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So where's the outcry?
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Down-and-Dirty Developers Want Into the Inner City
Continued from page 1
Published: April 10, 2008So where do we go with all of that, when we get stirred up? Easy. We go straight to Neal Emmons, our plan commission member, and to Angela Hunt, our city council member. They try to strike a balance between our demands in the neighborhoods and the city's need to encourage good new development. But between the two of them, they are the fulcrum.
It's that way in every city council district. That is why, except in the most extreme cases, the city council almost always honors the wishes of the council person from the district where a proposed zoning change would happen.
At the March 26 Dallas City Council briefing, Mayor Tom Leppert and North Dallas council member Ron Natinsky tried to bust the rule. They asked the council to vote down Angela Hunt on a routine zoning matter. Hunt was actually in favor of the development in question but wanted to send it back to the plan commission for tweaking.
With Leppert's backing, Natinsky moved that the council refuse to send it back. He and Leppert were defeated in a 10-5 vote, and the issue went back to the plan commission.
To us in East Dallas, the move by Leppert and Natinsky looked like an attempt to write a new everybody-but-Angela rule. And why would we would be paranoid about that? Because over the years the bad development interests, the rip-and-run boys, the in-and-outers, have tried to blow out every strong representative East Dallas has ever sent to council, from Hunt to Veletta Lill all the way back to Lee Simpson in the early 1980s.
They always think the same thing. Get rid of that East Dallas council representative, and the walls will come tumbling down. Then they think they can have their way with East Dallas, whether it's ramming highways through to get people out or tossing up cheap multi-family housing to get people back in.
On April 1, the Morning News editorial page castigated the council for not going along with Natinsky and painted the council members who had voted against him and with Hunt as crumby little ward-heelers: "Unfortunately, the independent-minded still appear to be in the minority on the council," the editorial sniffed. "Too many city leaders are loath to rock the boat on issues in other districts, lest their colleagues interfere with their own pet projects."
The most important point here is that zoning questions in the inner city are not the pet projects of council members. They are my pet projects. My neighbor's pet projects. We watch this stuff like hawks, all of us, and you better believe we let Emmons and Hunt know if we don't like what we see.
I talked about this last week with Michael Jung, an attorney at Strasburger & Price who represents both homeowner groups and developers on zoning questions. "Angela Hunt to a degree is, believe it or not, more business-friendly than some of the homeowner wing of her constituents," Jung said. "And she agonizes over that."
He agreed with me that getting rid of Hunt, stuffing her somehow, isolating her on the council, is not going to calm anybody down or make things easier for any developers.
"Angela is not whipping otherwise calm East Dallasites into a frenzy," he said.
Believe it. We bring the frenzy.
Nothing drives people in my part of town crazier than the assertion that we should be grateful for any new development we can get. That's the "gift horse in the mouth" argument.
We know too well, based on too long an experience, that the creature bearing gifts is not always a horse. Sometimes it's a wolf. We know exactly what that coded language on the Morning News editorial page means when they say, "...we'd be better served by leaders who favor a citywide vision rather than parochial protocol."
It means people who don't get our part of town at all will ram cheap development down our throats, undo decades of hard-fought progress, scoop up quick profits and then run for the border.
The hell, we say.









Here's a solution to the short-sighted, cut-and-run developer: any entity that wants to build one of these gi-nourmous projects must either (a) have owned and operated a similar project in Dallas for five continuous years and agree to do so with this project, or (b) sign an agreement to continue to personally operate the proposed project for five years, backed by a bond large enough to tear the whole damn thing down if they cut and run.
I suspect the opposition's response to this proposal would be that it would stifle development in Dallas. My reply is: do we want those kind of developers operating here? Or, do we want developers who will develop Dallas in a useful way, as opposed to developing their short-term profits at our long-term expense?
Comment by Renegade — April 11, 2008 @ 03:33PM
You're right on the money - and that's what it's all about -- MONEY.
Travel a little further north to District 10 where Fief Jerry Allen's pals at Prescott Real Estate are trying to flip a property at Skillman and Church, purchased with Single Family zoning, into a 5-story senior apartment residence, zoned as a Planned Development. The resultant profit from rezoning is about 500%.
That's right, $1 million purchase from an Hispanic church desperate for cash to a $6 million selling price to Jonathan Perlman, the ostensible developer.
All of this is justified by the need for "higher density population" to support Prescott's new Lake Highlands Town Center and to generate greater tax revenues.
The homeowners adjacent to all of this hoopla are vigorously opposing it, wary and fearful of "another Uptown" on the Skillman corridor in their Lake Highlands back yards. I'd bet a bunch that Perlman wouldn't want a 5-story box with 250 units in his own Park Cities back yard.
Comment by Bill Barstow — April 14, 2008 @ 05:41PM
I have a solution no one here will like: take the power away from special interests by taking it away from the city council.
If zoning were removed so prices would reflect the real market value of the property, it would eliminate the temptation to throw up shoddy and poorly planned developments. Active communities like ours (East Dallasite here) would use our own purchasing power and local market insight to influence development.
Henderson was screaming for more upscale retail space with all the mcmansionists moving in. The city council and zoning commission were nothing but an obstacle regardless of what kind of support they provided. There will always be people who don't want x,y, or z development next door - and I'm sure I'm one of them. Using political power to subvert or inflate someone's property interest is far more of an offensive to me than a hot pink tampico motel down the block.
Comment by Josh — April 16, 2008 @ 11:58AM