About Me

Name: Katy Grimes
Email: fetchingjen@gmail.com Biography
Loading...

Create Your Own Blog Find Other Townhall Blogs

Comments

Blog Roll

 

Union or Non-Union Grass?

In recent headlines in The Sacramento Bee, reporter Ryan Lyllis wrote how the city's budget shortfall was heading right for the parks - the bottom line, that is. City budgeteers are proposing a 35% budget cut for the department of Parks... but not for the Recreation side of the department. http://www.sacbee.com/government/story/1844020.html
 
The neighborhood in which I live surrounds Sacramento's largest regional park, William Land Park, and the neighbors are spitting mad. There has been no talk of cutting the excessive staff in the city - only parks maintenance and services.
 
Within the Department of Parks and Recreation, the parks budget is pretty straightforward and typical: maintenance, repairs, projects and restorations. The Recreation side of the department however, is bloated with lots of interesting departments:  pools & aquatics, senior enrichment classes, a travel agency, teen "health" centers, neighborhood block party planners, a skate park, day care centers, and even 17 community centers (all of which require staffing).
 
Last week, 65 people from my neighborhood attended the City Council meeting and present an optional budget proposal to the council, instead of allowing the parks to fall into blight. Not just for our neighborhood, but for every Sacramento neighborhood where a park is located. We testified about what happens to parks when the maintenance ceases and bathrooms close: public urination (and worse), crime, drugs, gangs take over. Additionally, the city would have to spend an inordinate amount of money to get the parks back into shape once the economy recovers.
 
We proposed privatizing park maintenance, saving the city at least 60% of the existing cost due to the union contracts under which city parks employees currently work.
 
With a city council of all Democrats save one, it is the unions who put each council member into office. Consequently, no one will even broach the discussion of cutting union jobs... or pay... or benefits... muchless privatizing any city services.
 
Last night the City Council met again (here is the agenda and video link
05/26/09 Council Meeting May 26, 2009 01h 32m Agenda Video Open Video Only in Windows Media Player
 
skip to Public Testimony Parks for testimony.
 
In the meeting, it was brought up that the city found some additional money for Parks and Rec. When asked where and how, the City Finance Director stated that there are several lighting and landscaping assessment districts. They did an audit and "added parcels." They will use this money to "backfill the loss of general funds."
 
The city just "added parcels" to an existing assessment district - wait until the property owners find out. These people will not cut a thing out of the budget as long as it is tied to union jobs.
 
Meanwhile, our park is looking really neglected and blighted in some areas, but not one city parks department employee has been let go. Where are they working? Who ordered them to stop mowing and maintaining the park? My guess - One of their bloated union middle managers.
 
The funny thing is that adjacent to our park is the Land Park Golf course - beautifully maintained... privately. We refer to this as "union grass" and "non-union grass."
 
Email ItEmail It | Print ItPrint It | CommentsComments (0) | TrackbacksTrackbacks (0) | Flag as offensiveFlag as Offensive

Sacramento City Council Performance

Last night as I sat in the audience watching the Sacramento City Council perform, I felt that I'd been ripped-off. The performance was bush-league, and not even worthy of  Middle-school production.
 
For several hours, they demonstrated how ill-prepared most of them are. They demonstrated that they prefer to let "staff" make decisions for them (Lauren Hammond). Council members demonstrated that they are not engaged at all in the issues (Rob Fong). They demonstrated that they are beholden to local union 39 (Ray Tretheway). Tretheway even demonstrated that he is oblivious to the conflict of interest he has as Executive Director of the Sacramento Tree Foundation, as he talked down to a City planner about the "tree canopy" and "Urban forest" he thought should be included in the updated Urban City design plan for downtown. As I sat there trying to take notes while Tretheway spoke, I found the task nearly impossible; he never completes a sentence of thought.
 
Councilman Kevin McCarty, Cohn  and Sandy Sheedy made sense a couple of times - McCarty when he pressed the City Finance Director for information about whether or not the City was laying off more line workers and saving management jobs and salaries - she could not answer. Sheedy made snese when she refused to vote for an intent motion for the budget as proposed.  All of the other council members voted to pass it. Cohn pressed city staff on a bogus contract.
 
One item of interest on the agenda was the Old Sacramento Tour Boat Interim Lease Agreement. A member of the audience and his attorney addressed the Council, asking why the bid process had not been open as they (Commodore Events) would have bid on it and probably won the bid instead of mega-tour boat company, Hornblower (who operates Alcatraz and Ellis Island tour boats). It was abundantly clear that there was only the one "bid" and the process had been done hurridly in order to award it to Hornblower, but not just the "interim" contract. Apparently Hornblower Company was going to be allowed to sign a long-term contract courtest of staff's recommendations - "5-10 years" as the city staff employee said sheepishly. She became defensive when Councilman Cohn asked her instead to consider a 2-year contract as the RFP for the process was already 5 years old. When  The Mayor asked the City Manager to step outside and meet with city staff and the disgruntled party to see if they coudl come to a compromise.
 
The groups eventually came back in and the calendar item was resumed, and promptly passed a unanimous vote of council. I wonder what went on in the back room to appease the attorney and his client...
 
Councilwoman Hammond on several occasions, challenged her colleagues on their questioning of city staff procedures saying "we already proved that when we don't let staff do their jobs, we are wrong." She clearly likes to have staff do her job for her as well. If the City council is not challenging city staff procedures, recommendations and policy, who will? The City Manager? I don't think so.
 
Councilman Rob Fong never once participated in the meeting, and he looked like a clown, dressed in a neon tie and even brighter shirt. Four audience members spoke about the need to maintain Land Park, and Fong never even acknowledged their presence, and never uttered a word. His lack of engagement in his own neighborhood is shameless.
 
Councilwoman Bonnie Pannell was also uncharacteristically quiet. 
 
The bulk of the audience members were present to argue budget cuts in park maintenance, speaking eloquently to a future of closed park bathrooms, weeds and uncut grass, garbage problems, crime, public urination, and a myriad of other problems that will arise if parks are allowed to degrade. Additionally, one speaker presented seven different options for cuts and budget reforms, for which both McCarty and the Mayor thanked the group, pointing out that they never recieve alternate proposals when city residents show up to challenge budget cuts. www.rescuesacramentoparks.blogspot.com
 
The Sacramento City Council is woefully inadequate on financial and business issues. They only seem to perk up when social programs are the issue. There are moments when several of the members seem to grasp the issue - Cohn with the tour boat issue, McCarty with the budget issue, Sheedy refusing to vote on the budget without more information - but mostly they sit back and allow the City Manager, City Attorney and various City staffers do the work for them, without ever verifying issues themselves, or even being prepared ahead with pertinent questions.
 
The Mayor is clearly only one voice, one vote, on the Council. After witnessing several council meetings lately, more than ever, Sacramento needs to change the City Charter and make the Mayor the CEO of the City. Last night's meeting would have gone very differently had a CEO been in charge. And we desperately need to elect council members who understand and are even vaguely familiar with finance and business.
Email ItEmail It | Print ItPrint It | CommentsComments (0) | TrackbacksTrackbacks (0) | Flag as offensiveFlag as Offensive
« Previous1Next »