New Position with CellarPros

Today I am excited to announce that I have recently begun working as a Fine Wine Consultant with CellarPros, an affiliate of Benchmark Wine, one of the largest marketers and service providers of wine in the country.

My expertise with fine wine and collectors will allow CellarPros to bring a new level of cellar service to the south central part of the country. I will be a key part of CellarPros national team and will specifically focus on cellars in Texas, Louisiana and Oklahoma as well as charities and their needs. I imagine many of your either have wine collections, or know people who do, that could potentially benefit from our services.

CellarPros provides a full suite of services to cover any need the serious collector may have. Our primary business to date has been acquiring private cellars from collectors and retailers that they may wish to liquidate in part or in whole due to any number of reasons including relocation, change in tastes, divorce, death or just the need to raise cash.

CellarPros Services include:

  • Wine cellar inventory and appraisal
  • Inventory management
  • Shipping and storage logistics
  • Consulting to acquire wines for a collection
  • Advisory for brokerage of a wine collection
  • Subscription to Wine Market Journal for wine auction records and analysis

If you or someone you know has a wine cellar I would welcome the opportunity to meet or setup a phone conversation to further discuss how we can work together.

Remember, Eat well and drink even better,

Marshall

Farewell

Friends,

I am writing to tell you that, as of today, I am no longer serving as the Executive Director of the Wine and Food Foundation of Texas (WFFT).  I am, however, thrilled to announce that my recent separation will allow me to pursue some exciting new opportunities, including working with an up-and-coming consulting group in the food & beverage industries and other innovative endeavors using my expertise and relationships I have been so fortunate to develop over the years.

I do want to take this opportunity to say how proud I am of my three years at WFFT and all that was accomplished during this time. The successes are many, including:

  • having the most successful philanthropic year in 2013 – awarding more than $160,000 to many deserving chefs, sommeliers, and causes;
  • sending several sommeliers to study in France and Italy with renowned winemakers and educators, and many local cooks to intern with great chefs like Michael Mina (Mina Group), David Chang (Momfuku), Tyson Cole (Uchi), and Jason Dady (Bin 555);
  • increasing the WFFT membership almost four-fold and starting the High Plains Chapter in North Texas; and
  • hosting some of the Foundation’s most successful events, including Big Reds & Bubbles and Tour de Vin, and starting a new one, Cowboys & Gauchos, all of which introduced many local, talented, and up-and-coming chefs and restaurants to our attendees.

None of this could have been accomplished in such a short amount of time without the Board of Directors, Advisory Council, so many great volunteers and hard-working interns, and the most amazing staff I have had the honor of working with – a big shout out and many, many thanks to Donaji, Jennifer, Becca, Melissa, Cathleen & Morgan!  I am so proud of all of your hard work and our amazing accomplishments.  The six of you truly made my job fun, exciting and worthwhile. You inspired me every day and I would be honored to work with each of you in the future.

During my time at WFFT I have learned a lot, made so many friends, and shared plenty of amazing food & wine. I am very thankful for having had this opportunity and look forward to continuing to work and enjoy many good times with all of you in the future.

Now I am reaching out to you to ask for your help. If you or anyone you know of is looking for someone who is dedicated, hard working and available, please pass my name along or send them my way.  In return, I am offering you my service; if there is something you need or anything I can do for you, please do not hesitate to ask.  You have all done so much for me in my role at WFFT; I want to give back to you.

Thank you in advance for your help.  I hope to catch up with you individually soon!

T. Marshall Jones
Eat well and drink even better

For now, please contact me at:
tmjen555@gmail.com
(512) 694-0491

Now We Can House the Homeless! (Finally)

Let me begin by thanking several people:

  • Mayor Leffingwell for your leadership on the dais in promoting the need for Housing-first Permanent Supportive Housing!
  • Mayor Pro Tem Cole for your leadership in presenting an amendment to the Density Bonus supporting Housing-first Permanent Supportive Housing
  • City Council members Morrison, Tovo, Martinez and Riley for voting in favor of the Density Bonus as amended to allow for the funds generated in Downtown Austin to be used for Housing-first Permanent Supportive Housing. (And I am sure i would be thanking Councilman Spellman as wee had he been on the dais to vote)
  • Ann Howard, Ann Denton, Ed McHorse and the rest of my ECHO Board members for making Housing-first Permanent Supportive Housing a priority in our mission being fiercely committed to ending homelessness
  • Charlie Betts, Bill Brice, Julie Fitch and the rest of my Downtown Austin Alliance Board members for taking the charge on making lemonade out of lemons pertaining to the Density Bonus
  • The Planning Commission and Downtown Commission for supporting an amendment to the Density Bonus supporting Housing-first Permanent Supportive Housing

