Tuesday, October 6, 2009

Role of the Mayor

The Mayor of the City of Chicago is responsible for:
  • Approving / vetoing city council ordinances and has a line item veto power over appropriations bills.
  • Since he's responsible for submitting a budget and has line item power, the Mayor has the power of the purse.
  • The Mayor is also responsible for appointments to City Boards:
  • Education
  • City Colleges of Chicago
  • Chicago Housing Authority
  • Park District
  • Public Library
  • CTA (4 of 7 members)- uncertain but he may pick the chairman
  • RTA (5 of 16 members)
  • Public Building Commission (6 of 11 members) - he himself is currently the Chairman, not sure if that belings to the Mayor or he appointed himself Chairman
  • *International Port District (4 or 5 of 9 members) - Mayor's site says 4, IL Port Site says 5. The balance are appointed by the Governor.
  • Metropolitan Pier and Exposition Authority (7 of 13 members)
  • The Mayor is responsible for picking the Police Superintendent and the Fire Commissioner.
My sources for the above (and I have to admit that some of these sources are severely lacking):

So to boil down what the Mayor is responsible for and has his hands in, he must:
  1. Be a good competent manager and delegate well. He has to be able to pick managers who can drive results. But he is ultimately responsible because he puts them in their jobs.
  2. He is responsible for city ordinances - he vetoes or approves them. And it requires the city council to override with a 2/3 majority. Short of that condition, he's responsible.
  3. He "controls" outright the CPS, City Colleges, CHA, Park District, Public Library.
  4. He "controls" through majority appointment CTA, PBC (he's chairman), MPEA, and possibly IIPD.
If any of the above are deficient in the city of Chicago, Mayor Daley is responsible for not replacing the heads or providing new direction after a certain period of time.

The most straightforward approach this is to go through these different areas, plus understand certain city ordinances and render a judgement.

Monday, October 5, 2009

Daley Evaluation Framework

I'm evaluating whether Mayor Daley is "good or bad." I think this boils down to two fundamental questions:
#1- Is Mayor Daley a net positive or a net negative?
#2- Is Mayor Daley the best option we have?

Question #1 is important, if he's a net negative we should want to replace him. But in a vacuum of political or management talent, he may be the best we have.

Fair Disclosure- I'm biased against Daley. For the purposes of this analysis I think I will be fine to put that bias aside since I like to document and record where conclusions and proof come from. But going in to this I should state where I stand on this. I think Daley is probably a net positive. Some of this may be because of the way the Chicago political machine operates and so he is uber-effective- and he probably is a competent manager. However I think someone not so politically connected would rely less on cronies to get the job done, perhaps increasing the effectiveness of municipal government across the board. Fairer bidding for contracts, more competition for licences, etc. But the data will bear this out.

A couple major tasks/work streams to be addressed:
#1- What is the official role of the Mayor? Does Daley accomplish this (Poorly, Well, Fantastically)?
#2- Was the Olympic bid a good use of city / private citizen resources?
#3- The parking meter deal.
#4- Is he dirty? And if not, why is he content to let people think he is? Why are the feds investigating him?
#5- Where is he leading the city? Is he doing this as well as can be asked (if he's as big a dictator as everyone assumes, could he be doing more)?

I think answering/ addressing these issues leads us to the answers for Question #1 and #2. As you can see, these 5 issues in and of themselves require frameworks or approaches to address. #2 and #3 are current as well- so there may be things that are added and the relevance of them may diminish over time. But as examples of decision making- since Daley's been in office for 20 years, one would hope that if these were colossally bad decisions, someone with his experience would not still be making these.

Recommitting to the Blog - Update

So this was the second long term, unplanned, hiatus I've taken. I hope it will not happen again (but it will). I got behind updating my candidate evals and then the race was over very quickly after that. I've since moved to the South Loop and work had me out of town for two months which made things very busy. Ultimately I ranked my final choice of candidates as follows:
#1 Wheelan
#2 Quigley
#3 Fritchey

But I really, REALLY preferred the top 2 over Fritchey. But I'd like to see Jan Donatelli keep at it and run for an office in the future when she is more prepared. So all in all, a good result and I'm really glad Mike Quigley is the US representative from my former district.

What made me update with a post was a Facebook comment a friend made. It was right up the alley of what I wanted to do with this blog. Everyone seems to hate Daley, why? I have to admit, I don't have many concrete reasons - certainly not enough that justify my conviction that this city would be better off without him. So to get back into the swing of things I am going to to try to answer the question of whether Daley is good or bad. This is remarkably vague and subjective so I will try to apply a framework to my evaluation. This will also be a large undertaking but ultimately will be worth it. It will also likely not have a nice neat ending to it. Daley's in office, month to month, year to year, a cost-benefit analysis of his administration may result in conflicting results.


Sunday, February 1, 2009

By the way, the forum was packed

Democratic Candidate Forum- what's to come and introduction impressions

I'm going to try to explain my analysis as best as possible but I took a LOT of notes and explaining my impressions of the candidates with substaintiated examples of all their actions would be utterly draining. I'll do my best.

