BS Awards And The Return Of My Documentary

by Travis Mateer

Recognition is important. For me, I seek it out wherever I can get it, which tends to be the kind people selling me weed and coffee. When I’m feeling down from becoming a targeted individual for my local exposure of BS, like Tax Increment Financing, I know not EVERYONE has the kind of opinion Detective Guy Baker has of me.

Sometimes negative narratives are GOOD for bottom-lines, like what you’re about to read from Sara. But first, what you should know about Sara before reading her scary story of a scary dystopia that will most definitely descend WITHOUT that BS I mentioned earlier (Tax Increment Financing) is this: Sara works for the Snowy Mountain Development Corporation, which describes itself like this:

In 2001, a group of community-minded volunteers founded Snowy Mountain Development Corporation (SMDC) as a 501(c)(3) non-profit organization to build community and economic capital in a six-county area comprised of Fergus, Judith Basin, Wheatland, Petroleum, Musselshell and Golden Valley Counties situated at the geographical heart of the State of Montana.

Local, state, and federal governments provide funding for SMDC to carry out this mission. Notably, the US Economic Development Administration recognizes SMDC as an Economic Development District and the State of Montana recognizes SMDC as a Certified Regional Development Corporation. With these designations is funding to support SMDC’s partnerships with local governments, community organizations, businesses, and entrepreneurs to implement key community and economic development projects.

Ok, with all that in mind, here’s what Sara wants you to think about the terrible possibilities that would result, according to her, if a Montana State Legislator gets his way with TIF. From the link (emphasis mine):

Think about it, folks. What happens when properties are vacant and fall into a state of disrepair? They get more expensive to fix. They attract crime, vagrants, drugs, vandalism, homelessness, poverty, and all those conditions of despair that accompany them. As property values decline, the values of the structures around them decline. Those with the means to do so flee to the suburbs. Businesses follow.

Meanwhile, the city’s tax revenues plummet and the demand for essential services skyrockets with increased police, fire and ambulance calls; vandalized street, traffic, and security lights; crumbling curbs, gutters, sidewalks and potholed streets; broken water mains and sewage contamination; and more, and more, and more. This is the physical evidence of market failure. And Hertz’s reform offers no remedy for it. Rather, it hamstrings every local government’s ability to address it without shifting it all on to you.

Instead of using more words to counter Sara’s FEAR campaign, here’s the REVIVED LINK to my documentary, revived thanks to the help of my collaborators. Instead of paying the Vimeo extortion price-tag, we put it up on Youtube for your viewing pleasure.

You’re welcome.

While I appreciate Hertz tilting his lance at the TIF windmill, I suspect his position on TIF might be like how a broken clock is accurate two times a day. Otherwise I’m not sure how to understand the idiotic ceiling on weed potency Hertz is proposing.

A proposed legislative measure, Senate Bill 443, has sparked significant controversy among cannabis industry stakeholders and consumers in Montana. The bill aims to revise state drug laws by limiting the THC content in marijuana products to 15 percent, including flower, concentrates, and edibles. Critics of the bill argue that it could severely harm local businesses and infringe upon consumer rights.

I’ll fully admit my bias on this issue because, without STRONG Cannabis, there’s no way I could read about the winner to today’s BS Award, Mayor Andrea Davis, who got her own recognition recently, which I consider to be total BS.

Missoula Mayor Andrea Davis’s reelection campaign sent out the following:

Missoula Mayor Andrea Davis has been named one of 61 Women of the Year by USA Today. Davis joins Hota Kotb, recently of the Today Show, Olympic rugby medalist Ilona Maher, United Way CEO Angela F. Williams and a host of other influential, committed and talented women who do their best every day to improve the lives of women and everyone else in their communities.

Ok, maybe if CAN-KICKING was a measure of civic accomplishment, Davis would deserve to be recognized, but taking so long to develop a METH COLONIES IN PUBLIC PARKS policy that sparked such widespread public outrage that it was overturned, well, I’ll be interested to see how our Mayor plans to tell us that up is really down.

If you appreciate my sense of direction, make sure to show that appreciation, if you can, at Travis’ Impact Fund (TIF), or the other methods I’m hoping to make available soon.

Thanks for reading!

Author: Travis Mateer

I'm an artist and citizen journalist living and writing in Montana. You can contact me here: willskink at yahoo dot com

5 thoughts on “BS Awards And The Return Of My Documentary”

  1. Hey brother I’m getting called out as a liar for saying that there was 32 drug overdose deaths in the Johnson Street shelter

    The person who told me this is a very reliable source

    The mayor is nowhere around talking about that

    She needs to produce her income tax return to show us how much money she makes off of her rental so that she cherry picked from the non-profits she was employed by and stop someone was houses from getting a potential house so she could have a rental

  2. Brilliant piece with the documentary Travis. Should be required viewing in civics classes everywhere. As proof that even when the voters believe that one side is working for them, it is not the constituents that have a say in how their community evolves. For in the history of all mankind, no person in a position of power has ever thought that the People know what is best for them.

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