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marine1/1 wrote on Aug 5, 2008 12:11 PM:
doscentavos wrote on Aug 5, 2008 12:15 PM:
Native74 wrote on Aug 5, 2008 5:07 PM:
Hold off on any more luxury items like office remodels and get with the program here for Roads. Other communities are! I don't think my cubicle has been replaced in 10 years and the carpet? Goodness knows how long that's been...comes down to priorities in the public sector.
And as marine1/1 suggests...does anyone have a factual count on how much has really been borrowed from the Roads fund or is it a myth? Are we compensating FEMA non-reimbursed funds from the Roads budget here as well? Yikes! Get those project completed and reimbursed so we can focus on Roads again! "
kbf wrote on Aug 6, 2008 6:28 AM:
The grants are out there unless they already put in for them, and if they had you would see something done. When you get a grant you have to account for what you do with the money to the state.
I've also herd that the streets will be taken care of as soon as the construction is done, but it never will be done. "
14obama wrote on Aug 6, 2008 7:00 PM:
musikluvr wrote on Aug 7, 2008 11:44 AM:
napablogger wrote on Aug 7, 2008 1:03 PM:
The county lent the roads money from other areas to cover repairs until we got reimbursed from FEMA. FEMA is reimbursing most of the money, but not all which is another hit on local funds.
Dan, I guess you and I had the same idea this week.
I think the employees are overpaid. Did you see the new contract with the mid management employees for the City that came out two weeks ago? All of them are in six figures, with 4-5% increases this year. Meanwhile workers in the private sector saw a .9% DROP in their income last year.
We also have to ask ourselves how much human services we can afford. Huge money is going into that and every time an initiative comes along "for the kids" it gets passed. But now I guess I am a cold hearted Republican.
The truth is that each person has to learn to make their own way in life, whether we hand them a bunch of money or not. I think there has to be a safety net at the bottom for people who really aren't mentally healthy enough to make it, and for emergencies, but beyond that I don't think in the long run all these social services really help people that much. Pretty outrageous to say it, but I believe that it is true. "
misfit wrote on Aug 7, 2008 5:14 PM:
14obama wrote on Aug 7, 2008 6:43 PM:
Surely there will be the kind that disagree and welcome tourists,but,oh well. Somehow they've lost touch with beauty and serenity. They must need a bottle of wine and a circus environment to feel alive. They've never understood the meaning of "Live and Learn". "
musikluvr wrote on Aug 8, 2008 2:49 AM:
napan79 wrote on Aug 8, 2008 9:12 AM:
lola wrote on Aug 9, 2008 8:10 AM:
Skip M. wrote on Aug 9, 2008 11:37 AM:
Skip M. wrote on Aug 9, 2008 11:43 AM:
chunk wrote on Aug 9, 2008 1:15 PM:
Raven wrote on Aug 10, 2008 8:46 PM:
hudds5 wrote on Aug 12, 2008 9:17 PM:
dowhatsright wrote on Aug 12, 2008 10:25 PM:
THE ONLY THING I SEE HERE IS THE PROBLEM WITHOUT SOLLUTION. HOW MUCH TIME DOES ONE HAVE, TO SIT AND COMPLAIN ABOUT EVERYTHING FROM GRFITTI TO HUNGER STRIKES. ANYTHING UNDER THE SUN. ITS THE SAME NAMES EVERY TIME. START SENDING LETTERS TO WHOM IT MAY CONCERN. CHANGE DOESNT HAPPEN OVER NIGHT,BUT IF ENERGY IS PUT TO THE RIGHT USE, IT MAY WORK.
QUIT CRYING. DO SOMTHING OTHER THAN ,B----ING ABOUT YOUR OVER RATED TOWN. "
lola wrote on Aug 13, 2008 12:09 PM:
MarkJoseph wrote on Aug 14, 2008 11:14 PM:
1) The Gas Tax is charged based on gallons of gas used. As the price goes up, usage drops and so does the tax revenue. It seems counter-intuitive, but that's the way it works.
2) The State keeps borrowing money earmarked for local roads, to help balance their budget. At some point it might get reimbursed to the Cities and Counties, but who knows? Meanwhile, Cities and Counties don't have the cash to fix roads.
3) New development generally pays what is known as an Impact Fee, which is designed to make them pay for their fair share of new roads, parks, etc. These Impact Fees don't contribute to maintenance, but they do contribute towards new roads or traffic signals, etc.
4) Napa and Solano Counties are about the last 2 counties in the Bay area that are not "self-help" counties (aka, haven't imposed local taxes for roads). That means we are at a disadvantage in getting grants for roads. Think about it: if I have a million dollars, do I give it to Napa and get a million dollars of value, or to Contra Costa County, who can match my million with their million?
A better approach would be something like the Napa Flood Project: get all the people and the players in one room, educate each other on what's real and what's not, and then craft a solution that works and people can support.
mj "
ProudAmerican wrote on Aug 15, 2008 6:46 PM:
Raven wrote on Aug 17, 2008 2:13 PM:
As for the share the hotels are paying, they probably aren't and while I don't have figures at hand, I am sure some here do, they may well have been given incentives, usually in the form of tax exemptions or credits.
But I would wager that most of the visitors to the valley don't stay in Napa hotels, so any tourist taxes are not being paid by them....so how would you have them pay for their wear and tear on the road? "
musikluvr wrote on Aug 17, 2008 4:39 PM:
Bike To Work wrote on Aug 17, 2008 7:10 PM:
We need to get together and stand for something, show the world that Napa is "World Class".
The next sales tax measure; more transit, lets do trains, express busses, bike lanes, pedestrian improvements, and skip the expensive freeway overpasses. "
musikluvr wrote on Aug 19, 2008 9:15 AM:
freeport56 wrote on Aug 21, 2008 9:20 AM:
It's time for a state constitutional convention to replace our state government! "