City Desk ~ An insider’s view of the policies and politics of Colorado Springs city government

City hires new chief information officer

January 4th, 2013, 12:32 pm by

The city announced the hiring of a new chief information officer Friday.

Joe Palmer will join the city Jan. 21, pending City Council confirmation.

Palmer will be paid $128,000 annually.

The city said Palmer was selected “after a comprehensive five-month recruitment and interview process” with more than 120 applicants nationwide.

“Joe has 15 years of progressively responsible experience in information technology and accounting, including nearly five years as a chief information officer,” the city said in a news release. “He specializes in strategic planning and process optimization and has experience leading multiple large-scale transformational initiative and projects that deliver critical business outcomes.  Most recently Joe served as chief information officer for Jefferson County where he oversaw a staff of 78 and budgets of up to $15.5 million for nearly 5 years.”

Palmer has a bachelor’s degree in accounting and finance from Middle Tennessee State University and a master’s in business administration from the University of Colorado, the city said. Palmer also holds a Project Management Professional certification and is “affiliated with numerous professional associations and has earned multiple awards for his work,” the city said.

Here’s more information about Palmer’s  responsibilities as described in the job posting:

The Chief Information Officer is a highly responsible (at-will) executive position reporting to the Chief of Staff/Chief Administrative Officer. The CIO will provide vision and leadership by championing key technology initiatives that will transform the way the City does business and lead efforts toward practical, effective, and efficient technology and information solutions for the City organization and the citizens of Colorado Springs. This department, with a 2012 budget of over $13 million, is staffed by seventy-one full-time equivalent employees (fifty-five positions currently filled) and nine contract staff.

This position is responsible for all of the City’s technological needs including the maintenance and support of technical network and application infrastructures, enterprise and department specific applications (e.g., email in a Microsoft Exchange environment, PeopleSoft financial and human resources ERP, customer web interface programs and applications, and an award winning eGovernment website), region-wide Radio and ESRI GIS systems, comprehensive data telecommunications network, and a City-operated Cisco telephone system. Currently, the City is primarily a Microsoft shop with minimal open source utilization.

City schedules closed-door session to discuss no-panhandling zone lawsuit, ethics complaints

January 4th, 2013, 11:24 am by

The City Council is scheduled to meet behind closed doors Monday to discuss a lawsuit over a no-solicitation zone downtown.

Monday’s informal agenda included a closed executive session for “legal advice and consultation” with City Attorney Chris Melcher regarding the status of a complaint filed against the city by the ACLU, which says the zone violates the First Amendment.

After the closed session, the council is scheduled to reconvene in open session and have a “general discussion” about the status of the case, according to the agenda.

The lawsuit over the no-panhandling zone isn’t the only item scheduled to be discussed in closed legal session.

The council also is scheduled to receive “legal advice and consultation … regarding the processes and procedures for ethics allegations against councilmembers.”

That item may be tied to an ethics complaint filed against City Councilman Tim Leigh by David Neumann, who claims Leigh “has committed numerous wrongful acts potentially in violation of his  fiduciary and other duties as a member of the Board of Directors of Utilities.”

Neumann has a $73.5 million contract with Colorado Springs Utilities for scrubbers at the Martin Drake Power Plant downtown. The contract and the scrubbers themselves are the subject of intense debate among city officials.

 

Council president outraged by Flakes’ candidacy

January 4th, 2013, 10:15 am by

Andy Westbay and Scott Hawrysiak

Some people say Gary Flakes deserves a second chance.

When he was 16 years old, Flakes and his friend gunned down two teen-age boys who were walking home at night on Valentine’s Day 1997.

The victims — Andy Westbay, 13, and Scott Hawrysiak, 15 — were shot with a 12-guage shotgun.

Flakes was tried as an adult and served more than 12 years in prison. His co-conspirator, Jeron Grant, then 17, also served time behind bars.

But neither was convicted of pulling the trigger. Instead, they were convicted in separate trials as accessories to murder.

Though authorities alleged, based on confessions and witness testimony, that Grant was the trigger man, neither Grant nor Flakes has owned up to it.

Now, Flakes, who says he’s a reformed man, is running for City Council District 4.

His candidacy has opened old wounds for the victims’ families and outraged people in the community.

Among them is City Council President Scott Hente.

“I listened (Wednesday) to a former state representative’s beliefs that this guy should be given a second chance,” Hente said, referring to former state Rep. Dennis Apuan.

“He didn’t give those two kids a second chance back in 1997, did he?”