1) I will provide a candidate scorecard that shows their stance on the issues asked about
2) I'll give my impressions and rankings (both overall and just at the forum)
3) I'll summarize the questions and answers from the forum
4) I'll make a fuller analysis available for those special candidates (those who should be supported and those who should not be supported at all cost)

My Impression of the Forum
The forum was entertaining, informative, and eye-opening.  A lot of the people on that stage did not belong there.  Some of my prejudices were substantited and some were not.  The candidates were introduced by Lynn Sweet, the moderator and were each given 3 minutes to introduce themselves which they also had to use to make clear their position on gay marriage, universal healthcare, and the Oslo accords.  It was made clear it was not a debate.  She then asked questions to 1 or 2 candidates and then took volunteers after that.  That was the basic format.  

I immediately noticed that almost all the non-pols explained that they "were not a politician and we need someone to not be corrupt."  Most of them didn't realize EVERY OTHER non-pol on the stage was going to say that.  What would have been impressive, if one of them would have said, "and when I'm in congress I support A, B, and C measures on how to clean the system up."  Nobody said that.  I should note that I was impressed with Charlie Wheelan's introduction.  He did not play up the non-pol cred at all.  He probably stayed away from it because everybody else did.  I noticed it with him especially because he introduced himself later.  Overall, today was a good ( dare I say, "great") for Charlie Wheelan.

Presentation scores for their introduction (style and substance) 1-10 and my impressions

Annunzio - 5: One of these guys who is the anti-politician.  No proposals on how to change the system or counter corruption.  He is qualified because has knowledge of federal spending practices from being in construction industry.  He is pro single payer.  And when he addresseesd the gay marriage issue, he parsed his words like a politician (although not as smooth).  You had to really pay attention tpo understand that he's pro-civil union NOT gay marriage.  Suprisingly little courage for a non-politician, uness he's really thinks "marriage is between a man and a woman.

Feigenholtz - 7: The theme for feigenholtz was , NO SUBSTANCE.  Even as politicians go she was very poor today.  She is woman focused, that seems to be her only chip to play.  Her stance on the issues which made me put her in the "need for information" category, advocacy for single payer, sounded very wishy washy.  Universal healthcare is the ultimate goal.... weak!  I don't advocate single payer but if you're for it SAY YOU'RE FOR IT.   Didn't say anything about gay marriage.  She dodged a bullet there.  Weak!

Fritchey - 8: Fritchey surprised me.  I'd never seen him speak and his educational pedigree made me think he was a tee-totaler.  This is probably the type of guy who's banged a hooker in his day.  That being said, he's an in your face, these are the facts, yea I said it-type of guy.  It was nice.  It was very easy to know where he stood on isuses.  He probably raised his stock price today.  He said he was proud of his education, he attended a private highschool  in the city then went to U of michigan, then onto Northwestern law all on hardship scholarships (impressive). Said right up front he was not from Chicago (a lot of folks made it a point to mentionthey were from the city or play up their roots....who gives a fuck? You're here now, I hope. Fritchey is by the way).  He said single payer is a "moral construct." He said he had "unwavering support of his friends in the GLBT community on marriage, on ENDA etc".  Very good intro.

Quigley - 8: Immediately you could tell he was a politician, with demenaor and manner of speaking reeked of it.  He was very polished and introduced himselfwell.  Although he and Wheelan were the only ones who asserted they were more qualified than anyone else.  Wheelan did it more diplomatically, Quigley came right out and said, "I am the catalyst for change."  This saddened me.  All the other intros were hokey, sure but they felt honest.  Parts of Quigley's intro felt like he was just telling people what they wanted to hear.  He tried crafting a story about how he's always been for change and little has happened since the election (Obama has been in office for 12 DAYS!!!).  He's pro gay marriage, he feels Hamas needs to recognize Israel's right to exist (this got a HUGE applause.  I t was sort of strange), and he's pro-universal healthcare.  He asserted that he fought Stroger on higher taxes, and some other stuff.  I was annoyed that he's one of these people who pronounce "Illinois" as "E-llinois", like "ell" rhymes with "bell."  Not a substantive issue I know, but that really pisses me off.  Otherwise, a decent guy.

Thompson - 6: From the jump this guy seemed unprepared.  He could barely talk, or complete a thought, and he wasn't wearing a tie or jacket.  I'll be the first to say dress codes are stupid and you shouldn't assert people's motives from meaningless acts.  But I am abnormal in that regard.  And I wear a suit on interviews.  This was an interview.  This guy is not serious.  Probably less serious than Cary Capparelli because he wasn't at the forum.  He probably knows he has no business running and did the pragmatic thing and is dropping out.  This guy should too.  He spoke right after Wheelan and stole his "wealthiest" nation line.  There was one point where I thought this guy knew something and that was when he addressed the Oslo accords portion of the intro question he said, "it is an old agreement, it's unfinished."  At this point he was a dark horse.  And that was best his campaign will ever be.

