Monday, January 07, 2019

Going Rogue Again with Jon Talton: "GrowthGasms", Suburban Sprawl + The Water Fix

"The only way to address the Colorado River shortages is to stop the sprawl, indeed to reverse it. Anything else is a dangerous lie."
That statement is taken from the wrap-up paragraph in Jon Talton's latest post in his site Rogue Columnist.com that was published online 03 January 2019:  The Water Fix 
"The Arizona media have been producing many process stories (e.g. this one) about the federal government's insistence that states agree on a plan to use less Colorado River water at this time of historic drought. . . At the same time, the same media have engaged in their usual growthgasm stories about Arizona once again being one of the nation's fastest-growing states in population . . .
Yet I have yet to see any story connect the two.
The disconnect is staggering, matched only by the inattention to climate change as a prime driver of the ongoing Southwestern drought.
Arizona's "plan" is to keep adding people, no matter what. The entire economy's foundation is based on continuing large increases in population. Not only that, but to continue doing so in single-family housing sprawl far from historic urban centers. . . This is a dead end. Reality doesn't care what Grady Gammage or Elliott Pollack or "Sun Corridor" Michael Crow want or are selling. . . "
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Now c'mon Jon > Sprawl is a Money-Maker for the Real Estate-Industrial Complex - it's our Artificial Paradise here in the Southwest
 
 

Spotlight On Jon Kyl: BREAKING/IN-DEPTH SPECIAL REPORT: NOW (MOST OF) IT CAN BE TOLD

The In-Depth Special Report was posted by https://arizonaspolitics.blogspot.com/2019 on 04 January. It's nice to see some more fearless investigative journalism that focuses on just the politics here in Arizona - that's a real mine-field to dig deeper into for sure!
Like so many other Revolving-Door Arizona politicians in/out of Congress and high-paying influence-peddling positions [Matt Salmon among them], Kyl has been making a killing boosting his income that he's required to disclose: he's increased his Net Worth 7X. The eye-popping numbers come on the first page of the report (below) when the Senator lists his income sources for the past two years*. . .
It came the week after he left the U.S. Senate, but Jon Kyl has now filed the financial disclosure statement that all candidates and officeholders generally file before serving the public. In it, he discloses that:
(1) he had been involved with many companies that do significant business with the federal government
(2) his salary as a part time ASU professor averaged $64,000
(3) he provided previously undisclosed legal/advocacy services for APS, SRP and others (4) non-Senate life increased the Kyls' net worth by more than seven fold.
There had been much speculation in the media that Kyl was trying to avoid filing a financial disclosure statement at all, although Arizona's Politics recently pointed out he was still obligated to file the report by the extended deadline even though he would not be in office. 
Sure enough, the report was filed late yesterday evening . . . 
Here's a link to the source: https://arizonaspolitics.blogspot.com/
 

Review: Mesa City Council Study Session 03 Jan 2018

This was the first meeting this new year 2019. If you have the time, take a look and listen to the streaming Video that was uploaded to YouTube - five days later only 15 people have bothered to view it. Does that tell you anything about the continuing failure to engage and involve the public in the government you elected???
At the rate that is going it certainly looks like the same-old "business-as-usual" . . .SHAME.
The most time spent on a single item starts at 10:48 into the uploaded video supplied by Mesa Channel 11 that is inserted below: It's a whopping 191-page "clean audit" provided by an independent third-party accounting form that few people can understand. City Manager Chris Brady gives it a good-go as you can see by the smile-on-his-face, backed up Irma and Mike, while he fields questions and discussions around the table from just a couple of City Councilmembers. Today Candace Cannistraro [and "her crew"] might shed some light on the details taking another look at that single ITEM 6: Take action on the following recommendation from the Audit, Finance and Enterprise Committee:
*6-a File #19-0003
Accepting the City's Comprehensive Annual Financial Report (CAFR) for the Fiscal Year ended June 30, 2018
Accepting the City's Comprehensive Annual Financial Report (CAFR) for the Fiscal Year ended June 30, 2018.
Attachments: 1. Overview of Fiscal Year 2018 Comprehensive Annual
2. Presentation - Audit, Finance and Enterprise Committee
3. City of Mesa June 30 2018 CAFR

