TU: Mayor Alvin Brown to embark on reorganization ahead of City Council vote

Please take a look at this.  I personally am very concerned about what appears to be an attempt to centralize power under the mayor office and appoint folks that for all intents and purposes appear to be CZARS.  I do not think the mayor's office should be allowed to turn any of these entities into political footballs with changes in personnel that "see" his point of view politically instead of doing their job or perhaps even favor one class of people over another which seems very popular at the federal level right now (not popular with most people but popular with the politicians).  The city already has enough problems and we don't need an empire maker for Mayor.  Right now, he needs to focus on solving the problems not trying to grease the skids to his re-election or to aid and abett the current president in his bid for re-election by setting our city up in a manner that might be useful for that.  I just do not have the warm fuzzies over some of this, and it is yet another matter that needs to be addressed immediately because the council has rushed this through at Christmas when most people are either away or going away for the Christmas holiday.............that in itself makes me very skeptical!

 

The council supports the mayor's plans for reorganization in local government, but won't vote on them by Tuesday.

Posted: December 12, 2011 - 12:02am | Updated: December 12, 2011 - 6:12am

Smoothing out the rough spots

Mayor Alvin Brown’s plan to reorganize Jacksonville City Hall has met some resistance from City Council members and civic figures in the run-up to a council vote. These are some worries that came up and varying ways they’ve been addressed:

Children’s Commission: Brown’s plan made the commission’s executive director directly accountable to the Mayor’s Office instead of the commission’s board. Skeptics worried that could add political overtones to some agency roles, such as distributing grants. The subject was still under discussion Friday.

Planning and Development Department: The bill proposed making the planning department part of the city’s economic development arm to help businesses speed up construction permitting and approvals. Council members questioned how well a development agency could serve neighborhood needs. Council committees voted to keep planning separate from economic development.

Commissioners: Brown wanted to call high-level administrators “commissioners.” Council members said that was confusing; Jacksonville once had elected city commissioners and elected Duval County commissioners, got rid of both in 1968, and now has dozens of unpaid advisory board members called commissioners. Brown’s staff asked for deference, but council committees voted to change the administrators’ title to “officers.”

Block grants: Some council members questioned whether changes to the Housing and Community Development Division could politicize how federal block grants are spent. Chief Administrative Officer Kevin Hyde said that wasn’t intended and offered to draft new language to show that. A change could be proposed before committees vote next month.

Office names: A panel of ex-City Hall administrators suggested an office Brown would label the Intra-Governmental Services Department could work fine with its old name, Central Services. After Brown’s council liaison, Jessica Deal, explained the reasoning for the new name, council members decided against trying to change it back.


Jacksonville Mayor Alvin Brown plans to forge ahead with portions of his plan to reorganize city government, even as the City Council puts off approving the plan until at least next month.

The changes the mayor will embark on are mainly internal, such as changing employee responsibilities or physically moving offices.

At the same time, Brown is continuing to press the council for its approval, which he’ll need to change titles, modify who reports to whom and create new departments.

“In order to really move forward,” he said, “they should pass it. I’m not waiting for the council. The citizens can’t wait.”

Since introducing the reorganization plans to the City Council just over a month ago, Brown has pushed for the plans to be passed by Dec. 13, a time frame seen as either ambitious or impossible.

“I’ve said from the beginning that it was a little aggressive to get an entire reorganization of the city done in one [council] cycle,” said council President Stephen Joost. “We’re just doing our due diligence.”

Nevertheless, Brown and his staff have said they thought the plan would be approved at Tuesday’s meeting, the earliest possible date. The fact that the council did not meet that deadline, said both Brown and Joost, should not be viewed as a sign of difficulty in the relationship between the legislative and executive branches.

“When laying out a vision,” Brown said, “not every member catches the vision immediately.”

Much of the Brown’s ideas have the council’s support, Joost said. He anticipates 95 percent or more of the plan passing.

“It’s simply council doing its job,” he said.

The fact that Brown’s plan isn’t being passed on his timetable, say those who watched the process, is in part a result of not having yet forged relationships with all the council and in part the simple fact of being new to the job.

“He’s never been in [city] government,” said former Mayor Jake Godbold. “He has an inexperienced staff. That doesn’t mean they’re not smart, but they’re new.”

On the other hand, said Godbold, who also served as council president: “Every mayor has his challenges with [the] council.”

Brown’s ambitious plan is the sort of thing that council members want to pore over, making quick passage unlikely.

“This is almost like having a charter change,” Godbold said. “He really took on a challenge.”

Mayors come into office convinced they have a mandate, an idea Brown echoes when he says that he’ll start moving ahead with changes in order to “keep my commitment to the citizens of Jacksonville.”

Then, the executive runs into a legislative branch that sees itself with its own mandate.

