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Joyce Clark Unfiltered

For "the rest of the story"

Today the city released as an agenda item for Tuesday, March 26, 2013 city council meeting. The council will be asked tocity hall 2 formally ratify a contract with Beacon Sports Capital Partners that has apparently been in effect since March 4, 2013. In fact, the City’s Communications Director, Julie Frisoni, denied as late as March 15, 2013, that there was any such contract.  An action George Fallar and I have speculated upon for the past month.

I suspect that the contract was vetted in a previous Executive session after a council workshop. Keep in mind, council may not vote in a workshop or Executive session but they can certainly come to consensus and give direction. When I served on council, a majority routinely gave direction in an Executive session. The council meeting on March 26 merely ratifies direction provided as a previous executive session. So much for a greater transparency embraced verbally by the new council and recently lamented as absent by the infamous Ken Jones in recent letter to the editor in the Glendale Star. The bloom may be off the rose for Mr. Jones and his love affair with the new council.

BeaconThe Beacon contract is short and sweet and takes only 4 pages. Glendale tasks Beacon with developing an RFP “process for the future lease and management of the Arena to prospective Venue Managers…” Its role is that of liaison for Glendale and it has no power to bind Glendale to any contract. Its duties consist of: reviewing all existing business contracts; preparing the RFP; soliciting interested parties and assisting them in their due diligence and review process; providing a recommendation to the city manager and council; developing the arena management agreement and sealing the deal between the venue manager and the city. We have to presume that the NHL approves of such an arrangement as they continue their silence (there is an occasional platitude signifying nothing).

This contract is in effect for 6 months (September 6, 2013) or if a venue manager is secured before the end of the statedcontract term, it will terminate earlier. When this agreement is ratified by council, presumably on March 26, Beacon will receive a $25,000 retainer. In addition to that retainer the city will pay $400 per hour for the services of 3 Beacon principals: Richard Billings, Jr., Gerald Sheehan and Christopher Billings. Oh, and by the way, these fine gentlemen will be reimbursed for any out-of-pocket expenses such as travel, lodging and meal expenses. The costs of this contract are not budgeted in the Fiscal Year 2012-13 budget. The funds will have to come from the “Unappropriated Contingency” Fund (read the $17M allocated in this year’s budget to pay for an arena manager).  Lastly, both sides in the contract recognize that this agreement is proprietary and confidential.

In a previous blog, “Ripples in a cornfield,” I related that a 2005 suit was filed against Beacon Sports, IFG and Michael Reinsdorf by West Coast Arena Ventures, LLC in the Superior Court of California. West Coast Arena Ventures sued because it alleged that its confidentiality was breached by Beacon, IFG and Michael Reinsdorf. I do not know the outcome of this suit.  It has been alleged previously that when IFG and Michael Reinsdorf had work they could not or chose not to take they passed it on to Beacon. A leopard doesn’t change its spots.leopard 2 It may very well come to pass that the Reinsdorf/Kaites group will have an inside track because of its relationship, perceived or real, to Beacon Sports.

The previous Reinsdorf deal for the purchase of the Coyotes insisted there be a 5 year opt-out clause. If they hold to the same line, the Coyotes could stay for an abbreviated period and then be moved to…Seattle?

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Courtesy of
Goldwater Institute

On March 14, 2013 the Center for Media and Democracy in conjunction with Arizona Working Families issued A Reporter’s Guide to the Goldwater Institute: What Citizens, Policymakers and Reporters Should Know. It can be found at this site:  http://www.prwatch.org/news/2013/03/12021/reporters-guide-goldwater-institute.

While I was serving on Glendale’s city council there were several lawsuits filed by the Goldwater Institute (GWI) against the city. The first dated back to June of 2009 and contended that the city was refusing to release documents relating to its negotiations with various entities wishing to purchase the Coyotes and to secure a lease management agreement. GWI felt every scrap of paper should be a public document. The final agreement was that the city would release all documents it felt would not harm its negotiating position and if that should be the case, a judge, in camera, would review them and make a final decision.

