Los Angeles Times

Anaheim’s fortunes

- Re “Is Disney paying its share in Anaheim?” Sept. 24

Your readers were not provided a balanced perspectiv­e on the relationsh­ip between the city of Anaheim and Walt Disney Co. I was interviewe­d about my years as mayor, including about agreements reached between the city and the company to create the Anaheim Resort District.

The vastly greater-than-anticipate­d revenues from tourism since the resort creation are hardly mentioned. The many beautifica­tion improvemen­ts to decaying old streetscap­es near Disneyland — a truly stunning before-and-after success — are ignored.

Also not mentioned are the hundreds of millions of dollars in crucial transporta­tion improvemen­ts included in the agreements, as well as the affordable housing projects adjacent to the resort.

The major financial windfall to the city treasury from tourism should be a source of pride and opportunit­y for the city. Anaheim has more financial resources than most California cities, primarily due to the largesse of tourism. Yet the city has struggled in recent years to effectivel­y demonstrat­e how it spends those extra revenues on community benefits, such as new parks, youth programs or street and sidewalk repairs.

Meanwhile, the city’s tourism revenues and employment base continue to grow every year thanks to the thoughtful — and unanimous — decisions made at City Hall 20 years ago. Assemblyma­n Tom Daly (D-Anaheim) The writer was mayor of Anaheim from 1992-2002.

For decades, Disney’s profits went to Hollywood executives and Wall Street investors, leaving Anaheim with low-wage jobs and soaring poverty — and a puppet City Council showering it with corporate welfare.

Great to see Mayor Tom Tait and his new council majority finally standing up for their own citizens. Chris Norby Fullerton The writer was an Orange County supervisor from 2003-10 and a state assemblyma­n from 2010-12.

When will our states, cities and our community leaders wise up, bind together and refuse to buckle under the financial demands of corporatio­ns like Disney, Amazon or Walmart?

In the long run, these corporate welfare deals are almost always losers for taxpayers and the health of the community. Time and again we have seen states and cities battle each other over landing a big company that will just bleed them dry.

We the people have to tell our representa­tives to just say no. Paul Burns Granada Hills

 ?? Gary Coronado Los Angeles Times ?? WALT DISNEY Co. has secured subsidies, rebates and protection­s from future taxes in Anaheim.
Gary Coronado Los Angeles Times WALT DISNEY Co. has secured subsidies, rebates and protection­s from future taxes in Anaheim.

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