eyephone said:fortune11 said:eyephone said:jmoney74 said:eyephone said:i1 said:+1iacrenter said:I'm okay with the land swap but Irvine shouldn't be funding the cemetery.
$40M works out to ~$500 per homeowner. Would rather see that used elsewhere
Wasn't there a bond last election, because the school district needed money. Where did $40 mil come from?
250M for great park fund
"I hate the way our government spends our taxes."
Trump
Source:http://www.cnsnews.com/news/article...le-possible-because-i-hate-way-our-government
Yeah why not -- he and his family just love mooching off other taxpayers to line their own pockets. Personally I would rather see our tax money go towards a vet cemetery for our fallen heroes than paying $1m per day to keep Melanie separate from this dumb-ass-in-chief or to fund jared kushner's fundraising trips to meet Chinese FCBs offering them investors visas.
Tend to agree w Compressed Village , I think years from now people will be glad to have this vet cemetery. The UCLA example is very valid. Properly done, it will add a unique visual dimension and add visual diversity to the area. Things like sports complex etc will help as well.
1. The president and family gets secret service protection.
2. Why was there a school bond last year? When the city just donated $40 million.
3. Get real this area is not like UCLA. There is not a VA hospital. Are comparing UCI with UCLA?
4. Why do certain people get free cell phone service in California? (great use of tax payers money?)
it is more like the country is spending a lot of $$ to baby sit the petulant man child in the Oval Office ... hey as long as we can get our tax cuts ... why not .
The bigger issue is corporate welfare / public union benefits drain / gerontocracy -- senior entitlement , things which sap money that could be going towards other productive uses like infrastructure .
The point of comparison w UCLA is that you can have a veterans cemetery and not have it affect property values since there are other more important factors driving it. Do you think a row of cookie cutter tract homes in a random irvine neighborhood will lose their value just because there is a green space nearby that is in fact preventing construction of other cookie cutter homes ? It is incredible degree of narrowcasting to suit personal preference of a certain buyer base.