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

Archive for the 'Mayor Lionel Rivera' Tag

Police association says Bach would slash city employees’ pay, benefits

May 4th, 2011, 8:35 am by

The Colorado Springs Police Protective Association sent out an email calling mayoral candidate Steve Bach a “local developer” who would slash city employees’ pay and benefits to solve the city’s financial problems if he’s elected.

The email was sent to about a dozen city employees at work, prompting Steve Cox, acting city manager, to issue a warning to all employees to stay out of politics while they’re on the clock.

Here’s a copy of the letter sent via email by the PPA:

Dear City Employee,

Please consider the well-researched information in this letter about the upcoming runoff election for Mayor. There are long-term, serious consequences to YOU, whether you are a general City, Hospital or Utilities employee.

On November 16, 2009, an email by Stephen Bartolin (President and CEO of the Broadmoor Hotel) was sent to Mayor Lionel Rivera and City Council, complaining about budget cuts and water rate increases impacting his particular business. He felt these were unfair and unnecessary, and that Council should make cuts in what he called the “Ferrari” package of City employee pay and benefits. He suggested that City employees should receive pay and benefits more in line with those of his hotel’s employees.

In his letter, Mr. Bartolin provided the following “constructive comments” or suggestions about City budget problems:

1. Reduce all City staffing from 1805 to 1550 employees

2. Reduce payroll cost from 70% to 30%

3. Reduce the average per employee cost from $89,196 to $24,460 (including benefits)

4. Reduce the number of salaried employees making more than $100,000 from 67 to the

neighborhood of 13

5. Drive City vehicles at least 200,000 miles and then look at buying used vehicles

6. Move (minimum) retirement age to 60 – no matter how many years of service – both

for collection of pension benefits and for medical insurance

7. Restructure the health insurance program to one comparable to what is being offered

in the private sector and examine the costs shared by the employee

8. Move any retirees reaching age 65 to Medicare and off the City plan

Suggestions 7 and 8 were actually implemented in the 2011 budget. The effect was immediately apparent in your cost of health insurance.

Suggestion 8 was implemented in September of 2010 when the Council adopted

Ordinance 10-74. The long-term effect of this ordinance may increase the after retirement costs of the average Police and Fire retiree currently under the age of 55 by as much as $6,000 per year — excluding inflation of medical costs and any future Medicare reforms. The practical effect may well be that you will never be able to afford to retire.

Mayor Rivera and Council asked Mr. Bartolin to “create an independent advisory group” to consult with the City. The advisory group was formed but had no City managers or employees as members. Not surprisingly, this group agreed with Mr. Bartolin about the “Ferrari” pay and benefits plan. (See Bartolin letter and Mayor Rivera letter on file at the Office of the Mayor)

So what do Mr. Bartolin’s letter and the advisory group have to do with the current race for Mayor?

Steve Bach, a local developer, is a candidate for Mayor and has never held public office.

Most significantly to YOU, Mr. Bach totally espouses the Bartolin and advisory group recommendations drastically cuttings employee pay and benefits – they are the foundation of his “plan” to solve the City’s financial problems as he sees them. (See his web site under the Action Plan tab at http://www.stevebachmayor.com). Mr. Bach’s candidacy is supported by the Broadmoor Hotel and Steve Bartolin and many private sector interests who stand to profit from his “outsourcing” ideas. He has been publically endorsed by the Colorado director of Americans for Prosperity, a partisan political group started and funded by Kansas oil billionaires which is targeting public employees and their pay and benefits across the country (Wisconsin, Michigan, Ohio, Indiana, Tennesee and New Jersey, for example). Another partisan political group, Magellan Strategies, has made telephone “push-polls” to Colorado Springs voters, supporting Mr. Bach and distorting his opponent’s record, values and proposals. Just ask yourself – should there be a “partisan” way to provide police or fire services or medical care, to pave streets or plow snow, or provide electricity and clean water? Or to compensate public employees for their service?

