Fighting
Eviction
Will term limits force a vanishing act
for three Austin council members?
by Ken Martin
Photography by Barton Wilder Custom Images
The three
most experienced members of the Austin City Council want another
term, but voters will not get the chance to reelect them-or toss
them out in favor of other candidates-unless the trio can gather
enough signatures to win a place on the ballot. Their predicament
stems from the imposition of term limits by voters in 1994, in the
form of an amendment to the Austin City Charter.
Term limits
got on the ballot almost without discussion. The Austin American-Statesman
reported March 4, 1994, that three speakers at a council meeting
opposed amending the charter to include term limits. One was Frances
McIntyre, president of the League of Women Voters, who said, "Term
limits interfere with my right and yours to choose who we want in
office."
Save for
that minimal opposition, consideration of the implications of limiting
how long a council member could serve was lost among twenty-one
other propositions on the ballot, some of which were seen as vastly
more important at the time. Proposition 1, if approved, would have
established single-member districts for the future election of council
members. Proposition 22 was the highly charged campaign over whether
to repeal insurance benefits for the unmarried domestic partners
of city employees, a measure put on the ballot through the petition
drive of conservative Christians who banded together under the name
Concerned Texans. The so-called "shack-up insurance" was
a hot-button issue that lit up the phone lines on talk radio and
triggered the formation of a more liberal Mainstream Austin Coalition
of churches to try to defeat the amendment. Noting the significance
of Proposition 22, on election day the Statesman reported, "It
has taken on national importance as a test of support for gay rights
and the power of religious groups to influence political decisions."
The election
of a mayor and three council members was on the same cluttered ballot,
and Daryl Slusher, who had built a following as politics editor
of the Austin Chronicle, managed to make it into a runoff for mayor
with incumbent Bruce Todd. Slusher lost that race by just 1,339
votes.
The fervor
for term limits was sweeping the country, and Austin was not immune.
Fifty-nine percent of the voters approved Proposition 2, with 46,222
voting yes, 31,489 voting no. Ronney Reynolds, who was on the city
council at the time and supported term limits, told the Statesman
after the election that the vote was a criticism of the council:
"There's a natural distrust of politicians, and people feel
like with term limits there will be turnover without the incumbent
having the advantage in every election."
Passage of
Proposition 2 meant that, beginning with elections after 1994, anyone
elected for two terms can get on the ballot again only by submitting
a petition signed by at least five percent of the city's registered
voters.
Mayor Pro
Tem Jackie Goodman was first elected in 1993; her first three-year
term on the council did not count for the purposes of term limits.
Her reelection in 1996 and 1999 did count. So it's two strikes and
she's out unless she can raise the signatures.
Council Members
Beverly Griffith and Daryl Slusher were first elected in 1996 and
then reelected in 1999. They, too, must petition or step down.
A mountain
to climb
The number
of signatures needed to equal five percent varies from time to time,
as people are added to or deleted from the voter registration rolls,
but the latest estimate is that 21,109 valid signatures will be
needed to get on the ballot for the May 4 election. The number is
a moving target, however, and it could go up if significant numbers
of people decide to register before the petitions are submitted,
which is likely given the upcoming March 12 party primary elections
that include numerous statewide races.
To put this
figure into perspective, it should be noted that only one of these
incumbents garnered that many votes when they were reelected the
last time in 1999. All three were reelected without a runoff. Goodman
got 21,747 votes to thump her only challenger. Slusher got 18,721
votes to defeat five opponents. And Griffith garnered 17,085 to
beat eight challengers (earning a footnote in history, as it marked
the first time since council seats were designated by places in
1953 that an incumbent who faced so many challengers did not need
a runoff to secure reelection).
Getting the
number of signatures they need is not impossible-but it is difficult.
The fact that these three council members are willing to even try
to corral so many signatures says something in itself. Why do they
want so badly to hang onto a council seat that pays $45,000 a year
(raised from $30,000 effective July 2, 2000) and comes with a built-in
supply of people to criticize anything they do, or fail to do? Each
of the incumbents answered that question differently:
Goodman:
"Why am I doing this? To be perfectly honest it's because I'm
competitive. But the larger picture is that an awful lot of good,
caring people wanted me to run again...It's hard to tell those folks
that someone else will do what I do, because I'm not sure that's
true. I'm not sure someone else will have the focus and understanding
and commitment that I have and will always have."
Griffith:
"It's in the public interest that folks who have the experience
and corporate memory are there to serve." Noting that Austin
has a new mayor and new general manager for the electric utility,
and soon will have a new city manager, Griffith says, "What
citizens are telling me is that we absolutely cannot afford the
loss of the three senior, most experienced, most knowledgeable council
members at the same time. It could be very high risk...We must have
people with business experience, neighborhood credentials, and a
strong environmental record at the helm or there's a lot of uncertainty,
which people are telling me they don't want right now."
Slusher:
"I have real mixed feelings about going for another term. I
feel like there's more work to do. It's a critical time for the
city. Finances are a particularly serious challenge. We need stability
at City Hall. This is what I got from many people, leading up to
deciding whether to run again."
