Local News
Iowa City District 5 hopefuls link crime, housing issues
Posted on Oct 29, 2009 by Admin.
City Council candidate Mark McCallum didn’t intend to run against Connie Champion, but he is.
The real estate agent said he was recruited to the council race by the Iowa City Area Chamber of Commerce and was repeatedly assured Champion, a three-term incumbent, was not running again.
Mark McCallum
Champion did, but McCallum is undeterred.
“Once I got in it, I decided to stay in it,” he said.
McCallum, 49, is challenging Champion, 69, for the District B seat she has held for 12 years. The election is Tuesday.
The district covers much of eastern Iowa City. That includes a chunk of the southeast quadrant, which has gotten a lot of attention lately for juvenile and adult crime problems.
Champion and McCallum each put solving those issues at the top of their to-do lists. And they both said part of the problem is the city allowing too much low-income housing in the area.
Such density leads to crime problems, they argue, and they want affordable homes to be scattered throughout town.
“I think neighborhoods should be mixed economically and socially,” said Champion, co-owner of Catherine’s clothing store. “I think it’s good for neighborhoods, it’s good for kids.”
McCallum said the city should get rid of the public housing units it owns and stick to overseeing the federal Section 8 voucher program.

Connie Champion
Earlier this fall, a divided City Council was on the verge of approving a juvenile curfew as a result of some of the problems in the southeast quadrant. But a majority of the council, including Champion, voted to delay action to give a new community group a chance to address the matter.
McCallum supports the curfew and opposes the delay. Champion still backs the curfew but wants to give the group time to try a different approach.
The current council is expected to vote later this year to impose a 2 percent franchise fee on natural gas and electric customers, with most of the money for more firefighters and police officers.
McCallum said he views the fee as a last resort. He supports starting with across-the-board cuts of 1 to 3 percent for all city departments except police and fire.
Champion, who is in favor of the fee, noted that the council made cuts earlier this year and, with another tight budget predicted, expected more next year.
Any eligible voter in the city can vote for a district candidate.



I was at the Iowa City Council candidate forum sponsored by the Iowa City Press-Citizen and Sue Freeman and the Neighborhood Centers of Johnson County at Grant Wood School, and I noticed that Connie Champion, who voted to defer the second reading of the curfew vote so that "a group of people" could try to solve the problem of an increase in crime on the southeast side of Iowa City can try to solve those problems without giving police tools to send children and teens roaming the streets all night. Right now a nine-year-old child can hang with teenagers on the street at 1:00 a.m., and the police have no authority to send the child home.
Connie said that the SE side crime problem "has become a 'racial issue,' which is tragic." She said that she lives in a "mixed neighborhood, which is good for families" on Summit Street, a high-end historical district where someone living a plantation-style mansion next to other historical mansions simply can't compare the advantages, which I'm sure are real, of her mixed neighborhood to the hell on earth experienced by residents in the SE side's mixed neighborhood.
Mark McCallum denied that complaints about crime where people live is based on race. "People can't sleep at night," he said simply. He wants the city to get out of the low-income housing business supervised (actually, poorly supervised) by the City of Iowa City Housing Authority.
I used to work with homeless families in transitional housing and Head Start parents on the SE side south of Highway 6, and the outcome statistics for those families not from foreign countries were dismal. Only my clients from Ecuador, Egypt, the Sudan, and Nigeria qualified for home loans, small business loans, graduate school fellowships, and had kids getting good grades at and regularly attending schools in Iowa City.
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