Wednesday, April 22, 2009

Rigonomics Regulates the Agranistas


Jim Righeimer penned an absolutely stunning rebuttal to Emporer Agran's shameless pitch for porkulus to fund his Great Pork. Mr. Righeimer, a great party activist for the GOP just narrowly missed being elected to the Costa Mesa City Council. He would be much more effective on the council dais than Hurricane Katrina Foley who is an out of touch liberal and a member of Mr. Agran's infamous Great Pork board.

Many of our NIMBY posters on here incessantly claim El Toro International Airport is "dead" and that we should stop talking about it. They have become so desperate to silence pro El Toro supporters that they have even resorted to publishing the phone numbers of private citizens on here. Hence, the new moderation rules.

I got news for them. El Toro is NOT dead when the Great Pork tries to come after my wallet through the confiscation of my tax dollars to finance a frivolous project that was absolutely promised to be TAX FREE. (Perhaps there should have been a teabag rally at the site of the Great Pork.)

El Toro is also NOT dead, when South County NIMBYs incessantly write op-eds lamenting the lack of flight capacity within Orange County. When it was they who were the very ones that caused the lack of flight capacity in the first place by their lame attempt at trying to turn El Toro International Airport into some kind of fantasy park. It is the ultimate case of chutzpah for any of them to whine about lack of commercial flights out of Orange County.


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RIGONOMICS:
Don’t be misled on park
By JIM RIGHEIMER
Updated: Friday, April 3, 2009 9:30 PM PDT

There are times when you read or hear something that just doesn’t sound right. Something about some fact or figure just seems out of whack. They just don’t seem to add up, but there it is for all to read in a credible major newspaper.

I had one of those moments last week when I read an article about the major job creation that was happening at the Great Park in Irvine. The story went on to say that 6,317 new jobs would be created in the Great Park this year.

That’s right, 6,317 jobs this year — 2009.

Total benefit to the economy? How about $23.9 billion over the next 12 years? Now, I do not know about you, but I have not seen a lot of construction around the Great Park, at least none that included 6,317 jobs.

It only took a little research to see that a major newspaper was hoodwinked by the Master of Great Park spin. None other than Irvine Councilman Larry Agran, chairman of the Great Park Corporation.

This is the same Larry Agran who just a couple months ago at a public presentation of the completion of the comprehensive park plan said it was worth the three years and $50 million spent to design the Great Park.

In fact, it actually cost more than $100 million to get to this plan, but Larry is never one to let facts get in the way of a good spin.

He is correct that the actual firms that came up with the design were paid $50 million.

It just so happens the Great Park Corporation also burned through another $50 million during that same planning process. But of course this money was not spent on design.

It was spent on public relations, public education, outreach and such. You have to understand that it takes a lot of public relations to design a park and public relations firms cost a lot of money.

So let’s look at the many ways that Agran and Co. misled the public about this massive $1.6-billion park development.

First off, they call everything the Great Park. Not just the 1,347 acres that someday may be a park, but also the 2,350 acres on which Lennar is developing 9,000-plus homes, condos and apartments, and millions of square feet of commercial, office and retail development — all of which are also called the Great Park.

Ken Smith’s company that won the $50-million master design contract for the Great Park is now called none other than Great Park Design Studio.

By calling everything the Great Park you are able to intertwine different aspects of the project without letting the public know which part you are talking about.

So when grand manipulator Agran talks about the billions of dollars in projects and the thousands of jobs the Great Park will provide, he can confuse everyone about what he is talking about.

Now, do not get me wrong, some people would say that Larry Agran is lying, or at a minimum he has a hard time speaking the truth. The fact is he never lies. He doesn’t have to. To get to his thousands of jobs and billions of dollars he uses confusing and misleading terms like “Great Park-related infrastructure” or “Great Park-associated development.”

He wants you to believe the Great Park is the economic stimulus when it is really the 9,000 homes that will be built (not any time soon). This is like the rooster taking credit for the sun coming up.

Let’s look at the community column Agran wrote for the Daily Pilot last week. In this piece he argues that federal stimulus dollars (a.k.a your tax dollars) should be spent on the Great Park. To back up his claim he trots out a study — a study that was paid for by none other than the Great Park Corporation.

Good manipulators always have a good study to confirm what they want to say. When you dig into the 115-page study it becomes very clear that the actual park is a very small park of the economic activity in the area. In fact, the study says that only 313 of the 6,317 jobs Agran takes credit for are from the actual park, and those are the design and public relations jobs I discussed earlier.

I guess I could sum it up with the disclaimer on the last page of the study. “No warranty or representation is made… that any of the projected values or results contained in this study will actually be achieved.” When you hear something that just doesn’t sound right, go with your gut — especially when the numbers just don’t add up.


JIM RIGHEIMER is a Costa Mesa planning commissioner, a local developer and a GOP activist.

8 comments:

anon said...

Thanks for publishing Jim Righeimer's demolition of Larry Agran's story about jobs at his Great Park. Righeimer found that Agran's 6317 jobs this year actually were 313. Great Park is hardly an economic engine and the Register and Los Angeles Times did not publish Agran's letter, but Daily Pilot and Orange County Business Journal did publish it. Orange County Business Journal should have known better. Bring on the jobs, Agran, of El Toro International Airport. Yesterday, Today and Tomorrow.

Anonymous said...

Gosh Donald, I just love it when you pat your self on the back for your own rants.

Vernon Delights said...

710 this is my blog, not Donald's.

Vernon

anon said...

1046, thanks Vernon for asserting your ownership of this fine website.
Recently I met a NIMBY from one of those south county towns which voted against the airport. He said how many times do we have to vote no for them to get the message? I said you voted four times and lost on all elections and now Irvine can open it without any more elections. Then he said you're just trying to get rid of flights over your house and if you get your way there will be airplanes running into the mountains. I said you're brainwashed. The airport is approved by the FAA, and I am for El Toro International Airport. He was muttering something as I walked away, but I knew he was not used to being confronted on this issue. Turn on the lights, Vernon.

Anonymous said...

We all know the Vernon is Donald in a really bad disguise.

anon said...

410, dream on Lone NIMBY. If Vernon is not Vernon, then I'm not me either. Turn on the lights, Vernon. Lone NIMBY feels insulted that Vernon is a master of magic and I'm even tougher to spot. Lone NIMBY is having a nervous breakdown.

Anonymous said...

Boy Donald (1108) you really told him and bombarded him with lots of facts! I'm sure you really changed his mind. Why he's probably home right now writing his supervisor and pushing for El Toro to open....NOT! He know's you an elitist old fool and he probably feels sorry for you.

anon said...

428, sure changed his mind. He didn't know there were people for El Toro International Airport. He couldn't hear the airplanes, but he could see them. Everybody in this country can see the airplanes, so that part of his brainwashing was rinsed out. Turn on the lights, Vernon. We're making great progress with you know who.