Scrambling
for signatures
So far, the
petition drives that will determine whether the three council members
make it onto the ballot again are getting mixed results. Griffith
said January 16 she had "north of 13,000" signatures.
Weekly meetings and pep rallies with petitioners are keeping the
process on track, she says.
Griffith's
petition drive was shot out of a cannon the first day, as paid petitioners
were at the polls during the November 6 presidential election and
netted some 2,000 signatures, she says. Griffith's petition drive
is headed up by Linda Curtis, who has completed numerous successful
petition drives, including the effort by Austinites for a Little
Less Corruption that got campaign-finance reform on the ballot and
approved by Austin voters in 1997. She also was a driving force
in the petition of Clean Campaigns for Austin last year, which was
responsible for getting the Austin Fair Elections Act on the ballot
this May to repeal and replace the Little Less Corruption reforms.
Slusher declines
to say how many signatures he has gathered but concedes he is worried.
"I'm working hard on it and I think it's possible, but it's
a very difficult task and not certain. I'm more confident of getting
reelected if I get on the ballot than I am of getting the signatures."
Goodman says
she has not had time to count the signatures gathered so far, as
many petitions are being circulated by volunteers. She indicated
that even Slusher's petition drive was organized well before hers.
Asked if she'd get enough signatures, Goodman said, "I don't
know."
Goodman and
Slusher at first relied mainly on volunteers. In December they jointly
hired veteran political campaigner Pat Crow to lash together a renewed
effort to collect signatures. But they said that except for the
booth at the Armadillo Christmas Bazaar, where petitions for all
three candidates were available to sign December 13 through December
24, not much got done during the holidays.
The cold
weather hasn't helped. Because of frigid temperatures, howling winds,
and no protected space where she could pitch an appeal to people
coming and going, Linda Curtis said she wouldn't even try to get
signatures from the crowds flocking to a weekend automobile show
at Palmer Auditorium.
Slusher said
he and Goodman were hoping to fire up more enthusiasm with a "good
old-fashioned Musical Sign-Along" January 27 at Antone's, featuring
Joe Ely, Toni Price and a long list of other musicians providing
the attraction of star power to build political power. The admission
of ten bucks was to be waived for anyone bringing in petitions with
ten valid signatures for each of the council member hosts.
While Slusher
and Goodman try to boost their petition drives through traditional
grass-roots methods, complete with rally-round-the-flag gatherings,
Griffith pushes ahead with a team of seasoned signature snaggers.
Mike Blizzard
of Grassroots Solutions is a political consultant to the Griffith
campaign and has helped to formulate strategy for the petition drive.
"My prediction is that Beverly's will succeed," he says.
"If she keeps up the rate she's going she will turn in 26,000
signatures." The last big push will be made at the March 12
party primary election, where every signature gathered is certain
to be a valid, registered city voter.
The absolute
deadline for submitting petitions is March 20-the last day of the
filing period for a candidate to apply for a place on the May 4
ballot.
Pushing the
petitioners to produce results includes paying bonuses for anyone
on Griffith's team who gathers 2,000 signatures, Blizzard says.
"The key is sustained effort. You have to have people doing
it on a daily basis or you will not succeed," he says. To make
the deadline, he said, the team of petitioners must consistently
average 1,500 signatures a week.
While Griffith
seems to be the only sure bet to finish her petition drive successfully,
some people criticize her tactics.
Ginny Agnew,
chair of the city's Ethics Review Commission, says, "Beverly
Griffith may be the poster child on the issue, because the thing
you're trying to do is limit the power of the incumbency and the
power of the pocketbook, and there she is buying signatures to overcome
the rule of term limits. She makes herself impervious to attack
because she has money to put into her campaign and the power of
the incumbency."
But, given
term limits, and given the restriction that only incumbents who
can demonstrate broad public support through a petition drive can
get on the ballot, Griffith appears to be following the rules.
Blizzard
says that Griffith has put only $5,000 of her own money into the
campaign and has demonstrated phenomenal community support in gathering
another $30,000, in spite of the $100 contribution limits. "Raising
money that way, you have to be tenacious and organized," he
said.
Slusher says
he had intended to launch his petition drive at the annual Diez
y Seis celebration where, traditionally, thousands of people gather
to celebrate Mexico's independence from Spain. But that event, scheduled
for September 15, was canceled out of respect for the victims of
the September 11 terrorist attacks. Slusher delayed his petitioning
for a month and started in October, he says, mostly with volunteers
gathering signatures. "I announced I would do it October 11.
But it was hard to get geared up because I couldn't raise money
till November 6," he says, alluding to City Charter restrictions
that prohibit raising money more than 180 days before an election.
"I had to go make copies and pay out of personal funds, and
I don't have all that much personal funds. It got started in earnest
on November 6."
Goodman says
she started her petition drive November 9. "For me, it was
a one-person campaign for some time. When I had a minute, I'd run
make copies."
