John Anton's Questionnaire
Each candidate answered a League-style questionnaire.
How many years have you lived in Maine?: 10
What experiences, motivations, and leadership styles will make you an effective City Councilor?:
EXPERIENCE:
In my professional life, I rely on financial analysis, management and
city planning skills, all of which are much needed on the Council.
Additionally, I have served on several non-profit and public boards.
From this service, I have learned how to promote institutional change
in organizations from an oversight, rather than direct management,
role.
MOTIVATION(S): I am running to promote strategic
long-term thinking by the City. I want to move our City's
decision-making away from the current ad hoc, reactive approach that is
undermining the Portland that I love.
LEADERSHIP STYLE: I
recognize that if I am elected I will only be one councilor out of
nine. For the Council to make progress on addressing the city's
challenges, I will have to forge issue-by-issue alliances with
councilors of diverse and competing points of view. In my professional
life, I have able to reconcile the competing and often adversarial
interests of investors, non-profit affordable housing organizations and
state housing agencies. I do this by seeking and offering clear
articulation of motives and interests, acknowledging where differences
and competing views lie, and using data, reason and examples from other
settings to craft solutions. Perhaps most importantly, I admit when I
don't know something (which is often).
If elected, what would your top three priorities be? How do they affect Portlander's aged 18-35?:
My top three priorities are:
1) Making funding school programs and buildings our highest fiscal priority while seeking efficiency in administrative costs;
2)
Increasing the supply of housing affordable to middle- and
working-class people. We have the infrastructure to serve a city of
77,000 - our 1950 population - with only 64,000 people living here now;
3)
Implementing transportation planning that will give the same weight to
pedestrian, bicycle and public transportation as is given to
automobiles.
I believe that most Portlanders between 18 and 35
are struggling to earn enough money to meet the cost of living in
Portland. My priorities are intended to address both the income and
expense side of the economic struggle. An excellent educational system
gives young Portlanders the resources needed to pursue higher education
and build a career. Likewise, reducing housing and transportation costs
contributes to a lower cost of living for all Portlanders including
those between 18 and 35.
Please share one positive change you have seen on City Council AND in Portland over the last year?:
The
repeal of the Formula Business Ordinance. Councilors Marshall and
Donoghue led a repeal effort that eliminated a poorly conceived and
executed ordinance while still maintaining the City's commitment to
support local business. By repealing the Formula Business Ordinance,
the Council was able to significantly reduce the level of acrimony in
the civic discussion on the issue. Particularly gratifying to me was to
discover that many people on either side of the debate about the
ordinance were actually in agreement about the importance of
locally-owned businesses to our economic health. I hope that the repeal
of the FBO as well as the forthcoming product of the task force have
established a precedent for how the Council will address important
policy matters in the future.
Please share one frustrating change you have seen on City Council AND in Portland over the last year?:
The
school budget and financial management debacle. The relationship
between the "city side" and the "school side" is awkward and not
conducive to collaborative problem-solving. It does however provide
staff and elected officials ample opportunity to point fingers without
offering strategies or solutions.
My fear is that the managerial
and personal shortcomings of some of the participants in these
discussions will be used to diminish the city's commitment to
high-quality public education. We must get past the structural fiction
of "schools" vs. "city." It is all one budget serving one citizenry.
The City Council must take responsibility for determining the priority
of education within the city budget and collaborate with the School
Committee to develop a city budget (including schools) in which the
public can be confident.
What competing responsibilities do you have: professionally and personally?:
I
have a full-time job as the President of the Northern New England
Housing Investment Fund. I also have two young children (ages 4 and 2).
Frankly, I had difficulty managing my professional, personal and
volunteer responsibilities when I was on the planning board
(particularly after the birth of my second child). With that in mind, I
have arranged for a reduction in my work hours if I am elected to the
City Council.
Are you a homeowner or a renter?: Homeowner
Do you support reducing the parking requirements for new construction (Y/N)?: Yes
Do you support increasing housing density to build more units (Y/N)?: Yes
What are you thoughts and ideas about housing in Portland?:
Both rental and owner-occupied housing continue to be extremely expensive in Portland when compared to incomes.
I
support the city's Housing Plan which identifies increasing housing
supply as the primary strategy for improving housing affordability in
the city. While the city has worked hard to promote housing development
over the past few years, we still need to do more, specifically:
-
Re-write and expand our residential zoning to allow increased density
with lower parking requirements, especially on the peninsula;
-
Assign a cost to the adverse impact of condo conversions on the supply
of apartments. We should increase condo conversion fees and direct that
revenue to a housing production fund.
- Collaborate with Efficiency
Maine and Maine State Housing Authority to provide grants and low-cost
loans to landlords who make energy-efficiency improvements in rentals
where tenants pay for their own utilities.
What is your primary mode of transportation? How can we improve transportation in Portland?:
My
primary means of transportation is my family's 2000 Subaru Brighton
Legacy wagon. My wife and I both work at full-time jobs and our older
daughter goes to a preschool that is not walking distance from our
house. We want to remain a one-car family, but it is a significant
challenge.
There are many ways we can improve transportation in Portland.
-
Reform Metro. Metro routes and scheduling need to become
consumer-driven, i.e., designed by bus riders and prospective bus
riders rather than administrators.
- Implement the city's 1993
transportation plan. Among other things, this plan directs the city to
have transportation planners on staff and to incorporate non-automotive
transportation elements into review of all new development proposals.