Then about two years later, in March of 2011, Goldwater having reviewed more than 1,000 of the city’s documents as a result of the previous court decision, filed suit to subvert the Hulsizer deal to buy the Coyotes. It contended that the city was offering a subsidy in violation of Arizona’s Gift Clause statute. There was never a decision in this case as the city and Hulsizer could not finalize a deal.

When this report was issued I was eager to read its findings. I suspect that the practices of GWI are not so different from other public policy non-profits whether they are liberal or conservative. These types of non-profits are often shielded by federal government regulations making it difficult to obtain a complete and accurate picture of their financial dealings.

I find that to be ironic. The same organization that sued the City of Glendale for a lack of transparency is habitually not so transparent itself. It seems they don’t mind letting the public know about some, not all, of their sources of funding but they certainly don’t want you to know too much about how they get their money or spend it.

Another irony is GWI’s persistent attack on only one sport venue in the state – Glendale’s Jobing.com Arena and its use by the Coyotes. Lord knows, there have been sweetheart deals aplenty with other sports venues. Yet Goldwater never raised an eyebrow. I have often wondered if the close relationship of some board members with the baseball industry was a motivator. Perhaps, in the minds of some, there are too many sports teams all competing for the same public discretionary dollar. Taking out a major sports team could benefit the remaining teams. When a team is weak, as the Coyotes have been for multiple years, that makes it a perfect target for elimination.

Briefly the findings of this report do highlight some questionable practices:

  •  The Goldwater Institute is a member of the American Legislative Exchange Council (ALEC). ALEC is funded by corporations and its sole purpose is to craft and advocate for bills favorable to big business interests exclusively. The relationship between these two organizations appears to be very, very close. Often the very issues that GWI is advocating for coincidentally happen to be part of ALEC’s agenda.
Darcy Olsen 2

Darcy Olsen
Courtesy of
Goldwater Institute

Clint-Bolick

Clint Bolick
Courtesy of
Goldwater Institute

  • Despite a very modest growth in GWI’s income it substantially raised its top executive’s salaries disproportionately to that growth in revenue. Darcy Olson’s Executive Director salary jumped from $180,000 to $268,000 by 2011; Clink Bolick’s Director of Litigation salary went from $126,000 in 2007 to $300,000 by 2011.

 

  • Up to $1.9M has been approved as a loan by the GWI board to one of its board members, Norman McClelland, a GWI founder and past president, for his private, for-profit company, Shamrock Farm Co Investing.
  • Goldwater claimed to the IRS in 2010 that it spent $0 on grassroots or direct lobbying. Yet is has two registered lobbyists, Starlee Rhoades, Vice President, and Lucy Caldwell, Communications Director. Gallagher & Kennedy, a Public Affairs firm, is representing GWI as an active lobbyist this year.
  • GWI does not publicly disclose its largest donors, although most public policy non-profits do.  A majority of GWI’s funding comes from and  its largest donors happen to be out-of-state foundations with specialized agendas.
Barry Goldwater

Barry Goldwater

Barry Goldwater  became the Institute’s namesake. Recently Susan Goldwater expressed public concerns in the media about the GWI by saying, “(W)hat he didn’t like was seeing it turn into a special interest, big-business lobbying group.” I suspect Barry Goldwater is rolling in his grave as he sees what the Institute has morphed into.

Perhaps this “big-business lobbying group” should add as an agenda item how it can advance the cause of big-business sports teams and their venues. After all, according to GWI, all big-business is good business.

 

 

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Skeete

Horatio Skeete

Yesterday I related sources who indicated that Interim City Manager Horatio Skeete would be resigning. Today I received more accurate information and that is that while Mr. Skeete will no longer be Interim City Manager he will stay with the organization and resume his role as Assistant City Manager.

Who will be the new Interim City Manager? Only the shadow…er, the city council knows…and maybe they haven’t made up their minds yet. So I will throw my speculation into the confusion that exists right now. I question 3would not choose anyone from inside the current organization.  I would hope that this council will not do so either. For them, it’s a case of paranoia. I don’t think they trust anyone inside the organization to provide them with their perceived and long-awaited version of the truth on any subject. It has been rumored for quite some time that this council would do major house cleaning of upper management. There has even been talk of offering a vastly different compensation package to anyone willing to step into this mess and take on the role of permanent City Manager. Expect internal warfare over the final selection of a new City Manager. Let’s hope that once that person is chosen, they can forget their differences and solidify around the selection.

