March 31, 2007

Tax dollars to be spent "subsidizing" govt employees private cars??

I had to read this story twice. Sounds really great that Google (a company supported by STOCKHOLDERS NOT TAXPAYERS) makes all sorts of subsidies for workers including free lunches and cash incentives to buy private cars that get better mileage. So now the County wants to do this? Did they forget that those are my tax dollars? Why don't they give the money to me? I drive a car in LA county and I can green up the environment just as well as a government employee. Have they lost their minds. Sure if the county employee wants to go out and get a car with good mileage then give them better parking. But cash subsidies are going too far.

I have an Idea. Why doesn't the County Board of Supervisors just worry about fixing the traffic problem they have created by allowing silly over development. Fixing just a few traffic logjams in the county would save lots of gas. Or how about reducing road closures due to needless police action? Another time AND gas saver. Remember a Prius and a Hummer get about the same mileage when going 2 mph.

http://www.latimes.com/news/local/la-me-green31mar31,1,888714.story
Employers offer green-car incentives
By Ashley Surdin
Times Staff Writer

March 31, 2007

Los Angeles County government, Southern California's largest employer, may soon join a burgeoning trend that entices workers to give up their gas-guzzling cars for more environmentally friendly ones.

Earlier this month, the Board of Supervisors asked its staff to come up with ways to encourage the county's 90,000 commuting employees — about 90% of the workforce — to buy and drive so-called green cars, such as hybrids partly fueled by electricity or other high mileage, low emission vehicles. Some hybrids get up to 50 miles per gallon.

The idea, suggested by Supervisor Yvonne Brathwaite Burke, is part of a larger county push to reduce its environmental footprint. It also addresses the state's 2006 Global Warming Solutions Act, which requires California to reduce its greenhouse gas production.

With federal tax breaks for hybrid buyers waning and the state out of permits granting them access to carpool lanes, Burke said, the county needs to up the incentive ante.

"It's good government," Burke said. "We all have such a responsibility to try and cut down on energy use."

So, what would it take to make the supervisors themselves trade in the Cadillacs, Chryslers and Buicks they now use to commute to work?

"Not very much," said Burke, who drives a six-cylinder Chrysler 300. "I really like the way the Prius looks, and if I could make sure that I have access to electricity or to the fuel source, I'd be fine."

(In fact, the Prius, made by Toyota, automatically recharges its battery and runs on regular gasoline.)

Employee transportation incentives are not new, but green-car-related incentives are, according to Kellie McElhaney, adjunct professor of corporate responsibility at UC Berkeley's Haas School of Business.

In the last year, young cause-minded workers and a growing awareness of global warming have prompted some companies to offer such perks. Now, green-car incentives — from purchasing programs to parking discounts — have sprouted up among private companies, nonprofits, universities and governments.

"We think of branding as something a company does for customers, but they also do it for their employees," said McElhaney. "This is great branding for L.A. County — it dovetails with California's stance on trying to be a state focused on global warming.

"I'm not aware of any other county doing this," she added.

Neither is Glen Brand, director of the Sierra Club's National Cool Cities Campaign, which aims to help cities and counties reduce energy costs and global warming pollution through clean-energy solutions. But one Southern California city is already way ahead.

By May, the city of Riverside's 2,500 full-time employees will be eligible for $2,000 reimbursements if they buy new hybrids and $1,000 if they buy used ones, said Mayor Ron Loveridge. To qualify, they must buy the cars from Riverside dealers.

"This country, this state and this city need to support hybrid technology," Loveridge said. "And this is one way we're doing it in Riverside."

The city has set aside $20,000 in state money to begin the program.

Though Los Angeles County's potential employee perks are undetermined, they could include cash subsidies, preferential parking or discount parking.

In the meantime, private companies are leading the trend of environmentally friendly incentives, offering their employees some of the most generous benefits.

Charlotte, N.C.-based Bank of America, for example, offers its employees a $3,000 online, direct deposit reimbursement toward a green-car purchase. Up to $5,000 in forgivable loans are available to employees of Berkeley energy-food maker Clif Bar & Co. At Internet search giant Google Inc., employees are eligible for a matching amount in a taxable lump sum payment if they buy certain hybrids, or $2,500 if they lease.

Bank of America launched its incentive program for green-car purchases nine months ago in three pilot cities: Los Angeles, Boston and Charlotte.

Within the first six months, 64 employees in the Los Angeles area — including some in the Inland Empire, Orange County and High Desert — participated.

Among them was project manager Grisel Wallace, 45, of Stevenson Ranch, who commutes from the Santa Clarita Valley to downtown Los Angeles. In October, she traded in her Saturn for a Prius. Her and her husband's gas bill, once soaring past $500 a month, is now under $100.

"We were looking at them, but the offer from Bank of America actually got us to make that final step and go into the dealership," she said.

The program's success, said West Coast spokeswoman Colleen Haggerty, persuaded the company to expand it recently to all of its 185,000 U.S.-based employees.

"Doing something like this for employees certainly builds company loyalty, and it's a good retention tool," Haggerty said.

Universities have launched green-car incentives too, if only to reduce traffic in and out of campuses.

At UCLA, students and employees who already earn parking permit discounts for carpooling will soon earn a better bang for their buck if they throw in a low-emission vehicle.

Come July, the university will offer an additional discount to carpools that include an ultra-clean low emission car. A three-person carpool that includes such a car will be charged only $30 a month to park — about half of what a single driver of a conventional car pays. Parking tickets and fees will fund this discount and others. In essence, those who pay the most to park will compensate for green drivers paying the least.

"Our philosophy is: If you're driving, then you should be helping to support the solution," said Renée Fortier, director of UCLA transportation, noting that the school's alternative transportation programs cut down on 1.7 million car trips to and from the Westwood campus each year.

A $1,500 to $2,500 discount offered to employees of the Washington-based American Jewish Committee proved to be the clincher that persuaded Saundra Mandel, director of the nonprofit organization's Los Angeles chapter, to sell her 7-year-old champagne Mercedes for a "banker's gray" Prius.

Offering such incentives can be risky, Berkeley business professor McElhaney said, because they raise employee expectations that their company is socially responsible. Employees will "often wonder what else the company is doing beyond just this type of program," she said. "It's risky if the company isn't committed to doing other programs as well."

Otherwise, she added, "It's a great loyalty-building and employee identification strategy to reduce turnover and improve job satisfaction and company loyalty."

Does a new Prius make Mandel more loyal to her employer?

"I wasn't planning to leave, and it isn't going to keep me here," she said, "but it increases the pride in the organization that I work for."

ashley.surdin@latimes.com

Quotes LAAG loves to Quote

We just had to put up a quotes page as there is so much choice material we wanted to share. Some of these are inspirational some very true and others somewhat philosophical. If you find any out there you are fond of (and they are in the same theme as those below) please pass them along to us and we may post them. Some of the "sayings" below are not really quotes. If there is no persons name following the saying then its not really a quote but just an unattributed saying.

