Life is sweet sometimes. Unlike the topic of this missive.
Sewage plant plans need more studyYour turn: Does your city's management of projects like this cause your blood pressure to rise? What is it about Frank Lloyd Wright that makes me think of sewage?
Published Wednesday, March 1, 2006
The London Free Press
Any business owner knows that it costs money to make money. But investing in the future is a tricky game that has more questions than answers: How much should be invested? How fast should it be spent? Will it drive profitability enough to justify the outlay?
It’s a conundrum that London currently faces as it debates plans to build a new sewage treatment plant for the city’s southwest end.
On the one hand, we need to spend the $134 million on the plant and related services to support continued growth. This is how London competes against other cities for new investment.
On the other hand, we can’t spend ourselves into a debt-created fiscal prison.
The fact that so little is currently known about the returns suggests that city employees should be spending a little more time with their spreadsheets. Londoners deserve to know the full fiscal picture.
If businesses of all size follow the investment-return model, is it too much to ask that our city does the same?
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I definitely think more time and study needs to be given this project. That's a lot of money needed for a sewage treatment plant. What is the projected population figures. Michele sent me.
ReplyDeleteSewage projects are expensive... and the controversy is more often over the "Not in my backyard syndrome" than the money involved. But it sounds like a lot of money so I hope they've done their homework (or will do it at your insistence).
ReplyDeleteWe have a lot of projects going on in our little town (outside Milwaukee) and many people are not happy about them. I'm trying to be patient because I do think they are for the greater good, but in the meantime, they're a big pain in the you-know-what.
ReplyDeleteMichele sent me. *waves*
hello michele sent me this time.
ReplyDeleteAh, poor Frank!
ReplyDeleteHe doesn't deserve to be in the same paragraph as sewage. My heart, she breaks!