 

ACLU threatened to sue city in 2001 over ordinance prohibiting ex-felons from holding public office

January 3rd, 2013, 10:13 am by

The candidacy of Gary Flakes has prompted City Clerk Sarah Johnson to research whether ex-felons can serve on the City Council.

“We need to do a lot of research,” Johnson said Wednesday. “I’ve been working with the City Attorney’s Office on that very question, and we are currently researching the answers.”

The issue came up in Colorado Springs before when the Rev. Promise Lee was considering a council bid in late 2000, early 2001.

Lee was convicted of second-degree murder in the 1974 killing of a Fort Carson soldier. Lee was 15 at the time of the crime.

When the council passed an ordinance prohibiting ex-felons from serving on council or even running, the ACLU of Colorado stepped in.

“Eleven years ago, the ACLU of Colorado was prepared to sue on behalf of the Rev. Promise Lee, who was the target of an ordinance passed to prevent ex-felons from running for or serving on the city council,” Mark Silverstein, legal director for the ACLU of Colorado, said in an email Thursday.

At the time, Silverstein sent a letter to former City Attorney Patricia Kelley asking for a repeal of the ordinance.

“The council repealed the ordinance,” Silverstein said.

Johnson, who is relatively new to Colorado Springs, said the city is looking “through all the files to see if the question has come up” and how the city responded.

“Of course, there’s a lot of case law out there on this particular issue,” she said. “Now, I don’t know necessarily in the city. I can’t answer that question. But nationally, it is an issue.”

Silverstein said the law hasn’t changed.

“The law is the same as it was when I wrote the letter in 2001,” he said. “Mr. Flakes has a right to be a candidate, and the voters have a right to consider whether to vote for him.”

Here is the full, unedited text of the ACLU’s 2001 letter:

January 3, 2001

Patricia Kelly

City Attorney

City of Colorado Springs

30 S. Nevada Ave Suite 101

Colorado Springs, Colorado 80901

Dear Ms. Kelly:

I am writing to you about a recently-enacted ordinance, Ordinance 00-175, which purports to make citizens ineligible to serve on the Colorado Springs City Council if they have been convicted of a felony at any time in the past.

The newly-enacted ordinance adds the following section to the Colorado Springs Election Code:

5.1.105: ELECTORS ELIGIBLE TO HOLD MUNICIPAL OFFICE

Every registered elector 25 years of age or older on the date of election who has been a resident of Colorado Springs for one year immediately preceding election, is a citizen of the United States, maintains a residence within the District for election as a District councilmember and within the City for election as Mayor or at-large councilmember, and has not been convicted of a felony in any jurisdiction may be a candidate and hold office.

As this section is written, it forbids individuals from holding municipal office if they have ever been convicted of a felony, even if the sentence has already been served and even if the convicted person’s right to vote has been restored.

I write on behalf of the Reverend Promise Lee, who intends to run for a seat on the Colorado Springs city council in the upcoming election this April.   Rev. Lee was convicted of a felony in the early 1970s, for a crime that occurred when he was fifteen years old.   Since his release from prison, Rev. Lee has become a community leader and an outspoken advocate on matters of public concern.  The newly-enacted ordinance, however, would prevent Rev. Lee from serving on the city council if he were elected.

I am writing to ask that the City of Colorado Springs take immediate steps to repeal the newly- enacted ordinance.

The Colorado Supreme Court has characterized the right to run for public office as a fundamental right.    Cowan v. City of Aspen, 181 Colo. 343, 349, 509 P.2d 1269, 1272 (1973).   “This right may not be infringed upon by invidious discriminatory disqualifications.”  Id.   When the government takes away from the voters the ability to decide who shall be qualified for public office, the government’s reasons must be “real, clear and compelling.”  Id., 509 P.2d at 1273.

I have reviewed the documents that the city council considered last November when it enacted the ordinance that purports to bar Rev. Lee’s candidacy.  In those documents, I do not find any reason for barring ex-offenders from office, let alone a reason that is sufficiently compelling to override Rev. Lee’s fundamental right to participate fully in the democratic political process.

Unlike other states, Colorado does not permanently disenfranchise ex-offenders from voting, nor does it prohibit ex-offenders from holding public office.   The Colorado Constitution makes it clear that convicted felons are barred from voting only during the time that they are confined in prison as a result of their conviction.  Upon release from prison, ex-offenders are restored to their full rights of citizenship.   Nor are ex-offenders barred from holding public office in Colorado, unless they have been convicted of one of the five specific crimes listed in Article XII, Section 4 of the state constitution.  See Colo. Const. Art. XII, Sec. 4 (listing embezzlement of public funds; bribery, perjury, and subornation of bribery or perjury).

