Anonymous has left a new comment on your post "Bedtime Story....Not":
I'd like to know how you can sleep at night when you publicly criticize staff like this.
First off, you're obviously waging a public campaign to have the CAO fire. You've written non-stop recently about him and what a terrible job he's doing. It's beneath contempt for an elected official to behave this way.
Second, you publicly criticize bylaw staff using a "source." So you have no first-hand knowledge if staff is doing what the source accuses them of. Perhaps the source has an axe to grind against the bylaw officers.
Either way, I can't believe your new colleagues haven't taken you to task over your continued public abuse of staff.
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My first inclination was to delete this comment. Then I thought...no. It serves to illustrate a couple of points I have been trying to make but I'm not sure are understood.
Use of the social media has been front and centre lately.Generally it's considered a good thing. I failed to convince Council they should know and authorise how it might be used by staff. The majority clearly believe there need be no parameters.
The question comes down simply to how we govern ourselves. Do we elect a Council to govern. Or is the elected body just a tool of the administration and subject to staff authority.
Call me old-fashioned. I believe we are elected to govern. It means each member of council exercises authority as best we can using whatever tools are available to expedite the task.
Until now, I have never known municipal staff to have trouble with the concept.
On Monday evening ,struggling to make inroads on a budget which I cannot justify, I suggested town departments be asked for input as to savings they might identify in their level of operations.
The CAO responded that staff were confident the budget presented was defensible. I did not choose to challenge the statement. Budget deliberations this year, with predominantly new councillors, have been lengthy. some might say tedious, could easily become fractuous, but I would argue are necessary because those at the table are accountable to the people who sent them there.
I did not react to the CAO's comment. I let it pass. It was not however a missed opportunity.Friction between a veteran Councillor and the CAO would have detracted from the process.
Nevertheless, my request for input from staff at the lower level was not frivolous. I do not acknowledge the authority of the CAO to summarily dismiss a proposal by an elected representative.
Though it was not the time to engage on the question, there was nothing to indicate it would not subsequently be engaged.
The social media which council believes staff should have free rein, means the argument can be taken up at any point without wasting precious time at the council table and risking frayed tempers and whatever else might happen in the heat of the moment.
A councillor receives many confidences. We are the ears as well as the voice of the people. The issue of not renewing a particular contract and how it was accomplished, happened months ago. It disturbed me. I did not keep my concern to myself. Being powerless to correct what I perceived to be an injustice and cowardly incompetence, I was obliged to publicly hold my peace.
I did not forget. I watched. I was further informed.
My job is not simply to strive to keep the cash grab in taxes at a reasonable level, it is also to make sure the service we pay for is the service we receive.
When the CAO responded negatively to my suggestion staff at the lower level be invited to make input into possible budget savings, he sought to close that door firmly in my face. He opened another at the same time.
By declaring administrative confidence in the budget, he provoked a political declaration that I am not.
My confidence takes precedence.
He crossed the line.
He is in my territory.
Whatever tools are there, are mine to use.
I am not satisfied we are getting what we are paying for from the Bylaw Department. I do not accept adding a full-time bylaw officer at a cost of $85 a year as the answer to the problem of low productivity.
At the height of a controversy last year, failure to call for proposals when the OHSC contract was due for renewal, an incomplete report in January of this year, giving inaccurate information to the new Council with the recommendation to extend the contract, months after it's termination,is just another example of why I believe we are not well served .
Now does any other brave anonymous person who may or may not be a member of staff , feel the need to defend the defenceless administration from the no mind, no account, two bit politician, want to tell me what I may or may not say on behalf of the people who pay the bills and elected me to keep an eye on the store ?
Dear Me , it looks like your respondent has been grazing in the very same swamp as AnyMoose, how dare you ask the tough questions or share an opinion on all that's financial in the good Town of Aurora , Keep it up with the bed time stories , quite frankly it seems that some of your best work is when you lay your head on the pillow.
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