(Promoted by Colorado Pols)
Americans for Prosperity and other conservative operatives in Colorado Springs got pissy with Republican Mayor John Suthers for thowing his support behind a sales tax to fix the city’s pot-hole-ridden streets.
But his proposal won, by a 2-to-1 margin.
Now, some of Suthers’ conservative critics will be unhappy to hear that Suthers may extend the sales tax beyond its five-year duration, if needed.
Talking on KVOR radio after the vote, Suthers didn’t rule out extending the tax, telling host Richard Randall:
Suthers: We’ll do a reassessment of our road conditions in four years, give a full report of the the public, and say, this is where we are. Do we need to do anything further? My hope is that we will significantly expand our road investments through the general fund over the next five years, and this may not be necessary to extend. If it is necessary, can we lower it dramatically? We will evaluate that in four years based on the progress we make.
Poking the eyes of his opponents, Suthers told Randall that his polling showed clear support for the tax increas from the get go, and so he wasn’t surprised by the overwhelming support for it in Colorado Springs, despite the “noise” against it.
Suthers: We polled throughout…. When you just have community hearings, you don’t really get a clear view of how the public as a whole looks at an issue. Sometimes you get how interest groups look at a particular issue. So we went to the public and said, where are your priorities between storm water and roads? How would you want to pay for it? Would it be sales tax or property tax? What kind of duration should the tax be? All that sort of thing. And I was very gratified. The number held the pretty clearly, with all the noise that we heard over the last month about, oh, they are going to spend the money on something else. Or they could find the money elsewhere. It really didn’t move the needle at all. The numbers stayed very consistent. So I wasn’t surprised, because we had been doing some polling throghout. and that’s how the community felt about it. Listen to Suthers KVOR 11.5.15
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I think I got called for that poll. It was smart, you could tell what was going on, and you could tell it was very safely worded and meant to give way more information to the pollee than the poller. A good push poll?
If it isn't a pot hole with some road surface, it is not a real Republican street™. Buy your own suicide hotline, buy your own streetlight. Nothing says real republican™ like neo-tribal lifestyle.
Discussion of renewing the tax for another five years is not new. That was part of the discussion from the beginning. The decision–based on the polling–was that rather than ask for ten years now, ask for five years, demonstrate that the money was well spent, and then four years out ask the voters to extend it for another five years.
RINO
That said, that tax ain't going anywhere. Roads are eating up local budgets and Colorado weather swings are not kind to them.