I sat down recently with a resident of Pensacola who is
focused on, in his words, “Making this community better.” This individual requested a meeting with me
to talk about governance in the county, and particularly what he feels would be
a better way forward. We agreed on
several points, (e.g., county-wide election of each commissioner and some
departmental functional consolidation for efficiency and taxpayer dollar savings)
but we vehemently disagreed on the topic of pivoting to a county-wide, elected,
and strong County Manager or County Executive.
Sitting with me at the round table in my office, this individual did make one point with emphasis: “Look, we are the largest county that still operates the way we do [elected commissioners, hired executive]—and if we move to a more modern structure like Duval County/Jacksonville-we would be Florida’s 4th largest city.” (While I do agree that such a move would make Pensacola one of Florida's largest cities--I disagreed that we are an outlier structuraly; most Florida counties elect commissioners who, in turn, hire an executive like we do it here) He went on to enunciate the benefits of such a move in terms of how the Governor treats the panhandle in general, and Pensacola/Escambia in particular.
He stated “look, if we’re the 4th largest city in the state---- which we would be if the County and City Consolidated------the Governor and his staff pick up the phone when we call.” I don’t disagree with that assessment; however, I believe that view is a distinction with no difference as the Panhandle is a Republican stronghold and therefore, we do receive attention from the Governor. Although it is diffused through a mayor, state representatives and a state senator, and to a lesser degree thorough locally elected county commissioner(s) and business leaders---we do have a strong voice with this current governor. If anything, consolidation might have negative impacts on anyone other than a “strong county executive” having the Governor’s ear—so is this a good thing?
Is changing to a consolidated city/county a good thing? I don’t think so.
I think electing strong, intelligent, ethical county commissioner candidates solves these perceived governence shortcoming "issues." Giving one person all the power inevitably leads to problems. Look no further than how Escambia scuttled the outdated concept of an Elected Superintendent--when nobody thought that was possible. The county's voters did it because they saw that having one guy calling all the shots and pushing his agenda did not work and was not right. So thankfully the voters fixed that dysfunctional structure in our area's schools locally.
Nevertheless, I am not afraid of discussing
consolidation or even discussion of a strong county executive elected countywide.
In fact, I welcome it.
I think such a discussion should be added to an upcoming agenda of the BOCC and it will
either receive support, or it won’t.
Meanwhile-in the days since this meeting with this
downtowner, I have spoken with several others who are aware of the push for consolidation
and a charter county “structure” like the city of Pensacola has.
Said one observer with whom I spoke, who has intimate familiarity with all aspects of local politics due to the nature of the business he runs: “They suddenly want the county to consolidate because they are not getting the outcomes they want from the current structure in the city with the mayor and the council. But you should ask them---why do you think the county having a strong, elected administrator is important when you, the same people, just fought to rid Escambia county of a strong, elected superintendent of schools for the Escambia County School District—the largest governmental agency,
by far, in Escambia County?”This is a fair and good question—as some of the power brokers
who were intimately involved and invested with changing the Escambia School District’s
antiquated, throwback method of “electing” a strong, boss-hogg superintendent
of schools---------- are the same ones who are apparently “all-in” on the
effort to consolidate Escambia County with the City of Pensacola---or at a
minimum—remove the ability of the currently elected Board of County Commissioners
to hire an executive—leaving them at the mercy of the whims and positions of an
“elected” strong county executive.
Seems like a double standard and doesn’t make sense.
Sure—I know the elected, strong Mayor of Pensacola concept
has yielded mixed results for the power brokers downtown; Many improvements
have happened downtown—but it has not been a one-way street; look no further than
the recent vote against the mayor’s wishes for massive residential down there
on the Maritime Park land. The City
Council—instead--brushed that concept aside and chose a different concept with
a parking garage and a convention center.
I know that infuriates some folks--------but this was a decision, after
all, from a city council and a city governance model that the power brokers wanted,
right?
A Lawyer with whom I spoke on this topic gave a measured assessment
on the failed topic of City/County consolidation from the last decade. “Look—I put a lot of time into the effort,
lots of hours--more than 100-- with the assurance from a County Commissioner that what we came
up with after all of the effort would be enacted. And that commissioner, and most of the others,
voted against what we recommended. So, I’m
done with that.”
I told him “As a current commissioner, I would never give an advisory committee a blanket assurance that I would unilaterally, unequivocally support whatever was recommended by such a committee---because, to do so would be foolish.” I finished. “Are you certain the commissioner said he’d be a ‘yes’ no matter what?”
“Yes”, the lawyer
stated firmly. “He said he would support
our decision, but he didn’t.”
In subsequently speaking to a different, former county commissioner to ascertain the veracity of that claim, that “whatever was advised was supposed to be enacted,” claim--- I asked point blank of this person “Did you agree to do whatever was recommended by the Charter/Consolidation advisory committee?
To which I received the blunt and curt response:
“Absolutely not!”
This all points out a glaring issue locally:
Were the former, and not the current, moves
toward a charter county governance model only to get desired “results” from
whomever holds the offices such a charter government would produce—due to
frustration or other motives?
If the answer to that is yes, and it appears to be “yes” ---then
we have bigger issues locally than our ‘style or form of governance’ so far as
I can tell.
I work hard to always follow the law and do what is right—not what is politically expedient. I have a history of that of which I am proud.
And as I have stated earlier in this very post—I
have no problem with a discussion of potential governance models that would be
better.
But what I will never do is give a blanket assurance to any committee
that whatever such a committee recommends, I will adopt.
