It’s the same story over and
over again. The rich kid comes over to your house, takes
all your toys out of the toy box, smashes them to pieces, and leaves. No apology. No
note from his mother. No offer of restitution. No nothin’. In fact, he probably blames the breakage on you.
Somehow it’s usually that way in
politics, too. President George W. Bush broke the whole setup, diving into Iraq
for no authentic reason at all, “paying” for the billions it costs by cutting
taxes, nearly bankrupting the nation, and now sitting at home, nonchalantly painting pictures of his feet in the bath tub.
John Lindsay, a popular
Republican mayor of New York back in the 1960s, at least until he was out of
office and people started counting the broken toys, left New York such a
financial basket case that it essentially went into financial receivership. The
economic fallout that deeply wounded the local economy and caused a precipitous
drop in home prices.
F. Scott Fitzgerald was
certainly aware of the syndrome when he wrote "The Great Gatsby." It’s not Gatsby, who came by his millions only lately, who makes the mess. It’s those always-rich kids, Tom Buchanan and Daisy Buchanan, who leave a wake that contains a corpse, a scandal, and misplaced blame.
And now we have former Mayor
Michael Bloomberg, against whom I have railed almost since this blog was born.
The damage Bloomberg has done is more subtle – or should I say more
insidious?
Bloomberg hasn’t left his city
bankrupt. At least not on the surface he hasn’t. But he seems to have done
everything in his power to make sure that the next guy might deal with one
humongous financial mess.
For one thing, like the rich kid
who takes the broccoli on his plate and surreptitiously shovels it onto the
plate of the kid sitting next to him, Bloomberg quietly and deliberately
postponed all labor contracts until after his third term expired.
There isn’t a union representing
city-paid workers in town that’s working under a contract. Most of the contracts expired five years ago. Some ran out years longer ago than that.
Clearly, employees who haven’t
had a raise in five, or six, or even seven years have a beef. And clearly, if they
don’t get a raise, they’re going to strike. So de Blasio will have to eat the broccoli that Bloomberg refused to touch, and find the money, either by cutting taxes or by cutting city services. But instead of wrestling with the
problem and coming up with the money – even if it meant demanding of Albany
that he be allowed to hike taxes – Bloomberg swept all the broccoli onto de Blasio's plate, and stashed all the broken toys under
Bill deBlasio’s bed.
There are quite a few other broken toys that Michael Bloomberg left in his wake, but let me point to one program that heaped mountains of praise
on Bloomberg and is leaving de Blasio with a heap of broken wheel spokes and
brake levers.
I’m talking about the city's bike share
program, immensely popular, now mired in a mess. There is
insufficient money to make bike repairs, expand the program, or eventually replace
worn out bikes.
Turns out that, with the exception of New York, in every city – every – that has a bike share program,
government kicks in some cash. How
much did Bloomberg kick in? Nada. Zilch. Not a plugged nickel.
To be fair, some of the
program’s troubles stem from the brutal winter we’ve had here in New York,
which rendered the streets un-navigable for many days. And even when the
streets were clear, all but the heartiest New Yorkers found it just too cold to
ride a bike through the subzero winds.
But equally to blame, according
to officials, is that tourists aren’t renting the bikes in the numbers
expected. Well hell, you’re limited to a 45-minute ride, which doesn’t take you
far in New York traffic. And the price is nine bucks, which is pretty steep.
(Yes, you can return the bike to a bike stand and pick another one up later the
same day, for your nine bucks. But c’mon, we’re talking about tourists out for a
day’s fun, not cost-efficiency experts gaming the klunky bike system.)
And even when you're talking about local folks, the program is too limiting. You can't ride a Citibike from the East Village to the Upper East Side, because when you get there, there are no Citibike racks. And you can't do it in reverse, for the same reason.
So why is all that Bloomberg’s
fault? Simply because, in every other city where there’s a bike share program,
government kicks in. Bloomberg gave…not a nickel! Nor did he ask a cent of
state or federal government.
Hey, why should Bloomberg have worried when somebody else would get
stuck with the broken bike share system? That person is Bill de Blasio, whose pressed,
pressured, and soon-to-be-clobbered budget has to deal with getting all those
union workers paid, keeping the cops on duty, the firemen on the ready, and the city
offices humming – without help from New York’s supposedly Democratic governor,
actually a Tea Party yahoo in disguise.
Whatever Governor Andrew Cuomo
thinks he’s going to run for next, he doesn’t intend to run for it with any tax
increase for anything on his record. And already he’s justifying his inaction
with the kind of doubletalk and logical non-sequiturs that would make a Tea
Party patriot proud.
The New York Post, which is most
certainly well to the right of center, quotes Cuomo talking about the injustice
– O the injustice! – of taxing the rich, as Mayor de Blasio proposes.
[Cuomo] charged that de Blasio’s proposal is more regressive than the property-tax system that steers more funding to schools in wealthy suburbs than to poorer parts of the state.
“If you haven’t come up with a system that is less equitable, this would be it. A surcharge on millionaires,” Cuomo said.
Little wonder that far from the city in upstate New York, protestors at the State Capitol are calling Cuomo "Governor One Percent."
Sorry kids, but Michael's gone, Cuomo's gone Tea Party rogue, and the toys are all
broken. Maybe you can put your hand in an old sock and pretend it’s a puppet.
Never write a blog post when you're sleepy. I've discovered a couple of errors since I posted this piece, and unfortunately, as a guest blogger I don't have the tools to edit things once I've posted them.
ReplyDeleteSo...
1. Most importantly, I meant to say that Bill de Blasio mayhave to raise taxes (If the governor and state legislators let him), not lower them, to make up for the impending shortfall left by Mayor Bloomberg.
2.I have no idea how Daisy Buchanan crept into this piece. Pretend she's npt there.
3.The daily rental price of a bike for those 45 minute rides is $9.95, not $9.
Thanks, I was kind of confused.
ReplyDeleteBut, then, I'm hung-over, so wtf do I know?
I have come to believe Cuomo's hero is Rick Perry. If the GOP was half sane I would consider voting for a Republican but Assstorino is just a DBag of monumental proportions so that is dead. 9/11 profiteer Giuliani should be where Kerik was , in prison. Its a sad state of affairs here in NY.
ReplyDelete