While the
three council members are all facing the same formidable challenge,
they are not exactly the Three Musketeers, all for one and one for
all. It's not that they don't wish each other well, and want all
the petitions to succeed, but ultimately each incumbent is responsible
for gaining a place on the ballot.
Will they
exploit loophole?
The one way
the three incumbents could help each other-in the event one or more
petitions fail to pass muster-is to swap council seats. That's a
loophole in the charter. Term limits only apply to a given place
seat. While political backlash is possible from voters angered by
an end-run around term limits, the strategy is technically possible.
Slusher says
he doesn't plan to slip through that loophole.
"A lot
of people are trying to get me to switch seats and not go through
this ordeal of getting the signatures, but I don't like that option,"
Slusher says. "I just can't get past the fact I don't think
that was the intent of the voters. I call on people to follow the
intent of the voters, like the SOS Ordinance, where I call on developers
to follow the will of the voters."
Goodman is
more ambivalent, saying, "It's an option. I don't know if it's
one I would take. I'd have to think about that. This (petition drive)
is logistically almost an overwhelming task. It takes your total
energy and commitment, so knowing there's another option is not
something I'm spending any time thinking about right now."
Griffith,
who at this point seems the least likely to need to think about
switching seats, says she is reviewing the situation.
While the
three incumbents are galloping toward the wire in the petition drives-and
facing a moral dilemma about changing seats if the signatures fall
short-the circumstances are conspiring to create a scenario for
the May 4, 2002, election that is eerily reminiscent of 1994.
In early
1994 the Austin City Council was reeling from problems at Brackenridge,
including a $21 million deficit. Today, Brackenridge Hospital is
once again a serious problem, as Catholic doctrine imposed on Seton,
operator of the city-owned Brackenridge Hospital, threatens to interfere
with women's reproductive healthcare at the facility.
In early
1994 City Manager Camille Barnett was forced to resign because of
the Brackenridge situation and Jesus Garza was hired as city manager
to fix the mess. Today, Garza has submitted his resignation to take
a job with the Lower Colorado River Authority, and the council is
mulling the promotion of Deputy City Manager Toby Futrell to succeed
Garza.
In 1994 voters
were called-for the fifth time-to decide whether to elect future
City Council members from geographic districts instead of at-large.
Today, the Charter Revision Committee has recommended that the City
Council put single-member districts back on the ballot again.
One major
difference in this year's election is that nothing on the ballot
is likely to draw the massive numbers of conservative voters that
flocked to the polls in 1994, when Concerned Texans successfully
petitioned to get Proposition 22 on the ballot to repeal insurance
benefits for domestic partners of unmarried city employees. But,
since this year's ballot items won't be set until around mid-March,
this could change.
In 1994 voters
approved the term limits that are plaguing the three incumbents.
Today, if the Charter Revision Committee's recommendations are followed
by the council, voters will get a chance to repeal term limits.
But that
won't save the council careers of three officeholders whose terms
are up. They're going to have to do that for themselves.
The good
news for Goodman, Griffith, and Slusher is that if they do succeed
in gathering enough signatures to get on the ballot, they're not
going to be evicted-not by term limits and not by a challenger.
In the first
place, all three clobbered opponents to win reelection in 1997 without
even a runoff. And this time each of them will have in hand the
petitions that identify some 25,000 supporters who can be targeted
and herded to the polls. No challenger can ever hope to have that
kind of information. They will be untouchable.
Ken Martin
is editor of The Good Life. He agrees with the title of a book written
by Henry B. Fox of Circleville: Dirty Politics is Fun. For the journalist,
anyway.
Round 2 for Campaign Finance
Reform
Will voters decide to pony up?
"Politics
is a place of humble hopes and strangely modest requirements,
where all are good who are not criminal and all are wise who are
not ridiculously otherwise." -Frank Moore Colby (1865-1925)
by Ken Martin
Somebody's
got to pay for election campaigns and the theory of a group of local
reformers, Clean Campaigns for Austin, is that's it better to help
with public money than to have politicians obligated to private
interests. To understand why, one only has to think of the national
scandal currently unfolding, as politicians richly endowed with
contributions from bankrupt energy trader Enron Corporation must
now be expected to lead the investigation into how investors and
employees were bilked.
The most
vivid local example of how political contributions taint the public's
interest was reported by the Austin American-Statesman January 24:
Texas Attorney General John Cornyn, a Republican candidate for the
US Senate, has recused himself from the investigation of the Enron
matter that cost Texas state agencies $68.5 million. The reason?
He collected $193,000 in campaign contributions from Enron interests
between September 1997 and June 2001.
When Austin
voters go to the polls May 4 to elect three council members, they
will also get to decide whether to approve the Austin Fair Elections
Act. The Act would provide an initial grant for qualifying candidates
who agree to abide by voluntary restrictions and it would subsequently
match amounts the candidates raise, up to the maximum allowed.
To qualify
for public funding, a City Council candidate would have to get signatures
from 500 registered city voters (or an eighth of one percent of
the registered voters, whichever is greater) and a five-dollar contribution
from each signer. Mayoral candidates must get 1,000 signatures (or
a fourth of one percent of registered voters, whichever is greater)
and contributions of five dollars each.
