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Straight Talk on Outsourcing
Watch our new 3-minute video. San Diego trash collector Franklin Lamberth explains some of the risks in contracting out city services.
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Contracting in the Dark
As San Diego moves to contract out more city services, taxpayers and even City officials are in the dark about the true costs of the City's already massive contracting bill.
San Diego is spending $1.4 billion this year on supplies and services, with a large and unknown portion of that going to contractors. That's Billion with a B and it's half the City budget. The contracts aren't individually listed in the budget, and only those with an initial pricetag above $250,000 are reviewed by the City Council.
And the true cost may be much higher. Talking to city workers, CPI has found numerous cases in which contractors botched a job and city staff were sent in to redo it, fix it or clean it up -- adding to city payroll expense.
Some of the stories they told:
- Contractors have repaved intersections without repainting the crosswalks, and installed pedestrian ramps leaving a drop-off that had to be connected to the street.
- When a contractor painted doors in City Hall, city staff were called to take the doors down, rehang them and paint the other side, because those tasks weren't spelled out in the contract.
- A contractor left streetlights in Point Loma and DeSoto hanging from plastic zip-ties. City staff redid the job before the lights dropped into the street.
Nationally, cost overruns and service failures are common when public functions are privatized -- the most prominent example being Halliburton's substandard services and vast overcharges in Iraq. On the local level, many cities have learned the hard way that privatization often brings hidden costs and quality problems.
- Stockton, California, is reversing the privatization of its water utility this month, after six years of sewage spills, excessive rate increases and poor maintenance under a private firm.
- Midland, Texas, is resuming public control of its swimming pools after the contractor doubled the city's costs.
- In Nashville, contractor Wackenhut Corp. left city buildings inadequately guarded. In December, thieves broke in and took two laptop computers containing the Social Security numbers of 337,000 voters.
With Mayor Sanders and his reelection challenger both pushing for faster privatization of city departments, city officials must make sure systems of monitoring and accountability are in place and adequate to ensure we get what we pay for.
The City Council budget committee takes up the privatization plan again on Wednesday, March 26, at 9 a.m. CPI will be there with proposals to help the city do contracting right.
Mark your Calendar
On Saturday, March 29, CPI is cosponsoring the showing of the film Made in L.A. at the San Diego Indie Music Fest. This amazing 70-minute documentary follows three Latina workers as they struggle to win basic labor rights in garment sweatshops. It is scheduled for 6:15 p.m. At the North Park Theatre. Admission is included with tickets to the annual music fest.
Monday, March 31, is Cesar Chavez Day. As part of the ongoing fight to protect San Diego's middle-class, hundreds of union workers and others will walk through downtown to demand that employers provide decent jobs with dignity and respect. The Journey for Better Jobs, led by the San Diego-Imperial Counties Labor Council, starts at 9:30 a.m. at the San Diego Convention Center and ends at 2 p.m. at the San Diego County Administration building on Pacific Highway. Along the way, rallies will be held at four locations where workers are currently fighting for their rights.
CPI's work is being recognized! The Foundation for Change will honor CPI cofounder and Executive Director Donald Cohen on April 5, and CPI will receive the Vince Andrade Making a Difference Award from the San Diego County Democratic Party on April 12. |