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Fifth Ward Candidates Advocating for a More Affordable Ithaca

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THIS WEEK

THIS WEEK

By Matt Dougherty

Petitioning for the June 27th democratic primary is underway and two candidates have announced their campaigns for the four-year and two-year term to represent Ithaca’s Fi h Ward on the Common Council.

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Depending on the position they are running for, candidates are required to have between one to 390 signatures to appear on the ballot and must have their petitions submitted by April 6th.

Longtime Ithaca resident and community organizer Margaret Fabrizio has announced that she is running for the four-year term to represent the Fi h Ward on the Common Council. Cornell University Freshman Clyde Lederman has announced that he is running for the twoyear term.

Fabrizio — who also goes by the name “Margherita” — said that she is running to make Ithaca a more a ordable place to live for everyone.

According to Fabrizio, if Ithaca is going to be a “visionary, a ordable, equitable, wildly unique place, we need to be properly resourced, and that can’t happen by just continuing to increase the tax burden on city residents, and in turn, on renters.”

In her campaign announcement Fabrizio said that the city needs new partners and new revenue streams.

Fabrizio explained her position on how to make Ithaca a more a ordable city in her recent article titled “Cornell’s TaxExempt Status and Ithaca’s Bottom Line” which was published in the Ithaca Times on February 15, 2023 — before it was known that Fabrizio would be announcing her campaign for local o ce.

Following the article’s publication, Fabrizio started a local movement called the Fair Share Campaign, which is dedicated to making Ithaca more a ordable by seeking equitable compensation through a Payment in Lieu of Taxes (PILOT) for essential community services provided to Cornell University.

According to Fabrizio, “Ithaca’s unaffordability has reached a breaking point. We are all negatively impacted whether stu- dents, renters, property owners, landlords, single parents, young families, or retirees.” She continued saying that Ithaca is underresourced which leads to increasingly high rent and tax burdens for residents.

Fabrizio acknowledges that Cornell contributes to Tompkins County and the City of Ithaca in immeasurable ways, but says that “to have a city where 60% of the property is tax exempt, with over half of that owned by a tax-exempt institution making only a small, direct monetary contribution to help make up for that, is not a formula that works.”

According to Fabrizio, local property taxes are higher than the national average and the city is still not able to pay its workforce fairly or have funds to achieve its stated climate and public safety goals. “I am ready to jump in and help us nd pragmatic solutions to our funding challenges,” said Fabrizio.

In addition to pressuring Cornell to contribute more, Fabrizio prioritizes the need to work more closely with the county, school district, and state, to re-prioritize spending.

She has also said that Ithaca could do much more to utilize the talents of students and faculty at Cornell. “I’d like to see a robust internship program and establish formal ways to connect faculty and their students with mutually bene cial servicelearning opportunities through Engaged Cornell or the Einhorn Center for Community Engagement.”

Fabrizio continued saying that the city “should have a student advisory board composed of student reps to better understand how the community can best capture the imagination and energy that students bring.”

According to Fabrizio, “Increasing public engagement is key to a progressive, sustainable, livable, welcoming community. I’m ready to get to work to build the alliances it takes to make positive change.”

Similarly to Fabrizio, Cornell University freshman Clyde Lederman — who is running for the two-year term to represent the Fi h Ward — has identi ed housing a ordability and transportation issues relating to Cornell’s tax exempt status as some of the priorities of his campaign. Since announcing his campaign, Lederman has been endorsed by the New York Working Families Party.

According to Lederman “local governments can do a lot to help folks. And what I see here are a number of serious problems.” He continued saying that the city is facing a housing a ordability crisis, both for students and for permanent residents.

“ at means housing is o en substandard and overpriced and which really pushes out middle and lower income residents,” said Lederman.

In addition, he says that the city has “real challenges with public transportation, in large part because of Cornell’s contribution, or lack thereof, which means that TCAT can’t run when it should, and when it does run the routes are more limited.”

According to Lederman, “You don’t need to be some sort of expert in order to tell that the bus service in Ithaca isn’t what it should be.”

Like Fabrizio, he continued saying that a lot of the issues in the city “come back down to the Memorandum of Under-

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