Mayoral candidates address poverty issues
In their first public appearance together since becoming the top vote-getters in last week's primary election, State Rep. Ralph Becker and City Councilman Dave Buhler agreed mostly: that Salt Lake is unique, it has a diverse population and the central city is as much a neighborhood as the Avenues, Sugar House and Holladay.
"The city has failed in that endeavor downtown," Becker said, noting that the planning department as opposed to the mayor's office of late "is in a shambles" and as a result has been a missing voice in the course of downtown development. Becker, who was on the Planning Commission seven years, said he plans to "rectify that problem immediately."
Buhler said downtown, which is undergoing a multi-year renovation project at its core, should not only be a gathering place, "it should become the vibrant center of commerce it was in the 1960s."
The candidates forum was part of the fourth annual People's Summit on Poverty on Saturday.
"This is the best of times and worst of times in Salt Lake in terms of housing in Salt Lake," he said. "Financial pressure on the lower end of the income scale and on the fixed income even those not living downtown is tremendous," he said. Noting that "tempting" though it might be for candidates to promise what they can't deliver during a campaign, "one of the things I can pledge is that we will get focused on a better housing policy."
That amounts to a percentage of development being set aside for low-income housing, Becker said, noting that none of the 11 condominium projects under construction now in downtown are so designated.
Both candidates also agreed that lack of focus in city government has affected more than housing. Buhler said he has been frustrated as a council member when he has proposed initiatives, and fellow council members approve them, only to see them languish sometimes years without implementation by the administration.
He said that would not be a mark of his administration.
Nor of Becker's. Using a question about the proliferation of paycheck loan outlets, Becker said a proposed ordinance change to stop their growth and possibly eliminate them from downtown, would get his immediate attention.
"I've been frustrated at the state level that we haven't been able to regulate these lenders better," Becker said. "We've introduced these bills year after year. Something must be done because most of their customers are people in significant financial distress."
The candidates agreed they would do what the mayor's office would allow to support improvements in public education and to make the popular downtown farmers market on Saturdays expanded so people on food stamps could make purchases. They also said they would like to see the market in a permanent location and open all year long.
E-mail: jthalman@desnews.com




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