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Joyce Clark Unfiltered

For "the rest of the story"

convention 2On Friday, April 26, 2013 the Glendale City Council had another special budget workshop. This time their agenda was to revisit the issues of police and fire requests for additional personnel and healthcare premium increases for employees and retirees.

Ms. Sherry Schurhammer once again presented the proposed budget and the cuts recommended for 2015 and 2018. Staff’s recommendation was to deny the police and fire requests for additional personnel and to accept the increased healthcare premiums. Her major take-away is that the city has a structural deficit and acceptance of this budget as proposed was the first step toward eliminating it.

Fire Chief Burdick came back with a revised request for an additional 8 positions and two  fire truck leases. Police Chief Black upped the police ante to 31 positions plus 6 non-sworn positions. Together these two departments requested a new ongoing expense for the General Fund of $5.5 million and a new one time expense of $1.2 million for the General Fund.

For most of the session there was a united front of 4 councilmembers willing to grant the police and fire departments their requests. They were Councilmembers Alvarez, Chavira, Sherwood and Vice Mayor Knaack. Later one of them will break from this pack and change the council consensus and direction to staff-but that’s for later in this blog. Let’s begin with the four’s reasoning for granting the police and fire wish list.

Norma Alvarez

Norma Alvarez

At least Councilmember Alvarez is consistent. She began with remarks like, “a business should be paying for their own” and “ they’ve (businesses) taken a lot.” Make no mistake. She was alluding to the city owned arena. She also suggested that we “forget festivals” and pointed out that Glendale Glitters will cost the city $759,000 to produce this coming year. She even suggested that the funding for Public Safety be taken out of the Enterprise Funds (water, sewer and sanitation). She made sure that everyone knew that “the past is what brought us here” and she’s “not gonna forget the past.” She became confused when talking about crime being up in Glendale. It depends on what kind of crime. Glendale’s overall crime rate is down but certain categories such as theft have gone up.  Apparently the bottom line was that she had received a complaint from a citizen (certainly not vast hoards of people) that a “suspicious activity” call was not answered for an hour. Obviously calls are prioritized. If there is imminent danger to life or a crime is in progress it receives the highest priority, a Number 1 and is answered within 4 or 5 minutes. A call such as she described would receive a priority of 3 or 4 and would be answered eventually when an officer was available. Apparently that is not good enough for her.  It was vintage Alvarez. She blamed others, protected her agenda in the guise of protecting the taxpayer and exhibited her usual amount of confusion.

Chavira photo

Sammy Chavira

We finally saw the true Councilmember Chavira as he stood in support of Alvarez’ desire for more police and fire personnel. He worried about “call degradation.” Bet he couldn’t define it for you. He literally blessed fire and police personnel. Solicitudes were oozing from every pore. He was clearly upset that the police department had asked for more personnel and funding than had the fire department.  Then he spoke the magic word, “parity.” Just to remind you, he is a Phoenix firefighter and is going to push his brother Glendale firefighters’ agenda. He and his brother firefighters positively bristled at the mere possibility that police could end up with “more” than they would. So he suggested that the police personnel request be reduced to 20 personnel thereby reducing the ongoing request to $4 million. Make no mistake. His agenda is to further the desires of the Glendale Fire Department. They own him. Not just because he’s a brother firefighter but because the fire union poured upwards of $50,000 into his campaign. That’s a lot of chump change that Sammy will be paying back for a very long time. What Chavira did was not helpful. He widened minor disagreements between fire and police into the size of the Grand Canyon. It has now surfaced like an unwanted boil on your backside.

Martinez photo

Manny Martinez

Councilmember Sherwood offered some well thought out questions and clearly supported the police and fire requests. He, at the end of the session, still felt that if the city paid less back on a loan it has with the Enterprise Funds, the city could pay the additional costs of these requests. Councilmember Martinez stuck to his guns and simply made the point that it was not appropriate to grant these requests and that they “were not in a popularity contest.” He also said it was not productive to continually go back to the past and to point fingers. Councilmember Hugh was silent until the end of the session.

Knaack

Yvonne Knaack

Vice Mayor Knaack made it clear she was in public safety’s corner when she said the defeat of Proposition 457 (would have allowed the removal of sales tax increase) was due to Public Safety’s efforts.  She said that voters defeated it because public’s perception was that its defeat would preserve Public Safety. I know that is the message that police and fire were using in their campaign to defeat Prop 457. All that I can say is that at the very least, Councilmember Martinez and I made it very clear, often and quite publicly, that its defeat would prevent the city from making draconian cuts to this year’s budget and buy the city time to make more temperate cuts over the next five years. We both repeatedly referred to the city’s structural deficit. We did not say it would save fire and police jobs. We said it would save the city from having to make major personnel cuts to any department but that cuts would still be needed.

The issue of the proportionality of public safety sales tax was initiated by Vice Mayor Knaack. The voter approved tax calls for proportionally 1/3 to fire and 2/3 to police.  This will surface again but I think council will find that changing the proportionality of the tax is far more complicated than they know. She also publicly acknowledged that the arena management fee could very well be higher than the $6M in this budget.

Perhaps the surprise of the session was comments made by the Fire Chief. He said $1.2M to $1.3M was needed to insure “constant staffing” within the department. One would think that would be his first priority within his department budget. He also indicated that he would have “no problem shutting down a truck” to cover his department’s overtime. He virtually threatened council with his observation that they will have to make policy decisions regarding fire next year. He followed that by saying he would close a fire station if fire was not adequately funded. The nut is the definition of “adequately.”