These are not organized right now in any particular fashion. This is a work in progress and we may add subject categories at some point. To check for quotes this is a good source: www.brainyquote.com

"If you interviewed 1,000 politicians and asked about whether the media's too soft or too hard, about 999 would say too hard."
- Bob Woodward

"It was accountability that Nixon feared."
- Bob Woodward

"Trust, but verify"
- Ronald Reagan

"A common field one day. A field of honor forever. May all who visit this place remember the collective acts of courage and sacrifice of the passengers and consider this hallowed ground as the final resting place of those heroes, and reflect on the power of individuals who choose to make a difference."
- mission statement of the Flight 93 National Memorial

"There is not a man in the country that can't make a living for himself and family. But he can't make a living for them AND his government, the way his government is living. What the government has got to do is live as cheap as the people."
- Will Rogers

"Just throw money at the problem"
- Quote from 2006 Tour De France attendee

"A remark generally hurts in proportion to its truth."
- Will Rogers

"Who controls the past controls the future: who controls the present controls the past."
- George Orwell, 1984

The harder something is to understand, the more likely something isn't right. (That's often the reason it's so complicated.)
- This could be a Murphy's Law corollary

Doppler effect: The tendency of stupid ideas to seem smarter when they come at you rapidly.
- sort of a pseudo science quote

One of the penalties for refusing to participate in politics is that you end up being governed by your inferiors.
- Plato

"The definition of insanity is doing the same thing over and over and expecting different results"
- Benjamin Franklin

Why do you do what you do? If you have to ask that question then you probably would not understand the answer.
- from a South Pole explorer on a TV show

"The most terrifying words in the English language: I'm from the government and I'm here to help."
--Ronald Reagan

“No government ever voluntarily reduces itself in size. Government programs, once launched, never disappear. Actually, a government bureau is the nearest thing to eternal life we'll ever see on this earth."
--Ronald Reagan

"Anything important is never left to the vote of the people. We only get to vote on some man; we never get to vote on what he is to do."
- Will Rogers

"Be thankful we're not getting all the government we're paying for."
- Will Rogers

"Power corrupts, and absolute power corrupts absolutely."
- Lord Acton

"Politicians fascinate because they constitute such a paradox; they are an elite that accomplishes mediocrity for the public good."
- George Will

"The first rule of any technology used in a business is that automation applied to an efficient operation will magnify the efficiency. The second is that automation applied to an inefficient operation will magnify the inefficiency."
- Bill Gates

"There are known knowns. These are things we know that we know. There are known unknowns. That is to say, there are things that we now know we don’t know. But there are also unknown unknowns. These are things we do not know we don’t know."
- United States Secretary of Defense Donald Rumsfeld (2002) and others prior to that

"The only reason a great many American families don't own an elephant is that they have never been offered an elephant for a dollar down and easy weekly payments."
- Mad Magazine

"Cynicism is an unpleasant way of saying the truth."
- Lillian Hellman

"Those who would give up Essential Liberty to purchase a little Temporary Safety, deserve neither Liberty nor Safety."
- Benjamin Franklin

"Those are my principles, and if you don't like them, well I have others"
- Groucho Marx

If we desire respect for the law, we must first make the law respectable.
- Louis D. Brandeis

In the frank expression of conflicting opinions lies the greatest promise of wisdom in governmental action.
- Louis D. Brandeis

Our government... teaches the whole people by its example. If the government becomes the lawbreaker, it breeds contempt for law; it invites every man to become a law unto himself; it invites anarchy.
- Louis D. Brandeis

Publicity is justly commended as a remedy for social and industrial diseases. Sunlight is said to be the best of disinfectants; electric light the most efficient policeman.
- Louis D. Brandeis

The most important political office is that of the private citizen.
- Louis D. Brandeis

We can have democracy in this country, or we can have great wealth concentrated in the hands of a few, but we can't have both.
- Louis D. Brandeis

Only God who appointed me will remove me.
—Robert Mugabe, President of Zimbabwe, refusing to cede power regardless of the results of a runoff election

The power of accurate observation is commonly called cynicism by those who have not got it.
- George Bernard Shaw

The best minds are not in government. If any were, business would hire them away.
- Ronald Reagan

If it walks like a duck, and talks like a duck, it must be a dinosaur.
- Unknown theology quote

The more people doubt their own beliefs the more, paradoxically, they are inclined to proselytize in favor of them.
- David Brooks, NY Times

First they ignore you, then they laugh at you, then they fight you, then you win.
- Nicholas Klein

"It’s difficult to get a man to understand something when his salary depends on his not understanding it"
- Upton Sinclair

"...his remark was not intended to be a factual statement.."
- Office of AZ Senator Jon Kyl after he wrongly proclaimed on the Senate floor in April 2011 that abortions constitute "well over 90% of what Planned Parenthood does," (The "internets" went nuts with this one as did Twitter)

You can't take something off the Internet - it's like taking pee out of a pool.
- Author Unknown, 1995 (more here)

Our problems are man-made, therefore they may be solved by man. No problem of human destiny is beyond human beings.
- John F. Kennedy, 35th president of US 1961-1963

The great enemy of the truth is very often not the lie -- deliberate, contrived and dishonest, but the myth, persistent, persuasive, and unrealistic. Belief in myths allows the comfort of opinion without the discomfort of thought.
- John F. Kennedy

"The demagogue is one who preaches doctrines he knows to be untrue to men he knows to be idiots." - H.L. Mencken, American journalist.

The federal government is basically an insurance company with an army.
- Paul Krugman, NY Times

"When the people find that they can vote themselves money, that will herald the end of the republic."
 --There is no evidence that Benjamin Franklin ever actually said or wrote this, but it's remarkably similar a quote often attributed, without proper sourcing, to Alexis de Tocqueville and Alexander Fraser Tytler

Governments and politicians by their nature will try to find a way to spend every dollar possible and push the liability for that spending into the future, either through borrowing or creative accounting.
Far from acting prudently with taxpayer funds, Street said, government officials instead work overtime to enable their spending schemes by crafting narratives that depend on false impressions of spendable cash flow.
- Chriss Street, Orange County treasurer from 2006-2010

It's not that I'm so smart, it's just that I stay with problems longer.
- Albert Einstein

The difference between stupidity and genius is that genius has its limits.
- Albert Einstein

"...A lot of times, people don’t know what they want until you show it to them.”
- Steve Jobs, Apple

“Being the richest man in the cemetery doesn’t matter to me … Going to bed at night saying we’ve done something wonderful… that’s what matters to me.”
- Steve Jobs, Apple

"We can't solve problems by using the same kind of thinking we used when we created them."
-Albert Einstein

"Journalism is printing what someone else does not want printed: everything else is public relations."
-George Orwell

"You can't handle the truth!"
-Col. Jessep [as played by Jack Nicholson in "A Few Good Men"] for the follow up to this line this quote list from the movie is a must read

"Experience hath [has] shewn [shown], that even under the best forms of government those entrusted with power have, in time, and by slow operations, perverted it into tyranny."

--Thomas Jefferson
"Educate and inform the whole mass of the people... They are the only sure reliance for the preservation of our liberty."
--Thomas Jefferson

"Economics is like driving a car by looking through the rear-view mirror."
--general running joke among economists

"Everything is fine today, that is our illusion"
--Voltaire

"The most dangerous place in [your city] is between [politician name here] and a microphone."
--A long-standing joke among political observers

"The American political system is not good at trading sacrifice now to prevent crises later." 
--Ezra Klein, Vox,com

Los Angeles County government is a "Soviet-style system," with too many people only sort of in charge and no person sufficiently at the helm to take responsibility.
--Supervisor Zev Yaroslavsky, commenting on how the pieces of county government were assembled with a markedly lower level of genius and foresight than under the US Constitution

"The solution when you don’t like someone’s speech is not to silence that person, or that corporation. It’s more and louder speech of your own."
--Michael Kinsley, columnist for Vanity Fair.

