Archived Ants
Tuesday
Oct152024

ISSUE #275: Is Subsidized Housing the New Aspen Idea? (6/21/24)

"One of the epidemics in our industry is 

the abuse of power."

-- Nancy Dubuc

Is there anywhere where “more” subsidized housing in Aspen is not appropriate? 

Apparently not. With the recent proposal to add subsidized housing at the historic Red Butte Cemetery after failed attempts to do so in 2008 and 2014, we have crossed into truly disturbing territory. (See below to take CRITICAL action on the First Reading of an Ordinance - p. 58 - that will enable such development at TUESDAY's council meeting.) First it was in low-density neighborhoods, but now as we contemplate desecrating our parks and sacrosanct burial grounds, it’s time to ask ourselves whether every “green field” of town is fair game. “More” is limitless. But is “more” actually what’s best for the community? 

At the rate we’re going – cramming subsidized housing into every possible nook and cranny in order to “solve” a problem we refuse to define and quantify, we are actually making things worse. Think about our community values as articulated in the 2012 Aspen Area Community Plan. “We have a long-standing history and ethic of growth management” to “preserve open space and rural character,” acknowledging since the 1970s that “the time is fast approaching where we will be at the maximum in economy, physical space and quality of life.”

Consider for a moment a 80’ x 60’ footprint. This could fit well within the dead-space tragedy known as Galena Plaza, adjacent to the Taj Mahal city hall atop the parking garage. This is coincidentally the footprint of the 84-story, 1400’ tall, 572,000 sf Steinway Tower in NYC. Imagine a tower of that size: enough space to house all 3 phases of Burlingame AND The Lumberyard. Why wouldn’t we break ALL the rules, and break them just once?  And then never talk about “more” housing again. I’m kidding. Kinda. Just think of the great views for the beleaguered masses who WANT to live in Aspen affordably in the very best location. No parking would be needed and there’d be just one HOA to manage. Best of all? No sprawl and no infill of neighborhoods, parks and cemeteries. Maybe THEN the community might stop its perpetual whining about a constant and ongoing need for “more” housing. LOL. I digress. 

But recently reading about the lengths local employers are willing (forced?) to go in order to house their own employees, it’s quite remarkable. The Aspen Institute, Aspen Music Festival & School and Aspen Center for Physics are soon to submit a land use application for proprietary housing on the Aspen Meadows campus, intended for full and part-time staff, interns, students, musicians and visiting physicists. The little historic Victorian at 205 W. Main was (sadly) approved for conversion into 8000 sf of nine 2- and 3-bedroom units (22 total bedrooms) on the 7500 sf lot where the residing ~44 souls employed by the nearby Mollie hotel will fight over not only living space but the 7 on-site parking spaces. We’re clearly now more than willing to compromise our strict design standards to cram in “more” housing just about anywhere. 

Then there are the hospital and the school districts, both well on their ways to self-reliance on their own housing inventory. Hospital workers and teachers, hmmmm. Good for them.  And good for us.  So who exactly is living in APCHA housing then?  Oh, that’s right. The elephant. As in “the elephant in the room.”  In other words, we don’t know. We don’t know because we deliberately choose not to. It’s willful ignorance of the highest order; a decision in bad faith to avoid being actually informed about something for fear of the facts that might reveal some surprises and require some unpopular decisions.

Aspen’s old guard (the Mick Ireland/Rachel Richards cabal) has always ranted against housing that is tied to employment for fear of becoming “a company town,” yet in the same breath they demand employers pay their own way by providing housing for their own workers. So which is it? Who then exactly is APCHA for?  Beware of the answer because it’s certainly not workers.  We know we’re not housing “essential” hospital and school workers, which completely undermines and renders obsolete the whole point of what we’ve been told APCHA is supposed to be providing for the community! The new term is “community housing.” Think: retirees and others who WANT to live affordably in Aspen! Workers be damned.

Meanwhile, Pitkin County is looking to partner with Basalt to build more subsidized housing. The municipality has land but not the necessary funding. The county has money but no land. It’s not yet a match made in heaven, but consider: priority will likely be given to Basalt workers. Fine, but why then is any kind of “priority” for APCHA housing shamed as being “anti-community-housing”?  Why is the APCHA portfolio beyond any reasonable oversight, direction or control? 

The entire regional housing debate has dramatically morphed into a progressive “building community through housing ownership” diktat, ignoring the harsh economic realities of the exceedingly high cost of real estate and living here. Housing security (which has become synonymous with “ownership”) is now a local social justice goal.  Apparently you can't be part of a community anymore if you rent! The Carbondale chapter of Habitat for Humanity strives to build homes for $305/sf and sell them for $200/sf, targeting these units for “teachers, nurses and other essential workers,” according to Aspen Journalism. Where have we heard THAT before?  H4H also boldly cites a “2019 housing study” that cites a 5700 unit housing shortfall between Aspen and Parachute by 2027.

B***S***. 

There’s no question that the region (Aspen to Parachute) generates more DEMAND for housing than it has, but is demand the same thing as need? Not in my book. (The region is awesome – who wouldn’t WANT to live here? That is not economic demand, that’s desire.)

I have debunked the 2019 Regional Housing Study numerous times, including by actually reading it and then by calling the principal of EPS, the consultancy that wrote the report to inquire about the methodology employed to generate the ESTIMATES that are widely circulated (see above) as scientific fact by local subsidized housing zealots. I was told in no uncertain terms that “there was no methodology,” just educated guesses, and as luck would have it, the low-level staffer who generated this work product is no longer with the firm. This same report is the source of the widely reiterated current “housing shortfall” estimate of 4000 units for Aspen-Snowmass. These numbers are clumsy, liberal and non-scientific. (LMK if you'd like to see it and I'll email it to you.) Furthermore, without a truly scientific “census” of what we currently have and how it’s utilized, there is no basis upon which to base ANY measurement of current or future “need.” Do not be fooled.

I am sick of the scare tactics and false reporting. You should be too, especially when the City of Aspen is seriously contemplating a ballot measure for this November that would extend the 1% real estate transfer tax (RETT) for housing until 2060 in order to issue bonds for the estimated $500 million+ construction of The Lumberyard. (As it stands, the current RETT does not sunset until 2040, and the collection balance through May 2024 is just over $10 million.) It seems mighty premature to extend this tax without far more housing-specific due diligence!!

Specifically, why isn’t there more and louder outcry about the utilization of our existing APCHA inventory?

Housing at any cost has somehow become widely accepted. It makes me sick, but it continues. If that no longer scares you, housing ANYWHERE really ought to. Former county commissioner and current Open Space and Trails board member Michael Kinsley (one of the proud fathers of APCHA) shared his admittedly heretical view that half of Aspen’s municipal golf course and a portion of the Marolt Open Space are ideal for “more” subsidized housing. His radical solutions espouse deliberately ignoring “governmental, jurisdictional boundaries to solve regional problems.” Predictably, he too all but contradicts himself when he admits that Aspen proper is no longer suitable – despite its original intent – for integrating its diverse social strata, implying that some workers prefer to live outside of Aspen for various reasons. Therefore, he sees the glaring need for a viable way for working people to get to work in Aspen. I can get onboard with that.

And then there’s the June 2024 Northwest Council of Governments (NWCOG) regional economic update report which outlines the Q4 2023 jobs and wage data for the six counties: Eagle, Grand, Jackson, Pitkin, Routt and Summit. It’s interesting info if you have the stomach for it. Thanks to the willing assistance of a fabulous data-mining expert co-conspirator, here are the highlights, which really ought to inform local decisions. (Wouldn’t that be something?!)