I would choose someone from outside because it would help to foster an atmosphere of impartiality and remove the necessity of taking sides within the organization.

confusion 2Looking outside I don’t see a lot of choices with City Manager experience. I would consider Dr. Martin Vanacour or Richard Bowers.  Dr. Vanacour was Assistant City Manager of Glendale from 1970 to 1985 and then its City Manager from 1985 to 2002. He is experienced, knowledgeable, and certainly well versed in Glendale issues. Since his departure from the city he has been consulting and teaching. Another very viable candidate is Mr. Bowers. He was Assistant City Manager in Scottsdale from 1981 to 1991 and then its City Manager from 1991 to 2000. He has performed various consulting jobs for the past and present council. He, too, has been consulting and teaching.

The City of Glendale would be well served to have either one of these gentlemen as its Interim City Manager for several months until a permanent person is chosen for the position  Either one would bring stability and a sense of impartiality to an otherwise chaotic city management group.

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savingsIn my posting the other day, “Saving grace,” I talked about the $17M allocated and reserved in Glendale’s Fiscal Year 2013-14 Budget for Jobing.com Arena’s lease management agreement. I suggested that saving that $17M would be prudent by placing it in the city’s Unappropriated Contingency Fund. It should not be spent at this time. Then should there be a lease management agreement the first year’s funding would be available or if not used in that manner, it would fatten the city’s bottom line, an attractive strategy for lowering interest rates on the city’s bond indebtedness.

Well, apparently everyone – from city staff to the council – is already placing dibs on that money as evidenced by the March 19, 2013 City Council workshop.  Ms. Sherrybargaining 3 Schurhammer, Executive Director of Finance, offered many ways to spend it. Some of the expenditures include:

  1. Paying for the special, outside audit mandated by the new council.
  2. Paying for the consultant (read Beacon Sports and its special ties to the Reinsdorfs) to write and manage the RFP for the arena.
  3. Miscellaneous city department overages or unexpected expenses.
  4. Repaying loans made from the water and sewer funds.
  5. Paying for fund transfers to and from the Risk Management Trust Fund and the Workers’ Compensation Trust Fund.

Add to that staff wish list Mayor Weiers’ recent comment about raising employees’ salaries. Also add Councilmember Chavira’s plaintive call for a Special Council Workshop to consider the issue of Public Safety employees’ compensation and Councilmember Alvarez’ desire to restore or increase funding for youth and the poor.

If everyone’s desires are fulfilled, you can say good-bye to that $17M at the end of budget workshop discussions. Then where will the funding come from if (are you listening, God?) there ever is a successful contract for the arena and its management.

tax increaseI also heard the first tentative feelers being thrown out there publicly about Glendale’s property tax rates and the fact that revenues from that source continue to drop. Don’t be surprised if there is discussion (and possibly) adoption of higher property tax rates in Glendale.

 

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Skeete

Interim City Manager
Horatio Skeete

Several sources have related that Interim City Manager Horatio Skeete is resigning. No news on who will take his place while City Council continues search for permanent City Manager.  House cleaning by a majority of this council continues.

With resignation of City Attorney Craig Tindall and now possibly Interim City Manager Horatio Skeete it appears Glendale will be adrift for awhile. This is occurring as the council prepares to take up budget discussions for Fiscal Year 2013-14. The two persons most knowledgeable about crafting a lease management agreement for Jobing.com Arena and keeping the Coyotes in Glendale are now or soon will be gone.

 

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Saving grace

Posted by Joyce Clark on March 18, 2013
Posted in BlogsCity of GlendaleGlendale finances  | Tagged With: , , | 1 Comment

budget 3In a few weeks the Glendale City Council will begin a series of workshops to craft the Fiscal Year 2013-2014 budget. The temptation will be the unexpended $17M allocated for the Coyotes lease management agreement in the FY 2012-2013 budget and what to do with it. The temptation will be spend it now. I believe that is the worst move that this council could make.

