$100,000 UNION METER MAIDS – WONDERING WHY CALIFORNIA IS BANKRUPT?

Government union employees should enjoy the remaining time in their fantasyland of high salaries, tremendous health benefits and glorious pensions. It will all end because the promises are un-payable. It’s simple math. The taxpayers will not pay. The localities will declare bankruptcy because they have no choice. The money isn’t there. All the promises will not be fulfilled. So Solly.

Hermosa Beach meter maids making nearly $100K?

August 10th, 2012, 9:01 pm ·  · posted by

When contemplating the many reasons cities in California and elsewhere are venturing closer to bankruptcy, look no further than the relatively lucrative and often-unjustifiable salaries bestowed on municipal employees – and the lofty pension benefits attached to the high pay.

One of the latest examples comes from the California coastal city of Hermosa Beach, where some community service staffers who collect money from parking meters and manage their operations – positions once widely known as “meter maids” – are making nearly $100,000 a year in total compensation, according to city documents.

Article Tab: Newport Beach outsourced parking meter collection and enforcement to a private firm last year.

There are 10 parking enforcement employees for the 1.3-square-mile beach city southwest of downtown Los Angeles, and they pull down some disproportionate compensation, considering their job functions. In fact, the two highest-earning employees for fiscal year 2011-12 are estimated to have made more than $92,000 and $93,000, respectively, according to city documents provided by Patrick “Kit” Bobko, one of five council members and who also serves as mayor pro tem. Those two have supervisory roles. The other eight parking-enforcement employees make from $67,367 to $84,267 in total compensation.

There are four qualifications for being a city “community service officer,” Bobko told me: “You have to be able to drive a standard transmission; you have to able to handle large animals; you have to read and interpret statutes and regulations; and you have a high school diploma or equivalent.”

According to the city’s job description, these community service officers are supposed “to enforce meter and other regulations governing the parking of vehicles on streets and municipal parking lots; to enforce animal regulations; may drive city buses; collect meters and perform minor meter repairs; perform related work as required.”

The section of the job description that gives examples of job duties reads as follows: “Patrols streets and municipal parking lots and checks vehicles for parking violations; issues citations for parking violations; impound vehicles in certain cases; collects and transports stray dogs to designated holding facilities; investigates complaints for animal control violations; may drive city buses; meter collection and minor meter repair.”

Bobko also wrote in a memo that the retirement costs for these 10 employees “from [fiscal year 2011-12] through their retirement age at 62 was nearly $1.6 million, and the medical costs for these employees from this fiscal year to their retirement at age 62 would be $1,353,827.” Excluding salaries, the [retirement] contributions and medical costs for the 10 employees performing parking enforcement will cost, on average, nearly $300,000 apiece.”

Aside from the personnel costs, there has been criticism from Hermosa Beach Treasurer David Cohn that parking meter operations have been mismanaged. Cohn cited nonfunctioning parking meters, a backlog in disputed parking tickets and problems with the accounting for revenue.

Bobko told me that his concern is that, when taxpayers learn that city employees “are making high wages for low-skilled jobs, they are not OK with it.” That’s especially true when considering these jobs easily could be at least partially automated or even outsourced, for less money.

Bobko is pushing a plan to outsource the city’s parking enforcement operations, which he says will save money, reduce maintenance costs, relieve the city of accounting functions related to parking enforcement, increase efficiency and, perhaps most importantly, increase revenue and “reduce the city’s pension and salary obligations.”

There has been opposition to the outsourcing proposal from Hermosa Beach’s Police Chief Steve Johnson and Councilman Howard Fishman. Both expressed concerns about letting go full-time city staff. Bobko accurately characterized the resistance: “When you outsource, you take away union jobs.”

In this case, outsourcing parking-enforcement duties would benefit the taxpayers among Hermosa Beach’s population of slightly less than 20,000. For an example of how such a switch might work, Hermosa officials could travel about 45 miles south along the coast to Newport Beach, where the city successfully moved to outsource parking enforcement last year.