"Nothing that’s good works by itself, you’ve got to make the damn thing work."
--Thomas Edison (inventor)

"Remember, never take no shortcuts and hurry along as fast as you can."
--Virgina Reed survivor of the Donner Party disaster wrote in a letter to her cousin

"Everyone is entitled to their own opinion, but not their own facts"
--Daniel Patrick Moynihan four-term U.S. Senator,

"The beginning of wisdom is found in doubting; by doubting we come to the question, and by seeking we may come upon the truth."
-- Pierre Abelard

"We now live in a post-factual democracy. When the facts met the myths they were as useless as bullets bouncing off the bodies of aliens in a HG Wells novel."
--Nicholas Barrett, a political journalist

“The general theme in California law is the government should not be keeping secrets,”
--Former Los Angeles County Counsel Mark J. Saladino 

“Strong minds discuss ideas, average minds discuss events, weak minds discuss people.”
--Socrates

“Everybody wants a revolution, but nobody wants to change their bad behavior”
--Leo Tolstoy

“There are the parallels between Sisi supporters, Trump supporters, right-wing supporters in Europe and Islamic supporters. They all share the same thing. Facts do not matter. Ideology comes first and then I can tailor the facts based on what I think and see. These people don’t care if what they’re rooting for is a failure or evil or bad. It doesn’t matter as long as we can get back at the other side.”
--Bassem Youssef (Egyptian comedian host of "The Show")

"When plunder becomes a way of life for a group of men in a society, over the course of time they create for themselves a legal system that authorizes it and a moral code that glorifies it."
--Frédéric Bastiat, early free-market economist

"As democracy is perfected, the office of the president represents, more and more closely, the inner soul of the people. On some great and glorious day, the plain folks of the land will reach their heart's desire at last, and the White House will be adorned by a downright moron!"
--H.L. Mencken writing for the Baltimore Evening Sun, July 26, 1920.

“Sometimes it is the people no one imagines anything of who do the things that no one can imagine”
-- Alan Mathison Turing, an English computer scientist, mathematician, logician, cryptanalyst, philosopher, and theoretical biologist. (The Imitation Game, 2014)

History is a progress of argument without end. 
-- Pieter Geyl, Dutch Historian

More people are held up with a pencil than with a gun.
-- My Grandfather 

"Without reason, without truth, there is no real democracy because democracy is about true choices and rational decisions." 
-- French President Emmanuel Macron in a speech to a joint meeting of Congress 4/25/18 

"Confidence is silent. Insecurities are loud," 
-- Don Corleone, The Godfather  

"The Golden Rule ....of politics...whoever has the gold makes the rules" 
-- comic strip “Wizard of Id” by Johnny Hart 

paralysis by analysis. 
--not a quote per say but a concise statement of a true principle. Applies to govt in spades

“The truth is that these companies won’t fundamentally change because their entire business model relies on generating more engagement, and nothing generates more engagement than lies, fear and outrage.” 
-- Sacha Baron Cohen, the British actor, said in 2019 regarding the social media behemoths 

“The spectacle is capital accumulated to the point where it becomes image.”
--French philosopher Guy Debord 

"the stone age did not end because we ran out of stones; it ended because we invented new tools"
-- former Saudi oil minister Sheikh Ahmed Zaki Yamani

"There are no easy answers, but there are simple answers."
--Ronald Reagan  

“The Democrats don’t matter. The real opposition is the media. And the way to deal with them is to flood the zone with shit.” 
-- Steve Bannon, the former head of Breitbart News and chief strategist for Donald Trump. 

“... a model we use called the 4d’s — dismiss the message, distort the facts, distract the audience, and express dismay at the whole thing.” 
--Graham Brookie, Digital Forensic Research Lab (DFRLab) operationalized the study of disinformation by exposing falsehoods and fake news.

“The good thing about science is that it’s true whether or not you believe in it.” 
-Neil deGrasse Tyson 

"I'm a CPA I move numbers around"..Attorney responds: "I'm an attorney and I move words around"
--Ozark series on Netflix

"The ultimate measure of a man is not where he stands in moments of comfort and convenience, but where he stands at times of challenge and controversy."
--Martin Luther King
 
"Injustice Anywhere is a threat to Justice Everywhere"
--Martin Luther King 

"Capitalize the gains, socialize the losses"

--some guy who works on Wall St. (or in DC)

"There is a Providence that protects idiots, drunkards, children and the United States of America." --Otto von Bismarck, German statesman

“and then what?"

-- Robert Gates, former secretary of defense on the three words most infrequently uttered in Washington

"If you live long enough, you’ll see your heroes become villains.”

--Unknown

“To him, a lie is not a lie. It’s just what he thinks. He doesn’t know the difference between the truth and a lie.”

--Dan Coats, Trump’s former director of national intelligence

"Never argue with stupid people, they will drag you down to their level and then beat you with experience."

-- Mark Twain

"Delusion will last until it is about to become fatal, at which point an onset of sanity is certain."

--American economist John Kenneth Galbraith

"History doesn’t repeat itself but it does often rhyme"

-- Mark Twain

“When everything becomes political, that is the end of politics.”

-- Hebrew University religious philosopher Moshe Halbertal

“If conservatives become convinced that they can not win democratically, they will not abandon conservatism. The will reject democracy.”

--David Frum, former speechwriter for President George W. Bush

“Problems have solutions, but dilemmas have horns.”

--old saying among foreign affairs specialists

"You may have the watches, but we have the time."

--Afghan proverb

"It is a luxury to be irresponsible in a society where others would be responsible for you..."

--Charles Blow NY Times regarding the anti vax movement

"Me and my brother against my cousin. Me and my brother and my cousin against the outsider."

    --an old Arab Bedouin saying (loosely translated)

“It ain’t what you don’t know that gets you into trouble. It’s what you know for sure that just ain’t so.”

  --possibly Mark Twain but not clear

Scientific method “Here are the facts. What conclusions can we draw from them?” Political method: “Here’s the conclusion. What facts can we find to support it?”

  --not attributed

"If liberty means anything at all it means the right to tell people what they do not want to hear,"

  --George Orwell

"The best way to get the right answer on the Internet is not to ask a question, it's to post the wrong answer."

 --Cunningham's law.

“I’ve never seen a tax I didn’t like.”

-- Long beach Mayor Robert Garcia at the LB Convention Center following the passage of Measure M (passed June 2018; ruled unconstitutional March 2022)

 "The whole problem with the world is that fools and fanatics are always so certain of themselves, but wiser people are so full of doubts."

--Bertrand Russell

“For every complex problem, there is a solution that is clear, simple, and wrong.”

--H. L. Mencken

“The problem is that we all too often have socialism for the rich and rugged free enterprise capitalism for the poor.”

--Dr Martin Luther King Jr

“If I’ve learned anything recently, it’s that humans are really reluctant to give things up to prevent a catastrophe..They’re willing to hang on to the very end and risk a calamity.”

--Brad Udall, a water and climate scientist at Colorado State University

 “Everyone can’t get everything what they want,”

--Thomas Tebb, WA state Department of Ecology re water

"If you see a snake, just kill it - don't appoint a committee on snakes."

--Ross Perot 1994 Presidential Candidate

"The activist is not the man who says the river is dirty. The activist is the man who cleans up the river."

