Sunday, October 29, 2017

My View on Richland Hills Proposition A

Early voting is already underway in the City of Richland Hills for the November 4 General Election. On the ballot is Proposition A, which asks:

Shall the City of Richland Hills require by ordinance that all police officers and firefighters be paid no less than the average of all salary and benefits paid to equivalent positions in the Cities of Fort Worth, North Richland Hills, Hurst and Haltom City.”

After due consideration, I am declaring my opposition to this proposition. The conversation about fair pay for our first responders is vitally important, and deserves the ongoing attention of the citizens and City Council in setting budget priorities for our city. Let's have open, informed consideration and deliberation and hold our elected officials accountable for the budget decisions they make.

My opposition is not based on a consideration about the current adequacy of the first responder pay scale in Richland Hills.  I take no position here about whether or not the current pay scale is fair. Rather, my opposition is entirely predicated on one paramount principle: I am not willing for our city to legislate away control over a significant portion of our municipal budget and abdicate budget line items to an index of our neighboring cities.

With respect to the citizens who proposed this action, I do not doubt that they did so with good hearts and noble motivation. I agree with them that our city is best served by public service officers who are fairly compensated and have opportunity to develop and advance professionally while in the employ of Richland Hills. If there are concerns as to whether we as a city are appropriately compensating our officers and firefighters, let's have that debate. But let us not, for expediency sake, turn over the city purse strings to the fiat of averaging out salaries from neighboring cities.

Surrendering control of our budget can have unintended long-term, serious, negative consequences. There are too many variables which can impact pay scales in other cities which may have no correlation whatsoever to our city. Much larger cities have different, and often enhanced, police and fire service needs, driven by such factors such as high crime rates, high-crime areas, types of commercial and industrial development and construction, and other community-driven needs which are unique to those cities. Larger departments may unionize or engage in collective bargaining. Merely looking at overall compensation does not take into consideration other factors which accrue to fair pay considerations. Work schedules, work load, retirement policies, etc., are equally important in the calculus but are completely ignored by this proposition, as there is no reasonable way to quantify these other considerations in dollars.

There are other variables which may have a negative impact in the future. For example, consider the recent situation with the City of Dallas Police Department. Because of mismanagement of their retirement fund, there was a wave of early retirements by officers trying to maximize their retirement benefits. This created a staffing vacuum which has required Dallas to revisit police compensation. Were this to happen in Fort Worth or one of our other neighbors and Richland Hills pay was indexed to them, our city would have to make budget adjustments simply because our neighbor failed to take care of their own business.

Under this proposition, every budgetary deliberation in Fort Worth, Haltom City, Hurst, and North Richland Hills becomes material to our city's budget, but we have no voice. In essence, we're declaring “you other cities do what you want with police and firefighter pay, and once you figure it out, let us see the figures so we can calculate what it means to our budget.” That, my dear citizens, is the antithesis of good government and representative democracy.

Advocate for our first responders and hold our council accountable to see that they are paid fairly. But don't give away budgetary control of this line item to our neighbors. Vote “Against” Proposition A. There's a more excellent way to handle our municipal finances.