CBT's picture

Dead on. Thanks Rikki. This

Dead on. Thanks Rikki.

This petition stuff is the wolf of top-down government trying to wear the sheep's clothing of 'public' input and public good. It's a small group of people, most all of which live inside the City of Knoxville, driving an effort to change county government.

And, I'm tired of hearing 'we should just let people vote on it'. If I circulated a petition to bar red-headed people from holding public office, should 'we let the people vote on it'? No, it's a stupid law.

If an amendment is bad, it shouldn't be on the ballot. And, as Rikki capably points out, there are bad ones within these carefully put together groups. Start an orange thread and a white thread and let KnoxViewers comment on the amendments therein.

SAY NO TO THE PETITIONS!

edens's picture

Rikki, unlike certain folks,

Rikki, unlike certain folks, did an excellent job of arguing against the substance of the petitions (note to nine, btw, I've never been a big fan of Metro government), rather than engage in spurious accusations about ethics policies and such.

But, CBT, shouldn't city residents have a say in County Government? Or should they just send in their taxes and keep quiet?

rocketsquirrel's picture

CBT is clearly saying city

CBT is clearly saying city residents can't have a say in county government. But when the county (and the city) are funding ministries with millions of dollars to build homeless shelters on Broadway with pass through (federal) block grants, I'll be damned if I'll be quiet.

Rachel's picture

It's a small group of

It's a small group of people, most all of which live inside the City of Knoxville

Oh, the COK isn't Knox County now? You sound like Howard Pinkston, who once announced at a Commission meeting that his job was "protecting the people of Knox County outside the city of Knoxville." Of course, roughly half of his constituents lived inside the city limits, but never mind.

R. Neal's picture

I have to agree, at least on

I have to agree, at least on the bundling part. Bad move. They should be on the ballot as individual items or not at all.

Ennui's picture

Cheers to Rikki. I

Cheers to Rikki. I personally love the "Nothing says “accountable” like changing your name thrice in a year."

Anonymously Nine's picture

Is rikki channeling Number9?

You know it is bad when rikki and I agree. What are the odds?

Combining the Charter Amendments is voter disenfranchisement. No one should endorse this.

In order to get a Charter Amendment you want you may have to choke down a Charter Amendment you despise.

Brilliant. Simply genius. This special interest group has mangled this beyond comprehension.

The two key Charter Amendments, Mayor King and Feudalism Now were never going to be put up as stand alone Amendments. The medicine was too bitter. They had to be wrapped in sugar, the Nepotism, Conflict of Interest, and Inspector General Amendments.

These KCP people might think we have to be treated like children.

The hucksters who are collecting signatures for Knox Charter Petition/Knox Unaccountable have a pitch sheet just like magazine sellsmen. When you walk up they say, “Do you want to stop Nepotism?”

I replied at the Fresh Market to the huckster, “Are you aware the Nepotism ordinance is on the books? It was passed last week in second reading. It is the law of the land. Are you aware Conflict of Interest is already in the County Charter? All this does is make the office of County Mayor more powerful. Why would anyone in their right mind want that?”

The paid signature gatherer look puzzled and then said, “The Inspector General will solve all those problems”.

A man who just signed the petitions looked at the huckster and asked, “Is that true”?

It gets sad at this point. The huckster replied, “I am not really up on politics but we have to have the Inspector General”. Poor huckster, doesn't understand the difference between politics and government. This country made a huge mistake when we stopped requiring civics and debate be taught in high school.

For some reason the huckster is not at the Fresh Market collecting signatures.

reform4's picture

Don't Forget

In order to get a Charter Amendment you want you may have to choke down a Charter Amendment you despise.

Don't forget many of the proposed amendments can be resolved by resolution/ordinance. We can have a Conflict of Interest policy (a tighter one than the KCP proposal), Anti-Nepotism policy, and even change the size of Commission without amending the charter. It may take until 2010 to get the votes, though. It depends how this election goes.

-----------------------------------------
Fighting for Reform and Representation, Fourth District
Steve Drevik, Commission Seat 4-B
(link...)

gonzone's picture

Examples

Colorado and California can tell you how "putting the vote to the people" with propositions, etc. can be devestating.

"When the going gets weird, the weird turn pro."
Hunter S. Thompson

StaceyDiamond's picture

Big Shout Out!

A big shout out to an unlikely pair, Rikki, and Knox County Focus's Steve Hunley in last week's Focus, for calling these petitions and this group what they are!! The name changes, the voting in clumps, the top down atmosphere, I have a bad feeling about it all. Those folks-kids making 15-20$ an hour, were everywhere at the 4th celebration last week, asking people to sign their "petition against nepotism" without much explanation.

knoxdude's picture

It's good that we're finally

It's good that we're finally seeing some unbiased coverage of this issue. "Let the people vote" doesn't make a lot of sense if they're voting on flawed changes.

But what we really need is a true grass roots effort to educate the public and counteract the paid petition seekers, privately funded "concerned citizens group" and free ads from the News-Sentinel. I'm going to start talking to people about this. Anyone interested?

