Max Lord, 32, said he graduated from CU Boulder with a bachelor’s degree in physics, according to his LinkedIn. He said he has since worked a range of jobs in the city, from delivery driver and line cook to helping build labs for the CU physics department. He now owns Hammer and Driver, a home improvement business. Lord’s top issues include environmental protection, wildfire resilience and affordable housing. He is a renter.
Endorsements: Boulder Area Labor Council, CLC and AFL-CIO
Answers to questionnaire:
Perspective and experience: What perspective or lived experience would you bring to city council, and how would it shape your approach to policy?
I’ve lived in Boulder for a long time, and believe my diverse experience across the city is what qualifies me to be an active participant in city council. It isn’t always obvious where experience comes from, a good example is that I learned all the roads when I was a delivery driver late nights after college. Since then though, I’ve worked in the physics labs on campus, at NCAR, and now I am a builder around town. I am familiar with the land use regulations, as well as the homes that are currently built on them, and how they were built. Beyond that, it’s really working with the homeowners on the day to day, as well as the small businesses who rely on me, like the Trident and the Dark Horse. I’ve also volunteered with TGTHR, and Bridge House. I am familiar with our most vulnerable. I’ve worked on massive infrastructure projects, all the way down to small restaurants on the hill. It’s always about working on a team. Listening to others, understanding what you do and don’t know.
Camping ban: Should Boulder enforce its camping ban when the All Roads shelter is full? Please answer yes or no and explain.
I think that some candidates use the camping ban as a buzzword to generate appeal. This is a good example of where we could use some more honesty. It doesn’t matter how much you want to “enforce it.” You can’t enforce a camping ban if the shelters and the jail are full. At some point, “enforcing it” is just police driving people back and forth from the jail. Neglecting the fact that it’s impractical, it’s also immoral, and misses the core of the issue. We have All Roads, and Blue Bird, but we don’t have any sober living facilities, or hostels as a secondary option. We also don’t have an emergency plan for bad weather. I think we, as a people, and a city, can and should do better, rather than acting as if a camping ban has any meaning on policy.
Wildfire mitigation/home hardening: Should the city require wildfire mitigation and home hardening — such as a five-foot buffer of noncombustible material around the home, or banning wood fences and gates within eight feet of a home — for existing homes? Please answer yes or no and explain.
I think that the updated WUI districts and code are an important step to fire hardening the city. I also believe that forcing homeowners to make changes to their homes is not the role of the city government, particularly when we make it so hard to do so. I think that people want to protect their homes, they want to protect our city, but the city makes it too difficult to acquire permits, or really even information. The new WUI map is confusing, the codes, while important, are difficult for people to understand. I think rather than forcing anything, we need to focus on outreach, and streamline permits for homeowners who are trying to update in case of a fire. I don’t see how any one can champion “affordable housing for the missing middle” when they are also forcing homeowners to pay exorbitant fees to even have the right to protect their homes.
Housing supply: Boulder needs thousands of new homes by 2032 to meet demand and keep rents and home prices from rising further out of reach. Yet projects often face cost overruns, community pushback or zoning hurdles. What specific steps would you take to address the city’s housing shortage?
I think we are going to need to accept the fact that Boulder is changing. The whole world is getting a little more crowded, and we can’t simply pull the ladder up behind us if we have lived here longer. That means changing land-use policy to allow more housing at the peripheries of the city, apartment complexes within, and duplexes and triplexes in some of our tough-to-build-in neighborhoods. We need to keep a tight eye on contractors who are hired by the city (once again, this is a good insight I think I would bring to the council) so we aren’t wasting money on city projects, and also confirm that they follow the guidelines we require for equitable housing. This only begins to address housing supply though, and we need to help renters with the existing housing by creating greater protections.
Council’s role on foreign affairs (and Gaza): Should the Boulder City Council take positions on foreign affairs? Regardless of your answer, what actions, if any, should the city council take in response to Israel’s war in Gaza and the related disruptions and demonstrations in council chambers (e.g., open comment rules, safety, hate speech, First Amendment considerations)?
While I do believe as a local government we need to tend to the garden we can touch, and focus on policies that directly impact the citizens of our city, I also think part of that means listening to what our citizens want. I worked building water treatment for refugees in Burma, and I can say first hand that both sides of the conflict use technology like Toyota, and Microsoft. These are massive corporations, and while they have admittedly scrupulous ethics, overhauling our civil infrastructure to prove a point is going to cause more damage to our people than any good in the grand scheme. Still though, we can provide guidance, and moral standings. We condemn violence. We condemn harassing our public officials, we condemn attacks on our citizens, just as we condemn bombing children, or violence against people we politically disagree with. None of these acts solve problems, they add fuel to a fire.
Budget priorities: With sales tax growth slowing, the city manager imposed a hiring freeze this year and the city council faces tough trade-offs. The city also has an estimated $380 million capital maintenance backlog and uncertain federal funding. With limited dollars, what are your top priorities, and what would you cut or delay?
I could take the easy way out, and say “performance-based metrics” and “higher revenue, and lower spending,” but it’s simply an easy way to dodge the question. I do, of course, believe we need to have good metrics for measuring how our policies affect our cities, from the efficacy of higher policing, to the impact of more buses. I also think Council needs to be honest with its citizens, and itself about what it can no longer afford, and start looking for cheaper alternatives. This means tabling some civic projects, and looking for simpler ways to get people around safely. We spent 16 million dollars on the demolition of the old hospital, so that we could recycle the steel and say we did it sustainably. I, like everyone, want to recycle, but we can’t be spending many times over market average for commercial demolition for a warm fuzzy feeling, when the money could have gone to helping get addicts off of the streets, and people back into our shopping centers for more economic vitality.