Some fear
these thresholds are too low and would allow marginal candidates-such
as Austin perennials Leslie Cochran and Jennifer Gale, who offer
little more than comic relief-to qualify. Clean Campaigns proponents
say experience in other jurisdictions with public campaign financing
indicates fringe candidates rarely qualify for public funding. Think
of it this way: It's one thing to sign a petition that costs you
nothing; it's another to fork over five bucks when you sign; and
it's harder still if you realize that a candidate who qualifies
is going to receive public funding. That's enough to sober up any
taxpaying citizen.
Candidates
are allowed to raise seed money in contributions of up to $200 per
donor to pay the expense of qualifying for public funding. Council
candidates may spend up to $10,000 in seed money, mayoral candidates
$20,000.
Qualifying
candidates for City Council would receive initial grants of $16,666.
Qualifying mayoral candidates would receive initial grants of $33,333.
Thereafter, candidates could accept contributions of up to $200
per donor; these would be matched by public funds, with two dollars
provided from public funds for each one dollar raised privately.
Council campaigns could spend no more than $100,000 in the general
election and $100,000 in the runoff. Mayoral candidates could spend
$200,000 in the general election and $200,000 in the runoff.
A participating
candidate's spending limits would be adjusted upward to match the
amount spent by any opponent who exceeds the voluntary spending
limit, whether from personal funds or contributions. This provision
addresses situations like the 1997 council campaign, in which millionaire
Manuel Zuniga poured more than $92,000 of his own money into the
general election and runoff he lost to Bill Spelman.
A participating
candidate's spending limits would be adjusted upward to match any
independent expenditures opposing the candidate or supporting an
opponent if the independent expenditures exceed $25,000 in a council
race or $50,000 in a mayoral race. This provision addresses situations
like the 2000 council elections, in which lottery winner Thomas
"Hollywood" Henderson and the Austin Police Association
made independent expenditures that boosted the candidacy of Austin
Police Officer Danny Thomas, who defeated incumbent Willie Lewis.
Reform
by citizen initiative
The Austin
Fair Elections Act will be on the ballot as a result of a petition
drive by Clean Campaigns for Austin to amend the Austin City Charter.
If voters approve it, the Austin Fair Elections Act would repeal
and replace the campaign finance reforms approved by more than seventy-two
percent of voters on November 4, 1997. That reform reduced the amount
of money candidates could accept from political action committees.
It also limited individual contributions to $100. That limit has
been viewed in hindsight as too low, even by members of Austinites
for a Little Less Corruption, who got the initiative on the ballot
through a petition drive.
The Austin
Fair Elections Act was written by attorney Fred Lewis. He is founder
and president of Campaigns for People, whose mission is to promote
workable reforms that restrain the influence of money on state government
and create an ethical climate that builds public confidence in the
state's democratic institutions. Lewis says his initial draft of
the Austin Fair Elections Act ran thirty pages. The Brennan Center
for Justice at the New York University School of Law, an organization
involved in litigation and reforms for campaign financing, edited
the draft down to nine pages, he says.
Lewis also
wrote a twenty-one page fiscal analysis of the cost of implementing
the Austin Fair Elections Act (see it on-line at www.cleancampaigns.org).
Based on the experience of publicly funded campaigns in Arizona,
Maine, New York City, and Los Angeles, Lewis estimated the cost
of Austin's partial public funding at $806,000 for 2003, when the
mayor and three council positions will be up for election; nothing
in 2004, when there are no elections scheduled; $716,000 in 2005,
when three council positions will be up for election; and $1.3 million
in 2006, when the mayor and three council positions will again be
on the ballot. The analysis assumes that with each election the
candidates will grow more familiar with how the Austin Fair Elections
Act works, and over time more candidates will choose to participate
in the voluntary system that provides matching funds.
The money
to pay for the partial system of public funding would come mainly
from the city's general fund. The Austin Fair Elections Act limits
funding to a maximum of one-quarter percent of the city's annual
budget. The city calculates that's about $4 million. But, the Act
requires the Ethics Review Commission to make a written estimate
of the amount needed for an election cycle and submit it to the
City Council for appropriation. At least five percent of the amount
appropriated must be used to administer the Act.
The Act
requires a voluntary check-off system be made part of the city's
utility billing system; ratepayers would be able to contribute to
the Fair Elections Fund, just as they do now for the Plus 1 Program,
which helps poor people pay utility bills, and the Tree Planting
Program. Qualifying candidates would be required to deposit into
the Fair Elections Fund all qualifying contributions and any surplus
seed money collected.
Fiscal conservatives
may be philosophically opposed to using public funds to pay for
campaigns. Others figure it's cheaper for citizens to buy candidates
than let private money taint the public interest.
Mike Blizzard
of Grassroots Solutions, a strategy consultant for Clean Campaigns
for Austin, says it's a matter of cost and benefits. "The issue
here is whether people will accept paying for better democracy,"
he says.