Indeed, it is the “strong public policy” of the State of Colorado “to aid ex-offenders in their rehabilitation to society and to insure that they are not discriminated against solely because they, at one time, were convicted of crimes.”  Watson v. Cronin, 384 F. Supp. 652 (D. Colo. 1974) (interpreting C.R.S. § 24-5-101).

It appears that the newly-enacted ordinance was drafted and passed with full knowledge that Rev. Lee was interested in running for a seat on the city council and with full knowledge that the new ordinance would bar his candidacy.   Indeed, an article published in the Colorado Springs Gazette on November 10, 2000, states that the Colorado Springs City Attorney believed that Rev. Lee’s past felony conviction might prevent his candidacy.  The article was published before the newly-enacted ordinance was even presented to the city council.

The newly-enacted ordinance violates the charter of the City of Colorado Springs, which clearly sets out the qualifications for city council and the mayor’s office:

Qualifications.  No person shall be eligible to the office of Mayor or Councilmember unless he or she is a citizen of the United States, at least twenty-five (25) years of age, and shall have been for one (1) year immediately preceding such election a resident of the City of Colorado Springs.  (1909; 1987).

City of Colorado Springs Charter, Section 2-20.  It is clear that the charter sets out only three criteria for eligibility: citizenship, age, and residency.     Rev. Lee is a United States citizen; he is over twenty-five years old; and he has been a resident of Colorado Springs for more than one year.  Under the charter, Rev. Lee is eligible to be elected and to serve as a member of the city council.

On behalf of Rev. Lee, I ask that the Colorado Springs City Council take immediate steps — at its next scheduled meeting on January 9, 2001– to effect the repeal of the newly-enacted Section 5.1.105 of the city’s election code.

Sincerely,

Mark Silverstein,

Legal Director, ACLU of Colorado

 

 

VIDEO: Flakes refers to murders as ‘the situation’

January 3rd, 2013, 9:40 am by

Gary Flakes, who was involved in one of the most high-profile crimes in Colorado Springs history, announced his bid for City Council District 4 on Wednesday night.

The 32-year-old started the announcement by thanking everyone who was there.

Then, Flakes brought up the shotgun slayings of Andy Westbay, 13, and Scott Hawrysiak, 15, on Valentine’s Day 1997.

“This was definitely very emotional for me to have to go through, and I know that some of the families and friends is having to really relive the situation,” he said.

“I’m running for City Council because I understand the needs of this community. As a young person, my actions devastated the community and brought grief to two families. The teenager who committed those acts made me the young leader I am today. Today I will use my life experiences, my knowledge, to make the lives of young people better and to help all of District 4 live up to its greatest potential,” he said.

CLICK HERE to watch video of Flakes announcing his candidacy.

 

Bruce calls salary increase for council members ‘beyond audacious’ but is open to paying them more

December 28th, 2012, 12:46 pm by

Douglas Bruce says he would publicly oppose a proposed ballot measure in April to give City Council members a salary increase.

“For whatever that is worth,” said Bruce, an anti-tax activist who was convicted of tax evasion and other crimes last year.

But Bruce said he’s open to the idea of paying council members more than the $6,250 a year they get now.

Yes, you heard that right.

Bruce, who has clashed with council members in the past, thinks the council should get more money.

Bruce said he objected each time a proposal to increase council members’ salaries was brought to voters, primarily because Colorado Springs was paying a city manager under the old council-manager form of government.

But the switch to a council-mayor form of government “ostensibly” created some savings because the mayor is paid $96,000 and the city no longer has a city manager.

“Since we’re saving some money, I don’t have an objection to paying the council because there’s a savings in one area of administration or leadership and some of that can go to paying people who are undercompensated,” Bruce said.

“But, having said that, to sextuple their salary is absurd. I mean, that’s beyond audacious. It’s not even borderline greed. It’s wallowing in greed,” he said.

Bruce said he did some calculations and figures that council members should be spending about 20 hours a month in meetings “if they didn’t engage in these silly marathon spectacles about solicitation on the sidewalk and what do we do about homeless people and all these problems that they’re manufacturing.”

Council members have two informal and two formal council meetings each month, and they meet once a month as the Utilities Board.

Council members also serve on various boards, committees and commissions, but Bruce said that’s unnecessary.

“They don’t need to serve on all these boards and committees. They need to simplify city government. That’s why we have a mayor. The mayor is supposed to be the administrator,” he said.