Last night, the Austin City Council passed the (so-called) Density Bonus allowing developers wishing to build residential units downtown the ability to apply for great FAR (Floor to Area ratio) than is currently allowable by paying a fee-in-lieu of $X per square foot to be spent on affordable housing, specifically amended to define affordable housing as Housing-first Permanent Supportive Housing.  This is a big deal in a city that is in need of 38,000+ affordable housing units and is the first step in housing the truly homeless, those categorized as chronically homeless.  These are the men, women, children, veterans and disabled individuals that are the most vulnerable and most need our help forced to sleep in our streets, parks, woodlands and ditches alike.

The fact is there is not enough money available to build the 38,000+ plus affordable homes needed and, until now, there has been no reason to build housing for the chronically homeless.  Simple market economics state that when there is a shortage of housing, or anything for that matter, the market will cater to the highest end of the need and the least risky investment.  In this case, affordable housing, a developer is going to build housing for the easiest to house, the wealthiest of the population and the lowest risk tenant.  This would be anyone other than those we most need to house.  So the simple economics haft left the chronically homeless out in the cold, literally.

It has been proven that the only way to get someone interested in building housing for the poorest of the poor, the hardest to serve and highest rick clients is to either be so overstocked with housing that anyone and everyone finds a place to live, or to force the issue by making that the free money for which developers can apply.  Our Council just did the latter last night and I applaud them for their wisdom, courage and action.

Marshall

The Four Winners of the Senate Filibuster

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So by now the whole world knows about Wendy Davis’ 11-hour (though I still give her credit for the almost full 13 hours as she stood by her post through two hours of debate) filibuster to kill Senate Bill 5 (SB5) aimed at tightening abortion laws.

This was a historic day in the Texas Senate and that is not necessarily a good thing.  I have heard form many sources, including Senators that have been representing some of you for a long time, maybe too long, that have seen many filibusters come and go that the behavior and disrespect for each other was nothing less than horrific.  for the best commentary on that, role back Senator John Whitmire’s passionate plea for respect and decorum on the floor.  Whether you agree or disagree with the premise behind SB5, whether you agree or disagree with Wendy Davis’ decision to filibuster and whether you agree or disagree with the rules of the Senate allowing such a filibuster to stop the people’s business, the fact is that it is a rule and most Senators of the past have respected that rule even when they despised the premise or purpose.  There is a reason almost every vote in the Senate ends 31 – 0.  They air their laundry behind closed doors, come to a consensus and respect the politics that landed them all there in the first place.

And if that were not bad enough, the jeers from the gallery and total disrespect of the chamber in which they sat the final eleven minutes just cost you all roughly $330,000 per day to continue this debate.  Has the role call been completed on time, SB5 would have passed and it is likely a second Special Session would not have been called.  Trust me. SB5 in a new iteration will pass.  Period.  All we did we put on a very expensive show that at the end of the day left us with four big winners and one big loser – who is also our fourth winner.

Setting aside the deplorable decorum of the night, there was a very interesting dynamic that ended up playing out although the fate of it’s course was set several hours and days prior to that fateful day.  Here is what happened, why it happened and how it had to play out the way it did:

  • The House failed to get SB5 back to the Senate early enough to avoid a likely filibuster sans the return of Judge Bill Meier
  • This left the Senate 13 hours to pass three bills: SB5, a bill relating to transportation funding and a bill relating to the prosecution of 17=year old offenders
  • At approximately 11:14am, Lt. Governor David Dewhurst called the session to order and decide to take up SB5 first.  In a Special Session, this is a privilege of the presiding officer
  • At approximately 11:18am, Wendy Davis began her filibuster
  • Sometime around 10:00pm (and three martinis for this writer later), a third point of order was called on Senator Davis setting off two hours of Parliamentary Points of Order and Inquiries that I can only describe as a Robert’s Rules of Order bracket opening and closing worthy of the best Microsoft Excel equation – except that in Excel, at least a computer is keeping track of what came before what before what and after what.
  • Then, with maybe 11 minutes remaining before the drama would be timed out, it was finally ruled that the filibuster was officially over and the vote on SB5 could be taken on the floor
  • A role vote was called for but never finished in time due to the disruption of the idiots in the gallery

So at the end of the day, all three bills were left for dead leaving many to question why the Lt. Governor decided to take up SB5 before the remaining two bills.  Was it to kill the other two bills intentionally?  Was it to make Ms. Davis suffer as long as possible?  Or was it really not a choice he had any longer?  I will argue the third.