Blizzard
notes the estimated cost of the Austin Fair Elections Act is in
the general range of the annual funding given to the Austin Music
Network, $775,000. "If it's a priority to have better democracy
in our local elections, more candidates, better competition, and
more access to voters, that seems a small price to pay," he
says.
Some critics
of the Austin Fair Elections Act say that it represents an ineffective
way of bringing about reforms, and contend an ordinance would be
preferable to amending the City Charter.
Craig McDonald
is executive director of Texans for Public Justice, a nonprofit
group organized in 1997 to take on political corruption and corporate
abuses in Texas. Texans for Public Justice is one of the groups
that endorses the Austin Fair Elections Act. McDonald says, "I've
done a lot of petitions and I agree it's not always the prettiest
approach to making legislation, but sometimes it's the only approach
you have."
Blizzard
is unapologetic. "We believe a petition is exactly the right
way to bring about reform, because people elected under a system
are loathe to change it," he says.
An ordinance
could have been initiated through petitioning, but that would require
the signatures of ten percent of the qualified voters of the city.
A charter amendment requires the signatures of five percent or 20,000,
whichever is smaller. In late January, there were 422,194 voters
registered in the City of Austin, within Travis and Williamson counties.
An ordinance petition would require 42,219 valid signatures; a petition
would probably need 50,000 to 60,000 signatures to survive the verification
process.
Lewis says
the petition drive to get the Austin Fair Elections Act on the ballot
was initiated only after representatives of Clean Campaigns for
Austin had met with council members and concluded that there was
no interest in setting up a public process to initiate campaign
finance reforms.
Petition
drives are invariably difficult and this one was no exception. Petitioners
were barred from soliciting signatures in the federal post office.
HEB Grocery tried to bar petitioners from property in front of the
store at Hancock Center. To maintain access, Clean Campaigns filed
a lawsuit last June against H.E. Butt Grocery Company, the state's
largest private company and the top food retailer in South and Central
Texas. Ultimately Clean Campaigns succeeded in persuading the court
not to issue the temporary restraining order sought by the company,
and continued to solicit signatures at HEB.
Regarding
the HEB lawsuit, Lewis, attorney for Clean Campaigns, told the Austin
Chronicle, "How do you reach people in a society like we have
where people congregate in malls and shopping centers, where you
don't have community events where people congregate?"
Linda Curtis,
the main sparkplug in gathering signatures for Clean Campaigns,
as well as for the successful petition drive by Austinites for a
Little Less Corruption, told the Austin Chronicle, "If we don't
have public access, I don't see how they can require signatures.
The problem is not getting people to sign, it's getting to them."
Late last
August, Clean Campaigns submitted to City Clerk Shirley Brown petitions
containing a reported 28,341 signatures. By mid-September, after
verification of a random sample of a fourth of the signatures, Brown
says she had concluded that the number of valid signatures was 20,186.
That met the threshold of five percent of the city's registered
voters.
Thus the
Austin City Council had no choice but to call an election. It had
one option: put the Austin Fair Elections Act on the ballot in the
November 2001 general election, which was also a presidential election,
or wait until the May 4, 2002. The council chose the latter.
Obstacles
to passage
The Austin
Fair Elections Act is not going to have an unimpeded shot at getting
the attention of voters. In addition to the election to fill three
council seats in the May 4 election, the ballot is also likely to
have on it the consideration of single-member districts and, in
all likelihood, a number of other items. (See "Austin's future
riding on City Charter amendments.")
It's also
possible the City Council will put on the ballot an alternative
proposal that would directly compete against the Austin Fair Elections
Act. Council Member Daryl Slusher says he publicly announced the
idea. "I had said at one meeting that I'd consider that, but
I decided to wait and see what the Charter Revision Committee recommends,
and not get out in front of them. I think it's possible. Or we might
just let it go (to the voters) up or down," he says. "There
has not been a lot of discussion."
The idea
that a council member-especially one elected in part because of
strong support from environmentalists-would even consider putting
an alternative to the Austin Fair Elections Act on the ballot is
rich in irony. In 1992, the Austin City Council put on the ballot
an alternative to the Save Our Springs Ordinance, which was brought
by initiative petition. This enraged environmentalists. After a
bitterly fought campaign, the SOS Ordinance passed by a margin of
nearly two to one and the council's alternative was soundly defeated.
Ultimately,
after lengthy discussion at its meeting January 23, the Charter
Revision Committee voted 5-1 to recommend that the City Council
not place an alternative campaign finance proposal on the ballot.
The dissenting vote was cast by Ricky Bird, who criticized the Austin
Fair Elections Act at length. The motion was made by Martha Cotera,
who noted the complexity of the matter. "We don't have the
time or the expertise to work out the details," she said. "If
we put an alternative on the ballot, it would only muck up the waters
more."
The city's
Ethics Review Commission also has studied the Austin Fair Elections
Act. Chair Ginny Agnew says, "We have decided it's inappropriate
for us to take a position on it. But we have spent a good deal of
time studying it and meeting with the drafters, hoping to get them
to make some changes in it, because there will be problems of enforcement."
