MAPS 3 ballot won’t detail individual projects
MAPS 3Council worded item certain way to follow law
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Published: November 8, 2009
The first MAPS ballot in 1993 listed each of the proposed projects in a single-question, all-or-nothing proposition, but that ballot may have been improper, according to numerous attorneys.
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They do have some improvements I like such as more toilets and free shows that I don't remember like the lumberjacks and children's animal petting since I take my grandson. He enjoys it and would go every day if we would take him. Last year he got to ride a camel and a pony. The only thing that got his mind off it was "Walking With the Dinosaurs".Now everything is dinosaurs. I have an ankle ulcer. When he was watching me bandage it just after the show he asked," Grandpa,Did a Dinosaur bite you?"
I don't enjoy the fair anymore as it has seemed to have gone down hill ever since I started going almost 60 years ago.
When we voted for MAPS, we needed a baseball staduim. The Myriad was getting old, the Civic Center was getting old, couldn't tell you what the downtown liberay looked like, Bricktown barely existed. The North Canadian was just something that ran through the city.
What grew was simply amazing. Downtown was vastly improved. The Ballpark was cool, the Ford Center was better than expected, the Myraid was improved, the Fair looks better, the Oklahoma River is better than one could expect, the Libray is cool.
But what is the reward of having a big park?
It just seems that the city is throwing projects at us so they don't lose the revenue the never ending 1 cent sales tax has given the city.
But the problem is, it is still illegal as the article points out. Just as the original MAPS was illegal (but no one challenged it). This is an even more egregious example of log rolling. Slapping an extremely generic label of "capital improvement" and not listing the projects at all doesn't seem to avoid that. This is a $777M blank check.
The Mayor said at the MAPS 3 press conference we would be voting on the items individually, when he said: "Each of these projects is going to have to stand on its own."