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OPINION
San Diego's backroom 'reform'
A
push to revise the city's charter is little more than a power
grab by the mayor
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Steven P. Erie and Norma Damashek
Los Angeles Times
October 7, 2007
Nothing better illustrates the politics, power structure and
civic maturity of a city than charter reform. A charter is a
city's constitution. It allocates authority at city hall and
sets out rules by which interest groups gain access and
influence city government.
San Diego is considering rewriting its charter to make
permanent a "strong mayor" system that only last
year began its five-year trial run. You might ask, why so
fast? Why not let the experiment play out longer before taking
the significant step of changing San Diego's charter?
The answer is politics. Mayor Jerry Sanders is up for
reelection in June, and his supporters hope that a charter
proposal on the same ballot securing him and future mayors
major new powers will ride his coattails to victory.
The rush has turned the city's approach to charter reform into
a civic sham. Orchestrated by the mayor's office, with help
from the downtown business and civic establishment, the effort
seeks to turn back the political clock and marginalize
progressive, labor, environmental and community groups that
have only recently gained clout in San Diego government.
Two major events discredited San Diego's previous city manager
system. The first was a huge shortfall in the city's pension
fund. San Diego had increased employee pension benefits while
cutting back its contributions, and pension managers had hoped
the dot-com stock market would keep soaring and finance the
plans. But the market collapsed. The second crisis was the
devastating 2003 Cedar fire, which San Diego firefighters were
helpless to stop because the city did not have water-dropping
helicopters.
The next year, angry voters narrowly approved the experiment
with a mayor-city council system similar to L.A.'s. Elected in
2005, Sanders sought to add even more mayoral powers after his
first year in office. In March, he created a 15-member charter
review committee, seven of whose members he appointed. The
city's eight council members nominated three candidates each
for the remaining slots, with the mayor making the final
choice.
The result is a stacked-deck committee, top-heavy with
downtown lawyers and lobbyists. There are no labor,
environmental or good-government representatives on the panel
despite Sanders' promise to make the committee broadly
representative. And in a city with a large and rapidly growing
Latino population, there are no Latinos on the committee.
The mayor's office has controlled the review process from the
get-go. Calling for "clarification and fine-tuning"
of the strong-mayor experiment, Sanders' staff wrote the
agenda. They lobbied hard for the mayor's positions and
controlled the charter consultant. The mayor's office
scheduled only two community forums to discuss the recommended
charter changes. But embarrassed by sharp criticism from
labor, environmental and good-government representatives, the
committee was forced to hold additional neighborhood meetings,
though the public input did not influence the final set of
recommendations.
After deliberating less than six months (charter reform in Los
Angeles was a two-year process), the committee last week
proposed far-reaching changes in San Diego's charter that
would strengthen and make permanent the strong-mayor form of
government -- at the expense of the City Council's and city
attorney's powers.
Under the proposed charter, the mayor would control San
Diego's growth and development, including the city's
redevelopment agency; appoint the city auditor, who, among
other things, reviews the books of the city departments that
the mayor manages; appoint two of the five members of a new
audit committee; and get more appointment powers. The City
Council would be expanded from eight to 11 members, with the
veto-override threshold raised to a difficult-to-obtain eight
votes. Most troubling is the committee's proposal to weaken
the elected city attorney's independence and powers. For
instance, the city attorney's clients would be only city
officials and not the public.
Sanders' insider power grab is in keeping with San Diego
history. In the last 150 years, special interests -- the
military,the tourist industry, downtown business interests,
developers and the building industry -- have exerted
inordinate influence over city government. Sporadic
grass-roots challenges, such as outsider Peter Navarro's
mayoral race in the early 1990s, were easily subdued, but new
threats of insurgency have grown up. With the advent of
district elections in 1988, Democrats, labor and community
groups have gained a foothold on the City Council.
More recently, progressive City Atty. Michael Aguirre and
Councilwoman Donna Frye, who unsuccessfully ran for mayor,
have challenged old-guard rule by championing open public
meetings, greater transparency in government and an end to
special-interest rule. In response, a reinvigorated
GOP-downtown business-developer machine, with backing from
supporters who bill themselves as the "nominal Democrat
allies," has embraced Sanders' quest for a new charter
giving him greater power.
The charter committee's recommendations will go to the City
Council this month for approval or revision, and will appear
on the June ballot as propositions. The council can preserve
or strengthen San Diego government's current system of checks
and balances by proposing an independently elected or
appointed city auditor, maintaining the city attorney's
independence and powers and keeping its membership at eight
pending the 2010 census and redistricting.
But its performance under the experimental strong-mayor system
has not been reassuring because the council has given Sanders
nearly everything he has asked for. For instance, the mayor
can transfer funds between departments and cut up to 15% of
the total budget without council approval. This power far
exceeds that of mayors in Los Angeles and most other big
cities. Should Sanders not be satisfied with the council's
response to the charter recommendations, his supporters are
threatening to use the city's initiative process to place the
proposals on the ballot.
San Diego has an ignominious history of backroom deals that
benefit developers and business interests. Lavish corporate
subsidies go hand in hand with penurious spending for such
basic public services as police and fire, street maintenance
and neighborhood parks. What San Diego needs is a bloodless
revolution and an infusion of enlightened leadership, not
retrograde charter "reform," to address its real
problems: fiscal insolvency and inadequate public services and
infrastructure. Only then will America's "Finest
City" start to fulfill the promise of local democracy.
Steven P. Erie, professor of political science at UC San
Diego, is completing "Paradise Plundered: Fiscal Crisis
and Political Turmoil in San Diego." Norma Damashek is
vice president of the San Diego League of Women Voters.
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Copyright 1999-2007, California Coastal Coalition
Phone: (760) 944-3564
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