Today there's both another Study Session

FINAL AGENDA CITY COUNCIL MEETING @ 5:45 pm is inserted farther down [13 pgs] 
Source: Mesa Legistar Council, Committee & Board Research Center
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MESA CITY COUNCIL STUDY SESSION from Thu 03 Jan @ 07:30 am
Published on Jan 3, 2019
Views: 15
Streaming 47:10 vid uploaded to YouTube
 
Alternative option from City-owned Mesa Channel 11  please visit:http://mesa11.com/vod/?show=1722 

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City Council Study Session
Meeting Agenda - Final
Roll Call (City Council members participate in person or by telephone conference call.)
1 Review items on the agenda for the January 7, 2019 regular Council meeting.
2 Presentations/Action Items: 19-0006

Hear a presentation, discuss, and provide direction on the auction of City-owned property on the northwest corner of Thomas and Recker Roads. Item  2-a
3 Hear reports on meetings and/or conferences attended.
4 Scheduling of meetings and general information.
5 Adjournment.¹

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File #: 19-0006   
Type: Presentation Status: Agenda Ready
In control: City Council Study Session
On agenda: 1/7/2019
Title: Hear a presentation, discuss, and provide direction on the auction of City-owned property on the northwest corner of Thomas and Recker Roads.
Attachments: 1. Presentation
2. Council Memo 

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Memorandum 
TO:  Mayor and City Council
THROUGH: Karolyn Kent, Assistant City Manager
FROM: 

Kim Fallbeck, Real Estate Administrator
Angelica Guevara, Development Services Project Manager
SUBJECT: Thomas and Recker Land Auction
DATE: January 3, 2019
This memo is intended to provide information on the Thomas and Recker Land Auction.  The property is approximately 132.54 acres and is located at the northwest corner of Thomas and Recker roads. 

The City acquired the property in 1998 with General Obligation Bonds for $4,026,000 with the intent of using it for future open space needs and public use. 
The property has a current appraised value of $15,600,000. 
It has a sewer lift station accessed on Star Valley Street from Recker Road that will be carved out and retained by the City. 
Since the property was purchased by the City using General Obligation Bonds, $4 million of the sales proceeds will be used to pay down outstanding principal or invest in another project for public use within two years after the property transfer.
Based on the current interest in this property, and the surrounding development, residential land use is anticipated by City staff.  The final development patterns and densities will be determined as part of the land entitlement process.
Staff has reviewed the process that the Town of Gilbert used for a live auction and combined it with the City policies expressed in Management Policy 208. 

In addition to the City’s notice requirements, staff recommends following the Arizona Revised Statutes requirements for notice, which provide for more notice in the newspaper and additional physical property postings at the property for sale.  
Staff proposes the following schedule:
 January 16, 2019 Post Auction Notice on City Website and Post Site
 January 18, 19, and 20, 2019 Advertise in Local Newspaper
 February 4, 2019 Pre-Auction Conference
 February 19, 2019 Deadline to Receive Questions
 February 21, 2019 Deadline for Staff to Post Answers
 March 7, 2019  Auction and Review of Bids
 March 11, 2019 - tentative Open Escrow
TBD Council Reviews Proposed Purchase Contract from Highest Bidder


Bidders will be required to provide a $250,000 Cashier’s Check to participate in the auction which will be held on Thursday, March 7th. 