 

** See table below - my tech inabilities prevent me from inserting it here!!

·      Look at the ratio of Total Employment to Total Labor Force in Pitkin County relative to the other counties. We have FAR fewer people in our labor force relative to total jobs, which means we inherently have to import more workers than most counties.

·      Look at the ratio of Housing Units to Total Employment. We’re one of the few counties with fewer housing units than jobs, which means we inherently have to import more workers than most counties.

·      Notably, Pitkin County is fortunate NOT to show up among the counties with the highest population growth.

·      And, we’re more than fortunate to have the highest wages for resort jobs, which make up 38% of our economy.

Notably:

·      If we try to build our way out of our worker housing shortage (increase the labor force by increasing subsidized/deed restricted housing), then we would certainly show up with high population growth, a result that creates its own challenges and negative impacts to our quality of life.

·      Better utilization of the existing housing inventory we already have is the obvious low-hanging fruit.

·      To echo Michael Kinsley, a shift in focus toward wholesale improvement of transportation for commuting workers to Pitkin County would dramatically improve our ability to fill the jobs that we cannot mathematically fill with our existing labor force.

Food for thought. And data to back it up. But it’s nothing new: it simply doesn’t make sense to exert all of our bonding authority and put these and other tax revenues into the proposed Lumberyard basket when this most certainly won’t move the needle under the current APCHA mismanagement and poor inventory allocation. Any potential funding is far better being spent on transportation improvements for the actual workers who commute to service our local economy.

And one last consideration for the Bolsheviks who still see government-subsidized housing as the panacea, the answer to being able to live where one grew up and something that one should be able to pass on to one’s kids. Take a look at Vienna, the fastest growing capital in Europe where the city builds 6000-7000 new units of subsidized housing a year to keep up with rising demand. (Population has increased 25% since 1989. That’s serious growth!) Vienna supports its housing program with a 1% tax on ALL salaries, creating a permanent funding mechanism that originated at the end of the first world war. Notably, social welfare systems like this require very high taxation in general, and in Vienna, everyone pays the 1% income tax specifically for housing. If people want to live in a small government apartment for life and even leave it to their kids, great, but they pay for the privilege on an ongoing basis with income taxes. While a wise person might wish to amass wealth privately, away from the grasping hand of government, Vienna’s system does offer a unique option. Never mind that it more closely resembles social welfare than actual workforce housing. Could this be the direction we’re headed?

I know, I know, it’s been a minute. Don’t despair. I have several future issues in the works! EM

Re: Housing at Red Butte Cemetery: What part of "cemetery" does the City of Aspen not understand in terms of appropriateness for subsidized housing? I don't care if it's one unit or 100, a cemetery is a sacred space for the burial of the dead. This ill-conceived idea has been considered and denied before, and resulted in the proper zoning of Red Butte Cemetery as a "Park," granting it protection from development on par with Wagner, Paepcke and all of our other city "Parks." Housing at the cemetery is a perverse use of this sacred land. Please write council TODAY to voice your strong objections. This is insane.

Thursday
May232024

ISSUE #274: APCHA's Property Tax Hustle  (5/21/24)

"To force a man to pay for the violation of his own liberty is indeed an addition of insult to injury."

-- Benjamin Tucker

Amid the furor over dramatically increased property valuations and taxes for 2023, it was brought to my attention that a simple search of the Pitkin County (PitCo) Assessor’s website by local political apparatchik of one’s choosing demonstrates notable DECREASES in their (deed restricted housing) property tax bills for the same period. Here’s a subset of the sample that was shared with me:

1.             City manager Sara Ott owns a Water Place home. 2022 actual value was $249,000, and that decreased 22% to $194,000 for 2023. Her taxes for 2022 were $634.60, and that decreased 38% to $391.40 for 2023.

2.             Aspen community development director Ben Anderson owns a 550 Employee Housing Fund Condominium. 2022 actual value was $196,800 and that decreased 28% to $141,800 for 2023. His taxes for 2022 were $501.52, and these decreased 43% to $286.00 for 2023.

3.             APCHA assistant director Cindy Christensen owns a Juan Street unit. 2022 actual value was $320,800 and that decreased 10% to 288,800 for 2023. Her taxes for 2022 were $817.56, and these decreased 29% to $582.56 for 2023.

4.             APCHA board member and ACRA exec Alycin Bektesh owns a Benedict Commons unit. 2022 actual value was $171,500, and that decreased 27% to $125,900 for 2023. Her taxes for 2022 were $437.00, and these decreased 42% to $254.12 for 2023.

5.             Former mayor and county commissioner Rachel Richards owns a Hunter Creek unit. 2022 actual valuation was $187,800 and that decreased 26% to $139,200 for 2023. Her taxes for 2022 were $478.44, and these decreased 41% to $280.88 for 2023.

6.             Former mayor and county commissioner Mick Ireland owns a Common Ground unit. 2022 actual valuation was $152,400 and that decreased 27% to $111,100 for 2023. His taxes for 2022 were $194.12, and these decreased 42% to $112.00 for 2023.

It turns out that the Colorado legislature passed SB 23B-1 in November that reduced residential assessment rates for 2023 from 6.765% to 6.7%, and exempted Colorado homeowners from the first $55K of their home’s value for taxation. Still, with APCHA’s numbers all over the board, it’s diffficult to determine how the 2023 valuations were determined.  

When queried about this unusual scenario, APCHA pointed to “appreciation” (3% or CPI, whichever is less, annually) for what created the differentials, until another example was presented that does not appear to have taken appreciation into account. In short, it’s simply impossible to verify APCHA’s math:

“(County commissioner) Kelly McNicholas-Kury owns a Burlingame II unit. Its 2022 actual valuation was $254,000 and that decreased 14% to $217,600 for 2023.  She bought this unit on 8/23/2021 for $266,619, so this unit has lost about 20% of its value since closing. Her taxes for 2022 were $647.08, and these decreased 32% to $438.96 for 2023. Where is the appreciation?” Same with Sara Ott’s above. To the knowledge of The Red Ant, this inquiry was never addressed. 

This entire curious revelation illustrates a legally problematic reality and systemic deficiency for how the county allocates the local property tax burden. For assessment purposes, free market property valuation is determined by what a new owner would pay in the current market, in other words, “the market approach.” APCHA and other deed restricted properties, on the other hand, are valued based on an owner’s basis in his/her unit – what they originally paid for it. Using this methodology, since deed restricted properties infrequently change hands, in addition to the original public subsidy, the property taxes on deed restricted properties are further subsidized forever, even as property taxes on free market properties soar. 

This ongoing shift of the local property tax burden from the deed restricted sector to the free market sector is not only unfair, it is also illegal.

It’s important to understand just how PitCo’s deed restricted properties are actually valued today. It’s simply mind-boggling. While the county assessor is required by law to value all real properties every two years (CRS 39-5-101), for deed restricted accounts, her office is merely “given” property valuations by third parties: Snowmass Village, Basalt, City of Aspen, APCHA and Habitat for Humanity!  And no, the assessor’s office does not verify any of this info; it just takes the submitted data and uploads it into the system. 

This current system for deed restricted properties relies on a “savings account” approach to valuation where each individual deed restricted property has its own accrued valuation account that reflects its individual cost basis and appreciation over the period of ownership. The complexities of this approach are surely where many errors originate as the examples above show how the methodology is unevenly applied. Plus, this approach is inconsistent with the law (CRS 39-1-103.5) which states, “The actual valuation of residential property shall be determined solely by consideration of the market approach to appraisal.” The market approach reflects what a willing buyer would pay. And in APCHA’s case, such prices are set. It’s very straightforward and there would be zero additional burden to the assessor’s office to use these figures.

