Midwest Environmental Advocates, the public interest law firm, has
posted on its website the comments it submitted to UWM's consultants
preparing an analysis of water's relationship to socio-economic issues.
The
consultants were hired to perform a quick, 90-day review of the
Southeastern Wisconsin Regional Planning Commission's draft water supply
plan - - now in its fifth year of drafting by a 32-member advisory
committee (one member of color, fyi) - - that preliminarily endorsed a
Lake Michigan water diversion to Waukesha, along with other
recommendations.
Waukesha is proceeding with an
application to the eight Great Lakes Governors for the diversion - - a
mandatory and unanimous approval that is no sure thing, given Michigan's
anti-diversion politics - - with the first major step being Waukesha
Common Council consideration set for April 8th.
That
will send the application to the Wisconsin Department of Natural
Resources, and it is currently writing the scope of the environmental
review it perform on the application when it is received.
The
DNR is working from a weakened review position, having chosen not to
write administrative rules that would have defined just what a diversion
application would include, and without public hearings on those
proposed rules.
The SEWRPC regional water
supply plan, once the UWM consultants have finished their piece, will
probably be adopted by the full 21-member SEWRPC board this spring or
summer.
Yes, I know:
SEWRPC's
studies and plans recommendations are just that - - recommendations -
- and governments latch on to them when it serves their purposes.
That
is how, for example, the Wisconsin Department of Transportation
(WisDOT) got the cover it needed to forge ahead with $6.4 billion in
regional freeway reconstruction and improvements: SEWRPC recommended it -
- after performing a study with a $1 million WisDOT planning contract.
That's how that game is played.
Or SEWRPC
recommendations are ignored - - which is how the Town of Summit and the
City of Oconomowoc let Pabst Farms be built on acreage (with millions in
Tax Incremental Financing subsidies, to boot) that SEWRPC's supposedly
all-encompassing, all-powerful Land Use plan had recommended be left
undeveloped. That's how that game is played.
Then
SEWRPC turned around and recommended that WisDOT hurry up and build a
full-scale, $24 million I-94 interchange to serve a shopping mall
planned, but not yet built, at Pabst Farms. So that game continues, too.
But
I got diverted.
In its first water draft
diversion application made public a few weeks ago, Waukesha's water
planners jumped the gun, saying SEWRPC had recommended the
diversion. I pointed out this over-eagerness to Waukesha officials and
they agreed to make the wording accurate.
Of
course, there is little doubt the full SEWRPC board will soon adopt the
regional water study and its Waukesha-centric diversion recommendation,
but let's not forget that SEWRPC's Environmental Justice Task Force, a
citizen body that demanded and got the independent, UWM socio-economic
analysis of the overall regional water supply study under way in the
first place.
The EJTF will review the
consultants' findings, so we'll have to wait for this admittedly
confusing but very important process to play itself out.
A
lot will depend on the final report issued by the UWM consultants - -
and note: The consultants are still seeking public comment at
this site, so
weigh in before the end of March.
The MEA
comments, also endorsed by others including the American Civil Liberties
Union, are
here.
They are comprehensive and strong and are well worth reading.
Yet
I was disheartened by
a
public listening session held by the consultants in Waukesha last
week because their draft findings and recommendations took these
positions:
1. Development in Waukesha will
happen regardless of which water supply Waukesha elects to pursue (Lake
Michigan, not wells, is the Waukesha preferred option, as is purchasing
that water from Milwaukee, which is closer to Waukesha, and has better
and cheaper water than two other potential suppliers - - Oak Creek and
Racine.)).
2. So...the best way that the
region's low-income residents could obtain a positive benefit from that
water sale is through a "regional cooperation or intergovernmental
agreement that could address some of the region's most critical
socio-economic problems," with the 2008 New Berlin water sale agreement
held up as a model.
Further, the consultants
said low-income residents or households in the selling community might
see an economic benefit through reduced water rates.
Here's
the overall problem: these draft findings don't fully take into account
the region's history and realities.
A. There
is opposition in Waukesha towards buying Milwaukee water, and downright
hostility towards any agreement with Milwaukee that goes beyond a
contract for water-by-the-gallon.
Jeff Scrima,
winner of the Waukesha mayoral primary in February, and others, are
framing the argument around Waukesha's alleged "sovereignty," and
against tying a water sale housing or transit or jobs, as Milwaukee city
policy requires. See history
here.