On the March 19, 2013 City Council workshop one agenda item is The Fiscal Year 2012-2013 Financial Report Update and Fiscal Year 2013-2014 Revenue Projection.  The good news is that the temporary sales tax increase generated approximately $22M for Fiscal Year 2012-13. An insightful comment from the staff report states, “An analysis of spending habits in the community for these four months (Sept. to Dec. 2012) shows that the increase in the sales tax rate had no obvious impact on the spending pattern in the community.” All of those doomsday proclamations of “no one will shop in Glendale anymore” were flat out wrong. Shoppers, it seems, didn’t want to spend the extra money for gas to go further away or they simply did not want to leave their usual venues and venture outside their comfort zones.

Forget the Coyotes for a moment. The reason for the sales tax increase, ratified by the voters, remains the fact that the city spends more than it takes in. The Fiscal Year 2012-13 General Fund Budget is $155.3 million. Of that amount approximately $22 million (15%) comes from the increase in the sales tax rate that occurs each year over the next four years. What happens when the extra $22 million annual revenue from increased sales tax  is gone as it sunsets in 2017? That is the question.

There is a solution that began implementation in FY 2012-13 and that is a $5 million reduction in expendituresbudget cuts 1 each year from FY 2013 to FY 2017. If that course of action continues when the extra $22 million is gone in FY 2017 the city will not have to make any more draconian cuts. It will have a balanced budget whose expenditures are covered by existing revenues without having to dip into its contingency fund. The Glendale staff reports also states, ” Since the news sales tax rates are set to sunset in 2017, a long-term look at the city’s operational expenses must occur in order to plan for the eventual reduction of sales tax collections. The current financial position necessitates that the plan incorporate a phased approach and the FY 2013-14 budget will be a critical component of this plan.” In other words, get the job done and cut the city’s spending.

For the past six years during the worst of the recession, Glendale’s expenditures rose as its employee base grew and operating and maintenance costs also grew. Simply put, its expenditures have not met revenues. In the last two years, the city publicly acknowledged the problem and began laying off employees because quite simply, personnel costs represent about 70% of the General Funds’ expenses. That is the major expense and will require major cuts.

A city primarily produces one thing and one thing only – service to its residents. Yes, it produces one commodity as well, water, but that cost is borne by the people that use and pay for it. Service costs are built on two items: 1. buildings and equipment with their operating expenses and maintenance; and 2. employee wages and benefits. In the past several years, the former council purposefully began reducing personnel (wages and benefits) and  non-personnel expenses (operating and maintenance). The city has reached the point where non-personnel costs have been decimated and the only way to continue to cut them further is to reduce service areas or levels meaning that further personnel reductions will be necessary.

san_wrkr[1]Whether it is libraries, public safety or trash collection, they are all services offered to residents. The cost to provide services continues to outstrip the revenue the city takes in. The city must rein in the cost of services to have any hope of creating a balanced budget in FY 2017 when it loses the extra $22 million in annual revenue. The 2012 city council committed to the plan of cutting $5 million from the budget every year until 2017. To date the new council has been reluctant to follow through.

In an effort to avoid the pain of making another $5 million in cuts this coming fiscal year and each year for the next few years, this new council may consider the $17 million in this year’s budget as “found” money and spend every dime of it. Not a good idea. If they choose that course they are not solving the underlying problem of not enough revenue to cover costs. They are merely delaying the problem and compounding it. Saving the city’s money is not a foolhardy strategy but rather it is a grace to be nurtured and preserved.

savingsThe most prudent course of action is to place that $17 million in the city’s “rainy day” (unappropriated contingency) fund and to make the necessary $5 million in cuts this year. Increasing the city’s contingency fund is a signal that the bond market considers favorably and offers the city the opportunity to decrease interest rates even further on its current debt service load of $86 million (FY 2012-13). The debt service load is the annual amount paid in principle and interest on the city’s total debt.

Another reason to place the $17 million in contingency is that there may be another deal to keep the Coyotes in Glendale. Any deal will require a certain unknown amount as the annual lease manager fee. Having that money in reserve resolves the issue of where the fee is to come from.

