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Explaining Local Government Support For Ose - Look at Citrus Heights

Posted by: Aaron Park | 04/30/2008 8:10 AM

The below attached article might explain why several in local government have endorsed Ose- they must know about his successes "bringing home the bacon" to the district.

Please also Note the close connections to SACOG - which is a local government organization made up of Supervisors, Commissioners, and City Councilmembers.

Included in Ose's record of voting for budget busting-spedning are:

$925,000 for the Please Touch Museum. (CAGW Pork in HR 4577. Labor-HHS-Education Fiscal 2001 Appropriations/Conference Report).

$176,000 for the Reindeer Herder's Association. (CAGW Pork in HR 4578. Fiscal 2001 Interior Appropriations/Conference Report.

$800,000 for red imported fire ants. (CAGW Pork in HR 2330. Fiscal 2002 Agriculture Appropriations/Conference Report).


These must be some of what Ose meant when he told Eric Egland - "If you want to be part of the club, you have to make accommodations..."


Cityhood Suits Many Residents in Citrus Heights, Calif.
Sacramento Bee August 25, 2003, Monday
Copyright 2003 Knight Ridder/Tribune Business News
Copyright 2003 Sacramento Bee

The Traffic circle at Carmelwood and Zenith drives doesn't look like much, just a cobblestone roundabout in a modest suburban neighborhood.But for John Taylor, the circle is an example of the way life has improved since Citrus Heights incorporated in 1997.

Taylor said the circle and others like it have slowed traffic in his 1970s-era subdivision, which sits next to Interstate 80 near the Placer County line. "We used to have people racing through our neighborhood," he said.

Little by little, the leaders of this young city are improving the quality of life for residents. They also are tackling the daunting task of forging an identity for a chunk of aging suburbia known chiefly for its heavy traffic and strip malls.

So far, the changes have been incremental and haven't dramatically altered the basic appearance of the community, which even its boosters concede is largely indistinguishable from the rest of suburban Sacramento County.

But city leaders are thinking big, and their attitude has won praise from residents and regional observers alike.

"I think the ingredients for converting a typical suburban community into something different exist in Citrus Heights," said Martin Tuttle, executive director of the Sacramento Area Council of Governments, or SACOG.

In the six years since incorporation, Citrus Heights has beefed up police coverage, rehabilitated playgrounds and pools, created a new civic center, built a skateboard park and planted palm trees in empty median strips along Greenback Lane and Sunrise Boulevard, two major arteries that intersect at Sunrise Mall.

"I see physical improvements in streetscapes and signage, landscaping and an overall attitude of trying to create a little suburban village out of an area that doesn't have any heart, any downtown, any center," said Randy Dawson, an architect who has lived in Citrus Heights for 16 years.

The city recently launched its most ambitious task to date: coming up with a plan to remake a tired, 1.5-mile stretch of Auburn Boulevard between Interstate 80 and the Sylvan Corners intersection into a lively, pedestrian-friendly mix of apartments, offices, stores and a hotel.

Unlike the region's other young cities -- Elk Grove, Rancho Cordova and West Sacramento -- Citrus Heights doesn't have large expanses of open land for growth. It must work with what it has.

Given that, planning as usual is not an option, said Community Development Director Janet Ruggiero. "Clearly, built-out suburban communities have to do something different," she said.

Citrus Heights Mayor Bill Hughes, a retired Roseville police lieutenant, has emerged as one of the region's most enthusiastic converts to "smart growth," a planning approach that advocates building denser, more urban mixtures of housing, stores and businesses on underused land in existing communities. The idea is to reduce dependence on cars and to slow suburban sprawl while injecting energy into older neighborhoods.

"Our future is going to be redevelopment; we just can't stop and say we're done," Hughes said. He has educated himself by traveling around the country and reading books such as "The Geography of Nowhere," which explores the evolution of suburbs.

Hughes currently serves as chairman of SACOG, the regional agency that divvies up federal and state transportation dollars among local governments.
Before incorporation, he said, Citrus Heights was headed downhill. Many of its modest tract homes had become rentals and were deteriorating. Wealth and population seemed headed east to newer suburbs, such as neighboring Roseville.

"People were trying to get out, and if the city hadn't incorporated, I would have been one of them," said Hughes, a 30-year resident. "My wife and I had already made that decision."

But voters in the community opted for cityhood, 62.5 percent to 37.5 percent.
Some members of the first Citrus Heights City Council had experience as urban planners, and the new government set out to hire experienced staff like Ruggiero, formerly community development director of Woodland.

Ruggiero is known as "one of the dynamos in California planning," said midtown architect David Mogavero. He was hired to work on the city's first general plan and said he was "extremely impressed" by the nascent city's leaders.

"The elected officials were vibrant and extremely engaged in their community and cared deeply about making it better," Mogavero said. "It really turned me around on incorporations. I had been dead set against them."

Citrus Heights wasn't flush with cash. Under terms of its divorce from Sacramento County, the city's property taxes will continue to flow to county coffers for another 18 years, said City Manager Henry Tingle. But Citrus Heights was allowed to keep the sales tax from its many retail outlets, including Sunrise Mall.

Since then, the city has been a successful player in the intense competition among local governments for "big-box" stores, which churn out millions of dollars in sales tax. Lowe's and Sam's Club arrived earlier this year, and Costco is coming soon.

Big-box stores aren't exactly what most planners would label smart growth, Hughes acknowledged. He said he regrets that the city's last significant open parcel of land, 129-acre Stock Ranch on Auburn Boulevard, will be developed with a Costco and 98 single-family homes.

