Arthur Schaper: Improvident Providence

Arthur Christopher Schaper, GoLocalProv MINDSETTER™

Arthur Schaper: Improvident Providence

Earlier this week, GoLocalProv exposed the top forty public employees in Providence, who are pocketing an improvident amount of money. How these people can call themselves public servants, when they are serving themselves a second helping from the public coffers – I am at a loss for words (though hardly surprised).

Only a handful of city administrators made the Top 40. Interestingly enough, Mayor (and gubernatorial candidate) Angel Taveras did not even make the Top 100. At least he has one thing going for him when he runs to replace Chafee in 2014: “I close your pools and cave into public sector unions, but I don’t make you pay me extra for doing so!”

The majority of highly compensated employees were firefighters. Perhaps the high compensation is justified. How many fires have erupted in Providence? The Providence fire department released the following list of ladder and engine statistics for 2010, but more up-to-date information was not forthcoming.

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Fire rescue captain Vincent D’Ambra holds the Top Spot for the Top 40, taking in nearly double his base pay in one year (Overtime: $116,356.94). With benefits, and his total pay amounted to $218,145. Providence has indeed been provident to Mr. D’Ambra, but will the city employees find themselves taking haircuts from an emergency manager (like Detroit), or a public beheading from taxpayers and underserved city residents (like Bell, California)? Remember Central Falls, firefighters. The mayor went to jail, the city filed for bankruptcy, and the sacrosanct public pensions took a scalping.

Such profligacy is not shocking to me.

In the South Bay of Southern California, where I live, the beach city communities see very little crime, fewer fires, with a high-class residential clientele in the aerospace or entertainment industry. El Segundo, California has one of the largest Chevron refineries in the country, and low crime/fire rates. El Segundo’s police and fire chiefs take in six figure salaries. One city council member wanted to contract out the fire department to Los Angeles County, and the current city council is facing massive budget deficits because of the overgenerous pensions.

Further south, there’s Hermosa Beach, where “The Tonight Show” host Jay Leno practices his jokes at the Comedy and Magic Club before prime time. The city’s comedy and magical thinking comes from the public sector unions in this pretty little beach city, where one murder in seven years and very few fires have taken place. Why do police captains need a six figure salary? Better yet, why does the city hire parking enforcers for $50,000 a year, with a lavish pension waiting for them when they retire? By the way, those meter maids make more money than the teachers in the same city. Unbelievable.

Now, back to Providence.

If overtime pay is such a problem, then the city should hire more firefighters and cut down on the overtime. Providence did hire fifty-two more employees, yet the city’s budget for fire services will increase, nonetheless. What gives?

Why do public employees take in so much in the first place? Prior city leaders cave in to union pressure and agree to contracts in the best interests of the collective bargaining units, which in turn support city leaders’ re-elections. Pure and simple. The result? Take a look at San Bernardino, California, where prior city councils refused to face the facts about the financial mess that they were forcing themselves into, and declared bankruptcy last year. The crime rate since then has spiked (the housing crisis created a wasteland of abandoned, underwater homes), and city tax revenues have suffered. Sound familiar, Rhode Islanders?

Then if the leaders in Providence are so bad, what will it take to make them lead?

One Rhode Island resident who follows me on Twitter did not mince words:

“Fear of being voted out of office. Unlikely in a state full of the walking brain dead.” One Republican Party official did admit that the voter apathy in Rhode Island is horrendous.

Are the voters that apathetic about their city leadership?

I called the Rhode Island Elections Division for some tallies. Here are the results:

Providence mayoral election turnout in 2010, in which there were 96,712 possible voters.

MAYOR CITY OF PROVIDENCE

Candidate                                      Ballot breakup                                               Total votes             Percentage

• Angel TAVERAS (DEM)               Polling place: 26,572, Mail ballots: 956            27,528                     82.1%

• Jonathan P. SCOTT (IND)           Polling place: 5,801, Mail ballots: 205               6,006                      17.9%

 

Two thirds of residents did not bother to vote for their next mayor.

Providence voter turnout for state senators and state assembly reps in 2012: Out of 103,165, only 53, 506, or 50.9%. Not very impressive.

Either Providentials don’t vote, or they vote for the same legal collusion of Democratic politicians and demanding public sector unions.

Brain dead voters voting against their better interests? Hardly likely. Government’s ubiquitous presence in Rhode Island, from high welfare payments to bureaucratic finagling, has made big government a big advantage to voters. How much longer this unsustainable collusion will last, however, may force even the welfare recipients, government bureaucrats, and public sector employees to give up on taking improvident advantage of indigent Providence, Rhode Island in 2014.

 

Arthur Christopher Schaper is a teacher-turned-writer on topics both timeless and timely; political, cultural, and eternal. A life-long Southern California resident, Arthur currently lives in Torrance. Follow him on Twitter @ArthurCSchaper, reach him at [email protected], and read more at Schaper's Corner and As He Is, So Are We Ministries.


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