Copyright 2008. All rights reserved.
Contact Steve Collins at scollins@bristolpress.com
In the wake of the public's refusal to create a chief operating officer for City Hall, Mayor Art Ward said Wednesday he’s not sure whether he will ask the City Council to allow him to hire an assistant.
“That’s something I’m going to be evaluating in the next several months,” Ward said.
He said he has meetings scheduled soon with state development officials about the mall property and a few other issues. The result of those talks may determine which direction the mayor will go, he said.
Ward said he may decide soon, but he won’t be asking the council for the position at next week’s meeting.
Insiders said he’s considering hiring former city attorney Ed Krawiecki, Jr, who has experience dealing with the state Department of Economic and Community Development. But Ward said he hasn’t even decided if he wants to have the position.
There’s a chance, too, that the council may create an assistant for itself.
The president of the Greater Bristol Labor Council said he “quite ticked off” at the signs erected by supporters of the chief operating officer proposal that portray the referendum as a showdown between unions and taxpayers.
Mike Petosa said that the signs “really show the ignorance” of the charter change backers “about what we are and who we are. We are taxpayers also.”
Petosa said the proposal to create an administrative chief at City Hall is “so full of holes that it’s not funny,” including any provision for paying the expected $250,000 tab to hire an experienced professional to do the job.
“If they think they’re helping the city, they’re not,” Petosa said.
He said that Bristol “is in a lot better shape than a lot of other cities” because its leadership has done a good job over the years of protecting its financial standing and balancing the service needs of residents with their ability to pay.
Petosa said there is “a core group” pushing the chief operating officer that includes businessman Craig Yarde, former Republican mayoral contender Ken Johnson and city Councilors Craig Minor and Ken Cockayne.
“These people have their own agenda,” Petosa said.
There’s something they wanted that they couldn’t have” so they claim there’s no accountability at City Hall, he said.
Petosa said he’s upset they decided to make an issue out of the unions, which have traditionally had good relations with mayors and city councilors in Bristol.
“It shows their lack of professionalism,” Petosa said.
He said that Cockayne in particular has been going after municipal unions since day one.
“If he wants to cause labor unrest in Bristol, he may just get it,” Petosa said.
He said that Yarde may be a good businessman, but he doesn’t know anything about how city government operates.
Besides, Petosa said, Yarde demonstrated his commitment to Bristol a decade ago when “he moved his company and 400 jobs out of town” to Southington.
Petosa said he trusts that voters will see through the weak arguments raised by COO supporters and will opt to keep the existing governmental structure in place.
Whether the city needs a chief operating officer or not comes down, in the end, to something akin to faith.
Those who support the measure on Tuesday’s ballot say that putting an experienced professional in charge of city administration will lead to savings that far exceed the position’s likely cost.
Those who opposed the charter change say that adding a post that’s likely to cost taxpayers about $250,000 a year – for salary, benefits and sundry – doesn’t make sense in the middle of a recession unless there is hard proof that it will produce savings.
Since only time can answer the doubts with proof that one side or the other is correct, it is virtually impossible to prove that adding a kind of city manager-lite to the structure of city government would have much impact. But voters still have to make a choice on the controversial plan Tuesday.
The Choose COO organization pushing the idea – headed by businessman Craig Yarde and former Republican mayoral contender Ken Johnson – said Friday that Bristol’s “present system is laden with cronyism and lacking accountability” and called on taxpayers to “get the professional leadership we need” by voting in favor of the proposal.
But Mayor Art Ward, a critic, called the move a “last minute push by a small group of political proponents who want you to believe that all of the ills of our community will be resolved by the presence of yet another level of government, a COO.”
Though the plan got the unanimous backing of the bipartisan Charter Revision Commission, the Republican Town Committee and the Greater Bristol Chamber of Commerce, city councilors gunned down the proposal in June on a 5-2 vote.
The losing side opted to fight on, gathering more than 3,600 signatures from registered voters in order to give the public the last word on whether to make the change or not. That’s why it is on the ballot Tuesday as Question #5.
“It looks like a classic fight,” Yarde said. “The taxpayers who are looking for more efficiency and cost containment in our city government and the union looking not to change the status quo.”
The Choose COO group has put up large signs in town describing the vote as one between taxpayers and unions, which critics say is unfair given that most city workers live in town and are both union members and taxpayers.
Still, a letter sent out to members by Local 2267 of the American Federation of State, County and Municipal Employees warned them that a chief operating officer “will not prove to be a friend of the unions.”
Officials who oppose the charter change say that the city runs pretty well now and there’s no need to add a vague new position that might muck things up.
City Councilor Mike Rimcoski, a Republican, called the proposed chief operating officer “another layer of bureaucracy” that would cost taxpayers too much.
City Councilor Frank Nicastro, a former Democratic mayor, said that the strong mayor form of government in Bristol has served the city well for nearly a century and there’s no reason to revise it. He said that arguments that department heads are out of controland need supervision is “garbage.”