"The whole planning process (for Stock Ranch) is years old now, and we just didn't have the education," Hughes said.

In the future, he said, the city's planning approach will be different, despite its dependence on sales tax to finance operations.

"We want to create streetscapes that have a more urban design, that allow for pedestrian and business traffic," he said.

But the sales tax from big-box stores and from Sunrise Mall certainly comes in handy.

The city also has proved itself adept at obtaining money from the federal government. U.S. Rep. Doug Ose, R-Sacramento, has been a powerful ally, obtaining about $ 5 million in federal funds for various projects, Tingle said. As a resident of Citrus Heights, Ose once led the community's incorporation effort.

About $ 2 million of that federal money went toward a new police center that opened last year near City Hall on Fountain Square Drive. Ninety officers hired through a contract with the Sacramento County Sheriff's Department work out of the building, wearing uniforms and driving cars identifying them as Citrus Heights police.

"The police presence is huge, and the difference (from the county days) is fantastic," said Taylor, president of the Northwest Neighborhood Association.

The city has set aside a reserve of $ 25 million and spends about $ 4 million a year on capital improvements such as the renovation of the pools at Rusch Park and San Juan High School and the construction of a new skate park, Tingle said. He said he relishes the challenge of running a mature, built-out community.

"You don't judge a city by its growth; you judge a city by how well it maintains its older parts," Tingle said. "It's so easy to put the older parts of the city on hold when you have fancy new growth projects."

Comments

Bruce said:

My goodness, Doug Ose helped get funds for local police departments. Think what horrible things he'll do for Placer. He might help our citizens, too, if he's elected to Congress again. Gosh forbid we have a Representative who wants to help our communities get some of their tax dollars spent at home.

Doug said:

Lord knows McClintock would rather people die than an earmark get approved

John Stoos Author Profile Page said:

Actually, what Senator McClintock would suggest is that we STOP sending that money back to Washington DC so we can beg to get some of it back! That way the bureaucrats and lobbyists would not get their cut either!

John

Mark Klang Author Profile Page said:

At this time I support McClintock. However, this could change if his campaign does not get back to me regarding his votes not to support the military.

I am starting the McClintock military watch. I will post everyday that I do not hear back from the McClintock campaign. I called his campaign office on Monday and have not heard back.

This is now DAY 3 OF THE MCCLINTOCK MILITARY WATCH.

Craig said:

Mark, I've good luck calling 916-446-1246... I had abortion questions, which they helpfully answered.

Aaron Park Author Profile Page said:

Stoos is right - how about restoring local control so earmarks are not a tool to curry influence? How about more tax cuts, not the shrunken ones the RMSP insisted on?

How about spending cuts, like those that Ose voted against time and again?

Klang - I have put you in touch with the people who can answer your questions.

John Stoos Author Profile Page said:

While we are at it, how about our highway taxes in an age of $4 a gallon gasoline: We pay 18 cents a gallon for a federal tax imposed to build the Interstate Highway system: Last time I checked that was completed sometime in the 1970's!

Of course, just like the phone tax to pay for the Spanish-American war, we are still paying this federal tax: All that happens is that we send money that should be collected and spent locally to Washington DC so we can beg to get some back: When that happens the LOCAL member of congress can get his picture in the local papers as he "brings home the bacon" as Cabana Boy likes to say.

Not only do we NOT get back as much as we send in for roads, we get a TON of federal regulations about how we can spend our road money, and lots of others that are enforced by saying IF you don't do what we say we will cut off YOUR highway dollars! What a great system for the lobbyists in Washington DC.

Anyone care to give one good argument for doing it this way in the 21st Century OTHER than to fund the "earmark" system that Ose and others like to work?

John

John Stoos Author Profile Page said:

Mark,

I think that I posted the explanations on the veteran bills, but let me know what specific questions that you have.

Allow me to ask you one as well: Did you support the concept of the military base closing commission to reduce wasteful military spending?

John

Mark Klang Author Profile Page said:

John

I believe your postings were critical of McClintock voting against the military issues. Is that they way I should read it?

I did support the BRAC concept. I have been to many Air Force and Navy bases and many of these installations were being kept open just to feed the local economy. It was a waste of our tax dollars.

Regarding my call to the McClintock campaign, I should not have to beg for answers. I know his campaign people read this blog. My good friend Aaron Park is trying to help get me the answers. However, I want an official answer from tom McClintock's campaign. Is Aaron Park an official spokesman for Tom McClintock?

THIS IS NOW DAY 4 OF THE MCCLINTOCK MILITARY WATCH.

John Stoos Author Profile Page said:

Mark,

I believe you misread what I posted because it was in support of Senator McClintock and I will paste them below for your review.

I would point out that one of the measures that Ose and I am sure Charlie Brown will attack Senator McClintock on is the vote agaisnt AJR29 which was an attempt to water down the base closing commission efforts that have saved BILLIONS and made our military much stronger over time.

John

[previous post]
John Stoos Author Profile Page said:

Jeff,

On the votes that you cite, you know that Charlie will do the same thing using out-of-context legislative votes to say that Tom hates old people, does not want school children to have breakfast or lunch, does not think poor people should have healthcare and wants all of California's environment to look Chernobyl. All he will have to do for most of it is cite Tom's many votes against state budgets!

IF you had been at the debate that Supervisor Uhler attended last week you would have seen how Senator McClintock handles the veteran issues and as we have discussed at length in previous posts which you have once again misquoted, Senator McClintock's belief that we should have the FULL force and fury of the American people and American resources behind our troops when they are in harms way is the best policy for Iraq and any other hot spot in the world!

John


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