YOUR GUIDE TO THE TWIN CITIES
ANOKA-HENNEPIN LEVY
Too high a price
The Oct. 29 editorial, "A vote for quality in Anoka-Hennepin," nicely parrots the taxpayer-funded promotional literature created by the school district to advocate for $30 million to $50 million in new property taxes. Both would flunk a math class.
Both the editorial and the district tout programs that liberal funding allows, but neither mentions measures to assess student and teacher performance -- the means by which taxpayers judge whether additional tax revenue is a good investment.
The levy initiatives take an unreasonable bite out of family income. If all four ballot questions pass, a taxpayer in a $250,000 home would pay a whopping $600 more a year. Seniors and retirees already give plenty and are unable on fixed incomes to pay more. Workers fortunate to have employers providing pay increases would turn over a disproportionate share of them to the government.
Here in Brooklyn Park we're spending millions of public dollars buying up apartments and cracking down on property owners to stem the decay in aging neighborhoods. The impacts of the foreclosure crisis are local and add further pressure to local government spending. Each dollar taken from struggling families by the school tax increase is a dollar not invested to repair our neighborhoods.
Asking so much more for schools is not only bad math, it's a hardship too many cannot afford.
SCOTT SIMMONS, BROOKLYN PARK
REMEMBERING WELLSTONE
Tainted by politics
I respect Nick Coleman's desire to memorialize the late Paul Wellstone on the fifth anniversary of his tragic death. Sen. Wellstone was a good man and an honorable public servant. And even those of us who did not share his political philosophy admired his unyielding fight for it. I for one was proud to publicly pay tribute to him on TPT's "Almanac."
But in his "memorial" column, Coleman takes several political cheap shots at the Minnesota senator who shares his last name. How does the fact that a college-aged Norm Coleman went to Woodstock have anything to do with remembering Paul Wellstone?
Nick Coleman has a strong command of the written word, and I admire his wish to honor the late Sen. Wellstone with his prose. But calling his column an "anniversary" piece and then including snide partisan attacks is inappropriate and in bad taste, and tainted what otherwise would have been a perfectly fine tribute that people of all political stripes might have enjoyed reading.
ANDY BREHM, MINNEAPOLIS
He was proven right
I was moved by Nick Coleman's Oct. 28 column, "Now more than ever, this country needs the bravery of Paul Wellstone."
As a former labor activist, I was a staunch supporter of Paul's and once was even in a political TV ad of his along with my three boys. Since that time, I have moved toward the center with my positions and political thinking. But reading Coleman's column has caused me to reflect a great deal on this change.
Back in the late '90s, Paul was being attacked by the conservative right. They called him liberal and any other name they could think of. For a short time I agreed. I viewed Paul as being on the fringe.
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The Opinion section is produced by the Editorial Department to foster discussion about key issues. The Editorial Board represents the institutional voice of the Star Tribune and operates independently of the newsroom.
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