City worker, paid for nothing, files for bankruptcy – dailypress.com

Sometimes comedians can take the day off. Sometimes the punchlines write themselves.

See if you can follow this one, keeping in mind that it is a news story and not a joke.

Jill McGlone, a former social worker for the city of Norfolk, continued to collect paychecks – about $30,000 per year – for 12 years after she stopped doing the job.

Now she’s being sued And she’s filed for bankruptcy.

So in a nutshell, the city paid her 12 years of salary for nothing, and when she gets caught she tries to block a lawsuit by saying she has no money.

via City worker, paid for nothing, files for bankruptcy – dailypress.com.

Duluth City Councilors question spending on staff in top administration | Duluth News Tribune | Duluth, Minnesota

Two Duluth city councilors took aim at city administrative staffing Monday night.

A resolution approving the appointment of a new director of public administration in Duluth to replace Lisa Potswald drew sharp words from councilors Sharla Gardner and Jim Stauber.

“I think we need to get our priorities in order,” Gardner said, suggesting that roughly $100,000 in salary plus benefits could be better spent on public safety, such as the continued operation of the recently closed Park Point fire hall. She said she had no issue with the qualifications of the job candidate but only with the position to be filled.

In an era when budget constraints have forced the city to make painful rank-and-file staffing cuts, Stauber said: “I think we need to slow down adding people at the top.”

Duluth’s Chief Administrative Officer David Montgomery defended the position, saying the director of public administration oversees city operations that employ about 200 people.

Council President Dan Hartman said he shared many of Gardner’s and Stauber’s concerns about the city’s administrative structure but did not feel it was appropriate to eliminate the position now, especially when the post already had been offered to someone, who was preparing to move to the community.

Councilor Emily Larson agreed it would be unfortunate to withdraw the job offer, especially when the council had already approved the position.

“For me it’s a timing issue,” she said.

The council was asked Monday to authorize the appointment of Roshanda Smiley as Potswald’s replacement.

The resolution passed 6-2, with Gardner and Stauber voting in the minority.

via Duluth City Councilors question spending on staff in top administration | Duluth News Tribune | Duluth, Minnesota.

Link

Steven Abrahamson, et al., Respondents, vs. The St. Louis County School District, Independent School District No. 2142, et al., Appellants; Office of Administrative Hearings, Respondent. Court of Appeals

A10-2162        Steven Abrahamson, et al., Respondents, vs. The St. Louis County
School District, Independent School District No. 2142, et al.,
Appellants; Office of Administrative Hearings, Respondent.
Court of Appeals.
1.   A school district is a corporation within the meaning of Minn. Stat. ch. 211A (2010) and therefore is subject to the campaign-finance reporting requirements of that chapter if the district acts “to promote or defeat a ballot question.”
2.   The complaint alleged facts sufficient to make out a prima facie case under Minn. Stat. ch. 211A (2010) that the school district acted to promote a ballot question.
3.   A claim alleging a violation of Minn. Stat. § 211B.06 (2010) is untimely under Minn. Stat. § 211B.32, subd. 2 (2010), if the allegedly false statement was made more than one year before the complaint was filed.
4.   The complaint alleging a false statement based on a “worst case” assumption failed to state a prima facie violation of Minn. Stat. § 211B.06.
            Affirmed in part, reversed in part, and remanded.  Justice Alan C. Page.
            Concurring, Justice Paul H. Anderson.
            Concurring and dissenting, Justices David R. Stras and G. Barry Anderson.

Duluth City Council tables move to draw down trust fund | Duluth News Tribune | Duluth, Minnesota

The Duluth City Council delayed a vote Monday on paying off some street improvement debt when the method of payment drew fire from two council members.

City administration proposed paying down about $3 million, to bring the city’s outstanding street improvement debt to about $13 million.

“This is sort of like your scheduled mortgage payment,” said David Montgomery, Duluth’s chief administrative officer, in characterizing the proposed financial transfer detailed in a council resolution Monday.