Bids will be made in $50,000 increments and the successful bidder will be required to provide an additional Cashier’s Check totaling 5% of the winning bid amount to open escrow upon review and approval by the City. 
March 11, 2019 is the tentative date for opening escrow.
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PRESENTATION Thomas and Recker Land Auction [10 pgs]
City Council Study Session
January 7, 2019
Christine Zielonka, Development Services Director and Beth Huning, City Engineer 

The Property
• Northwest corner of Thomas and Recker Roads

• 1/3 mile north of the Loop 202
• Approximately 132 acres
• NamoTalley located to the north and Red Mountain Ranch is located to the east
• Current appraised value $15.6M     

Future Land Use
• Interest From Residential Developers

• Use Will Primarily be Restricted to Residential
• Final Approval of Land Use and Intensity by Council
• Public Involvement
• Planning and Zoning Board Hearing for Recommendation

Development Review and Approval Process
•Entitlement application process can start while in escrow

•Public Participation/Public Hearings with the Planning and Zoning Board with City Council Approval for:
 -Minor General Plan Amendment
 -Rezoning -Subdivision Plat
•Close escrow after Council approves entitlements
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> ITEM 4: 16 Contract Awards all on the Consent Agenda

> ITEM 5: 6 RESOLUTIONS all on the Consent Agenda
Item *5-d 
Approving and authorizing the City Manager to enter into a Purchase Agreement and a Development Agreement with Chicanos Por La Causa, Inc. for the development of approximately 2.5 acres of property, of which approximately 1.3 acres is City-owned, on the northwest corner of Country Club Drive and Main Street.
The Purchase and Development agreements will facilitate the development of a mixed-use, transit-oriented development. (District 4)
Attachments: 1. Council Report with Exhibits
2. Resolution
3. Development Agreement with Exhibits
4. Purchase Agreement with Exhibits

> ITEM 6: Take action on the following recommendation from the Audit, Finance and Enterprise Committee:
*6-a 19-0003
Accepting the City's Comprehensive Annual Financial Report (CAFR) for the Fiscal Year ended June 30, 2018
Accepting the City's Comprehensive Annual Financial Report (CAFR) for the Fiscal Year ended June 30, 2018.
Attachments: 1. Overview of Fiscal Year 2018 Comprehensive Annual
2. Presentation - Audit, Finance and Enterprise Committee
3. City of Mesa June 30 2018 CAFR
NOTE: Attachment 3 is 15.0 MB It's 191 Pages! ....takes a few minutes to download

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ITEM 7: Introduction of the following ordinances and setting January 28, 2019 as the date of the public hearing on these ordinances:

*7-a 19-0014 ZON18-00246 (District 4) 
Within the 400 and 500 blocks of North Center Street (east side); and within the 400 and 500 blocks of North Pima, North Lewis, and North Sirrine (both sides); and within the 500 block of North Pasadena north of 526 North Pasadena (both sides) (32.8± acres). 
Located east of Center Street and north of University Drive.
Rezone from RM-2, RM-2-HL, RM-4, DR-2, DR-2-HL, DR-3, DB-1, and LC to ID-2 and ID-2-HL.
This request will establish a zoning designation that reflects the historic development pattern of the area.
City of Mesa, applicant; multiple owners.
Staff Recommendation:  Approval with conditions

P&Z Board Recommendation:  Approval with conditions (6-1), as ratified on December 13, 2018

Page 9 City of Mesa Printed on 1/4/2019
January 7, 2019City Council Meeting Agenda - Final


*7-b 19-0032 ZON18-00688 (District 6) 
Within the 2100 to 2400 block of South Signal Butte Road (east side).  Located south of Baseline Road on the east side of Signal Butte Road (7.4 ± acres).  Rezoning from RM-2-PAD to RM-2-PAD-PAD; and Site Plan Review. 
This request will allow for an attached single-residence subdivision. 
Tim Nielsen, Farnsworth Construction Company, applicant
Sunland Springs Golf Company, LLP, owner.
Staff Recommendation:  Approval with conditions
P&Z Board Recommendation:  Approval with conditions (7-0), as ratified on December 13, 2018

