Wednesday, May 03, 2006

All Gondolas, All the Time

or:

Descente Doesn't Care!


By Dian Woodhouse

I attended a "Gondola/Resort" meeting last night. It did not change my opposition to these projects, of which I have written at length before, but attending this was very worthwhile because I was finally able to understand part of the motive behind all this.

Mayor Matthew Godfrey ran for office on a platform to revitalize Ogden. He recounted last night that one of the missing components in this city is, and was at the time he took office, white collar jobs downtown. For five years, he, and staff, and Community and Economic Development tried in vain to recruit companies to come here and provide those jobs. And for five years, they did not get one taker.

Enter Curt Geiger in 2002. Discussions between him and the mayor take place, and the idea of making Ogden the ski hub is born. Descente moves here, Lift Ogden is formed, and they begin to pitch this idea to ski companies.

In the last year and a half, Mayor Godfrey said, everything has changed. Seven ski companies are now here, with an eighth possibly on the way, and "the only thing that has changed in the pitch is the gondola."

In other words, the gondola does seem to be being looked at as a silver bullet. After five years of total nothing, inclusion of this gondola/hub idea in addition to the other things Ogden already has to offer, seemed to generate, finally, outside interest in Ogden in the way of these ski companies.

I say "seemed," because I do not think this is that simple. I do not think the gondola is and was the key to increased economic development here. Instead, I think that the reason that the mayor spent that grueling five years with no return is that a large portion of the country was, for that five years, doing exactly the same thing. When the tech bubble burst in 2000, and then with the occurrence of the subsequent Enron scandals, the sudden disgrace of nationally prestigious accounting firms, and the realization that the boom of the nineties was in large part predicated on false accounting, inflated figures, and money that existed only on paper, a whole lot of people lost a whole lot of money.

Probably many companies were in no shape, after that, to move anywhere, let alone Ogden. Many of them had to spend a few years trying to stay afloat. And many of them didn't make it.

So it is very possible that the bad time Ogden had in generating interest was not caused by lack of a gimmick, lack of a resort, lack of high end housing, but by the fact that, at that time, quite a few people had no money to put into anything. It wasn't just in Ogden--it was all over the country.

Interesting, I thought. That is part of the motivation for this project--that the inclusion of the gondola in the pitch might have coincided with a brief upswing in the national economy, and the gondola, not the economy, is being looked at as the reason that Ogden is doing a bit better because of the ski companies that have come in. Not to minimize the effort the mayor and Mr. Geiger have put into this effort--we all know it has been a huge effort--but just to say that it might not be the only factor operating in this.

The mayor said, as he has said before, that from the station at the top gondola, "you could get into Snow Basin if you want." Another quote was: "You can point your skiis east and ski right down that road that's already up there and go right down into Porky." Another was: "You can access Malan's from the Strawberry gondola."

Not knowing the terrain there, I am not qualified to comment on these things, although I do find it interesting that they were said in view of the position of Sinclair Oil, Snow Basin's owner, that appeared in the Standard Examiner. Mayor Godfrey also said that "they," (I assume Sinclair,) wanted it stated that there were no ticket or other arrangements between the two resorts, but also in the meeting, when questioned about this pitch for the gondola when Sinclair had said it wouldn't go to Snow Basin, stated: "They did not say it's not going to Snow Basin."

Moving on, there was quite a bit of discussion about selling the golf course. The Mayor's point of view regarding that is that the golf course has a negative value--this because it runs at a deficit. Because it has a negative value, we will not be losing anything if we sell it. There were spirited exchanges here between the mayor and members of the community who alleged that the books from the golf course were not totally accurate as they included a carryover debt which was questionable, and in fact, that the Mount Ogden Golf course could probably Make money hand over fist were it given the opportunity to do so.

Speaking of spirited exchanges, there was also one between the Mayor and State Representative Neil Hansen, who asked if involvement in these projects was truly what a government should be doing, and also why the taxpayers of Ogden should assume the costs for the Urban gondola. The Mayor's answer to this was that the urban gondola would benefit us. People wanted to know how. The answer was that it would increase downtown economic development.

Curt Geiger attended this meeting, and at one point delivered an impassioned speech to the effect of the fact that we in Ogden have a chance to boom, to make something of the city, but that it was our choice. If we wanted to naysay and be against everything, that was up to us, and that "Descente doesn't care. This is his home, he is happy here, and it is up to us whether to get behind this idea or not, but "Descente doesn't care."

Mr. Geiger also said elsewhere that his rent is $2,500 a month--1971 levels. He employs fifteen people, and his payroll is a million dollars a year, which is "not chump change," and he pays $125,000 annually in sales tax to Ogden City.

Someone commented that the Mayor should be honest and open with the public about "the parking lot at Weber State for the gondola." This was the first, and last, I have heard of this. There was no further discussion about it.

Someone else commented at the sad state of Ogden City Schools, saying, "We need that revenue!" There was applause at this.

One comment I thought interesting had to do with the idea of those opposed to the gondola being so because it would damage their current quality of life. Since quality of life is not something that you can look at on a balance sheet, arguing the merits of this project based on a balance sheet alone leaves quality of life out of the equation.

Then someone stated that he had lived in Ogden for forty years and his quality of life had gone down. There were some murmurs of assent at this.

There was a comment that all trails are not equal. That if Chris Peterson changes the ones we now have, will that mean that what he comes up with will be as good as what we now have.

This was a Long Meeting. We left at about 11:30 at night and the meeting hadn't formally closed. I don't know if it ever did. Many things were discussed, and both sides, pro and con, asked questions. Since this is getting to be therefore, a Long Article, perhaps the best thing to do is end it here and readers can ask questions about the meeting. Other things touched upon were---a streetcar, motorized vehicles and emergency services at the resort, the trails, the housing development, The Junction," Larry Miller, light rail impact, open space, affordability for locals, jobs---you see how long this would get if I attempted to discuss all these things. So ask away, and I will check in periodically and try to answer.