Bruce also thinks council meetings need to be run more efficiently. He said council meetings should last no longer than four hours each.

“They have these meetings that are much longer than they need to be, plus of course they waste a lot of time on ceremonies,” he said. “They have these meetings and they have people twirling their batons or singing America the Beautiful.”

Bruce proposes paying council members $15,000 a year, or $62.50 an hour for 20 hours of meetings each month.

“That’s more than your average plumber or electrician or somebody that actually does something useful,” he said, adding that a 140 percent increase “would be enough.”

Paige advocates for evening council meetings

December 28th, 2012, 10:23 am by

Sean Paige/Photo by Daniel J. Chacón

Don’t expect  former City Councilman Sean Paige to appear in any campaign ads supporting a proposed ballot measure that would increase the pay of a future City Council.

“I have a one word rebuttal to those who believe better pay will result in better leadership: Congress,” Paige commented on a story on gazette.com about the proposed salary increase.

“Congress isn’t any less of a circus because each of the clowns now makes $174,000 per year, plus a king’s benefits and pension package,” he said.

Paige, former editorial page editor of The Gazette and currently deputy director of the Colorado chapter of Americans for Prosperity, says he has a “simpler” and “more affordable” solution to increase the pool of council candidates.

“The easiest way to increase the number and quality of people able to serve on City Council/Utilities Board — if that is the primary goal here — is to move meeting times from weekday afternoons, when most people are working, to evening hours, which would permit more people not only to serve but to attend,” he said.

Paige left a lengthy comment backing the idea of moving council meetings to the evening.

Here is the rest of his comment:

I pushed for this while on council but the idea was shot down, for reasons that were either silly, self-serving or outdated. Daytime meetings are a relic of the city manager system, in my opinion, when what was convenient for city employees was more important than what was convenient for the public at large. That model is gone now so a re-thinking is in order.

This simple change would cost nothing but greatly expand leadership opportunities for people who work 9 to 5. If we did it now, or very soon, the pool of people interested in running for council in April would grow considerably. Many cities function quite well with councils that meet in the evening. Marathon sessions that stretch until midnight could be avoided simply by running meetings with more efficiency.

Meetings would be attended not just by the narrowly-interested, who happen to have an item of special concern on the docket that day, but by the general public, who may be prevented from taking part now by day jobs. This new arrangement might be less convenient for the city or utility staff who are required to attend, and it might increase the city’s coffee bill by a couple bucks each month, but those are small drawbacks as compared to the obvious advantages.

Jumping directly to paying council members $45,000 per year, without first trying this much simpler and more affordable way to broaden the leadership pool, is a leap too far, in my opinion, which will flop at the ballot box. I also agree with those who say we still have some work to do, sorting out roles and responsibilities, particularly pertaining to utilities business, before we can determine a more equitable pay rate for councilors. More responsibility might argue for more pay, but I don’t see that responsibilities have grown any — and they may even be diminished somewhat under the new structure.

Finally, I would be more supportive of paying council members more if there were fewer of them — 5 instead of 9, for instance. I’ve never understood why a city this size needs a 9-member council, when 5 would probably do just fine. That’s my 2 cents worth, off the cuff. I reserve the right to add another dime or quarter as the debate unfolds.

Forte won’t meet Bach’s Christmas Eve deadline

December 21st, 2012, 6:16 pm by

Jerry Forte

Mayor Steve Bach will have to wait until next year to get responses from Colorado Springs Utilities to a long list of questions about the Martin Drake Power Plant downtown.

Bach had given Utilities CEO Jerry Forte a Christmas Eve deadline to answer 18 questions about the power plant, which city officials are talking about decommissioning.

But Friday, Forte sent Bach an email stating he is working on responses but won’t be able to meet his deadline.

“Because of the number and complexity of the questions, I will not be able to complete this effort by the date you requested. I plan on having something to you during the first week in January,” Forte said in the email.

“Please let me know if you would like to meet in the interim.”

 

Quote of the Day

December 20th, 2012, 5:16 pm by

Rich Coolidge

“To refer to Ethics Watch as a legal-based watchdog group is total bunk. I mean, it’s very clear that they’re a liberal group that only attacks Republicans, and if you look at the data, that’s all they attack.”

– Rich Coolidge, communications director for Colorado Secretary of State Scott Gessler, who was listed in Colorado Ethics Watch’s Top 5 ethical scandals of 2012.