“We have seen increased revenues with the private company operating the meter program,” Newport Councilwoman Leslie Daigle said.

Since Newport made the move, the city “has seen a 24.4 percent increase in parking-meter revenues over last year and salary savings of approximately $500,000 from outsourcing parking meter operations,” according to Tara Finnigan, a spokeswoman for the city.

Privatizing parking meter duties also is a national trend, as detailed in a recent study by the libertarian Reason Foundation. Chicago and Indianapolis have had success with outsourcing parking enforcement, and other cities including New York, Pittsburgh, Sacramento, Memphis, Tenn., and Harrisburg, Pa., are considering privatization proposals.

Indianapolis City Councilman Ben Hunter told me, “The privatization of the parking meter system in Indianapolis allowed for an immediate upgrade of a poor system.”

Back in Hermosa Beach, “We can’t keep making promises with money we don’t have to people we are paying well above what the market would pay them,” Bobko said.

Public employee compensation and retirement costs are proving unsustainable. More cities in the Golden State and elsewhere need to accept that reality and act on it to avoid fiscal calamity, perhaps starting with the meter maids.

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67 Comments
Steve Hogan
Steve Hogan
August 12, 2012 2:44 pm

I don’t know whether to laugh or cry. $100K for writing parking tickets? Jesus. What a freaking joke.

Several simple laws could rein in this nonsense, though they’ll never be tried:

1. Outlaw public sector unions
2. Do not permit public sector employees to vote
3. Do not allow public sector employees to work for or contribute to political candidates or initiatives
4. Compensation and benefits should never exceed those of the private sector

Pierre Le Troll
Pierre Le Troll
August 12, 2012 2:57 pm

Wait. They privatized the meter maids last year and its costing more?

Pierre Le Troll
Pierre Le Troll
August 12, 2012 3:03 pm

So they raised the parking fees so the city could collect more revenue which comes from…wait for it…its taxpaying citizens. Wonder how much the CEO is gettting paid. Is there really any savings here? And then when those meter maids, making min wage retire they will have to go on social security and medicare?

Seems like a accounting gimmick for whats really a zero sum game.

Jimi d
Jimi d
August 12, 2012 4:23 pm

You simply could not make this stuff up – no one would believe it !

Pierre Le Troll
Pierre Le Troll
August 12, 2012 4:34 pm

“Under a program initiated by the city of West Hollywood’s Parking Division, drivers displaying disabled placards may be randomly approached to provide proof of placard ownership,” a city press release explained. “Failure to provide the required identification card will result in the confiscation of the disabled placard and a parking citation for misuse, which carries a $500 fine.”