*7-c 19-0034 ZON18-00692 (District 4) 
Within the 1000 block of East University Drive (north side).  Located west of Stapley Drive on the north side of University Drive (1± acres).  Rezoning from OC to RM-4. 
This request will allow for residential development.
Kempton Fuller, Arthereal Design, applicant
Wallin Holdings, LLC, owner.
Staff Recommendation:  Approval with conditions
P&Z Board Recommendation:  Approval with conditions (7-0), as ratified on December 13, 2018

*7-d 19-0035 ZON18-00693 (District 6) 
Within the 2800 and 2900 blocks of South Hawes Road (east side) and the 8400 block of East Guadalupe Road (south side).  Located at the southeast corner of Guadalupe Road and Hawes Road (10± acres).  Rezoning from RS-43 to RM-2-PAD-AF; and Site Plan Review. 
This request will allow for a multi-residential development.
Brennan Ray, Burch & Cracchiolo, applicant
Hawes Section Corner, LTD, Partnership, owner.
Staff Recommendation: Approval with conditions
P&Z Board Recommendation: Approval with conditions (7-0), as ratified on December 13, 2018

*7-e 19-0033 ZON18-00689 (District 6) 
Within the 3200 and 3300 blocks of South Power Road (east side).  Located north of Elliot Road on the east side of Power Road (9± acres).  Rezoning from LI-PAD to RM-2-PAD-AF; and Site Plan Review. 
This request will allow for a multi-residential development.
Brennan Ray, Burch & Cracchiolo, applicant
Garage Town, USA, LLC, owner.
For continuance to the March 18, 2019 City Council meeting.
Staff Recommendation:  Denial
P&Z Board Recommendation:  Denial (6-1), as ratified on December 13, 2018
> ITEM 8 Discuss, receive public comment, and take action on the following ordinances 

*8-a -18-1382 ZON18-00592 (District 6) 
Within the 10200 and 10300 blocks of East Hampton Avenue (south side).  Located north of U.S. 60, east of Crismon Road (17.7± acres).  Rezoning from LI and LI-BIZ to LC-PAD; Site Plan Review and Council Use Permit for multi-residence use in the LC zoning district. 
This request will allow for the development of a medical, commercial and residential mixed-use campus. 
Kevin Howard, Kevin B. Howard Architects, Inc., applicant
Ski Properties, LLC, VJ Crismon, LLC, Sterling Hospitality, LLC and Legacy Hospital, LLC, owner.
At the Planning and Zoning Board meeting, this request also included the consideration of Special Use Permits for a reduction in parking and assisted living. 
The Special Use Permits were approved by the Planning and Zoning Board subject to Council approval of the Rezoning, Site Plan and Council Use Permit.
Staff Recommendation: Approval with conditions
P&Z Board Recommendation: Approval (Vote: 5-0)


 

PENTAGON ADMITS AFGHANISTAN'S NEW BLACK HAWKS CAN'T MATCH ITS OLDER RUSS...

Inspector General Report
It's damning news
Published on Jan 7, 2019
Views: 730
This video is made under fair use policy, also this material is made from public published domain for people with hearing and seeing disability
A new official report raises serious concerns about whether the new helicopters will actually hurt the Afghan military's ability to operate.
BY JOSEPH TREVITHICK
http://www.thedrive.com/the-war-zone/...

Warthog Defense members are sharing stories, insider tips, news from the front lines, and unique slices of military life including the tough stuff of war.