A simplistic analogy is that you have a $1000 monthly mortgage payment but your income is only $900 a month. What do you do? I guess you could run up more debt on a credit card but that only delays and compounds your problem.  The best way to face the problem is to cut your monthly expenses.

Will this council do what you would do? Will it responsibility continue to cut its expenses over the next four years or will it spend “found” money now to avoid pain of making further, necessary cuts and delay the problem only to face a bigger problem in FY 2017?

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A naked pond…now what?

Posted by Joyce Clark on March 16, 2013
Posted in BlogsKoi pond  | Tagged With: , , | No Comments yet, please leave one

Pond 2011

Pond 2011

Yippee! It’s March of 2011 and we have a pond in the ground. There are no fish and no plants. From all the research done, we knew that we needed to let the water sit or “balance” for a month before we put any fish in. So, I focused on plants in and around the pond. Unless you hire a landscape contractor, which we did not, you are not going to have instant landscaping. It’s been two years and we’re still working on it.

Everything that I read said for a good fish environment, there should be about 50% of the water surface covered in plant material, read, water lilies. The vegetation provides shade on scorching Arizona summer days, keeps the water temperature a little lower and also help to oxygenate the water. It also provides hiding places for the fish. Why would they need hiding places? More on that… later.

Taro

Taro

Lilly bloom

First Lilly, Attraction

 

Yerba Mansa newly planted

Yerba Mansa newly planted

Yerba Mansa 2

Yerba Mansa now

Pickerel Wart 3

Pickerel Wart

 

 

 

 

 

Mosaic plant

Mosaic plant

In the pond, I used Lilies, Yerba Mansa, Pickerel Wart, and Taro. I tried a wonderful water plant called “Mosaic” but it is very delicate does not seem to survive our few Arizona frost nights.

In 2012 I put some grass in the pond because I wanted to create some visual height. Big mistake. I would never put grass in the pond again. It proliferates just like weeds. Soon, it was everywhere! I spent part of this past winter season removing it. Some shoots may still come up but I will pull them as soon as they do.

If you know of anyone with a pond you can always try asking if they have extra plant material to share. I do have such a friend who supplied me with Lilies, Yerba Mansa and Taro. She (is a Master Gardener…good friend to have!) also advised me on the kinds of plants that would require low maintenance and would grow and live for years. My plant palette around the pond includes: Gazania, Rosemary, Stasis, Verbena, Ruellia, Lantana, Daisies, Dwarf Palms and various Aloe and lately some grasses. All of the plants were in one gallon containers or smaller. The only large plant I splurged on was the Aloe we put in the island between the stream and the pond. I even put three cacti in the pond island. Who could kill a cactus? I did. We’re now down to two of them.

Rosemary  newly planted

Rosemary newly planted

Rosemary and Ice Plant

Rosemary and Ice Plant now

 

Ruella 2

Ruellia after frost

Stasis

Stasis

Verbena

Verbena

 

 

 

 

 

In the past two years I have had some land plants thrive and others like the daisies…well, they are in plant heaven.  Ground plants that have done well for me have been the Rosemary, Verbena, Ruellia, Stasis and Lantana. The Ruellia and Lantana seem to suffer damage from frost, even when covered but they regrow with gusto. The Stasis has reseeded itself and seems to like nooks and crannies. The Rosemary just grows and grows. The Verbena makes an excellent ground cover and also is taking off. The Gazania has suffered from frost as well but is making a comeback. Where it frosted it died.

Island Aloe newly planted

Island Aloe newly planted

Giant aloe

Aloe now in island   and Gazania

Lantana after frost

Lantana after frost

First plants in the ground

First plants in the ground

Aloe in bloom

Another Aloe in bloom now

 

 

 

 

 

Pond July 2011

Overhead shot of pond July 2011

 

All of the pond plants have done well. The Pickerel Wart and Taro, even in the pond can suffer frost damage but they will come back. The Yerba Mansa is very hardy, suffers little frost damage and does very well.

