Originally Posted by
Steve
Way, way back when, the public was asked to approve the public safety tax. This was under a young, inexperienced mayor by the name of Ron Norick and a relative short-timer of a city manager (Terry Childers). True
The tax was a great way to beef up the ranks and buy new equipment, True but it came with some future problems without any solutions YOUR Opinion. One, the cost of those police and firefighters salaries and benefits would ultimately grow faster than the tax itself Half truth since 200 FF & PD lowest levels personnel are paid by the sales tax, salary and benefits as whole are negotiated items which both sides negotiate every year. Two, there was a minimum staffing requirement built into the deal. True
(Guys, correct me at any time here) Working on it......
As the mayor got more experienced, and city staff began to realize what this meant, it created a problem for them because they felt it was forcing them to cut other departments' and services' funding just to keep up with firefighter and police costs. Your Opinion and don't forget that the FD and PD budget, aside from the 3/4 tax began to lose pace with other departments that didn't have dedicated funding.
They tried various ways to work around this, a lawsuit was filed, bad things were said, and a judgment was handed down that clogs up the city council agenda every year. True about the judgement, Your opinion about clogging up agenda's.
(Again, correct me at any time) Still working on it......
The council and staff might have been more aggressive against the unions, but didn't dare after April, 1995, and with the presence of a few allied council members, the unions did pretty well for a while on contract negotiations getting raises year after year. False, the unions offered to roll over the contract in 95 and have not received a raise every year as you state.
But a shortfall and reorganization in the late 1990s led to the first attempt to clamp down on rising costs. This was a nasty battle that involved the struggling EMSA service and all sorts of complicated scenarios that left neither side very happy. Sorta True, for the FD this was the Benson and Marrs era and was very complicated. Neither helped relations between the CM and council and the EMSA debacle still reigns on today.
This is where we get into ALS engine companies, what was promised, what wasn't promised. I could spend a few hours at this point digging into archives to figure out exactly what the heck happened - but I'm tired. The unions will give their side of this here on OKC Talk TRUE, that's where I'm the fly in your ointment, and city management won't FALSE they are all over this site. The truth, as always, is probably somewhere in between. True to an extent, but i tend to lobby for my love and passion of my career and have had first hand dealings with the City management for many years.....so yeah, I'm tired of being lied to.
So now it's 2010. We're enjoying the national recession. I've seen a couple hundred people, several friends, lose their jobs. Salaries are flat for three years. What we're paying for insurance is up.
And the police and firefighters are upset because they feel they've been shorted on promised raises FALSE, staffing increases FALSE, for several years.
And they want this rectified, recession be damned. And as they try to argue this, they can't figure out why no one sympathizes with their cause.
Somewhere up in Heaven, Mark Schwartz is looking down, frowning, and saying "guys, you need to regroup. You're going about this all wrong. Now here's the plan ..." FALSE Mark would more likely be saying Don't let those SOB's take another thing away without a fight, we've lost too much already.
(DISCLOSURE: All of this is from memory, so if I've messed it up, give me credit for trying)
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