Thursday, September 30, 2010

Akron's day on the labor front: teachers union, school board have tentative contract. http://ping.fm/vgBX6
UPDATE City Hall responds to fact finder siding with FOP in police contract talks. http://ping.fm/ZvIou
UPDATE City responds to fact-finder siding with Akron FOP on contract issues. http://ping.fm/PYGnr
WATCH The AkronNewsNow.com Update to see the latest local news and weather forecast! http://ping.fm/iKFB2
Love this story on how the Cleveland Indians went web. http://ping.fm/5rLMK
Former ABJ boss Mizell Stewart to moderate Indiana Senate debate. http://ping.fm/neRO7

Wednesday, September 29, 2010

Tuesday, September 28, 2010

VIDEO UPDATE: How Will Southwest's Deal With Airtran Impact CAK? See that story and more! http://ping.fm/6zhkj

Monday, September 27, 2010

VIDEO UPDATE: Southwest Buys Airtran, Thousands Take Part In The Akron Road Runner Marathon http://ping.fm/25bGw
More from @AkronNewsNow on AirTran-SWA merger impact on CAK. http://ping.fm/qPtZF

Saturday, September 25, 2010

Coverage of Hoban-SVSM live on the stream at 7p, then 1590 WAKR after OSU postgame. http://ping.fm/H8NL6
Hoban-SVSM football at 7 tonight begins online; 1590 @WAKR join in progress after OSU postgame. http://ping.fm/B7a6J
What a finish! Just one second between top and second in men's Akron Roadrunner Marathon. http://ping.fm/9xeMY

Wednesday, September 22, 2010

VIDEO UPDATE: Akron Police Back To Work, Which City Unions Support The Charter Amendment http://ping.fm/VziVF

Tuesday, September 21, 2010

Not all of Akron's public worker unions are on board the Issue 17 wagon -- yet. Including Fire. http://ping.fm/Cn3eT
VIDEO UPDATE: Akron Police Approve Concessions- Laid Off Cops To Return To Work http://ping.fm/JzxI1
Akron police have agreed to a concession package that will bring 40 officers back to work by a vote of 346 to 52. http://ping.fm/abNu7

Monday, September 20, 2010

Norton police tell AkronNewsNow.com that they've shut down ramps from Route 21 in both directions to I-76 Eastbound, due to that accident.
Norton police say a stuck semi-truck is blocking one lane of I-76 Eastbound off Route 21 Northbound.
Vice President Biden's visit to Akron is causing stopped traffic, I-76 and the Central Interchange. I-77 will be affected later.
APD Chief Gus Hall to retire. http://ping.fm/jrl3D
Video Update: Akron Police Vote On New Deal, Biden Visits The U of A & More! http://ping.fm/Dm71Y

Sunday, September 19, 2010

One of the more cogent and convincing arguments yet on a changing economy. @shelly_palmer http://ping.fm/j9IVR
For my "sky is falling" media colleagues: Americans say they are more informed. Just more places to do it? http://ping.fm/MRDlH

Friday, September 17, 2010

Video Update: Ohio Storm Damage, Unemployment Drops & Opa! Greek Festival Downtown: http://ping.fm/yTpXK

Thursday, September 16, 2010

Some new hope for feds thawing the ice jam on cameras in the courtroom. @RTDNA http://ping.fm/WAx96

Wednesday, September 15, 2010

City says it has approval to put school construction income tax for public safety on ballot; still depends on FOP deal to count votes.
VIDEO Update: How Much Is The City Saving On Police Layoffs? http://ping.fm/keANj

Tuesday, September 14, 2010

VIDEO: Fire Victims Saved By Good Samaritan & Firefighters http://ping.fm/1HXtA
How one other local city is avoiding the deficit trap door: http://ping.fm/o8jq2
Video Update: Laid Off Cops File For Unemployment, Two New Construction Projects In Akron & Much More! http://ping.fm/sxqWI

Monday, September 13, 2010

When Simple Math Isn't Simple

There's a reason why it takes an M.B.A. to figure out government accounting in this day and age. It really doesn't work the same as it does for us at home.

Take, for example, Saturday's news release from the City of Akron listing the per-officer "cash sacrifice" cost of what the City says was it's best and final concession package offer. The members of Fraternal Order of Police Lodge 7 turned the package down by 29 votes.

Saturday's accounting listed the following; I've taken the liberty of listing what the number would be, when available with additional notes in boldface:

-Defer (put in the bank for payment later) longevity (bonus) payments of 2010 and 2011;

-Work three, non-traditional holidays in 2010 at straight time pay rate. (Officers receive 13 paid holidays/yr.);

-Take 14 hours furlough in 2010. (Most city employees have taken 32+ hours);

-Have no wage cut or increase for 2010 and 2011 (actual amount unknown; City asked for clarification on "cash sacrifice" cost per officer based on current contract terms);

-Replace $300 cash fitness payment with a free gym membership for 2011

-Reduce 2011 clothing allowance (ranges from $1200-$1500) by approximately 25 percent. (Officers uniforms are provided by the City) (Cost to each officer: $300-375 based on ranges noted by the City);

-Make minor change in mail order prescription plan

-Agree that specific non economic issues would remain before fact finder


At this point the cost to officers in the fitness payment and clothing allowance alone is $600 apiece, and that doesn't include the "cash sacrifice" impact for straight time for three holidays, a wage freeze, or 14 hours of furlough pay for the remainder of 2010.

