Wednesday, November 16, 2016

I Was Wrong. They Do Have an Agenda.


Last night, the outgoing Commission had its last business meeting.  The urgent matter was approving the second reading of an Ordinance, but a few other matters were added, to get them off the books and into action.  One of those matters was the commitment the Village already intended, to acquire four new police vehicles.  There are four that are very high mileage and increasingly low reliability, the maintenance costs for them exceed the cost of a lease-purchase, the money was already set aside in the new budget, and all we had to do is place the final stamp of approval on the commitment.  The matter was listed in the Consent part of the Agenda, because it wasn't worth discussion.  Or so we assumed.

We received a letter from one of the Commissioners-elect, Jenny Johnson-Sardella, telling us why this matter should not be considered by the outgoing Commission.  It involved an expense, and Jenny proposed that it was not properly publicized.  Jenny couldn't be at the meeting, for reasons she did not specify.

Tracy Truppman, another Commissioner-elect, was there, and she said the same thing Jenny did.  Will Tudor, the other Commissioner-elect and "three-pack" member, wasn't there.

Jenny and Tracy had outgoing Commissioner Barbara Watts to add muscle for them, and Barbara took the matter off the Consent Agenda, so we would have to discuss it.

As I said, this matter has been discussed before.  It was discussed a few months ago, when the budget was approved.  The reason to cycle out old, high-mileage, and low-reliability police cruisers is that they cost too much to maintain, and they're not reliable.  These are emergency vehicles we're talking about.  Emergency vehicles that are not reliable is not a good thing.  So on the surface of it, there was no reason not to go forward with the intention, as we had already planned and for which we had made fiscal room, and the sooner, the better.  These cars take many months to complete, because they are specially equipped.  They're much more expensive than similar models for sale at car dealerships.

The only reason not to move ahead with this plan last night was to preserve the opportunity to cancel it.  And since cancelling the intention to order these cruisers is the one and only possible outcome of delaying the order, then it must be the reason two of our Commissioners-elect, and one outgoing Commissioner, wanted the delay.

We're then left to wonder why they would want to cancel such an order.  It can't be that police cruisers are considered trivial or unnecessary.  We very typically clamor for more police action and visibility and effectiveness.  It can't be saving money.  Repairing old cruisers, apart from keeping them unreliable and unavailable, costs more than paying the lease on new vehicles.

But there is one reason the new Commission might want us not to have new cruisers.  Tracy Truppman has told us what that reason is.  Tracy has decided, for whatever are her reasons, that we should cut back what she somehow understands or imagines our police expense to be, by no longer offering our officers take-home vehicles.  So presumably, Tracy, with the apparent agreement of Jenny and Barbara, has calculated that the fewer police cruisers we have, the less available they are to be provided as take-homes to our officers.  This is apparently Tracy's, and Jenny's and Barbara's, idea of an end run around the contracted commitment we made to our police officers, providing a take-home vehicle as a consolation or compensation for underpaying them.

And let's say, just for purpose of discussion, that Tracy and Jenny and Barbara had a point worth looking at.  Let's suppose that if we have fewer vehicles, and they're not very good, that we would have grounds not to be able to spare them for our officers to take home.  The theory about police officers taking home their cruisers versus not taking them home, apart from how the officers feel about it, is that if officers take home their vehicles, then municipalities have to have more vehicles available.  And the vehicles are only used when the given officer is on duty, or when he or she is commuting to and from the Village.  If officers don't take home their cruisers, and have to use their personal cars to commute to and from work, then the municipality needs fewer cruisers, and those cruisers are used continuously, by whoever is on duty each shift.  So one scheme requires more vehicles, which are spared when officers are off duty, and the other scheme requires fewer vehicles, which wear out much sooner, because they're used much more heavily.  Most knowledgeable people who calculate this conclude that it's essentially a wash, with the difference represented by the consolation or compensation experienced by the officers.  And since our officers-- the ones we underpay-- have been more or less content to accept the take-home vehicles as consolation or compensation enough, that's what we do.  It's in their PBA contract with us.

But here's the other problem, and the real problem, with Jenny's and Tracy's and Barbara's proposal.  Setting aside how not nice and not respectful and not honorable it is.  If we don't have newer police cruisers, then we have older police cruisers.  Those are the unreliable ones, that eat up more money in repairs than it would cost to replace them.  It means that when you or I have an emergency, and we need police help, we might not get it, if a cruiser won't start, or dies on the way to us.  It completely defeats the entire purpose of an emergency vehicle.

