|
Metro commissioners threatened with recall
By Chris Fitzgerald
KP News
At a public candidates’ forum held September 2005 at the
Civic Center, candidates for several elected positions
sat at long tables and fielded questions from the
audience. Among the hopefuls were candidates for Fire
District 16, the recently formed Key Peninsula Community
Council, and the new Key Peninsula Metropolitan Park
District (KPMPD). Of particular concern to the audience
were the leanings of park district commissioner
candidates.
Just months prior, KPMPD had come
into creation through a 60 percent passing vote by
peninsula residents. It was replacing a nearly bankrupt
park system run by individuals who created Volunteer
Park with the sweat of their own brows in the 1960s.
One question from the floor came
from Mike Salatino, previous Key Peninsula park board
chair. He asked Kip Clinton, incumbent KPMPD
commissioner (and previous park board member), what her
intentions were regarding the issue of compensation for
elected commissioners. (Washington State law allows
compensation up to $6,720 per commissioner per year, per
RCW 35.61.150.) In a related article printed in the May
2004 issue of the KP News, Clinton had indicated one
decision was firm: The commissioners will not request a
per diem stipend.
“We (the original members) have
agreed it’s a strictly voluntary position,” she said.”
She repeated those words on that September evening.
Salatino said, “That’s all I wanted to know,” and sat
down, satisfied that the intentions of the departing
park board would be honored.
According to current KPMPD board
president, Paula DeMoss, at the outset of organizing the
district, some individuals firmly opposed any kind of
compensation for the new commissioners. She said there
were misgivings that, with compensation attached,
perhaps those who might run — and be elected — may not
have the best interests of the area in mind.
As a governmental body, the board
is required to address the subject of compensation
annually. Delayed from winter this calendar year, on May
8, 2006, four of the five current park district
commissioners voted in favor of Resolution No. R
2006-03, “…Establishing Commissioner Compensation.”
Those voting for the resolution were DeMoss, Vice
President Jerry Schick, and members-at-large Ross
Bischoff and Caril Ridley. Clinton, board clerk,
abstained, although she did sign the resolution as a
member of the board “to show solidarity.”
The resolution states the
procedures for reporting and paying compensation (up to
$70 per day). These include submittal of a Commissioner
Compensation Form, and conditions under which a
commissioner may request compensation (a day or portion
of a day devoted to official business of the district
and otherwise case-by-case). Regarding district business
outside of official public board meetings, the
resolution states that compensation is not an
entitlement, “unless compensation for such business of
the district is pre-approved by the board on a
case-by-case basis.” Adoption of the resolution does not
preclude any commissioner from choosing to waive
compensation at any time. This can be accomplished
simply by “written waiver filed with the clerk… anytime
after the commissioner’s election and prior to the date
on which the compensation would otherwise be paid.” It
is up to each commissioner to determine if, when, and
for how long they might consider either taking or
waiving compensation for hours spent in service on the
board.
In an email statement to KP News,
Ridley wrote, “I’ve never opposed compensation for
commissioners elected to represent their community. As a
longtime volunteer, I wholeheartedly support reasonable
compensation and recognize that community service should
never be exclusive to people affording their own agenda.
Therefore, I believe reasonable compensation for
services required offers everybody an opportunity to
serve without personal loss, whatever their financial
situation. Reasonable compensation attracts the support,
the quality guidance and effective decision making our
growing district deserves.”
At the May 8 meeting, according to
the minutes, Schick presented the compensation
resolution. DeMoss said “she would not object to
compensation for pre-approved out-of-district events,
but commissioners should not expect compensation for
regular board meetings,” to which Bischoff agreed.
In a brief discussion of the
resolution at the May 22 meeting, commenting to the
board that KP News was attempting to acquire information
about the resolution, DeMoss said, “This is a touchy
subject. We put in extra hours outside the meetings — it
takes time; gas costs… (This) more or less covers our
expenses to allow us to pursue the 360 (acre park)
acquisition. It is a personal choice to accept
compensation.”
Schick added that “it would be
exceedingly difficult for any one commissioner to come
to that maximum ($6,720).” Concerned about news
coverage, DeMoss said, “I desperately do not want an
article to be written wrong on this topic.” She directed
Scott Gallacher, park district director, to put together
a press release for commissioner-approval to be given to
local newspapers at some point in the near future. The
press release was not available at press time. Bischoff
and Schick did not respond to email requests for
interviews.
In an interview after the meeting
of May 22, DeMoss said she thought any requests for
compensation would amount to less than $500 by year-end.
She also said that even for that amount, “there was no
way” to budget it in without deleting something else.
The May 8 minutes indicate a discussion ensued regarding
“personal choice” and the Peninsula Metro Park District
in Gig Harbor, whose five commissioners’ compensation
are both budgeted and taken. Clinton “reminded the
commissioners that should one or all ask for
compensation, that would ‘bust the budget,’” the minutes
said.
The new resolution prompted
Gallacher, who reports to the five commissioners, to say
in an interview, “We’re going to have to revisit the
budget. The commissioners attend two meetings a month —
three to five or six hours apiece. They also have other
things that come to them from me. Fire district
commissioners are paid for their meetings — and other
county elected officials have small stipends. My hope is
they (the commissioners) don’t take the full amount;
there is nothing in the budget for it. But they should
be paid. If we had to pay someone to put in the amount
of time they spend on parks issues, it would cost a lot
more (than what they’re allowed to take). There has to
be some value attached to that.”
The actual budget to minimally run
Volunteer Park, and bare-bones maintaining of Home Park
and Rocky Creek Conservation Area since the district’s
inception in March 2004, is as follows: 2004 annual
(rounded) total: $67,500 with monthly average of $9,600;
2005 annual total: $122,600 with monthly average of
$10,200; 2006 to date: $49,800 with monthly average of
$9,900.
Pierce County is currently enjoying
the greatest increase in retail sales tax since 1990,
(up 11.3 percent, according to Washington State
Department of Revenue), which is reflected in the
increase in the KPMPD’s share of the zoo/trek tax. The
park district’s challenge is that the district’s
population is growing, and with it, park usage. The
commissioners are intent on land-banking more property,
which, according to Ed Taylor, an audience member at the
May 22 meeting, “can be done in a way that doesn’t cost
any money — if you do it right.”
Current parks have plenty of
deferred maintenance, while the budget stays virtually
the same. “Parks are important for economic development
of an area,” Gallacher said. “People don’t always want
to pay for them, but they want them. Sometimes you have
to pay for what you want.”
©Copyright 2005-2008, Key Peninsula
News, all rights reserved.
|
|