We asked the Mayor's office to explain how it arrived at the $450 figure that would set the "cash sacrifice" for the 449 officers now on duty.

In a response today, the longevity pay deferral over two years would amount to $720,000 over two years, or about $360,000 each year. That alone is worth $801.78, on average, to each officer. There is a promise to pay the amount back in 2012 -- just as the City and F.O.P. agreed to defer the 2009 amount to 2012, which means four years of longevity pay (2012 current + deferrals) would come due in 2012.

That's a whopping minimum $1,440,000 total police longevity pay bill due in 2012 -- $360,000 for 2009, 2010, 2011 and 2012. The actual amount will fluctuate depending on each year's makeup of the workforce; less longevity and seniority, lower payments.

The response also lumps together the clothing allowance, 14 hours of furloughs, straight time instead of holiday pay for three holidays, and changes to the prescription plan into additional impact on the balance of $1.4 million the City says it would save over two years.

Perhaps the oddest twist comes regarding the impact of the $300 per officer cash fitness payment. The City doesn't consider this a loss of cash to the officers, since they would be receiving value in a free gym membership in return. The gym is the CitiCenter Athletic Center facility, which is owned and subsidized by the City and was the focus of a 2007 story by the Akron Beacon Journal (archive access only) and AkronNewsNow.com over costs of over a million dollars over the past decade. In that year City Council approved a $233,000 subsidy for the CitiCenter Athletic Center even though membership fees only brought in $90,000. The athletic facility is managed by the Akron Area YMCA.

The CitiCenter website lists the monthly cost for city, county and state members of $37.60 -- a 20% discount from the regular membership. Based on the membership cost listed for government workers, coverage of all 449 police officers at the government rate would be $16,882.40 monthly, or $202,588.80 annually ($37.60 monthly x 449 officers x 12 months). The fitness payment now costs the City $134,7000 annually ($300 cash payment x 449 officers).

A spokesman for the Mayor writes the City has an arrangement with Medical Mutual that provides for lower health care premiums based on participation at the CitiCenter gym, noting that if police officers join it will lower costs.

So the "simple" math: $1,400,000 in savings over two years divided by 449 officers works out to $1,559.02 each year over the period, not $450 as reported by the City on Saturday, according to the City's own numbers.

We should note some of the City's concession package breaks no new ground; the FOP agreed to concession terms in 2009 that included deferral of 2009 longevity bonus to 2012 as well as working three holidays -- Columbus Day, Veteran's Day and the Friday after Thanksgiving -- for straight time rather than overtime at a time-and-a-half rate.

Around this time last year it was Akron firefighters on the grill rather than police. FOP members approved concessions by a 94% margin (399-27) while members of the AFD took layoffs rather than the concession package proposed by the City. Those firefighters were called back earlier this year when Akron was able to secure federal funding. The firefighters union appealed to the Akron Civil Service Commission, which rejected their appeal and noted the layoffs could have been avoided had firefighters agreed to concessions.

This year it's the F.O.P. essentially playing chicken with the City, but it won't be the Civil Service Commission ruling that awaits. It's the ruling of a fact-finder, who's mission was triggered when the City couldn't convince the F.O.P. to take a concession package earlier this year during contract negotiations. Critics of the Plusquellic Administration assume the report will find against City Hall, but it is important to note F.O.P. president Paul Hlynsky has repeated said the findings may very well come in to the favor of the Mayor's position.

There's been plenty of drama distraction the past few months in following this story. There was the document released by the Mayor's office that threatened more than 90 police layoffs in light of a $4 million dollar projected deficit and protests from the Administration there were no other places to cut. But weeks later, that number shrank to 49 -- 40 layoffs and nine demotions -- after Police Chief Gus Hall was able to shift general fund spending to grants.

Then came the membership vote when the bargaining committee agreed to present the package to Akron police; it flunked by a relatively slim 29-votes, especially slim when considering these same officers approved concessions last year by a 94% margin. Before the ink was dry on the results, the Mayor suggested a political wrinkle that community leaders be allowed to observe the negotiating process.

In political circles this is clearly a tactic designed to position your opponent; who is in the room is a function of agreement by both parties, not the arbitrary wishes of one side over the other. The City points to an F.O.P. guest on hand last week, but fails to mention the "guest" was in fact a vice-president of the union and someone with a direct stake in the negotiations. Community leaders Rev. Ron Fowler and Judge Marvin Shapiro, while honorable men, are not parties to the negotiations. It was within the rights of the F.O.P. to refuse to accept the condition of meeting imposed by City Hall to include Fowler and Shapiro, just as the City would have been within it's rights to refuse to allow the F.O.P. first vice-president permission to attend.