--Ross Perot 1994 Presidential Candidate 

"The budget should be balanced, the treasury should be refilled, the public debt should be reduced and the arrogance of public officials should be controlled."

--Ross Perot 1994 Presidential Candidate

"Expect disappointment and you’ll never get disappointed"

--by the character Michelle Jones-Watson in the film Spiderman: No Way Home (2021).

"The people in our democracy are not uncommonly wise, but their experience tends to make them uncommonly sensible.”

--Irving Kristol

"To the victor victim go the spoils"

--LAAG; a commentary on how the victim mentality/state is paying off for victims

 “I am not a member of any organized political party. I am a Democrat.”

--Will Rogers

"Politics is the entertainment division of the military industrial complex"

--Frank Zappa

“Thanks to our evolutionary history, we’re programmed to deal with the lion coming from the woods, not to strategize how to save our civilization over the next hundred years,”

--Jeff Goodell, author of "The Heat Will Kill You First"

“Civilization asks whether law is so laggard as to be utterly helpless to deal with crimes of this magnitude by criminals of this order of importance.”

--Robert H. Jackson, the eloquent Supreme Court justice who served as the U.S. chief prosecutor at Nuremberg, in his opening address there

 "Life is like riding a bicycle. To keep your balance, you must keep moving."

— Albert Einstein

 "You are never too old to set a new goal or to dream a new dream."

— CS Lewis

 "It is often the small steps, not the giant leaps, that bring about the most lasting change."

— Queen Elizabeth II 

"Few people have the wisdom to prefer the criticism that would do them good, to the praise that deceives them."

--Francois de La Rochefoucauld

"Everything that irritates us about others can lead us to an understanding of ourselves."
--Carl Jung

"Only the narcissists have the fortitude to persist in politics."

--Unknown 

"America did not invent human rights. In a very real sense, it is the other way round. Human rights invented America." 

--Pres. Carter's Farewell address January 14, 1981 

A fact is “a piece of information presented as having objective reality”

--Merriam-Webster 

“You can pardon most anything in a man who will tell the truth, if anyone lies, if he has the habit of untruthfulness, you cannot deal with him, because there is nothing to depend on.”. 

--President Teddy Roosevelt 1903 speech in California 

"Those who cannot learn from history are doomed to repeat it." 

-- George Santayana 

"history doesn't repeat itself, but it often rhymes" 

-- Mark Twain 

Not quotes but interesting facts nonetheless....
On June 14, 1954, President Dwight D. Eisenhower signed an executive order (not legislation) adding the words “under God” to the Pledge of Allegiance. The Supreme Court decided in 2004 to keep “under God” in the pledge. Interestingly, “God” doesn’t appear anywhere in the Constitution.


Lakewood Accountability Action Group™ LAAG | www.LAAG.us | Lakewood, CA
A California Non Profit Association | Demanding action and accountability from local government™

click here to receive LAAG posts by email

March 30, 2007 Hollywood fire started with Fireworks

Once again fireworks, Kids and a dry season all will add up to a fun summer. Just think how many baseball uniforms we could buy with all the money we spent to put this fire out.

http://www.latimes.com/news/printedition/california/la-me-fire31mar31,1,4997143.story?coll=la-headlines-pe-california

Hillside fire threatens landmark, fouls the air
The blaze quickly burns 160 acres in the Hollywood Hills but stops short of signature sign. Two teens admit starting it, mayor says.


By Rong-Gong Lin II and Hector Becerra, Times Staff Writers
March 31, 2007



Photo from LA Times and User-submitted photo by: PhotoMatt

A fast-moving brush fire cut a path through bone-dry terrain in the Hollywood Hills on Friday, churning massive plumes of smoke across the region that slowed traffic, jangled nerves and for a time threatened the Hollywood sign.

The 160-acre blaze, the largest in the heavily populated Hollywood Hills in nearly two decades, consumed brushland above the Warner Bros. Studio and Forest Lawn cemetery.

The fire occurred in what is usually Southern California's rainy season and comes as the region is experiencing its driest year on record. Firefighters warned that they expect the fire danger to remain high through the spring.

Witnesses told authorities they saw two teenagers setting off fireworks about 1 p.m. near the Oakwood apartments, a temporary housing village near several major studios frequented by people in the entertainment business.

Three hours later, two teenagers from Illinois who were visiting the Oakwood turned themselves in to police and admitted starting the blaze, L.A. Mayor Antonio Villaraigosa said. The boys, ages 16 and 17, were detained by LAPD officers on suspicion of reckless setting of a fire and then released to their parents' custody, pending possible prosecution.

"They were old enough to know what they were doing," said Villaraigosa, adding that the boys first told their parents about setting the fire before together calling police.

Independence Day comes early for Whittier CA

LAAG congratulates the good folks of Whittier who were able to convince their city council (without the expense of an election) that they had lost their mind allowing fireworks money to taint their community. The Whittier folks had spoken with LAAG before the vote and quite frankly we were skeptical that residents could pull this off. But apparently they got the ear of the council before the "fireworks machine" did. Unfortunately for Lakewood getting fireworks out of the city is like getting the Mafia out of Sicily. Its too ingrained and there are too many people addicted to it like "Meth addicts". It never was about the fireworks, in Lakewood or Whittier. It was all about the money. That same fireworks money paved the way for an ad blitz that assured victory for the political party of "smoke and fire". Again, we hope that more cities stand up and add their names to those cities that think progressively. Soon fireworks companies will be viewed like the tobacco companies.

Fireworks ban applauded
Article Launched: 03/29/2007 08:16:58 PM PDT
http://www.pasadenastarnews.com/opinions/ci_5551562

WHAT could be more fitting than for the people to prevail in an issue involving Independence Day?

The people of Whittier did just that.

Tuesday night, four members of the Whittier City Council rescinded their action taken in February which legalized the sale of safe and sane fireworks prior to the Fourth of July and the use of those fireworks on the Fourth of July.

The council action in February ended a city fireworks ban that had been in force for 20 years.

Owen Newcomer was the only council member to vote against ending the ban from the beginning.

Once the 4-1 action to end the fireworks ban went into effect, 32 local organizations applied for the 10 permits to sell fireworks allowed by the new ordinance.

But, the council's action ending the fireworks ban sparked opposition among residents and fire officials who emphasized that Whittier is a community of precious hills and wildlife and this is one of the driest years on record.

Week after week, the fireworks opposition grew into a firestorm of its own, with hundreds of protesters, including former mayors and community leaders showing up at council meetings to urge repeal of the ordinance.

Suddenly, last week, the lottery for fireworks sales booths was called off and the issue was placed on the March 27 council agenda.

Prevailing logic told everyone that this meant that the council very likely would rescind its legalization of fireworks.

And that's precisely what happened.

After the long procession in Council Chambers of fire department executives and many others against legalizing fireworks, council members one-by-one announced that they would vote to rescind the ordinance making fireworks legal again.

Nordbak became our hero when he actually admitted he had been wrong and apologized to his constituents.

"In hindsight and listening to the comments, I apologize, I missed the boat," he said. "When I voted, I thought I was doing the right thing."

He said he had received 2,400 comments on the issue and only three were in favor of fireworks.

Councilman Joe Vinatieri, who put the proposal for lifting the fireworks ban on the agenda last October, voted to rescind also, but added, "I'd like us as a community to come up with some idea for doing something like an old-fashioned Whittier July 4th celebration."

