away with the biggest part of Blue Crush.” Things have since stabilized as Armstrong has begun to restore the former policy. “Blue Crush works,” Strickland said.

Turning to budgetary matters, Strickland, who chairs the Council’s budget committee, told his audience they “probably won’t believe it,” but the city’s tax rate has in recent years decreased by about 10 percent. He reminded them that the amount of property tax paid is a combination of two elements, “the tax rate and the value of your homes.”

Inasmuch as the most recent assessment shows a dramatic downturn in property values for most Memphians, he said, there is pressure to increase the tax rate so as to maintain revenue. Hence, a budget proposal from Wharton last week calling for an increase from a $3.11 rate to one of $3.39.

Strickland noted that the combined city and county tax rates for Memphians are already 50 percent higher than the property tax rates imposed by Nashville Metro government. Given that the county rate is going to go up, largely because of the unanticipated transitional costs of school consolidation, Strickland forecast the possibility that local tax rates could increase to a level 75 percent higher than Nashville’s.

He further noted that Mayor Wharton’s proposed budget would spend $622 million, an increase over last year’s budget of $597 million and said, “We need to reverse that.” The bottom line, said Strickland, was that “we have to spend less.”

The problem is one of where to cut, and Strickland made known his preference for maintaining projected expenditures for pre-K education. “Pre-K works,” said Strickland. “If Pre-K didn’t work, I wouldn’t have sent my kids to Pre-K.” He said statistics demonstrate that Pre-K instruction causes literacy rates among children to rise dramatically.

Strickland said some of the remedies frequently called for (and expressed by members of his audience on Saturday) would have no effect on the tax rate per se. Included in that category were the idea of privatizing city sanitation services, which are subsidized by fees, not taxes, and proposed pension reforms involving a change from a defined-benefits system to a defined contribution (or 401-K) system. Strickland agreed that pension reform needed to be discussed, but he argued that an immediate switch “would not save tax dollars” and that there were would be transitional costs involved in maintaining the city pension fund.

As an example of the kind of thing that might be cut, Strickland mentioned the Memphis Music Commission, the work of which is paralleled by the privately funded Memphis Music Foundation, “which probably does it better.”

An aspect of Wharton’s proposed budget that Strickland did not specifically discuss but one which may be featured in budget deliberations next week is the mayor’s call for a 2.3 percent pay raise for all city employees to take place in January as a start in restoring a 4.6 percent pay cut imposed on city employees two years ago.

“We need to go over the budget line by line” looking for opportunities to cut, Strickland said, and he called for public participation in the process of looking for reductions, noting that the facts and figures of the budget process are available for inspection on the city’s website, memphistn.gov.

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Earth Day Celebration at Shelby Farms

Join the Down to Earth Day celebration at Shelby Farms Saturday. There’ll be bands all day, a 5K fun run, a petting zoo, vendors, crafts, archery, rock-climbing, lots of food, and more.

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News

Star and Micey

J.D. Reager catches up with rising Memphis indie band, Star and Micey, who play the Poplar Lounge Sunday.

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News

The Place Beyond the Pines

Ryan Gosling stars in The Place Beyond the Pines, which Flyer reviewer Addison Engelking gives a thumb’s up. Sort of.

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Sing All Kinds We Recommend

Catching Up With Star & Micey

In recent years, the local indie-pop group Star & Micey has seen its stock rise from relative obscurity to one of the most consistently enjoyable and hardest-working acts in town. The group’s 2012 E.P. I Can’t Wait earned the band rave reviews from both critics and fans, as well as slots on high-profile national music festivals such as the Folk Alliance Conference and South By Southwest.

This Sunday, April 21, Star & Micey will perform a special last-minute show at The Poplar Lounge. Singer/guitarist Josh Cosby spoke to the Flyer this week about all that’s been going on with the group and more.

Memphis Flyer: What have you guys been up to since last we spoke?

Cosby: We went to Canada for the Folk Conference and it was beautiful – we found a manager and a booking agent there. Then we went to Austin and broke our backs, but made an impact. Now we’re back home in Memphis.

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Politics Politics Beat Blog

BULLETIN: Strife Between Speakers and Chambers Kills Two Key Bills in Tennessee Legislature

Senate Speaker Ron Ramsey gets report from state Rep. Jon Lundberg (R-Bristol), House sponsor of Judicial Redistricting measure, on failure of bill.

