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It's Not a Real List

Published: Monday, December 22, 2008 6:17 PM PST



OK, this is fun.

I just talked to Darren Pudgil, the mayor's spokesman. I wanted to know why the city of San Diego would be asking for $10 million from Congress and the president to expand the Ocean Beach library only weeks after the mayor excoriated the City Council for not closing that same library.

The request for the $10 million was included in a massive list of projects all San Diego area public officials submitted to the federal government.

Pudgil said the list of projects the city sent in came from the list of capital improvement projects that the City Council approved last year. And that this was well before the mayor himself had recommended cutting the Ocean Beach branch.

Furthermore, he said, the list didn't matter much. Pudgil says it's just to give Obama and other feds an idea of the kind of projects the city would fund.

"This is not a grant application. It's basically just us letting them know the kinds of projects we would fund with block grant funding," Pudgil said. "It is not a menu or a wish list."

OK. So I wondered: If it's meant to give Obama an idea of what the city would spend its money on, are we giving him a misleading idea if we include projects on there like the expansion of a library the mayor doesn't even want to keep open now?

No, Pudgil said, we're not. "This will all be revisited next year."

So, with fanfare, the region releases a list of the projects it would fund with stimulus money from the new federal government.

But the mayor of San Diego says a good portion of the list isn't to be taken literally. It's just an "idea" of what we'd buy with federal money.

They should have just put, under the city of San Diego's tab of what it would fund: "I don't know, you know, libraries and roads and stuff."

-- SCOTT LEWIS




Editor´s Choice
The reader comments you won't want to miss. (Editor's Choice selection do not represent the views of the editors. They are comments that seem to add to the discussion as opposed to less productive insults or arguments.)

Yes, I agree with the approach... send in an initial list to buy time so the list can be revised and resubmitted later. I do not see a problem with that. And I suspect the City of San Diego, as large as it is, is not the only jurisdiction to take that approach. I'd call it smart... despite how comical the response from the Mayor's Office appeared.

Posted by Brandon F | reply to this comment
December 23, 2008 9:38 am

It seems that Darren Pudgil did not learn from the mistakes of his predecessor. People tend not to like people who just can't admit to being wrong occasionally. It is okay to say "I made a mistake" instead of making up stuff like Pudgil did in this case. Obviously the Mayor's Office was pressured to submit the list - they presurred departments to get something in and the insertion of the library was a mistake they did not catch.

Posted by T. Tanaka | reply to this comment
December 23, 2008 9:44 am

Has anyone considered that this was an effort to make the Obama administration aware of everything that was ready to go and COULD be done in the region -- and the value of having a higher number so that when you get a fraction, it's a larger number? That's how you lobby for federal money so that you aren't overlooked when the doling out begins. This list isn't a "fund everything on my list" one by one like a grant application, it's "look at all these items that are ready to go." Kelly Bennett's story actually puts it in the proper perspective, whereas Lewis just ridicules aimlessly without thinking of the actual objective of the list -- then ridicules the explanation given.

Posted by Another view | reply to this comment
December 23, 2008 4:01 pm

I for one am quite tired of the local "gotcha media". The problem here is that you clearly don't have an inkling of an understanding of how this stimulus package works and what will ultimately be funded and how. It is fully expected that Congress will push funds out to states and locals under existing programs. They are not going to "earmark" or delineate specific projects in the bill, but yet members of Congress have asked for project lists so they can see the types of local projects. This will assist in their decision as to which existing programs to fund, but not how much to appropriate. As Mr. Pudgil indicated, local agencies submitted their previously approved CIP lists, as requested by Congress, in a compressed timeframe to serve as examples only. Grant requirements from the respective federal agencies will ultimately dictate what projects can be funded, not these lists.

Posted by sdsouthcoast | reply to this comment
December 23, 2008 10:13 pm

5 Comments so far on this story...

I hope the list includes brain transplants for the mayor and his PR flacks.

Posted by larry | reply to this comment
December 23, 2008 4:09 pm


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Scott Lewis on Politics

The Scott Lewis on Politics blog, abbreviated cleverly as SLOP, is a collection of observations, insights and the occasional scoop on public affairs in San Diego. Please feel free to e-mail Scott at scott.lewis@voiceofsandiego.org.


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