Councilman Bob Henderson agreed with Vinatieri that some kind of Fourth of July event should be explored. He also emphasized that "the incredible dryness of the year," made this an exceptionally bad time to bring back fireworks.

We support the idea of exploring a future patriotic community event and believe it would be best for such an event to originate with a city department, commission or community organization and come to the council as a proposal for whatever action would be required.

Councilman Owen Newcomer should be thanked for his good sense and courage to stand alone from the outset against an obvious danger to local lives and property.

Finally, we echo the sentiments of Councilman Nordbak, who urged that youth groups and churches that now will not reap the anticipated funds from fireworks sales be generously supported by local businesses and individuals.


Council reverses stance on fireworks

By Mike Sprague Staff Writer

www.sgvn.com

WHITTIER - The Whittier City Council reversed itself Tuesday and voted unanimously to ban July 4 fireworks.

The council in February had voted 4-1 to legalize fireworks for Independence Day. But since then, many residents have gone to council meetings, e-mailed and talked to council members individually asking them to rescind that decision.

"In hindsight and listening to the comments, I apologize," Councilman Greg Nordbak said. "I missed the boat. When I voted, I thought that I was doing the right thing. I think in hindsight, I missed it."

The council still must vote again in April and approve a new ordinance reinstating the ban on fireworks.

Nordbak said he was looking for a way to help local nonprofit groups raise money, but he found that even those people didn't support legalizing fireworks.

About 100 people were present at the meeting, with most of them in opposition to fireworks.

Four of the five council members changed their votes. Only Councilman Owen Newcomer had opposed legalization in the February vote.

Nordbak said he had received about 2,400 comments about fireworks. But only three supported keeping fireworks legal.

"That's a lot," he said. A big concern of all five council members was the lack of rain this year and what that could mean to the hills.

"We have something unique this year - the incredible dryness of the year," Councilman Bob Henderson said. "We now have a moisture content that is equivalent to what we normally have in September."

Councilman Joe Vinatieri, who put the proposal to legalize fireworks on the agenda in October 2006, said he still wants to find a way to celebrate Independence Day.

"There is no independence celebration in Whittier, which is inconsistent with our patriotism," Vinatieri said. "I'd like us as a community to come up with some idea of doing something of an old-fashioned Whittier July 4 celebration."

A couple of residents asked the council not to change its mind.

"The people in the hills are controlling the rest of Whittier," said resident Michael Schmidt. "The majority of people have forgotten what it's like to be a kid. They don't like noisy kids or dogs. They're at the sunset age."

mike.sprague@sgvn.com

(562)698-0955, Ext. 3022

March 29, 2007

Wonder why there isn't enough money to fix city streets?

You just cant say it enough ways or enough times in enough places. The "driveby media" is slowing picking up the story and starting to see the "Emperors clothes". Most politicians are to blame and very few feel any responsibility to "fix" the problem. Public safety employees are really not worth the cost, especially for benefits. Most crimes (especially murders ans serious crimes) have no relationship to the numbers of cops on the streets in most areas. The same with structure fires. When was the last time you saw one in person. Aside from the occasional house fire most large buildings are sprinklered or have advanced fire protection. Its just fear mongering by greedy unions pounding the drums making us think that if we are short one fireman or cop, our house will burn down or we will be attacked on the street.

You schleps in the private sector making under $100,000 a year with no benefits, ironclad job security or lifetime pensions at 100% of your highest years salary, better wake up before you get one hell of a tax bill soon.

Breaking the bank
Wonder why there isn't enough money to fix city streets? It's because fat pay and benefits packages are sucking up the dough


http://www.newsreview.com/chico/Content?oid=302991
By Richard Ek
PHOTO BY MEREDITH J. COOPER

About the author:
Dr. Richard Ek is a retired Chico State University journalism professor and department chairman who contributes frequently to the Chico News & Review.
www.chico.ca.us

The city of Chico is in financial trouble because it spends more than it takes in, and Greg Jones wants everybody in town to know about it.

"It's important to admit you have a problem before you can form a plan of action to solve it," the city manager said.

This negative state of affairs has been going on for about four years. If allowed to continue unchecked for a couple more years, the operating reserve would be gone, and another five or six years without corrective action would erase the emergency reserve, Jones explained. Then the sky could fall.Root cause of the problem: The city pampers its 450 employees with costly pay and benefits goodies, which in turn limits the amount of money available for street repairs, parks maintenance--Bidwell Park especially--and development of creekside greenways, to name a few infrastructure needs.

In what amounted to a cry for help, Jones last fall put out a mass mailing to Chico residents at a cost of $7,000 to pinpoint the problem. In the glossy, four-page "citizen newsletter," Jones said in part:

"The cost of doing business for the City has outpaced revenue for a number of years, requiring the use of reserves. ... These cost increases are comprised of ... retirement system cost increases, health benefit costs ... pay increases, and other personnel related costs.

"These costs, if no changes are implemented, will continue to accelerate faster than revenues, causing continuing ongoing budget deficits and allowing no room for increasing levels of service which the community needs."

Jennifer Hennessy, the city finance director and the source for most of the numbers in this article, supplied specifics by revealing that 80 percent of the city's $46.9 million budget for 2006-07 went for people costs. That's almost $37 million, and of that amount $26.5 million went to public safety, meaning police and fire. Overall, public safety accounts for 71 percent of the general-fund budget, with police taking 45 percent of the total.

Retirement benefits for city employees as a group have gone up 379 percent since 2000, and pay rates have largely kept pace.

Just how sweet the benefits package has become can be seen through health and life insurance policies enjoyed by all employees. Health coverage ranges from an HMO policy that's free to the employee but costs the city $323 per month, to a "Cadillac" policy that covers 90 percent of anything needed for a family and costs the city $902 per month, compared with $170 for the employee. All city workers also enjoy a city-paid life-insurance policy--cost: 34 cents per $1,000--worth a dollar of coverage for every dollar earned. Thus an employee who earns, say, $75,000 carries a free $75,000 life-insurance policy.

On average, permanent city employees earn $68,022 annually.

"Government employees are extremely well paid ... compared to private-sector workers in Chico and the county," Hennessy said. Indeed, Chico has long been known as a minimum-wage town, and Butte County, whose median household income in 2003 was just $33,443, has long been a poor county.

Jones emphasized that people everywhere consider public safety and streets to be the most important factors defining how well their cities or towns are managed. Public safety measures up well in Chico, but the streets do not.

Indeed, the police and fire unions--plus other city unions and employees--dip so deeply into the money pot that there's little left for road repair and maintenance.

The most outspoken critic of the pending budget shortfalls is City Councilman Larry Wahl. He more than anyone has warned that the council must face these realities and take action to reconcile spending and income imbalances before it is too late.

Dan Fulks, the city human resources director, holds the demanding job of negotiating contracts with the city's several unions. He's now hammering out a new multi-year contract with a three-person team representing the local chapter of the International Association of Firefighters. He said he couldn't "sunshine" (reveal) details other than to say the firefighters got a raise in each of the past three years and want another raise this year.

In contrast, the Chico Unified School District, for example, must early on sunshine the demands of the teachers' union, which nearly always creates a public furor. The city process instead reveals terms only after the fact, when the City Council has already OK'd the contract. Fulks acknowledged there might be more negative reaction if bargaining details were publicized.

