Author Archives: Joe Doc

How Jim Kenney Plans to Run City Hall (And a Brief PhillyLabor Editorial To Follow)

By Patrick Kerkstra

– Mayors need to know politics and policy. They need to be an ambassador for Philadelphia outside city lines, and a leader who can rally public opinion within.

But they also need to manage the enormous enterprise that is municipal government, an operation that spends $6.9 billion a year and employs nearly 28,000 people. And yet, somehow, management is often overlooked as a must-have mayoral skill.

In truth, we don’t know all that much about the management chops of Democratic mayoral nominee Jim Kenney, who is a slam-dunk election away from being the city’s next mayor. His primary campaign is the largest enterprise Kenney has ever run. For the 23 years before that, he was in City Council, where he managed a Council office comprised of just a few employees.

That’s not a lot to go on.

But after Kenney sat down for an interview with Citified, we now know a bit more about the type of manager he intends to be. And there actually are some worthwhile lessons to take from the way he ran both his campaign and his council office.
Kenney listens to smart people. Expect him to assemble a talented team, and to give them a good bit of rope to carry out his plans.

Both as a candidate and a Councilman, Jim Kenney has shown a knack for attracting top talent and letting them do their jobs. Those are promising traits.

Asked to describe his management style, Kenney says that his is still “developing,” but that his basic approach is to hire good people and let them work. “It’s going to be allowing folks who I think are extremely capable of doing their job to do their job without too much micromanaging. Now, certainly we’ll meet and discuss and we’ll figure out what direction we’re going in, but I don’t expect to be telling the police commissioner or the streets department commissioner or somebody else how they should either plow snow or pick up trash.”

And this is actually what Kenney has done, both on Council and in his campaign. A lot of people who know Kenney are agog at just how disciplined and controlled his campaign for mayor has been. That’s largely because he’s trusted and listened to the political pros that are running it.

“Jim is very deferential to the staff. He asks questions. He wants to know why he’s doing what we ask him to do, but he ultimately defers to us,” says Lauren Hitt, Kenney’s communications director.

If there were any sense that Kenney was an empty vessel, this might actually be an alarming trait. But Kenney is positively bursting with strong opinions and convictions. So it’s actually encouraging to hear — and see — that he defers to experts on a lot of the tactical decisions, even if he occasionally throws little tantrums about it.

Kenney lucked into landing Hitt and his campaign manager, Jane Slusser. Both were hard up for work after their former boss, Ken Trujillo, abruptly withdrew from the campaign, and Kenney was the one guy in town hiring. But Kenney does deserve credit for being the guy at the top of smoothly-operating campaign that featured a staff with a mix of for-hire politcal pros and lifelong Philadelphians and Kenney loyalists, like his longtime Council chief of staff Deborah Mahler and Jim Engler, who was the director of legislation in Kenney’s council office.

Another indicator that Kenney is capable of rallying talented people to his cause is the policy advisory team he assembled early in the campaign. It’s a veritable laundry list of accomplished Philadelphians, from Alba Martinez to Otis Hackney III to Phil Rinaldi to Ellen Kaplan (to name just a few).

Kenney describes his mayoral dream team this way: “Diverse, intelligent, forward-thinking, hard-working. Not afraid to tell me when they think I’m wrong. Not afraid to go and have their own initiative, to have their own new ways of looking at things.”
Kenney probably won’t restructure city government. He has some new ideas about how the machinery of government should work, but he’s a traditionalist in a lot of respects.

Every mayor organizes his government a little differently. Mayor Nutter created a class of powerful deputy mayors to oversee operations across multiple departments. The arrangement has its plusses and minuses, but Kenney clearly isn’t a fan. Expect him to use a more traditional approach, one that’s more consistent with the structure outlined in the city charter.

“The charter’s not a bad document,” Kenney says. “It needs some tweaking every now and then, but it’s a pretty solid document to run a government.”

What does that mean, exactly? A few things.