Next time, I’ll share my fish experiences…

 

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And the clock continues to tick

Posted by Joyce Clark on March 13, 2013
Posted in Blogs  | Tagged With: , , | 12 Comments

Sherwood

Councilmember Gary Sherwood

Coyotes logoToday is March 12, 2013, and the Coyotes ownership situation is silent…deathly so. What we know or think we know is that Mayor Weiers announced over a month ago that he had received calls expressing “interest” from mystery buyers. If there really were mystery buyers we have to assume that he passed those contacts on to the appropriate person, in this case, the Interim City Manager. We know from the public statements of Councilmember Gary Sherwood that Greg Jamison is making another run for ownership. We also know from media reports that Grant Woods is likely assisting Ice Edge in a possible bid and that Anthony LeBlanc, reputed to have broken away from the original Jamison investment group, said any new ownership deal has got to look very similar to the deal Greg Jamison was working previously. Councilmember Sherwood publicly stated that Glendale was hiring Beacon Sports Capital to negotiate for the city. Since then we have heard that Beacon is writing the RFP for the deal and that it is not expected to be completed until the end of March. It will have to go to council in executive session for approval and then will be released. That means a public RFP won’t hit the streets until April…and the clock continues to tick.

We know that Beacon Sports has a close relationship to Michael Reinsdorf and that relationship may offer insider access to the RFP for a possible Reinsdorf/Kaites bid.

We know that Bill Daley of the National Hockey League has said that if the deal cannot be completed in this round, I presume by the end of the season, the NHL will consider relocation of the team…and the clock continues to tick.

TimeWhat is worrisome is the seeming lack of any sense of urgency by the seven councilmembers or upper management of the city to complete a deal before the NHL pulls the plug. The end of the season for the Coyotes, if they do not have any play-off games, is the end of April. After the RFP is issued in April it will likely stay open for 45 days. Then the council needs to bless a possible owner, the NHL has to approve the possible owner and then, only then, is the final deal crafted. The attorneys bless their hearts; will take quite some time and many billable hours to finalize this new deal. Bear in mind the city will not have the services of former City Attorney Craig Tindall. In past years he had negotiated (some say obstructed) several possible deals for the city. Without his expertise, it could take considerably longer…and the clock continues to tick.

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Councilmember Sam Chavira

Something which may or may not relate to the Coyotes deal is the attendance of Senator John McCain and Grant Woods at the Saturday hockey game where they were seen chatting with Mayor Weiers. Could one of the topics of conversation have been the Coyotes deal? Following that game Mayor Weiers, accompanied by Councilmembers Sherwood and Chavira, flew to Washington, D.C. The trip appeared to have as its goal Luke Air Force Base and an effort to lobby for the F-35. However, a March 12th Phoenix Business Journal article reports that the F-35 has never been considered for a possible sequestration cut. Now, if they were there to lobby for keeping the Glendale Airport’s tower open that would make far more sense as it is on the chopping block. But this was not declared to be part of their lobbying agenda. If nothing else it sure makes for a great photo op for newly elected officials. There are so many questions floating about. I’ll leave it to you to decide if this was the kind of politics where one hand washes the other. You must decide for yourself. Was this trip with  access to the Department of Defense a means of acknowledging access to Beacon and the RFP before issuance or just an opportunity for a local mayor to have a photo op? I don’t know. This is all pure speculation of course but it’s interesting to try to figure out if and how the dots may connect.

I guess we have to assume that there is much scurrying behind the scenes and we may see that a Kaites/Reinsdorf group or a Jamison Group emerges as the front runners  However, if a deal similar to the previous Jamison deal, requiring a $13M or $14M annual management fee, is offered to the city, as Anthony LeBlanc stated is needed, will this current council accept it? Will we see an offer coming forward at the moment the RFP hits the streets? And the clock continues to tick.

Weiers

Mayor Weiers

We know Councilmember Alvarez has publicly stated that NO deal is a good deal. Will she reconsider a five year deal? Or does she have the clout to bring Councilmembers Ian Hugh and Sam Chavira with her and find just one more vote in rejection of any deal? If so, could it be the Mayor? We saw those same four join forces to oust the City Attorney Craig Tindall…and the clock continues to tick.

Weiers ran for election saying that any Coyotes deal must not be done on the backs of Glendale taxpayers. Is the real plan to let the time run out on putting any deal together? Only time will tell.

