Why Houston?

July 7, 2013

Item 5B on this week’s city council agenda relates to air conditioning equipment for our zoo.

The city proposes to spend almost $120,000 dollars for various units, once again without bidding, but through a buy board.

Four percent of this money is paid to this Houston based buy board.  A review of the contract documents relating to this vendor reveals that the vendor was not the lowest price  offerer.  The contract was issued in 2010.

Air conditioning equipment and services are available through the  El Paso based Region 19.  We would have to pay a percentage to this buy board also but at least that money would stay in El Paso.

Them again if this item had been taken out to bid we might have found lower prices than through the buy board.  I don’t understand how the city can determine that the buy board is more cost effective than bidding without in fact bidding.

Adding insult to injury, this money is coming from our quality of life bonds.

We deserve better

Brutus


Public confession

July 6, 2013

I watched the video of this week’s city council to see what they did with the proposed new ordinance that deals with deadlines and procedures relative to placing items on the city council agenda.

In two prior posts I explained that the new ordinance would change the rules.  The old ordinance (17616) required that each member of council receive all of the proposed legal documents by noon of the fourth day before the city council meeting.  If those documents were not provided to each council member in time, council could not vote on the item unless it first took a special vote to declare that failure to take action on the item would be detrimental to the interests of the city.

I also showed that they have been using the wrong old ordinance number.  They used the number 17016 (which established the capital improvements advisory committee) several times and then changed public documents improperly to cover up the problem.  As of this writing they still have not fixed the copy that was posted for the public.  It still repeals 17016 instead of 17616.

At this week’s meeting the city attorney incorrectly told council that the old ordinance required them to table any item if all the backup had not been posted by noon the Thursday before a meeting.  That statement was incorrect in that council was required either to table the item or take a special vote declaring that failure to act on the item would be detrimental to the interests of the city.

Then the shoe dropped

The city attorney then said of the requirement to table the item “council wasn’t doing that anyway”.  Violating a city ordinance is an ethics violation for council members.

I would think that the city attorney would advise city council members if they are breaking the law.

Absent that, the municipal parliamentarian certainly should.

Our current municipal parliamentarian is the city attorney also.

It would appear that she is not doing either job here.

We deserve better

Brutus


Curve Ball

July 5, 2013

Over thirty years ago, a small group of El Paso Citizens thought that the City needed a venue to teach our children science. All science, a “hands on” museum where they can learn about nature, space, gravity, anatomy, etc. They put their money where their mouth was and through their tireless efforts, Insights Museum was born. Over the next 30 years plus, over a million Children from our school districts alone, learned the beauty of science. Countless physicists, chemists, physicians, engineers and even an astronaut, had their first exposure to the beauty of science at our museum. “Poof”, says the Wilson Quintet of Byrd, Cook, Lilly, Ortega and Niland and it’s gone. So we needed a downtown ballpark so the children can sit in the stands and eat junk food while watching minor league baseball players, hit, catch and scratch. Such a deal!

Always thinking of the children since they are our future, they tossed the Insights Museum out in the street, replacing it with first base.

Did they give us an interim location for our children? How about the El Paso train Station? No lets rent/give it to the Texas Tech Architectural School for $1.00 a year for 75 years. Some of our kids may become architects. I’ve got a better idea, let’s stick a Children’s museum into the Quality of life Bond issue which if they approve, will result in the City hall and the Insights Museum imploding. They think they are getting a museum but it will take 5 years if ever. Give the kids popcorn and cracker jacks.

Despite the City’s efforts, Insights lives on. There is an active board of directors who like their predecessors, see the value of a science museum for the children of El Paso. They see, out of the Rubble of the old Insights Museum a new and better era coming. I’m sure that the new Mayor and Council will see their value and give them the support they need. Oh yes we want to support the baseball team but isn’t this important?

Just think of it, dedicating space in the new baseball stadium addition in honor of the Insights Museum on which the stadium is situated. How about a display about the physics of a curve ball? a sinker? a fastball? ala George Wills. the art of hitting the ball, opposite field hitting etc. I’m sure we can come up with that type of display. Things don’t just happen by accident, there is a science to baseball Misters Doubleday, Foster and Hunt.


Independence every day

July 4, 2013

… That to secure these rights, Governments are instituted among Men, deriving their  just powers from the consent of the governed.  That whenever any Form of Government becomes destructive of these ends it is the Right of the People to alter or abolish it …

Eternal vigilance is the price of liberty

Cato


Pay up

July 3, 2013

I guess city staff thinks it is time for us to pay up.  Since November 2012 this blog has covered the wanton spending that the former city council authorized.

Now the city manager is evidently going to propose a 3.6% increase in our taxes for next year.  I wrote in For whom the bill tolls about El Paso being the 5th most expensive of America’s top 50 cities in terms of tax rates in 2011.

Now it appears that we will climb up to 4th position unless the rascals in the other cities can out do our efforts.

Much of what we have been writing about here has not been about the policies behind what city council has been doing.  We have been trying to point out that the way they have been doing it is wasteful.  The articles are in the archives so I will only post their themes here:

Issuing no-bid contracts for construction work.

Buying through buy boards when in some cases 4% of the money we spend on them goes to out of town governments.  This percentage has cost us hundreds of thousands of dollars.

Declaring an unneeded emergency around building the ball park.  This caused us to tear down city hall and commit to spend over $70 million (at this point) to relocate city facilities.

Rushing into ball park construction without valid cost estimates.  The official ball park cost number is now in excess of $62 million when we were told it would be $50 million.

Tearing down the mayor’s office. Building a new one and tearing it down before even occupying it.  Then building an even bigger one because in their haste the city did not plan.

Paying for alterations and moving city departments into temporary facilities throughout the city while waiting for newer facilities to be designed and built as a result of tearing down city hall.

Spending $3 million that a reasonable person would know would not be collected from property taxes on a local refinery.  The appraised value of the refinery  increased from $280 million to $1.1 billion in one year.  A settlement was reached placing the appraised value at $320 million.

We now have the highest hotel occupancy tax in the state.  Our tax rate is so high that the Texas legislature passed a bill limiting the tax rates other cities can charge at a rate below ours.  El Paso was grandfathered.  So much for tourism.

In addition to the proposed tax increase the city staff plans to recommend increasing our garbage bills by $1 per month.  Is this to pay for the increased cost of garbage collection?  No.  Staff plans to use the funds to help pay for other services.  This is another tax increase, plain and simple.

There is no denying that these bills now have to be paid.  Our hope lies in believing that this mayor and council will do a better job of stewardship.

We deserve better

Brutus