So last night, we went ahead with our lease commitment.  Bob Anderson wasn't there, and the vote to make the commitment was 3-1, with Barbara Watts representing her incoming replacements, who are trying to figure out a way to squeeze the BP police department.  This was what Tracy told us she would try to do, it's the way she said she'd try to do it, and she's been good for her agenda.


6 comments:

  1. Now look here. And wait just a careful minute.

    Two people have contacted me separately to make the same observation. That is that Jenny and Tracy made the exact same argument, using some of the exact same language, and both observers immediately thought this looked like a Sunshine violation. (The Sunshine proscription is that members of a Board, such as a municipal Commission or Council, cannot communicate with each other about Board issues except during noticed and publicly attended meetings. Sunshine applies from the moment of election.) And I agree, this does LOOK like a Sunshine violation. But as I told both of the people who called to complain about this, neither Jenny nor Tracy said they communicated about this, I'm sure that if asked or confronted, they would both say they did not communicate, and that any similarity was coincidental and due to having already understood Village matters in the same way, and there's no proof to the contrary. It could in fact be no more than a dramatic coincidence.

    So let's not be accusing our new Commissioners of anything, especially if no one can prove the accusation. Does it LOOK like too much for coincidence? Sure, it does LOOK that way. But it could be just a coincidence.

    And besides, it could be possible that they did discuss Village business inappropriately, but maybe they didn't know they couldn't. Maybe on the list of things they didn't know about the Village and its functioning is that the Sunshine Law exists, and they're now under its requirements. I don't know if anyone told them that yet. And how else would they know? Well, Jenny might, because she was on a major Board, where Sunshine would have been very prominent. But even if she knew that, maybe it didn't occur to her that it applied to now, after she was elected but before she was inaugurated.

    Fred

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  2. For the record the clerk informed the three newly elected officials that they were subject to the sunshine law on election night after the results were announced so you can strike through your last paragraph. Since the subject has been brought up let's not forget Watts brought up the identical items from backup she prepared prior to the meeting. Not accusing, just one more coincidence.

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  3. I made a second mistake. Cancelling the order for the new cruisers was not the only possible outcome of the proposed delay, and it is therefore not necessarily the reason for the proposal. The context of the request-- that Tracy had already publicly said she wanted to stop the practice of our offering our underpaid officers take-home vehicles-- led me to assume that was the reason she wanted herself and her new colleagues to make the decision, instead of the outgoing Commission's making it.

    But the other possible reason Jenny and Tracy might have wanted this matter on their Agenda, instead of on ours, was that they wanted the honor of approving this order. Not to worry. First of all, since fulfillment of this order takes such a comparatively long time, it's better to start it a month and a half sooner. Second, Tracy and Jenny, with four year terms, will have many, many opportunities to make their marks, and show their dedication to the police and to the neighborhood. They can craft an even better driveway/swale Ordinance, to show us how they would like to class up the neighborhood. They can get Parks and Parkways to prepare for us a median plan, so we don't have to pay a landscape architect hundreds of thousands of dollars for one. (No easy task to get P&P to do this. My hat will be off to the new Commission, if they can do it.) They can pick up the momentum on drainage and road improvement. They can get us better lighting in the Village. And most of all, as all of us agree, they can increase revenue for the Village. And I hope they won't do that in the negative, by reducing expenses instead. We already fail to meet many of our municipal responsibilities, because we can't afford them. Abdicating responsibility on a few more is not the preferred direction, or message.

    Fred

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  4. We moved to the Park in 1993 at the time the commission was having the exact same issues. If it wasn't the Police cars it was Public Works vehicles. These are necessary items, but yet here you are 24 years later still arguing about the same nonsense and this is why the Village has not progressed, it remains stagnant. Until the Village Commission thinks out side the box there will be no progress

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    1. Sira,

      Great to hear from you. Can you suggest some outside-the-box approach that seems promising to you? For cruisers, until now, we've relied heavily on hand-me-downs from other municipalities: when cruisers get enough miles on them for the other municipalities not to want to rely on them, we get them. It doesn't take a rocket scientist, as they say.

      When we have money, we don't spend it on stuff like that. In my first few years living here, I used to complain to the Commissions for charging a high millage, then just sitting on the money, and not improving the Village. I told them that if they weren't going to use the money, they should return it to me.

      We weirdly won't raise the millage, so we could afford what we need. We failed to annex, owing to the timidity and lack of vision and ambition of a poorly-timed Commission. What else do you see us doing?

      Fred

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