Editor's note: The following is a letter to Milwaukee Alderman Robert Puente from Milwaukee business owner Wayne Staats, who shared the letter with BizTimes Milwaukee.
Alderman Puente:
I am still in shock over the receipt of my recent commercial property real estate tax bill. It grew by an average of 38.9 percent over last year! This is outrageous and does nothing more than convince me that doing business in the City of Milwaukee is a crazy venture!
The lowest increase of the various components on this tax bill was 31.0 percent (the State of Wisconsin, believe it or not) to the highest, 49.3 percent, for Milwaukee Public Schools. In addition, my water "fee" increased 50 percent (to over $1,000) this year after in astronomical increase the year before of nearly 200 percent! I don't even use much water in my building except to flush a few toilets and make coffee! This is insane!
This problem is exacerbated by the fact that my commercial property value (which I maintain diligently, so it is not deteriorating as are many other buildings in the Milwaukee area) has DECREASED in value over the last several years, not increased as has my assessment. This particular round of tax increases has reduced my property’s economic value by $62,000! And furthermore, after paying all these taxes, I'm not even eligible to visit the zoo, museum or play golf on county courses without paying non-resident fees simply because I don't live directly in the city (or county) proper!
To make matters worse, the services I have received from the city have done nothing but decline over the past years. If you ever drive north on 107th Street, you will find that south of Brown Deer Road you are riding on a beautiful boulevard. If you continue north past County Line Road, where my building is located, you will find another beautifully repaved and nice section of road for two miles to Mequon Road. The one mile segment between Brown Deer Road and County Line Road (where my building is located) is awful: a pothole-laden, patchwork quilt that shakes the inside of your car as if you were driving down an unpaved rural road. The road is narrow and the shoulders treacherous.
And, this section serves many companies that use large semis to pick up and deliver their goods, so the traffic is always busy. The ditch in front of my building NEVER empties and has become a cesspool of garbage which can never be cleaned up because there is always standing water in it and it is deep and treacherous. I've been told that it is a "downstream" problem and that some other "authority" is responsible. Only no other "authority" will admit to their responsibility and clean it up. This problem has existed for many years.
Between this and many other unbelievable anti-job decisions being implemented by city "leaders," the asset values of Milwaukee-based businesses and properties are declining precipitously. As mentioned earlier, I have lost significant value in my commercial property and business potential due in large part to this anti-job atmosphere, not just the economy. I was born and grew up in Milwaukee, went to school here, have been a long-time business owner, employer, taxpayer, run the only non-subsidized business incubator in the region, volunteer in various nonprofit organizations and am a strong advocate of entrepreneurism and other activities to encourage business growth and create jobs.
At the rate that this city is declining, I'm not sure how much longer I can "hang in there," dreaming that someday we will find the Holy Grail and everything will be just great. Anything I do to help create jobs, start new businesses or encourage existing businesses to grow and come to Milwaukee seems futile.
Please, provide some guidance about what I can do.
Wayne Staats is the owner of the Granville Business Development Center, 9310 N. 107th St., Milwaukee.




5 Comments
I'd like to see BizTimes do a little followup with this letter.
Mr. Staats brings up a host of issues that are a bit confusing out of context. However, his primary complaint seems to be that he's paying a lot of taxes for his business, but the road where his business is located is not getting fixed.
Now, it makes sense for the businesses on this road--particularly those that "use large semis to pick up and deliver their goods"--to pay their fair share to fix the road they are wearing down.
But in order for that bargain to be truly fair, the road must actually get fixed. So, BizTimes, how about answering Mr. Staats' question about who's responsible for the road and why the repairs haven't been made? Pose these questions directly to his alderman and to the county supervisors.
After all, if Mr. Staats is accountable for paying his taxes, then the people who control what to do with that money must be held accountable, as well.
Skeffert, Wayne has the right person. Puentes is both the alderman of District 9 and a member of the Dept Public Works. DPW is responsible for road maintenance and flood/flowage abatement.
To Wayne's larger question, Where on god's green earth does our money go? I've traveled around the area mentioned by Wayne and there is not one good main road anywhere. The only exception would be 76th St (hwy 181) that was just redone last year. Otherwise the roads are some of the worst in the city.
I don't know what our city and council are doing with our money. Does anyone have any idea where it all goes?
Biz Times: I hope you take Skeffert's suggestion. This is an excellent opportunity to explore Bob J's question about where the money does indeed go. It seems to me that the problem is twofold. One, our tax money comes from a maxed out source: property taxes. Second, it then gets pulled into social services, including added police, which everyone demands. Hence, while our roads are supposed to be on a 70-something year cycle of repair, they are actually pushing 200. Mr. Staats' case is an egregious example of the resulting neglect. This doesn't necessarily let his alderman off the hook. But it's another example of doing things the "old way" ain't gonna cut it anymore.
I drove down 107th St this morning on the way to an appt. There was a patching crew putting cold patch on some of the chuck holes. At least it is a start......
Anyone can request service work from the DPW on the website:
http://dpwworks.mpw.net/
Everything from sign repair, street light maintenance, pot hole repair, empty lot clean up, snow plow service, etc. Check it out....