Richard Skorman is also running for Mayor. You may know Richard or recognize his name. For over twenty years he has been a Colorado Springs resident, and a downtown business owner whose employees enjoy a living wage and health insurance. He has real experience in City government, having been a Councilman, a Vice Mayor, and Chairman of the Pikes Peak Area Council of Governments. He understands the complicated nature of governmental, economic and legal issues facing the City. He has proved his respect for City employees and his willingness to work with them. (See http://www.skorman4mayor.com)

There are many challenges facing the City in the next four years. These are difficult times and many people are struggling. Any solution must involve shared sacrifices. However, Mr. Bach and his supporters have targeted YOU as a City employee as the key problem, and drastic cuts in your pay and benefits as the key solution. Do you feel this is a “shared” sacrifice or a fair one? Do you think you have a “Ferrari” benefits plan? Do you think you can support yourself and your family on a proposed salary of $24,460 including benefits as Mr. Bach seems to believe?

The stakes of this election are high for all City employees. PLEASE – please take the time to vote for Richard Skorman for Mayor. Please consider contributing to his runoff campaign, and contact your friends and neighbors and ask them to support Richard for Mayor. And remember to vote by mailing or dropping off your ballot so it is received by May 17th.

Thank you!

Quote of the Day

May 2nd, 2011, 11:29 am by

Jeff Crank

“I posted it because I have a sense of humor about myself, and I really do think it is pathetic that they continue to post these YouTube videos and get only 20 to 50 views.  I thought I’d help them out by advertising it.”

– radio host Jeff Crank, who posted a video on his website that pokes fun at Crank and mayoral hopeful Steve Bach.

The video, produced by Ed Billings, who has lampooned everyone from Mayor Lionel Rivera to anti-tax activist Douglas Bruce, has received 126 hits on YouTube.

Crank, who embedded the video on his website, said the video got 238 hits there. Unfortunately, he said, those hits don’t translate to hits on YouTube.

The video was posted under the headline: “Help the Liberals Out — View their Video About Me.”

To watch the video, click here.

Credit rating agency affirms ‘outstanding rating’ for Springs

April 27th, 2011, 11:40 am by

Moody’s Investors Service has affirmed the city of Colorado Springs’ Aa2 general credit rating.

“This rating is a testament to the outstanding work of the City’s financial experts,” Mayor Lionel Rivera said in a statement.

“They and the City Council have made very difficult cuts in the past couple of years,” he said. “Our responsible fiscal actions are acknowledged by this outstanding rating.”

Rivera noted that the city’s reserve fund is now about $29.7 million, or 13.3 percent of the 2011 general fund budget.

“This means the new mayor and Council will be able to begin their work under positive circumstances,” he said.

Terri Velasquez, the city’s financial and administrative services director, said that “key elements” considered by rating agencies include the city’s economic stability, strong unreserved general fund balances, good financial policies and practices, and low debt and lease burdens.

Quote of the Day

April 19th, 2011, 1:27 pm by

“There’s still a little Rivera on council.”

– Mayor Lionel Rivera, who said the maiden name of one of Councilwoman Brandy Williams‘ grandmothers was Rivera.

As of today, Rivera is the city’s chief executive and chief administrative officer.

Rivera, who was first elected to an at-large City Council seat in April 1997, is term-limited and will step down in June when the new mayor is sworn in.

Quote of the Day

April 8th, 2011, 1:55 pm by

“I’m sure he’ll claim that he’s being unfairly targeted because a federal judge doesn’t like his views on limited government. Then there’s the issue of trying to find him to serve him.”

— Mayor Lionel Rivera, reacting to news that anti-tax activist Douglas Bruce had been indicted for tax evasion.

Quote of the Day

March 25th, 2011, 10:34 am by

“He asked me, ‘Are you going to vote for the Waffle House Five?’ I knew who he was talking about, and it kind of brought a chuckle.”

— Mayor Lionel Rivera said about one of his clients, who is referring to the self-proclaimed Reform Team as the Waffle House Five.

One of the members of the slate of at-large City Council candidates is Richard Bruce, who owns three Waffle House restaurants in Colorado Springs.

Secretary of State: City ‘well poised for another successful election’

March 25th, 2011, 9:46 am by

Scott Gessler

Colorado Secretary of State Scott Gessler says the City Clerk’s Office is well prepared to conduct the April 5 election.