 

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The City of Glendale owns 2 adjoining suites at Jobing.com arena and a suite at Camelback Ranch. The City Manager’s Office developed the original policy for their use in 2005 with a policy revision in 2010.

The criteria for their use, in order of importance, are listed below:

suite 31.   Conducting city business

2.   Conducting City Council city business

3.   Activities for youth and recognized, non-profit organizations

 

 

 

The City’s Marketing Department keeps records of suite use. In 2012, various city departments requested use of the Jobing.com suites 5 times during the course of that year. For the Coyotes 9 playoff games spanning April 12 – May 22, 2012, the Mayor and all City Councilmembers were invited. Only 4 councilmembers accepted. They were myself, former Vice Mayor Frate, Councilmember Martinez and Councilmember Knaack.  Former Mayor Scruggs and Councilmember Alvarez did not participate. Former Councilmember Lieberman did attend playoff games on several occasions. From attendance records it was pretty obvious that a line in the sand had already been drawn among Council regarding what would become the Jamison deal to buy the team.

Many corporate interests were also invited to the playoff games and it was understood that the councilmembers would meet and greet these corporate and media representatives. Councilmembers would use this opportunity to reinforce Glendale as a great community in which to locate or relocate. All councilmembers in attendance did exactly that, although some were better at it than others.

For the majority of dates in 2012 the suites at Jobing.com were awarded to non-profit groups. It included many non-profits with a presence in and servicesuite 2 to Glendale residents such as Big Brothers, Big Sisters, Heart for the City, Special Olympics and Crosspoint Christian Church. It is a small but significant way of recognizing their service to our community.

The Mayor and Councilmembers were not usually notified of  non-profits’ use of city suites on the 26 occasions it occured in 2012 and consequently did not attend. There may have been a rare time when a councilmember may have sponsored a particular non-profit’s use of the suite and may have attended. I, personally, am not aware of any such occurrence but it could have happened.

Since January 15, 2013, a new pattern has emerged. every non-profit awarded use of the city suite/s has been joined by Mayor Weiers and a guest (usually his spouse). The suite/s have been used 12 times from Jan. 15 to Jan 28, 2013, and 10 of those uses were for Coyotes games with Mayor Weiers in attendance and used by non-profits such as the Salvation Army, St. Mary’s Food Bank, Central Christian Church and the First Southern Baptist Church. On two occasions of Mayor Weiers’ attendance, the suite/s use was requested by the city’s Economic Development Department – The Feb. 6, 2013 WHO concert and the Feb. 18, 2013 Coyotes game.

Weiers

Mayor Weiers

Do his actions signal that he is committed to keeping the team in Glendale? After all, he’s attended the team’s home games – therefore, he MUST be a hockey fan. He’s said publicly that he wants to keep the team but with the caveat that it must not be on the backs of Glendale’s taxpayers. Sounds good, doesn’t it? Then why does he continue to advocate for 4 separate contracts for the arena? Surely he’s aware that there isn’t a potential buyer out there that would participate in such a scheme? In fact, Anthony LeBlanc, assumed to be in the running to buy the team, has been quoted in the media as saying that any future deal to purchase the team would have to look very similar to the deal that was on the table for Jamison.

Mayor Weiers appears to be a very committed and an eager elected official enjoying his new role. That’s extremely commendable and should be applauded. His style appears to be attendance at every Jobing.com event including Coyotes games (often seen wearing his #1 Mayor jersey) and concerts. There have been at least 12 events through the end of January, 2013. The assumption is that he takes those opportunities to thank the non-profits for their service and to pitch Glendale to future business and corporate locates.

ticket 1Who is paying for his and his guest’s attendance in the City suite/s? I assume it’s the City. Several sources have said that Mayor Weiers has standing tickets to every event in Jobing.com Arena. I don’t have any information related to the Mayor’s use of the city suite at the city’s baseball venue, Camelback Ranch. I find his prolifigate use of the suite/s  to be  troubling. In all my years of service on City Council I know of no such standing tickets being offered or accepted by any of the Mayors or Councilmembers with whom I have served. There is certainly nothing illegal about the Mayor’s acceptance of tickets to use the city suite/s. Glendale elected officials’ gift policy mirrors that of the State’s gift clause policy.

