For most of the media, the Finance and Administration
meeting at the beginning of last week was a bust, really, nothing to write
about there.
But not so fast. Although there weren’t any big
announcements, or major skirmishes, and the meeting itself took only an hour,
there were two or through interesting forays.
Downtown Parking
Study
Staff needs to obtain council approval for expenditures over
$100,000. The update for the Downtown Parking Study had been requested by the
Downtown Parking Committee years ago; in fact, I was one of those who requested
that it be done before council commit itself to investing in additional
parking. We had received one update from MMM Group, back in 2009, which
reported that downtown parking was at 70% capacity at mid-morning, indicating
that the much touted shortage of parking was not being borne out by actual
research. It was suggested at the time that, since the update was conducted in
late spring, more people would be riding their bicycles; therefore, we should
repeat the count late in the fall.
But nothing happened. Those who wanted to build a parking
garage were convinced that the need was there, especially for long term parking
for downtown employees. An offer presented itself, from Tricar across from the
John Labatt Centre, but it was seen as financially unacceptable.
The matter was revived with the new council. It received an
unsolicited offer, an opportunity too good to pass up, to lease 300 parking
spots Tricar was proposing to build between its two new buildings at a rate of $2600
per spot per year for the next 30 years, about $33M in total. At the end of 30
years, the building would belong to Tricar.
A few councillors were gung ho to go, but in the end, were
persuaded by legal advice that they really did need to go to a competitive
bidding process (by then Shmuel Farhi had come up with his own version) and
should update the study identifying the actual parking needs.
$115,000 had been committed to update the original Downtown Parking
Study. But now the parameters of the study had been changed with the proposal
to add in another 300 spots, whether in the Tricar building which was going
full steam ahead, or Farhi’s proposal, or something else entirely. Most of
council was convinced another 300 spots were needed immediately, however they
might be found. Including that change in the contract with the consultant, MMM
Group, generated a request for an additional $27,464 to complete the project.
The mayor had been quite enamoured of the Tricar offer. He
was, as he put it, “a little ticked off” that this company (MMM) on the basis of
driving around on a Saturday morning had suggested that there was enough
parking and had interfered with the direction being taken, in fact done “a
complete U turn”. From Fontana’s perspective there was no doubt that the city
needed more parking . They had had a “good partnership with Tricar” which
suddenly went south on basis of legal advice. But $140K for an update, that was
outrageous.
Councillor Paul Hubert professed to experiencing the same “sticker
shock.” He couldn’t understand what constituted the additional workload, simply
changing the number of spots. He could hire one and a half people for a full
year for that price. What was the additional value? “Just plug in 300 spaces
into the model,” he suggested.
The city treasurer pointed out that $115,000 had already been
committed; he was requesting the additional $27,000 to accommodate the change
in the project.
But, of course, anyone who has ever done home renovations
can appreciate the effect of making changes in a project once it is underway.
It doesn’t come cheap.
It’s another week before the matter comes before council. By
then, staff may have some additional information to provide.
London Economic
Development Corporation (LEDC) Contract.
For more than a decade, London has farmed out its economic
development to LEDC. The original idea was that the corporation would attract
private partners and investment but, in fact, the corporation has one funder,
the London taxpayer, at a cost of more than $2M per year. At this meeting, LEDC
came forward with an offer to renew the agreement at a somewhat higher cost
after tossing in a 1% increase.
It’s hard to know whether LEDC provides a cost-effective
service or not since it’s a single source provider and there are no competitive
bids. London’s unemployment rate continues to be high, relative to many other
medium sized cities, but this may be a matter of location and international
conditions. However, the mayor has introduced a number of economic councils and
he recently announced the creation of a private equity firm, LEAFCorp,
headed by two of the coordinators from the first of his economic councils, Tim
Kavanagh and Todd Gillick, and his former campaign advisor and current communications consultant, Susan McElroy. It claims to have attracted significant investment
dollars but there is little evidence of that on the website. Additionally, a
new committee, the Investment and Economic Prosperity Committee headed by Councillor Joe
Swan, which will be consulting the public on June 19th about its
wish list. And finally, council has agreed to hire a new investment officer.