50 comments:

Anonymous said...

Dian,
Wonderful post! Am sure the Standard, Trib and Des AM News are in a salary war over you!!!

Reading your paragraph in which you quote the Mayor as saying "you can access Snowbasin", You can access Malan's from Strawberry (gondola), and "you can point your skiis east" to SnowBasin all sound like infringing on another's property.

The Sinclair Oil Exec was quoted as saying there was no agreement between Snow Basin and Malan's for anything, that I could determine.

I should think the leader of a city has a moral obligation to obey the law and be an exemplary role model for the citizens of the town he is leading.

To ride roughshod over the express policies of another resort as if they don't matter, shows Mr. Godfrey to be a lawbreaker and a shyster.

Anonymous said...

Two additional comments:

Hizzonah said that Snow Basin wanted him to be clear that there is no agreement in place between Snow Bason and the managers of the proposed Malan's Basin resort for gondola access between the two resorts.

According to the Standard Examiner [article posted on this blog a few topics below], the Snow Basin statement was rather more forceful: Snow Basin is not intersted in a direct connection by gondola between Snow Basin and downtown Ogden. It is not part of the owners' long term or short term plans. Given that Snow Basin has just broken ground on a $200 million hotel complex, and is planning a phase two condo development as well [intending to make SB a destination resort], it is hardly surprising the the resort is not interested in a rapid gondola connection to downtown Ogden's hotels, restaurants, etc.

But for whaever reason, Snow Basin has made its views on accessing its resort via the Malan's Basin gondola scheme: No. [One wonders what part of "no" the mayor did not understand.]

Yet there he was again, Tuesday night, implying again that there would be gondola access to Snow Basin from Ogden. This was, to be as delicate as possible about it, disingenuous to say the least. And so I wonder again: if the Mayor thinks he has to be deceptive about this in order to make the gondola/gondola scheme seem attractive, what else is he being deceptive about?

I expect some hyperbole from real estate promoters and such like in order to market their plans and attract investors. But from an elected public official I expect more. I expect candor about a project he is presenting for the city's consideration. I expect absolute accuracy and full disclosure. When an elected offical behaves otherwise, I become very suspicious about what is really being proposed. The Mayor's behavior in all this, his penchant for secrecy in general and disembling on the Snow Basin matter, have me, now, very suspicious. What else is he concealing? Of a an elected public official, I should not have to... no one should have to... ask a question like that. We have Mr. Bob Geiger, on the record, saying Lift Ogden is withholding information out of fear that if it became public, opposition to the plan would grow. That's fine for Lift Ogden, a private group, to do if it thinks it will serve its interests. It is not fine for an elected public official, like the Mayor of Ogden, to act that way while presenting a major plan for changes in Ogden to the voters.

Second, Tuesday's meeting conducted by the Mayor made an interesting contrast with the meeting at Wasatch Elementary conducted by Smart Growth Ogden some weeks ago. First of all, the meeting was open to all community residents, not small groups of invited residents and their acquaintences. Mt. Ogden resdidents who wanted to speak at the meeting were offered an equal opportunity to do so --- including for example Mr. Bob Geiger --- and all were treated by the crowd assembled politely. No cat-calling, no heckling, and applause for most speakers, whose opinions about the future of the neighborhood were all over the lot [so to speak]. An interesting contrast, I think, to the by-invitation meetings the Mayor is holding at which his views are presented. True, questions are solicited, but at the Mayor's meeting Dian described, those who expessed opinions not comporting with the Lift Ogden party line were sometimes heckled by shouters saying "you've got rocks in your head!" and " You're a looney!" Sadly, the gibes were sometimes returned in kind. I merely want to note here that nothing like that happened at the SGO Mt. Ogden Community meeting where speakers on all sides of this issue in particular were treated respectfully by the crowd, and listened to politely.

V. Kenneth Jackson said...

I don't know how aware of this you all are, but Chris Peterson, the one that is putting the money in for most of this resort gondola thing, is Earl Holdings son-in-law. Earl Holdings is the owner of Sinclair, and Snowbasin among other things. Chris Peterson managed Snow Basin for 18 years. Chris Peterson knows what he is doing, and is going to be the person that connects his gondola, to Snowbasin. You can't tell me that Snowbasin privately doesn't want an Easier, faster, and ultimately more patrons to their resort because of a gondola from downtown Ogden. That Gondola is going to connect to the new commuter rail from salt lake, and the airport. I think it is amazing how Snowbasin is building a giant hotel complex at the same time as everything that is going on in Ogden.
I don't know how people are still against something that could be so good for so many people. Businesses are coming in left and right, developers and investors are coming in also. We have a man wanting to spend half a billion dollars in the city, and we have retailers and business men wanting in on the deal, and so many people are against it. It confuses me when so much good is going on, yet so many people would be content in none of this happening, which in turn would keep Ogden the way it is, which to many people across the State, and region, doesn't have the greatest reputation.

Anonymous said...

"Given that Snow Basin has just broken ground on a $200 million hotel complex, and is planning a phase two condo development as well"

I hadn't heard: what's up?

Anonymous said...

The mayor is right.

All we need is a tourist gimmick to put Ogden on the map.

Anonymous said...

I have sat back and watched with real intrest about this whole issue of the gondola. there is some things that I think that needs to be said that I don't know that any one will say, so here it goes.

