OFF the BEAT
ROBERT L. SPINKS, MA, MS
COMMENTATOR
THE NEXT LEVEL OF PROFESSIONALISM? Published on Wed, March 16, 2011 by Robert Spinks, MA, MS http://www.sequimgazette.com/spinks
Interim City Planning Director resigns; $30,000 to survey 1,200 Sequim city and area residents. Those were headlines that nearly had me drop my cup of morning coffee. With last week‟s announcement that Interim Sequim Planning Director Joe Irvin has resigned effective April 15th, a Baker‟s Dozen of staff have left the City since May 2008. The question on the minds of many is who‟s next to leave City government? The phrase uttered by Sequim City Manager Steve Burkett as people have left the employ of the City has been that he is taking the City to the “next level of professionalism.” Sequim had been on the road to incremental change well before Burkett arrived in October of 2008. That evolution was less reliant on wholesale change; paying out-of-state consultant‟s, raising the pay of management, and failing to invest in staff. Severance payments, unemployment costs, incentive pay for interim assignments, payments to Page 1 of 2
recruiters and lost productivity have by some accounts exceeded $800,000. You can hide some costs and ignore „soft‟ expenses. But, anyone in business or government knows that high staff turnover and then recruiting new employees is not cheap, efficient nor cost-effective. A Survey is in the City Budget. In these lean times with high unemployment and a shaky economy, wouldn‟t some lower cost alternatives make sense instead of a $30,000 survey? The International City/County Management Association (ICMA) has a survey service. The National Citizen Survey is available to City‟s at $9,900 and allows you to compare your results with similar sized communities. Peninsula College is just a few miles down the road. I‟d guess between the professors and students that even for $5,000 a pretty comprehensive survey could be developed. ICMA will sell you a book $58 and you can learn all about citizen surveys. Maybe even create your
own and distribute it as Port Angeles did, as an insert in everyone‟s utility bill.
payments, increases his car allowance and grants additional vacation time.
On the other hand, the $30,000 survey that the ETC Institute in Kansas will develop for the City is actually two surveys. One is a parks and recreation survey. A natural partner might have been Clallam County Park and Recreation District #1. Most folks know that District as the Sequim Aquatic Recreation Center (SARC). According to SARC representatives, they‟ve not been contacted or consulted in any way about a survey that will be sent out to residents that comprise their District, which is far outside the borders of Sequim.
Burkett‟s base pay is $120,000 a year, if you look at total compensation which includes medical/dental/vision coverage, vehicle costs and the new deferred compensation; you‟re really looking at a cost nearing $160,000 or more.
The second survey covers city operations and questions that ETC will develop with the City. Other clients that use ETC include Washington, D.C., Atlanta, Oakland, Las Vegas and San Diego just to name a few. It‟s nice to know that Sequim is in the company of such large metropolitan cities that would require the services ETC. So what else have we recently received from City Hall? Remember that the change of City Councils in 2008 came on a platform of „smart growth,‟ many have since argued that really meant „no growth.‟ Today building a new home in Sequim can include $20,000 to $25,000 in city permit fees. Those candidates then voiced concerns that city departments had grown to be too large, and that change was needed. Other than turning over staff and hiring new staff, the city budget has grown. What has changed is that a new $60,000 a year PR manager is on the payroll, the consulting firm of CFM in Oregon received a $40,000 a year contract for lobbying, and consultants all the way from Cincinnati have flown out to conduct retreats and training.
What is missing from this growing list of expenses are the folks who actually conduct the back breaking work of our city. The public works staff, the street department, the waste water reclamation operators, and dare I say the police officers. They didn‟t see increases in their compensation like Burkett did. Think about who really is working long and hard out there in the rain, in the snow and in the middle of the night? At the same time the Boys and Girls Club Teen Center Program was radically slashed, support for economic development was cut by over 70% last year and was continued in 2011. Out of state consultants are being paid for retreats, for lobbying efforts, and the contingency fund at City Hall continues to bleed. Sequim has benefited from sales tax revenues. Thank goodness that the walls for the new Ross Dress for Less and a new warehouse grocer are going up. Of course the expansion of Wal-Mart into a Super Wal-Mart is also needed if the City continues to fund pet projects, rising management costs, and more consultants. It was refreshing to see that Sequim Mayor Ken Hays declared in the media that he would take responsibility for how the City is spending its money. He may get the chance to do just that. Mayor Pro-tem Laura Dubois stated that she‟d probably consider doing a second survey. At $30,000 a pop, maybe she can lead the effort to raise funds outside of the city budget.
City Government Costs Continue to Grow. This month, Burkett received a compensation increase, which according to the City totals $8,807 annually. This includes deferred compensation
Robert Spinks is former Sequim chief of police and Interim City Manager. Reach him at robertbythebay@aol.com .
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