The assessor cites APCHA’s position that its Intergovernmental Agency (IGA) status gives it the authority to value deed restricted properties, but in reviewing this IGA as well as Colorado law (CRS 29-1-204.5) that enables housing authorities, there is NOTHING that takes statutory valuation authority away from the duly elected county assessor and gives it to APCHA! (Furthermore, how can it be legal to delegate such responsibility to a non-governmental entity such as Habitat for Humanity?)

A fellow co-conspirator obtained the property valuation data submitted by APCHA for the current billing cycle and dug in, discovering many, many errors, including errors of omission. The APCHA data showed 1654 units when the assessor’s website cites 2132 units, a difference of 478. (Once this was brought to the attention of the assessor, most were identified but there are still some units that are accounted for.)

According to an email exchange shared with The Red Ant, the assistant county attorney defends Pitco’s practice, despite its clear illegalities, despite refuting APCHA’s assertion of authority that it doesn’t have, stating that the system has been used “for many years,” as if that makes it okay. He also says accepting third party data is purely at the assessor’s discretion. The assessor, Deb Bamesberger, on the other hand, feels that her hands are tied – a clear reflection of the power APCHA wields not only over those in its program, but also over various city and county departments. It’s time to sort this out.

Deed restricted property valuations are NOT being conducted by the elected PitCo assessor as required by law! It is entirely unfair for the assessor to have to accept third-party work product and use it to determine property tax billings. She currently has to sign off of these assessments and represent to voters that she did her job, despite not verifying any of the information she has been given. Just say no! Pitco assessor Deb Bamesberger, stand up for yourself and for the voters who elected you! Do not let APCHA bully you and dictate anything pertaining to property values! 

As you might imagine, the state requires an audit of property valuations, however, the assessor clarifies that the state only reviews select free market accounts. There is zero quality control because the deed restricted data is not audited by anyone. So it’s true, there are indeed two systems for property valuation: one for the free market and another for deed restricted properties. Are you actually surprised?

Today with PitCo deed restricted property valuations, we are effectively operating within a “garbage in, garbage out” structure, where the system is only as good as the data received from third parties. It’s time to make some fundamental changes that are far simpler than one might imagine. And legal! 

To begin with, the assessor needs to assert herself. If the county attorney says the current system is in place at her discretion, well then, demand a change. Refuse to accept third party data. And c’mon BOCC, how about standing up for your fellow elected official in the name of following the law and demonstrating transparency to your constituents!

Next, change the methodology and adhere to the law. The market approach to property valuation is the only acceptable and legal method of property valuation. Period.

Two identical 2-bedroom units at Burlingame 2 of the same category under a market approach would have identical valuations based on the current set price for these units. But the savings account approach would yield different valuations that reflect the individual owners’ purchase price and accrued appreciation. This is wrong on too many levels to list, and serves to artificially keep property tax bills low (and often decreasing) while shifting more and more of the tax burden onto the free market.

It’s time to put APCHA on notice that its rogue ways must end. The chronic lack of transparency and toxic “it’s always been done this way” mentality only further serve to discredit the corrupt entity, not that its reputation could get much worse! And I’m talking to you, city manager Sara Ott. Making APCHA into a city department and managing the APCHA executive director as a direct report is proving to be a fatally failed model that will be the housing program’s undoing.

On a positive note, Assessor Deb Bamesberger is no APCHA apologist. She was elected to her position in 2018 and re-elected in 2022. Keep in mind that she defeated Mick Ireland (62% - 38%), whose potential reign of terror and the havoc he would have created in this role cannot be understated. It’s imperative that we support Deb as she too uncovers and addresses more “it’s always been done this way” BS in her own office and works to make the necessary improvements. In this case, there are 18 months before the next property valuations are due. Again, it’s an easy fix and it’s incumbent on all of us to encourage and support Deb in her efforts to clean up this mess. Encourage her via email HERE(assessormail@pitkincounty.com).

One more related thing for Deb to clean up regarding APCHA over-stepping its authority: amid the revelatory “Torre-and-APCHA-cheated-to-give-him-housing” saga, I learned that the assessor’s office only records the sale price of APHCA transactions, not the purchase price. For example, since APCHA takes momentary ownership in the chain of title when units trade, the price APCHA pays the seller is always left blank in official records, yet the buyer’s purchase price is listed. When I asked why, guess what I was told? Yep. “It’s always been done this way.”  

What is APCHA hiding? I can imagine that, with simple annual appreciation of 3% or CPI – whichever is less, it’s entirely possible that APCHA is buying units for one price and then re-selling them at the unit set price which could actually be less. This “gap” is not currently visible to the public due to the lack of full and proper disclosure, making it impossible to know how APCHA is hiding or manipulating its finances, and might just be yet another public subsidy we were not previously aware of. 

Clean this up! In the name of transparency, the assessor must cease accepting incomplete property transaction data from APCHA immediately and transition to a cleaner, simpler and more transparent “market approach” to deed restricted property valuation that is easily accessed and verified.

 



 
Tuesday
Apr232024

ISSUE #273: Ireland's Inquisitions Are a Losing Bet for APCHA  (4/23/24)

"I ruin everything I touch."

-- Inspector Jacques Clouseau

A long-time local family has recently been vindicated after a five-year witch hunt by APCHA and its resentful and power-hungry hearing officer, housing zealot Mick Ireland. 

Tipped off by neighbors in 2019, APCHA alleged that North 40 residents Cameron and Tricia McIntyre were in violation of their deed restriction by additionally owning local residential real estate through an LLC called “CMTR.”

Slapped with a notice of violation that accused them of controlling CMTR, which holds title to a free market Aspen townhome on Park Circle, the McIntyres were directed to sell either their North 40 home or the Park Circle property. So they lawyered up and requested a formal hearing.

Enter Mick, Aspen’s former mayor, a former county commissioner, and today APCHA’s official hearing officer, whose zeal for retribution and bullying tactics over the course of a 3-day hearing generated a ruling that Tricia “effectively owned” the Park Circle property through CMTR which he deemed was her “alter ego.” He then ordered the McIntyres to sell their North 40 property within 90 days. Not the free market property, the APCHA one. (He made the independent decision to force the sale of the APCHA property – their home – surely because of the financial windfall associated with a sale of the free market property. He simply could not tolerate the idea of the McIntyre’s profiting by what he saw as a violation, and at the same time, attempted to exact the harshest possible punishment.)

The McIntyres then sued APCHA, challenging the decision of the government body and its officer to determine whether the officer exceeded his jurisdiction or abused his discretion with his ruling.

Notable Facts:

 ·      CMTR, LLC is actually legally owned by the McIntyre’s two adult sons who are the LLC’s sole members. Any gains, losses and tax responsibilities are borne by the sons, not Tricia and Cameron.

·      CMTR holds title to the Park Circle property that is not part of APCHA’s portfolio, therefore it is not subject to any APCHA deed restriction.

·      The McIntyre sons don’t owe any duties to APCHA.

·      The 1996/1997-era deed restriction on the McIntyre’s North 40 home does not preclude their sons (individually or through an LLC) from owning local residential real estate.

·      The McIntyre sons contracted with Tricia to manage their LLC. She is their mother, after all.

·      Tricia McIntyre “managing” CMTR’s real estate interests is not unusual nor is it unlawful.

Lo and behold, it was no surprise to anyone but APCHA when the district court ruled in favor of the McIntyres, and excoriated Ireland in the process: 

He MISAPPLIED CORPORATE VEIL PIERCING doctrine, employed only under extraordinary circumstances by the courts to impose liability on individual shareholders for a corporation’s obligations. It is “not a fact-finding mechanism for administrative agencies,” the judge wrote. Furthermore, Mick’s use of this doctrine to make a factual conclusion about CMTR’s ownership and ordering injunctive relief (requiring the McIntyres to sell their home) was was an ABUSE OF DISCRETION and not recognized by the law.

