JIM TOWNSEND BLOG

Entries in Jim Townsend (3)

Tuesday
Mar022010

First it was Campaign Finance, Now It’s America’s Waters

Not satisfied with enabling corporations to flood America’s political system with money, the Supreme Court has overturned decades-old interpretations of the Clean Water Act to allow many of those same corporations to flood our precious waterways with poison. Not only is this a threat to the water we drink but it has the potential to do great harm to Michigan’s economy by fouling fisheries and beaches and preventing us from leveraging one of the state’s greatest assets – our abundance of fresh water. For me, this is especially galling because as a young Congressional staffer in 1992 I had the privilege of drafting legislation, which became law, to strengthen the Clean Water Act. Later that year my boss at the time, U.S. Representative Nita M. Lowey, was honored as “Legislator of the Year” by the American Planning Association, because of legislation I helped her develop designed to strengthen financial support for the CWA and create thousands of good jobs by investing in the nation’s water infrastructure.

Instead of nullifying laws that protect our waters, health and quality of life, we should be working on cost-effective strategies to prevent pollution and enable more people to enjoy our beaches and waterways. If we do this, metro Detroit can leverage its inland lakes, Detroit River and Lake St. Claire as destinations and job generators the way Chicago and Toronto maximize their waterfronts.

Article on Supreme Court decision

Learn more from Clean Water Action

Monday
Feb222010

Rising Poverty in the Suburbs: Another Sign that Priorities in Lansing and Washington Must Change

At the February meeting of the Royal Oak Area Democratic Club, a bright but freezing Saturday morning, members learned about the important work of the Welcome Inn Day Center for the Homeless, which provides warmth, food, medical attention, job search resources and clothes to people in need from the community meeting room of the Unity Church of Royal Oak. Just weeks earlier new data from the U.S. Census Bureau confirmed what people at the Welcome Inn already knew – the number of poor people and struggling families in the suburbs grew dramatically in the last decade. Over 119,000 people fell below the poverty line in metro Detroit’s suburban communities. This is also occurring in the rest of the U.S. but at a much slower rate. For the first time more people are living below the poverty line in Detroit’s suburbs than in the center city.

This does not mean that the suburbs are poorer than the city; Detroit’s poverty rate far exceeds that of its surrounding communities. What it means is that residents of southeast Michigan are suffering like nowhere else in America, and Washington should take notice. But the federal government won’t take action unless we speak with one voice. In 2002 I worked with a group of mayors and city managers to create the Michigan Suburbs Alliance for that very purpose:  to bring communities together to tell Lansing and Washington that the time has come to shift priorities away from subsidizing sprawling development in places where cows recently outnumbered people. Instead of cutting grants that support efforts such as the Welcome Inn, we should be scrutinizing and eliminating tax give-aways that fail to produce jobs. We should insist that state-supported research institutions looking to sell their patented technology give priority to investors who promise to create jobs in Michigan, instead of selling to the highest bidder anywhere in the world. We need fresh ideas and new priorities and we need them now.

Article about Welcome Inn Day Center for the Homeless

Report from Brookings Institution on Poverty in the Suburbs

Thursday
Feb042010

Debate about RO Liquor Licenses Misses the “2nd Story”

The Royal City Commission made a wise choice this week when it approved the transfer of a liquor license that will allow the opening of a new Greek restaurant downtown. Mayor Ellison and his colleagues on the commission correctly pointed out that Royal Oak is in the enviable position of drawing visitors from a large area across SE Michigan, which means that the state’s quota of 40, which is based only on the City’s population, is too low and needlessly prevents new investment and jobs from coming into downtown Royal Oak. My friend and campaign supporter, Professor Jeff Horner of Wayne State, in this week’s RO Review supported the state’s quota system and pointed out that downtown’s need to attract high revenue office space.  

What’s missing in this discussion is the fact that Royal Oak along with other cool downtowns around the country is leading a growing 2nd story office space trend, where high tech firms and other entrepreneurs are choosing the upstairs of urbane spots like Royal Oak because of their vibrant mix of retail and dining.  Let’s reject the false dichotomy between entertainment and office and recognize that growing Royal Oak means fostering both with reason and care.

Royal Oak Review Artcle

Article in Metromode on RO's Emerging 2nd Story

Facts about the Issue