The Mayor is correct when pointing out there's less money in the City budget to do what the City needs to do. Something has to go, and in a services-industry budget like government that "something" usually means someone. He clearly telegraphed the punch early, noting layoffs -- just like last year -- were on the line. The F.O.P. is correct in working within the parameters of the collective bargaining system, and proved last year members were willing to absorb some short-term hurt to help. But what hasn't helped is losing focus on meeting the growing deficit, made even harder by a call to base the budget on concessions that weren't agreed on by both parties. Just search the word "concessions" on AkronNewsNow.com and put the last year in context.

Lost in the swirl of soap opera on High Street remains what actions the City will take to avert a projected $4 million dollar budget deficit, and whether the political posturing of tying a funding proposal involving breaking the promise to use Issue 10 for purposes other than schools will cost voters the chance to decide whether they feel it is enough of a worthwhile investment to change the terms of their approval in 2003 of the school construction tax. That language -- while politically crafty -- may come back to outfox the Administration and City Council by tying their own hands in an attempt to position the F.O.P. rather than address the threat of an out-of-whack budget.

The decision of the City to move forward with a negotiating strategy that called into play a fact-finder has been costly. The name-calling by both sides has built an atmosphere of distrust and enmity. Tying the budget deficit to the police contract, neither side breaking out issues of agreement, the war of numbers that don't seem to add up...all bring to mind the popular scene from the movie "Dave", where accountant Charles Grodin is asked by his president-impostor friend Kevin Kline to figure out the federal budget.

They do so over a late-night meal.



If only it was a simple as a couple beers and sandwiches.

Sunday, September 12, 2010

Is it just me or in a year when Igor is a hurricane shouldn't Karloff be one, too? http://ping.fm/ygAXa

Saturday, September 11, 2010

The scheduled negotiations between Akron Police & city officials regarding concessions did not take place. Cops getting laid off.

Friday, September 10, 2010

This likely won't make anyone happy, but why is capital spending still sacred? http://ping.fm/3LUA4
Streaming audio now: President Obama news conference, almost time for questions. http://ping.fm/Sd8bd
The Akron FOP has turned down the tentative contract agreement with the city of Akron 221-192.

Thursday, September 9, 2010

Florida pastor now decides he's not burning books this weekend -- including the Quran.
Well, here's an interesting update on open speech in Mississippi... http://ping.fm/VL12f
Journalism's future in Akron: home grown? http://ping.fm/LBL6o
Waiting for my Fox-hating pals to weigh in on Fox News decision to skip the Quran burning... http://ping.fm/pZHZl
A car fire just south of the Stark County line on I-77 Southbound has backed up traffic into Stark County. A tow truck is about to clear.
Video Update: The Future Young's Restaurant, Mayor On The FOP Tentative Agreement & Is Walmart Moving From Fairlawn? http://ping.fm/hM37M

Wednesday, September 8, 2010

That time of year: what's the start of school without someone left behind? unhurt http://ping.fm/LIZOT
AkronNewsNow.com Video Update: FOP & City Reach A Tentative Deal, Babysitter In Court & Falls Riverfront Concerns: http://ping.fm/NNrod
Tentative deal reached between Akron Police and the city. http://ping.fm/sba2Z

Tuesday, September 7, 2010

AkronNewsNow.com Video Update: Fatal Holiday Shooting, Store Robbed In The Valley & More: http://ping.fm/V7DLT

Friday, September 3, 2010

Comments sure worth a read; did Sutton supporters stalk Ganley in wrong district? http://ping.fm/j0zex
Big Ben's return comes against the Browns. Insert observations on daughters here. http://ping.fm/2bCn1
Video Update: Akron Aeros Players Face Bar Fight Charges, A Stem School Student Wins A Hefty Prize: http://ping.fm/31JiP
Akron Aeros Players Face Bar Fight Charges, A Stem School Student Wins A Hefty Prize & The Holiday Forecast! http://ping.fm/31JiP

Thursday, September 2, 2010

Still a lightning rod...and still damn thought provoking, especially on the state of political reporting. Dan Rather talks with @poynter http://ping.fm/QTfkb
The Coast Guard says an offshore oil rig in the Gulf of Mexico has exploded west of the site of the BP rig. More details coming.
AkronNewsNow.com Video Update: Canton Soldier Killed, Council Puts Mayor's Issue On Fall Ballot: http://ping.fm/CBk5N

Wednesday, September 1, 2010

Akron City Council votes 11-1 to put charter change to use part of school tax to fund public safety on Nov ballot contingent on FOP.
Testing the system.
The day after ONA online ethics situation -- breaking case history. discovery on twitter http://twitter.com/TBD
AkronNewsNow.com Video Update: APD Layoff Opps! Plus The City's Budget Projections Looking Up? http://ping.fm/COQk6
Delays for drivers on I-76 East this morning. ODOT has reduced the roadway to one lane of travel at Rt. 619 due to a crash. http://ping.fm/OGPsb