Despite going along with the Bossier City Council
in doing the right thing for tax renewals in a few months, at its latest
meeting Republican Bossier City Mayor Tommy Chandler demonstrated why his time
in office must end after a single term.
Chandler ran in 2021 as a foil and a reformer. He won
because he wasn’t 87 years old that had spent 32 years at the top of city
government watching and presiding over wasting a golden opportunity to make the
city a low-tax, low-fee magnet for economic growth that provided superior
public safety and other services. He won also because he
said he would boost pay for public safety employees, try to lower taxes,
and look to cut “wasteful” spending (while “Pet projects and wasteful
government spending will not be tolerated”).
Since then, he has done next to nothing to fulfill
these promises, if not engaging in backsliding. Outside of one-time bonuses and
mandated supplemental pay raises for public safety employees – which haven’t
kept up with inflation – no permanent discretionary pay raises have been given,
largely because the city’s enormous debt servicing eats up revenues. Taxes
haven’t gone down but fees have gone up, while there’s no sign wasteful
spending has been curtailed. Some budget-busting items, like giving
away a fitness center, died on the vine although Chandler seems to have had
nothing to do with that, while others, such as giving
away potentially a waterworks, staying
in the tennis business, spending
big bucks to expand park facilities to generate revenues but shut out citizens’
use of these, and building
an idol to politicians past and present apparently proceeded without his
objection, if not with his blessing.
Perhaps the most trenchant way of viewing Chandler’s
term is what would be different about how the city has been run if instead of
his presence a cardboard cutout of him had been situated in his office or at
Council meetings? He
did make efforts to ensure the city followed its charter in putting term
limits on the ballot, although other than signing the petition to do that he
did nothing to get it to that point of ballot inclusion. And his only visible
attempt to reduce government spending was to propose unwise, later attenuated,
cuts to public transportation.
Summarizing how Chandler has become a cipher in
efforts to stop city fiscal mismanagement was his obeisance to the process
rigged in favor of Manchac Consulting’s retention of its management contract of
city engineering and public works. The last time this came up,
fewer than two months before Chandler took office, he complained that the
termination clauses made it much more difficult for the city to make it change
and that incoming elected officials were handcuffed by the three-year length
when a shorter extension would do.
They were good questions because they spoke to creating
a framework of incentives that would improve Manchac’s performance, which has
been spotty (and little did anyone know then, Manchac included, about a costly
error Manchac made on keeping open a railway crossing at Shed Road that
would force its closing months after the pervious renewal). Indeed, the
termination issue spoke directly to whether the contract, then and now, violates
the city charter because that language attenuates the mayor’s ability to
fire a city engineer.
But Chandler not only had no such criticism
earlier this month when extending the contract came before the Council, but
also he praised Manchac’s work and supported its payment increase, now 50
percent higher than the last time he spoke on the issue. Nor did Chandler’s
administration, according to a public records information request, follow the Charter
in certifying Manchac as a single source vendor.
That was glossed over by the continued
ridiculous assertion by Assistant City Attorney Richard Ray that the city
was prohibited to competitively bid the contract. Not only does this contradict
the practice of other cities, as Republican Councilor Chris Smith noted,
but also commenter Wes Merriott related that he spoke to the chief legal
counsel of the Louisiana Legislative Auditor who said the law in no way
prohibited that. Merriott phrased the inanity of that assertion as a product either
of incompetence or deliberate deception on Ray’s part, as a means to justify
the no-bid renewal.
Ray technically works for City Attorney Charles
Jacobs, currently on medical leave. But Jacobs works for Chandler and can be
dismissed at any time, over any issue such as legal department staffing. Not
that Chandler
hasn’t had cause to dump Jacobs for a number of breaches, including Jacobs actively
working to sabotage the very cause about which Chandler showed his rare
penchant for standing on his own hind legs, term limits.
Smith was joined by Republican Brian Hammons
and no party Jeff Darby
in opposing the extension, while Darby’s fellow graybeards Republicans David Montgomery
and Jeff Free
and Democrat Bubba
Williams, plus Republican rookie Vince Maggio
voted in favor, leading to a narrow 4-3 approval. Those on the losing side took
pains to note that they found, as did Chandler, Manchac’s performance
satisfactory, but that competition might turn up the possibility of an even
better performer, resulting in best use of taxpayer dollars.
Chandler could have vetoed this ordinance, but
didn’t. It’s emblematic of his full co-optation into the get-along-go-along mode
of governance that has plagued the city for going on three decades, which is
not the spinelessness or carelessness needed to guide the city out of its past
pattern of throwing money at boondoggles and special interests to the citizenry’s
detriment.
There are signs of progress. At
the meeting, the Council approved ballot language that would send to the
ballot property tax renewals at the maximum authorized rates, which are lower
than the rates last approved in 2015 of 8.45
(down to 8.32) and 2.75
(down to 2.71) mils, making it more difficult for the city to hike taxes.
But that just means there’s less money to waste,
which doesn’t halt the wastage. If that is to stop, the city needs a mayor
committed to that task. Chandler hasn’t shown he’s up to snuff to do that.
Therefore, he needs to be replaced.