To do so would be irresponsible and foolish. I want efficiency, and I want savings.
But I don’t want to make it easy for power brokers and the
wealthy to simply get “what they want, when they want--or more importantly---who they want!”
No, government is not supposed to be smooth, like a well-oiled
machine.
Government---particularly at the local, boots on the ground
level, is supposed to be contentious, rough, and uneasy.
My advice to citizens:
Be on guard toward anyone who is pushing changes in our
governance structure simply because they don’t “like” the tone of the discourse
or the outcomes that are produced.
Be on guard, and protect against anything that will in fact
take your power away and award it to someone downtown who does not have your
best interest at heart and wants to make decisions “easier.”
Be on guard if you want a say and if you have a brain.
Be on guard.
And know
I am and will continue to be.
Ole’ 🦚
ReplyDeleteAt least he got smart and realized pushing his agenda on ECW was ruining his credibility. Peacock, Maygarden, Davis, Wyler, Spruill, Montgomery, Bookman, and McQueen’s push for a CAB for redistricting, and stating redistricting is an urgent issue made me nervous.
ReplyDeleteJohn Peacock wants to do away with residence electing their County Commissioners in their Districts. He stated that Commissioners would run at large, allowing voters at large to vote for each of the Five Districts. If that was to happen, individuals of color will never be elected to any county office. Going back to Jim Crow laws isn’t going to help any of us.
I’m completely against this. Giving more power to the downtown players to make things easier for them to get what they want will be a big mistake. I knew this was coming when Quint didn’t get his way for parcels 3,6, and 9. Downtown greed is all this is. I can hear the call to Andy now.
ReplyDeleteAnonymous 9:34: I believe having four of our five districts voted upon by the entire county with the caveat that the commissioner running in a district must live in such a district--is the right way to operate, as it would end "ward politics" that we have currently. But D3 would always remain a minority-majority district, with that district's citizens being the only voters who elect their d3 represnetative on the board--which would comport with McMillan and Augustus rulings from the civil rights era. Where d3 would achieve more and enhanced power and voice would be not only would they vote for their candidate--but they would also vote for the other four districts as well--making them the only voters in the county to vote for every district's commissioner. That is power, and that would be fair. I brought that concept to the board a few months back and sadly it did not receive support, so the status quo will rule the day. Aside from the commissioner elections, I do strongly oppose any moves toward a "strong" elected county administrator. I think that would be disastrous, and I have lived through that as a board member under an elected superintendent. It was a failed model, and it created way too much tension, led to mistrust and tribalism, and most importantly--it vested too much power in one person and his backers/minions; remeber the sage advice of Lord Acton: "Power corrupts, absolute power corrupts absolutely." So I'm a FIRM NO on an "elected executive. It would be a plane crash into a mountain.....
ReplyDeleteCommissioner Bergosh, it was a full-court press since at least the point, years ago, that Downtown decided to try to take over the OLF8 project. I predicted a world war culminating in some very nasty politics between the City and the County three years ago. Who knew it was going to happen in the middle of a pandemic, or that an administrator would politic against her own board in service of development barons who wanted to elevate her to a position of authority over the Board.
ReplyDeleteCrazy times.
I think a lot of people acknowledge that the idea of a combined charter has its attractions, in general. But watching the juggernaut along Main Street, Cervantes, heading up Pace now, the golden spades in the ground at Moreno Court, the push to conquer new worlds up in the North County...to be blunt, I don't want a charter written by the Rainbow and Unicorn Planning crowd downtown that pretends to act in the best interests of the public while they push charettes with plans that have been in the works since post Ivan with the land banking coming to fruition. And there are a whole lotta people who feel the same way.
It's reassuring that people in the County are finally waking up to what has been going on. Hopefully it's not too late. They'll be coming gobs of our taxpayer money for their Homeless Task Force next. Which should not happen unless there are some serious transparency measures put in place to offset all the back dooring that has been going on there.
Keep a close eye on RESTORE funds, FEMA grants, etc. And the Estuary Program. That kind of money is always an easy take without enough rigorous oversight from policy makers. You've got some very dubious actors sitting that board from Santa Rosa who are taking a beating and looking to form alliances. And the two commissioners sitting that Board for the Escambia BOCC are the ones most closely tied to Downtown interests and backing.
Anon 9:34, thanks for spelling out some of the people meeting to push this. Other than Julian McQueen, of course, the people listed aren't the top dogs pushing this mess and trying to blow the County up for their own self-serving purposes. The daily positivity pieces in the PNJ just kill me.
ReplyDeleteNo we don't want this locally.
ReplyDeleteOn a larger scale..I came across an article about the International Monetary Fund.
I'm not sure what it means for us..I'm reading about it.
https://www.imf.org/en/News/Articles/2021/07/30/pr21235-imf-governors-approve-a-historic-us-650-billion-sdr-allocation-of-special-drawing-rights
ReplyDeleteIt was on WEAR I think, but perhaps got buried or dropped.
This may be beyond the scope of this local blog post, I know.
I think it highlights the difference schools of thought about the USA as a country and as a member of the global markets.
This seemed noteworthy to me, in the larger scheme of things.
The one's who wanted out country to be strong and wealthy are no longer in power.
To look at the IMF, it shows our economy operates in a deficit, I think it's about to get worse, yet we are of of the bigger players paying into the global economy.
The dollar is about to be devalued I think, and the debt increased maybe it's not being run on MSM so people don't make runs on the bank.
Bad times really.
With D.C. Reeves about to be our new Mayor, Studer will be happy.
ReplyDelete