DOUBLE-HEADER
It was a precedent-shattering day for the Shelby County Commission Monday. The assembled commissioners were addressed by two mayors — county mayor A C Wharton in the morning, pitching his proposed new Adequate Facilities Tax, and Memphis mayor Willie Herenton in the afternoon, stumping for city/county consolidation. But the key moment may have come at the very end of the commissionersย long day, when, just before adjournment, Commissioner Joe Ford announced, almost as a throwaway line, ยIยm going to vote for development every time it comes by here,ย and proceeded to make the case that adding property to the tax rolls was the summum bonum for country government, transcending considerations of ยSmart Growth,ย urban sprawl, school funding, or whatever.
Fordยs declaration followed a close and controversial vote on an east Shelby County subdivision project proposed by developer Rusty Hyneman, which in itself was an appropriate capper for a dayยs worth of high-urgency policy debate — much of which centered, explicitly or implicitly, on that selfsame issue of development. The morningยs activity focused on Whartonยs presentation of the case for an Adequate Facilities Tax as a lynchpin of his ยSmart Growthย plan, technically delivered to the commissionยs budget and finance committee but made before a de facto meeting of the whole commission, reconvened for the purpose in the first-floor auditorium in the county administration building. The afternoon saw ยWillie W. Herenton, citizenย (as the city mayor insisted on calling himself) make what — considering the advance buildup — was actually an anti-climactic and understated plea for consolidation.
The intertwined issues of development and school funding as they impact the countyยs worsening financial predicament underlay both presentations and the discussions that ensued from them.
The Adequate Facilities Tax that Wharton proposes — and which he had first introduced to the commission in a preliminary budget projection last week — would impose fees of $1 per square foot for new residential development and 75 cents per square foot for new nonresidential projects. Citing the fact that ยour property taxes are among the highest in the region,ย resulting in a ยtremendous lossย of population and industrial clients to DeSoto County, Wharton said he intended the A.F.T. — which is close cousin to an ยimpact feeย on new development — to ยtake pressure off the property tax.ย But he added, ยIยm looking for workable solutions,ย offhandedly throwing out a number of other possibilities, including that of a payroll tax.
Commissioner Deidre Malone grabbed that ball and ran with it, pointing out that a payroll tax would be an appropriate means of getting help on infrastructure costs from out-migrants who live elsewhere but still work in Shelby County or rely on the countyยs shopping, recreational, and entertainment facilities. And, though commission chairman Walter Bailey dutifully pointed out that the scope of Monday morningยs discussion was limited to the proposed new tax or to the county mayorยs Smart Growth concept or his budgetary proposals in general, the payroll-tax idea kept resurfacing. Commissioner Joyce Avery, who represents an outer-county district, added her approval of it, twice calling the payroll tax — either in a Freudian slip or as an imaginative analogy — a ยpoll tax.ย
And a sizeable host of developers and their spokesmen on hand were like-minded. A series of speakers, beginning with former Office of Planning and Development director Dexter Muller, who now represents commercial developers, and continuing with several officers of the state and local Home Builders Associations, deplored the effect of the proposed new tax on what they described as an already depressed homebuilding industry and talked up the alternative of a payroll tax. Homebuilder Frank Uhlhorn, a Germantown alderman, was typical in suggesting that the right tactic was not to penalize local developers but to target those who ยhave chosen to cut and run.ย Ron Belz, president of Belz Enterprises, said county entrepreneurs trying to attract warehousing and other commercial clients could ยlose deals over penniesย and that the proposed A.F.F. could tilt the balance, however minutely, in such negotiations.
Commissioner Tom Moss, himself a developer, was skeptical of the limited yield — $4 to $7 million annually, Wharton has estimated — from an Adequate Facilities Tax and quipped sarcastically that ยwe could go for some real moneyย by applying the proposed tax retroactively to developments already completed. That, said Wharton aide Kelly Rayne straight-facedly, would be unconstitutional.
The lone testifier on behalf of the tax was Cordova homemaker Stacy Heydrich, who said that the morning session seemed ยskewedย on behalf of homebuilders and developers and lamented the fact of pell-mell development in her area. Mentioning specifically the Hyneman project on Macon Road that would be voted on later in the afternoon, Heydrich cited the difficulty of funding new schools and other infrastructure that she said would arise from that and other new development and proclaimed, ยIf you donยt have the money, you have two choices: Donยt build, or tax builders and developers.ย
What Wharton was asking the commission to do was not to enact his proposed new tax but merely to pass it on to the legislature, where, if the Shelby County delegation supports it with what amounts to unanimity, enabling legislation could be passed, and the tax could be forwarded back to the commission for definitive action. With that in mind, such undecided commissioners as Marilyn Loeffel and Avery voted with a 6-to-4 majority to pass the proposed measure on for action in Nashville, where, as Wharton pointed out, the General Assembly is heading toward an early-May adjournment.
Though his afternoon appearance had been much ballyhooed, Herenton added little to the consolidation agenda which he had previously proposed, though his declaration before the assembled commissioners — and in the presence of Wharton, his mayoral counterpart — that ยwe cannot continue to support two separate governments and two separate school systemsย had inherent symbolic power. Like Wharton, Herenton pronounced that local taxpayers could not continue to be burdened with add-on property taxes. Underscoring the implicit comparison between his own no-new-taxes budget and the countyยs revenue difficulties, certain to require additional taxes of some sort, the Memphis mayor-qua-Shelby County ยcitizenย said, ยAs a taxpayer, I expect better policies and better management.ย
One result of that was a somewhat testy back-and-forth between Herenton and commission budget chairman Cleo Kirk, who at one point asked Herenton what the cityยs bond rating was. ยDouble-A,ย the city mayor said proudly. ยWell, ours is Double-A-plus,ย responded Kirk. ยWe canยt have been doing things all that badly.ย
At some point, the idea of a ยsummitย to discuss the issues of schools and local governance got bruited, and Herenton said, ยI am hoping that Chairman [Walter] Bailey, in his great wisdom, would call the summit.ย To which Bailey replied. ยI trust your hopes will be realized.ย As they were ultimately, with the commission voting 11-1 to hold such a meeting of local officials — time, place, agenda and other particulars yet to be defined.