Critics argue that Bristol has managed to create a healthy rainy day fund, fully fund its pension trusts and provide a solid school system without socking taxpayers over the years. They say there’s nothing a COO add.
But city Councilor Ken Cockayne, a freshman Republican who favors the change, said, “People seem to be living in the past. We have to be looking to the future.”
Democratic city Councilor Craig Minor, who favors the position, said that asking how much the new slot will cost is fair.
“I personally think that in the long run the COO will save us a lot more than he costs, but a better way to look at it is to think back to when desktop computers were just starting to become common in the workplace. Everyone wanted to know how much money would they save,” he said. “Well, as it turned out, they probably didn’t save a penny.”
“But they made it possible for us to provide much better service to our customers, and to do many things we never thought possible. They make us more productive. That’s what the COO provides,” Minor said.
Yarde said a COO “will help in the continuity needed to maintain a long term vision for this community,” which he said is needed because mayor and councilors can change every two years.
Yarde said that he’s also convinced the position will bring savings for taxpayers.
“Believe me, there are millions of dollars of low hanging fruit that a COO can pick without sacrificing service or jobs,” Yarde said.
“We’re not the little town of Bristol anymore. It’s time for professional oversight,” Johnson said.
There are other questions on the ballot as well, including a controversial state referendum about whether to hold a constitutional convention to consider rewriting Connecticut government’s blueprint.
There are also four non-controversial charter issues in Bristol that haven’t received any opposition, including a move to extend the registrars’ terms to four years.
The polls are open from 6 a.m. to 8 p.m.
What would a COO do?
The COO would supervise and evaluate the city’s 21 department heads, make recommendations to the mayor and the City Council, and ‘provide leadership and direction’ to city government on a range of issues, including the budget, technology initiatives and customer service.
Who hires the COO?
A hiring committee consisting of the mayor, one city councilor, the Board of Finance chairman and two citizens, one from each party, would pick the COO.
What qualifications would a COO have?
To apply, a COO prospect would need at least a bachelor’s degree in public administration or a related field and have at least four years of experience as a city manager or its equivalent.
At least four city councilors said the standards ought to be higher.
How would a COO lose his job?
At any time, a vote by two-thirds of the City Council would end a COO’s term, which means that five of the seven council votes would be needed to fire someone in the job.
Press release from the ChooseCOO group:
UNIONS AND MAYOR MAKE CONVINCING CASE FOR COO
If ever there was a time for a COO, this is it. Local union leaders, by their actions, have made a convincing case for the COO (aka ‘Chief Operating Officer’ or ‘City Manager’).
The Mayor needs help. This is a given. Our present Mayor and past mayors have acknowledged this fact. However, while the unions and their Mayor are saying in words that they are all about the taxpayer, their recent actions paint a different picture.
Local union leadership is against the COO, but all they want to talk about is the cost, not the benefits. In fact they are running the anti-COO campaign. Of course they’re against the COO – do you really think they want someone hired to focus on the efficient delivery of City services? Do you really think they are going to put the best interest of the taxpayers ahead of their own self-interest? Let us give you an example: A new city committee is looking into the possibility of using money from overfunded pension accounts to pay for retiree health benefits instead of asking taxpayers to pay the tab – a move that would lower property taxes by nearly half a mill. Nine of the 19 members of this new ‘GASB 45 Committee’ are union representatives and some others are friendly to the unions. Do you think union leaders are ready to throw their support behind a decision that will save taxpayers $1.8 million now and much more in the future? Wouldn’t that alone more than pay for the COO position?
Further, union leaders have the Mayor in their hip pocket. How do we know? Well, first the Mayor loaded this GASB 45 Committee with union members. Then, the Mayor issued a press release parroting the unions’ argument against the COO. Do you believe that his actions are not politically motivated? Whose turf is he protecting? Do you think there is any conflict of interest here? After all, when the COO position is introduced, doesn’t that lessen his job duties and, perhaps, his pay?
This community may be facing the greatest economic challenges in our history in the coming years. Our present system is laden with cronyism and lacking accountability. Taxpayers, this is your chance to say, “Enough politics!” and get the professional leadership we need -- someone with the expertise of a Chief Operating Officer – by voting ‘Yes’ to Question #5 on Election Day.
A public employees union that represents cafeteria workers and others is leading the fight to block a controversial plan to create a chief operating officer to oversee City Hall.
Though “there’s always a threat there could be a loss of union jobs” if the new administrative post is created, “this is a taxpayer issue” first and foremost, said Chad Lockhart, president of Local 2267 of the American Federation of State, County and Municipal Employees.
A letter sent out by the union to “union brothers and sisters” in Bristol says it is “putting together a committee to fight against” the Nov. 4 charter change referendum that would add the chief operating officer to the city government’s structure.