Agnew says
despite early conversations with Lewis, when the Austin Fair Elections
Act was being drafted, no attempt was made to reconcile the language
of the Act with existing city ordinances. As a result, she says,
the Act "makes no effort to say one way or the other if it
will preempt the Fair Campaign Fund."
The Fair
Campaign Fund was created by ordinance in 1994. The fund is the
financial account into which lobbyist registration fees are deposited,
and from which qualifying candidates who sign and comply with voluntary
restrictions may receive funds in a runoff election. Daryl Slusher
was the first candidate to qualify to receive funds and was entitled
to get $21,662 for his 1996 runoff against Jeff Hart. Slusher declined
to take it, amid a heated council debate over whether to appropriate
the funds. His reluctance stemmed from the fear of political backlash
if he accepted public funds while running a "basics, not boondoggles"
campaign. Bill Spelman and Willie Lewis each got $18,402 in the
1997 runoffs and won election to the council. In the 2000 runoff
election, Raul Alvarez and Rafael Quintanilla were competing for
the Place 5 seat vacated by Gus Garcia. Each got $29,124 from the
Fair Campaign Fund.
Fred Lewis
concedes the Austin Fair Elections Act does not address what would
become of the Fair Campaign Fund, but predicts the City Council
will repeal it once the new Act is in place.
If approved
by voters, the Austin Fair Elections Act would radically transform
the Ethics Review Commission from a body that has played virtually
no role in the outcome of past elections, despite numerous formal
complaints lodged with the commission during the campaigns, and
make it-on paper at least-a strong watchdog agency that would draft
rules and regulations to carry out the Act, and enforce them.
Ethics Review
Commission Chair Agnew, an attorney but not one familiar with criminal
law, says the Austin Fair Elections Act lacks enforcement powers
needed for the Ethics Review Commission to mete out punishment for
violations. The Act does specify penalties, however, including fines
and-for knowing and willful violation of the Act by an incumbent
officeholder or officeholder-elect-forfeiture of office.
Lewis says
the Act does contain the necessary powers of enforcement. It states
the Ethics Review Commission would be empowered to monitor election
activity, conduct audits of campaign financial reports, subpoena
witnesses, compel their attendance and testimony, administer oaths,
take evidence, and require by subpoena the production of any books,
records or other materials.
These powers
are appropriate, Lewis says. "One rumor goes around the bowels
of the bureaucracy that the Ethics Review Commission would be too
powerful an entity, and the other rumor is it has no power. I think
we got it just about right."
Strong
support for passage
In a perfect
world citizens would not have to take into their own hands the reforms
needed to reduce the influence of private money on public policy,
but things aren't perfect. Round Two of Austin's reforms promises
to be a winner at the polls. The reason is simple: First, Clean
Campaigns for Austin has the signatures of more than 28,000 people
who signed the petition. The signers will be viewed as supporters
who can be motivated to vote for the proposition.
Secondly,
a broad base of support has been lined up behind the proposition.
Clean Campaigns for Austin claims the endorsements of Austin Area
Interreligious Ministries (formerly Austin Metropolitan Ministries),
Austin Democracy Coalition, Austin Neighborhoods Council, Campaigns
for People, Common Cause of Texas, Democracy Matters-UT Chapter,
Gray Panthers, League of Women Voters-Austin, NAACP-Austin Chapter,
National Organization for Women-Austin Chapter, People Organized
in Defense of Earth and Her Resources, Public Citizen, Save Barton
Creek Association, Save Our Springs Alliance, Sierra Club-Austin
Chapter, Travis County Democratic Women, Travis County Green Party,
and Texans for Public Justice.
Political
consultant Blizzard says, "Clearly there is going to need to
be an organized campaign, and that's already moving forward."
Lewis says
the campaign to pass the Austin Fair Elections Act will be up and
running in February and supporters will be reaching out, explaining
the Act, and asking for support. "We'll have the money for
a grass-roots campaign," he says. "Don't expect to see
us on TV."
Lewis says
the reforms approved by voters in 1997 were intended to stop corruption
by ending the unrestricted contributions to mayoral and council
campaigns, and that goal was achieved. But the reforms failed to
provide the support needed for bona fide candidates to get their
messages to voters. The Austin Fair Elections Act will fix that
problem, Lewis says.
"This
is recognition that Austin is a big city and it takes substantial
amounts of money to get your message out."
Editor
Ken Martin believes Austin citizens deserve the best elected officials
money can buy.
Austin's future rides on City
Charter changes
by Ken Martin
We're fast
approaching the mid-March deadline for the Austin City Council to
decide what will-and what won't-be put on the ballot for voters
to decide on Saturday, May 4.
All that's
known for certain is that three council seats will be up for grabs
and we will be deciding the fate of at least one amendment to the
Austin City Charter.
