With the announcement of the proposed #MAPS4 package for consideration by Council at Tuesday's meeting, I feel compelled to share my thoughts and where my head is and has been during this process.
I ran my campaign for City Council w/ the core value that caring for our most vulnerable neighbors creates a community that works better for everyone. Robust transit gets people to work, healthcare, groceries, & entertainment...
Affordable housing ensures we use tax-payer resources effectively in prevention rather than emergency services; complete streets enables families to feel safe when their kids walk or bike to school and people with mobility devices can safely navigate our streets.
Like many, I see the shift in this MAPS package that begins to address many of those needs in our community - it's certainly promising that so many human & neighborhood needs are included in this proposal.
However, I fear that many of those projects started out compromising the true needs with the fear that they might not get included if their request was "too big".
In fact, since I have been involved in this process since April when I was sworn into office, the originally projected numbers for the projects haven't changed much - and the numbers that did change were all in the group of proposals related to human & neighborhood level needs.
That concerns me because many of those needs are already huge and I am concerned that while the investment may sound big now, the solution will just begin to scratch the surface as the need grows larger.
In my time working in social services, I've learned the mantra & hold true to the idea that we "can't sacrifice the good for the perfect". However, I'm not sure that advocates don't sometimes use that phrase to start out compromising rather than making the big, bold asks we need.
I recognize that by sharing these thoughts I might be seen as "bomb throwing" or "not being a team player". I suppose I'm willing to risk those criticisms to share my thoughts & struggles with this proposed package because I suspect I'm not the only person with these thoughts.
I think I'm also willing to risk those criticisms because I believe there is value in my being transparent and honest and open to the conversation that will result from the process.
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FWIW, I’ll be voting no on this. I did vote to send it to a ballot, which I somewhat regret not making this more of a conversation at the time, but after thinking on it more, the way this came to Council felt rushed and not very thoughtful.
We weren’t presented much data at all about how much of this tax is actually collected from visitors vs residents of OKC who, due to housing insecurity, are living in motels (although I’m not sure there even is a good way to get that info, tbh).
Additionally, I think we could be doing a better job of working to make sure our tourism economy is really supporting good, dependable jobs for locals + promoting our commercial districts more robustly.
While I'm sure most folks can assume my thoughts & feelings about the recent incident of OKCPD officers shooting someone threatening suicide & I have become hesitant to make statements about these things bc of the abuse often hurled my way, I feel the need to say a few things...
We leave many of our institutions related to health, well-being, & connection defunded - which then leads to crisis situations we react to with calls for more police to address crises they are not equipped to address. While I don't know this individual's specific circumstance...
...suicidality is regularly precipitated by a loss of hope. Life circumstances and personal biology often converge to make a person feel like hope for change is lost and the perceived solution is ending their life.
Curious to know where all those “bodily autonomy” folks shouting “freedom” at the Council meeting last August are in this conversation.
Or maybe they’re ready to admit that for many, it was never about freedom but more about who is/isn’t subject to control by the state.
Cause here’s the thing - living in this country many shout “FREEDOM” when they are told they’ll be subject to a rule that is supposed to be about addressing harms to others or themselves.
But those rules are more typically skewed to address behaviors that are perceived as harmful by a certain perspective/viewpoint…and often informed by very bad causation/correlation mis-attributions. This whole rights “rooted in US history” is saying the quiet part out loud.