Mayor Slesnick’s View on Transparency and Information

This is the mayor’s response to an article in the Miami Herald.

I believe that his is a somewhat narrow view of “transparency,” and certainly not a modern political view that transparency necessarily accompanies full citizen participation, rather than it being a one sided information flow from government to citizen.

Jackie Bueno Sousa’s Jan. 5 column, A transparent government isn’t necessarily a direct one, takes issue with governments, like the city of Coral Gables, that try to provide financial and other important information to the public. In Sousa’s view, Coral Gables and other governments, including the state of Florida, provide a lot of information, but do not tell citizens what’s important and what they should know.

Of course, citizens themselves don’t always agree on what is important, and for that reason Coral Gables tries to provide a broad range of relevant data, including posting the city’s annual financial reports on its website and timely updates on a variety of topics through its online newsletter, “e-News.”

Coral Gables’ employee pension plan is a case in point. The city’s financial reports contain several pages on the pension plan, including a detailed breakdown of assets and liabilities. The city’s pension obligations, like those of cities and states throughout the country, have grown in recent years largely as a result of the worst economic downturn since the Great Depression.

City leaders have not hidden the city’s pension problems. Rather, they have taken bold action to reform pension benefits and reduce pension costs. During the past seven years, the city, with the cooperation of the employee unions, has made several meaningful cost-saving changes to the pension plan. Those included across-the-board employee contributions to help support their future benefits, an approach only now being considered by the Legislature for the state’s pension plan.

Last August, after many months of negotiations and deliberation, the City Commission adopted sweeping changes to the general employee pension plan that, if they survive pending legal challenges, will significantly reduce the city’s pension costs.

It is easy to criticize government for not providing enough information to taxpayers and the public; but many local governments, including Coral Gables, have gone to great lengths to make meaningful information about their finances and operations readily available. It is a far greater challenge to use the information to make informed decisions that will benefit citizens for many years in the future.

DON SLESNICK, mayor, Coral Gables

via Coral Gables makes information easy to access – Letters to the Editor – MiamiHerald.com.

Are You a Fiscal Conservative? And Coral Gables Government?

Not enough has been done to protect us from the “too big to fail banks” doing it again.  It won’t be the same way but banks are good at inventing risk instruments that favor their balance sheet.

This is somewhat similar to the city of Coral Gables where decisions of the city commission did little to create a well run, efficient, honest and transparent government that protected taxpayers rather than the special interest groups allied with the mayor and commissioners, including the powerful labor unions.   Taxpayers need to confront the power of the city commission who keeping raising taxes and cow-towing to the unions.

Following President Obama’s State of the Union address, there is a great deal of discussion about whether we might now be edging our way towards fiscal responsibility.

Unfortunately, most of our political elite – both left and right – is still living in a land of illusions.  They cannot even seriously discuss what would be required to bring our true fiscal position under control – remember that most of the recent damage to our collective balance sheet was done by big banks blowing themselves up.  No one who refuses to confront the power of those banks can be taken seriously as a fiscal conservative.

via There Are Still No Fiscal Conservatives In The United States « The Baseline Scenario.

Current Websites: candidates for mayor of the city of Coral Gables

In alphabetical order:

Jim Cason.  http://www.votejimcason.com/about-jim/

Tom Korge.  http://korgeformayor.com/index.asp

Don Slesnick.   none

House Prices Still Going Down

According to Standard and Poors house prices continue their decline in Miami.  There is concern about a national double-dip in these prices.

Two points–don’t believe the real estate agents and fully expect the city of Coral Gables to increase property taxes yet again in 2011.

In November, only four MSAs – Los Angeles, San Diego, San Francisco and Washington DC – showed year-over-year gains. The Composite indices remain above their spring 2009 lows; however, eight markets – Atlanta, Charlotte, Detroit, Las Vegas, Miami, Portland (OR), Seattle and Tampa – hit their lowest levels since home prices peaked in 2006 and 2007, meaning that average home prices in those markets have fallen even further than the lows set in the spring of 2009.