You see, because the House did not get SB5 back to the Senate before the last day, and a filibuster-able (like that?) amount of time, the chess pieces were already lined up for the checkmate. And that leads us to the winners and losers of this very expensive match.

Winner #1: The Austin Club.  Easily.

Winner #2: Senator Wendy Davis.  Ms. Davis’s filibuster gained her such notoriety that she is getting more national face time than a Kardashian’s iPhone.  She is poised for a $35 million swelling of her war-chest that can then use to run for the office of her choice.  She may not wine, but she is the most legitimate Democrat in Texas right now.

Winner 3: Lt Governor Dewhurst.  Mr. Dewhurst saw the chess pieces on the Board and made the only move he could, SB5.  By calling SB5 before the other two bills, he forced everyone’s hand resulting in the only result that could have resulted,  An eventual checkmate that will end with him getting his much needed abortion bill passed while also giving his boss, Governor Perry, the victory on the remaining two bills, plus any other bill he may want to add a later date (read Special Session #2).  When the day began, the Lt Governor seemingly had two choices: Call SB5 first, or call SB5 last.  He actually did not choose, he moved his chess piece and waited.  You see, by calling SB5 first, only two outcomes could have resulted: Senator Davis succeed in her filibuster killing al three bills or Senator Davis fails in her filibuster passing all three bills.  Had Dewhurst called SB5 last, after passing the first two bills, he was a grave risk of Senator Davis succeeding in killing SB5 leaving that the sole loser of the day.  Perry may be crazy, but even he is not stupid enough to call a second Special Session just to save face for his second-hand man and thus committing his own political suicide.  So, the choice was not a choice; the only way to make damn sure his abortion law passes is to make are all three bills pass.  With all three bills going down, Governor Perry has the reason needed to call a second Special Session thus reviving Dewhurst’s abortion bill.

Winner #4 and Loser #1: Governor Rick Perry.  The Govenor is one politically savvy dude, enough so that he is soon to gain tenure and become Governor Emeritus.  Once the chips we all on the table, he simply allowed Dewhurst to make his move assuring that all four of the bills he put on the call would pass.  He already accomplished in getting SB2, the bill relating to redistricting and the original reason for the Special Session, successfully through both houses and sent to his desk to sign in to law.  The remainder of the bills were simply gravy so tasty that he could not let them go down so he now has the will to call a second very costly special session.  And you know what they say about there not being any such thing as bad press so lang as they spell your name right?  “Perry” has been spelled correctly a lot lately and it will continue to be so as the rest of the world watches, fascinated, with the politics he puppeteers of this great State.

However, this win will also come with a burden to bear and that is his complete and utter loss of love and support from his once adoring “XX” chromosomal voter and fans.  Remember “Good Hair Perry” in his good looks, great smile, sharp suits, shiny cowboy boots and perfect quaff wooing the women of Texas and beyond not unlike a certain Mr. Clinton? Gone. Done. Toast. In Governor Perry’s bid for the last Presidential election, his female following cratered quickly and that was just the beginning.  As the SCOTUS makes decision after decision in this historic week giving more rights to those viewed unequal, Governor Perry continues to impose his will on his once strongest support base, the Women of Texas and the United States.  They despise him at such a level that not only will they never vote for him again, neither will any husband, boyfriend. father or son who has to face the wrath of a woman Perry scorned.

Let’s hope many lessons were learned in this National spotlight on our politics as one Senator took advantage of possibly our strangest legislative rule resulting in four winners and one loser.  Actually, after watching the tape again, maybe the real loser were the people of Texas who once had faith in the last bastion of political respect.

I’d e happy to discuss this over lunch and a drink at The Austin Club.

Marshall

KeepATXAffordable

Today, I joined with a broad coalition of business, faith, and community leaders in kicking off Keep Austin Affordable (http://KeepATXAffordable.org)! Keep Austin Affordable is a community-led campaign to raise awareness about the great need that exists in Austin for affordable housing, the local solutions that work, and the public investment that’s critical to addressing this growing challenge for our city.
We were all surprised when the affordable housing bonds were narrowly rejected by Austin voters last November. That’s why I am a part of Keep Austin Affordable and our call for city bonds to be put back on the ballot in November 2013.

Go to http://KeepATXAffordable.org to join the effort!

Did you know that Austin is in the top 10 most expensive rental markets in the nation? Over 38,000 families in Austin cannot find an affordable place to call home. And Austin ISD reports 1975 students were homeless last year.

While the need is great, the city’s affordable housing program, in partnership with local organizations, has been incredibly successful.

Previous bonds have helped build and repair thousands of affordable homes for seniors, working families, veterans, and people with disabilities.

