Archived Ants

Entries by Elizabeth (295)

Tuesday
Oct132020

ISSUE #173: Holy Winnebago!  8/17/20

"They paved paradise and put up a parking lot ... with a pink hotel, a boutique and a swinging hot spot."


 - Joni Mitchell

 

 

Parking has always been at a premium in Aspen, but this summer we're seeing cars in unprecedented numbers.  The drive market has significantly impacted the rebound of our local economy, but the lack of foresight by our car-loathing electeds leaves us with literally nowhere to park.  Add to that America's resurgent love for RVs and the fact that Aspen allows these to park on any street and you have a parking dilemma that is not going away.
 

Read my column from Sunday's Aspen Times HERE

 

 

Tuesday
Oct132020

ISSUE #172: 1984 Revisited  8/4/20

"The ideal set up by the Party was something huge, terrible, and glittering - a world of steel and concrete, of monstrous machines and terrifying weapons - a nation of warriors and fanatics, marching forward in perfect unity, all thinking the same thoughts and shouting the same slogans, perpetually working, fighting, triumphing, persecuting - three hundred million people all with the same face."


 - George Orwell

 

 

I recently read New York Times (now former) editor Bari Weiss' resignation letter and it struck me. The current recent civil unrest, coupled with widespread revisionist history through the removal of statues and names, and this very high profile example of the "thought police," reminded me of one thing - George Orwell's 1984, which I hadn't read since high school. I re-read the 1949 classic and was shocked by how Orwell's prescient warnings have manifested themselves today.
Read my column in last Sunday's Aspen Times HERE.

 

 

Tuesday
Oct132020

ISSUE #171: Aspen's NextGeneration Gap  7/19/20

"The lessons of the past are ignored and obliterated in a contemporary antagonism known as the generation gap."


   - Spiro T. Agnew

 

 

Divide and conquer appears to be the modus operandi of young city councilman Skippy Mesirow. His favorite is to incite division between the haves and the haves-not, but most recently he went after his fellow councilmen along generational lines. This took place following a council discussion of whether to adopt "mobile voting" by phone or computer for future Aspen elections. Mesirow so desperately wanted to adopt the unproven method that when his colleagues opted to wait for improved security as well as, God forbid, state approval, he chastised them personally as old and out-of-touch.
Always one to overshare on social media, Mesirow is the gift that keeps on giving.
Who he speaks for is unclear, but if it's the young people in our community, we ought to be aware and more than just a little concerned. The 18-to-40-year-old demographic has been given an official voice through the city's "Next Gen Commission." For balance, isn't it time for a similar commission-level voice for second homeowners, the ones who pay the taxes and boost the economy?

Read my column in today's Aspen Times HERE

 

 

Sunday
Jul192020

ISSUE #170: Aspen's Vigilante Mask Police: Just Stop! 7/5/20

"Beware that, when fighting monsters, you yourself do not become a monster."


   - Unknown

 

 

 

Summer is here, the tourists are back, and so are cases of COVID-19. Masks are mandatory and there's a midnight curfew for businesses. As we individually grapple with the challenges of re-opening, keep in mind that Aspen's very survival depends on our ability to host tourists - this summer and beyond. 
If mask-wearing keeps the government and health board happy and we can keep the doors open, then it's a relatively small price to pay. But please, assess your own risks, take individual responsibility (especially if you have underlying health issues), and don't take enforcement into your own hands. 
Read my column in today's Aspen Times HERE 

 

 

 

Sunday
Jul192020

ISSUE #169: Subsidized Housing: A privilege at a time when privilege is a bad thing 6/21/20

"What separates privilege from entitlement is gratitude."

