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How to Run Government Like a Business

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OUT OF FRYING PAN - It’s just not fair. For years, business and civic leaders have been telling public officials like me to “run government like a business.”

Recruit top-flight executives who know how to get things done. Spend what’s necessary at the “top” so that the over-arching goals of the enterprise can be achieved. Get rid of all of that unnecessary bureaucratic “process” that just slows things down.

Make the “deals” happen and get on with the business of government.Unfortunately, when we do just that, we get slammed. In fact, an outside observer might point out that all of this emphasis on running government like a business is just a trap for the poor unsuspecting schlubs (aka, government officials) who are just trying to do what they’re told.

Case in point is the situation at the Housing Authority of the City of LA, responsible for all public housing in LA (and the sister city agency to the LA Community Redevelopment Agency, where I have been a board member for nine years.)

The recently fired CEO of HACLA, Rudolph Montiel, was bitterly criticized for his high salary of $450,000 per year and his unreasonably “pricey” $1.2 million severance package.  The city controller just-released a scathing report criticizing my sister and brother commissioners for running up huge dining and travel tabs over the past few years. This is a follow-up to a recent local CBS News investigation making similar charges.

To add insult to injury, a recent Daily News editorial argued that “taxpayers and the residents who rely on the Housing Authority need the assurance that the men and women leading the agency are making the right decisions for the right reasons.”

But what are the “right decisions for the right reasons?” If you’re operating a public agency like a business, what’s wrong with high salaries for people at the top? Big severance packages are necessary to make sure we can recruit top-flight executives. Generous dining tabs and travel budgets? All of that sounds to me like what the private sector does. Just the cost of doing “business.” In fact, it sounds like the Housing Authority leadership was focusing on getting results no matter the cost. Isn’t that what they were supposed to be doing?

(In fact, it’s what some of the leading candidates [link] for president of the United States continue to say [link] to this day.)

Now some do-gooder anti-business types say that the old mantra of running government like a business is wrong. They claim government is about public good while business is for private profit.

They say that people in top government positions should be hired based on their commitment to the mission of managing public resources for public benefit. Sometimes, these naysayers argue, government officials need to do business over meals, but they should have modest budgets to help pay for these kinds of expenses.

Well, Public, make up your mind. As a government official expected to think like a businesswoman, I need to operate in an environment that enhances my entrepreneurial impulses. Imagine this. I have to make an important decision that I need to talk over with my other highly compensated colleagues.

(Confession: I’m actually paid nothing for my work as a CRA Commissioner, but that fact is beside the point.) We go out to dinner at a lovely restaurant and have a tough conversation over a plate of sustainably harvested and beautifully roasted Alaskan salmon. Add a bottle of my favorite New Zealand Sauvignon Blanc and I think we can all agree that the perfect environment to enhance my creative juices has been created. Now, imagine making a decision to cut pensions, lay off scores of people and otherwise find ways to save millions while dining at Denny’s on the $3.99 Breakfast Slam? Unthinkable.

If we are expected to run government like a business, then those of us at the top need to be able to spend whatever it takes to interact with our peers to make the tough, business-oriented decisions that are expected of us. If that decision-making process costs $1,000 a plate, so be it.

(Madeline Janis is co-founder and executive director of the Los Angeles Alliance for a New Economy. She also serves on the Los Angeles CRA Commission. This piece was posted first at fryingpannews.org)
-cw

Tags: government, business, run government like business, LA Housing Authority, CRA, Rudolph Montiel, Los Angeles, HACLA







CityWatch
Vol 9 Issue 101
Pub: Dec 20, 2011

 

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