We elected the mayor to do a job. That is why we call him a PUBLIC SEVRANTS, and that this job is to govern this city, he has been given a STEWARDSHIP to over see the 100 million plus tax dollars, that we as taxpayer pay, so with that stewardship he is to govern the city, the first thing he did as mayor was give us a tax break on our property tax, that very month or so the weber county commission raised our property tax, so there was no saving to the citizens. All the Mayor did was shift our tax base to the county. SO was he wise in his stewartship? I ask? Then the next thing he does is start showing how all the city projects are losing money and he wants to get rid of them, such as the union station, mashall white, now the golf course, he privatized the city parks for a while and that didn't work and so we are back in to providing service to the citizens again in the parks.
well the list goes on and on. He will even tell you we are losing money on the fire dept and maybe we should sell it off and he DIFFENTLY SAID THAT IF HE COULD HAVE THE MAYORS OFFICE SOLD OFF TO MAKE A PROFIT HE WOULD SELL IN A HEART BEAT!
Well Mr Mayor in case you have not realized that the mayors office is not yours to sell. Like all of the city assets that you want to get rid of, just shows us that you are incompetent in being a mayor and that you havn't learned your stewardship in the last 6 and half years that you have been in office. That maybe you should step down and quit running this city into the ground. I for one would look at this as miss management, Just like today when I found out that Mark Johnson just got a HUM VEE for his new vehicle, it cost the taxpayer 16,000 dollars over and a above his trade in. That we taxpayers are paying for and with gas prices as high as they are that we taxpayers are paying where is the accountablity of what is going on here and will you do anything to lead the way on gas conservation.

well I could go on and on with what I know. I would be intersted to see what others have to say about this. so is the gondola a really good idea .
this really looks to me like what the mayor really wants is...
more will come later

Anonymous said...

Thanks, Sharon. No job offers yet, though.

In the Standard article quoting Clint Ensign, who is, I believe, Sinclair's vice president in charge of governmental relations, there was absolutely nothing that would lead one to believe that Snow Basin was at all interested in a relationship of any kind with this proposed resort. This makes Mayor Godfrey's comments confusing, to say the least.

Having grown up in Ogden at the base of what was then the foothills, there were the foothills, in which one could freely roam, and then there was Private Property, where one was Not to set foot. And if one did trespass, it was not uncommon to suddenly be faced with the property owner shouting and waving a rifle loaded with rock salt.

This was Scary. So much so that I developed a healthy respect for Other People's Property and therefore find this attitude that it is free to use as long as one can get to it quite a change from the way Ogden used to be. Even if one blundered onto it unknowingly from another direction where it was not fenced and posted, the owner would chase one off. Generally, it only took one time.

What Mayor Godfrey is implying here is that there will be no official connection or relationship between the two resorts, but if one can access Snow Basin from the Malan's side, Snow Basin will not mind. Because of Mr. Ensign's quotes, I question this. And although the days of rifles and rock salt seem to be vanished, I still think we should get this point clarified, once again, from Sinclair.

At the very least, it makes no sense at all to start out, if we do indeed start out, on the wrong foot with them.

Anonymous said...

The thing that bothers me most about the mayor is the fact that he cares more about his personal political career than he does about the general welfare of Ogden and its citizens, he is small-minded and his vision is misguided. He would love this project come to fruition so he has something to boast once he leaves his post.

Anonymous said...

Well, Hitler and other despots used this to their advantage to exhort, excite, confuse and rein in the masses:

"Say it loud enuf, long enuf, and often enuf, and the rabble will believe, follow and accept". AND PAY!!!

You DO recall (those who were lucky enuf to have studied real history in school) that the beleagured citizens who really did see the nude Emperors started UNDERGROUND MOVEMENTS TO PROTECT LIBERTY AND LAW. WE HAVE SMARTGROWTH AND QUESTIONING CITIZENS WHO ARE ABLE TO DISCERN TRUTH FROM ERROR.

Let us press on getting the word out. We MUST have good men and women with morality and leadership skills step forward and volunteer to run for mayor.....or City Manager!

We have to take a hard look at how badly this city is run.

As Dian brot up several posts ago, the evil design is to denigrate Ogden as an unattractive, dead, downtrodden town that has to have REVITALIZATION, FIXING, TEARING DOWN OF HISTORIC BUILDINGS SO SOMETHING 'NEW & EXCITING' can be brot in. Businesses, yes. But Ogden has beauty in 'them thar hills' and canyons. Fishing, golfing, boating, hiking, skiing....all within a short drive!

The letter in the SE today asks what all sane citizens are asking: "who will benefit from a gondola going from Wall Ave to WSU?"

Peterson said each 'stop' will cost a MILLION DOLLARS! One may be given the option to slide down a chute as the slow moving gondola passes over your destination.

Yes...we DO know Earl Holding is Peterson's father-in-law. I wonder if Earl wants to be reminded?

Again, if CP were such a talented, creative, producing businessman....why isn't HE a CEO at Sinclair??? What is his record of success? (Like John Kerry, marrying into money may be considered a talent that could be mentioned on a resume...or get one an invitation to speak at a " How I Married a Millionaire" seminar."

I think Sinclair made it very plain in the SE that Snow Basin wants NOTHING to do with Peterson or Malan's Basin....and they don't want Malan skiers crossing over onto their property.
One...It's trespassing. Two..How foOlhardy and dangerous to skiers to suggest that this can and should be done...what about avalanches? Who is going after these lawbreakers to rescue them? And how? No road to Malan's, remember?

I think Dian's theory that the economy was shot for so many years that many towns suffered a lack of new business start-ups,

I don't believe the gondola has a &^#%^ thing to do with any prosperity for Ogden. Godfrey wasn't mentioning a gondola when he crammed the rec center down our collective throats. Gosh, muscle, disingenuousness, sneakiness and creative financing worked then...how about some more to lure business here?

Cabela's, Ikea, Walmart Grocery, The Hispanic Center, all are down the road or bitten the dust.

Kudos to Curt Geiger for bringing in Descente. But, we are not a 'ski hub'....we should pursue a partnership with the Smithsonian Institution for the COUNTRY'S FIRST NATIONAL RAILROAD MUSEUM! It is calculated that several million visitors would come annually...many by commuter rail to visit the museum and our other attractions IF THEY KNEW ABOUT THEM! It's a crime that our FIRST INDEPENDENT FILM FESTIVAL AT THE BEAUTIFUL HISTORICE PEERY THEATRE WAS NOT 'PR'D' ALL OVER THE STATE!