((Edited to include: The judge ruled that Mick had no authority to assert the equitable power of piercing the corporate veil. This is only reserved for actual judges. Mick really thinks he is a judge!))

Ireland had concluded that CMTR was used to perpetrate fraud but the judge ruled this was not supported by evidence. “Controlling and owning an LLC are distinctly different under the law.” (Tricia’s contracted management of the property is not the same thing as owning it, nor does this justify corporate veil-piercing. And there is nothing in the North 40 deed restriction that bars Tricia from “controlling” property.)

In addition, Ireland went far beyond what is contemplated in the McIntyre’s North 40 deed restriction (circa 1996/1997), which plainly states remedies for established breaches, therefore his arbitrary administrative declaration to force a sale was BEYOND HIS AUTHORITY.

And perhaps most damning, CMTR wasn’t even a party to the proceedings. The matter was between the McIntyre parents and APCHA. Mick LACKED JURISDICTION over CMTR yet made a judgment that EXCEEDED HIS AUTHORITY that amounted to an ABUSE OF DISCRETION.

In other words, Mick’s quasi-judicial jackassery went far beyond the matter at hand, and in the end proved only costly to the public who now owes the McIntyres. (In late February, the district court VACATED and SET ASIDE Ireland’s ruling and order, and according to a recent filing, the McIntyres are entitled to legal fees which currently exceed $168,000.)

But APCHA intends to appeal. The APCHA board is so focused on what they perceive to be a violation because how could an APCHA-housed family possibly have sons who could purchase local real estate. They not only let loose their angry pitbull on an innocent family, no one at the housing authority took the time to look at the McIntyre’s deed restriction to ascertain what is and isn’t permitted, nor the corporate documents of CMTR which plainly show ownership solely by the McIntyre sons. It is jealous rage, pure and simple, and notably outrageous given that two APCHA board members are executives at local banks, who one would think might be able to read and understand basic corporate documents.

The APCHA board is surely aware now of what’s at stake. The initial investigation, followed by Ireland’s hearing and the judge’s ruling have now unleashed a problem for APCHA that no one contemplated with the original issue. Instead of doing proper due diligence and determining the McIntyre’s compliance was NOT affected by the real estate investments of their sons, APCHA has now written and published the blueprint for how any APCHA owner can now purchase local real estate as long as they do it quietly through an LLC.

“Corporate veil piercing” cannot be employed for “fishing expeditions” like Ireland’s, so who would ever know? APCHA can’t use this to prove it. In short, because assets only matter on the day one purchases APCHA property, local free market real estate ownership is now possible for APCHA owners; yet another outlandish benefit for those “in the system.” 

So here we are. With savvy financial planning, annual gifts and lifetime exemptions, any APCHA owner can also give their kids money and that money can be invested in Aspen real estate though an LLC unless specifically prohibited by one's individual deed restriction. There is no loophole to close. The McIntyre case, if handled with proper discretion, could have been an eye-opening, legal example of what is inherently possible within our ownership housing program with the hope that not many would actually partake in such an opportunity. However, following the brazen and ill-conceived witch hunt, hearings and judge’s ruling, that example has been lit up in bright lights for any and all to follow. Ahh, the law of unintended consequences, again. 

This has become Reason #279 why APCHA housing should be all rental. The ownership model continually creeps closer and closer to mimicking free market real estate ownership on the upside, yet still reaps entitlement benefits such hefty initial subsidies, low property taxes and no income/asset limits once in the system. Hardly the intent of the program.

And, at press time, Ireland finds himself at the center of yet another complex APCHA lawsuit in which the plaintiff claims APCHA has falsely accused her of marriage fraud to justify forcing her to sell her unit. Clearly, our very own Inspector Clouseau’s role as a hearing officer has once again gone to his head. He is being accused of investigating an APCHA owner far beyond the scope of her case in an effort to force a sale of her property, when the only “evidence” he had was a “recital clause” in the deed restriction which does not hold water in court. (Recognizing the recital clause was unenforceable, Ireland took it upon himself to demand tax information and divorce documents to conduct an in-depth investigation into unrelated issues in order to bolster his case.) He’s out of control.

To Mick, it’s clearly personal. I can appreciate the importance of properly enforcing program compliance, but this isn’t it.  APCHA counsel Tom Smith and Ireland, an attorney himself, are clearly ill-equipped to fulfill their roles in professional, responsible or capable manners. And as a result, the public is continually on the hook for the sizable attorney’s fees awarded to plaintiffs when APCHA predictably loses these cases.

(A note about how out of touch APCHA-contracted attorney Tom Smith is, earlier this year, he had a hard time grasping the concept of “remote workers.” He continually insisted that “remote workers” are local workers who live outside of the county yet work from home for local employers, seemingly oblivious to the more problematic APCHA dwellers who work for Google, Lockheed and Meta from the comfort of their in-town APCHA units.)

Mick’s interrogations, investigations and inquisitions are an outrageous over-reach. He and his vendettas against those he dislikes and envies are a stain on our community that only serve to perpetuate APCHA’s reputation as a corrupt police force that picks winners and losers. Mick is the loser. He needs to go, now.

* * * 

THE FEEDBACK LOOP

Got an issue with city government? The VERY BEST way to communicate your concerns is by email:

council@aspen.gov

Is CommDev taking too long with your permit? Do you have concerns about the Castle Creek Bridge replacement? Is your Burlingame 3 unit in working order? Is APCHA responsive to your inquiries? By emailing all 5 council members, you will be heard.

Communicate with your elected officials! 

Tuesday
Apr232024

ISSUE #272: APCHA's Pathetic Torre Story  (3/26/24)

"Things come apart so easily when they have been held together with lies."

-- Dorothy Allison

I referenced this in a recent issue, but no one was more surprised - and vindicated - when the Aspen Daily News ran a follow-up to my column that broke the story about Mayor Torre's outrageous August 2023 real estate deal. (Read my original piece again HERE)

I initially wrote that it was unlikely that Torre did anything illegal per se, but that APCHA intentionally broke its own rules to facilitate the secretive and off-the-books deal. After reading how APCHA staff reacted to reporter Austin Corona's follow-up inquiries, I am going to revise my earlier assessments of the less-than-kosher deal.

In short, Torre completely fleeced his former landlord, taking full advantage of her incapacitation and the fact that her ill-informed daughter who never looked at the unit's deed restriction was handling the transaction. Legal? Sure. Befitting someone with any morals or virtues? No way. It was filthy dirty and self-serving to the highest degree. And if the young woman thinks Torre "deserved" the unit as she says, she should have been informed that public officials cannot accept favors of this kind because that is what's called a bribe.

And, APCHA is run by executive director Matthew Gillen who is nothing short of a liar whose doubling and tripling down to normalize this obscene transaction finds him contradicting himself in the newspaper again and again, and misrepresenting APCHA's own policies to fit a ridiculous narrative of his own concoction. (Only because APCHA staff works for the city manager and not its own feckless board of directors does this arrogant miscreant still have a job. No wonder our corrupt housing program has the poor reputation it does - it starts at the very top!) 

So let's dig in and take a look at Gillen's ridiculous attempts to make "The Torre Story" seem normal and go away. (It won't.)

The March 12 vindication squarely proved how APCHA a lying and story-changing entity whose failed attempt at discrediting a critic (me) blew up in their faces. Their desire to have it both ways (no lottery, multiple simultaneous deed restrictions AND no RETT for Torre) and multiple occasions of outright LYING to the local media is both shameful and demonstrative of corrupt practices. When APCHA picks winners and losers - as they obviously do - this is clearly not in the best interest of APCHA residents and aspirants, nor should it be tolerated by this community.

