Thursday, May 6, 2010

Bloomberg spending scrutinized (for the first time!)

From the Village Voice:

So you would think someone in the New York media would pay attention when CBC issues a "mixed" report on Bloomberg's eight-year expenditure of $63 billion on capital construction projects. It's the biggest price tag on any single government expenditure in the Bloomberg years, and the $8 billion a year towers over what any prior administration spent. Yet no one wrote a word.

CBC answers the question of what we got for this huge capital outlay -- and since it's borrowed money that has to be repaid, one giant bit at a time, out of the expense budget that covers day to day operations, we should all care.

The good news is that bridges, schools, and parks got better.

For example, the number of bridges rated in bad condition dropped from 8 to 3, and the number of bridges rated good or very good increased from 296 to 329. A hundred new schools with 95,800 seats were built. The city was improving only 322 acres of parkland a year in 2004, and that soared to 739 acres by fiscal year 2007, although parkland improvement dropped in the latest fiscal year to 457 acres.

Not so good with roads, with the number of streets rated good dipping from 82 percent to 70 percent.

And the real disaster was water mains and sewers. CBC says that the number of miles of new water mains "plummeted to an estimated 21.7," from 107.6 when Bloomberg took office. Similarly, 33.6 miles of sewers were constructed and 38.5 miles were reconstructed in 2002, but only 8.8 miles and 7.5 miles were constructed and reconstructed in the latest fiscal year.

Without really commenting on the city's capital funded housing program, CBC assessed the biggest new growth area in the capital budget -- economic development, noting that Bloomberg spent $2 billion on these projects. Another $2 billion is slated to be spent in the next four years -- on controversial development projects like Willets Point and Coney Island. CBC's Maria Doulis tells the Voice that this is twice the city's economic development expenditures in the prior eight years, and that "even indexed for construction cost increases, it's still higher by 55 percent."

"The rationale for making such investments is that they will generate new economic activity," says the mayor's favorite budget group, "however, little or no analytic evidence of such benefits is publicly available."

7 comments:

Anonymous said...

And read the article from Tom Robbins about the mayors home movies on his waste of tax money to tape every move he makes every where he goes, shelved, and then shown to us little citizens at his directing. The same way rightwing Berlusconi does in Italy with his media owned TV outlets.


The City's TV Station Is All Bloomberg, All The Time
NYC Media, making Mayor Bloomberg's home movies

Tom Robbins Tuesday, May 4 2010

http://www.villagevoice.com/2010-05-04/columns/nyc-life-bloomberg-business-trips/

Anonymous said...

The nyc.gov city owned and paid for website is more of the same.

Anonymous said...

It's interesting to see weeklies such Village Voice and The Observer scrutinizing the Mayor.

But why aren't Daily News, NY Post, NY Times, doing their jobs?

Mortimer Snot said...

Is that dullard pickin' his nose...again???

Anonymous said...

The media doesn't say much about Mayor Moneybags because they have all been paid off. This way, nothing bad is every printed about him and his huge ego.

Anonymous said...

I think having crews cover bloomberg is a question of emergency preparedness.

Anonymous said...

Look I am not a huge fan of Mayor Mike, but I certainly think the city would have gone to pot in the hands of Mark Green or Freddy Ferrer. And to be fair, I agree that some of the major daily papers have gone light on Bloomie - probably for different reasons than they were "paid off." But Tom Robbins seems to me to be a big loser. His attacks are childish sometimes, and seemingly speculative. His articles over the past few years are all borderline National Enquirer material, localized for New York City. And he seems to have a real grudge against Bloomberg. Its like some personal vendetta. Like he was denied a job as a journo at Bloomberg LP or something. So that's probably why he takes aim at Katherine Oliver, Arick Wierson, Chris Coffey and other members of Bloomberg's inner circle - to try to get under the mayor's skin. Its actually entertaining, but as a reader of average intelligence, I can say I hope no one takes Robins' rants that seriously.

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