A much bigger role for the managing director. The charter intends for the managing director to be the operational chief of city government, with broad power over most every city department. Nutter’s managing director, Rich Negrin, is an important official in the administration, but he’s not running the show on a day-to-day basis. The next managing director very well might. “We’re going to have a managing director, that’s actually a managing director,” Kenney says. “And I don’t mean any offense to Rich, because he wasn’t allowed to manage.”
Deputy mayors who have been cut down to size. Kenney’s deputies won’t manage multiple departments; they’ll advise on policy or message, or lead-up specific initiatives.
More autonomous department commissioners. This just follows. Without a bevy of deputy mayors calling the strategic shots for the departments, commissioners will have broader authority under a Mayor Kenney.

Kenney is interested in reforming the city’s civil service regulations, which would be part of contract talks with the city’s unions. “I talk to department heads now, they tell me they can’t fill positions because they have to go through this whole crazy process,” Kenney says.

Does that mean more patronage? No, Kenney says. But he doesn’t have a problem with patronage where it exists (including, it should be said, in the mayor’s office). “What’s my view on patronage? Patronage employees perform and do a good job and are respectful to the citizens. Patronage has its place,” Kenney says.

There’s a lot to chew over here. Kenney’s acceptance of patronage will surely trouble some of his reform-oriented fans, while probably encouraging his more politically pragmatic ones.

But the more consequential question is probably this: How well will Jim Kenney’s successful management of tiny operations scale? After all, keeping a Council office working in sync is one thing. Straightening out L&I with limited resources? That’s another.

Source – http://www.phillymag.com/citified/2015/07/08/jim-kenney-mayor-management/

BRIEF PHILLYLABOR EDITORIAL – In unprecedented fashion, Jim Kenney has brought people together from all communities both as a City Councilman At Large and as a mayoral candidate and he will do the same thing as the next mayor of the City of Philadelphia!

The truth about District’s Outsourcing Plans

– PFT General Vice President Arlene Kempin sets the records straight on the District’s plans to privatize Philly substitutes.

Arlene Kempin has a letter in today’s Inquirer challenging the District’s notion that there is a shortage of substitutes. You can read the edited letter here.

But for a more complete perspective, I wanted you to see the original version of the letter which discusses how the district has ignored the PFT and neglected to include retired teachers who are willing an able to act as substitutes in our schools:

To the Editor:

The SRC’s vote to outsource School District substitutes on June 18 compels me to share some recent history and some truths regarding the outsourcing of substitute teachers.

In the midst of the chaotic environment that School District’s management team has created, there has always been one concept that both the District and the PFT agree upon: Philadelphia’s retired teachers are a valuable resource to our schools and our students. Their experience, knowledge of the system, credentials, and willingness to serve has always been acknowledged by the union and the District.

But for the past three years, the District has blatantly and without reason blocked any new retirees from joining our substitute pool. Repeated requests—from the PFT and the individuals themselves—to allow more retirees to sign on were rebuffed. The District’s response was that our substitute pool is big enough, and we don’t need any more retirees.

In addition, the PFT has continued to stress that as long as positions were posted first for non-retirees (with a time limit for acceptance), retirees could be offered the unfilled positions without violating PSER’s regulations. This input was ignored by the District time and time again.

We must also be mindful of the dedication and commitment of hundreds of Long Term and Per Diem Substitute Teachers who had never been retired as appointed teachers from the District. Many have devoted their entire professional careers to servicing our students either on a day-to-day or long term basis.

Now we learn that the District has valued all of our substitutes so much that they must farm them out to a private company so that they may be offered bonuses for accepting designated positions. In over two years of contract talks, the District never proposed any such incentives, nor did they ever mention a shortage of substitutes.

Once again, they have ignored, disrespected, and insulted the very people that directly service our children.

Sincerely,

Arlene Kempin, General Vice President,

Philadelphia Federation of Teachers

Source – http://www.pft.org/blog.aspx?id=139

Happy Independence Day 2015 From PhillyLabor!

On this day, as we gather with friends and family to celebrate the 4th of July weekend and the Summer of 2015, let us also remember the true meaning of Independence Day and the brave forefathers of our great nation, who on July 4th, 1776, gathered in our great city of Philadelphia and officially adopted the Declaration of Independence and thus declared the then 13 colonies, a new nation, the United States of America! The Rest is hard fought and very important history that has made it possible for us to enjoy the freedoms we enjoy today and everyday!

God Bless America and Happy Independence Day to all Americans including the patriotic men and women and families of the Labor Movement and particularly to all of those brave men and women who have served this great nation in our American Armed Forces!!

