Posted on 04/22/2020 8:28:50 AM PDT by a fool in paradise
Houston State Senator Paul Bettencourt is calling on Mayor Sylvester Turner to halt controversial public housing projects until the coronavirus shutdown is over.
The Houston Housing Authority claims it cannot provide public records on the planned 84-million-dollar land deals because it is closed for business, all while theyre moving ahead to close on the real estate deals.
It is anti-transparency, says Sen. Bettencourt. Just because youve got a COVID pandemic, theres nothing that should suspend public knowledge of these projects and you shouldnt use that as a reason not to provide the information. The mayor should not be proceeding.
The Chairman of the Senate Property Tax Committee raises an even bigger alarm for Houstonians. Dozens of projects approved by the Houston Housing Authority will take as much as $1 billion of value off the tax roll, creating a windfall for a few developers. That will mean a loss every year of nearly $11 million to HISD, $4 million to Harris County and millions more to the city to pay for firefighters and police.
In San Antonio, a similar taxing break resulted in a $10 million profit for developer NRP in a single year. The company is also developing the East End project here in Houston.
Whats worse, says Bettencourt, is that the members of the HHA arent elected, but appointed by the Mayor without even City Council approval.
Harris County Commissioner Jack Cagle says this is simply unfair.
What Im most concerned about is that taxpayers are now having to pay more, and others are having to pay less without it coming through the entities that should have to make that decision, Cagle said.
The Houston Housing Authority is just starting to pop these things out like popcorn and thats not what the law was designed for, says Bettencourt. The problem is when you dont have elected officials ratifying these decisions theres no accountability at all.
I can guarantee you that one bill Im going to file next session is that these deals have to be approved by city council and all taxing entities that are losing the income, says Bettencourt.
One of Houstons biggest apartment developers calls these tax-exempt public housing projects insane.
Its a shady little deal, says Eric Barvin of the Barvin Group. I think it is a real tragedy for the City of Houston. I mean taxpayers should be outraged by this whole thing.
The planned EADO 800 project just south of Buffalo Bayou in the East End includes 5 acres of contaminated land, and the rest of the planned housing project will be surrounded on three sides by contaminated property.
Based on the limited records available, it appears the mostly low-income apartments will end up costing about $260,000 a piece to build, tens of thousands more than the average first-class apartment complexes.
Can we be real? It would be far cheaper to give every low-income family a check for any apartment in town, or buy them a house in the suburbs and a luxury car with a gas credit card where the schools are better anyway, says Wayne Dolcefino, President of the Houston-based investigative media firm, Dolcefino Consulting.
The public housing story has curious political connections. The wife of Harris County Commissioner Rodney Ellis and the former city public housing chairman Lance Gilliam are cashing in on virtually every recent city housing contract.
Dolcefino Consulting has been exposing the Houston Housing Authority deals on Facebook and on www.dolcefino.com.
The Houston Housing Authority Board of Commissioners is meeting at 3 p.m. on Tuesday, April 21, 2020 by telephone conference.
https://dolcefino.com/wayne-dolcefino/
Wayne Dolcefino is one of the nations most decorated journalists.
Thirty Emmy Awards from the National Academy of Television Arts and Sciences, Five Charles Green Awards, an Edward R. Murrow award, a Jack Howard Award for investigative reporting, numerous honors from the Associated Press and Texas Association of Broadcasters, and an unprecedented three medals from the international journalism organization Investigative Reporters and Editors.
For nearly 27 years, Dolcefino headed up the 13 Undercover Unit at abc13 KTRK-TV Eyewitness News. The 13 Undercover investigative unit specialized in exposing public corruption, wasted taxpayer money, government malfeasance and fraud. As head of the unit, Dolcefino managed the investigative process, and was involved in the marketing and advertising of KTRK-TVs investigative news product.
Between 1979 and 1985, Dolcefino was an investigative reporter and radio talk show host at NewsRadio 740 KTRH-AM radio.
Prior to that he worked at NewsRadio KLBJ 590AM Radio in Austin, Texas.
In December 2012 Dolcefino created Dolcefino Consulting. This firm consults on crisis management, ethics reviews, informational marketing and media relations and provides production, investigative services and expert testimony in litigation.
Dolcefino has significant experience in courtroom litigation relating to first amendment issues.
Learn more about Dolcefino Consulting.
Sylvester Turner is competent compared to his predesessor. That isn’t saying much.
We the People will need to be the ones policing all this...
My brother and his wife lived in Tomball, had a nice big house with an HGTV kitchen and a “cement pond”. It sold for less than $260K
State Senator Paul Bettencourt is the former county tax assessor and looking at this. He also appears on 700AM KSEV radio in Houston on occasion.
Disclaimer: Opinions posted on Free Republic are those of the individual posters and do not necessarily represent the opinion of Free Republic or its management. All materials posted herein are protected by copyright law and the exemption for fair use of copyrighted works.