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Recurring theme at the heart of debate on flood CEO: current City Hall can't get it right; needs push from private sector
Mar. 10, 2009 12:58 pm
Some in the local business community have been pretty sure they can help City Hall almost since the flood waters began to recede last June.
The latest example of the private sector's coming to the rescue surfaced last week when council members Justin Shields and Monica Vernon proposed that the city add to its payroll a flood czar of sorts.
Vernon called the position a flood CEO.
The City Council will discuss the matter at its meeting Wednesday evening and may even act on it.
There are two significant features of the proposal:
Firstly, as presented by Shields, the flood czar would report directly to the City Council and not directly to City Manager Jim Prosser. Shields said the city's organizational chart would include a “dotted line” to Prosser, which apparently means that flood CEO and Prosser would communicate.
This part of the proposal is not particularly new: Shields and Vernon have been trying for some months, without success, to get a staff policy maker who would report directly to the City Council and not be managed by Prosser. Heretofore, the council majority has had little time for such a thing. Prosser is the council's CEO, and Prosser and the city staff are the council's policy advisers, the council majority has said.
A second significant feature of the latest proposal is that the cost of the new city employee would be paid by the private sector.
Asked after last week's meeting, Vernon deferred when asked for details about whom or what this private-sector force might be.
She said it was a “captain of industry” who had come up with the idea.
“I don't think it's important to tell you right now,” Vernon said when asked for specifics. “We have some people (in the business community) who are very interested in this and who get it: that it (the new position) needs to be part of city government.”
Suffice to say, it will be a great discuss on Wednesday evening.
Council member Kris Gulick was quick to note last week that creating a CEO slot that reports to the council when the council already has a CEO in the city manager would cause problems for the city's current structure of “governance.”
Shields did note that Patrick DePalma, a vice president at AEGON USA who headed up the council's government reorganization task force, recommended a year ago and again in recent months that Prosser needed, at the least, an assistant city manager who would report to Prosser. The council and Prosser have put that idea aside in the past because of cost.
The new wrinkle -– the new allure -- is that the private sector will now foot the bill.
In that regard, it's hard to imagine a local “captain” of industry whose company doesn't have some entanglement with City Hall.
There are street issues out by Rockwell Collins and economic development incentives as well. The city is leasing an office building as a temporary City Hall with an AEGONUSA sign out front. The city is set to approve a franchise agreement to allow Alliant Energy to continue to operate in the city.
In truth, the city has had relationships with some or all of these private companies for a number of years in the form of donations of executive expertise. No one has suggested any problems with that.
In the broad picture, that the private sector is apparently willing to pay for a flood CEO or specialist is a piece of a recurring theme: that City Hall isn't doing that good a job on flood recovery.
Chuck Peters, CEO of Gazette Communications, recounted at a recent meeting of the Downtown Rotary Club how he and a few others jumped on an AEGONUSA corporate plane in the days after last June's flood to see how Grand Forks, N.D., had recovered from a similar disaster in 1997.
That Peters is still telling the story is an indication he doesn't think lessons learned on the trip got much of an audience at City Hall.
In recent weeks, the Downtown Rotary Club devoted four straight meetings to a newly created, local flood-recovery entity called the Economic Planning and Redevelopment Corp.
The corporation has City Council member Monica Vernon on its four-person board as well as Linda Langston, Linn County supervisor. But the push to create the corporation came from some in the private sector who feel the city's flood recovery needs private-sector know-how.
The chairman of the EPRC is John Smith, president/CEO at trucking firm of CRST International Inc. Smith, incidentally, is the boss of newly announced mayoral candidate Ron Corbett, who is a CRST vice president.
Clay Jones, CEO at Rockwell Collins, also has turned up in public talking about Cedar Rapids' flood recovery. That happened when he crossed paths and spoke briefly with President Obama after the president's speech to The Business Council on Feb. 13 at the White House.
Keep in mind, the city of Cedar Rapids, after much debate and many meetings of the Home Rule Charter Commission in 2004 and 2005, voted overwhelmingly to get rid of the commission form of government that the city had had in place from the early years of the 20th Century. In its place, voters picked a city government with professional management and a part-time mayor and council.
It's no little irony that the commission form of government came to be in Galveston, Texas, after a hurricane devastated that city in 1900. Back then, the private sector stepped forward and said that city government needed its expertise if the city was to recover. In the commission government, council members double as experts in certain fields like finance, public works and public safety.
After a few years, the council-manager government, which most cities now have, began to replace commission governments.