Wednesday, October 13, 2010

The Loneliest Number

After four years of casting losing votes, Bonnie Mager hopes voters give her a win.

Nicholas Deshais
Bonnie Mager and Al French
Bonnie Mager and Al French
Bonnie Mager and Al French

Two-to-one. In any game, or on any battlefield, those odds generally signal a loss for the overwhelmed and outflanked loner.

Just ask Bonnie Mager. Since joining the board of county commissioners almost four years ago, she has suffered loss after loss at the hands of the other two commissioners — Todd Mielke and Mark Richard — who regularly form a voting bloc against her.

“It’s hard to run on, ‘Yeah, it could have been worse,’” she says with an acquiescent laugh. It’s not much of a battle cry when running for re-election — Stand with the lonely loser! — but Mager doesn’t have much of a choice. “But it could have been worse. It really could have been. Much worse.”

Why? Her fellow commissioners are in the pocket of special interests, says Mager, a Democrat.

“A lot of it goes down to special interest voting. … Are we trying to protect our quality of life, or are we trying to do favors for a particular industry?” she says. “The developers are kicking in big bucks to buy the third seat on the county commission.”

Thirteen months ago, Republican Al French announced he was challenging Mager in the Journal of Business, an avenue he preferred because, “I see myself as business-friendly,” he told the paper. French, who served eight years on the Spokane City Council, has been an architect for more than 30 years.

And though he says he will listen to every constituent who comes to him with a problem, he’s unapologetic about how he views the world.

“I am very much pro-growth, in terms of how do we grow in a community, how do we grow an economy,” he says. “I am very much a stickler for private property rights.”

GROWTH AND TAXES

At a recent debate, Mager and French were asked about the “benefits and drawbacks” of the state Growth Management Act, which gives guidelines for local governments to control urban sprawl.

French began by touting his development bona fides before going into how it was important to “protect property rights for property owners and allow them to be able to achieve the visions they have for their property … and balance that with the interests of the community.”

Mager’s answer dug deeper into the county’s balance sheet. She discussed how revenue has been hobbled by a voter-approved cap on property tax increases, as well as by the annexation of income-tax-rich county property by surrounding cities.

Last year, commissioners plugged a $10.5 million hole in the budget, mainly by cutting 114 positions from the county’s rolls.

Knowing this, Mager said, “I would propose an amendment that would give the county more tools to raise taxes, because we have basically a two-legged stool instead of the three-legged stool that the municipalities have. They have the utility tax, property tax and sales tax.”

It may have been a financially sound answer — even if it probably wasn’t the wisest thing to say during election season — and French soon rolled out a clip of her response, which has circulated on Facebook.

Regardless, Mager’s approach to the county’s finances has earned her plaudits.

“The interesting thing about Bonnie, on many of the fiscal issues, she’s the one speaking out for more of the conservative approach,” former Republican Commissioner Kate McCaslin said last year about Mager. McCaslin is supporting French in the race.

RACE DAY

Mager’s two pet issues in the campaign are the county’s purchase of the Spokane County Raceway on the West Plains and the proposed expansion of the jail.

Almost from day one, Mager opposed buying the racetrack, which is estimated to end up costing the county $7 million. Mager has called it a “totally irresponsible” use of county funds.

French agrees — to a point.

Fact:
Of the 51 2-1 votes recorded since Bonnie Mager joined the county commission, she cast the minority vote 60 percent of the time.

When he first announced his candidacy, he told the Journal that buying the racetrack was “a good overall move” aside from “a hiccup with their operator. That’s something that can be resolved.” “I was told that the goal was to buy the whole property, retain the sports complex and then sell the racetrack back into the private sector,” he says. “When I found out that that wasn’t the case, then I didn’t support what they were doing because I don’t think government should be owning and operating a racetrack.”

“That’s a million-dollar hiccup,” Mager says of the difficulties with Bucky Austin, the track’s first operator who contracted a bunch of work at the raceway and then left town without paying his bills. “[French’s] trying to say … somebody misinformed him. It’s not his fault. … He had the information.”

French admits he wasn’t as informed on the raceway as he should have been.

“In hindsight, quite frankly, I wished I’d have done more hands-on analysis of the racetrack personally and not relied on other people’s information,” he says. “A major decision like that shouldn’t be made by just two people in the county. And that’s what it was. Two people in the county made the decision.”

Still, he can’t resist hedging a bit for the men he hopes to work with. Mielke and Richard “make a very good argument that this was a good economic development investment. … If you’re going to just look at it from a numbers standpoint, it’s a great argument. I look at it from a philosophical standpoint: Should government operate a business that could be operated by the private sector? And I say no.”

‘HUG A CRIMINAL’

When it comes to expanding the jail, however, French is more blunt.

“It goes back to one of the core functions of government: keep your population safe,” he says. “That’s the difference between Bonnie and I. I want to make sure those bad people are put in jail, not put in a program. I don’t want to hug a criminal. I want to put him in jail.”

