Posts Tagged ‘Accountability’

WQUN Interview, this coming Saturday 7:00 am

Thursday, April 22nd, 2010

A radio interview on The New Haven Citizen’s Action 2010 Tax Relief Rescue Mission, with Susan Campion, volunteer, will be aired:

Saturday, 4/24 at 7:07 am (Early Bird Special)
John Deandre’s Newsmakers program
Tune in on 1220 am on your radio or click here for live streaming.

Learn more about Performance Based Budgeting from Susan Campion.

Final Public Hearing, Wednesday, April 28 @ 6:30 pm

Thursday, April 22nd, 2010

We need your support by coming to the final public hearing on the budget. Your presence will make a big difference and we need you to come even if you can only stay a short while. The meeting is at City Hall, on the second floor, 165 Church Street.

We are asking everyone to do these three things:

#1 —- Sign the Petition to Cut the Budget by 10%
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The Mayor is proposing a 2% cut through Innovation Based Budgeting (IBB), we are asking that number to be 10% to be no new (net) taxes. Please call Jeffrey at 203-676-0880 or email [email protected] if you have petitions ready to be picked up. While our Citywide Brainstorm has generated over 315 revenue/expense ideas, we believe city managers are best poised to implement cost savings measures to achieve a 10% reduction in the budget.

http://www.petitiononline.com/NewHaven/petition.html

#2 —- Come to the Final Public Hearing On The Budget —- **** PLEASE COME TO THIS EVENT!!!!! **** —-
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Final public hearing on the budget. We need people to turn out on this night. Bring your neighbors!!!
Wednesday, April 28, 2010 @ 6:30 pm
Board of Alders Chambers, City Hall, 165 Church Street, New Haven, CT 06511

#3 —- Contact these Board of Alders, Finance Committee Members —- They will be making a recommendation to the Full BOA on the Budget —-
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Ward#
4 Andrea Jackson-Brooks [email protected] 102 DeWitt Street New Haven, CT 06519-2131 203-776-0502

5 Jorge Perez [email protected] 24 Cassius Street New Haven, CT 06519-2313 203-562-4373

7 Bitsy Clark [email protected] 320 Audobon Court New Haven, CT 06511-1203 203-772-4455

9 Roland Lemar [email protected] 549 Orange Street New Haven, CT 06511- 203-240-6135

10 Justin Elicker [email protected] 192 Willow Street New Haven, CT 06511-2501 203-500-2969

11 Maureen O’Sullivan-Best [email protected] 54 Foxon Street New Haven, CT 06513-3404 203-467-9783

14 Stephanie Bauer [email protected] 55 East Pearl Street New Haven, CT 06513-3206 203-785-0065

16 Migdalia Castro [email protected] 139 Lloyd Street,Unit 3, New Haven, CT 06513-3811 777-6835

22 Greg Morehead [email protected] 13 Frances Hunter Drive, New Haven, CT 06511-3533 203-507-7766

23 Yusuf I. Shah [email protected] 730 George Street #309, New Haven, CT 06511-5217 843-4450

29 Carl Goldfield [email protected] 25 Roydon Road New Haven, CT 06511-2806 782-2064 w:787-9222

Online Petition – Cut The Budget By 10%

Friday, March 19th, 2010

A Petition to the Members of the Board of Alders Finance Committee

The undersigned residents and taxpayers of New Haven wish to register our opposition to Mayor DeStefano’s proposed 2010-2011 budget. The $670,448,590 proposal is a large one and calls for a city-wide 9–11% tax increase, regardless of taxpayers’ ability to carry this burden. This is unacceptable.

We agree with the Mayor that these times are not normal. We disagree emphatically, however, with the Mayor’s proposed responses to these events. The Mayor’s proposal does little to attack the real problem, which is rapidly escalating costs, well beyond the rate of inflation. We refuse to be deflected from this focus.

