City attorney does it again

May 19, 2014

Our city attorney is way out on a limb because of the advice that she evidently gave city council about the process used to negotiate with our potential city manager.

City council went into a closed meeting to discuss their selection.  When they re-convened in open session they did not take a formal vote to authorize the negotiations with their candidate.

They must have decided to do that in closed session.

The 2012 Texas Open Meetings Act Made Easy contains this language:

A court has held that a member of a governing body may indicate during an executive session

how he or she plans to vote on an item.  However, the governing body may not conduct a

straw vote or a formal vote during such a session.   The Act requires that any final action,

decision or vote be taken in an open meeting.

The actual law contains this:

 § 551.102. Requirement to Vote or Take Final Action in Open Meeting

A final action, decision, or vote on a matter deliberated in a closed meeting under this chapter may

only be made in an open meeting that is held in compliance with the notice provisions of this chapter.

 

Without a vote how did council decide which person to make an offer to?

The great enabler

Our city attorney repeatedly gives advice to council and makes statements to the public that violate the spirit of our laws.  The law may have been violated here.  Two council members have asked for a special meeting of city council in order to get a written document from the city attorney where the city attorney tells them that they have not violated the law.

If she provides the document they will be off the hook.  Otherwise they could be subject to criminal charges.

What a shame.  Council members have the right to expect their city attorney to keep them out of trouble.  This city attorney actually sits and watches while council violates the law.

Acting city manager controversy

The Times has reported that there is concern that council cannot appoint an acting city manager because our charter gives that prerogative to the city manager.

Here is what the charter says:

 Section 5.4 ACTING CITY MANAGER.permanent link to this piece of content

By letter filed with the City Clerk, the City Manager shall designate a City employee to exercise the powers and perform the duties of City Manager during the Manager’s temporary absence or disability. The City Council may revoke such designation at any time and appoint another employee of the City to serve until the City Manager returns.

Temporary absence

These documents are easy to look up.

We deserve better

Brutus


Done deal

May 18, 2014

We are in more trouble than I thought.

In their last meeting city council approved the closing of Maple street for the railroad.

The only questions came from a city representative that was concerned about types of crossing equipment that have nothing to do with the Maple street closing.

Not a peep

Otherwise nothing was said or asked.  The silence and tension were thick.  Evidently there was fear that someone would object.

Part of the deal

Train wreck explained how the city needed a sliver of land that the old city hall sat on in order to build the ball park.

Our city administrators made many concessions in order to get the land.  Agreeing to close rail crossings throughout town was part of the deal.  Paying $27.50 per square foot to the railroad for the land they needed while at the same time getting paid $11.10 for adjacent land was another part of the deal.

Posturing

Last year when the deals were being finalized some members of city council put up quite a fuss about the closings.  The railroad and city staff had to back off and the result was that not all of the crossings that the railroad wanted to close were closed.

Last week city staff brought one more closing to the table.  This time council quietly agreed.

Deeper problems

Evidently the railroad has more control over council than I thought.

We deserve better

Brutus


City manager contract termination

May 17, 2014

Will had asked that I post a link to a copy of the contract that the new city manager will have.

I tried to do that through a response to his comment but the link does not bring up the contract.

Being technologically challenged, let me put the link here.

The portion relating to early termination without cause is also posted below:

cmcontract

Brutus


Community College transparency

May 17, 2014

A recent look at the El Paso Community College web site shows something else getting better.

Their agenda postings now include backup materials that help explain the nature of the item on the agenda.

Thank you El Paso Community College!

Something got better

Brutus


New broom

May 16, 2014

If things continue the way they are headed now we will soon have a new city manager.

Clean house

We have witnessed many problems with city staff over the past few years.  The tearing down of city hall and building of the ball park have been supported by wildly misleading financial projections, backroom discussions that we cannot get the city to divulge through open records requests, and parliamentary tricks from our city attorney.

The facts will come out eventually.

A smart new city manager will distance himself from these acts.  Replacing the administrators that have helped perpetrate the problems will make the new city manager look like part of our solution.

Replacing the city attorney is not one of the city manager’s prerogatives.  Making life miserable for the city attorney is however.

Sweeps clean

A new broom sweeps clean.  I predict that we will see many of the senior staff at the city leaving soon.

We deserve better

Brutus