In Solidarity!

Your Friends From PhillyLabor!

Celebrate A Union-Made Fourth Of July

By The PA. AFL-CIO

– With the upcoming Fourth of July celebrations, we wanted to encourage everyone to support their fellow union members. This is the perfect opportunity to fill your cookouts and picnics with union-made products. To take some of the stress away, we’ve put together a short list of some of the many products that are available. For more information about union-made products, visit www.labor411.org on their “Union Made Products” page. We hope you have a great Fourth of July overflowing with goods made by your very own members!

Meats:

Ball Park Franks (UFCW)
Boar’s Head Deli Meats and Cheese (UFCW)
Hebrew National (UFCW)
Oscar Meyer (UFCW)
Tyson (UFCW)

Condiments and Sides:

French’s Mustard (UFCW)
Heinz – all brands (UFCW)
Hidden Valley Salad Dressing (UFCW)
Hershey’s Syrup (BCTGM)
Kraft Foods (UFCW, IBT, IAMAW, BCTGM)
Land O’Lakes Butter (UAW)
Tostito Salsa (BCTGM)
Vlasic – Pickles, Peppers, Relish, and Sauerkraut (UFCW)

Snacks, Chips, Etc.

Cheetos (UFCW)
Chex Mix (BCTGM)
Doritos (UFCW)
FritoLay – Chips and Snacks (BCTGM)
Lay’s Potato Chips (BCTGM)

Breads, Hot Dog and Hamburger Buns:

Holsum Bakery (UFCW)
Stroehmann Bakery (BCTGM)
Pillsbury (BCTGM)

Ice Cream:

Breyers Ice Cream (UFCW)

Beverages:

Coca-Cola (UFCW, IAMAW)
Pepsi (IBT, UFCW, IAMAW)
Minute Maid (UFCW)
Sprite (UFCW, IBT, IAMAW)
Folgers Coffee (UAW, IAMAW)
Maxwell House Coffee (UFCW)

Beer:

Budweiser (IBT, IAMAW)
Busch (IAMAW)
Coors (IBT, IUOE)
Miller (UAW, IAMAW)
Rolling Rock (IAMAW)
Stella Artois (IAMAW)

Source – http://www.paaflcio.org/?p=6128

Literally Giving Away The Store: PA Senate Votes 27-22 For Liquor Privatization Bill

By The PA. AFL-CIO

– Vote will blow a huge hole in the budget, and eliminate 5,000 family-sustaining jobs.

– In what was an expected move today, the PA State Senate voted in favor of House Bill 466, which would shut down the entire system of publicly owned Wine and Spirits Stores in Pennsylvania, and massively expand alcohol sales.

The Wine & Spirits Stores are a valuable public asset, one which provides more than $550 million to the general fund annually in profits, taxes, and services. Alternative proposals to modernize, rather than give away, the system would have added an additional $185 million per year in revenue. Just two days ago, Senator Chuck McIlhinney, Chairman of the Senate Law and Justice Committee, acknowledged “the liquor system gives us money every year for our budget… so it is a positive revenue asset for us.” Today senator McIlhinney joined 26 of his Republican colleagues in voting for this destructive legislation.

This was a vote to give away the store, literally – it is unlikely that new permit fees will even cover the cost of shutting down the public stores, and every year moving forward, if this bill became law, the Commonwealth will have to make up hundreds of millions of dollars in revenue from new sources.

This was also a vote to destroy 5,000 good family-sustaining jobs all across Pennsylvania. Even the previous administration acknowledged that no jobs will be created by liquor sales in grocery stores and other new retail outlets, and the re-training funds made available by HB 466 will do nothing to help the families whose lives will be turned upside down by this bad legislation.

This is nothing but an ideological attack by small-government extremists, and it is one that the State Senate refused to even debate in the previous legislative session. HB466 now moves back to the State House for a concurrence vote. The Pennsylvania AFL-CIO, and our affiliated unions, have made it clear to ALL members of the State House and State Senate that we oppose this legislation, and that we consider it to be an unconscionable attack on working families.

Three Republicans joined all Democratic Senators in opposition of HB466 this afternoon. They were Senators Brooks, Greenleaf, and Scavello.

Source – http://www.paaflcio.org/?p=6105