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Milestones: Rubik’s Cube Mismanagement Can Ruin a City! – Opinion

Publisher Miles Barber talks about the learners' Rubik’s Cube mismanagement of Santa Clara and getting rid of long term employees.

Karlsruhe, Germany on December 8, 2017: Pieces of Rubik's Cube for problem solving on white background

It has now become obvious that change will happen in Santa Clara, slowly, painfully, and eventually.

While the new council majority is peeling the cover from the pile of so many fallacious actions, it is a question of where do they start? Certainly, dealing with competent legal counsel ranks near the top.

The massacre of long-term employees has decimated the ranks of what was long known as “the Santa Clara way.” Dozens of city employees spent years in the pipeline, learning, listening, and doing. They patiently waited their turn to move up in the ranks and eventually run a department taking a leadership role.

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Then came the apocalypse of the Gillmor guillotine. Long-term Santa Clara employees who were primed, trained, and ready for advancement were ignored. Some were forced out. New recruits from cities outside of Santa Clara were recruited to replace the leadership. Many of these “new” employees were hired on as department heads at salaries of stratospheric scope.

There was one common denominator among these recruits. They had to be loyal to the Gillmor regime.

One observation would be the office of the City Manager. The top of the pay scale was in the $300,000 range and worked its way down to the assistant manager in the $200,000 plus range.

If you had questions as to how Santa Clara is projecting a $40 million dollar deficit, salary awards under Mayor Gillmor’s direction may be a major contributor.

Santa Clara’s current City Manager, Deanna Santana, leads the State of California as the second-highest-paid manager at a $700,000 salary, plus benefits. In addition, Santana has added not one, not two, but three assistant managers at $300,000 each. You don’t need to be smarter than a fifth grader to calculate the addition on that payroll.

Historically, Santana has been a Gillmorite, supporting the Mayor on most of her financial extravagances. These would include the millions foolishly spent on fighting the California Voting Rights Act (twice). In addition, because Santana and Gillmor have withheld payments to the Stadium Authority partnership, the 49ers have sued Santa Clara numerous times to collect the millions owed to the Stadium Authority by the City.

The refusal of Santa Clara in making these payments has cost the City close to another million dollars in legal fees and interest. And, by contract for late payments, the interest rate owed to the Stadium Authority now jumps to 12%. (It might just be cheaper to simply pay the bills!)

This Rubik’s Cube of financial maleficent manipulation and mismanagement is a mess. The new Council is struggling to get their arms around this entanglement and do the right thing. If they wait much longer, the legal fees and lawsuits will consume Santa Clara’s reserves.

Speaking of legal expenses, why is City Attorney Doyle still employed?

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