The Mayor’s actions may be entirely altruistic and worthy of praise or he may be joining non-profits in the city suite/s for his own gain. It’s a matter of judgment and perception… yours.

PS . Have you ever heard of a “cop card?”  If anyone out there knows what this refers to, please share with me.

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Pond construction begins

Posted by Joyce Clark on March 10, 2013
Posted in fish pondKoi pond  | Tagged With: , , | No Comments yet, please leave one

After we had massaged our plan for the pond and incorporated all of our ideas, it was time to solicit bids and to meet contractors. We decided that we wanted a large pond to be the focal point of our backyard. Our initial dimensions were to be 10’ by 20’ and an average depth of 3’. It would be the size of a small swimming pool but obviously not as deep. We also knew that we wanted a stream and 2 waterfalls.

We researched online to see what it would cost to build ourselves. We quickly ruled that out as the cost of supplies alone would run more than $10,000. Add to that labor costs and the cost of equipment to excavate and it became apparent to us, as retired folks, that it was more than we could handle.

I let my “fingers to the walking” via Google to find contractors in the Phoenix Metro area. I solicited a recommendation from a friend who also had a koi pond. I found that some contractors who advertised were no longer in business. There are not many contractors who do this kind of work in our area. Eventually, we met with four contractors and received bids ranging from $9,500 to $20,500. The discrepancy in the bid price was because of the materials they planned to use – everything from concrete to lined pond—as well as the “extras” they felt we should have.

We finally settled on a contractor in the mid-range and who fit our budget of $15,000 as a maximum price. The bid price accepted was $14,600. It included the following items (some of which we specified): pond with outside dimensions of 23’ by 15’(or about 7,000 gallons); pond depth to vary between 4’ and 2’ with an average depth of 3’; 8 large decorative rocks (boulders); automatic water leveler; fish cave; 33’ long stream; main waterfall approx. 4’ high and stream waterfall approx. 1’ high; 20 tons of dirt (most of which came from the excavation; balance was supplied by the contractor; relocation and replanting of some displaced rose bushes; 4 underwater pond lights with wire and transformer; 2 above ground spot lights with electrical and material; 7,000 gallons per hour pump (ended up with 2 at no extra charge – one for waterfall and one for stream) with all warranties on mechanical equipment, liner and lights; contractor had to leave one irrigation line intact or relocate; 6 koi fish and 6 water plants.

Excavation begins on the first day. Dirt from the hole is placed behind pond shape to create elevation for the waterfall and stream.

Pond Construction first day 1

First Day

Pond construction first day 2

First Day

Pond Construction first day 3

First Day

 

 

 

 

 

On the second day pond bottom is made smooth and level, plant shelf around pond perimeter created. Liner is placed, gravel placed in bottom and on plant shelf and first rocks are placed inside the pond. Once main pond elements are in place, water added to look for leaks or major flaws.

Pond Construction second day 1

Second Day

Pond Construction second day 2

Second Day

Pond Construction second day 3

Second Day

Pond Construction second day 4

Second Day

Pond Construction second day 5

Second Day

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

On the third day, stream shape is refined and completed. Liner,  rocks and gravel  placed in stream bed. Filter box for waterfall and stream placed. Electrical for lights and pool motors – 2 – one for waterfall and one for stream are constructed. Lines buried, connections made. Waterfall and stream output tested.

Pond Construction third day 1

Third Day

Pond Construction third day 2

Third Day

Pond Construction third day 3

Third Day

Pond construction third day 4

Third Day

 

 

 

 

 

The fourth and final day included relocating and replanting several rose bushes. Since the lights were on a timer set to come on in the evening they were checked the previous evening and worked well. Both motors had been running for 24 hours and there were no problems.  Site clean up was performed.

Pond Construction fourth day 4

Fourth and final day

Pond construction fourth day 3

Fourth Day

 

 

 

 

 

 

Time needed for construction was one week with payment made in three installments: one upon start of construction; one at midweek and one at the end of construction. We settled on the first week of March, 2011 as the confirmed date of construction. We were excited after all of our preparation to see our new pond become reality.

Our pond was up and running but very naked. Next up…plants and fish…

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