Donatelli - 7: Her rationale for being qualified was that she worked for the Obama campaign.  She claims to have written policy papers (PLURAL) on transportation, infrastructure, and veteran affairs. I'm going to double check this with her website.  I was pretty certain that it said she contributed to A POLICY PAPER (SINGULAR).  I'm being ticky tacky but as I said with Cary Capparelli, embellishing to win a public office is not acceptable.  She supports a 2-state solution, and thinks single payer should be a long term goal.  

Bryar - 6: My first impression of this guy is that he's a weasel.  That would be supported later in the forum.  He thinks the #1 issue rigth now is to create jobs, and the #2 issue is that he's the anti-politician and he'll fight corruption.  (How?  Exactly)  He's in favor of a made in america tax cut (boo) and will freeze his pay when he's in office (so).  He favors universal ACCESS (yea), gay marriage (yea), and the Oslo accords agreement (I should read more).  

Forys - 6:  This guy meant well but.... he read his speech from paper in front of him and I frankly found it hard to concentrate.  He's a small business owner, he favors civil unions, single payer is not a political possibility right now (I'd argue with his analysis, this may be the best political environment sans economic downturn for single payer in the last 20 years), and he favors a 2-state solution.  

Wheelan - 9:  The man of the day.  Best intro out of all of the candidiates.  He was quick, rational, and substantive.  The economy is hte sinlge most important thing, he is clearly eminently qualified.  Pro gay marriage, no if's ands or buts, for universal healthcare, and supports a 2-state solution.  Because of his policy background he's been on the ground, "not as a toursit" advising diplomats, NGOs, governments etc. in Egypt, Jordan... a bunch of places I don't remember.  I think he has more national government experience than any of the other candidates which might strangley enough make him the most "qualified" to be a congressman.  

Geoghegan -6:  He sounded like he was screaming at first.  Here's another debunked first impression.  I expected him to be a loony super labor guy.  He was super labor, no mistake about it, but he sounded much more rational than I expected.  His intro was rather rambling though.  He wants to increase Soc Security to make it a real livable pension for all Americans, he wants single payer healthcare, he's anti-TARP, pro gay marriage, and oslo accord neutral. 
 
Monteguado - 6:  He's a cuban immigrant.  He sounded pathetic trying to claim to be a local because his wife is from the area and they've "owned a home" in the area for the past 15 years.  This guy is from NY.  at least that's where he's been living.  What have you done to help the community? Go get your shinebox carpetbagger.  I bet if you sat down with Dr. Monteguado he would have some very wise nuanced opinions about policy and the state.  But he just couldn't convert ANY of that intelligence today.  He constatnly stumbled over himself and added nothing to the forum.  He invoked Maslow in his intro (It was SUPER rambling).  He's pro gay marriage, and he's pro universal healthcare (but he's open to other options too). so he's not really for universal healthcare.  Gutless.

Thursday, January 29, 2009

Candidate Evals- Fritchey, Quigley, Wheelan, Forys (D)

Everyone in this eval is a, So Far So Good

John Fritchey
John Fritchey is state senator.  I've liked him for a while.  I have reservations that he might be churchy but I ca nevaluate that in greater detail later.  I like that he has a blog and while he doesn't update it quite as much as I might like, he's trying.  And he's had the blog for a while so it's not like he just started it for this election.  I was also able to find some news stories of where he inserted himself into some local issues rather than standing back like it's not his job.  At the forum I will ask to see if he followed up on those programs he enacted and ask for metrics on how he knew it worked/ helped.

Mike Quigley
Mike Quigley is a county commisioner.  I think if this wasn't such a democratic area, he might be a republican.  But his thing is waste elimination and efficiency.  I haven't made it through his authored report from 2002 but I have started it.  People who really want to change stuff issue reports and solicit feedback.  I think this guy is in it for the right reasons.  I haven't seen anyhting to counter that yet.

Charlie Wheelan
Charlie Wheelan is a lecturer at the University of Chicago.  The last one of those we had from Illinois became the president.  Just putting it out there.  I like that he's an economist, he's clearly very smart, he's not a politician, and he's a public policy expert.  Of the non-politiicans (and maybe the politicians as well) he's probably the most knowledgeable about the issueas and solutions that the country faces.  Which is good for a US representative.  

Viktor Forys
Viktor Forys is a physician.  He's donated a lot of time to charity and a clinic he founded.  Think of all the reasons you might want Paul Bryar in office and Viktor seems to be a mirror of that.  I get less of a "R in D clothing" vibe from him.  But as this round of evalutions is only skin deep, a cursory glance reveals a citizen interested in public service with a track record of giving back that will be very qualified on one of the very important upcomeing issues (healthcare).

Wednesday, January 28, 2009

Candidate Evals- Process Change

I'm going to change the way I'm doing the candidate evals.  Right now I write a long post using my framework and afterward there is some sort of disposition of the candidate.  So Far So Good, Need More Info, and Thanks for Playing.  There are so many candidates and it's been so time consuming that I'm going to be a little less thorough up front, and then drill down later when I can make better comparisons and hopefully there is more information.