   - Brené Brown

 

 

 

You'd think that a global pandemic and ensuing financial crisis would humble even the most idealistic politician. But not city councilman Skippy Mesirow. As our local governments continue to throw good money after bad at local issues, Mesirow leans even farther forward with woke and uber-progressive concepts to reform local institutions like APCHA. You'd think the crises of 2020 had dropped squarely into his lap so that he could show us how easily our culture can be transformed.
The Red Ant sees all of his virtue-signaling and political pandering for what it is ... a danger to established community values. While others are distracted, toiling for their very survival, Mesirow is affecting governance by weaseling his righteous indignation into critical policy documents. Buyer beware.
Read my column in today's Aspen Times HERE

 

 

Sunday
Jul192020

ISSUE #168: A Housing Lifeline to Build Goodwill and Boost Inventory  6/7/20

"It's easy to underestimate the real cost of home ownership."

   - Suze Orman

 

 

 

The Red Ant has long focused on our subsidized housing program and questioned the policy of selling units versus renting them. While I acknowledge the pride associated with home ownership, I regularly question the wisdom of selling housing that requires regular, ongoing and preventative maintenance in a city where such services come at exorbitant free market prices. The discrepancy between artificially low home prices and the high-end resort costs of maintaining them more often than not results in deferred or ignored maintenance. This, combined with the unwillingness to require sufficient reserves at each of the HOAs has resulted in widespread negligence and looming problems. But the housing, when it comes available, still flies off the market due to demand.

The recent chaos likely has many subsidized homeowners questioning their investment. Instead of the option of breaking a lease and walking away, mortgage holders are clearly held to a different level of commitment. This is an idea I've been thinking about for a while. I think it checks a lot of boxes.
Read my column in today's Aspen Times HERE

 

 

Sunday
Jul192020

ISSUE #166: Box It In: Good luck with that  (5/10/20)

"The science increasingly shows that the measures we have taken in the last few weeks have been both harmful - with freedoms lost, money spent, livelihoods destroyed - and pointless."

   - R. R. Reno

 

Aspen has mandated the wearing of face masks in public, which if this is what it takes to open local businesses, fine by me. Look for these to become the norm for the foreseeable future.  

I have closely followed the Pitkin County Board of Health and its Public Health Orders throughout the pandemic. The latest COVID-19 response is called "Box It In" and is all wrong for Aspen. It's a political strategy, not a scientific one, which stands to quarantine large numbers of our populace regardless of whether or not they are sick. There is still a huge focus on keeping the virus out of Aspen.
Thankfully, the science shows a far less deadly situation than we had originally feared. Individuals need to take personal responsibility and make their own risk assessments. Our lifeblood is tourism, and getting back to business should be our number one priority. 
Read my column in today's Aspen Times HERE

* I'm attaching a letter HERE from respected restaurateur and community member Jimmy Yeager who wrote to the powers that be and his colleagues this past week. It's a sobering and heart-wrenching look at what our local restaurants are up against. 

* The Red Ant gives credit where credit is due. Many thanks to Mayor Torre and County Commissioners Greg Poschman and Patti Clapper for their convincing advocacy of local businesses, especially restaurants and lodges. Your strong support for earlier-than-anticipated openings stands to save businesses and livelihoods.

* Please continue to support our local businesses, now more than ever. 

 

 

Sunday
Jun072020

ISSUE #167: Aspen's Taj - Our Fiscal Mausoleum  5/24/20

"The (federal) government's most useful role is not to rush into a program of excessive increases in public expenditures, but to expand the incentives and opportunities for private expenditures."
       - John F. Kennedy

While we struggle to open our doors and cling to hopes of regained livelihoods, the City of Aspen presses on with the ill-conceived Taj Mahal City Hall on Rio Grande Place.  Budgeted at $33 million, rumors persist that the great hole we have to show for it is, at the $10 million mark, already over-budget.  Professional developers estimate it will cost $50 million before we're through, never mind the office space was unneeded at the time of inception and is certainly unneeded today.

City council knows little of the specifics of the building - it's projected cost, it's projected completion date, it's programming - and cares even less. All decisions are deferred to staff who, of course, prefer offices in the shiny new digs. The city manager says and therefore council insists that we must build it. They're very, very wrong. And fiscally irresponsible. (The financing is tricky, but not insurmountable.) 
 
