Monday, March 19, 2012

Task Force Report Alone Not a Cure

Tonight residents and officials will hear the results of a 10-month inquiry into workings of the Plainfield Municipal Authority. The City Council's PMUA Task Force will give its report at a special joint meeting, 7 p.m. at Washington Community School.

Born into controversy, the authority that handles the city's sewerage and solid waste emerged from early litigation to become the city's fifth largest employer and part of the community's fabric, offering an Environmental Fair each fall. But at a meeting in 2009 with city officials, Executive Director Eric Watson was edgy, defensive. True, rate hikes earlier that year had brought an outcry from residents and caused formation of a ratepayers' watchdog group, but Watson's dramatic tone seemed to reflect a personal hurtthat didn't jibe with the reasoned presentation of PMUA attorney Leslie London to the governing body.

At this juncture, the leadership of the PMUA is in the hands of an interim director, Duane Young, who impressed the council last fall with his pledge of cooperation and transparency. But he may or may not have the post permanently. Watson and Assistant Executive Director David Ervin are gone, albeit it with a parting settlement so controversial that Gov. Chris Christie wants an investigation. The board of commissioners is split, as are the governing body and the mayor over appointments. And as the DumpPMUA group continues to uncover dubious use of the ratepayers' money, the drumbeat for dissolution of the authority has intensified.

But will tonight's report resolve anything?

Not likely. It is a report from a volunteer task force, not a mandate. The governing body will have to decide what action, if any, is warranted now that the state is looking at the authority. At the local level, the issue of the PMUA's future is almost too clouded by politics to permit any rational action. As an autonomous body, the authority is expected to solve its own problems, unless, as several close observers feel, they are so fundamental that only disbanding the PMUA will suffice.

The PMUA is undoubtedly the most-studied entity in the city's history, with volumes of data on the DumpPMUA web site and more emerging every day. What this report could do is put the main issues into sharp focus. The money wasted or misspent is gone and not likely to be recouped, unless the state somehow strikes down perhaps the most egregious example, the $1 million settlement. The issues of leadership in the organzation and on the board of commissioners will not be resolved by an external report. In and of itself, the report cannot make the PMUA go away.

The report does deserve close attention from all tonight and further study in days to come. No doubt a copy should go to the appropriate party at the state. But let us all remember that it is not likely to still the boiling cauldron of controversy over how basic services now in the hands of the authority should be delivered to the city's 16,000 households. Impatient as everyone is for closure, it will not come tonight, despite the hard work of the task force.

So listen well, ask questions, take notes - and  perhaps the PMUA web will be untangled sooner rather than later.

--Bernice

7 comments:

  1. As usual the council deflects responsibility and thus driving the cost of governement. All the council would have to do is file an OPRA request to find out about the direction of the PMUA. So instead we make a political spectacle of the whole process instead of providing concrete reforms. Here is a suggestion. The council should make recommendations and not follow the whims of an ad hoc committee, but that would require leadership

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  2. Replace the commissioners, hold them individually and collectively accountable for the healthcare benefits they've been pilfering.

    Void the settlement. Hold Dunn and Sanders accountable for subverting the arbitration process and gross negligence of duty. Send them packing.

    An independent audit is called for. The city has been lying about what is revenue sharing. It's working off another agreement than what is spelled out in Article II of the ILA, unapproved by either governing body, and only alluded to in the fine print of PMUA's financial statements. A side deal as it were that severed an important regulatory and financial link.

    Put PMUA under a state-appointed trustee, get the audit done and turn up all the rocks and take a look underneath.

    Put the fate of PMUA into the hands of the voters when this is complete. By City Council action, petition, state or court order, let's have this on the ballot for November 2013, to coincide with the mayoral race.

    No more backroom deals. No more profiteering. Let each voter study the issues, have the lines be drawn, enlist your allies, fire yourselves up, and power to the people.

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  3. Alan,

    That would require common sense, courage and a sense of stewardship from our elected folks. It's likely not going to happen because they are too entrenched in the corruption.

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  4. Ohhhhhhh ..... A Task Force, now they mean business and yes taxes will go ? Thanks to our all Democratic Party council.

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  5. Plainfield Peace CoalitionMarch 20, 2012 at 7:09 AM

    I believe by doing some math that PMUA is actually operating in the red... The reason I say this is due to the tremendous debt it has been carrying for years, as follows:
    Muhlenburg $4000,000 LOSS
    Connelly proprties $256,000 LOSS
    At one period of time we had 16000 homes in delinquency $$28million LOSS
    as published by Courier News
    Fanwood 19million owed /paid 9million 10millionLOSS
    City of Plainfield 2million owed paid???
    Debt of $48million cost of operating
    Seems to me we are in rough shape
    sewer component was sold to a private entity for 19million which brought in 21million yearly
    The best solution for this, is prayer

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  6. PPC, where are you getting these figures? 16,000 homes would be the entire city. What sewer component got sold and when? I thought the city still owned the sewer system and PMUA just operated it. More facts, please.

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  7. Plainfield Peace CoalitionMarch 22, 2012 at 1:47 PM

    Bernice
    According to 2005 Census
    there are 27,865 housing units in the City of Plainfield
    Please contact Dottie G.

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