CBT's picture

My point is not that city

My point is not that city residents shouldn't have a say. But, should they have all the say? Look at the One Question committee. How many live outside the city limits?

How would you feel about an organized effort of folks who all live in Halls and Farragut proposing a set of measures which would govern where homeless shelters could be located? I think the same idea applies if most of the folks in One Question live in two city zip codes.

Anonymously Nine's picture

Channeling KCP Stuart Smalley...

Except for the two city zip codes you spoke of, the people aren't good enough, they aren't smart enough, and dog gone it, people just don't like them.

It may be a smugness problem.

Mark Harmon's picture

Focus on the Policy

I'm disappointed in the direction this thread has taken, namely creeping personal attack, despite protests to the contrary. Also, I respectfully disagree with Rikki's article. Let's return to the text of the proposed changes:

Orange Petition Amendments:
* Prohibits elected or appointed Knox Co. official from getting a relative hired, transferred, or promoted by the county.
* Knox Co. officials not only disclose conflicts of interest but recuse self from any vote.
* Co. Commissioners not employed by any other branch of county government.
* Reduce commission size to eleven, nine by district and two at-large; staggered terms.

White Petition Amendments:
* Create and Inspector General Position able to initiate as well as respond to complaints of waste, fraud, and abuse.
* Knox Co. administrators with a conflict of interest on a discretionary matter must disclose the conflict and recuse themselves.
* Starting in 2010, clerk, trustee, and register of deeds (law director in 2012) become mayoral appointments approved by commission, and capable of being removed by a 2/3 vote of commission. In effect, the fees these offices collect automatically go into the overall county budget, not just some leftover amount after these offices overstaff themselves.

Why clump them? Blame that small minority on Commission who kept any one from getting a 2/3 majority on second reading. The arguments were bizarre. First the sponsoring group was too inflexible, then when it made changes it was wishy washy. Financing and street addresses got more notice than the ideas themselves.

In an ironic twist the only item going on the ballot individually is reducing the required number of signatures on a petition from 15% of all voters to 15% of voters in last gubernatorial election. That arguably is not in effect now, and just to be on the safe side this group must get a very large number of signatures. Trying to get massive amount of signatures on seven separate items would be a logistical nightmare.

I saw this process in action and read the Baker Center report. Judge on the merits, and on balance these proposals are quite meritorious; and the need for them has been demonstrated by commission's indefensible behavior in how it handled them.

Mark Harmon

rikki's picture

Mark, I agree that several

Mark, I agree that several of the proposals have merit. The IG position in particular is good idea, although the Mayor's version is even better, since it provides the office greater independence. The nepotism and conflict of interest provisions are good too, but I'm not sure either problem is big enough to deserve a charter amendment. I suspect that with term limits finally in force, such problems will fade.

I don't like the idea of shrinking Commission because I think a smaller body is more easily swayed by monied interests. Obviously, it's cheaper to buy a majority of six than ten, and hopefully term limits will reduce the number of commissioners who can be bought. In any case, if changes to the structure of Commission are needed, I'd like to see much more deliberation about the many options before a specific plan gets chosen. Speaking of the structure, will commission districts be redrawn after the 2010 census?

Regarding who is eligible for Commission, I'm more bothered by the number of realtors and developers on Commission than by the number of teachers or county employees. That seems like something people gripe about not out of principle, but because they looked at Scoobie after Black Wednesday and just said, "whatever is true of him must be bad."

It's ridiculous to blame commissioners for bundling the amendments. That was a choice made by the petitioners. If two petitions is all they were willing to work on, they should have selected two top-priority amendments and saved the rest for the new Commission or the next election cycle.

bill young's picture

Mark

1. The petition group did a very poor job of:

A.explaining the charter amendments to commissioners & those seeking the appointments.

B.presenting clear language in the orginal amendments as pointed out by Frank Leuthold.

2.Because the petition group did not do their homework they did not know that the charter amendments could be place on the November ballot & were strident @ the commission meeting.

3.During the recent appointment process did you ask those seeking the appointments their opinion on the proposed charter amendments & how they felt about putting them on the ballot?You may well have I don't remember.

4.I am for appointing the fee offices & I was for the orginal proposal by the petition group.The orginal charter amendment included the propery assesor as being appointed.However,that was changed.I never got a good explaination why.

It made me wary of the White petition because of the willy-nilly way the property assesor postion was changed.

CBT's picture

There was no personal

There was no personal attack. No names were mentioned. Only geography.

As Commissioner M. Harmon knows, County Commission decides many issues which apply only to the County. If I saw an effort from grass roots people in all parts of the City and County, I might have a different opinion on the way this has been brought forward. But, it's not and I don't.

Also, I have heard Commissioner Elaine Davis say that under the fee office appointment amendment that the Mayor would also have the ability to remove the appointed fee office holders without cause. That is, both Commission and the Mayor can remove these appointed officeholders. Commissioner M. Harmon, is the above the entire text of the proposed amendment? Did I misunderstand Commissioner Davis? It could be. I'm just asking.