Funding affordable housing bonds isn’t just the right thing to do. It’s economically smart.

The bonds improve the social health and the economic health of Austin. They generate rent and property taxes for the city and revitalizes neighborhoods and raises property values. Every city dollar attracts four more in matching funds from outside sources, so the money goes a long way.

It’s an investment-in people and in the city. It will help keep Austin the kind of place that we admire and enjoy living in.

We need your help to spread the word and keep a good thing going!

Go to http://KeepATXAffordable.org to join the effort!

And be sure to like the campaign on Facebook at http://Facebook.com/KeepAustinAffordable and follow it on Twitter at http://Twitter.com/keepatxafford.

Sorry, Austin, You Suck

Well, that’s it.  I am no longer proud to call myself an Austinite.  I am proud to say I am from Houston.  A great city.  a real city.  I have tried so hard to be proud of you. I put up with the skinny jeans; I put up with the jorts, I put up with the yoga pants, I put up with the ridiculous looking tank tops; I even put up with gladiator sandals…on dudes.  I put up with your ‘I’m too creative to be burdened with society’ crap.  I put up with seemingly half of you having no real jobs and not adding any real value to our economy.  I have managed a great amount of restraint in wanting to believe you were worthy of the accolades you have received in being named one of the greatest cities to live in the USA.  But no longer.

Yesterday’s November 6th election was proof that you really are no better than any other city in the US.  You truly do not care about your fellow neighbors; you don’t pay attention and you blindly follow the pack of lemmings before you.  You’re just not that damn smart after all.  I know, your too busy being clever with your blogs sipping $8 french press coffee to truly give a damn about this city you love to call home.  My prediction, in 10 years 50% of will have already moved on to the next ‘great city’ because you have certainly f***** this one up.

Let me tell what you did yesterday since you either don’t know (ignorance is absolutely no excuse) or, worse, knowingly don’t care.

Yesterday, you voted to spend hundreds, maybe thousands, of millions of dollars to revamp your entire system of government and likely did not even know it.  You voted to grow the council from 7 members to 11 members. Really?? Any idea what the personnel cost alone will be annually? Let’s use Council Member Riley’s office as an example: the Council member plus his three staff earn $202,966 annually (Texas Tribune lists salaries of all staff so this math is exact).  That means for 6 Council members we spend $1.218M annually.  Adding another four Council members adds another $811,864 annually.  Then lest add another 30% for benefits, pension, etc and you get an additional $1.156 million annually!  That’s

I am mad you spent this money.  It’s completely unnecessary.  Completely!  On top of that, you did a lot of other bad things as well including voting for a new civil service agreement that no longer allows the City to hire and fire at will, like every other business in Texas.  It has been estimated this new change will add additional millions of dollars to our city government.

What else could you do?  You also decided to vote for single member districts to be drawn, approved by the Court system and then by all of you.  What were you thinking?  Better representation?  Really?  How much will this legal battle cost us? $100 million?  $500 million?  More??  For the same reason you hate the Republicans at the State level, you just approved this form of redistricting at the City level!!

Now we get to divide the City in to 10 pieces and select the one person who gets to represent that one district.  Not the City of Austin, one district.  How could that end poorly??

All I heard from you was “no more taxes” yet you just spent $1.156 million annually in salaries, who knows how much in administrative costs plus the costs of changing our entire city charter to add ten single member districts.  What’s a $1 billion or so dollars over the next few years… Additionally, you passed every single bond initiative; every single one except one: Prop 15: Affordable Housing

And then the coup de grace: You let your true colors show.  I have already proven this election was not about money.  You just went on a spending spree that would make a drunken Sailor and his gold-digger wife from Tarrant County proud.  So what, then, caused you to vote to spend hundreds of millions of dollars (most needlessly) and then decide that  you can’t spend $78.3 million on affordable housing??

The truth is, Austin, you are nothing more than a bunch of NIIMBY’s.  It wasn’t about the money.  You passed Proposition 18 for arts and culture with flying colors yet our museum system in Austin is barely third world worthy.  Would it surprise you to know that $3.8 million was buried in there for the Women’s and Children’s Shelter?  It’s probably a good thing you didn’t know that or you would have voted that down too.

You are pathetic.  You’ll spend millions on anything, anything, as long as it does not mean building housing for those disgusting poor people in your backyard.  How dare they build housing for the poor, sick, dying, vulnerable and needy.  The homeless.  You’d rather do anything than stop people from dying on the streets.  Like they deserve, right?  One person dies on our streets every three days yet you don’t care.  So long as they don’t die in your backyard, housed or otherwise.

Wake up, Austin, you’re not so damn clever after all.  You’re just like everyone else.