I had a very discouraging conversation with a city council member over the condition of some of our neighborhood streets. You know, I was complaining about the area we’ve always affectionately referred to as “the college ghetto,” but I live across town, in a neighborhood full of property tax paying homeowners, and the same could be said about the streets, sewer, and drainage in my neighborhood. In fact, the houses across the street from me are in a designated flood zone, and those with mortgages are required to buy flood insurance, simply because the city has never installed drains along that section of our street. We were annexed in the early 1990’s, with promises of “services,” but only the new subdivision down the street has drains.
Oh yeah, and my neighbor Phil’s house, because he complained about flooding caused by a nearby new subdivision. And because he was a drinking buddy of the late Tom Nickel. Tom literally made that happen – don’t call me a liar, just drive over and look at it – they came over and put sidewalks and drains just in front of Phil’s property. I love Phil, and God bless Tom – of course that drainage was necessary – but just that section?
That’s how stuff works in the City of Chico, as you’ve seen with the new paving program – the squeaky wheel that knows who to squeak to gets the pavement. You read the news stories – at first they were going to “repave” in newer, high-end neighborhoods, but somebody pitched a howl, so they started looking for poor-people neighborhoods to slop their slurry. It’s all just bullshit anyway, they are not doing the type of work that is needed, just band-aid repairs on streets that haven’t been maintained properly or updated since people were still using horses and buggies.
I know at least one council member who has done a lot of tongue wagging on the subject of providing housing for low-income residents, but when I pointed out the fact that we have square miles of low-income housing that is in third world condition, his response was very discouraging. I’m not really blaming this person, I’m just saying, this is discouraging.
“The City definitely doesn’t do any inspections and is pretty hands off. We are updating our nuisance code with the goal of improving the look of downtown buildings, but there isn’t the political or administrative will to target slumlords.”
There it is, what I’ve said for years – Downtown gets a disproportionate amount of attention. How can they justify that when Downtown businesses don’t generate a fraction of the total city sales tax receipts? They used American Rescue Plan funding for parklets for Downtown bars – our city council has been hitting the bottle.
And of course, the new subdivisions going in around the outskirts of town are all getting new streets, while the center of town is sinking faster than Mexico City.
“the will to target slumlords…” This council member is quick to blame landlords. The worst slumlord around here is the city of Chico. The streets, sewers, sidewalks, street lights (or total lack thereof) and street trees are all the responsibility of the city of Chico.
So it’s time to go after Measure H. That was a total scam, and we all know it now. The Taxpayer Protection and Government Accountability Act, which has made the 2024 ballot, will overturn Measure H. You know that’s true, because a group of legislators has mounted a campaign to require measures like the TPGAA to get 2/3’s of the vote. That means they’re scared, and they better be. More next time, on This Old Lady Needs a Better Bra to Drive the Streets of Chico.
UPDATE: Since this post is getting hit again, I’m going to ID the council member – Addison Winslow. Winslow has been a big disappointment so far .