Public Watchdog.org

Can Schmidt Veto De-Rail Pro-Hock Sabotage?

01.18.11

Sabotage has a long tradition.  

One of several explanations of its origin is that French Luddites jammed their wooden shoes – known as “sabots” – in the gears of powered looms during the Industrial Revolution in protest over the replacement of workers by machinery.

A much more recent, and more benign, form of sabotage occurred when departing Clinton Administration staffers reportedly removed the “W” keys from all the White House computer keyboards as either a prank or in symbolic protest to incoming president George W. Bush.

Last night, Mayor Dave Schmidt vetoed what appears to be another form of sabotage: the 2-year sweetheart employment contract that our current lame duck City Council – 5 of whom (Alds. Allegretti, Bach, Carey, Ryan and Wsol) are retiring from the Council after the upcoming April election – recently gave City Mgr. Jim Hock after Schmidt vetoed a prior version and his veto was sustained by the Council.

When Schmidt and Hock couldn’t agree to a new contract following that veto, Allegretti, Bach, Wsol and Ald. Rich DiPietro took it upon themselves to negotiate with Hock – but the result they produced could re-define “negotiate” to mean “give away the store,” as the contract they came up with appears to be even worse than the one Schmidt vetoed.

It gives Hock almost $200,000/year from now until April, 2013, and includes what Schmidt called a “poison pill” in his veto message: a “super” severance package that ensures Hock will receive no less than $117,000 if he is involuntarily terminated without sufficient “cause.”  That ties the hands of the City and the new aldermen joining the Council in April; and it makes Hock virtually bullet-proof no matter how poorly he does, or doesn’t do, his job.

In our book, that’s bad enough to justify Schmidt’s veto, as well as a round of Bronx cheers for the four alderman who “negotiated” that sell-out of the public trust.  Given their track records, we didn’t expect any better from Allegretti and Bach.  But we did expect more – much more – from DiPietro and Wsol, so their endorsement of this deal is a major disappointment.

And Ald. Joe Sweeney’s vote for it after stating that it’s a good deal for Hock but a not so good deal for the City makes us wonder whether somebody ever explained to Sweeney exactly who he represents when he’s sitting in that chair around The Horseshoe.

Worse yet, the sweetheart deal they cooked up was given to Hock without any Council member even attempting to show how Hock’s performance over the past three years has been good enough to warrant anything more than at-will employment, at best.  

Which in a perverse sort of way makes sense, because from what we’ve observed over the past three years Hock’s performance has done nothing to distinguish him from any other mediocre bureaucrat.

That might explain some of the displeasure expressed by Rob Lohens and several other residents at last night’s meeting, which should make the video of the meeting more interesting than usual when it gets posted later today or tomorrow on the City’s website.  

Two weeks from now we should find out whether our departing saboteurs (along with DiPietro and Sweeney) will have realized the error of their ways, will vote to sustain Schmidt’s veto, and will then leave the question of Hock’s contract to the new Council that will have to live with it.

Hope springs eternal…but we’re not going to hold our breath.

To read or post comments, click on title.

7 comments so far

They should sustain the veto and leave Hock on an as is basis for the time being. Let the new guys come in and let Hock make his case to them and the Mayor as to why he deserves a new contract. As it is this council has shown it makes no connection between performance and pay and they should not be allowed to saddle the new crew and the city with such an expensive and long trm deal as they exit.if they do it will be seen as just more of the same a la the state legislature and thayt God awful tax increase.

“Saboteurs”? You’re heading into Sarah Palin territory, PubDog. Whether you like it or not, I have to think those aldermen had the best interests of the city at heart when the approved that contract, so branding them saboteurs is harsh.

From the sound of the story in the online Advocate about the Council sustaining Mayor Schmidt’s veto of Police Chief Kaminski’s $148,000 salary, it looks like City Manager Hock screwed this up by over-paying the Chief. Yeah, let’s give Hock a two year $200,000 a year contract so he can keep on screwing up.

It is hard to imagine they aren’t doing this o purpose. Except for maybe Sweeney who sometimes seems like he is not sure what he is doing. (Sidenote…did Sweeney actually say last night he is against all deferred comp as he voted to sustain the Mayor’s veto of Kaminsky’s salary?!? Joe! Did you forget you voted FOR Hock’s contract last time around? Doh!) Anyway, this latest contract for Hock has to leave you wondering why the Aldermen think they should be giving Hock such a great deal as they exit…leaves me wondering if Hock isn’t just the beneficiary of the ongoing animosity between the Mayor and themselves. It is all quite a crock.

EDITOR’S NOTE: How could you even think that those aldermen would do anything merely out of “animosity” toward the mayor? Just because Allegretti, Bach, Carey, DiPietro and Ryan voted with then-mayor Howard Frimark to “condemn” then-ald. Schmidt in January 2008 because he lawfully made public Frimark’s closed-session scheme to have the City buy 720 Garden from a country club buddy of his for a new police station before the Council had even approved such a project? Or because Allegretti, Bach, Carey, DiPietro and Ryan contributed over $3,800 to Frimark’s unsuccessful re-election campaign? Or maybe because Schmidt has vetoed so many of their hare-brained spending decisions?

Nah…they probably just don’t like how Schmidt parts his hair.

The video of Monday night’s meeting is up on the City’s website and Rob Lohens’ comments (at 20:48 of the video) are right on. The idea that the police chief is collecting a pension from Evanston and getting $148,000 from us is just nuts. And giving the city manager a multi-year contract and a big severance is just as nuts.

Yes.

Lohens was good. He barely maintained his composure but he did. And even though he was wrong on a couple of points he was really passionate and made what seemed to be quite an impression on the crowd, includung the aldermen.

Maybe, just maybe, those aldermen are getting a sense of how excessive what they are doing, or letting Hock try to do, is and how the citizens of our town are feeling about it.

One can hope…



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