Weiers

Jerry Weiers

Mayor Weiers also offered some rather interesting remarks. He noted “the angst between the fire and police departments.” He also said that the previous council should have stayed with the 1.2% sales tax increase across the board rather than the 7/10s in place now.  He then called for council to express their final positions so that consensus could be achieved and direction given to staff. It broke Alvarez-Chavira-Sherwood-Knaack in favor of increased revenues to police and fire. Weiers-Hugh-Martinez were opposed and wanted to accept the staff recommendation. It appeared that fire and police had won the day but wait…

Bowers

Dick Bowers

Interim City Manager Dick Bowers responded with “there is no money to find” and the proposed budget as presented is a “sound and reasonable approach.” He indicated that if council gave direction to accede to police and fire requests, cuts to all other departments would be “surgical.” It was then requested that council identify which departments they would like to see eliminated to meet the police and fire financial requests. Council then spent 5 or 10 minutes reading the material related to departments other than fire, police or enterprise departments. It was embarrassing painful to watch but  reality set in when they realized how much would have to be cut. Vice Mayor Knaack finally broke and changed her direction in support of the staff recommendation. Chavira made one stab to try to get her back into the fold and she responded with, “I have the right to change my mind.” It was a tough decision to make but she did the right thing.

Two important lessons surfaced from this workshop. A majority of this council has not accepted that there is a structural budget deficit and expenses are outstripping revenues; and fire has bared its teeth with dire promises to delivery service if their demands are not met in the next year’s budget. Mayor Weiers, Councilmembers Martinez and Hugh are to be commended for holding the line and accepting that budgetary expenses must be pared and pared now.

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man moneyThere were several take-aways from the March 27, 2013 Glendale City Council budget workshop. Perhaps the most important was the Executive Director of Finance, Ms. Sherry Schurhammer’s quote of the day, “we have an ongoing operational deficit.” I’m not sure what about that statement some councilmembers refuse to understand. It’s really quite simple. The city spends more money than it takes in.  It’s almost as if members of this council expect manna from heaven or a sugar daddy to appear as a means of solving the city’s financial problems. Let’s hope this council grows a backbone and accepts that cost of service cuts are needed. The latest proposal from staff shows major cuts of $8M not now but in Fiscal Year 2014-15 and another round of cuts in Fiscal Year 2016-17. Quite clearly putting off the necessary cuts merely compounds the deficit and makes the future cuts to citizen services and quality of life more drastic and more painful.

Coyotes logoAnother interesting take away is the fact that staff is using $6M as a placeholder for an arena lease management fee. At least there was acknowledgement that this figure is merely a place holder. The final fee could be higher, lower or stay the same.  Or is that a place holder for the Phoenix Monarch Group, the good friends of Councilmembers Alvarez and Chavira? There remains a residual “blame the Coyotes” mentality. The first slide up presented by staff showed the city with a $3.4M deficit if it had had to pay the $17M arena lease management fee this year. I think that deficit blame deserves to be placed elsewhere. How about the $2.5M to repay the Water & Sewer Funds, and also used to make the Risk Management Fund and the Workman’s Compensation Fund whole? Or how about the $2.2M of newly created expenses: a $200K audit, a $100K Beacon contract, $1.2M additional to the Fire Department; an additional $370K in legal fees, an additional $370K in water costs in the Parks & Recreation Department or the unknown amount in salary and benefits for the newly hired Interim City Manager? These big ticket items come to nearly $5M in new costs that were unbudgeted when the current budget was approved and they will have to be absorbed this year.

hidden agendaAnother take away is there is certainly no doubt about at least one councilmember’s agenda. CM Chavira is “carrying the water for Public Safety.” It was obvious that his friends from inside those departments, especially Fire (don’t forget he’s a Phoenix firefighter), had prepared a series of questions for him to ask.  He read them quite nicely. Later when he was asked if he had more questions and apparently had used all of his prepared questions, he seemed to be at a loss for words. Chances are they will have prepared a new set of questions for him to read at the April 2, 2013 council workshop on Public Safety.

PolicemanWhile Interim Police Chief Black answered his questions directly and provided a realistic assessment based upon the city’s current fiscal condition, we didn’t see the same level of cooperation from Fire Chief Burdick. There definitely is a further agenda occurring on the Fire side. We heard the first salvo today when the Chief said calls for service had grown. Well, Glendale’s population has not grown per Mr. Craig Johnson, Director of Water Services, when he said new water hookups are flat. Those people leaving Glendale are replaced by others moving in but not in large enough numbers to create an explosion of growth in Glendale. The city is already planning for the fact that as Glendale’s population remains static, it will lose some of its state shared revenue to other, growing NW and W Valley cities.

Red Firetruck with Ladder ClipartSo where are the increased calls for fire/emergency service coming from? Have you heard of Automatic Aid? It’s a regional and cooperative program among most Valley Fire departments. If there is a call for fire service in Phoenix, Avondale, etc., and their nearest truck is busy on another call, the nearest adjoining city department will respond. I would certainly want to know the number of calls for fire service Glendale responds to outside the city versus the number of calls for service within the city. The increase in calls for fire service may well be attributable to population growth in cities surrounding Glendale.  If that is the case and the increase in calls is the result of an increased need to respond to Automatic Aid calls that is not a Glendale driven problem. We are not mandated to grow service or pay for it in Glendale to accommodate surrounding cities. While Automatic Aid is great in fostering regional cooperation in cases of extreme regional emergencies and for creating cost efficiencies in the use of specialized services such as water or mountain rescue, I am not convinced that it works in the best interest of a city with a stable population base whose resources are being used by surrounding cities with burgeoning populations.

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