Today we bring the first of a three-part interview with the council candidates. One thing we have learned is that with ten candidates, it is a bit like herding cats. We never did reach Linda Parfitt despite several emails and numerous calls. We will try to get her this week.
The Vanguard asked each candidate 12 questions and asked them to limit their response to 100 words (some went over 100 words, but we decided not to edit). Given the complexity of the questions, that is not completely fair and their answers should be judged accordingly. However, breaking the questions into three groups of four, and having a full ten candidates respond, would produce a 4000 story at minimum, which is a lot for people to absorb.
So we have done our best under the circumstances to provide the public with some information about these candidates, one of whom will become the fifth councilmember within the next month.
Here are the first four questions:
- Pick an issue that you think is important that you don’t feel will get much ink and tell us about it and what you propose to do.
- What do you see as your top priority if you are the one appointed to council?
- What is your understanding of the problems facing the city in terms of unfunded liabilities and pensions?
- How would you resolve the city’s budget problems within the scope of the collective bargaining agreements with various bargaining units?
Paul Boylan
2. In order to get the people’s business done it is essential to avoid deadlocks. That’s why governing bodies consist of an odd number of decision makers. Right now there are four sitting council members. They need a fifth to avoid 2-2 deadlocked votes on action items. If I am chosen to fill Don Saylor’s seat, my primary function will be to act as the tie-breaking vote, and that means my top priority will be to listen as well as I can, be as informed as possible, and then make the best and wisest decision I can based on what is best for Davis.
3. I understand that there is a big problem – the same problem every other California city, county, school district, fire district, community services district, water district and cemetery district is facing. Unfunded mandates are demanding a bigger and bigger share of revenues to satisfy, reducing the funding available to address other concerns.
4. I am a negotiator by training and vocation. All I can say is that I believe in the interest based bargaining model – an answer that might not make any sense to some of your readers, but it is the best I can do given the time available to answer. Beyond that, it would be a mistake to discuss strategy on how to achieve a new agreement that helps resolve contractual issues, including but not limited to the unfunded liability and pension problem alluded to in the previous question. All I can say is that it can be done.
Walter Bunter
The RDA will receive tax increment revenues totaling $9,900,000 (city budget). 26.89 Percent goes to the County via our Pass Thru Agreement and 20 percent goes for affordable housing. As assessed property values increase in the Redevelopment Area, the tax increment revenue will continue to increase.
We will be halfway through the 50-year plan in 2012 when we need to start drafting the next five-year implementation plan. Part of that process would give us an opportunity to do outreach workshops and evaluate impacts on the General Fund.
2. The FY 2011-2012 budget would be my highest priority. Using careful analysis, I would try to minimize increases requested by each Department while setting aside more funds to pay for obligated pension and health benefits.
One aspect would be to evaluate opportunities to limit the amount of overtime hours authorized with the provision for the City Manager to reassign hours during the year.
3. The City depends on CalPERS to grow our pension fund contributions. Our annual contributions are dependent on their projected annual rate of returns which are variable year-to-year due to their investment strategies.
Council members have lost confidence in CalPERS. Councilmember Sue Greenwald estimated that using a more realistic 7.25% ARR means that the City’s costs would increase by $7 million.
This situation makes our budgeting process very difficult.
4. I believe we could start work toward reducing the City’s long-term unfunded liability by developing alternatives for employee compensation and retirement benefits in preparation for contract negotiations in 2012.
This effort would need the help of the Finance and Budget Commission and a representative from each bargaining unit. I expect some of the alternatives could be two tier employment systems. We will need input from each bargaining unit to craft salary and benefits that will still attract new employees.
Kari Fry
2. My top priority would be a creative long-term approach to solve the problem of our unfunded liabilities. We need to think in terms of our current defined liabilities relating to employee benefits. We also should think conceptually—such as deferred street maintenance and other off-the-books deferred projects and community expectations.
3. We need to bring our liabilities on to our books and find a way to balance our budget and pay as we go moving forward.
4. We need to be able to run through all the “what-if” scenarios without fears and adversarial feelings. Let’s all be willing to look at different models to get a sense of how the bargaining units will respond by including them early in the process. If I were to be appointed to City Council I would be willing to commit extra time and energy to this important issue.
Sherelene Harrison
2. Managing growth in Davis is a priority. Growth involves increased demand for water, city services, educational expenses and housing. Reviewing current infill projects, allocated growth percentages, and the fiscal budget will provide a better understanding of how to manage realistic growth.
3. Unfunded liabilities in excess of $53 million in retiree health care costs and current levels of CALPERS pension costs is a tremendous challenge. As a city, Davis must comply with State and Federal restrictions. Assisting in establishing methods to decrease the city’s monetary contributions is a responsibility of city council. In today’s fiscal environment, employers in all phases of production and service are placing more monetary responsibilities for funded pension and health care benefits on the employee. The city council must find a way to communicate how changes are necessary in order to balance the current budget.
4. Bargaining unit agreements are contracts between the employer and employee unions. Negotiations between the union representatives, city staff and city council can only happen during contract hearings. Prior to negotiations, open communication between city staff, council and employees is necessary. Communication to those involved in negotiations as to how increasing or decreasing budget line items affect the overall fiscal stability would assist in fair solutions for all.
