Coral Gables: Did Anyone Think Twice?

Elaine de Valle reported in the Sunday Miami Herald that…

Former Coral Gables City Manager David Brown — who retired early under pressure after a scathing public corruption police report and sexual harassment claims from the mayor’s secretary — may have built himself an extra parachute days earlier.

Brown, who had been city manager since 2001, made an unauthorized change to the city rules and regulations that gives parting employees the following year’s worth of accrued sick and vacation time at the beginning of the fiscal year on Oct. 1. The change gave him an additional $25,400 to his last check that city officials are now saying he didn’t deserve.

And now the city wants a refund.

May one speculate whether someone in the City gave this payment a second thought before making the actual payment of more than $25,000. Managers and staff apparently liked the new rule written by the outgoing city manager and must have crossed their fingers that he would get away with the excess payment. The senior human resource and finance managers especially would seem to be open to questioning by the Commissioners. It would seem that are few “lessons learned” from the experience of ex-City Manager Brown’s management culture.

http://www.miamiherald.com/opinion/letters/story/966218.html

My letter to the editor of the Miami Herald.

The approval of the Marlins Stadium — mostly financed by tourist tax dollars — is more evidence that this never will be a great city. This approval while there are 100,000 foreclosures in Miami-Dade, pathetic education achievement and graduation rates, whole populations without health insurance, an unsustainable transportation network, mismanaged city and county governments, narrowly neighborhood-focused politics, growing unemployment, an untenable tax system, broken zoning — and so on.

”Play Ball” is fiddling while Rome burns.

STEPHEN E. McGAUGHEY, Coral Gables

Accountability and Transparency in Coral Gables

Even though the State of Florida has the strongest of government sunshine laws, there is a culture in the government of Coral Gables of holding back essential information from local citizens. Namely, the Federal Government is in the process of introducing a special website to follow the programs and expenditures of the multi-billion dollar Recovery Program. Why can’t the City of Coral Gables with its much smaller budget provide information on a website of investment and operating outlays and income. So far we have been getting stale information of already executed budgets or projected budgets, but not current outlays and revenues.  This would be a great contribution to citizen participation in government.

City “Beautiful”?

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