On January 20, the Aspen Daily News initially reported "Mayor's housing purchase not unique," defending the transaction based on information fed to them by Gillen. (I'd link the story but the ADN has pulled it down because of the now-proven "inaccuracies.") To "prove" how normal Torre's transaction was, Gillen highlighted the sales of two Hunter Creek units with 1982 deed restrictions that he said were "silent" on whether or not they needed to be sold by lottery, seemingly to justify not conducting one on Torre's. This was total obfuscation and misrepresentation. Yet it was printed in the paper even when the units' deed restrictions specifically DO require sales by lotteries. The ADN corrected this on March 12.

Asked by the ADN for other transactions "similar" to Torre's, Gillen produced 18 from 2023. The problem was, each one was an RO (resident occupied) APCHA unit that specifically DOES NOT require a lottery, ever. Nice try, Gillen. ADN corrected that as well.

The January 20 article additionally reported that Torre's unit required that it be sold to an employee at a set maximum price. This was another spoon-fed LIE by Gillen. The deed restriction, a publicly accessible document, clearly states that the unit simply be used as "employee housing." It states no such thing about who it can and is to be sold to, and for what price. HERE is that deed restriction. Read it for yourself. 

Tom Thumb Unit A301 was a free market unit, encumbered by an early deed restriction that required the unit to be utilized by an "employee of moderate income" until the deed restriction expired in June 2032. Anyone could own it as long as a qualified employee lived there. Come June 2032, all bets would be off. Gillen's representations to the contrary are simply his desperate attempts to distract the community from the malfeasance that he permitted and could very well have helped concoct. It's too bad the ADN didn't seek out the deed restriction to fact-check Gillen before going to print!

Recall that I had written how Unit A301 could have been sold to any buyer at any time for any price as long as it would be rented to an APCHA-approved "employee" until the deed restriction expires in June 2032, at which point it would revert to the free market. I asked numerous realtors about today's free market value of the 419 sf unit and suffice it to say, even with an 8-year "wait," to a one, they each said the unit would fetch SUBSTANTIALLY more than the $106K Torre paid his landlord! 

I also pointed out that the chain of title was a seller-to-APCHA-to-buyer transaction, standard practice when APCHA acquires a unit or transacts units already in the portfolio. (Torre "brought" the sale to APCHA after negotiating with his landlord, placing them in the chain of title.) Gillen corroborated APCHA's momentary possession of the unit and describes this as APCHA's regular opportunity to update transacting units' deed restrictions. Yep. Exactly. But here's where it gets interesting. Deep in the hole of his own digging, Gillen told the ADN that in the case of Torre's unit, "Only the owner can place a new deed restriction on the property." LOL. Right. APCHA does it all the time! See THIS email Gillen wrote to APCHA board chair Carson Schmitz in October 2023 in response to a question I asked. (Gillen had no idea back then what I knew about Torre's deal.)

In other words, according to Gillen, Torre struck a fabulously cheap deal with his landlord, bought the unit using APCHA as a transactional broker because despite having the listing contract with the seller they wouldn't tell the seller about the potential impending windfall (it becoming worth over $1 million in 8 short years), and then he voluntarily after-the-fact slapped a deed restriction on the unit that holds it to 3% appreciation and mandates ownership and use by an employee into perpetuity!?! Right.

No one reading here doubts the abject stupidity of our one-named mayor, but even this is beyond the pale. If he had done such a thing, surely he'd have shouted it from the rooftops to brag about his magnanimity as "the housing mayor!" But recall, Torre, city officials and APCHA staff kept the whole thing hush-hush and off the sales reports, where it was bound to remain, but then a reader tipped me off. It was HIGHLY UNUSUAL. There was not even a whisper. 

There is exactly ZERO chance Torre voluntarily deed restricted his unit. I know this because the APCHA board regularly kicks around ideas to financially incentivize such behavior and the county just created a $2 million fund to significantly reward people who do just this. APCHA has also identified 244 local rental units with similar expiring deed restrictions and has reached out to the current owners in hopes of acquiring these units before the deed restrictions expire. APCHA knows full well what the future values will be and wants to pick off these units before the current owners reap a large windfall, not to mention remove the units from the employee housing inventory! They're also hoping some of these owners are as ignorant as Torre's landlord's kid who now admits that she had no idea about the soon-to-expire deed restriction. (Of course APCHA didn't tell her!) Without bragging rights or money, Torre would never have done this. This is a guy who financed $95,400 of the $106K purchase, after all. 

APCHA absolutely updated the deed restriction when they update the deed restrictions of all other transacting units - during the brief moment of possession in the transaction's chain of title!!

But Gillen had to LIE, and this made the whole story a lot worse.

This LIE in particular illustrated how irregular and against policy this transaction was. On one hand APCHA says Torre changed the deed restriction after buying it. Ok then, why was APCHA even involved and why didn't he pay the RETT? Earlier, Gillen had said the transaction was not subject to the RETT because it was a usual APCHA transaction that is exempt. The two (old and new) deed restrictions cannot be in effect at the same time - it's impossible. So which is it, because you can't have it both ways, Gillen. Illegally exempting a transaction from the RETT is breaking the law!

The bigger question is why all the lies? It was obviously a clandestine deal: the assistant city manager was made vaguely aware but kept in the dark, APCHA staff knew, and of course the mayor himself was at the helm. (It was also intentionally kept from the APCHA board, but then again, what isn't.) Once revealed, why wouldn't the city and APCHA have simply owned it, acknowledged that it wasn't perfect, apologized and made Torre pay the (paltry) RETT before closing any and all loopholes to prevent such a grievous error from ever happening again??

They simply cannot ever admit being wrong. And with the city's backing (financial and otherwise), they'd rather fight.

As a result, today Torre's transaction lacks any and all legitimacy. How can ANYONE respect APCHA? It's a rogue organization whose lack of transparency and accountability are a community embarrassment and liability.

(And for those who are wondering, no, The Aspen Times did not react to the vindication article.)

This inability to admit when it is wrong is precisely why APCHA also regularly finds itself on the losing end of notable legal challenges that I will explore in a future issue. Suffice it to say, a recent district court ruling found in favor of the plaintiffs who own a RO unit in the North 40. The case is steeped in intrigue and features none other than APCHA's very own vindictive pitbull hearing officer Mick Ireland, who was excoriated by the court for exceeding his discretion and authority, and both misapplied and misinterpreted the law.

It's a doozy of a case that opens up a can of worms for APCHA far beyond what they ever contemplated when they came after the plaintiffs in the first place. One would hope that in retrospect they are regretting not taking a more objective stance, examining their current rules and the matter at hand, and realizing how an overly zealous Ireland took the initial matter too far. Instead, with a pending decision whether or not to appeal the court's decision, APCHA is potentially placing the entire future of subsidized housing ownership as we know it in jeopardy. Ahhh the laws of unintended consequences.

Stay tuned, stay in touch and stay involved. EM

Tuesday
Apr232024

ISSUE #271: Aspen Spring Cleaning  (3/13/24)

"Life under a good government is rarely dramatic; life under a bad government is always so."

-- Oscar Wilde

Without a Thursday filing deadline for a Sunday column, this has been an adjustment. As such, the “news of the day” will always impact when and whether there will be a “Sunday” installment. Sometimes there may not be one. But please know, as always, I am out here, I’m tracking and I will have something for you. Trust me, I’m just trying to make it worth the wait.