Museums don't make a lot of money, but tourists eat, sleep over, rent cars and attend other events and places of interest.

Thinkaboutit.

Anonymous said...

Curmudgeon:

The Little Lord is only lyin
when his lips are movin.

And perhaps Moosetaco should take a course in analytical thinking. He builds a wonderful argument for the gondola and resort, unfortunately it is all predicated on unproven theories, unsound business principles, untrue projections, and general all around fantasy thinking.

If the whole gondola and resort scheme were really viable, then Earl Holding would be doing them, not his bust out son in law who is trying to do it on other people's money.. And by the way, Peterson is not proposing that he brings HIS $500 million into Ogden, What he is trying to do is leverage OUR Golf course into a $500 million dollar deal that HE will own and WE will take all the risk on.

And finally, dontcha just simply love the way this incredibly disingenuous Lord Mayor we have can get up, and with a straight face, say that the 150 acres or so of prime real estate that is the Mount Ogden Golf Course actually has a "negative value"! Now that takes a heap of arrogance to be able to do that!

Like I said, "when his lips are movin"

Anonymous said...

If the mayor thinks the golf course has a negative value, then I can personally bail the city out right now.

I hereby offer Matt Godfey $100 for this negative value asset. That would be a huge windfall for the city, and if he has a lick of sense he will snap up my offer forthwith.

I excpect that the county assesor will assess the property at what I will be paying. Ogden city's portion of my total tax bill will be around $1.22 per year. Look at all the money Ogden is going to be making instead of the $300+ grand loss the Mayor lies about.

Anonymous said...

Actually Ozboy, it went something like this:

Every plan that we have seen involves public debt.

Chris Peterson asked to buy the golf course and will rebuild it. The fees will remain affordable.

A new shoreline trail would be built much higher than the one there now.

Peterson would pay for all this through the sale of homes. This would be an instance of private investors putting their own capital at risk. This is half a billion dollars "that they would come up with and put into our community."

The implication here was that no tax dollars would be involved in this project---instead, we would just lose the golf course property, and this is therefore not being viewed as a dollar amount loss.

Anonymous said...

Moosetaco:

A couple of points: You can speculate until the cows come home about what might happen in the future. The fact is, the management at Snow Basin has said it is not interested in a gondola connection to downtown Ogden, not in the short term, and not in the long term. It has said it several times, the last time insistently to the papers to correct the false impression our Mayor was giving that the gondola would provide access to Snow Basin.

Secondly: owners and developers of ski resorts do not make big money on lift tickets. If they do anything better than break even on operating expenses via lift tickets, they are doing well. They make their money on real estate development associated with the ski slopes: hotels, condos, lots. Mr. Holdings made it plain when he arranged the land swap with the forest service prior to the Olympic rebuilding at Snow Basin that his plans were to develop Snow Basin as a destination resort... that is, with hotels, condos, restaurants, etc. Given that [and Snow Basin has begun work on that development I believe], it is not now in Snow Basin's interest to establish a gondola link to the 400 vacation homes Mr. Peterson wants to develop on the golf course in Ogden or to the 350 hotel and condo rooms he wants to put into Malan's Basin or to the high end hotel and attendant shops and restaurants Peterson and the Mayor assure us will spring up in Malan's Basin and in downtown Ogden once the gondola is in place. Quite the reverse.

The Mayor can wish the gondola connected with Snow Basin, but as Grandpa Curmudgeon used to say, "if wishes were horses then beggars would ride."

Anonymous said...

If Descente doesn't really care...

Give me the story on Bob Geiger.

What's up with this tiny little dude who dresses as a crip at public events, blue flannel and all -- and blue watchcap?

Anonymous said...

To MooseTace (yech...I'll have a grilled cheese, thanx) and Southsider:

As Inspector Clouseau asked;

"What eez thee matter weeth yew...are yew bliiind?"

Anonymous said...

sorry...MooseTACO!


(I'm typing with gloves...cleaning)

Anonymous said...

Just received an e-mail in which the writer said that the gondola has been pushed by Mayor Godfrey since he took office. About 2000.

I wasn't really keeping track of Ogden politics at this time. Anybody remember this?

Anonymous said...

"To .... Southsider:

As Inspector Clouseau asked;

"What eez thee matter weeth yew...are yew bliiind?" "

The rumors for the past few years are that development of lodging at Snowbasin is on hold. Maybe I'm blind, but I don't see any evidence that that has changed. I'm just looking for evidence. If you have some, can you point me toward it?

Anonymous said...

South:
Let me get back with my source. May take a while. As soon as I do, I'll get something up.
C

Anonymous said...

It is pretty shocking to hear thta Curt Geiger is now proclaiming that Descente just simply doesn't care one way or the other!

As to those amounts of tax payments that he claims Descente makes to Ogden, well I flat out do not believe it. If you do the reverse arithmatic, you will see that for him to pay this much sales tax to Ogden City he would have to be selling millions of dollars worth of merchandise within Ogden city limits.

If you read their web site and do a little investigation on Descente, you will find that very little to none of their sales and or manufacturing actually happens in Ogden.

Other than Scott, who moved up the road 10 miles from Clearfield, all the ski companies that the mayor claims as great victory's do not amount to even 5 % of what Fresnius brings to Ogden. While Godfrey chases, and brags about, small 3 man, minimum wage, start up ski companies to build Ogden's economy, towns in South Salt Lake and Utah Counties are raking in major high tech companies that pay big wages and hire thousands of people.

I think the guy is world class bush league and has proven it with his dismal six year record of financial disasters. I have asked around quite a bit, and I cannot find any one in Ogden that can tell me of any successess of the Mayor and his development team.

