Published
7 years agoon
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gvwireIt has been said, “Two men look through the same jail cell walls, one sees mud and one sees stars.” Certainly, this is the way that I see the Fresno parks sales tax initiative.
First, I think some background is in order.
It goes without saying that the parks department wasn’t remotely close to the highest priority. Budget figures from 2009 through today are evidence of the department’s decimation. For the layman, the brown lawns at Fresno’s parks served as the obvious sign.
As the then-president of the Fresno Police Officers Association, Parks brokered a deal to take the brunt of the fiscal fallout.
Officers elected to forego raises and other incentives, and the department phased out positions to ease payroll and benefits costs — all to help the city get back on its feet.
Meanwhile, Fresno’s municipal government pension system is nationally recognized for its financial health.
Now we focus on today, where a concerted push — sponsored by nonprofits and donors — funds an initiative to revitalize, maintain, and build parks. The effort has been nothing short of impressive: polls funded, thousands of signatures gathered.
But a fundamental question must be asked: Who will go to parks if they are not safe?
This fight has pitted Mayor Lee Brand against former Mayor Ashley Swearengin over the city’s priorities.
In the movie “Matilda,” the child asked her father, a seller of shabby used cars, “Can’t we just sell good cars, Dad? Don’t people want to buy good?”
Which begs the question, “Can’t we just split it 50/50. Don’t people like both colors, green and blue?”
Businessman Brooke Ashjian represents Area 7 (Bullard High district) on the Fresno Unified School District Board of Trustees.
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Jacky Parks
August 21, 2018 at 2:36 am
The police department continues to suffer! The community doesn’t know the half of it, but the city leaders do. I would have loved to see the article have a pie chart on all the safety equipment that the police department has needed and still needs to compare to the parks pie chart! Much of it is the same ole stuff, finding money to pay for bullets needed for training, hand guns that are 7-8 years old and frequently malfunction during range training, firearms training was reduced from quarterly to three times a year, patrol vehicles once replaced at 90,000 – 100,000 miles now stay in service to 150,000 – 175,000 plus miles, finding money for ballistic vests is a struggle, the portable radio’s and a radio system continue to struggle, etc. If these officer safety issues and public safety issues under Mayor Brand look familiar to the same issues and struggles that occurred under Mayor Swearengin, it’s because they are! Politicians love to say they support law enforcement, they just do a poor job of following through with it. I’m voting “No” on any tax the benefits green space over the safety of the community, the safety of the officers, and the safety of my family.