Here’s what Ethics Watch wrote about Gessler:

“Scott Gessler’s Personal Piggy Bank:  Controversial Secretary of State Scott Gessler made a name for himself while attempting to reshape Colorado election and campaign finance laws in this election year.  He earned fame of a different kind when a review of public records revealed evidence of misuse of public funds by Secretary Gessler, including the use of state funds to cover travel expenses for partisan events, which implicates several laws against public corruption.”

 

Mayor continues to press CDOT for highway funding

December 20th, 2012, 4:41 pm by

Mayor Steve Bach

Colorado Springs and the Pikes Peak Region aren’t getting their fair share of funding from the Colorado Department of Transportation.

So says Mayor Steve Bach, who has been sounding the alarm since he was took office.

On Thursday, he sent the following letter to CDOT Executive Director Don Hunt and Colorado Springs businessman Les Gruen, who serves on the state Transportation Commission:

December 20, 2012

Mr. Les Gruen                                                                       Mr. Don Hunt

Transportation Commissioner                                         Executive Director

Colorado State Transportation Commission                 Colorado Department of Transportation

6 S Tejon, Suite 550                                                             4201 East Arkansas Avenue, Room 262

Colorado Springs, CO  80903                                           Denver, Colorado  80222

 

Gentlemen:

Thank you for our conference call conversation last Friday, December 14th.  To confirm, we have four (4) State highway-related, urgent public safety matters here where your help is needed.  Specifically:

1)       Cimarron Interchange with I 25.  This is a very dangerous, winding section of I-25 with recurring traffic accidents.  The local jurisdictions, through the PPACG, have provided $4M in Metro Funds for the advanced purchase of ROW prior to any CDOT funding of the interchange.  CDOT has now provided $7M for preliminary design of the interchange.  An additional $95M is needed from CDOT to complete construction.

2)       Fillmore Interchange with I 25.  Traffic during rush hour backs up onto the through lanes both Northbound and Southbound.  The City has committed nearly $7M to the planning, design, and construction of the relocation of Chestnut Street, which is required for the completion of a Diverging Diamond Interchange (DDI).  The estimated CDOT cost to complete the DDI is an additional $11M.

3)       Old Ranch Road Bridges at Powers Boulevard.  We’ve had multiple fatalities at this currently on grade intersection.  The City has agreed to fund this project in its entirety using PPRTA funds.  The estimated cost is $8M.  CDOT staff has discussed funding this project in advance of the PPRTA schedule with a four year payback from the City.

4)       Stewart Avenue Interchange with Powers Boulevard.  Traffic during rush hour backs up onto the through lanes both Northbound and Southbound.  The City performed capacity analysis of the existing Powers/Airport intersection and found that adequate capacity for the short-term future (10 years) could be provided with the addition of a through lane in each direction on Powers Boulevard south of Platte Avenue.  CDOT staff has agreed with this concept and is planning to fund this improvement with $10M committed FASTER funds.

Please let us know as soon as possible the approximate start dates for these projects.  Thank you.

Sincerely,

 

Steve Bach

Mayor

 

Cc: Members, Pikes Peak Region Mayors Caucus

Members, Pikes Peak Area Council of Governments Board of Directors

Members, Colorado Springs City Council

 

Attachment:  Distribution List

Distribution List for Mayor Bach 12.20.12 letter to Messrs. Les Gruen and Don Hunt

 

Members, Pikes Peak Region Mayors Caucus

Mayor Blair Bartling – Town of Calhan

Mayor Bruce Brown – City of Cripple Creek

Mayor Travis Easton – Town of Monument

Mayor Buck Hakes – City of Victor

Mayor Jeri Howells – City of Fountain

Commission Chair Jim Ignatious – Teller County Commissioners

Commission Chair Amy Lathen – El Paso County Commissioners

Mayor Nikki McDonald – Town of Palmer Lake

Mayor Marc Snyder – City of Manitou Springs

Mayor Dave Turley – City of Woodland Park

Mayor Lorrie Worthey – Town of Green Mountain Falls

 

Members, Pikes Peak Area Council of Governments Board of Directors

Chair Commissioner Sallie Clark

First Vice Chair Commissioner Dennis Hisey

Second Vice Chair Councilmember Scott Hente

Secretary Trustee Tyler Stevens

Treasurer Commissioner Jim Ignatious

 

Members, City of Colorado Springs City Council

Councilor Merv Bennett

Councilor Lisa Czelatdko

Councilor Angela Dougan

President Scott Hente

Councilor Bernie Herpin

Councilor Tim Leigh

President Pro Tem Jan Martin

Councilor Val Snider

Councilor Brandy Williams