The debate over the future of Amarillo’s downtown redevelopment effort has been underway for some time now.
I think I understand the divide in our city over whether the project that’s on the table is a good or bad thing for our city.
It runs between those who think the city is going to hell because of poor management and those who believe the city is functioning quite well.
Count me as one of the latter. I had faith in the city’s governing leadership prior to the May election. That faith was shaken when two incumbents got beat and a third one, Mayor Paul Harpole, was re-elected by a relatively narrow margin.
The city has proposed building the multipurpose event venue that’s been referred to the voters for their decision in a November election. The city also has agreed on a deal to build a convention hotel and a parking garage. If the MPEV goes down, does that mean the hotel goes away, too? Developers have pledged to finance the deal themselves. City officials pledge no increase in property taxes to pay for it.
Throughout much of this debate we’ve heard chatter about mismanagement, incompetence and the general overall well-being of the city. What about that?
Has the city been mismanaged? Are our leaders grossly incompetent? I do not believe either is the case.
Yes, there have been mistakes. The city has stumbled a bit on occasion. It also has corrected the mistakes that created the missteps.
Competence? I stand by my belief that the previous City Council comprised individuals who knew what they were doing as they were crafting — with considerable input and comment from the public — its downtown revival blueprint.
Mistakes? Sure. Wallace Bajjali — the one-time master developer that went belly-up without warning — is a big one. But was the city left holding the bag for money pledged for work that was undone? No. Wallace Bajjali had done what it had promised to do for the city before the two principal owners had their falling out and disbanded the company.
The downtown revival project remains sound in my mind and can work well for a community that continues to rock along economically.
Which brings me to the final point. As near as I can tell, Amarillo remains a city in good financial shape. Our tax rate is low; our bond rating is as good as it gets; our infrastructure is being improved constantly.
Can we do better? Sure. No city anywhere on the planet is being run to absolute perfection.
Someone on social media has declared that I have a “vendetta” against the three new council members — and maybe that individual is speaking for others who might share that view. My concern simply is that I didn’t harbor the ill will toward the former City Council that seems to have developed among quite a few of our city’s residents.
And yet at least one of the new council members has taken office with an apparent chip on his shoulder and he plans to bring immediate “change” to a city government that was being run to my satisfaction.
I will be waiting along with the rest of my fellow Amarillo residents to see the results of the change that has arrived at City Hall.
I’ll just say that my confidence in the new regime isn’t as solid as it was in the old one.