Anonymous said...

TL:
Now you've got me defending Curt Geiger. Why did you do that to me?

Look, I think there is a lot wrong with the gondola/gondola Malan's Basin development scheme. But the criticism that Mr. Geiger didn't bring all that many people here when Descante moved here strikes me as off the point and... well, kind of silly. It is a good thing that his company came to Ogden. It's a good thing that its coming here brought fifteen jobs to Ogden. It would have been a good thing if his coming here brought five jobs to Ogden. Or three. As an Ogdenite, I am happy his company moved here, and all the others that have come since... large, small or somewhere in between. ALL of them coming are good news for Ogden. Suggesting otherwise seems to me to not make much sense. However much or little his company pays in sales or property taxes here in Ogden, I am glad it is paying them and Ogden is better for it. Suggesting otherwise seems to me to be, well, just plain silly.

I disagree strongly with Mr. Geiger's ideas about the gondola and how to improve both the business climate in Ogden and the quality of life for all its citizens. None of that means, however, that I think it was bad for Ogden for his company to have located here. Not at all.

Anonymous said...

Dian, you missed a couple of points in your article.
First It is just not all about the ski companies, The last two days in the paper have talked about Mr. Kilby's Renovations on 2 buildings on Washington HE SAID HE IS RENOVATING THEM BECAUSE OF THE PROPOSED GONDOLA, AND JUNCTION DEVELOPMENT, and that is just in the last day for a recent example. You opposed both projects. Secondly businesses have not been coming to Ogden for decades so your economic downswing theory is bogus. I know you have only been back in Ogden the last couple of years, but PLEASE.

Anonymous said...

Thank you Sharon, for showing us how low class you people are. Comparing The Mayor to Hitler???? It does not matter which side of the argument you are on that was the lowest of the low.

Anonymous said...

The only sucess story that Matt has to offer is the Rec center we are building for two private companies, oh coincidently it was shoved up the Butts, and down the throats of the Ogden taxpayers. That was always toughted as the saving grace of the City, now its the Gondola. Whats next Matt? Maybe some other pile of crap?

Anonymous said...

Why is Ogden City Budget in Dire Straits? Now we need to make more budget cuts in all departments throughout the City or face lay-offs of employees and cut back services, while the budget is increased by approx 5 million dollars. Where are those millions going? Obviously not to repair the infrastructure, not to keep and attract qualified employees, where?

Let's see raise the water rates to pay for deteriorating water system, while they piss away monies that are supposed to go to infrastructure from BDO, but was used to guarantee loans for the Recreation Center, now sell off all of the prime east bench open spaces to help create more turmoil in the community and get rid of the last of our open spaces. This mayor has been way too controversial for as long as he has been in office. He has divided the community between the wealthy, and the people just trying to get by. His pipe dreams of making Ogden into something that it isn’t has driven a wedge between this community that will take a long time to repair and to regain trust in the local government. What ever happened to honesty and openess in Governmaent?

Anonymous said...

Mongoose,

It was not I who said that it was all about the ski companies. I don't think anyone said that, really. I was recounting what Mayor Godfrey had said, which was that until he started pitching the gondola and ski hub concept to outside companies, he had generated no outside interest in Ogden for five years. Then, as an illustration of that recently generated interest, which he attributed to the gondola and ski hub concept, he mentioned the ski companies that have come here.

And secondly, for that aforementioned five years, in which Mayor Godfrey generated no interest in Ogden, the entire country was in an economic downswing. Stating that a look at the thirty years prior to that shows that my theory is "bogus" does not make sense, as I was not speaking of those thirty years, but of the five when Mayor Godfrey was trying to get businesses interested in coming here and was not succeeding.

Anonymous said...

Anonymous,
Reread what I wrote. I said Hitler and other despots used these tactics:

"Say it loud enuf, long enuf, and often enuf".....

Godfrey is mentioned only once...in reference to the rec center.

However, you are free to draw any conclusion you like, of course.

Anonymous said...

Dear Can't Take It Anymore,
For a look at how your local gov't CAN AND SHOULD work, attend the Layton City Council meeting in two weeks. They only meet the 1st and 3rd Thursdays....I attended tonite..and wondered if I was in heaven!

What a community friendly and welcoming experience it was.

I think you will have your eyes opened to what good gov't really is.

They have a mayor/city mgr gov't.

Anonymous said...

Yes, Telluride does...

From their site http://www.telluride.com/about_telluride/Gondola.asp

The First of its Kind... For several years, the Telluride Ski & Golf Company (Telski) worked diligently to build the first-of-its-kind $16 million public transit system intended to eliminate the transportation and air quality impact of growth in the region. The first part of the system, the Chondola (a high-speed quad with a 4-person gondola cabin every 10th chair), opened in the 1995/96 season. The gondola, joining the historic town of Telluride with the town of Mountain Village and serving several ski runs, opened in November of 1996.

Telski is a ski industry leader and role model to other resorts in building trendsetting technology. The chondola and gondola systems are innovative, imaginative and something no other mountain community has. They signify the giant leap Telski has taken in initiating advanced transit systems.

Telluride's gondola is the equivalent of three high-speed express lifts. While it transports skiers and snowboarders to a mountain ridge, it is primarily a public transportation system and it's free to foot passengers. It virtually eliminates the need for a car and drastically reduces the amount of air and noise pollution. It eliminates growing traffic congestion and subsequently increases safety. It provides residents with an easy commute to work or school and allows guests to avoid renting a car. Most remarkably, it is more convenient and timely than a bus, a car or even light-rail.

Anonymous said...

Good Morning!
Have you read the excellent letter in the SE today by Gabrielle Vaughn (Clearfield)? She tears apart Peterson's presentation at WSU, and the specious answers she was given by someone other than Peterson.

Who was that 'someone'? Allen? Godfrey? Geiger?