Rachel's picture

County Commission decides

County Commission decides many issues which apply only to the County.

I'm assuming by that you mean only to "Knox County outside the municipal limits of the City of Knoxville and the Town of Farragut." If so, please say so.

Otherwise, yeah, pretty much everything Commission does applies only to Knox County.

I'm not just picking on you, CBT. I'm sick of people referring to Knox County like it has a great big donut hole in it where the COK is. There are honest to God a great # of people who don't realize that I pay county taxes - and that some of them pay for services (i.e., sheriff's office) that I don't even receive.

I have no problem with this. I chose to live in Knoxville. I just want folks to explicitly acknowledge that I'm also part of Knox County.

reform4's picture

Exact wording

Exact wording can be found here:
http://www.knoxcharterpetition.com/downloads/KCPFinalPetitionWhite.pdf

Yes, under the proposed wording, the mayor could dismiss "any department head without cause" as well as create or abolish entire departments (how would this affect the budget? would he have to obtain line item transfer approvals for newly created departments?)

-----------------------------------------
Fighting for Reform and Representation, Fourth District
Steve Drevik, Commission Seat 4-B
(link...)

bill young's picture

Am I misunderstanding?

I maybe wrong & please correct me if I am,Mark.

Under the proposed changes,if passed,in the 1st county commission district(where I live)a candidate elected in 2010 would serve till 2016 & if that incumbent is re-elected they would serve till 2020?

reform4's picture

Correct

Correct, the idea is to create staggered terms.

Of course, they could have had some of us "infillers" extend from two year terms to 4-year terms in districts 1, 4, 5, and 9 and had the same result and probably with less chaos.

-----------------------------------------
Fighting for Reform and Representation, Fourth District
Steve Drevik, Commission Seat 4-B
(link...)

rikki's picture

Digit, shouldn't you be

Digit, shouldn't you be filing an ethics complaint with Scripps against me? I contributed something of value to a political cause just like Jack McElroy did. You're not going to discriminate against me just because the dollar amount is a fraction of what he can manage, are you?

Also, I think you have the channeling thing backwards. This is not the first time I objected to the bundling of amendments. You got that from me.

CBT's picture

Steve, thanks for the

Steve, thanks for the clarification.

No one (not even Commissioner M. Harmon when citing the amendments on the petitions) mentions that the Mayor not only nominates the heads of the fee offices, the County Mayor can also fire those fee office heads without cause and without Commission approval. It's easy for me to see why no one talks about it. I mean, it might look like we were giving the County Mayor a huge amount of authority to run all of county government.

I'm not opposed to more oversight of the fee offices, but giving the County Mayor the right to pick and fire these officeholders without cause is too much power in one position. The fee offices should withstand public scrutiny, but should not be subject to the political or other agenda of whoever holds the position of County Mayor.

You'll also note the County Mayor can fire the Law Director without cause. But, we're not taking away your right to vote. No really, we're not.

jbr's picture

Dubious appointments and the

Dubious appointments and the appointment process itself, both by the mayor and CC, have caused a real mess.
Breaking apart the appointment mechanism completely and rebuilding would seem to be prudent. I assume there are some appointment mechanisms somewhere on the planet that have a better approach.

When are the MPC commission appointments coming out this year? Have they all been completed for 2008?

bill young's picture

"Focus on Policy"

Mark,I can not support the proposed charter amendment to reduce county commission from a 19 member body to a 11 member body for the following reasons.

1.Steve has answered that indeed in the 1st county commission district,as well as in other districts,a commissioner could serve 10 years.

I knew that if the Supreme Court ruled in favor of term limits in the Shelby County case it could mean term limits in Knox County.The Supreme Court ruled term limits valid in Shelby County in March of '06.The Chancery Court decision that the Knox County charter was flawed delayed term limits until the Supreme Court ruling in Jan of '07.

It has been a slow & frustrating process but we are seeing the light of day with the county general election that begins with early voting next Friday.Indeed another twist in this long & winding road reared up this week as to when county commission candidates that are elected will be sworn in.

So after all thats happened we are being ask to sign a petitition to put on the presidential ballot a proposed charter amendment that provides for a SIX YEAR TERM for some county commissioners & the prospect that if those commissioners are re-elected they would serve for TEN YEARS?

When I voted for term limits the key word was limits not term.I can not support a charter amendment that could allow a commissioner to serve for a decade.

Strike One.

2.Staggered terms,for county commission,is a tool of the establishment presented to the voters as stability.It is a comfort to the status que to know that with staggerd terms there is no way that a voter revolution can upset the apple cart.

I can not support a charter amendment that includes staggered terms because it favors the establishment over the voter.

Strike two.

3.I have not heard a satisfactory answer to this question.

If the proposed 11 member body charter amendment is approved would the result be a reduction in minority representation?

If so would the US Justice Department pursue a civil rights action?

Strike three

The Orange Petition is out.

Mark,I hope I have focused on the policy not the personal.

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