The Charter
election was triggered by the successful petition drive led by Clean
Campaigns For Austin, whose petitions were validated by the city
clerk last September. The City Council had the option of putting
the measure on the ballot in last November's general election (which
was also a presidential election) or waiting until May 4, and opted
for the latter. The measure, known as the Austin Fair Elections
Act, if approved by voters would establish a system of partial public
financing for mayoral and city council elections (see separate story,
"Round 2 for Campaign Finance Reform.")
Because state
law prohibits changing the City Charter sooner than two years after
it was last amended, the Clean Campaigns initiative has generated
a rush to consider other amendments as well. Many of the items that
may be put before voters to amend the City Charter are of crucial
importance. Since the City Council will soon be debating what to
put on the ballot, citizens need to be aware of what's bubbling
up while there is still time to influence the ballot decisions.
Charter changes
under consideration have been funneled to the Charter Revision Committee,
which was appointed by the Austin City Council last August to provide
advice on proposed amendments. The committee has already forwarded
one major recommendation and is actively reviewing numerous other
items, with the intention of making a final report to the City Council
by Feb. 7.
While numerous
housekeeping items have been proposed by city staff, others being
debated could radically affect the future of the city. These are
some of the major ones:
Redistribute
political power-On Nov. 26, the Charter Revision Commission
voted 4-1, with Ricky Bird opposed, to recommend to the council
that voters be asked to consider approving the establishment of
geographic districts for the election of council members. Under
the plan recommended, the mayor would be elected at-large and ten
council members would be elected from geographic districts in which
they live. Further, when the population increases by 25,000 above
the population determined in the 2000 federal census, the number
of districts would be increased to twelve. The commission also recommended
the mayor be elected to a term of four years, instead of the current
three. All these recommendations are identical to the ones made
by the previous Charter Revision Committee January 15, 2000, but
they were never put on the ballot. Voters have previously defeated
on five separate occasions the various ballot measures that would
have set up council districts. The City Council has scheduled three
public hearings on this proposal. The first was Jan. 17, and only
two people spoke. One of them was Bird, who said he opposes single-member
districts because the minority population is increasingly scattered
across the city, according to census data. As a result, there is
no assurance that ethnic diversity on the council would be achieved,
particularly with respect to African Americans and Asian Americans.
(Two more public hearings were scheduled for Jan. 31 and Feb. 7,
after press deadlines for this story.)
Solidify
political power-On Jan. 7, the Charter Revision Committee voted
7-0 to recommend that the City Council place on the May 4 ballot
a proposition to repeal the provision in the charter approved by
voters in 1994, which established term limits. Committee Chair Bobbie
Barker said that through discussion of single-member districts and
campaign finance, the group arrived at a consensus that the best
way to limit someone's term is to know who's representing you and
decide if you want them to represent you or not. "We believe
single-member districts will increase participation (in the electoral
process) and limits on the term will be defined by those who vote,"
Barker said. She said the recommendation on term limits and any
other recommendations would be taken to the council Feb. 7. "I'm
hopeful the City Council will hold additional public hearings on
any other issues we take to them, including term limits. Hopefully,
they'll put that on the ballot, also."
Close
the loophole-The City Charter requires that council members
be elected from the city at-large, with each council member elected
to occupy a place on the council numbered and designated one through
six and mayor. City Clerk Shirley Brown has recommended that the
Charter Review Committee consider that the system of designating
council seats by places be abolished. This would eliminate the loophole
that currently exists, by which a council member could sidestep
term limits by switching places and running for another council
seat. (This recommendation would be moot if voters approved single-member
districts.) No council member has yet taken advantage of this loophole
to avoid term limits. In 1997, then-Council Member Gus Garcia switched
from Place Five to Place Two to run for reelection, but he could
have run for another term in Place Five without restriction. His
goal was to step out of what had traditionally been the Hispanic
council seat, to represent the whole city in another seat, and to
get a second Hispanic elected to the council. Garcia was reelected
but Bill Spelman defeated Manuel Zuniga, thwarting the election
of a second Hispanic.
Get
serious with electric utility-Austin Energy generates profits
that are transferred into the general fund and keep property tax
rates among the lowest of any major metropolitan area in Texas.
While the city-owned utility is not required to enter competition
unless the City Council opts to do so, the specter of competition
has long been a major concern for the utility. Millions of dollars
have been spent on studies and consultants to whip the utility into
fighting trim and make rates competitive. In May 1996 the council-appointed
Electric Utility Commission (EUC) hosted meetings of a high-profile
focus group that met in public to debate the merits of establishing
an independent board to govern the day-to-day operations of the
city-owned electric utility. The group included Kirk Watson representing
the Greater Austin Chamber of Commerce (this was a year before he
was elected mayor); former State Senator Charles F. Herring Sr.,
who is also a former general manager of the Lower Colorado River
Authority; former Council Members Charles Urdy and Robert Barnstone;
Jim Marston of Environmental Defense; Tom "Smitty" Smith
of Public Citizen; former Texas Public Utility Commissioner Al Erwin;
Ed Adams, external affairs manager for IBM Austin, representing
the Austin Federation of Industrial Ratepayers; Len Riley, Austin
site manager for Texas Instruments; and former EUC member Manuel
Zuniga. The group reached consensus that to prepare for competition
the electric utility should be managed by an independent board.