Pls note the reference to 'FEDERAL' funds that could be used to fund the gondola....when she asked if our taxes would pay for the scheme.

Federal Funding is available for the trolley...but I've never heard that federal funding would go into the gondola.

Vague, disingenuous answers. And, she said Peterson told the crowd HE couldn't take questions. So, the henchmen did, thus, as Ms Vaughn deduced, Mr. Peterson cannot be caught in a lie that will come back to bite him.

The bitten ones will be us schmucks.

Again, talk about it as a done deal, and soon the rabble accept.

Anonymous said...

Copperpenny, that is the way I found out about the one I've written about on this thread.

Anonymous said...

Curmudgeon - I too welcome these small ski companies to Ogden. I never said anything about them being bad for town or unwelcome.

The problem is that Mayor Godfrey and this little clique of "HUB" backers are touting these small ski companies as the "saviour" of Ogden, the equivilent of the coming of the Railroad. They are promoting the disengenuous notion that this is the only way that Ogden will survive and that without them we are doomed as a city.

The mayor of Ogden gets a small handfull of 3 or 4 minimum wage employee ski oriented companies to move to Ogden and makes a huge deal over it. Meanwhile, Orem's mayor and development team go out and land a truly big deal that will employ 1800 people with high salaries!

I am not against the ski industry and all the small companies that may or may not come to Ogden. What I am tired of is hearing the mayor, and all these losers that he surrounds himself with, telling us over and over how this is our only course for salvation as a city.

The bottom line is that I do not think Ogden even needs "saving". The "HUB" crowd has created a straw man with this business about Ogden being in a state of collapse, and that they are the only ones that can save us with their gondola and resort idea.

The mayor and this whole crowd have been, and continue to be, very dishonest and corrupt in this whole process. They change their story daily and they lie when the truth would be better.

Anonymous said...

T.L.:
OK. Sorry if I misread your post. I suspect I was reacting more to some of the things said at Tuesday's Mayor's meeting rather than your post specifically.

Incidentally, Mrs. Curmudgeon just got a call from the Mayor's office inviting her to a briefing session next Tuesday. Chatting with the young lady making the call, she learned that the names are coming "probably from registered voters lists." No. Two Son Curmudgeon got a call from the same young lady at the Mayor's office inviting him moments later.

My guess is... and it's only a guess... that Hizzonah is targeting residents of the Mt. Ogden neighborhood, perhaps as a way to counter the meeting at Wasatch Elementary a couple of weeks ago. We shall see. Mrs. Curmudgeon has promised me a full report.

Anonymous said...

Copperpenny...DO YOU HAVE MONEY?????

Anonymous said...

Yet another discrepancy in the gondola story. In this morning's Standard Examiner, regarding Chris Peterson, we see:

He has said the value of the entire project once it is developed will be about $500 million.

Further down, regarding Bob Geiger, we read:

 “It’s not smart to summarily dismiss a $500 million investment in the community before all of the facts are known,” said Geiger...

Investment and value are two different things, as we know. Far from giving clarification to the gondola issue, this is actually clouding it even more, and still not answering the question people have been asking from the beginning----How much will this cost?

So many questions, etc., etc.

Anonymous said...

Dian,
I also, (as many others I'm sure0 caught that 'discrepancy.'

Sometimes I have to wonder how the SE can publish these remarks without blushing.

My very unofficial 'poll' would suggest that the letters in the SE FOR the gondola scheme lag far behind the AGAINST.

That tells me that most Ogdenites and neighbors are astute thinking people. In fact, most of the FOR make an argument embracing the 'investment' which means they haven't thought thru any specious argument by Peterson and the LO's.

A most worrisome thread that was evident during the rec center debacle was.."well, we need to put SOMETHING there!"....Now, we hear the same illogical comments..."well, we need SOMETHING to make Ogden better. Why not try this? At least we'd be doing SOMETHING!".

SOMETHING that needs to be done is.....NOTHING for the moment. Something that should have been done is bringing in the meat processing plant that Pleasant View will reap the benefits from.

Something that should have been done is not making a mess of the 'old mall site'...and bonding the folks for 25 years. Something that should be done is for Peterson to take his snake oil act to another town.

We could use a good 'unsexy, uncool' shoe repair shop. Also a bigtime book store...not just that used book storefront downtown...which serves a purpose, but hardly brings in a steady trade.

Most towns in Utah have a Strawberry Days, Steel Days, Peach Days, etc, complete with a little carnival, sidewalk sales, parade and Miss Whatever! Have I just missed Ogden's?

It would have been fun to have a PREMIERE, complete with searchlites, red carpet, etc for the FIRST INDEPENDENT FILM FESTIVAL. That would have been fun and welcoming...to the film people AND the filmgoers.

Ogden is not a rotten town in need of 'fixing'...but it does have rotten leadership...or lack thereof.

Anonymous said...

Moosetaco, I don't know if you're aware that three or four years ago, there was a developer for the Ogden Mall and the mall could have been built and bringing in revenue to the City NOW, but because Godfrey always has to micromanage EVERYTHING, they cancelled their contract with the City stating that Godfrey's views on Ogden's potential were not realistic. Maybe the City's Economic Development Dept. has desperately tried to recruit businesses to Ogden, but unless they met Godfrey's ideas of what HE wanted for Ogden, he drove them away, as recently happened with the Hispanic shopping mall between 24th & 25th and Monroe and Quincy. There are numerous projects that the Mayor has to take the sole responsibility of driving them away because they did not meet his vision! If we're going to tell the story -- let's tell it all and tell it like it really is.

