Wed
Nov 22 2006
10:31 am

Here's the Knoxville News Sentinel report. An interim contract was approved, but action on a new contract was postponed for further review.

PNI is embroiled in the controversy surrounding Knoxville's Community Development Division. Renee Kessler resigned as head of that division last week. According to today's report, the local NAACP was at the meeting to ask Mayor Haslam to clarify that Kessler's resignation had nothing to do with charges of discrimination involving division employment practices and Empowerment Zone operations. The mayor repeated his assurances that his own investigation found no evidence of discrimination.

We understand there is a 1200 page report resulting from an internal civil service investigation into operation of the EZ program and Community Development. We expect there will be more to come on this developing story.

In our opinion, City Council was right to approve an interim contract to keep the program going, and they were right to agree to pay PNI for the work they have done without a contract since the previous one expired in April. Now the city needs to review the entire program to make sure it is being run effectively so that taxpayer dollars are producing the intended benefits. City Council was right to postpone the proposed PNI contract until all of this is sorted out and the city can determine how the program can best be administered going forward.

Rachel's picture

To be clear, Council

To be clear, Council approved a management contract that reimbursed PNI for expenses back to April (they've been working w/o a contract since then) and that also allowed PNI to "pay back" the program money from a HUD grant that they've (illegally) been using for admin.  The contract also funds the three remaining PNI employees (they layed off 3 last week when they realized that Council was gonna have a bunch of questions about their spending) through January.  I agree with Randy that this should have been done. 

The other contract - the one Council postponed - is for management of the loan program.  The City was asking for $76,000 for PNI in admin expenses (some of it reimbursable for work done since July; some of it for work to be done in the next two months) plus $1M in loan funds.  As I understand it, PNI has only made about $1M of loans in 5 years.  In spite of the fact that Terence Carter and King Purnell said last night that $400,000 of loans are "in the pipeline", it's hard for me to see how they could possibly make $1M of loans between now and 1/31.

Council postponed action on this contract until after the workshop next week, but sent some pretty clear signals that PNI won't have access to the entire $1M.  They may only be charged with adminstering current loans (which is what I think should happen). 

PNI and the EZ have been a mess since the beginning.  There's plenty of blame to go around.  The PNI staff have not functioned well in many instances, and the board has not exercised oversight.  The City in the person of Rene Kesler (one assumes with the Mayor's approval, but maybe not) told PNI to keep working w/o a contract - asssured them that it would be approved.  Yet only Council can approve contracts.  And there's no excuse for this one sitting for 5 or 6 months before it came before Council.

Not to mention the fact that the community fought like cats and dogs over the $$ from the minute HUD announced that Knoxville had qualified for EZ status.  If half as much energy had gone into figuring out how to invest the $$ wisely as went into squabbling over it, we'd all be bettter off.  Add the racial angle, and you've got a nasty mess.  If I'm not mistaken, less than half of the EZ population is African-American, yet the black community felt they deserved the lion's share of the $$$ (and maybe they did, based on sins of the past). 

At any rate, the entire thing is a huge debacle.  One of the speakers last night said PNI should be "euthanized."  I agree with him.  There's just no way to save it in its current incarnation.  It should be allowed to die on 1/31, and the City needs to find a much, much better way to administer these funds, pronto (although it's hard to see how that will happen, since the Community Development Divison should take the lead on that, and it's in total disarray).

BTW, that 1200 page report Randy refers to?  I've talked to some folks who read it, and they say it makes Vickie Hatfield's summary memos look tame in comparison.

 

watcher's picture

Jobs & Money

You hit the nail on the head when you referenced the demographic makeup of the supposed EZone. The services were supposed to be available based on location, not race. It has turned into being about "black jobs" (sadly, mostly for folks completely unqualified for their positions) and the MONEY.

As insane as it sounds, the best thing the city could do at this point is to stand on the corner of 5th & Magnolia handing out checks to African Americans in the EZ, or African Americans related to African Americans in the EZ, or African Americans wanting to move next door to another African American in the EZ, or any other "justification" some of these folks can come up with for entitlement. Can you say "reparations???"

The really sad thing is that there really are people of ALL races who have benefitted and could continue to benefit from these programs, but we're naive to think that's what it's really about.

Comment viewing options

Select your preferred way to display the comments and click "Save settings" to activate your changes.

TN Progressive

TN Politics

Knox TN Today

Local TV News

News Sentinel

    State News

    Wire Reports

    Lost Medicaid Funding

    To date, the failure to expand Medicaid/TennCare has cost the State of Tennessee ? in lost federal funding. (Source)

    Search and Archives