A PROVOCATIVE PIECE
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Tuesday, July 30th, a commentary appeared in the Wall Street Journal - the best thing I read every day - by a gentleman named
Bill Nojay, identified as a member of the New York State Assembly, representing the 133 District in upstate New York. The commentary was titled, "
Lessons From a Front-Row Seat for Detroit's Dysfunction" and, if you're a subscriber to the
WSJ, you can read it
HERE. Assuming some of you are
NOT subscribers, I'll give you my take on this very interesting and timely piece.
A VIEW FROM THE INSIDE OF A ROTTING CARCASS
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Mr. Nojay, then a contractor, served for eight months as the Chief Operating Officer of the Detroit Department of Transportation (DDOT). He launches his message with the following paragraph:
"
Since Detroit declared bankruptcy on July 18, the
city's crippling problems with corruption, unfunded
benefits and pension liabilities have gotten the bulk of
airtime. But equally at fault for its fiscal demise are
the city's management structure and union and
civil-service rules that hamstring efforts to make
municipal services more efficient. I would know: I had a
front-row seat for this dysfunction."
SYSTEMIC CORRUPTION
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He goes on and on, describing the frustration of being confronted with a new problem each day, finding a solution, but being prohibited from implementing the solution due to the complete dysfunction of the government in that city.
SERVICES HALT WHILE REPAIRS ARE STALLED
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Nojay discusses the inability to get critical repairs done because vendors often refused to do the work because they had not been paid for previous efforts. Because of the widespread corruption in the city, the Detroit City Council approved payment of virtually all the bills - a fact that he describes as "
obstructionism". He tells us, for example, "
While I was at the DDOT, roughly 10% of bus-fare
collection boxes were broken. In another city, getting a
contract to buy spare parts to repair these boxes would
be routine. The City Council publicly expressed outrage
that we didn't fix the fare boxes, since the city was
losing an estimated $5 million a year in uncollected
fares." He explained that the contract to fix those fare boxes sat, untouched, for nine months in the City Council offices!
MICRO-MANAGING
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He expressed frustration at sitting for five hours waiting to discuss a minor traffic matter while the City Council members debated whether to authorize the demolition of individual vacant and vandalized house, one by one. He tells us there are over 40,000 vacant houses in Detroit.
CHARTER BLOCKED PROGRESS
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He described the frustration of being stifled when attempting to hire outside lawyers to fight injury claims filed against his department incidents that allegedly occurred on his buses. The claims, whether fraudulent or not, were routinely paid without investigation. He says, "
But we were blocked by city charter
provisions prohibiting any city department from hiring
outside counsel without the approval of the Detroit City
Council."
SOLUTION - START OVER
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After regaling us with more stories of the dysfunction and administrative gridlock that faced him and other department managers in Detroit he closes with this statement: "T
he last thing Detroit needs is a bailout. What it
needs is to sweep away a city charter that protects only
bureaucrats, civil-service rules that straightjacket
municipal departments, and obsolete union contracts. A
bailout would just keep the dysfunction in place. Time
to start over."
A CHARTER WON'T NECESSARILY SOLVE OUR PROBLEMS
I write this today as a reminder that a charter form of municipal government isn't necessarily the solution to all perceived or actual problems a city might have. While a carefully-crafted, locally-specific charter
CAN be a tool of good governance, it can also be a conduit for governmental mischief.
NO, WE'RE NOT "BELL", BUT...
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We have only to recall the recent calamity in the
City of Bell, where an unscrupulous City Manager,
Robert Rizzo, took advantage of an unsophisticated, uneducated, easily-swayed city council and an inattentive electorate to run roughshod over the city. Only 450 voters cast ballots in the municipal election that created the City of Bell Charter.
TROUBLED CITIES ARE CHARTER CITIES
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But, as you look around our state, you'll see other cities in deep financial difficulties who are seeking protection from bankruptcy courts to solve their problems.
Vallejo tried that and, several years out, not much has changed in that city.
Stockton and
San Bernardino are also on the cusp of "
bankruptcy salvation", but few informed observers think that's going to fix their problems. One common thread among those cities, and many others teetering on the brink, is that they are charter cities, where the protections provided to Costa Mesa as a General Law City were no longer available to them.
IGNORING THE WILL OF THE PEOPLE
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The lesson to be learned here is that, before we rush headlong into yet another charter fiasco, the residents of this city should carefully consider what's at stake, now and further downstream. The electorate resoundingly rejected
Jim Righeimer's Charter less than a year ago and yet he ignored the will of the people and almost immediately brought that concept back.
WHY HURRY?
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He forced the creation of a charter committee, which is theoretically going to create a charter without the baggage his had. He promised from the dais that he would have
NO involvement with the process of creating a new charter, yet appointed a majority to the committee that echoes his views on a charter to the extent that several have recently expressed concern about the slow pace of the process and suggested that the committee simply take his proposal from a year ago - the one that was thrashed at the polls - and do some subtle tinkering to it. What's the rush?
STILL NO REASON WHY...
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The City Council could have chosen to have a Charter Commission - 15 members of the community elected by the voters to put together a proper charter - one that would
NOT be subject to City Council approval. To date, no member of the committee has yet defined the problems that the city faces that a charter form of government would fix. That's what makes this process so laughable.
NO GUARANTEES THEY'LL EVEN READ IT!
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Even more frustrating is the fact that, regardless what kind of charter this committee eventually cobbles together and submits to the City Council for approval and placement on the ballot for the voters of this city to consider, the council is
NOT BOUND by any rule anywhere to actually accept what the committee proposes. They are free to toss out their work product and present to the voters whatever
THEY want - including a clone of
Jim Righeimer's Charter from a year ago.
RIGHEIMER COULD SHOW GOOD FAITH...
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There is a push by some, including some impatient members of the Charter Committee, to move the process along more quickly - I presume to try to get a charter on the June Primary Ballot, when many fewer voters take the time to cast ballots. There is a law pending in Sacramento, however, that would forbid any charter actions to appear before the voters except on the General Election ballots. Righeimer and his pals want to force this new charter onto the primary ballot if at all possible. In my opinion,
NO charter effort should appear anywhere except on the General Election ballots, period! Righeimer could show good faith if he came out publicly and said he'd prefer it if a charter effort were to appear on the November ballot next year. That would permit his spokespersons on the committee to throttle back their "hurry-up" effort and do a proper job with a charter.
SHOW UP AND SPEAK UP
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So, those of you with even the slightest interest in this process should try to attend the Charter Committee meetings to see for yourselves just how this process is moving along. You'll have a chance to address the committee in Public Comments at the start of each meeting, so you can tell your neighbors who are part of that group just how you feel, and why.
There's not much at stake here - only the future of our city, for goodness sake!
"The only thing necessary for the triumph of evil is for good men to do nothing."
-Edmund BurkeLabels: Bill Nojay, Charter, Charter Committee, Detroit, Jim Righeimer