But in the meantime, the contract with LEDC was up for renewal. This one
specified that LEDC would be limited in its ability to negotiate land deals,
especially the industrial lands. That’s because the Municipal Act prohibits
bonussing—providing incentives or assistance to a particular business or
company. Giving that responsibility to a corporation without electoral
accountability could be a problem.
Fontana thought it was a pity that LEDC couldn’t do more,
maybe leverage the asset base for economic benefit, be a little more like Build
Toronto, which has a lot more latitude. LEDC CEO Peter White thought there
might be more opportunities to do some of this once the new investment officer
was in place, there might be ways to use the “asset base” but leveraging could
be difficult to do “in a municipal environment”
Councillor Joni Baechler probably spoke for most in the
room. “I have no comprehension of what this means,” she exclaimed. “I’m glad
we’re not making a decision about this today.” She expressed concern about
eroding her voice as an elected official. She was not thrilled about the model
Toronto had adopted. Already, council was talking about handing over management of its utilities in the shared utilities model. “What will be left
for us to vote on?” she wondered.
2012 Debenture
Issuance
Then there was the matter of issuing debt. In 2010, the
municipal debt per household was $1,692, but in 2011, that had increased to
$2,122, just slightly less than it was in 2007.
Part of the reason for the increase was the federal stimulus
program which allowed council to move forward some projects that would normally
have waited longer. But getting the federal and provincial governments to pay
two-thirds of the cost is a good opportunity to get needed work done and saves
money in the long run.
Still, you don’t pay until you have to. But now, projects
were facing completion and the bills had to be paid. Fortunately, interest
rates are low.
Staff asked for the authority to shop around in the capital
markets for loans, a little at a time, for up to a total of $70M to be paid back over 10 years.
That should see them through for the time being.
Should we get debt for more than 10 years? Fontana wondered.
Maybe take it out for 20 or 30 years, since interest rates are so low and
likely to go up. Gets some extra money while the rates are good.
City treasurer Martin Hayward responded that the city has a
mix of debentures, with longer terms for longer life assets; it gets "hazy" when
you lock in for 30 years. The interest rate goes up; he likes to do a more
aggressive pay down. “The city pays a lot more if you’re stretching your
payments over the longer term,” he pointed out.
But Fontana continued to wonder if $70M was enough.
“Based on the projects, that’s all that we can do,” Hayward
assured him. It still left $240M that had been authorized but unissued until
the projects were undertaken and completed. You can't just issue debt without
tying it to something.
$5,000 for a party
The final item of interest was a request by Ward 14 Councillor
Sandy White. She wanted $5,000 so that a neighbourhood in her ward could have a
celebration in a nearby park later in the summer.
This is truly ironic. White has repeatedly requested that
the grants programs be carefully scrutinized and that staff develop a more
rigorous policy for evaluating requests. And, in fact, there are very few
occasions on which council would actually give money to a community group. Previously,
there was a civic reception fund that could be used to welcome visiting delegations
at a major conference or convention but that was discontinued in order to
achieve a tax freeze. There is also funding for the arts and for festivals, but
these are governed by specific policies and procedures and awarded by outside
bodies; the amounts are dealt with through the budget process.
But for some on this council, policy and practice are two
separate things. Policy is for others; practice is for “me”.
3 comments:
It is truly amazing that this council seems to know everything about anything while being dumber than a sack of hammer handles. Why would we borrow money for 30 years and pay more in interest when we can pay it off in 10 years? And hey Fontana, why are you in such a hurry to use my money to pay off your buds at Tricar for parking spots we don't need? Or you daft, dumb, or just crooked?
Sadly, Fontana continues to serve the interests of developers over the people of London. Let's borrow money to throw around now, and build, build, build so that developers make a kiling. Londoners will be stuck with the debt for decades. This is Fontana's brain wave of how to run a city. There is no limit to how much he will sell out Londoners to help out developers. Mr. Tax Freeze is going to leave us with a load of debt that will take years to pay off. What a disaster.
I have been driving in this city since 1970, quite often spontaniously to the downtown area and never once, not even on a Saturday afteroon during the festival season, fireworks displays or Santa Claus parade, have I been unable to find a parking spot within walking distance of my intended destination, so I don't think we need more parking spaces and would vote against any expenditure by The City of London to provide more.
Post a Comment