Ozboy has Peterson and Godfrey figured right about the Mt. Ogden Golf Course -- the Mayor gives the golf course to Peterson so this whole damn nightmare doesn't cost Peterson a dime in the long run. Who do they think they're fooling when they make Peterson out as a big contributer to Ogden's economic development? Godfrey is going to give the golf course to him for a few million bucks so that Peterson can use it to fund his gondola and resort and line his bank account with $500 million dollars or more in the end! This whole business deal has been poorly managed from the start! Not one penny should have been spent on it, until a feasibility study and a geological study were done. Thousands of dollars (some of it taxpayer money) have been spent and no one knows if the land can be used! WSU hasn't given their answer and said they would sell -- can homes be built on that ground or are they going to wash away like Country Hills Drive did? Will the existing homes below the golf course suffer more flooding if homes are built on the course?

I agree with "So Pissed I Can't Take It Any Longer." Godfrey has driven Ogden so far in debt that they have no money for the day-to-day necessities -- the money that should be going to fund improvements to the critical sewer and water lines is being used to guarantee the loan for the rec center -- so Godfrey's solution is to raise water rates by 13% so that he can still say that he lowered property taxes while he was in office. Who the hell does he think he's fooling?! Just these young starry-eyed young ski fanatics who don't get the picture. You can bet that the Mayor is making all department heads drastically cut their budgets while he is increasing his by an obscene amount! Is it time for Ogden to have its version of the "Boston Tea Party?!"

Ogden has got to get a new Mayor with a Masters degree in business and government administration or a new form of City government! It is blatantly obvious that Ogden hasn't seen a Mayor that can administer the City wisely since this strong Mayor Form of Government was voted in. Mayor Mecham didn't ruin the city, but he also didn't do much for it.

When the historians write Ogden's history, I hope they tell the true legacy that Godfrey leaves the City, not the one he thinks he is.

Anonymous said...

Earlier, I said I'd been to the Layton City Council Mtg.
What a great experience!

They have a Mayor/City Manager form of gov't.....also FIVE council members....all 'at large'.

WE should be looking at doing that again. I understand Ogden at one time did have such a gov't.

But, beyond that, the people were welcomed to speak for FIVE minutes and sometimes the exchange of Q and A with the att'y or city mgr...would take longer even after the speaker had sat down.

The Boy Scouts were welcomed and asked to stand and give their names and Troop #. Also the teens in attendance who were interested in gov't.

The Fire Marshall presented CERT certificates to about 20 citizens who completed the Community Emergency Response Training. The entire council, atty, etc, came down and stood in front and shook hands with every recipient. APPLAUSE WAS ENCOURAGED! Even a few 'woo hoo's" by exuberant fans. At the end of the presentations, the mayor thanked them for their service in being prepared to help the community in case of a disaster. Maybe they could start on the 9th floor here?

Intelligent questions were asked...and those presenting to the council had LARGE maps of the areas in question...on both sides of the room so all could see.

I suggest anyone interested in seeing how welcoming, encouraging and respectful a governing body can be to it's citizens, to attend the next Layton City Council Meeting!

It might be a good idea to become educated and then hold some town meetings to educate the interested public in this form of city gov't. if warranted.

The city mgr has been with Layton for 12 years and is considered the best in Utah. He also holds degrees in this type of management....which a good administrator should..Howard. Layton meets the 1st and 3rd Th's. They hold their work meetings before the public council meeitngs. Think about it....only two meetings per month....not weekly trying to learn all that needs to be digested. Obviously, going to two meetings for each (work and council) is effective.

BTW...not a cop in sight!!! I guess they were out fighting crime.

Anonymous said...

PS.....The Layton mayor is paid $18.000 a yr!

The council members receaive $11,000. The mayor is parttime.

Go visit the mayor's office...smallish, unpretentious...no mahogany!

Anonymous said...

Howard, good post! I'm sure the Mayor doesn't want anyone to remember things as they really happened. Thanks for the refresher!

As far as the budget goes, I think all of Ogden should fill the City Council room and make sure that the City Council doesn't give the Mayor his budget. That's disgusting to make all the department heads cut their budgets to the bare bones, but then he increases his own by an obscene amount. But leave it to Godfrey to be so brash.

BTW RDA/Council Meeting has been canceled Tuesday night so don't go down there.

Anonymous said...

Sharon:

Ogden used to have a council/city manager form of government. It switched over to Mayor/Council form about, I think, a decade or so ago. I presume the change was made with voter approval. If so, we've got the form of government we voted in.

I wasn't here when the change over was made. Be interested to hear from someone who was here then why it was made. Was there some scandal involving the Council or something the Counicil/ City Manager had done that got voters so ticked off they voted for a change in the form of government? Just curious.

But on the whole, I'm afraid we generally get the government we deserve [God help us]. We need to remember that Mayor Godfrey did not sieze power in a coup. We voted him in. Twice.

Anonymous said...

Curm, I was here when the the voters voted to change to the strong mayor type of government. It was 1990 or 1991 and Glenn Mecham was the first mayor elected mayor with the new form of government. I believe the reasoning behind it was people felt that an ELECTED mayor would be more responsive to the people than an appointed city manager. The City Council nor the Mayor, who was Sneddon did nothing to upset the citizens. The City Manager wasn't doing what the people wanted. And yes, people could see that Ogden was slowly going downhill and losing businesses to Riverdale and Layton. It's just unfortunate that people elected someone (couldn't be "a good old boy,") that wouldn't listen to them, who thinks HE knows everything. At least the Council had some control over the "appointed" City Manager, where now, we have a loose cannon running the show, and proudly tells everyone that "NO ONE is my boss!" And that includes the citizens/voters of Ogden. As he says in Sunday's (May 7th) newspaper, "Having a referendum each time a controversial issue faces the set sets a dangerous precedent," Godfrey said. "It's an absolute fiasco as far as making public policy," he said.
Our form of government isn't to go to a referendum every time there is a group that disagrees with a project."

OK, Mayor, how about letting the public vote at least ONCE! The gondola/selling Mt. Ogden Golf Course are BIG issues -- big enough to warrant a vote from the voters because they affect the WHOLE community!

