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Wanted: City Manager

June 6th, 2009

While I am in the unique position of being a city employee, I have tried to write this post  from a citizen’s standpoint in the hopes it will create some useful and positive discussion.

I’ve watched two mayors come and go (yes, Taylor is goingor not) the last 8 years.  When LaFortune took office he brought with him his own agenda, applied said agenda, wrecked some long-standing processes, and then he was gone.  In come Taylor who brings her own agenda, applies said agenda, and now she will soon be gone.  Guess who is left behind to clean up the mess?  We citeewurkors who have committed ourselves to the citizens of Tulsa as a long-standing career.

For some reason, this reminds me of a science fiction book by Larry Niven.  He wrote a book called the Mote in God’s Eye.  In this book Niven describes an isolated civilization called the Moties.  The Moties have this serious problem where they will die an agonizing death if they do not give birth to offspring.  Not wishing to have an agonizing death, this results in cyclic population explosions for the Moties that always result in wars and essentially near-extermination back to their stone age days.  Then they begin again.  The Moties have tried and tried to stop these cycles of the rise and fall of their civilization.  They always try to figure out solutions toward the end of a cycle but always fail.

The city of Tulsa is like this in some ways.  We have cycles that repeat generally every four years.  For the most part, department managers are able to keep a good semblance of normalcy and can protect established civil services from meddling by the ever-changing administration in the form of the Mayor.  But sometimes the head honcho inflicts damage that is difficult to recover from.

Take for example Taylor’s policy of furloughing city employees.  While I wish these were not necessary, I understand that they are and will adjust my budget accordingly.  However, the last time this happened under LaFortune the city incurred massive expenses in the form of a lawsuit from certain citeewurkors just because of the way the furloughs were implemented.  One astute worker pointed out to the mayor when she gathered us all together with a question:  “Why are we going down this road again?”  One astute city attorney responds by saying a certain judge overturned a certain judgment.

Why risk it, Mayor?  While I hate to even say this, the solution provided for in the Charter appears to be layoffs in the affected fund area.  I’m not sure why this is so hard to understand.  Perhaps I do not fully comprehend the black and white rules that we all live by, but I’d say I’m pretty sure of what I read.  Somebody please enlighten me if I’m wrong.

Surely with all the brains we have working for the city, there is a way to come up with a solution that will not appear to violate anything.

All that said, I will have to concede one point the Mayor made.  Funding city government via sales tax has the disadvantage of being subject to a poor-performing economy.  I have no illusions of proposing solutions to this except maybe to figure out a better way to fund those areas of city government that rely upon sales tax revenue.  How that could come about is for those with bigger brains to discuss.

In any case, this brings me to the title of this post.  I submit to you that Tulsa would benefit from hiring a city manager.  This city manager would not be subjected to political whims every four years or influenced by lobbying interest groups and yes…  unions.  He or she would be concerned with one thing:  operating the various city departments in the most effective and efficient manner.  As a hired hand, it wouldn’t matter if he or she were a Donkey or an Elephant.  He or she would also have no need to hire a “cabinet” or create positions of vague description with high salaries.

Then we could just kick the mayor into a figurehead status instead of a jumping ramp to another political office.

meeciteewurkor Tulsa, politics , , , ,

  1. Earl
    June 18th, 2009 at 19:42 | #1

    Old Earl here couldn’t agree with you more. This mayor has allowed her at-will staff to hire some of the dumbest people.

    This group of so-called professionals come from failed companies and think they are doing us a favor with their technical savvy and business vision. The reality is that this mayor doesn’t respect department lines and believes she is taking a business approach by carving up the companies (departments) by re-organizing and consolidating.
    Her efforts of consolidation may or may not be in the best interest of the customer, the citizen.

    This mayor believes that every employee works for her and not the public. She has created a very unproductive environment for the knowlege worker by putting analyst in a bull pen area with no walls and lots of disruptions and noise. The mayor, nor her high paid staff would last or tolerate one day in the cube farm environment.

    She has revised policy to give the office of the mayor more power. She has crippled Civil Service so that employees have little to no protection. This has caused employees to wisely seek out Union protection.

    Since she is not running for a second term her at-will staff is trying to secure civil service positions. The new group of employees are so stupid that they believe they can stay on staff when a new mayor is elected. Half the new people in IT do not know that her administration goes when she goes. They think it’s business as usual. They don’t get it!

    Sam Roop tried to stay on staff and was told to get the hell out. I hope a newly elected mayor shows the same professional courtesy to any of Taylor’s people who think they can stay on staff.

    I think a City Manager is exactly what Tulsa needs.

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