Suspect motorists would be stopped and questioned by private employees of the British company, Serco Group plc which took over parking enforcement for the city in May 2006. Under its contract with West Hollywood, Serco must disguise the company’s involvement in parking enforcement. The Serco-owned office where meter maids report must display signs that make it appear to be a city-owned location. Serco’s nine Toyota Prius vehicles and all employees must meet the city’s strict requirements that they be indistinguishable from official cars and workers.
~~~

So, you must pay some British company named SERCO for increased parking fees and increased government revenue. Good lord.. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Serco

Pierre Le Troll
Pierre Le Troll
August 12, 2012 4:38 pm

SERCO
Key people Alastair Lyons, Chairman
Christopher Hyman, CEO
Revenue £4,646.4 million (2011)[1]
Operating income £266.2 million (2011)[1]
Net income £175.2 million (2011)

I guess it could be worse and the company would be located in France.

Pierre Le Troll
Pierre Le Troll
August 12, 2012 4:42 pm

Hyman, SERCO CEO, is a passionate racing fan and has competed in the past in the Formula Palmer Audi championship in 1999.

Oh thats just lovely. Screw the teachers. Screw the meter maids. We need to make sure this guy can afford to persue his expensive hobby.

Pierre Le Troll
Pierre Le Troll
August 12, 2012 5:54 pm

The city (West Hollywood} pays a $164,595 monthly fee to Serco for 20 meter maids and 11 supervisors for a total annual cost of $2 million.

How is that a savings? The article does not state who got the contract, true, but do you think that it really differs that much from city to city?

Pierre Le Troll
Pierre Le Troll
August 12, 2012 5:57 pm

Troll ignores the FACT that if you pay government drones millions of dollars in salary, health benefits, and pensions for jobs that any moron could do for one quarter of the cost, you eventually run out of taxpayer money. -admin

Apparently not if you increase parking rates and let some CEO give you a kickback of 500k a year in ‘savings’ while taking in millions.

Pierre Le Troll
Pierre Le Troll
August 12, 2012 6:28 pm

Another proposal, favored by city staff, calls for a 44,000-square-foot, three-level structure, providing 440 spaces. It would be constructed on a parking lot and tennis courts on 11th Place west of the Community Center. The three displaced tennis courts would be relocated on top of the structure.

Costs for either project are estimated at $3.2 million, to be funded by bonds and repaid with parking fees over 16 to 20 years.

The privately run operation is proposed for a city-owned lot currently known as Lot C, at 13th Street and Hermosa Avenue. The parking plan, submitted by Ridgemont Parking Systems of Dallas, would provide 450 spaces in a 153,900-square-foot, three-level structure.

ThePessimisticChemist
ThePessimisticChemist
August 12, 2012 6:34 pm

Off topic: Skunk scent doesn’t really bother me that much. I think working on the chemical vault at the college must have killed my olfactory senses.

Pierre Le Troll
Pierre Le Troll
August 12, 2012 6:34 pm

Raising parking fees is very much like increasing taxes. Not to mention that Hermosa is betting this 3.2 million project wwill pay off in 16-20 years.

Pierre Le Troll
Pierre Le Troll
August 12, 2012 6:36 pm

Yes, Hermosa iss going to spend its way out of debt. Wooo hooo

Pierre Le Troll
Pierre Le Troll
August 12, 2012 6:37 pm

It was probably all that meth you insuffolated TPC.

DaveL
DaveL
August 12, 2012 6:43 pm

PeePee La Troll says:

“Oh thats just lovely. Screw the teachers. Screw the meter maids. We need to make sure this guy can afford to ‘persue’ his expensive hobby.”

Looks like Pee Pee didn’t PURSUE an education with those poor teachers.

llpoh
llpoh
August 12, 2012 6:58 pm

Admin – le trollop isn’t worth your time. Your efforts should be concentrated on bigger game – rodents are beneath you.

AWD
AWD
August 12, 2012 7:02 pm

Admin likes keeping the rodents on a string. Furthers his monthly insult count.

[imgcomment image[/img]

Even throws ’em a lifeline now and then.

IndenturedServant
IndenturedServant
August 12, 2012 7:04 pm

What are you bitching about Troll? A Spanish company will be counting and tabulating the votes of American citizens this November. http://www.dailypaul.com/228915/spanish-company-owned-by-geo-soros-will-count-americas-votes-overseas-in-november
I_S

ThePessimisticChemist
ThePessimisticChemist
August 12, 2012 7:08 pm

“It was probably all that meth you insuffolated TPC.” – Troll

Doubtfully, even if there was meth in the storage vault it is a solid at STP and thusly doesn’t exist in the room’s air system in a measureable quantity.