Sunday, January 06, 2019

Updates On Opportunity Zones 2019

The hot topic of OZones has been featured multiple times of this blog for months, as faithful readers this site know well.
However, there's always more information to put in front of your eyes all the time.
Highlighted today are two reports from 03 January 2019, backed up with inserts of streaming vids [Trump signing the Opportunities & Jobs Act on December 12, 2017] + an audio to save you time on what is a lengthy and detailed post today that also features links to what the City of Mesa has published online with an excellent aerial Map.
Tomorrow's Mesa City Council Study Session at 5:15 pm starts off with a look at the City's Annual Financial Review for the fiscal years ending June 30, 2018.
The regular meeting will be presenting and discussing various ordinances and resolutions about more proposed real estate developments downtown that are within the OZone. 
Where Opportunity Zones stand, heading into 2019
The stage is set for Sean Parker’s pet project—now it’s time for the money to start rolling in
"When Trump’s tax overhaul became law a year ago, the real estate industry’s attention was focused on caps to the mortgage-interest deduction, plus state and local tax deductions—which the industry predicted would put the housing market in peril. (It didn’t.)
After the dust settled in the spring, the industry realized a hidden gem had been tucked away in the law: Opportunity Zones.
The brainchild of Silicon Valley financier Sean Parker,
Opportunity Zones allow investors to obtain massive tax advantages if they invest capital gains—money made on the sale of assets like a home, a business, or a piece of art—into “distressed” areas of the country where the post-financial crisis recovery passed by.
While the provision theoretically allows investors to put money into any type of project so long as it’s in a designated zone—a business, infrastructure, whatever—most observers believe it is especially attractive to real estate developers, partly because the largest tax benefits go to those who stay invested in the zone for at least 10 years.
Advocates for the program believe this could be a game-changing community development tool.
Given the horizon for these investments is quite far off, where do things currently stand?
While the Treasury guidance was mostly inside baseball for financial professionals, it seemed to open the flood gates for activity around Opportunity Zones, as firms announced their intention to jump into the space en masse. The firms interested tend to be private equity firms, which have experience in raising money for long-term financial projects—many of which already specialize in real estate development.
If the pitches arriving in the reporter's inbox are any indication, firms have been awfully busy making slide decks to pitch their Opportunity Zone projects to investors. Some ahead-of-the-curve outfits have already raised money, for example, private equity firm Virtua Partners, which is close to breaking ground on three Opportunity Zone projects in Arizona.
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One Opportunity Zone Fund Breaks Out Investor Participation
Penciling In Affordable
For many institutional funds ESG may translate into affordable housing.
One investment Virtua has made via one of its Opportunity Zone funds suggests that such investment opportunities could increase under the program.
Uldricks tells of an apartment building it is developing in Tempe, AZ, which is next to Arizona State University. There is an allocation to affordable housing within the apartment, which both Tempe and the university encouraged.
As it happened, Virtua already had this transaction in its pipeline but when it became clear that it qualified under the Opportunity Zone guidelines, “it became much quicker for us to raise the capital for that transaction,” Uldricks says. Also, he adds, without the Opportunity Zone qualification it is debatable whether the company would have been able to pencil in the affordable component.

The floodgates opened when the US Treasury Department released long-awaited proposed rules regarding the Opportunity Zones established under last year’s tax overhaul earlier this year.
“Investor interest has been, we’ll call it insatiable,” says Derek Uldricks, president of Virtua Capital Management, which launched one of the first Opportunity Zone funds earlier this year, even before the proposed clarifications were released . . .

