City open records

June 5, 2013

The city has added a new section of it’s web site that allows us to make open records requests.

Follow this link to get to the page.  It looks like the city has made a good start in making it easier for us to make these requests.

As is unfortunately often the case much of what the city has posted on the page is either wrong or incomplete to the point of being misleading.

Texas law controls the handling of these requests.  The city site does point you to Texas sites that are authoritative and complete.

Understanding the rules takes some studying and I encourage you to spend some time learning them if you want to be successful with your request.

I only spent a few minutes looking at what the city has put on the web site.

Issues that jumped out at me at first glance were:

They fail to point out that you do not have to receive paper copies of documents responsive to your request.  You may request to view the documents in person.

Allowable charges vary depending upon circumstances (number, age, and location of documents).

The city will charge $15 per hour for labor but generally may not charge if you are requesting fewer than 50 pages that are stored in one building.  The city says they will charge $3.50 per hour overhead if they actually charge for labor.  Texas says that the maximum overhead charge is 20% which would put the city maximum at $3.00 per hour.

Eternal vigilance is the price of liberty.

Cato


Double play

May 27, 2013

I have to hand it to city staff.  They have found a way to put something over on us two different ways at the same time.

City staff wants city council to spend $10 million more for the ball park they are building.

$5 million of the spending is for club and restaurant facilities.  We know that they either knew these were left out of the original plans or they have now figured that they can get away with the additional spending.

The other $5 million is a problem of a worse kind.  This is money that had been previously allocated for other improvements in downtown.  Now they want to use it for the ball park.

This is not my opinion.  The city engineer said so when he said “We could not build the project we have designed without it.”  In other words they designed a facility that they knew would not work without this money becoming available.

No bid

What makes this worse is that this is work that would have been competitively bid.  Part of it is from quality of life bonds that we voted for and were told that the money would be spent wisely and would benefit local construction firms.

Instead of giving local contractors a chance he has decided to give the work to the out of town firm that has the  contract for the ball park.

No bid.  No chance.  Without bids we don’t even know that we are getting fair value for our money.

We deserve better

Brutus


The “GULP” Syndrome

May 19, 2013

In the El Paso Inc., Sunday morning, word got out as to what is holding up El Paso’s Business and Retirement Growth. This has been know for years but our Mayor and the City Council feel that the growth retardation is from lack of Facilities. Their approach is to spend, spend, spend resulting in higher taxes. They really don’t question why new business don’t want to locate in our fair city. There are plenty fo things to do. Indoors, outdoors etc. Real estate is cheap by comparison to other cities but them they look at the property taxes.

“Gulp”.

The property tax is approaching the house payment. Well, our Progressive council says, “Look at what you get”, “a downtown postage stamp baseball field with outfielders in the street”. (I’m sure someone will use double-decker buses as bootleg bleachers).
Scattered city services though out downtown. Don’t you worry, we’ll build you a new City Hall on the on Asarco land”. Then one read both the local and the national press only to find that our School Districts are riddled with corruption only toping the City and County government for indictments and convictions.

“Gulp”.

“Hey boss, are you out of your mind? “How about San Antonio”? “Las Cruces”? etc. Such a deal, you say. High Taxes, Government corruption. Poor schooling at Premium prices. Where is the line?

The PSB thought is was great deal they were proposing; a Retirement village of 450 acres next to Painted Dunes Golf course. The Developers will flock to get in their bids. Truth is that there were no bids. Mayor John says “times are tough”, “our properties have increased in value”, “they went to Santa Teresa because they like Pecans” etc. Again he won’t look at the facts that our Property taxes are over 2 times that of Austin and the the highest in Texas, 5th highest in the country. And thanks to the Mayor’s largesse to the Baseball owners of the team that no one wanted, (even Stockton Ca. turned them down) our taxes will soon go higher and higher unless we get a New Mayor who knows how to put the brakes on things and to bring businesses and jobs to this community. That ain’t “Stevie Boy”, fortunately. Steve, maybe you should teach school again. Please stay away from contract law. (The railroad land Read the rest of this entry »