“Following my office’s initial review of the city’s election preparedness, I’m happy to report that the city clerk’s office is well poised for another successful election,” Secretary of State Scott Gessler said today in a statement.

“In particular, the clerk and her staff have established sufficient security protocols and thorough procedures to ensure the integrity of this election,” he said.

The review was triggered by several mayoral and City Council candidates who expressed doubt about City Clerk Kathryn Young’s ability to run the election after a series of missteps.

“I am satisfied with this report,” Buddy Gilmore, one of the mayoral candidates who requested an observer, said in an e-mail.

“I believe this interim report provides a sense of comfort to the voters that the clerk’s office is working diligently to ensure all ballots are handled properly, and that results will be reported accurately,” he said.

Mayoral candidate Brian Bahr’s campaign manager, Kyle Fisk, echoed a similar sentiment.

“The Bahr campaign is pleased to hear this report,” he said, also in an e-mail.

“This is about the voters of Colorado Springs and ensuring they can have the highest confidence in the accuracy of the election results,” he added. “We appreciate the work of the Secretary of State and his office.”

Gessler said his office would continue to observe the election next week to review ballot processing and other procedures.

“Again, I would like to thank City Clerk Kathryn Young and Mayor Lionel Rivera for their warm welcome and cooperation,” he said. “I look forward to continuing our successful working relationship.”

Rivera and Young are holding a press conference at 2:30 p.m. today to comment on the report.

Mayor calls request for election observer a ‘cheap political stunt’

March 15th, 2011, 12:38 pm by

Mayor Lionel Rivera

Mayor Lionel Rivera accused three mayoral and two City Council candidates of using a “cheap political stunt” when they asked the Secretary of State’s Office to send an observer to monitor the April 5 election.

“It’s unfortunate these candidates are using a cheap political stunt to drum up media coverage for themselves one day before ballots are to be mailed out to voters,” Rivera said today in a letter to Secretary of State Scott Gessler.

“I have no personal investment in this election as I am not a candidate for mayor, being term-limited,” he wrote.

“I do, however, have a significant interest in protecting the professional character of Kathy Young, city clerk, and assuring our citizens we will have fair elections that meet the requirements of our charter and state law.”

Click here to read the letter.

Rivera also defends Young in the letter.

“Since being elected to the Colorado Springs City Council in 1997 through my re-election to mayor in 2007 and our last municipal election in 2009, I have participated in or observed seven municipal elections conducted by our City Clerk Kathryn Young,” the mayor wrote.

“Without fail, each election was conducted objectively, unbiased, fair, honest, with complete transparency and in accordance with state law.”

In an interview this morning, Young said she welcomed an observer from the Secretary of State’s Office.

“I don’t have anything to hide,” she said. “The process is open, so I welcome it.”

Mayoral candidates Brian Bahr, Tom Gallagher and Buddy Gilmore and council candidates Lisa Czelatdko and Angela Dougan sent a letter Monday asking Gessler to dispatch an observer to Colorado Springs to monitor the election.

“In the last several months, there have been ongoing concerns regarding Colorado Springs City Clerk Kathryn Young and her office,” they wrote in the letter.

“We now lack confidence that the upcoming Municipal Election will be conducted in a fair and unbiased manner. We are asking your office to step in, observe, and ensure a honest and transparent election process,” they said.

The five also raised concerns about a potential conflict of interest.

“Due to the passage of the Strong Mayor city charter amendment in November, 2010, Ms. Young, for the first time, will be directly affected by the outcome of this election,” the letter states. “Can she be an unbiased, objective election official given these circumstances?”

Rivera said Young, a council appointee, has been affected by recent elections because “either four or up to seven of her nine bosses were elected to office.”

The election of the city’s first strong mayor “has no bearing on how she will conduct” the April election, Rivera wrote.

“She is a professional and will uphold the standards of her office demanded of her in our City Charter and state law,” he wrote.

