GONZALEZ CREATES A DIVERSION
Chief Finance Officer/Deputy City Manager Pete Gonzalez stepped up to the podium to present item 20 on the City Commission meeting agenda: Consideration and ACTION to award a term contract for Delinquent Ad Valorem Tax Collection Services for the City of Brownsville.
After announcing that an "independent" committee had nominated the Linebarger law firm to represent the City of Brownsville to collect delinquent property taxes. Gonzalez proudly added: "This will not cost the city a dime!" That statement was a red herring, a factual distraction from the real issue at hand, since whether the contract was awarded to Linebarger, Pena or Perdue, it would be at no cost to the city.
Next, Gonzalez uses the video screen in the city commission meeting room to give us a history lesson in the evolution of tax collection in the City of Brownsville, showing important changes in 1983 and 1989. He mentions that the city used to have its own tax collection office, the elimination of which saved the city $160,000 annually. He wastes the city's time with this diversion. All of this information is irrelevant to the matter currently at hand: Which competing law firm is best equipped to collect delinquent property taxes for the City of Brownsville. This was the very moment he could have given the city commission side-by-side comparisons of the three competing firms. All that was left now was for the commissioners to rubber stamp the committee's recommendation and confirm Linebarger as the winner of the contract.
IS THE CITY COMMISSION BEING INTENTIONALLY WEAKENED?
The reality is that, during Tony Martinez' tenure, the city commissioner's role has gradually weakened. The appointment and reappointment to the several critical boards was to be farmed out to a shadowy, unknown committee. That doesn't seem to have happened. While each commissioner seems to have lost the right to nominate someone from their district, some homage is paid to having all of the district's represented on the boards. There was some confusion at this meeting as to which district prospective board members lived in. Still appointments were made, seemingly in a hasty manner. Now, the contract for a vital city service has been sent out to a committee first, with the city commissioners asked to simply say "yea" or "nay."
Why this important, lucrative contract was put in the hands of a committee was not explained. Actually, Gonzalez misread or underestimated the mood of the commission by coming in without factual support for his "independent" committee's recommendation. The commissioners, particularly the ladies Zamora, Vasquez and Tetreau have grown up. They fall for mealy-mouthed sales jobs no more. The discredited purchasing officer Robert C. Luna rarely shows up anymore. He sends an assistant.
THE BISD EXAMPLE
Of course, simply allowing the competing firms to give presentations before the commission does not guarantee a level playing field. The BISD board of trustees pretended to be totally unbiased in allowing all three firms to give presentations. When the first team exceeded the requisite 15 minute time limit by 2 minutes, the next two teams were allowed 17 minutes to insure fairness. Here is a portion of Mean Mister Brownsville's write-up on that meeting:
So, we await the next City Commission meeting to see if Pete's salesmanship paid off. But for the assertiveness of certain commissioners, the tax collection contract could have been awarded without input from the commission, setting a precedent for future important decisions.
"Tries to pull a fast one!" - Lyrics from the city's National Anthem. So, what else is new? Of course he's going to try to pull fast one. All Brownsvillians are schooled in that from an early age. Pulling a fast one works, in the flea markets, in the streets, in the bars, in local politics, in adultery. Pete Gonzalez was only acting out the culture. Why browbeat the poor guy. How long has been the city's finance director? Yeah, well, see?
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ReplyDeleteI wasn't particularly hard on Gonzalez. He's been at city about a quarter century. He's a numbers guy, a bean counter. He sees numbers in his sleep. He likely knew the exact comparables of the three firms, but wasn't sharing. Instead, he went with a long-winded presentation having nothing to do with the decision at hand. Smokescreen? Circular reasoning? Diversion? All of the above.
I listened carefully to the 17 minute infomercials of all three firms about 3 months ago. They all compare apples to oranges and oranges to tangerines. Enrique Pena of the Pena firm shouldn't be allowed to bid on any tax collection contract since he didn't pay his taxes on the house he built for ten years. Of course, somehow it didn't get assessed.
But Linebarger is notorious for lining politicians pockets. They donated $5,250 to the BISD majority 4 before the vote on contracts. IMHO, they are influence peddlers par excellence. So, Gonzalez coming before the City Commission totally flat-footed to present a recommendation for an extremely lucrative contract doesn't inspire confidence.
At least Pete now has two weeks to get his story straight.
Jim
If Linebarger did not have to buy the local BISD Trustees, city commissioners, and our State Representative, maybe just maybe they could lower the interest they charge the public. Oh Well!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
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