Kerry Loux
2. I think sustainability is key for Davis’s future vision. Most important is to consider all three inter-connected “E’s”: sustainability of the Environment, Economy, and social Equity. Without a stable economy, Davis cannot be a magnet for green technology and environmental design innovations nor can we ensure equity of jobs, housing and services. We must address economic restructuring and development strategies proactively, using the budget crisis as an opportunity for public engagement. Enhancing the downtown as a shopping destination should include participation by the Chamber, DDBA and existing small businesses. Boulder and Portland have brought a fresh perspective to city departmental structure, with sustainability as the key organizational factor. Studying the urban design and downtown revitalization approaches of other cities, such as San Luis Obispo or Vancouver, is also valuable.
3, 4. (she combined these into one answer): I think it’s safe to say that every city in the state is facing similar problems of budget shortfalls and unfunded liabilities created by policies adopted in ‘fat’ years, just as most private citizens have had to tighten belts in this difficult economic downturn. The harsh reality is that sacrifices must be made across the board. While none of the options available to address this untenable situation is attractive—instituting a two-tiered pension system, layoffs or furloughs, hiring freezes or salary reductions—concessions must be made. Inviting key players from the various bargaining units to share in problem-solving and mediated discussion is one workable way to get input and buy-in to solutions generated. What are top priorities? What can be cut or deferred? Rather than creating roadblocks, transparency and inclusion in the process are the answer.
Robert Smith
2. My top priority would be to learn the issues facing the City Council at this time.
3. I was not aware of any unfunded liabilities and pensions, since I have not been on the City Council in the past. I would certainly like to reduce these liabilities as much as possible.
4. I would first inform myself by reading the current bargaining agreements. Then I would ask to meet with the heads of the bargaining units, and begin to resolve the city’s budget problems by meeting with each bargaining unit head.
Dan Wolk
2. As I wrote in my application statement, the city’s number one priority right now should be its budget and fiscal challenges. These challenges are both short-term (including the possibility of the elimination of our redevelopment agency and the millions it brings to the city every year in property tax dollars), as well as long-term (most notably, unfunded liabilities in the areas of pensions, retiree health benefits, and public infrastructure). From day one, I would join with the Council in making a concerted effort to address these daunting issues.
3. The issue of how to pay for our unfunded liabilities is one of the main reasons I submitted my name for the vacancy. It is a problem of particular concern to my generation, which is worried about the impacts these liabilities might have on our lifetimes and those of our children. Under current estimates (which may actually undervalue the problem because of the CalPERS rate of return), we are looking at a nearly $100 million liability between retiree health benefits (OPEB) and pensions (CalPERS). And this does not include capital projects, such as improvements to the wastewater treatment plant or transportation infrastructure, which also should be considered “unfunded liabilities.” All this translates into millions more per year that would have to come out of our already-squeezed budget. I commend the City Council, at its January 18 meeting, for unanimously recognizing the gravity of this situation and asking staff to come back to the Council with a plan to address this problem.
4. As a public employee of a local government myself, I deeply value the commitment of our city employees. And considering that the residents-to-employee ratio is at its highest level in decades, those employees are working harder than ever. As Jerry Brown said recently, however, there is a need in this challenging time for “shared sacrifice” from all sides and that “everything should be on the table and everyone should be at the table to talk about it.” For example, my unit and others at Solano County have had to make sacrifices and are steeling for more. All sides, including management, employee groups, and the public, must be willing to work collaboratively in addressing our fiscal challenges.
Vince Wyatt
1. I believe that the voice of “the Little guy” of Davis is being overlooked and marginalized by the Davis City Council. I speak here of the Working Poor, the Unsheltered Homeless, the American Indians and Mexica people, the Gays and Lesbians, and Struggling University Students. The concerns of these various – yet interconnected, disenfranchised – communities need to be discussed far more often, and in an open forum, by the city council. I propose to bring this critically needed dialogue to the council.
2. To do all I can as an individual to ensure that the council is responsible and responsive to the citizens of Davis. And here I am talking about ALL of the people, not just a few. I don’t want Davis to continue going down the same path that it’s -apparently- heading now; a town in which only the people with the means to make it happen can afford to live here. On the day-to-day level, all levels of communication between the members of the city council and the general public, as well as the council and it’s own internal support structure(s) need to be streamlined and improved.
3. The City of Davis is currently unable to to pay its employees the full pensions that the City had promised to the workers. The City is also unable to pay for the rising costs of retiree medical benefits. The workers described above have all earned the money that is tied up in their pensions and health insurance; the City is going to have to pay them, sooner or later. Both sides of the issue are going to have to sit down at the meeting table -once again- to hash out a formula for progress.
4. The City needs to come up with the money needed to satisfy the terms as put forward in the collective bargaining agreements. The health of California’s ailing economy will no doubt play a major role in this process. It’s a two way street however; here in Davis, the various bargaining units involved are going to have to agree to a scaled-down version of their traditional/usual request(s). In time, the gears of this mechanism will finally mesh, and the city’s budget problem -in this area- will be solved.
The Vanguard will have the next set of four question tomorrow. We hope to get all ten candidates by that point.
—David M. Greenwald reporting
What an interesting and diverse group of candidates (myself exempted, of course)! I love this town. But the diversity and intelligence of our citizens spoil us. Any one of these people (myself exempted, of course) would make an excellent city counsel person. The choice isn’t the lesser of ten evils, it is deciding who is best among an already excellent group. Where else in this great country can this be honestly said? Nowhere but in Davis that I know of.
However, despite the clear excellence of the field, I must say that, based on the statements I just read, my favorite of the bunch (other than myself, of course) is Vince.