“A chief operating officer,” the letter explains, “will not prove to be a friend to unions.”
“What is that implying?” asked Republican city Councilor Ken Cockayne. “That implies that the labor leadership has their hands in City Hall.”
Cockayne, who supports the referendum, said the letter shows the public “who’s behind the vote no organization” that has started putting up lawn signs against the proposal.
In the letter, the union says it is placing signs to express opposition to the idea on members’ lawns around town.
“We really need to show strong opposition for what would surely prove to be a costly mistake for the city of Bristol and also for our AFSCME members,” the letter said, adding that anyone who didn’t want a sign should call the union to let it know.
Lockhart said that as a small business owner in town and a night supervisor for a high school, he “can see this whole thing from different angles” and understands why some people might like a chief operating officer.
However, he said, even those who see a need for a type of city manager should recognize that the proposal on the ballot next month is seriously flawed.
Because the city would retain its full-time mayor, it would wind up with “two people to do the same job” at greater cost if the charter revision is approved, Lockhart said.
Since the city already has someone at its helm “who, in my opinion, is doing a great job” as mayor, there’s no need to add another position at even higher pay to duplicate what’s already in place, Lockhart said.
He said that one reason to prefer a mayor to a chief operating officer is that voters can throw out a mayor they don’t like every two years.
To get rid of a chief operating officer, Lockhart said, takes a two-thirds of the City Council” and leaves the public with no role.
“I like the people to have the vote,” he said.
Installing a chief operating officer to oversee the city’s departments, Lockhart said, would “take the power away from the people and give it to the government.”
Former Republican mayoral candidate Ken Johnson, who helped organize the Choose COO group pushing for passage of the plan, said the proposal “isn’t anti-union. It is pro-taxpayer.”
Johnson said that if the public supports the charter change, people “can be assured that they will have a professional in City Hall who will put the taxpayers first and not be beholden to special interests or political whim.”
Lockhart said the plan offered to the public isn’t going to protect taxpayers.
He said that it doesn’t make any sense to add a powerful new administrative position that Mayor Art Ward and the council oppose that would leave a full-time mayor in place “to be a baby kisser and a handshaker.”
But Cockayne said the opposition is motivated by self-interest alone.
The union leadership, he said, “is afraid of accountability at City Hall.”
Instead of opting for a new chief operating officer for City Hall whose pay, duties and ability to get things done remain murky, Mayor Art Ward said he’d rather see a couple of mayoral assistants added to the staff to help cope with the workload.
Ward said he’d consider backing a plan that would let the mayor hire an assistant and to have the City Council hire another assistant to work in the mayor’s office.
With more help, he said, Bristol’s top leader would have a greater ability to attend hearings in Hartford, send representatives to community meetings and more.
The possibility of adding assistants stands in sharp contrast to the controversial proposal offered in a Nov. 4 charter referendum that calls for creating a chief operating officer to oversee city department heads.
Supporters say that a professionally trained chief operating officer will bring more efficiency to City Hall, along greater continuity. They say they have no doubt the creating the post will save money for taxpayers.
Ward said that those pushing for the new post need to “tell the people exactly what is wrong with our present position” at City Hall.
He said that Bristol has a fully funded pension plan, a solid bond rating, a Board of Finance that has kept spending under control for decades and an educational system that is admired across the state for delivering high test scores despite “relatively low spending” on the schools.
“Nobody has demonstrated to me the dire need for reform,” Ward said.
Ward said that if the mayor’s job is so burdensome that it needs the relief offered by a chief operating officer’s help, then hiring a couple of assistants would accomplish the same result for less money.
New Britain, he said, has five assistants for its mayor and other cities the size of Bristol have much larger staffs for the mayor than Bristol, which offers him only an administrative assistant.
Under former Mayor Gerard Couture, who served from 2003 to 2005, the city had a part-time aide for the mayor as well, who earned $25,000 annually.
But Couture’s successor, William Stortz, opted not to fill the post.
City Comptroller Glenn Klocko said the mayoral assistant’s position is no longer in the municipal budget.
Ward said that letting the mayor pick an assistant and having the council pick a second assistant would ensure that the choices “were not just dictatorial.”
He said that having assistants who could pick up some of the slack would allow a mayor to spend more time in Hartford attending key hearings and talking to the state officials who decide how much aid comes to Bristol and its projects.
Ward said there’s no doubt that it’s necessary “to tweak” city government regularly, to keep it functioning as well as possible.
But, he said, adding a chief operating officer whose focus would be solely internal wouldn’t be much help.
Ward said he sees merit in the argument that city needs greater continuity in its leadership, one of the reasons touted for a chief operating officer.
He said he would like to see mayors have four-year terms instead of facing reelection after just two years.
That would allow a mayor time “to accomplish a set agenda” before his term ends.
Ward said that city councilors should have three-year terms, with their terms staggered so that all of them would not be up for reelection in the same year.
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