City figures show that firefighters have enjoyed pay increases totaling 40.1 percent since 2000. As for retirement benefits, the big goody came down in 2001, when public-safety workers statewide won what has become known as the "3 percent at 50" plan. That means a firefighter or policeman can retire at age 50 with each year of service worth 3 percent of salary at the time of retirement.

If a public-safety worker started on the job at age 20, for example, he could retire at 50 with 90 percent of his highest salary, presumably the salary he made during the final work year. If that salary were $75,000 today, such a retirement would be worth $67,500. After age 50, each year is worth 3 percent of salary. In contrast, California public school teachers work until age 60 to get 2 percent.

The retirement benefits are carried with the California Public Employees Retirement System (CalPERS) in Sacramento, and the "3 percent at 50" plum proved to be the catalyst--along with a stock market swoon in spring 2000 that hurt investment returns and thus tax revenues--that prompted Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger to declare a state of retirement system crisis and call for the Legislature to rein in pension costs. The governor knew that, once granted, a benefit, just like a bond, must be paid, even if it means a taxpayer bailout.

Although the Legislature balked and forced the governor to temporarily back off, he took a different tack last month by tossing this very hot potato to his newly created bipartisan Public Employee Post Employment Benefits Commission to study retirement reform and quickly make recommendations for action to the Legislature. The commission is also supposed to right away find a way to educate the public about the magnitude of the issue.

At the commission's first meeting early this month, Marcia Fritz, a CPA and pension expert from Citrus Heights, outlined the scope of the problem over the next decade, when hundreds of thousands of state and local government workers will retire and begin collecting benefits. She said the pension "fiscal time bomb" represents the biggest issue facing the state.

Just how well the 69 firefighters at six Chico stations are doing is reflected in the fact that they enjoy benefits worth 53 percent of payroll. That means if a firefighter makes, say, $75,000 dollars a year, his benefit package--defined-benefit pension, health insurance, life insurance, etc.--is worth $39,750.

New firefighters start at a hefty $57,551, and the average salary is $81,630. With benefits, total compensation is $124,894. Fourteen of the 69 firefighters earn salaries in excess of $100,000.

There has never been a time in the American private sector when any occupation group enjoyed benefits as rich as those enjoyed by city employees. Today even 5 percent looks good, and in the past 30 years the number of workers covered by defined-benefit pension plans has decreased by half.

Indeed, Hewlett-Packard is the latest corporate giant to announce it will no longer offer defined-benefit pensions. Others, like United Airlines, enter bankruptcy and dump their under-funded pension obligations on the federal Pension Benefit Guarantee Corp., which then kills all secondary benefits like health and life insurance and pays some 60 to 70 cents on the dollar for the remaining pension, depending on how seriously under-funded it was at dumping time. This federal rescue agency, which is many billions of dollars in the red, may well soon be a candidate for a taxpayers' bailout.
Click on the image for a larger version.

All city of Chico employees are required to contribute 9 percent of their salaries toward their pensions, but the firefighters pay only 2 percent because the city picks up the other 7 percent. The city then pays another 25 percent of the firefighter's salary into his or her pension fund, for a total of 34 percent of salary. The city pays at least 25 percent of salaries toward the pensions of all its 450 employees. This is on top of their free life-insurance policies.

Bill Hack, president of the local firefighters' union chapter, didn't see any problem with asking for more money because he said any pay increase is tied to an increase in the general fund and the city's being able to afford it. But the city manager's point is that the city is balancing the budget by using its reserve.

The city has added three new firefighters this year.

Fulks will sit down with the Chico Police Officers Association when he wraps up a contract with the firefighters, and he said he doesn't know what the 93 badge-carrying cops will want.

There are a couple of important things he knows for starters, however. First, the city picks up the entire 9 percent pension salary personal contribution for the police, and, second, the police benefits package is now worth 62 percent of payroll. That means if a policeman is earning $75,000, his benefits are worth another $46,500. The police have won a 37.4 percent increase in pay since 2000.

Starting salary for police officers is $49,795; the average pay is $70,777.

A different perspective on the matter of public-safety compensation can be seen in the fact that 64 of the 159 cops and firefighters earned more than $100,000, including overtime, in 2006. Hennessy said the city paid $2,435,479 for public-safety overtime last year, which was 5.5 percent of the city budget.

The police are unique in having a trust fund for health care that will carry on into retirement, not stop at retirement, as other city benefits do. Detective Terry Moore, the police union spokesman, said officers contribute $200 per month to the trust. The city matches that with another $200, and the total buys a health insurance policy that "partially offsets" costs for officers in retirement.

Just how many cops would it take to make Chico residents feel safe? It's hard to say. Police spokesman Capt. Mike Maloney revealed that work has been done on the national level to partially quantify the question. He said a formula carried in the annual FBI Uniform Crime Report shows Chico, with 1.83 officers per 1,000 population, is a little above average for the three states of California, Oregon, and Washington.

The city manager, however, doesn't feel comfortable with formula staffing and wants more officers so he can get into community policing with foot patrols.

Police Chief Bruce Hagerty said that last year his department fielded more than 26,000 emergency calls to 9-1-1, and in the great majority of cases a crime had already been committed or was in progress. In many cases there was already a victim.

"Our No. 1 goal is to prevent crime, and we can offer no statistics on how we are doing there because we obviously have no way to count crimes that didn't happen," the chief explained.

Hagerty added that police made 54,000 responses last year to calls, in addition to 9-1-1 calls, where the calling party wanted a police officer.
North Cedar Street
PHOTO BY MEREDITH J. COOPER

The department has just added two officers to the traffic division by redeploying two officers and is now starting the recruiting process for two replacement officers. All this is being paid for at present by state/federal grant money that will run out in a few years. At that time, Jones said, the city will pick up the positions on its regular payroll.

The 2006-07 budget calls for six new police positions, four of which have been filled. The other two will be filled when new grads emerge from the Butte College Police Academy in May, according to official sources.

The public often hears that police officers and firefighters need extra compensation because they "put their lives on the line every day." While providing public safety certainly can be dangerous, records show that only one police officer and one firefighter have died in the line of duty in the history of Chico--the policeman in a downtown restaurant incident in 1938, and the fireman in a post-fire downtown roof collapse in 1970.

Fulks also bargains with the service Employees International Union (technical, clerical, trades, and craft workers), and its 300 workers do very well, averaging an annual salary of $47,867. The top for an SEIU member is $37 per hour with benefits worth 52 percent of payroll and yearly total compensation worth $118,686.46. Union members' pay has gone up 37 percent since 2000.

The fourth and last union Fulks sits down with is the Chico Public Safety Association (dispatchers and community service officers). This small group has also done well in pay since 2000, with raises ranging from 30.8 percent to 40.8 percent, depending upon position. Average annual salary is now $47,607. The highest-paid member earns $29.03 per hour with benefits worth 56 percent of payroll and total compensation worth $94,196.54.

In addition to these recognized unions, the city also has three "unrepresented" employee groups: public-safety management (fire chief, police chief and captains), who have benefits worth 55 percent of payroll; confidential employees (certain clerical staff who have confidential-information access), who have benefits worth 47 percent of payroll; and management (city manager, department heads), who have benefits worth 39 percent of payroll and pay increases totaling 35.3 percent since 2000.

The police and fire chief each earns a salary of $165,939 and total compensation of $251,439.76.