Anonymous said...

Howard:

Thanks for filling in the background. No system is perfect. City Manager plan has the advantage [if the Council hires well] of putting a professional in the job, not a politician. On the other hand, it really provides no check on the Council, which can hire and fire the manager. Mayor/Council plan in theory permits each to check the other. But it does mean, often, that a politician rather than someone skilled in city management gets the job. On the other hand, some of the best mayors in history have been popularly elected. Benefits and drawbacks [clearly] both ways.

As for referenda as a way to set policy: in general, the Mayor is right on this. You can't have a referendum every time some group disagrees with a project. However, the Mayor's own rhetoric on this --- this is a massive project that will change Ogden forever, involves $500 million in investment, requires selling off Mt. Ogden Golf Course and city recreational lands above and south of it, etc. --- that it seems to me it may qualify as the exception that proves the rule. If it really will so drastically change [one way or the other] the business and real estate situation in Ogden, the jobs situation, the tax-revenues, and I guess the nature of Ogden City, perhaps asking the people if they want to go ahead is the course of wisdom. Not as a general way of setting policy, but this time for this massive proposal.

Anonymous said...

You're missing the point, Bernie.

Lord Godfrey is totally nuts.

He's proven time again that he'll do anything necessary to promote his insane schemes.

The latest evidence is the water bill, which, at taxpayer expense, includes the Peterson/Godfrey sales pitch brochure.

This Mayor guy belongs on a carlot, selling "clean one owners, always parked in a garage in Pasadena."

How this insane and delusional Fuller Brush dimwit wound up Ogden's mayor is anybody's guess, but it's pretty obvious to most citizens I talk to, that he's a tool, clinically obsessed with overcoming the "short man syndrome," and ALWAYS getting his way.

Anonymous said...

To bad Sharon doesn't smack Bernie and Godfrey also, like she did that boy/man Geiger!

If it were not for courageous people like Sharon, Dorothy, Shroeder, Vouss, etc., Sociopaths like Godfrey would totally steam roller the people.

Viva la resistance!

Anonymous said...

Well, thanx so much Bonnie Lee!

One of my many mottoes and philosophies is " I know I'm on the right side, when I see who my enemies are."

Dont'cha love it when the other side squirms and snaps back with venomous barbs? Sometimes we get too close for their comfort.

If encouraging folks to look at Layton's city gov't and considering it makes Godfrey's kin into attack dogs...then we must've said something right.

It's easy to attack me, cuz I sign my own name.

Godfrey was voted in twice because too many voters didn't understand his personality, issues, come out to meetings, or just didn't show up at the polls to vote for someone else!

Hopefully, everyone is smarter now.

Anonymous said...

Sharon - While I tend to agree with most of what I hear from you, I must take exception on your analysis of why the Mayor was re-elected.

I believe the only reason that he won the last, and close race, was because of people in Ogden being afraid of electing his opponent - Garcia.

Rather we like it or not, there is a pretty big segment of our population, especially on the east side, that is biased and very nervous about our latino brothers and sisters and their growing numers in town. I just do not think that white, middle and upper class folks are ready to vote for a latin mayor. Inspite of his many years of very competent and loyal service to Ogden, I believe that there is a significant portion of voters who just simply could not vote for him because of the race issue.

I would hope to see that change in time. Unfortunately, since the last election, and Garcia's rise to council leader, he seems to have disapeared and is not taking the reigns of leadership.

I think that if Garcia wanted to run again for mayor that he could change a lot of minds come next election, If he would only be more bold and speak out on the important issues that face the city. The city of Ogden is facing a serious crisis in leadership in the Mayor's office as well as on the council.

Unfortunately the rest of the council has shown a serious lack of cajones as well. The only one on the council that seems to have any leadership potential at all is that baffoon Sasten, and we all know about him! The only one with the guts to stand up to Godfrey and his nonsense is Jeske, and I seriously doubt if she would be electable as Mayor.

Come on Garcia, show us your stuff. Show us the leader that some think that you can be.

Anonymous said...

Draconian judgements on the nature of the current Council, but a few months into its tenure and before it has even completed one budget process, seem to me to be wildly premature.

The responsibility of this Council... of any Council, really ... is not to get in the mayor's face on every issue to demonstrate its cojones. The responsibility of a Council is to make sound decisions in the public interest over the course of its tenure. It's early days, people. Be patient. A year into its tenure, we can perhaps draw some conclusions about the nature of the present Council. But it is way way too early to do so at this point.

And we need to keep in mind that no Council --- except one composed of a single member, me --- will make every decision correctly and will always decide matters as we might prefer. Give the members some time, and lets see how the chips fall.

Anonymous said...

Curm, I've read your posts for quite some time now, and I'm impressed with your wisdom and common sense. I hope you live in either Rick Safsten's or Brandon Stephenson's District and will be willing to run in a little over a year. Your maturity would be a welcome relief to the constant, unimportant and unnecessary babblings of the two afore mentioned Councilmen.

And as you say: "And we need to keep in mind that no Council --- except one composed of a single member, me --- will make every decision correctly and will always decide matters as we might prefer."

Please consider running, Curm.

Anonymous said...

Larry L
I agree with your assessment of the mayoral race, past.
Jesse has a lot of know how in how a city should function.
But, is he winnable? I'm not sure. Even for those non-racists voters, Jesse doesn't come across as a powerful, dynamic leader. He's too soft spoken. Am sure you've attended council meetings>
Too often, Safsten, in his sickenly coy manner, takes over, and Jesse allows it.

About Curm....sometimes I get the feeling that Curm already may be on the council!

I like a lot about Jesse. I think he'a a decent hard working guy. He's raised 4 great kids, by himself.
I am disappointed that he thinks it necessary to take the side of ILLEGALS. What a good role model he is and can be even more so, by encouraging Hispanics to obey the laws of our country.

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