David Anderson wrote:The question remains: Why did it conceivably take 95,000 more hours (equivalent to 45 full time employees) to do Lakewood's work in 2006 as opposed to 2003?....
......However, Doug, Gary, Bill, others, shouldn't the numbers provided at least raise the need for further study?
I like the way you think.
Take the problem with the parks. If you have 35 park employees that's 70,000 or so hours to pick up the trash and mow the lawns. It seems like plenty of time.
The City has signed on to a lot of studies over the last few years. How about a manpower study? Match each employee to job of 1987. What you have left are the added employees. Are the remaining jobs necessary? Maybe, maybe not.
What effect has the use of sick time as vacation time had on the need for additional employees? 60,000 sick hours each is a lot of sickness. How many days were you sick last year?
What effect has poor management had on employment levels?
This sounds like a job for the City's new Citistat Department.
Gary Rice wrote:The big problem for local governments, state governments, and schools, is that the Feds can put a mandate up, without enough money to back it up.
I know in the schools, we struggled with dictate upon dictate, with ever-diminishing resources.
First, I appreciate your reasoned and thoughtful responses to my posts.
Unfunded mandates do have a detrimental affect on schools and cities.
The recent water rate increases were made necessary by the EPA and the need to replace infrastructure. However, those mandates require the spending of money on infrastructure not on employment. Am I wrong? Maybe, a manpower study would tell us.
The schools are under immense pressure from the state and federal governments. The unfunded mandates do not improve education but they do increase costs. However, the schools are not mandated to pay the employee portion of the retirement plan and they are not required to offer gold plated health plans.
I have a sense that asking for a reasoned analysis of manpower and spending is a waste of time. I get the feeling the City has reached the point of no return.