In normal times, those who want work can generally find it. In normal times, wages and salaries increase, real estate values rise, the stock market expands – and we can support tax increases. But these are not normal times. In households throughout New Haven, families are re-learning how to “do without”. In New Haven’s businesses, and in our churches, colleges, and universities, responsible officials are finding ways to cut costs – not to control their growth, but to cut them. We affirm that, in these decidedly not normal times, New Haven’s city government must do the same. As City Alders, you have the authority to demand changes in the proposed budget and not simply accept it with minor changes As those who voted you into office, we deserve your protection and support.

We urge you to request that every department head identify ways to cut their actual expenses– not their proposals, but their current budgets – by 10% and to submit such reductions in a revised budget proposal. These are competent professionals who know how best to do this. They alone know how the dollar is spent and which activities provide the least value.

As an outside group we cannot presume to dictate where those cuts must be. We are confident, however, that competent professionals in every department know best how to cut 10% from their expenses with the least pain to New Haven’s quality of life and critical City services. Let them use furloughs, freeze hiring, wages and salaries, health care benefits, or simply turn the lights off earlier. Let them identify the ways to achieve the 10% reduction. We expect that some services will be sacrificed, and we are reluctantly ready to deal with that. We are not ready for yet another tax increase.

We know that what we propose is difficult. But these are not normal times. We urge you to send the Mayor’s proposal back and demand accountability from each and every department throughout this city. We love this city. We want this city to remain a great place to live for all.

To sign our petition to cut 10% of the budget: http://www.petitiononline.com/NewHaven/petition.html

Or if you want to print out the petition and help gather signatures. Return it to Jeffrey Kerekes, 43 Lyon Street, New Haven, CT 06511 203-676-0880

One More Answered, One More To Go

Friday, March 19th, 2010

The City is answering your budget questions. I submitted mine. What are your questions?

Here is one of the remaining two unanswered questions. One more to go:

(3/19/2010) Q: Under current contracts, does the City have the power to unilaterally change the work requirements such that we move City Hall to a four day work week and cut all related expenses including a proportional amount of salaries and benefits? You might not be able to change the contract on the days they actually work, but can you indirectly deal with this by decreasing the number of days?

A: The current bargaining agreements between the City and our Unions all contain language that prevent us from unilaterally making any of the changes suggested.

Remaining Question:

Question #3 — Not Answered Yet

#3: Why are we giving Chris DePino $50,000 a year as a state lobbyist when we have 8 Representative (2 senators and 6 reps) at the capitol? What have been the total payments to him for lobbying over all the years and what was the first year he was paid? What has his total ROI been from his specific efforts? Same thing with the about $100,000 we spend with William & Jennings our “Washington Communicator”?

Ask your budget questions at City Website

Wednesday, March 10th, 2010

You can ask you budget related questions at the city website and I was told they will work hard to get you an answer within 24-36 hours. Here are the questions I submitted. What are the questions you submitted?

Dear Jessica:

I am submitting my budget questions at the suggestion of Sean Matteson and as offered on the City of New Haven Website. I am cc:ing my fellow FRAC commissioners although these questions are coming from me and not the commission.

I would like to first say thank you for adding this feature to the city website and for the modifications to the City budget document (it still needs formatting improvements), which whether or not done for this reason, feels like it speaks to some of the changes I have been asking for and I appreciate that. Same thing for the voluminous Forms 106, which are a major improvement over recent years. I think it would be great for you to annually add the availability of Forms 106 and the excel version of the budget onto the city website for those of us interested in reading it.

Here are a few of my budget questions:

#1: I am interested to know why the Gateway Terminal only pays a few hundred dollars a year on taxes instead of $235,000? see attached advocate article. If we plan on raising taxes, shouldn’t we be collecting it from all entities? Are there other similar/related instances in the city?

#2: What is the city’s plan to deal with the dramatically increasing costs associated with pensions, healthcare, retiree healthcare, and workers compensation? They are rising much faster then we can keep up particularly given the deficits with the State Budget.

#3: Why are we giving Chris DePino $50,000 a year as a state lobbyist when we have 8 Representative (2 senators and 6 reps) at the capitol? What have been the total payments to him for lobbying over all the years and what was the first year he was paid? What has his total ROI been from his specific efforts? Same thing with the about $100,000 we spend with William & Jennings our “Washington Communicator”?