B.
As a member of the listening session audience said the other night to
Cate Madison, the consultant handling the Waukesha meeting - - water
rates never go down. Everyone chuckled, and Madison conceded the point,
but repeated that spreading a utility's costs across a broader customer
base was still an advantage.
That's true, but I
think we all know that doesn't really result in lowered rates and would
not amount to much of an attack on regional social and economic
problems.
And like the notion of a regional
contract, it's a way to address socio-economic issues passively, or
indirectly - - which is what happened when Milwaukee and New Berlin made
the 2008 water deal for diverted Lake Michigan water to be delivered to
New Berlin's middle-third.
3. The New Berlin
agreement brought Milwaukee a one-time payment of $1.5 million above
whatever is the state-mandated water per-gallon charge.
The
check covered the 20-year term of the agreement. New Berlin took that
approach because it did not want to get directly involved in transit
line connections or housing or other shared services.
Milwaukee
did not play hardball with New Berlin because it was an existing water
customer (to New Berlin's eastern third), and because Milwaukee and New
Berlin do not have an overall history as contentious as Milwaukee and
Waukesha's relationship.
But you can't get too
excited about the payment.
I pointed out at the
listening session meeting that the New Berlin payment amounts to
$75,000 a year - - and to a city like Milwaukee, with 600,000 people,
that's about 12 cents per person, per year.
If
there was an agreement made with Milwaukee reflecting Waukesha's
projected water purchase at about triple New Berlin's - - and believe
me, getting Waukesha persuaded to pay any regional premium may even be
beyond the skills of Waukesha lobbyist
Mike
D'Amato, the influential former Milwaukee East side alderman - -
that would put another 37 cents a year into a Milwaukee resident's
pocket.
I know that lump sum payments between
governments don't usually go to individual people. They go to a
government's general fund for tax relief.
But
in a billion-dollar+ City of Milwaukee annual budget, these numbers are
drops in the bucket, fade in value due to inflation, and do little
authentically to address the region's housing, transit and workforce
deficits.
And if you back out infrastructure
improvements that the Milwaukee Water Works will have to make to pump
water to Waukesha, or impacts on and around Underwood Creek from
Waukesha's return flow/wastewater discharge there - - who knows?
Maybe
it's a wash, or worse - - without considering the added growth that
will come Waukesha's way with an influx of ready, fresh, clean water,
with some inevitably at land-locked and poorer Milwaukee's expense.
And
let's not forget that New Berlin has taken its western third out of
added development, so New Berlin is committed to a disconnect between
sprawl and diverted water.
But Waukesha is
planning the opposite. It's draft application says it will send Lake
Michigan water way past its current water service boundaries to an
additional 17.5 square miles to the south and west that could
potentially increase the city's size by 80%.
The
homes projected to be built in the added water service territory - -
and will SEWRPC's environmental corridor acreage there be preserved, as
recommended? - - are on lots in the range of an
acre-to-an-acre-and-a-half.
No one is arguing
that is so-called affordable housing.
In
fact, Waukesha has recently reduced its citywide plans for multi-unit
housing, as is noted in the MEA comments:
For example, not only
did the city of Waukesha in 2009 reduce its targets for multifamily
housing, but on Feb. 24, 2010 the city of Waukesha Plan Commission
rejected a developer’s proposal to construct affordable multifamily
housing. Because persons of color are more likely to rent than purchase
homes, and more likely to have trouble getting mortgages even if they
could afford to do so, such actions may well result in even greater
segregation than projected in the draft Analysis, even in the city of
Waukesha.
And no one is
arguing that the new service territory will be served by transit, or
that new business and industry in Waukesha will be linked by transit to
Milwaukee, or other regional concentrations of high-unemployment. You
can't even take a municipal bus from Milwaukee to Waukesha now.
In
fact, the consultants found that the region's population, employment
and housing patterns are going to generally continue - - which has made
the Waukesha-Milwaukee pairing the most segregated for African-Americans
in the country.
So if the region is really
going to attack its overall lack of equity, and diversity, and social
justice and move towards widespread economic benefits, it needs to use
every means available, and that should include water - - a public trust
resource - - as a useful tool.
The MEA-endorsed
comments indicate, in fact, that federal law requires that kind
of assertive path.
Again: the comments are well
worth the read.
Especially in Waukesha, and
at SEWRPC.
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