Election 2011: Muhlfeld focused on economy
Enticing new businesses to Whitefish
will be a top priority for candidate John Muhlfeld if elected
mayor.
The current city councilor and
president of River Design Group plans to pull from his business
background to help promote economic development here.
Originally from Connecticut, Muhlfeld
moved to Whitefish in 1995 after studying water resources at the
University of Queensland in Australia. He worked here with the
Forest Service and Department of Natural Resources and Conservation
before teaming up with partners in 2003 to launch a river
restoration company. River Design Group was recently named by
Outside magazine as one of the best places to work in the U.S.
Muhlfeld was appointed to city council
in 2006 to fill a two-year vacancy and was elected in 2007 to his
current four-year term.
A major challenge facing Whitefish
today, he says, is promoting economic development and diversifying
the economic base. Muhlfeld wants the city to do a better job of
attracting sustainable and good paying jobs.
“We need to provide incentives for
businesses to relocate to Whitefish,” he said. “What we’ve seen
over the past few years is an economy susceptible to the boom and
bust of real-estate development. We need to diversify our economic
base by attracting small to medium businesses.”
He points to the vacant Idaho Timber
and former hospital lots as prime places that could be revitalized
as a business park. There are opportunities with the city’s TIF, he
says, to encourage private and public partnerships to help
redevelop some blighted areas.
“While we are in this economic slow
down we need to prepare the city for opportunities when they do
knock at our door,” he said.
Muhlfeld likes the idea of setting up a
business incubator to help prospective companies get established
and walk them through the regulatory process.
While Whitefish is sometimes accused of
being business unfriendly due to regulations, Muhlfeld says many of
the resolutions and ordinances that have passed benefit the city.
He also notes that any ordinance will require some “housekeeping
and review.”
“We can open the hood and look
underneath to see what we can do to streamline the process,” he
said.
“I think several of these ordinances
have helped define and distinguish Whitefish. They help promote the
character and quality of life that attracted us to Whitefish
individually.”
The Critical Areas Ordinance is a
regulation that Muhlfeld has been deeply involved with. As a
councilor, he sat on the Critical Areas Advisory Committee, which
in 2007 helped create and draft the regulation for review by the
planning board and city council.
Muhlfeld voted as a councilor to
approve the CAO in 2008. The document established a list of
criteria that set out to protect the city’s water quality by
limiting development in environmentally critical areas. The
ordinance has since been amended twice, both of which Muhlfeld says
he supported.
“I think we’ve made some good strides
to make the document more user friendly and less restrictive,” he
said.
A third amendment that Muhlfeld brought
forward is up for discussion now and includes an option to
eliminate the controversial “steep slope” portion of the
ordinance.
“[The city] updated erosion control
standards,” Muhlfeld said. “It duplicated the purpose of the CAO.
When you talk about too many regulations and having to wade through
that stuff — get rid of it. We don’t need it.”
He still supports the basic principle
of the ordinance.
“Our community values clean water. We
need to be good stewards of this resource for future generations.
No law or regulation we ever pass is right the first time. When I
was on that committee, I supported this for water quality and no
other reason.”
Critics of the CAO says it’s too
confusing and that its restrictions hurt property sales. Muhlfeld
says the brokers he talks to indicate otherwise, but that he
“respects the opposing opinion.”
“It’s that critical balance that we
need to try and find a compromise on the elements of the CAO,”
Muhlfeld said. “The zoning text amendments over the past years have
been a result of that.”
In the city-county planning doughnut,
Muhlfeld says the top goal should be to find meaningful
representation for doughnut residents. He supports the
Constitutional right of the referendum to repeal the interlocal
agreement, but says it’s likely not the best approach to resolving
the issue.
“This issue has become so complex that
I feel resolving this issue with the county is best handled by city
council officials and the county commissioners,” he said.
Muhlfeld voted against the restated
interlocal agreement at a Nov. 15, 2010 council meeting, but says
it’s a good foundation to build upon.
“It’s the first of several steps in the
right direction,” he said.
Muhlfeld voted to approve the 2012 city
budget and says he is in favor of keeping taxes down in the
future.
“I think people are still suffering to
some degree,” he said. “My constituents have indicated they’re
maxed out in terms of their property taxes.”
He says the 2012 budget was the best
council could do given the economy and choices presented by the
city. He’d like to see the budget be presented in a more
user-friendly format so it’s more readable by the general
public.
On the hot topic of a new City Hall
building, Muhlfeld says it’s time to slam on the brakes.
“We need to be responsible stewards of
city tax dollars,” he said. “Just because money is available now it
doesn’t mean we have to spend it. Being frugal in today’s economy
is OK.”
He says citizens should have a say
about where and when City Hall should be built.
The idea of the city helping fund a
high school renovation is appropriate, he says, but the city should
engage in talks first with the school district, PTA and public.
The role of mayor, he says is to serve
as a sounding board between city staff, the public and the city
council.
“More importantly, the mayor should
ensure we are providing a forum that fosters good debate and
respectful dialogue that encourages solutions that are in the best
interest of Whitefish,” he said. “Everyone deserves a spot at the
table.”