Others were taking a wait-and-see approach but are now getting organized, such as Anthony Scaramucci, the short-lived communications chief for President Trump. His SkyBridge Capital firm hopes to raise money to invest in hotels in Oakland, industrial real estate, and a mixed-use multifamily/retail development in Washington, D.C.
Jared Kushner, the president’s son-in-law, has also been linked to Opportunity Zones through a private equity firm he holds a passive stake in called Cadre, although he holds no operational role at the company.
. . . Which brings us the primary criticism of the program.
because these projects will take years to build and more years for their impact to play out, we won’t know how Opportunity Zones affected people one way or the other for potentially another decade. Right now, investors and developers are still just getting organized.
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From Bloomberg News 
Will ‘Opportunity Zones’ Help the Rich, the Poor or Both?
2. Why so many?
Economic growth in the U.S. has been uneven. A handful of cities are booming, while much of the country -- from rural counties to aging Rust Belt towns -- get left behind. Giving investors an incentive to plow some of their $6 trillion in unrealized capital gains into these distressed communities could help jump-start growth, create jobs and lift incomes. Nearly all of the opportunity zones have poverty rates north of 20 percent or family incomes that are lower than 80 percent of the state or metro median. 
3. What’s the problem?
There’s a debate over whether investors will pile into places that were already seeing development. An analysis by the Urban Institute found that most of the zones are in fact hurting -- fewer than 4 percent had experienced an influx of wealthier, college-educated people that would signal gentrification . . .
> CRITICS also note that there’s no requirement that investments in opportunity zones benefit the community.
4. Whose idea is this?
It was hatched in a 2015 white paper by Jared Bernstein, who was an economic adviser to Joe Biden when he was vice president, and Kevin Hassett, who is now chairman of the Council of Economic Advisers for U.S. President Donald Trump. They wrote it for the Economic Innovation Group, a think tank co-founded by Sean Parker, the Napster creator and first president of Facebook Inc. A group of Republicans and Democrats introduced bills in the House and Senate to create opportunity zones in 2016, but the measures never reached a floor vote. One of the sponsors, Senator Tim Scott, a Republican from South Carolina, successfully pushed for a modified version that was tucked into the tax overhaul.
5. What are the tax breaks?
How Profits Grow in an Opportunity Zone
If a $100,000 capital gain is invested in an Opportunity Zone project, the amount subject to tax falls if the owner waits before selling

Source: Congressional Research Service
Assumes project value grows at 7 percent per year
8. What will the zones cost?
When the bill was being considered, the Joint Committee on Taxation told Congress that the opportunity zone tax breaks would cost about $1.6 billion through 2027. But the figure would rise after that, as developers claim capital-gains exemptions on the sale of projects in opportunity zones held for more than a decade. Since the program is open-ended, the final tally will ultimately depend on how much money investors plow into opportunity zones and the gains that they realize.
The Reference Shelf
  • FAQ from the IRS on opportunity zones and a report from the Congressional Research Service.
  • Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis’s Opportunity Zone Explorer.
  • A Pew report on how investment may bypass rural communities.
  • Bloomberg Businessweek on the potential and peril of opportunity zones.
  • Forbes cover story on how opportunity zones became law.
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Dec 12, 2018 - Uploaded by PBS NewsHour
The Opportunity Zone program promoted by Ivanka Trump and her husband Jared Kushner — both senior ...
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Where to Find Investment Opportunities in 'Opportunity Zones ...
https://www.bloomberg.com/.../where-to-find-investment-opportunities-in-opportunity-z...
Dec 27, 2018
Charles Clinton, EquityMultiple chief executive officer, discusses where the firm is finding opportunity in the

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3 days ago
After the dust settled in the spring, the industry realized a hidden gem had been tucked away in the law ...
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Opportunity Zones
                    
OppZonePPTphotoForWeb
The Opportunity Zones program is a federal program designed to spur community investment by providing tax benefits to investors. The City of Mesa has 11 census tracts that have been designated Opportunity Zones by the U.S. Department of the Treasury.
The map below highlights these tracts within the city boundaries.
Image result for opportunity zones
Mesa’s designated Opportunity Zones are anchored by four [six] central business districts:
  • Downtown Mesa
  • the Fiesta District
  • the Falcon District
  • the Gateway Area [Gateway Area North and Gateway Area South]
  • the Riverview District [added below]
The Aerial Mesa tool showcases what makes each district an ideal place to locate and grow a business, including the location of Opportunity Zones, Major Employers and Assets, New Development and Investments, and Development Opportunities.
To visit the Aerial Mesa tool and explore Mesa’s Opportunity Zones visit the links below.
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DOWNTOWN MESA Link > https://aerialsphere.com/city-of-mesa/downtown-mesa/

Source:
https://www.selectmesa.com/business-environment/incentives-programs/opportunity-zones

OPPORTUNITY ZONES:
A NEW INCENTIVE FOR INVESTING IN LOW-INCOME COMMUNITIES
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