But City Councilor Jim Stauber objected to taking money from the city’s Community Investment Trust to make the debt payment. He said that when the trust was established, only interest from the trust fund was supposed to be used to cover bond payments for street improvements, leaving the principal intact, as a nest egg. But four years ago, the city started drawing down the trust, as it switched to a pay-as-you-go approach to paying for street projects.

Stauber noted that the trust balance has steadily declined from about $57 million in 2009 to a proposed $21 million if the latest payment is authorized.

“We’re spending down our goose that laid the golden egg,” he said.

The trust fund had been funded in the past from a revenue-sharing agreement with the Fond-du-Luth Casino. But the Fond du Lac Band of Lake Superior Chippewa stopped making payments to the city in 2009, resulting in a protracted legal battle.

Montgomery predicted the city should have some resolution to the case in early fall or winter. If the city prevails, he said Duluth could collect about $15 million in back payments.

But Montgomery said the city’s not taking victory for granted.

“We are working on alternatives to fund the street program while, on a parallel path, we’re also working toward some form of resolution with the band.”

Regardless, Montgomery said he would advise against drawing down the trust any lower than the $21 million now proposed. He said that any further reductions in the fund could put the city’s credit rating at risk.

City Councilor Jennifer Julsrud joined Stauber in opposing the transfer from the trust fund.

“I would like to see the council more actively involved in a discussion about the Street Improvement Program, and how we will pay this debt down. So I will be voting against this, as well,” she said.

The council needed seven votes to pass the resolution and, with Councilor Garry Krause absent Monday night, it would not have been able to achieve that threshold.

Councilor Jay Fosle moved to table the resolution until a full council could take up the matter, and his motion passed 7-1, with Stauber alone in his dissent.

via Duluth City Council tables move to draw down trust fund | Duluth News Tribune | Duluth, Minnesota.

Fourth educator files grievance | The Tennessean | tennessean.com

Another Cheatham County educator has filed a grievance over former director of school Tim Webb’s failure to conduct state-mandated evaluations during the 2011-2012 school year.

Shannon Schliwa, who was removed as the principal at Harpeth Middle School by Webb in June, filed the grievance in mid-July. However, the grievance was denied by current director Stan Curtis.

Schliwa is scheduled to teach at Pegram Elementary School this year.

According to Schliwa’s grievance, she maintains that evaluations were not done “correctly and never finished. No scores were given and no data entered. I never received any verbal or written feedback from Dr. Webb.”

By not having the evaluations finished, she maintains it is violation of Tennessee State Board of Education policy and Cheatham County School Board policy.

She also asked that a letter be placed in her personnel file acknowledging that the evaluations were not done.

Schliwa had a hearing with Curtis on July 23.

In Curtis’ response to Schliwa, he wrote that a letter stating, “The grievant’s transfer from principal at Harpeth Middle School to a teacher at Pegram Elementary School was not based on an administrator evaluation matrix score” would be placed in her personnel file.

She can appeal Curtis’ decision to the Cheatham County School Board.

Schliwa was the fourth Cheatham County educator to file a grievance over Webb’s failure to conduct state-mandated evaluations or provide feedback following the evaluations.

Jenny Simpkins, Tim Ray and Angela McCarthy filed similar grievances, and Curtis denied all three of them.

Simpkins was removed by Webb as principal at Sycamore High School. She is returning to the classroom at Cheatham County Central High School.

Ray was removed as the supervisor at Cheatham Academy. He is returning to the classroom at Cheatham Academy this year.

McCarthy was removed as the assistant principal at Harpeth Middle School. She is the new assistant principal at William James Middle School.

via Fourth educator files grievance | The Tennessean | tennessean.com.

Illinois Issues blog: Unions pitch their own pension reform plan

By Jamey Dunn

Union officials laid out the broad strokes of their own pension reform plan today.

