Superior’s Housing Time Bomb:

Worst-Case Scenario for 2026–2027

Featuring Mayor Jim Paine, the Rubber Stamp Choir, and the Ghost of Housing Authorities Past

SoupNutz Exclusive Forecast

“Ain’t nobody got time for affordable housing when your mayor’s doing donuts on the Constitution.”

Welcome to the predictive trainwreck nobody in Superior wanted, yet everyone desperately needs. This is the SoupNutz™ Official 24‑Month Worst‑Case Risk Forecast for the Superior Housing Authority (SHA), the City of Superior, and anyone stuck living under Comrade Mayor Jim Paine’s fog machine of “progressive” press releases.

If you thought things were bad now, buckle up. This isn’t “The West Wing.” It’s Chernobyl with city council PowerPoints.


YEAR ONE: APRIL 2026

Budget Woes Meet Courtroom Throws

  • Civil rights lawsuits against the city (LeRette, Cuypers, and others) march toward settlement or trial.

  • Superior burns through $1 million-plus in legal fees and payouts, because who needs parks or housing maintenance when you can bankroll litigation?

  • SHA’s thin HUD funding gets “temporarily borrowed” to cover emergency fixes while the General Fund plays financial Jenga.

  • City council nods along like dashboard bobbleheads while Mayor Paine spoon‑feeds them another 87‑slide PDF titled “Progress.”

Lead Pipes, Cracked Walls, and Shrinking Capacity

  • SHA’s maintenance backlog hits critical mass: elevators stall, heat fails, mold spreads like it’s auditioning for a biological horror film.

  • Complaints rise. So do worthless “we’re looking into it” responses.

  • HUD threatens a partial funding freeze for failure to meet basic livability standards.

  • Mayor Paine responds with another press release about tiny green-energy homes no contractor in Wisconsin could build without crying.

  • Audit Red Flags

  • Activists uncover emails showing city staff discussing land swaps to “get around zoning headaches.”

  • The infamous Paine Family Easement Fiasco™—a land‑for‑no‑land deal—falls onto the radar of the state ethics commission.

  • Rebecca Scherf releases a statement claiming, “The mayor has always complied with the spirit of transparency.”

  • Translation: LOL absolutely not.


YEAR TWO: APRIL 2027

The Great SHA Privatization Scam

  • After failing spectacularly to maintain public housing, SHA enters a “cost‑sharing partnership” with out‑of‑town developers.

  • Public buildings get sold off under “capital improvement agreements,” complete with sweetheart lease‑back terms.

  • Tenants see rent jump from $380 to $740, plus DIY plumbing.

  • City Hall dares to call this “progress toward sustainable independence.”

Developer Bros Take the Wheel

  • Council votes 5–4 to rezone half the North End for “mixed‑use micro‑units,” inspired by a pitch deck from a Patagonia‑vested consultant.

  • Lindsey “I Love Grain Elevators” Graskey insists the public was notified, but the meeting video is missing because she lost the YouTube password again.

  • Ruth Ludwig claps. Nobody knows why. Possibly not even her.

Frozen Politics and Homeless Hikes

  • Emergency shelters see a 50% spike in winter occupancy.

  • SHA’s waitlist hits 700 people with 18‑month delays.

  • Mayor Paine poses in front of a shipping‑container “transitional unit” and declares Superior “a national leader in innovation.”

  • HUD responds by assigning a full oversight administrator. Translation: We don’t trust you anymore.


What Comes Next (If Superior Doesn’t Wake Up)

  • HUD seizes SHA management

  • Class‑action tenant lawsuits

  • Federal civil rights consent decree

  • Mayor Paine announces run for Congress because “he’s accomplished all he can here”

  • Tylor Elm finally stops pretending he’s not Paine’s sidekick

  • Jenny Van Sickle returns and immediately runs against Ruth Ludwig

  • City council chambers become a luxury co‑working space; meetings move to Zoom


Final Crossing Signal

This isn’t if.
This is when, unless Superior finally grows a spine.

You’re looking at a city drowning in civil rights litigation, a housing authority with a fraud‑stained history, and a mayor who treats press releases as policy.

You don’t need a bigger budget.
You need accountability, oversight, and elected officials who know the difference between governance and improv theater.

Links :

Superior Housing Authority Director Federal Fraud Case

Superior Housing Authority

HUD Inspector General Report Fraud

HUD Fraud 

Housing Fraud

Housing Agency 7 Million in Fraud

Harbor scene in City of Superior featuring a colossal octopus-like creature towering over cranes and ships during stormy, rainy weather

Election 2026: Voters vs. the Budget That Ate Superior

Superior’s budget grew nearly 50% in six years, even as the city’s population shrank. Per-resident government spending jumped from $1,947 in 2018 to $2,908 in 2024, leaving taxpayers carrying about $1,000 more government per year than they did just a few years ago. Property tax revenue barely moved during the same period, meaning much of the spending surge has been fueled by outside funding, borrowing, and one-time aid. When spending rises while the population falls, the math gets uncomfortable fast — and eventually the bill comes due.

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