The EUC subsequently recommended that the City Council put the measure
on the ballot, as did the director of the electric utility, John
Moore. In December 1996, the council passed a resolution that promised
bond-rating agencies that a charter election would likely be held
to establish an independent board, but the matter was never put
on the ballot. On September 14, 1999, the City Council passed a
resolution to, in part, "initiate a public education and input
process that may culminate in a City Charter amendment election
to consider governance options for its electric utility, including
establishing a...governing board using the San Antonio model."
Once again, however, the election was not called. If a proposition
to create an independent board were put on the ballot for the May
4 election, and approved by voters, establishment of the board would
still have to be approved by the utility's bondholders, says Assistant
City Attorney Bob Kahn. "Generally, bondholders look on boards
favorably," Kahn told The Good Life, "but they would look
at how it was formed and what the powers are." Under state
law, the board would have five members, one of which must be the
mayor. The City Council would retain the power to issue debt, set
electric rates, and condemn property. The foremost model for this
system of governance is the City Public Service Board of San Antonio,
which manages both the electric and gas systems for the Alamo City.
City Public Service has for years had the lowest electric rates
in the state, setting the standard that Austin Energy uses as its
benchmark. The Charter Revision Committee has heard a presentation
by EUC members, who recommend the governing board, and was scheduled
to discuss the matter at the January 28 meeting, after press deadlines.
Power
to the people-The Save Our Springs Alliance has requested consideration
of a proposal that would make it easier to use the power of citizen
initiative to enact ordinances. At present, to get an ordinance
on the ballot requires a petition signed by ten percent of the registered
voters. The SOS Alliance has recommended that the bar for ordinances
be lowered to ten percent of the voters who voted in the last municipal
election. In the special election last November in which Gus Garcia
was elected mayor, a total of 59,794 votes were cast. Thus, an initiative
petition submitted per the SOS Alliance recommendation would need
the signatures of 5,794 registered voters to force the council to
either adopt the ordinance or put it on the ballot for voters to
decide. (In the 2000 election in which Kirk Watson was reelected
mayor, 38,166 votes were cast.) Council Member Beverly Griffith
says a formula similar to what the SOS Alliance recommended should
also be applied to petitions for a council member to get on the
ballot when otherwise prevented from running for reelection by term
limits. "Five percent of the voters registered in our jurisdiction
is quite challenging. But five percent of those who went to the
polls in the last mayoral election is more reasonable...You don't
want to be in a position to have more people sign a petition than
voted in the last election," Griffith says.
Power
to the bureaucrats- The City Charter provides, "Except
for the refunding of bonds previously issued, any proposition to
borrow money and to issue such bonds shall first be approved by
a majority of the qualified voters voting at an election called
for the purpose of authorizing the issuance of such indebtedness."
City Manager Jesus Garza has asked the Charter Review Committee
to "delete obsolete language that is in conflict with state
law prohibiting the issue of non-voter approved debt." State
law permits issuance of revenue bonds and does not require a local
election. While the City Charter does require voter approval of
debt, the council has on at least three occasions voted to issue
bonds without voter approval: (1) Under an agreement with Houston
Lighting and Power to build the South Texas Nuclear Project, the
city was obligated to pay a share of the expense, including cost
overruns. In the early nineteen-eighties, there were huge overruns
and the council under leadership of Mayor Lee Cooke voted unanimously
to issue bonds without voter approval to pay for those costs. (2)
In April 1997, the city council led by Mayor Bruce Todd voted unanimously
to use certificates of obligation without voter approval to buy
One Texas Center at a cost of $18.4 million. (3) In October 1999,
the council led by Mayor Kirk Watson voted unanimously to pay $72.7
million of the $100 million cost of a long-term water supply agreement
with the Lower Colorado River Authority by issuing debt without
voter approval.
Power to the council-Council Member Danny Thomas requested the
Charter Revision Committee consider recommending a City Charter
amendment be put on the ballot that would allow the City Council
to appoint the police monitor. Voters in the City of San Jose, California,
passed a charter amendment in November 1996 that authorized the
council to appoint the police auditor (a different title but the
same job). (See www.ci.san-jose.ca.us/cty_clk/charter.htm#Art8.
Scroll to Section 809.) Council appointment of Austin's police monitor
was recommended by the council-appointed Police Oversight Focus
Group that met weekly for six months, brought in national experts,
held public hearings, and made trips to Kansas City and the Bay
Area of California to find out how police monitors were performing
elsewhere. When the recommendations were put through the Meet and
Confer process of negotiating with the Austin Police Association,
however, the appointment power was given to the city manager. On
January 15, City Manager Jesus Garza announced the appointment of
former Austin City Attorney Iris Jones to the new position. Jones'
appointment was criticized for perceived conflicts of interest,
because as Austin's city attorney she had represented the Austin
Police Department. The Charter Revision Committee had not debated
this matter, and was scheduled to take it up at the January 28 meeting,
after press deadlines.
|