  • JB
  • Senate Speaker Ron Ramsey gets report from state Rep. Jon Lundberg (R-Bristol), House sponsor of Judicial Redistricting measure, on failure of bill.

BULLETIN: Strife between legislature’s two chambers and two speakers spells doom for two key bills.

NASHVILLE: The state Senate will shortly adjourn for the year without passing the Charter Authorizer bill (HB702/SB830) that easily cleared the state House on Thursday.

The reason? A tit-for-tat response to the House’s killing of a bill, favored by Senate Speaker Ron Ramsey (R-Blountville), to revise the state’s judicial districts. That bill (HB0630/SB0780) was defeated 28-66, with House members of both parties rebelling and expressing defiance against what several members referred to as dictation by the Senate.

One result: Dolores Gresham (R-Somerville), Senate sponsor of Charter Authorizer, will apparently not even bring it to the floor. If she does, before what is now an imminent adjournment, it will “go nowhere,” says source in position to know. Ramsey’s attitude is said to be, “Don’t get mad, get even!”
Though sibling rivalries have happened before between House and Senate and between their respective speakers, this is the most serious schism yet involving the GOP leadership. At one point, there was a heated exchange in Legislative Plaza between Gresham and House Speaker Beth Harwell (R-Nashville).
Details to follow

UPDATE: The Senate formally adjourned for the year Friday afternoon, minutes after state Sen. Gresham asked that SB0830, the Senate version of the Charter Authorizer bill, be referred to the Senate Calendar committee.

The fate of the Authorizer bill appeated sealed when the House overwhelmingly defeated a Judicial Redistricting bill favored by Lt. Gov. Ramsey, but various principals attempted to put together an improvised deal with inducements that could appease Ramsey and save the Authorizer bill. As it turned out, however, there weren’t enough carrots in the package.

Formal adjournment of the 2013 session awaited only action of the House to adjourn.

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News

MEMfix and the Broad Avenue Art Walk

There will be plenty of art to see at Friday night’s Broad Avenue Art Walk, plus some new businesses to check, complements of MEMfix.

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Food & Drink Hungry Memphis

It’s All About Boiled Peanuts

When I read about Hog & Hominy converting its patio area into a bar with a menu serving only oysters, burgers, and boiled peanuts, my first thought was, Memphis is saved!

Now that I look back on John Branston’s 2011 post 50 Little Things for a Better Memphis, I see that my memory may have inflated the importance put on boiled peanuts.

I’m not a fan, but an informal survey around the office reveals that I’m in the minority. Bianca has a recipe in Cookin’ Crunk, another coworker makes a batch once a week for her girls’ night.

Sharas boiled peanuts

  • Shara’s boiled peanuts

Paul Daddy’s Boiled Peanuts sells boiled peanuts at the Agricenter International Farmers Market on Saturdays and the Millington Farmers Market on Saturday. (Both markets open for the season the first week of May.)

Larry Duncan is in charge of Paul Daddy’s Millington operation. “I got into it an odd sort of way,” says Duncan, who retired from Dupont after 37 years. He, with a “semi-partner,” took over the business a couple years ago from the original Paul, who he describes as his “husband-in-law” (Paul is married to Duncan’s ex-wife.)

Paul Daddy’s sells regular and Cajun flavor for $5 for a quart bag. Duncan starts each batch on Thursday morning, beginning a 36-hour process that begins with brining green peanuts for 24 hours and then boiling them in 25- and 30-gallon pots over propane burners for 12 hours.

Duncan says he raised the price from $4 to $5 a year ago after bad weather and other factors saw raw peanut prices soar and availability shrink. Duncan drives to Birmingham, Alabama, to get the peanuts. (Duncan says he thought about charging $4.50, but he didn’t want to mess with quarters.)

Duncan says they’ll sell anywhere from 20 to 40 bags at the Millington market and between 75 to 125 bags at the Agricenter.

Duncan, who has cooked on competitive bbq teams, first tried boiled peanuts only a few years ago.

“I’ve developed a taste for them,” he says.

Check out Runaway Spoon’s boiled peanut recipe here.

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News

Haslam’s Tax Break for You: $3.65 a Year

Steve Ross says Governor Haslam has done all he can find tax breaks for big business and special interests. What’s left over for the average Tennessean? A penny a day.

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News

Griz-Clippers Series Preview II

Chris Herrington offers part two of his extensive preview of the upcoming playoff series between the Grizzlies and the Clippers.