Cinda Klickna, president of the Illinois Education Association, described the plan backed by We Are One Illinois—a coalition of public employee unions, which includes the Illinois AFL-CIO, the American Federation of State, Country and Municipal Employees, Service Employees International Union and unions representing teachers, police, firefighters and transportation workers. Klickna said that group seeks a guarantee that the state will make the required pension contribution. Under the proposal, the priority of the pension payment would only be second to the state’s creditors. Union officials argue that legislation that is currently up for consideration does not do enough to ensure that lawmakers make the annual pension payments. They point to skipped pension payments as the primary cause of the state’s more then $80 billion unfunded pension liability. “The pension crisis was caused by past governors and legislators that failed that people of the state,” Klickna said.

The group also is proposing that lawmakers reevaluate corporate tax breaks, such as the package of tax cuts recently passed to benefit Sears and the CME group. The collation is focusing on a group of tax breaks, the elimination of which they say could save the $80.7 billion over the next 34 years. On the list are tax exemptions for paper and ink given to news outlets, a tax exemption for foreign dividends and a tax break given to retailers for collecting the state’s sales tax. “We cannot longer afford to let these big corporations off the hook will vital services continue to be slashed,” said Henry Bayer, executive director of AFSCME Council 31. “We need to reform our tax system. It’s long, long overdue. … We need to focus on where the money is — what we can afford and what’s fair.”

All of the tax breaks have the backing of relatively powerful lobbying groups and could be a tough sell to legislators who are concerned about giving the appearance of being pro jobs and business friendly in the wake of the economic downturn.

The union coalition is also asking that any changes would not affect current retirees. In exchange for those three considerations, the group says that current workers would pay more toward the cost of retirement. Klickna said that such an increase would need to be negotiated, but she said the amount would likely vary across the different pension systems. “The employees didn’t cause the crisis, but we’re going on record today to say our members are willing to help fix it if the state will guarantee that the politicians will never again divert our pension money to other expenses,” Michael Carrigan, president of the Illinois AFL-CIO, said in a prepared statement.

The move comes as lawmakers are scheduled to return to Springfield this Friday to take up the pensions issue during a special session called by Gov. Pat Quinn. However, Quinn’s camp does not seem responsive to the plan. “This is nothing new, and all has been discussed before,” Brooke Anderson, a spokeswoman for Quinn, said in an emailed response to Illinois Issues. “This proposal would not solve the state’s pension challenges, nor is it feasible.”

House Speaker Michael Madigan reportedly plans to call House Bill 1447, which the Senate approved on the last day of the spring legislative session. The measure would require employees and retirees to choose between keeping either a cost-of-living increase based on compounded interest or state-subsidized health care benefits. Current employees who chose to keep the compounded cost-of-living adjustment would also not be able to factor any future raises into calculating their pension benefits.

Unions maintain that the pension reform plan is unconstitutional and presents workers and retirees with a false choice between two bad outcomes. “If I had to chose between my [COLA] and my insurance, it would be like asking me to cut off my right hand or my left hand,” said Barbara Gilhaus, a retired teacher. Gilhaus said she gets about $28,000 annually from her pension.

Supporters of the plan to offer employees a choice between health care and compounded COLAs say it passes constitutional muster because it allows employees to decide what benefits that may want to trade off to keep others. Quinn also recently signed Senate Bill 1313, which will result in retirees paying more for their health care coverage. While the state still plans to kick in to cover some of the health care costs for retirees, some retirees will have to start being premiums under the plan.

HB 1477 only applies to state workers and members of the General Assembly. Democrats and Republicans cannot agree on whether universities, community colleges and downstate and suburban schools should have to pick up the cost of their employees’ retirement. There are multiple bills on the table that would sift the costs to schools over several years. But so far, Republicans have staunchly opposed them, and Democrats have been unwilling to back off the issue. Leaving the retirement benefits of teachers and university employees out of any pension vote that may happen on Friday would allow lawmakers to revisit the issue of the cost shift after the general election.

via Illinois Issues blog: Unions pitch their own pension reform plan.