This week, I’d like to address several “loose ends” that we’ve all been following. Here goes:

VINDICATION IS SO SWEET

I was as surprised as anyone this morning to wake up to a long-hoped-for follow-up by reporter Austin Corona of the Aspen Daily News to my 12/31/23 exposé on Mayor Torre’s secret and sketchy home purchase last summer.  In short, despite APCHA’s pathetic “it was entirely normal” justifications for the off-the-books transaction and both local papers’ defense of APCHA’s claims (which caused me to quit The Aspen Times because they would not listen to reason and examine the facts), the Daily News came around and actually did the work. Thank you, Austin. The transaction was indeed “unique,” to say the least. That APCHA lied, obfuscated, contradicted itself, and to this day continues to dig itself an even deeper hole, was printed today on the front page. Read it HERE. (It's still riddled with errors and contradictions, but we'll have fun digging into that!)

I have A LOT more to say on the subject so stay tuned. I will be following up in depth. This one is not going away anytime soon. Rotten is as rotten does. 

"Torre-Gate. It’s never the crime. It’s the cover-up." Someone should mount a campaign! Oh wait, I already did. Contact me for your pin and wear it proudly. Our housing program is rotten to its core with corrupt and dishonest leadership, our mayor was the beneficiary of APCHA’s deliberate and selective rules enforcement, and APCHA staff facilitated a less-than-transparent transaction on his behalf. As always, the facts speak for themselves.

APCHA PROPERTY TAXES

To follow up on the recently uncovered mess with APCHA property taxes, I am not going to condemn the Assessor because apparently APCHA has always done it this way, but that certainly does not make it right. Moving forward, knowing what we now know, the Assessor, who is working diligently to right this wrong, needs top-cover from the county to demand changes because we know APCHA certainly won’t change their corrupt ways. 

It turns out that the “actual values” for the approximately 1700 “owned” properties in APCHA’s deed restricted portfolio that serve as the basis for property tax collection are not established by the county assessor who has the statutory authority to do so. Instead, she who runs APCHA in her head, deputy director Cindy Christensen (of living alone in a 3-bedroom unit fame), merely submitted a spreadsheet that lists the unverified current maximum sales price for each of the units. From this list, the Assessor deducted $55,000 (Gov Polis reduced all residential property values by $55,000 for tax year 2023) to yield the (supposed) actual value. Unfortunately, closer examination showed numerous grievous valuation and mathematical errors. 

In addition, there are HUNDREDS of properties that show up as “deed restricted” on the Assessor’s website that do not show up on APCHA’s spreadsheet. How are accurate values calculated for these properties and just who is tracking their accrued appreciation?

There are zero audit processes in place - this is apparently how it’s always been done. How did this pass the State’s audit? It’s time for the BOCC to assert itself and give the Assessor the power necessary to demand accountability and transparency from APCHA. This unchecked nonsense needs to end today. The inmates are literally running the asylum. Write the BOCC HERE so the Assessor can assert proper control.

THE FUTURE OF THE ARMORY

Meanwhile, city staff, in its zeal to have something new to build, has pushed city council into approving a $1.8 million contract for an architect/design team to renovate and remodel The Armory despite not having selected a master lease operator for the space. Never mind that staff issued an RFP for a food hall operator that no one responded to – the city knows best and they’re just gonna haul off and pay to have someone design one. Imagine the change orders and associated costs once an actual operator is on board. That is, unless the city thinks it can operate a food hall too. LOL.

But there is no timeline for finding an operator. The city seriously plans to operate this itself. I am not kidding. Staff checked out food halls and found that most are not operated by private entities because they're not profitable. Imagine that. Perfect for the city to subsidize! Outreach showed "locals" want cheap food so that is what is driving the project. Moderate-priced restaurants beware. It's likely to be a $25 million renovation that will house the most subsidized food anywhere in the world, if it ever gets finished. What a complete joke. Our only hope was redevelopment by a private developer and operator. 

MUNI GOLF COURSE PASSES: A “LOCAL” OFFERS SOLUTIONS

When I recently wrote about the “locals first” policy at the municipal golf course (including a very geographically liberal definition of “local”), I had one notable response that is worthy of sharing. It was a heated yet civil exchange with someone I have known for a long time who shall remain nameless, for now. 

“You are dead wrong on this one,” it began. When pressed, he continued, illustrating his thinly-veiled contempt for those upset by the policy, “I’m confused. They are deserving of a pass but can’t provide the documents?” I explained that actual Aspen property owners and taxpayers were being excluded in favor of “locals” throughout the region, only to then be told, “Get a DL from here. The city and state don’t benefit off that homeowner. You can’t have your cake and eat it also.”  Reminded that they pay local property taxes that pay for the course, he dug in, “I live outside the city limits. Should they get priority over me?”  Yes, in fact they should! I think City of Aspen property owners and taxpayers of all stripes should have priority.

He didn’t like that one bit. “So, I was born and raised in this town, have worked here for 30+ years, have had a pass since 2000. Should I not get a pass because I rent in the North 40?” I personally think city taxpayers who pay for the course should get first dibs if anyone does. 

The response was as expected. Pure class warfare and unabashed vitriol. “I spend lots of money in town. Those are taxes. My company pays taxes. I coach kids in multiple sports. I add to the fabric of the community. All they have to do is get a new DL and claim this place as their home instead of crying about amenities they can’t use. Perhaps they should give back to the community in ways that actually matter.” 

This is not an isolated opinion. HERE is a (similar) recent letter to the editor that shares the same ignorance and disdain. For all you non-local taxpayers and philanthropic donors, the hatred is indeed vicious and frighteningly widespread. Notably, not one local non-profit responded to the letter’s preposterous assertion that aside from tipping on checks, “the rich” do not give back to this community. FYI.

Then just this week, my “pal” sent me this: “Good news for your friends. There are ($3250) Platinum Passes left. All the golf they want.” (All other season passes are of course sold out.)

As always, there’s more to come. We’ll peer deep into the hole that APCHA executive director Matthew Gillen continues digging for himself and the housing authority. Instead of ever admitting a wrong and making sure it doesn’t happen again, Gillen and his band of thieves continue to double and triple down in hopes they can get away with it. Trust me – they won’t.

EM

Tuesday
Mar122024

ISSUE #270: Post-Vacation Musings  (2/25/24)

"You can never really own real estate for instance; 

if you think you can, just try not paying your property taxes for a few years."

-- Michael Maloney

Apologies for the brevity of this installment, but I have been traveling overseas and decided that updating you on a few things I am thinking about would be preferable to simply skipping an issue.

So let's dive in...

Property taxes. How'd those pan out for you? I've heard the average Pitkin County property tax bill increased 27%, but anecdotes are of course all over the board. The county is implementing its first-ever property tax relief program targeting residents with household incomes below 500% of the federal poverty level using $200,000 from the general fund to dole out rebates in $2000 increments. It caught my attention when I learned that thankfully "APCHA-aligned" properties are not eligible because their tax increases are "already capped." But what on earth does that mean? Why wouldn't APCHA housing be taxed like everything else based on assessed value? Capped. Hmmmmm.

With the help of a colleague, I did some cursory digging just to get a handle on what's what. Nothing personal against Kelly McNicholas-Kury of the BOCC, but I looked at her APCHA property first. (She lives at Burlingame in the city and is a county elected official who sits on the APCHA Board - a perfect subject, that's all.)

Her property taxes in 2022 were $647.08, but in 2023 these decreased 32% to $438.96. Curious. She paid $266,619 in 2021, yet her actual value in 2022 was $254,000 which further decreased 14% to $217,600 in 2023. The assessed value also decreased year-to-year. 