#4 Under current contracts, does the City have the power to unilaterally change the work requirements such that we move City Hall to a four day work week and cut all related expenses including a proportional amount of salaries and benefits? You might not be able to change the contract on the days they actually work, but can you indirectly deal with this by decreasing the number of days?

#5 Why not freeze all travel expenses? The Mayor’s budget proposes $724,333 to spend on travel expenses.

#6 The citizens of New Haven were promised by many Alders and the Mayor that the Municipal ID program would only be paid for by grant funding yet we see $53,833 for a staff member (does not include pension and benefits, or unassigned managers who oversee this project) and $190,372 (in the general fund Form 106 for the CSA) in operating expenses totaling about $1/4 Million dollars. I have no philosophical problems with this program. I did state before it was approved that I didn’t think we could afford to add a new program into the budget. I still feel that way. Why is this in the general fund budget?

#7 Why haven’t we raised the landing fees at Tweed to be at minimum close to what Waterbury charges? Why not a small increase in the fuel flowage fee?

#8 Why do we pay the City Clerk $46,597 a year, when we only pay aldermen/women $2000 a year and they clearly work harder and vastly more hours? They are both elected positions. Can we cut City Clerk to $2000?

#9: Do you have an official legal opinion from our Corporation Counsel and from the FAA that specifically and unequivocally states we are responsible to pay them back if we close Tweed? If so, can you please send a copy? How much would we exactly owe them? How long must we keep the airport open until that debt is forgiven(if it is forgiven), and under what terms is that debt forgiven? If we closed the airport, on what schedule of repayments would we have to pay the FAA back? What happens if we don’t pay it back (refuse to pay it back)? Why does this liability not show up in any Budget or related documents such as the bond offering statement? If we owe something, even a huge number, we should have it spelled out in detail so as to make informed decisions and if we owe them something, this is a liability that must be reported, no?

Mayor Seeks Budget Questions From the Public

Tuesday, March 9th, 2010

Check this out and enter your budget questions. They report that they will try to respond in 24-36 hours.

Ask your budget question here

Budget Panel Gets WTNH Coverage

Wednesday, July 1st, 2009

Check out this Channel 8 piece. Nice work on the interview Tim!

City to Name New Asst. Super for Portfolio Schools

Monday, June 8th, 2009

The New Haven Register reports “New York City school reformer Garth Harries [to be appointed] to the new post of Assistant Superintendent for Portfolio and Performance Management”. From the article, it seems like this would be a great addition to the educational reform needed in New Haven. I wish this person success. To complement the City Administration, this new trend of hiring experts to run the city is an encouraging development – especially if we can truly leave behind this “mom and pop”/”friends and family” style politics and cronyism. We can only hope that bringing in this new person from the outside does not meet with the same resistance/interference from politicos in the City Administration (and BOE) that are notorious for needing to control everything. This “business as usual” B.S. has already interfered with at least two outside experts hired by the city – the police chief and Michele Whelley from the new EDC. I hope Mr. Harries brings some antacids with him.

Citizens Budget Commission – NYC

Saturday, May 16th, 2009

The NYC Citizens Budget Commission provides an interesting website reviewing NYC finances. Their mission: “The Citizens Budget Commission is a nonpartisan, nonprofit civic organization devoted to influencing constructive change in the finances and services of New York City and New York State government.” Check out their Myth of Uncontrollables, which directly confronts the notion of “its all fixed costs,” the mantra of the New Haven BOA and Administration.

Freedom of Information Commission Hearing – Part 1

Friday, May 1st, 2009

There was a hearing at the State Freedom of Information Commission today. You can read the background in the New Haven Independent and The New Haven Advocate. Here is the sanitized version of the city’s projections. The attached version is different then the one Jeffrey saw in July 2008 and the one he requested under the FOIA. Notice that the City’s projections keeps taxes completely unchanged for five years. I don’t think anyone believes that taxes will remain completely flat for five years. Things inherently cost more each year. More updates forthcoming.