-
improve pedestrian safety - one major asset of Portland in comparison
to most surrounding communities is the ability to walk from one's home
to work, schools, shops and services. The attractiveness and
feasibility of walking is often diminished by unsafe road crossings and
poorly maintained or non-existent sidewalks. We must maintain
pedestrian infrastructure with the same diligence as automobile
infrastructure.
What economic development ideas would you bring to City Council?:
The
City needs a long-term economic development strategy. At present, it
appears that the City confuses commercial real estate development with
economic development. As a City Councilor, I will promote a
community-based economic development strategy that will include:
-
Directing our scarce economic development dollars into support of those
aspects of our community that distinguish Portland from its neighbors.
As an example, I think our tax money is better spent in providing an
infrastructure for the creative economy rather than subsidizing the
move of Intermed's offices from South Portland to Portland.
- Ensuring that the City's buying practices favor locally-owned businesses;
- Reviewing the city's fee structure to shift fees away from small locally owned businesses;
-
Reviewing the city's regulatory processes to ensure that applications
for land use approvals, business licenses, etc. are treated fairly,
consistently and in a timely manner regardless of their size or the
political clout of the applicant.
How do you think the current Council has processed the Maine State Pier development?:
Over the last few years, the City has repeatedly failed the people of the Portland with regard to the Maine State Pier.
-
The marketing of the pier as a marine industry site following Cianbro's
departure was inadequate and insufficient to declare the site
obsolescent for marine industry.
- The rushed rezoning of the pier
allowing substantial nonmarine uses was unfair to neighboring private
pier owners who are not allowed such uses while also being
disrespectful to the long-stated importance Portlanders have assigned
to a "working waterfront."
- Both the language of and the short
response time for the RFP discouraged submittals when what we needed
most were bold, creative visions for this enormously valuable public
asset.
- The evaluation of the RFP responses has been at best inept.
The CDC's failure to ever clarify how proposals would be evaluated only
exacerbated the perception of an unfair process. Development is always
contentious and selecting a developer in a competitive process for a
large project is that much more contentious. That is all the more
reason for the City to have employed the utmost caution and clarity in
issuing the RFP and evaluating the responses.
The City's actions
regarding the Maine State Pier have undermined the willingness of many
in our business and professional community to work with the City. More
importantly, these actions have undermined the public's confidence that
the City is representing the public's interest in the disposition of a
critical piece of public infrastructure.
Do you think it is
important to increase regional collaboration? Why or why not? If so,
what would you do to collaborate more?:
Yes. Many of the issues
we face in Portland - for example, transportation, housing and public
infrastructure - are ultimately issues with regional implications and
regional solutions. Because it is a "service center" community,
Portland is asked to bear the cost of services and infrastructure that
serve the entire region.
Specific areas in which I would seek collaboration are:
-
Port of Portland investment, maintenance and operations. Neighboring
communities as well as the state which benefit from our deepwater port
should share in its upkeep (and upside);
- identifying redundancies
between and among the administrative structures of the city, the
county, the state and neighboring communities. We need to consolidate
administrative functions across units of government whenever feasible.
What do you think of Portland's overall tax structure, and specifically, about current tax rates?:
Like
all municipalities in Maine, Portland relies on taxes on property as
its primary revenue source. Property taxes are inherently regressive in
that they are not based on a property owner's ability to pay. The state
has tried to address that issue through the property tax rebate
program, which provides a refund to homeowners whose property tax
exceeds 4% of their income. The refund is cumbersome to apply for and
is underutilized. The city should take a more active role in informing
homeowners about the program and assisting them in accessing it.
That
said, our property taxes are high relative to working class incomes and
as such contribute to our housing affordability crisis. Conversely,
they are low when viewed in light of the range of services the City
offers. My belief is that most Portlanders will accept our relatively
high property taxes as long as they feel that they are a) getting high
quality services and b) the city is well-run. I believe that the
public's confidence that the city is well-run is eroding.
What do you think Portland should do to encourage the arts and the creative economy?:
As
discussed above, I believe the city should focus its economic
development resources on promoting those aspects of the City that
distinguish us from our neighbors. Certainly the arts and the creative
economy fall into that category.
Additionally, the City needs to
recognize the particular issues facing artists. Cost of living, in
particular the cost of housing and/or studio/rehearsal/performance
space, presents a major challenge to artists being able to stay in
Portland. Over and above promoting housing affordability, the City also
needs to reform its land use ordinance to recognize and "legalize"
live/work artist space.
What role do you think neighborhoods, and neighborhood associations, should have in our city?:
Our
city's comprehensive plan calls for neighborhood-based planning; yet we
have never implemented it. There are many cities we can look to for
successful models, but we must first have the political will to do it.
I will work to ensure that the city directs its staffing resources to
implementing neighborhood-based planning.
What specific steps do you think Portland can make to become a more sustainable city and to safeguard a healthy environment?:
Municipal
governments around the country and around the world have already taken
the lead on sustainability. The City of Portland can begin by targeting
its own operations. Specific initiatives that the City of Cambridge, MA
(as an example) has already implemented and that the city of Portland
should pursue are:
- Establishing an Energy Management Task
Force to systematically assess City owned facilities and identify
energy efficiency upgrade projects;
- Incorporating alternative
fuels and vehicles into the municipal fleet. Fuel city-owned diesel
vehicles with B20 biodiesel. Move to GEM neighborhood scale electric
vehicles whenever possible.
- Developing a Transportation Demand
Management (TDM) plan to encourage employees to travel by means other
than driving alone. The TDM plan should offer a variety of employee
programs (including parking cashout) to encourage the use of
transportation options.