How do Burlingame units decrease in value when all other property values in Pitkin County increased dramatically? A great question for the assessor, right?

"You would need to talk with APCHA about the deed restricted properties. We get the list from them and just enter in the amounts they tell us." WHAT?!?!

For free market properties, the assessor values the subject property using comparable sales during the 18 month period prior to the valuation, but for APCHA properties, APCHA just submits a list of valuations to the assessor?!?!? Based on what? And who specifically compiles and submits this "list"?

Clearly, the result of this non-transparent policy has resulted in the shift of EVEN MORE of the already substantial property tax burden from the subsidized housing sector to the free market.

(Recall that my earlier investigation into Torre's sketchy real estate purchase yielded another anomaly with APCHA and the assessors office: APCHA reports the amount they sell units for but they do not report what they pay for them. These two instances where the county assessor blindly does what APCHA tells her to do can and should easily be tightened up in the name of transparency. Why the secrecy???)

I'll be chasing this one down!

"More housing" through buy-downs. Ugh. Thinking they're great leaders and because money apparently grows on trees at the county (see property tax increases, above), the BOCC has recently committed TWO MILLION DOLLARS to the West Mountain Regional Housing Coalition, a brand new non-profit seeking to solve the scientifically unverified regional housing crisis. (The coalition relies on numbers from a 2019 debunked housing needs study that the consultant admits did not use a scientific formula to support its conclusions.) 

The BOCC is all pumped up to support the buy-down of free market homes purchased in the region for $1.5 million or less by people (with no income cap) who will make these their full-time, primary residences and won't own residential property anywhere else. The coalition will provide up to 30% of the purchase price in exchange for the buyer deed restricting the property in perpetuity.

Crazy, huh? Especially when there is no mention of where or even if these potential beneficiaries will work in Pitkin County. And just who is going to handle compliance? Don't say APCHA. We know how that will go. None of this has been worked out yet, but the county is all-in solely because such buy-downs represent housing solutions without development!

But the $2 million ($1.2 million from the American Recovery Plan Act that must be spent in 2024, if it's even legal to spend it this way, and the balance from the county's housing fund) is expected to only yield 5 to 7 homes in year one. FIVE to SEVEN. What a complete joke.

I'll be watching closely as details come together, but best I can tell, there was no discussion of where the money, if any, will come in years two and beyond. In fact, there was suprisingly little discussion for an expenditure of this size - amazing given all the issues with APCHA and zero political will to admit or address any of these.

Entry level home-buying. Only in Aspen is the "entry level" $1+ million. But keep in mind that the already tight market for free market housing below $1.5 million is now set to get even tighter with the buy-down program. The Aspen schools have been on a buying spree with their 2020 bond proceeds while the city of Aspen outbids most buyers while building its own proprietary housing portfolio by targeting these exact units. Good luck to the first-time homebuyers and businesses seeking units for their employees - the competition at the low end of the market is about to get fierce and you know what that means for pricing.

I'd like to put together a tracker on the entities buying up such properties.

As always, more to come.

EM

Tuesday
Mar122024

ISSUE #269: In the Rough at the Aspen Golf Course (2/11/24)

"All paradises, all utopias are defined by who is not there, by the people who are not allowed in."

-- Toni Morrison

It should come as no surprise that the COVID-era enthusiasm for golf in Aspen has not died down. Time spent outdoors in the fresh air, with views of the Continental Divide, Pyramid Peak, Mt. Hayden, Independence Pass, Hunter Creek Valley, Aspen Mountain, Aspen Highlands and Buttermilk - it’s right up our alley, especially when the Aspen Golf Club, our municipal course, is so noteworthy: ranked as the #1 muni course in the state and #21 nationally in 2009, the 7100-yard Parkland-style course is one of the longest in the state with water featured at almost each hole. What’s not to love?

Apparently nothing. The course has apparently been getting loved to death, with 30,000 rounds played last year. And according to “the club,” part of the city’s parks and rec department, the biggest complaint is that “locals are getting squeezed” by the increased demand.

Peeling back a layer or two of the onion, this non-golfer was surprised to learn how the Aspen Golf Club has slowly crept from being a public amenity not unlike our parks, trails and open spaces albeit with reservations and greens fees, to what is practically a private club with a privileged class of members and a self-serving citizen advisory board that sets the rules.

But it may not be what you think. Despite the 100 Platinum passes ($3250), 185 Gold passes ($1600) and 225 Silver passes ($1050), the Aspen Golf Club has actually morphed into a “local’s only” bastion, with a mission statement of “affordability and accessibility for primary residents” and a recently stated (by the GM) challenge of “balancing those who want tee times while maintaining access to others.” 

Passes go on sale February 16 so let’s dig in. 

·      Just who are these “primary residents” aka locals, as far as golf passes are concerned? According to the AGC, those with Colorado driver’s licenses stating a residence in the following zip codes qualify: 81611 (Aspen), 81615 (Snowmass Village), 81656 (Woody Creek), 81654 (Snowmass), 81621 (Basalt), 81623 (El Jebel, Carbondale, Marble, Redstone) and 81642 (Meredith). These are the “verified residents” throughout the Roaring Fork Valley who get first dibs on passes. Then, after March 4, whatever passes (if any) are left will be made available to the public at large. And beyond that, just two (2) tee times per hour will be available for everyone else. All season.

·      Is there ever a “balance” when weighing “those who WANT” access against a limited supply of highly-desired access? 

This is crazy. Can you say “mission creep?” Yes, of course there need to be rules and tee times at a public golf course, and it’s great to offer affordable season passes. But why just to “locals?” And with all due respect to those from Carbondale, you’re hardly an Aspen local. Sorry. Like so much else around here, (think: little fiefdoms like the Community Garden), despite being under the city’s umbrella, the AGC operates unchecked and with so much autonomy that things cease to make sense anymore and frankly run unabashedly amok.

The AGC is a MUNICIPAL course. Public. MUNICIPAL. Synonymous with “city.”  As in the city of Aspen’s general fund covers the costs of running the AGC above the revenues the club brings in. That’s called a taxpayer subsidy. Why then do full-time residents of Meredith and Redstone (both over 40 miles from Aspen) take precedence over city of Aspen property owners and taxpayers when it comes to accessing the AGC?  It defies logic. By design.

The word “fair” gets regularly bandied about, and in the context of golf passes this is no exception. “It’s not fair” has become Aspen’s siren song of woe; the lament that somehow living “here” full-time (within a very wide net, apparently) makes one uniquely more deserving of an increasingly long list of benefits than those who actually pay for them. For those who are excluded from golf passes by the new rules, it should really come as no surprise: you want something that “locals” honestly think belongs to them by divine right – they live here and you don’t. And for that, you will be punished: no golf for you.

(And isn’t it interesting that most non-Aspen golf pass holders come from Snowmass Village, where Aspen employees cannot qualify for SMV subsidized housing, but SMV employees are of course qualified for APCHA units? I digress.)

What would actually be “fair” would be for those desiring golf passes to line up with their 81611 city-limits property tax bill, in order of taxes paid.  Pay most, go first. Then those passes remaining, if any, could be lotteried to “others” or left open to the public - there being no true distinction between a resident of Dallas who is visiting Aspen and someone who lives in El Jebel when it comes to the innate “right” to an Aspen municipal asset.  I’m not suggesting this as the solution, but it certainly would be “fair.”  And let’s not forget that we are an international tourism destination. Shouldn't some of our tee times be made available to our visitors - you know, the ones who pay the bills?