Tracking of all groups shows their pay increased roughly 6 percent per year, except fire, which is closer to 7 percent. Union workers occupy lifetime positions.

The city manager personally negotiates terms with the unrepresented employees and makes compensation recommendations for them to the City Council. Since Jones makes recommendations on all groups--represented and unrepresented--and makes a pitch for his own pay, does he indirectly benefit from his own raise recommendations and thus have a conflict of interest?

City Councilman Larry Wahl didn't answer yes or no but asked, "How would you deal with that?" He went on to say, "We negotiate our contract with the city manager, and the city manager is free to pay those people under him what he thinks they are worth, and he's got to make more than his underlings."

Official records show Jones started work on Jan. 1, 2006, at a yearly salary of $190,259 (it has since gone up to $200,533). Tom Lando, the previous city manager, who served from July 1, 1992, until Dec. 31, 2005, started at $84,000 per year and retired at $233,516. Thus his pay improved by almost $150,000 over 13.5 years, increasing $11,075 per year on average. Based on his age at retirement (55), he is making about $145,000 annually in retirement.

The city also paid for Lando to earn a Ph.D. in public administration through the University of Southern California, an expensive private university (tuition today is almost $34,000 per year), which further qualified him for teaching at Chico State University.

It remains to be seen what princely package Jones will develop in the future.

Roads are the starving waif of the city. Although that is the last thing Chico motorists want, they don't have a powerful union to help change the situation. It's one of those "everyone knows" kinds of things. Everyone knows that traffic is increasing in Chico all the time, with popular SUVs and heavy pickup trucks much in evidence. Heavy garbage trucks with an extra pair of wheels in back for bearing additional load pound the pavement, as do buses.

Chico State student and letter-to-the-editor writer Kristen Thengvall expressed the public's general frustration when she wrote recently about the awful condition of North Cedar Street that she and other Chico State students must use as their main route to campus and downtown. "We pay the price as our vehicles need to be serviced more often due to the wear and tear of potholes and uneven road surfaces," Thengvall wrote, also criticizing the lack of sidewalks and lighting. She wants the city to give the street higher priority and do something about it other than talk.

The city manager lamented: "I need six to eight million dollars a year to put the streets in proper shape, and I don't have the money." He added that the city tries to keep potholes repaired, but "it's like chasing your tail to keep up. I want preventive maintenance. If I've got potholes, it means the preventative maintenance system is failing. My goal is no potholes."

He pointed out that Chico streets were not built for high-use urban traffic. Further, if the present winter had brought a lot of heavy rain, the streets now in bad condition would be in terrible shape.

The city manager said it would take "a number of years" to fix the streets. He didn't quantify a more specific timeline or specifically describe a program to do it.

Official records show that slightly over $4 million in general-fund money was allocated in 2006-07 to the General Services Department, which has responsibility for street maintenance, street cleaning and sweeping, parks operation and sewer-line maintenance.

Another $2 million in what's identified as "gasoline tax transfer" money is available, according to official records, but only $1.2 million was transferred into general services for road improvement and maintenance. Note that's improvement as well as maintenance. The other $0.8 million goes to pay working crew members. Gas tax money also hired a maintenance worker whose job is to abate the growing graffiti problem.

It's clear that, as Jones said, the money for road repair falls far short of the $6 million to $8 million per year needed.

It's a different story with big roads. Bond money from the Chico Consolidated Redevelopment Agency (RDA) paid for "the lion's share"--almost $8 million--of the cost to do all the major renovation work last fall on Mangrove Avenue, Cohasset Road, the Manzanita corridor, Vallombrosa Avenue and the Skyway, said Bob Greenlaw, a senior engineer for capital projects. Gas tax money paid for about $1.2 million, which is the yearly allocation.

All the work done last fall on these heavily traveled arterial roads--as opposed to neighborhood streets, minor traffic feeder streets, and major feeder streets--cost $9 million, Greenlaw said.

Overall street conditions further suffer because Chico gradually and incrementally annexes more and more of the many county "islands" that have long existed within the city, and no annexation fee exists to help pay for the transition or to improve the bad roads that usually come with the deal.

The county never took care of the island roads, Wahl said, and when annexed they represent an added maintenance expense burden for "a long time." Official records show the city has gained 18,151 residents through annexation from 1992 through 2006. Wahl explained that Chicoans are paying "for the sins of their fathers," who never drew a line around the city in, say, 1910 to define the difference between its limits and the county's.

Larry Wahl
PHOTO BY MEREDITH J. COOPER

Jones, who has been on the job only 15 months, takes an optimistic view of Chico's financial problems and does not think the sky will fall. City leaders will work out one or more solutions, he said.

His first forward step was to project the city budget 10 years out to bring revenue and expenditures into long-range view for perspective. He thinks seeing liabilities stretched out will hopefully lead to a better and more pragmatic financial approach, whatever that might be.

Jones also spoke hopefully about building a stronger stream of sales tax revenue, the biggest single source of general-fund money for the city. He pointed to the Costco expansion and its potential to bring the city an additional $300,000 per year, but did not go on to other specifics. He also drew attention to the fact that Chico is a regional shopping hub that had in the past delivered well on retail sales tax and should be able to build more such tax revenue. Jones thus hoped the city could at least partially grow out of its money problems.

Since city employees represent more than 80 percent of the city budget, Jones was asked, why not hold the line on raises for this financially pampered group until income and outgo come into balance? "This financial correction should not all be on the backs of city employees," Jones replied emphatically.

Why not, he was asked, since he had identified their pay and benefits as the root of the problem? He replied that the problem is "paternalism"--treating employees with the generosity a parent gives a child--and it's not unique to Chico. He said some local governments give their workers even more than they ask for.

Mayor Andy Holcombe said he "didn't buy into" the idea that lucrative total compensation packages are handed over by the Chico City Council or other local governments because it's just OPM (other people's money).

On the same question, Councilman Steve Bertagna replied that giving away OPM was not the case. He added that the council wants a certain high level of service and is willing to pay to get it.

Wahl, a small-businessman known for his outspoken views, said using OPM is part of the generosity problem with public employees. Another is that the city wants to ensure that its workers are paid as well as those in comparable towns elsewhere. He then stressed that employee compensation represents a huge problem the City Council must face.

"I have asked that the City Council have a discussion ... about how we can rein in the costs of paying employees. It's something we must do because we just have to get a handle on knowing, say, five, 10, 20 years down the road where we are going to be if we keep paying what we're paying ... when most of the people who are there now are retired, and we have a new crop [of employees] that is being compensated as well or maybe better than the folks now."

The councilman said he hadn't been able to win over a majority "because it will be a hard [discussion] to have, and it's going to hurt." He added, "The feeling is that it's always been that way. Yeah, but--you know? It doesn't mean it always has to be that way. You'd be out of business in the private sector in any kind of business ... with employee overhead costs like that, but we accept it in government. It starts at 1600 Pennsylvania Avenue. [the White House] and works its way down." He then suggested possible solutions to get costs down.

"One is letting people go, but I don't foresee that happening. Another is increasing revenues. That means some kind of tax, but I certainly don't support that notion. Another is to let the revenue grow without letting the salaries grow. We could also have a tiered approach where newer people don't get the same level of benefits the current group is getting.

"Now, you know that [having tiers] would create major angst among the unions, and they would fight it," Wahl said, but he insisted it be part of the discussion the council must have "before some point in time when it may be too late. I don't know any other ways you can do this." Wahl emphasized it would be better to plan for an outcome now rather than be forced to "an outcome we may not like."