But he doesn’t support a new jail simply as a get-tough conservative, he says. Despite a recent dip in jail population, more room is needed for inmates, he says, and slowly building jail pods in Medical Lake is the wisest financial decision.

Mager, however, wants to put the brakes on the $210 million project. And, surprise, she frequently finds herself on the losing end of 2-1 votes concerning the jail.

“One of the priorities of government is certainly public safety, that takes up most of our budget,” she says. “My feeling is that we haven’t done a good enough job to show people” that we’re building the right-sized jail.

Mager argues that “evidence-based programs” haven’t been given a chance to succeed fully at the jail, programs like work release and electronic monitoring. She also says that people with mental health and substance abuse issues shouldn’t be locked behind bars.

“We haven’t done what we’re being told works,” she says of the programs. “We’re just heading to more bricks and mortar.”

EXPERIENCE MATTERS

French considers the eight years he spent on the City Council as his biggest strength heading toward Election Day. He says this experience will allow him to elicit greater cooperation from municipal leaders.

Mager, however, points to the municipally elected officials who support her: Spokane Mayor Mary Verner and a majority of the Spokane City Council; Spokane Valley Mayor Tom Towey, Liberty Lake Mayor Wendy Van Orman, Cheney Mayor Tom Trulove and Rockford Mayor Mickey Harnois.

“I think Al’s misinformed about county government,” Mager says. “I don’t think having been part of the City Council gives him any particular experience for being a county commissioner. What gives you experience is being somebody who gets along with people in city government. I’m the one who has that. I have the relationships. I can broker the win-win.”

“Four years in office, tell me something she’s led.

She takes credit for things that were led or started by other people,” French says. “I can point to dozens of things I led and took the political heat for being on the front side of things. You don’t have to be singing kumbaya to come to an agreement with people. I’ve been doing it for eight years, coming to agreements with people who didn’t like me, didn’t agree with me, wished I was dead. And that’s OK. That’s OK.”

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Ms. Magers primary position is simply to increase taxes! That will cure the budget problems! Taxpayers have plenty of money to give away, right??!! Typical Democrat solution to everything: raise taxes! It doesn´t matter that prices are constantly going up on everything, wages are stagnant or that we´re having a tough time in the whole country, just raise taxes!. I, for one, am sick of that left-wing mentality.
The real reason Ms. Mager is out voted so often is because she NEVER comes up with a workable idea that doesn´t increase the taxpayer´s burden. NEVER! She rarely even has solutions to any problems at all.
No, I´m so tired of her pessimism, her ignorance of reality and her tax-and-spend solutions for everything, but most of all her complete disregard for the financial/economic difficulties so many Spokane citizens are going through right now.....I doubt I could handle any more of her unrealistic positions and misconceptions.
It´s time for some real change in Spokane and she´s not it!!!!! Oct 13, 2010 | Reply to this comment

 

Republican/Tea party tape recorded talking points. What do you really know about so tired. You must be in love with your captures. what are you sick of really? White is not the only race and 1950 is here and gone. Let my generation have a chance. Dont support the banks and fox satire drama shows featuring everything that is ill about the U.S. Oct 22, 2010

 

Bonnie Mager takes initiative. She has found innovative solutions to County problems. To name a few:

Worked with citizens and state legislators to preserve Ben Burr Road for continued public use.

* Brought together elected officials and department heads to address the budget crisis and work toward efficiencies in the 2010 Budget. She personally paid to bring in a consultant to facilitate collaborative strategy meetings with Electeds and Department Heads to address solutions to necessary budget cuts.

* Successfully averted park restroom closures this summer by working with citizens, industry (Sunshine Disposal) and Parks Dept. to come up with creative solutions.

* She negotiated an unprecedented agreement between the county and the city for a revenue sharing agreement as part of the West Plains annexation agreement. This saved money on useless litigation and facilitated a seamless transition of services and revenues during the annexation process.

Bonnie Mager is fiscally conservative. She has been attacked by Al French for discussing tax increases. The County is tasked with funding the Sheriff´s office, the jail, the courts, and other essential services. Bonnie Mager made the point that as the city annexes more County industrial proporty, the County´s tax base is eroded. Bonnie would not propose tax increases unless absolutely necessary to fund basic services. In addition, as Bonnie points out, tax increases have always gone to the voters.

Some examples of Bonnie´s fiscally conservative decisions:

1. She voted against spending 4.3 million (7million total with interest) on the contaminate Raceway Park and she voted “no” to spend over 655K on additional upgrades to the Raceway Park.

2. She voted against putting the new jail site miles from the County Campus where the courts and needed services are. Maintenance and operations will out weigh any difference in savings for building costs, costing more in the long run.

3. She voted to postpone signing the contract to build the wastewater treatment plant because construction costs were dropping and by waiting I believe we could have locked in at a more favorable rate.