Read my column from Sunday's Aspen Times HERE

HERE is a refresher on the Taj Mahal City Hall. (#151)
* Amid the current crisis, city council is far more interested in "relief" (giving money away) vs "recovery" (saving our economy). THIS letter to the editor perfectly illustrates it. 

 

****************

The recovery is on. Businesses in Aspen are grappling with re-opening amid prescribed restrictions and protocols that frighten even the most cautiously optimistic. The “new normal” is anything but, yet during the weeks of uncertainty that have brought us to this point, we have all learned to adapt, to modify our horizons, and out of necessity we’ve reduced our spending and are more cognizant than ever about staying on a budget. We’re all in this together. It’s a popular phrase, and we are. If nothing else, we’ve learned firsthand how interconnected our fates and fortunes are, and how simplistic-sounding edicts have the power to trickle down to become raging torrents of destruction.

But why is the City of Aspen behaving differently, as if the rules don’t apply? If we are indeed all in this together, why are they continuing to build, with our tax dollars, the ill-conceived, unsupervised, over-budget, unneeded monolith known locally as the Taj Mahal City Hall when everyone else is trimming their sails?  As it turns out, it’s because no one is in charge. The current council barely acknowledges the project, yet alone knows anything about its progress, budget or future programming. They simply deflect when asked, falsely proclaiming that all the decisions were made by their predecessors, despite two of the current members being part of said group, and as if that absolves any of them of current or future responsibility. Mayor Torre even ran on his support for “a review and changes to the final design and programming of the new city office building” because it does “not appear to address community goals,” only to capitulate to staff the moment he took office. Let us also not forget that this edifice to bureaucratic excess was designed to accommodate future office space needs, never mind we’ve recently learned vis-à-vis the pandemic that “office space” is now effectively dead. If the world wasn’t working differently ten weeks ago, it certainly is today.

Recall in 2018, local voters chose the Taj in its current location and a remodel of the Armory over a developer’s proposal for a fixed-price new building on Hopkins which also included the Armory remodel. Anti-developer sentiment coupled with city staff’s desire for shiny new digs heavily influenced the vote for the current project. Initially sold to voters as a city office building, the Taj soon became “the new city hall” and quickly grew to include an obtrusive third floor.

Fearful of likely voter rejection of general obligation bonds to finance the project, the city opted to use Certificates of Participation (COP) which, in addition to being more expensive, restrict the funds to this building specifically and require completion, regardless of cost, by a specified date. Today, $10 million in and already over-budget, there is only a big hole to show for it. Professional outside estimates put the 37,500 sf Taj at a minimum of $50 million to complete.  Since the COP only cover $30 million, the city will be on the hook to make up the difference, and that difference continues to grow daily with cost-overruns, change orders, and exorbitant consulting fees – the kinds of charges one incurs when no one is watching. And it leaves the Armory remodel entirely unfunded. At a time when City revenues are already down $25 million this year and will likely not recover for several more, this financial liability gets worse by the day.

The solution is not ideal, but because of the hasty and misguided decision to finance construction with COP, several steps are clear:

  • Like the rest of us, the City must acknowledge and adapt to its new circumstances. A blank check for construction is typical, but times have changed.
  • It’s time to renegotiate the terms of the COP. 
  • The controversial 7,200 sf 3rd floor must immediately come off. This will obviously reduce costs, not to mention preserve the irreplaceable view plane and access through Galena Plaza, vital for a town-to-riverfront connection.
  • Council must step up now and demonstrate ownership, responsibility and accountability, and demand fiscal restraint. At the very minimum, we must stay on-budget with a downsized Taj.  Build what you can with what you’ve got, if you must, but nothing more.

As arrogant as it was to bypass the voters and finance the Taj with the more expensive and far more restrictive COP, not to mention the horrendous optics of building it today, it is nothing short of unconscionable for the city to move ahead with a superfluous and bloated vanity project at a time when people are losing their jobs, their homes and their livelihoods.