But “fairness” is not what they seek. It has nothing to do with “fairness,” clearly. It’s about taking stuff and making it available only to a moving-target definition of “locals” because our elected city government and the administration thinks this is ok. It’s about control and retribution. And it’s a selfish and dangerous philosophy for an economy that relies on tourism and recreation. This notion of acting on what people “want” has become a warped rationale for building more subsidized housing, potentially subsidizing retail and restaurants, and now prioritizing golf pass sales. Where does it end? (Hint: it doesn’t. The desire for “stuff” people WANT yet cannot afford is infinite.)

I know, it’s “just” golf passes. This time. But it’s yet another example of how far off the rails another fiefdom has gone. I bring it up to raise your awareness of next year’s MUNICIPAL election – your opportunity to weigh in and put an end to this nonsense and so much just like it. For now, it appears that only Aspen residents can vote, but at the rate we’re going, who knows. 

The election will be on March 4, 2025. There will be two council seats up: those held today by Ward Hauenstein and John Doyle. Good riddance! Ward is term limited off council but could (foolishly) run for mayor, and John can (but shouldn’t) run for council again. Let’s work to make sure they both know the harsh opposition they will face! The good news is there will be at least one open council seat.  Torre is also term limited and thankfully cannot run again for mayor. In other words, we could easily see three open seats. This is a real opportunity to add a rational thinker or three to Aspen’s elected leadership. 

Interested candidates, you have a fan right here!

EM

PS Please continue to share The Red Ant with your networks! I appreciate it!

Tuesday
Mar122024

ISSUE #268: Aspen and the Politics of Public Memory (1/28/24)

"If anyone tries to penetrate the past with the knife of the present will always act in vain. The past is invulnerable. Such attempts can only cause the present or the future to bleed."

-- Simon Schwartz

ASPEN TIMES COLUMN

Welcome new subscribers! And thanks to all of you who continue to forward The Red Ant to your friends and neighbors. The recent enthusiasm has been unbelievable and I am eternally grateful for the support!

A couple of housekeeping items as we get used to "the newsletter" again:

I am planning to continue writing "a column" every two weeks, but we'll see how that shakes out. There may be "Ants" more frequently too as news of the day dictates.

Say hello to "The Naughty Box." I heard the term on a recent vacation and knew it was just the vehicle to share "highlights" from our elected representatives, public servants and members of the press. Think of it as a police blotter, Red Ant style. See below. (Please feel free to contribute - I protect my sources!)

And lastly, the pins are in! Contact me for your Torre-Gate pin. It's never the crime. It's the cover-up.

Aspen and the Politics of Public Memory

What is going on around here? This past fall, the community was surprised by SkiCo’s strange and unexpected re-naming of the newly-expanded Pandora’s terrain on Aspen Mountain and literally rocked by the sudden announcement that the Aspen Music Festival and School’s iconic Benedict Tent would be renamed following a $17 million philanthropic gift by the organization’s board chair.  

In a place where perhaps the one last thing we all have in common is the value this community places on maintaining its shared history, are these just two alarming attempts at revisionist history, or does it portend more ill-conceived name changes to come?

Re-naming is not a new phenomenon. The George Floyd incident and BLM riots of 2020 exacerbated the widespread pressure on public institutions and universities to remove statues and re-name buildings that previously honored individuals whose beliefs, affiliations and activities no longer align with their current missions and values. Included in recent de-naming efforts have been slave owners and segregationists, pharmaceutical manufacturers and Jeffrey Epstein affiliates, among other unsavory names and contentious figures.

But locally, those reasons had no bearing on why “our” names were changed.

Here, as is our penchant, it’s more often than not the result of unforced errors: someone trying to be clever, or maybe even an emotional reaction to the loss of a leader or an unexpected financial windfall. For whatever reasons, both name changes are unmitigated fails.

Pandora’s 

In September 2023, SkiCo announced it was re-naming the soon-to-open new terrain formerly known as “Pandora’s” in an effort “to honor all of those who played an instrumental role in the exploration and opening of Aspen Mountain’s new terrain.”  Sounds well-intended enough, aside from the fact they re-named it “Hero’s.”

Hero’s? Who is this Hero for whom we have supplanted Pandora and named not only the terrain but also the lift? Gramatically, “hero’s” is singular possessive, as in “a hero’s welcome.”  And as it turns out, “Hero” is actually a slew of local ski icons, which further begs the question, why not “Heroes,” as in “the heroes of Aspen?” Or better yet, why not name the new runs for honored individuals but simply keep the area “Pandora’s,” the name we’ve called it for years and by which it went through the lengthy and controversial public approval process?  

I personally think of “heroes” as veterans, first responders and the like – those who put their lives at risk to save to save others, who run into burning buildings, etc. Best I can tell, those bestowed with trail names are arguably well-deserving “honorees,” most of whom are locally well respected and several who notably lost their lives in tragic accidents. But are they “heroes?” The new quad lift takes just four-and-a-half minutes to reach the top, plenty of time to contemplate the odd name choice.

Undoubtedly an emotional and reactionary response to the tragic death of SkiCo managing partner Jim Crown in June, surely there was a more appropriate way to honor the man. Even “Jim’s” would have been better.

 Just call it Pandora’s. 

The Benedict Music Tent

Then in December, it was announced that the Aspen Music Festival and School had received an unprecedented gift from board chair Michael Klein, and for this donation, the AMFS would be re-naming the 2050-seat music tent the “Michael Klein Music Tent” for the next 25 years.

While originally deemed the “Aspen Ampitheater,” in 1993 it became the “Bayer-Benedict Tent” to honor its architects Herbert Bayer and Fritz Benedict. The 2000-era Harry Teague-designed tent was then named the “Benedict Music Tent” to honor the longtime leadership of Fritz Benedict, both in the community and of the AMFS. While marked by name changes over the years, the tent’s name changes were notably never tied to the “sale” of naming rights.

The fall-out was swift and unequivocal, and continues in letters to the editor to this day:

  • “stunned”
  • “a bridge too far”
  • “It would be a shame to think that everything in Aspen is for sale”
  • “AMFS may have gotten ahead of its skis”
  • “disregard for history”

It would appear that Aspen jumped on the de-naming bandwagon when we really had no reason to do so. As other institutions respond to de-naming pressures and attempt to establish rational and defensible frameworks along with transparent processes (“De-name very rarely and only when necessary under exceptional and narrow circumstances.” – UNC Chapel Hill), Aspen seems to have just hauled off and made changes, public memory and sentiment be damned.

According to Town & Country in 2021, “Traditionally, naming rights have been viewed by the rich and civic-minded as a way to imprint their names on history while helping the organizations they support to build endowments, acquire masterpieces and undertake ambitious expansion plans.” Over the past two decades, this has become “a competitive sport” that even includes the ridiculous naming of restrooms and coat checks.

Some speculate that this trend is changing and that “parading one’s wealth” is becoming a sign of bad taste.  There are increasing instances of donors declining naming opportunities and even announcements of their gifts. New scrutiny and the risk of public backlash stand to create a chilling effect, and therefore it’s a tricky balance for institutions reliant on philanthropic dollars. That’s obviously where the AMFS finds itself today. 

Mr. Klein is clearly an extremely generous and committed donor to the AMFS. I have had a hard time tracking down the genesis of this naming issue: whether it was his idea or the organization’s. No one is talking. But it’s obvious that nobody anticipated the widespread backlash, and for that it’s a true shame. There is surely a way to properly honor Mr. Klein for his extraordinary gift; it’s just not re-naming the Benedict Music Tent.  

The same holds true for other local landmarks. Remember when SkiCo tried to rename Buttermilk “Tiehack?” Some things are best left alone. Public memory is an integral part of history.

Besides, each time I see the odd nomenclature of “Hero’s,” I can’t help but think of Nero, you know, the guy who fiddled while Rome burned.

EM