Asked what it would take to give street repair a higher priority, Wahl replied, "It would have to be a council discussion, and I asked for it at the State of the City meeting [last January]. We need to sit down and decide which are the worst [roads] and then make a start by taking maybe a half a million or a million dollars a year so we take a little whack at it year by year to do something."

Wahl's current plan of action involves writing a letter to the mayor asking that road repair be put on the agenda for the upcoming spring budget discussions, but "I don't know that it will go anywhere."

As for Jones, he appeared reluctant to speak in specifics about the future and possible solutions to city financial problems. That may be his way of saying that it's up to the City Council to make such policy decisions.

Union facts web page

click here to read about the firefighters union.


click here to read about the police union.

Maps: San Gabriel River issues

This is the perfect way to spot issues on the bike path!

click here to see the SG River map. Use the contols in the upper right to zoom in on any problem areas

March 25, 2007

CA cop earned $175,000 in a year...not including pension and healthcare costs

How a San Jose cop earned $175,000 in one year
`SPECIAL PAYS' PUTTING BIG BUCKS IN POCKETS OF SOME CITY WORKERS
By John Woolfolk
San Jose Mercury News
http://www.mercurynews.com/ci_5517589

Article Launched:3/25/07

The top annual salary for a San Jose police officer is $86,000. But one officer last year more than doubled that figure, earning a total of nearly $175,400.

How? Welcome to the world of "special pays," a combination of overtime, on-call work and other extras that put this officer among the 100 highest-paid of the city's 6,800 employees.

While the average Silicon Valley worker might marvel at such opportunities to boost one's salary, for a public employee it's all perfectly legal and above-board.

And the officer was hardly alone - one firefighter with an $84,000 salary was paid more than $163,000 last year, according to city records. While those are extreme examples, they show that for many city employees - in civilian as well as public safety jobs - their salary is just the beginning of their take-home pay.

San Jose's compensation structure includes 135 categories of extra pay, though no single employee can get them all.

The city's average employee salary and benefit costs have risen 45 percent since 2000 and recently come under heightened scrutiny. Mayor Chuck Reed, elected last year on a platform of fiscal responsibility, has noted that employee costs account for almost two-thirds of the city's nearly $1 billion operating budget.

And with a vow to eliminate recurring deficits, Reed has asked the city to look for ways to slow those growing costs as labor contracts come up for renewal.

Health care a factor

Employee Relations Director Alex Gurza said the various pay categories aren't primarily responsible for soaring employee costs, noting that most have been part of the compensation package for a decade or more. The biggest culprits, he says, are health care costs, steep pension payments and salary increases.

Still, the menu of salary extras illustrates the complexity facing city officials as they attempt to tackle runaway employee costs. Each uptick in the base salary rate can be magnified by special pays, which are often based on percentages of that base figure. City officials say those costs are tracked and taken into account when new labor contracts are negotiated.

Special pay beyond basic salary isn't unique to San Jose. Other cities offer similar provisions to their employees. Mountain View, for example, offers an extra $100 a month to bilingual officers and $50 a month for civilian employees who speak a second language. Mountain View canine officers get an additional 5 percent of salary to cover care for their police dogs.

But neighboring Santa Clara doesn't pay police extra for canine duty - their cops just get time off to spend on animal care and training. Santa Clara also doesn't offer extra pay for anti-terrorism training or higher levels of certification from the state Peace Officer Standards and Training organization, as San Jose does.

While extra cash for overtime, specialized training or foreign language skills might not raise many eyebrows, San Jose administrators have questioned the justification for at least some of the special pay.

City Manager Les White has asked that the city no longer pay a stipend to deputy managers for attending meetings of an advisory committee that oversees the San Jose/Santa Clara Water Pollution Control Plant. That stipend added $800 to one deputy city manager's $160,000 base salary and $100 to the $189,000 base salary of the other who qualified for the payment.

"That's ending," said Tom Manheim, a spokesman for the city administration. "It didn't seem to make sense that city employees are paid extra to do their job."

Many of the pay categories, however, have been negotiated in union contracts and can't be so easily eliminated. Still others are recent additions. After the Sept. 11, 2001, terrorist attacks, the city council approved a new 5 percent pay booster for all police to attend an annual in-house anti-terrorist training. San Francisco later adopted a similar program.

No names divulged

Apart from a handful of top administrators, it's unknown which employees are making what in salary and pay extras. The city, citing privacy concerns, has refused to release employee pay information by name unless the California Supreme Court, which is weighing lawsuits seeking disclosure by the Mercury News and other newspapers, orders otherwise.

By far the costliest special-pay category is overtime - usually one-and-a-half times the regular pay rate. It cost San Jose a total of $21.5 million in the last fiscal year and has been controversial for years. Particularly when it comes to the city's thinly staffed police and fire departments, where extra hours often are required.

City officials have argued it's cheaper to pay overtime than to pay the salaries and benefits of additional cops and firefighters. But union leaders say that strategy leads to costly injuries in a city with the state's highest proportion of big-city public safety disability retirements. They'd prefer a bigger staff to big overtime paychecks. The city has recently begun adding small numbers of police and firefighters to ease the staffing shortage.

But not all overtime is tied to overwork. Firefighters, who work multiple 24-hour shifts in a 56-hour week, are automatically paid overtime for three of their 56 hours. What's more, those who take on "administrative assignment" roles while working regular business hours are paid an additional $36 a day to make up for the loss of overtime pay.

Toward top of list

"Premium pays" for special skills and assignments are another big source of income, particularly in public safety jobs. The city's $175,000 officer, whose base pay is $83,400, wouldn't have cracked the top 100 highest-paid on $47,864 in overtime alone. It took special pay for extra training, on-call premiums and the extra compensation for having a police dog to help bring the officer near the top of the list.

While most of those categories are unique to public safety jobs, certain skills or circumstances also allow civilian city employees to boost their paychecks. City employees who decline the city's health and dental coverage get paid the money the city would have spent on it. For housing director Leslye Krutko - who is married to another city official and could get coverage under his health plan - that was worth an extra $5,350.

Some employees also can cash in their unused vacation. So for the city's busy redevelopment manager, the top overall earner of 2006, that contributed $8,648 toward his total pay of $254,000.

And in increasingly multicultural San Jose, bilingual ability is a big plus. There's extra pay for those who demonstrate fluency in another language - that's worth $754 a year - and $286 more for those who can read and write as well in another tongue.

Employee union leaders bristle at the suggestion that any of their members' pay is unreasonable, noting for example that public employees aren't eligible for Social Security retirement or perks like stock options that are available to their private-sector peers.

Police and firefighters say that even in the self-proclaimed Safest Big City in America, their jobs are dangerous. Five firefighters and an officer were hurt in December when a burning downtown house exploded, and a rookie officer was fatally shot making a routine traffic stop in 2001.

Erik Larsen, president of the city's largest employee union representing 2,900 librarians, janitors and other workers, said many struggle to pay the bills in high-priced Silicon Valley. Top base salary for a senior water meter reader is $59,000 in a region where $59,400 qualifies as low-income.

"Let's not demonize public employees that live in a region that has the highest cost of living in the country," Larsen said.

Contact John Woolfolk at jwoolfolk@mercurynews.com or (408) 975-9346.