“We are set up for this very thing to happen,” said former Councilwoman Suzanne Jenkins, who butted heads with then-Mayor John Peyton over courthouse construction issues. “It’s a pain in the rear for both sides. No one enjoys it. But the citizens gain from the process.”

At the end of the day, Brown could also gain from the process, particularly as the administration gears up for putting together next year’s budget.

Work on that officially begins early next year, but some in the administration have already been tasked with finding cuts in their departments.

As the budget process plays out, the relationships built and lessons learned during the reorganization process will come into play.

timothy.gibbons@jacksonville.com, (904) 359-4103


Read more at Jacksonville.com: http://jacksonville.com/news/metro/2011-12-12/story/mayor-alvin-bro...

Views: 647

Comment

You need to be a member of First Coast Tea Party to add comments!

Join First Coast Tea Party

Comment by James Kring on December 12, 2011 at 8:33am

How many times have we heard from our leaders "The citizens can't wait"!

Oh yes we can, let the council do their work!

Comment by david weed on December 12, 2011 at 8:27am

I agree with the comments so far. We have a grossly bloated city government that could lower taxes and operating costs by simply going back to core functions. My last JEA bill amount was more than half my mortgage payment. It also contained $37. in "fees/tax". I might remind folks that the Mayor appoints the JEA "board" for 4 year terms. Useless patronage positions that don't help the taxpayer.

Comment by Patricia M. McBride on December 12, 2011 at 8:27am

Agree Dennis.  It is centralizing the power and decision making in the Mayor's office instead of with our elected officials at city council who are charged with making decisions for their constitutents.  I do not want to mayor to have altimate power to sift through everything and decide what will go before the council, and can't imagine anyone would.

 

Comment by Valerie Sawyer on December 12, 2011 at 8:25am

"It's Beginning to Sound a Lot Like Obamaville . . . Everywhere You Go . . ." (sung to the tune, "It's Beginning to Sound a Lot Like Christmas")

Comment by Patricia M. McBride on December 12, 2011 at 8:25am

Durwin, I agree with you also.  I am hoping folks will write.  I know it's a lot just now, but the JEA pay raises and the Brown reorganization are extremely important.

Comment by Patricia M. McBride on December 12, 2011 at 8:23am

Lee, you are right, the council should step up and not let Brown centralize power under his office.  My concern about a couple of the things he has done is doing is that he wants to decide what makes it before the council and that is a problem.  There may be things the council should decide, but Brown would be removing that decision from them and making decisions for our city that fall under council auspices.  I am not in favor, at all, of anything that take decision making away from our elected officials and gives it to the mayor who does not really represent me.  Clay Yarborough does (along with the 4 at large), and I not only want but expect him and the at large city councilmen/women to make any and all decisions for the people of Arlington (not the mayor sifting through things and maybe not putting something before the council he does not want when we might want it).

Comment by Lee Jones on December 12, 2011 at 8:14am
Time for our Republicans on the City Council to step up and do their job! Don't let this Mayor have a free had at doing what he wants as our Congressional leaders in Washington have allowed Obama to do! Can Brown be removed by a recall vote?
Comment by DURWIN WALTER DAVIS on December 12, 2011 at 7:59am

I am in total agreement.  The people voting in this "city" don't care what or who does what.  The proof for me are the runaway "private-public corporations" such as the JTA, JPA, and JEA.  These have become self-serving, self-aggrandizing entities that show by their actions, the public their supposed to serve is more an apparent aggravation than authority.  Total up their "perks", "junkets", out of town "seminars" held in Hawaii and Vegas or the French Riviera, and utilities could be halved, JTA could be totally free, and the JPA could drop their fees and promote more goods shipped from China.  Widening and redredging the channel and giving Anderson a 68% pay hike is the reward for him to build his liquid "Tower of Babel".  Jacksonville deserves its politicians, and their pocket stuffing, unneeded projects.

National Debt Clock

  

The First CoastTea Party is a non-profit organization. We have no deep-pocketed special interest funding our efforts.

You may contact us at:

First Coast Tea Party
1205 Salt Creek Island Dr
Ponte Vedra, FL 32082
904-392-7475

Helpful Links

Blog Posts

RYAN NICHOLS - Hardened Criminal?? Seriously??

If you're not already aware. This is what's going on in DC while dangerous criminals are allowed back out on the streets.  It's horrifying that this is happening to our citizens and veterans for protesting the hijacking of our election process. This is still happening! They are STILL being tortured and treated like full on terrorists. 

You may not be aware of the typical things they're forced to go through...…

Continue

Posted by Babs Jordan on August 14, 2022 at 8:44am

© 2024   Created by LeadershipCouncil.   Powered by

Badges  |  Report an Issue  |  Terms of Service