The Black Kettle

May 16, 2013

The El Paso Times, this morning, showed their mettle when they flately stated that all the advertising dollars will not buy their suppport. Seems like they were bothered when Mayor Leeser cut his new car advertising in the paper after they tried to do a hatchet job on him. Needless to say, the complaint against Leeser had no validity. The Paper did their best to carefully craft attacks on the front runners Leeser, Haddad and Cormel. The accusatory headlines, followed by first page implicaations and finally on pages 4-6, nothing but inuendos and no meat. Now lets talk about Stevie Boy who with the Progressive council, gave the Paper 10 millions dollars for a white elephant that was draining the newspaper and had no takers to buy. If they abandoned the building, it would be another empty downtown structure nobody wanted and cost them millions in upkeep. So “thank you, Stevie”, you get our star billing.
His countenance and ideas take up the front page of the paper and the other candidates, mentioned on, where else, pages 4 and 6. Then there is Cormel’s delinquent property tax that wasn’t delinquent, Leeser’s and Haddad’s rap sheet that wasn’t a rap sheet. Any question about about Ortega? He voted to knock down the City Hall which was on land that the Railroad owned. That would be funny but they (we) paided dearly for the “oops” with the Railroad, paying top dollar for the land and having to close strategic RR crossings they requested, resulting in pure chaos for the citizens, the students and the Water district. To Quiet the Crazies, These dead end streets were labeled as “Quiet zones” and told they should have attended the City meetings and voiced their complaints.

How’s our credo go? “Don’t let those who caused the problem, solve the Problem”.


We’ed be better off

May 3, 2013

I have been thinking about what we can expect if our city representative who has reached her term limit is successful and gets elected to the El Paso Independent School District board.  Then The El Paso Times endorsed her candidacy  saying she “… repeatedly demonstrates her desire to get into the weeds …”.

Why anyone would want to run when the Texas Education Commissioner has announced that his own group of managers will manage the district not the board members that the public elects is beyond me.  Let’s say she does get elected and her board gets control back.

This scenario obviously is fictional, it has not happened.  For the sake of readability let’s call her Ms. Aviary:

Ms. Aviary reports breathlessly to her school board that the National Tumbleweed Contest does not have a venue anymore.  It is true that no other city wants to host the event but this gives El Paso a once in a lifetime opportunity to change the quality of life of her citizens.

We need a major league site where tumbleweed growers can come and show us what they can do.  We also need a sponsor.

We don’t have much time.  We will need a manager who will have the authority to bulldoze all obstacles and ignore everyone who objects.  Competitive bidding and transparency will take too much time.  She will need to have a lot of power and an important name.  Ms. Aviary  suggests Tumble Weed Institutional  Tyrant Comprehensive Head (TWITCH).

Luck is with us though.  The selfless businessmen that own the Border Irrigation Group (BIG) that supplies sprinkler systems to growers and the Southwest Tumbleweed Unified Feeding Facility (STUFF) that makes specialized fertilizer for tumbleweeds have offered to buy the sponsorship of the National Tumbleweed Contest and bring it to El Paso.  The only problem is that they need a venue now.  Tumbleweed growing must occur before the summer.  You know what happens to them once they die.

We are so fortunate.  How could these two firms possibly benefit other than by having the joy of seeing El Paso get itself teary eyed?

We must act now.  Where can we find the venue?

Ms. Aviary has the answer.  Boy are we lucky to have her representing us!  She tells us that there is no time to study the market and buy up property.  We must use something we already have.  Austin High School!  That is the perfect venue.  Yes it is a little small, but we could engineer the planting to be more intimate.  Maybe we could graft some plants, we certainly know a lot about graft here in El Paso.   If need be we could cut a deal with the railroad to get the event  on track.

What about the children, you ask?  Once again Ms. Aviary has a plan.  Move the children.  We will have to be flexible.  She tells us that we have all of those yellow school buses that are only used at the beginning and end of the school day.  What we can do is to put one classroom in each school bus.  Where will we park the buses?  Simple again, don’t park them — drive them around town as the teacher conducts the class.

What about gym class and band and orchestra where being in a moving bus might be dangerous?  That’s where the railroad comes in, Ms. Aviary tells us.  We can rent surplus box cars and place them in those unused bicycle lanes all around town.  We will have to pay the price though, surplus box car renting is expensive if you do it this way.

How will we pay for this?  Well first, Ms. Aviary says, it won’t cost much at all.  We already own the campus and the buses so it should only cost about 50 cents to build the venue and about 30 cents to move those kids around.

As luck would have it we can use our powers to get someone else to pay a large part of the 50 cents so that it does not have to come out of our pockets.  We can charge the allergists in town a fee based on the number of cases they treat.  The tumbleweeds will help drive up revenue.  She thought about taxing antihistamines but wanted something progressive.

The El Paso Times  could be a problem though.  What we need to do is to review their transcripts and make them all “A” students retroactively.  They still won’t know how to think independently, ask thoughtful questions, or do much other than print what we tell them to,  but at least they won’t be representing the citizens.

The times interviews Ms. Aviary  and prints this quotation from her. “I’m brilliant and am happy to show those ignorant voters and crazy taxpayers how to improve their lives, it’s nothing to sneeze at really.”

Just wait and see.

Eternal vigilance is the price of liberty

Cato