Even Al French proposes tax increases. He drafted legislation to repair a street utility tax law. The state Supreme Court blocked it on constitutional grounds. Oct 14, 2010 | Reply to this comment

 



Dear yellowcat92

I hope that wasn´t her best work in 4 years....
The window for dropping construction cost is a very narrow one indeed, and is usually followed by a sharp rise in construction costs. Ask anyone in the industry that can be factual and objective.Have materials and labor costs gone down ?? I haven´t seen it, with the exception of a few isolated instances and I´ve never seen construction costs really go down. Construction costs are an ever-climbing fact of life.....with the occasional short-lived dip. Supply and demand, supply and demand. Takes a long time to grow a tree.
The rest of your "innovative solutions" on your list of Ms. Mager´s list of accomplishments are marginal at best and artistically embellished. She´s doing the job of a minor league player in the majors.
She may be a good community organizer though.
Bet you voted for Obama, too. Oct 14, 2010 | Reply to this comment

 

I have to disagree with David Bray. Normally, I vote for the Republican. AL French is a fantastic candidate with a great resume. I offered him my home for fundraisers when he ran for mayor against Verner and Dennis. However, you have to look at a few other factors. Bonnie mager has voted like a very conservative Republican. She saves taxpayers money.
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Last year AL French wrote me a great "letter of recommendation". I love the guy...he is smart as heck and well qualified. BUT, do we really want three white mail GOP Republicans ? I think we need balance...and we need more women as leaders. Women tend to make superior leaders.
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I ran for county commissioner to expose corruption by our prosecutor...but I really wanted to support Bonnie as well. She represents the best and the brightest. The higher ideals and morality are things Bonnie cares about. She is a class act and a heck of a good commissioner.
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I am voting for Bonnie, while hoping Al French runs again for higher office (Congress?)...We NEED a balanced board of county commissioners !
~~
David Howard Elton
former commissioner candidate (more than a thousand votes)
~~

*For those who voted for me, please throw your vote to Bonnie Mager*

AL French is a good man, but we need Bonnie on the board for 4 more years. Oct 15, 2010 | Reply to this comment

 

So you want to keep Ms. Mager on the Commission because she provides "balance"?
What balance does casting "NO" votes provide? What balance does a lack of understanding of how government works provide? What balance does being against almost everything that comes up for a vote by Commissioners provide?
Now, if Mager HAD voted like a "very conservative" Republican, on a board with with 2 actual Republicans, why was she voted down 60% of the time?
David, you make no sense. Your reasoning makes no sense and your logic is non-existent on this matter. You want to exclude a person who probably has more knowledge about government functionality and a history of benefits for the electorate, because of a convoluted concept of balance. Unbelievable.
Oct 20, 2010

 

Response to Davidbray. Because she was voted down 60% of the time doesn´t make her wrong. Seems she was right and had better and more thoughtful motives for her votes than the one´s who won. Reminds me of another candidate on the ballot whose opponent is trying to use her loss on issues she voted on as a mark against her when, in my opinion, her views reflect the most commen sense. Almost everyone agrees that we are in trouble but refuses to see the wisdom shown by some of our representatives. We wale and cry over the decisions made but then critize the ones who voted against them. Duh! Oct 24, 2010

 



how do you intend to keep the population safe if thier main perp is the city itself and its laws?

“The Mental Health Therapeutic Court (MHTC) represents an effort to increase effective cooperation between two systems that have traditionally not worked closely together, the mental health treatment system and the criminal justice system.
The project hopes to achieve the following outcomes for the mentally ill misdemeanant population:
faster case processing time
improved access to public mental health treatment services
improved well-being
reduced recidivism”


http://www.spokanecounty.org/districtcourt/content.aspx?c=1564

“Make civil commitment more available as a mechanism to divert people who will otherwise be involved in the criminal justice system.”

http://www.dshs.wa.gov/pdf/hrsa/mh/Preliminary_ITA_Report_DRAFT_4_13_07.pdf



Who is benifiting from this law? reduced recidivism and gravely disabled to medicate people to human cells for the purpose of public safety, fiscal return because of no jail space, create one in the person themselves?

Any reason under the sun can get you in a 72 hour monitor situation, from developmental disability, to non felony crime, including property damage, public drunkenness. As well as legal things like applications, or even being disorientated from a fall and having memory loss, but not being able to clarify your seeming confusion. Even prorerty damage, they will hold you, charge you and medicate you over property, with no regard to the value of your brain.



Is it the hospital ER staff trained to be "concerned" and social services with the doc to utilize insurance, and everybody turns the other cheeek because they all finacially prosper except the medically, medicinally, mentally, incapcitated walking the streets disqusied as bums.

I have a business question, if hospital is the BIG business here, so the economy is fueled by Dr. and patients, what happens when you run out of patients and there s nobody to run the gas, grocery, clothing, store or anything else, because they have all been disabled by the law.


Oct 20, 2010 | Reply to this comment

 

 
 
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