Quote of the Day

February 23rd, 2011, 3:16 pm by

“There was no intentional dishonesty or malicious actions on the part of Ms. Young, and for the editorial staff of The Gazette to call for someone to be fired or to resign from their position because of a misinterpretation is nothing less than irresponsible. The council and the people of this community need to stop feeding into the bigotry and biases that come from The Gazette, the Independent and other media outlets.”

— Cassandra Gaines, who spoke at yesterday’s City Council meeting in defense of City Clerk Kathryn Young, who is black.

Gaines was among several blacks who showed up at council chambers to support Young, who caused an uproar in the middle of the election season when she said that corporations are prohibited from making direct campaign contributions to candidates even though it’s been a longstanding practice.

After Gaines spoke, Mayor Lionel Rivera also slammed the newspaper’s Editorial Department.

“I gotta make the observation that I’ve called the editorial in The Gazette irresponsible more than once, and I will also note that they asked me to resign – I don’t know – about a year and a half ago. ‘Come clean or resign Mayor Rivera.’ I’m still here, so just because you read it in the Gazette doesn’t mean it’s true or has any kind of facts backing it up. I had that conversation with Ms. Young and told her to keep on doing her job. She’s doing it well,” Rivera said.

In an interview today, Rivera said Young was acting on the advice of the City Attorney’s Office.

Councilman demands answers stemming from corporate contribution fiasco

February 19th, 2011, 10:38 am by

Councilman Sean Paige

The controversy over corporate contributions doesn’t seem to be going away.

Today, The Gazette’s Editorial Department wrote that city officials are downright “wrong” about corporate contributions and that “there is little room for dispute.”

Past and present candidates for public office have been accepting corporate contributions for years. But this month, City Clerk Kathryn Young said corporations are prohibited from making campaign contributions directly to candidates. When asked why the practice had been allowed in the past, Young said it wasn’t her job but the public’s to scrutinize campaign finance reports.

Today’s editorial states that mayoral candidate Steve Bach, who was named in a complaint filed by Brian Bahr, who is also running for mayor, hired a law firm with attorneys that specialize in election law to research the issue and “clarify the facts.”

“Attorneys John Cook, Jeff Dolan and others determined that nothing in state or city law prohibits direct corporate contributions in a Colorado Springs city election,” the editorial states.

This morning, Councilman Sean Paige sent an e-mail to Mayor Lionel Rivera and the other council members asking that Young and City Attorney Patricia Kelly “again present their cases in support of their interpretation of the law.”

“I also think we need the city attorney to respond to the information presented in the letter from Steve Bach’s attorneys,” Paige wrote.

Paige said this morning that his colleagues will probably ignore the idea.

“This proposal is likely to get snuffed, like a lot of mine do, but I think it’s worth a try,” he said.

Here’s the full text of Paige’s e-mail to his colleagues:

Mayor Rivera and colleagues:

Information presented in this Gazette editorial – http://www.gazette.com/opinion/city-113129-contributions-unlawful.html — indicates that we still may not have a definitive ruling on the issue of corporate campaign contributions, which can only serve to prolong the controversy, distract from other issues, add to uncertainty for candidates and raise more embarrassing questions about the quality of advice we’re getting from staff. Though time is short, my suggestion is that we use next week’s combined meeting to help resolve this issue, if we can.

I would ask that the city clerk and city attorney be asked to again present their cases in support of their interpretation of the law, followed by council questioning and discussion. I also think we need the city attorney to respond to the information presented in the letter from Steve Bach’s attorneys. Public comments should also be taken, if at all possible. The Gazette suggests that council then take-up a resolution signaling our interpretation of the law.

I’m not sure how this would work, procedurally-speaking, but the issue is important enough that we ought to try and do something. The city contributed to this confusion; it’s incumbent upon us, as leaders, to help clear things up. I’m aware that pulling this together in such short order may raise procedural questions, but I feel strongly, as a candidate and sitting council member, that city leadership has an obligation to address this issue now. Our failure to do so will only prolong the controversy and the uncertainly — and it could cast an unnecessary shadow over the entire election process.

I’m obviously not asking that we embark on a hasty re-write of the law, based on what we learn — just that we step forward as a group to help finally bring clarity and closure to the situation, if we can.

Look forward to your thoughts and feedback,

Sean