It was those damned organics.

FBD
FBD
August 12, 2012 7:12 pm

Meter maids should be paid on commission on tickets they write. That way there is no out of pocket cost to the taxpayer.

Say 10% of the face value. (For le Troll … they’d get $2.50 for a $25 ticket.)

Commissions should be CAPPED. The maximum earnings should reflect the qualifications for the job. Since meter maid qualifications barely exceed that of a McDonald’s worker, annual commissions would be capped at $18,000 per year (about $9 bucks an hour). No pensions. No medical. You want that? Get a real job.

That’s what low life ticket writers are worth … in the real world.

Meter maid problem solved.

AWD
AWD
August 12, 2012 7:13 pm

Governor Davis issued a “California bankruptcy handbook” the other day, and sent it out to cities and municipalities. It outlines how to declare bankruptcy, obviously, but imagine–so bad this step needs to be taken; and 90% of the reason is the ridiculous, insane, corrupt money these idiot union GED hacks get for jobs that should be paying $14,000 per year.

BTW,
In cities that already have declared bankruptcy, or put “emergency plans” into place due to near bankruptcy conditions, that mandated cuts in union pay or pensions, the unions have filed lawsuits in every case. Can you imagine the balls on these criminals? The city is bankrupt because of unions, and the douchebags are suing to make matters worse. Paul Ryan, if nothing else, has made unions eat shit and die, and for that he should be commended.

Pierre Le Troll
Pierre Le Troll
August 12, 2012 7:33 pm

The assets of the City of Hermosa Beach exceeded its liabilities at the close of the last fiscal year
by $81,944,000 (net assets). Of this amount, $13,284,000 (unrestricted net assets) may be used to
meet the government’s ongoing obligations to citizens and creditors.
• The government’s total net assets increased by $1,206,000. Net assets of governmental activities
increased $898,000 (1.25%) while net assets of business type activities increased $308,000 (3.5%).
• As of June 30, 2011, the City of Hermosa Beach’s governmental funds reported combined ending
fund balances of $10,070,000, a decrease of $656,000 in comparison with the prior year. The
decrease is primarily a result of the expenditure of Proposition C Transit Funds on the Upper
Pier Avenue Improvement Project and a one-time exchange of Proposition A Funds with
another city for unrestricted funds (net decrease of $256,000).
• The City of Hermosa Beach currently has no debt
http://www.hermosabch.org/modules/showdocument.aspx?documentid=1246.

The reason California is bankrupt is not because of Hermosas meter maids. This whole article is some kind of Reason Institute BS.

Pierre Le Troll
Pierre Le Troll
August 12, 2012 8:05 pm

The signed March 2, 2012 “Settlement Agreement And Release” among Macpherson, the City (Hemosa Beach) and E & B Natural Resources, including the conveyance and the assignment that are the two exhibits to the agreement, are posted on the City’s website and may be accessed here. An overview of the settlement terms is provided below.

Macpherson was paid $30 Million in cash to settle the lawsuit.

Hmmm,. Meter maids are pikers in comparison to Macpherson

Pierre Le Troll
Pierre Le Troll
August 12, 2012 8:06 pm

Need some ice for your shoe imprinted and bruised testes admin?

Steve Hogan
Steve Hogan
August 12, 2012 8:17 pm

You’re annoying, Pierre. Just saying.

llpoh
llpoh
August 12, 2012 8:50 pm

Admin takes the filleting knife to trollop’s backside. Not much of a challenge for him, but it is a slow day.

Novista
Novista
August 12, 2012 8:58 pm

Classic librul rebuttal: ” Reason Institute BS” … easier than simple arithmetic.

llpoh
llpoh
August 12, 2012 9:02 pm

Admin – seriously, these asshats don’t understand unfunded liability? $100k per year for a meter maid? But all jokes aside, they do not define “total compesation”. My unskilled employees cost me around $80k per year, total compensation – if wages, bennies, etc. are all added up. I doubt the $100k includes “unfunded liabilities” – ie pension/health costs.

llpoh
llpoh
August 12, 2012 10:15 pm

Thanks Admin. So they make double what a reasonably well-paid private sector employee makes (and the 80k I mention above is for a work week of around 50 hours, so it is even worse than that when compared on an hours worked basis).

Oh joy – high school drop-outs costing the public $140k per year. I echo the “we are screwed” sentiments. How on earth could this happen? Oh, yeah – politicians find it easier to roll over for the unions and send their cities broke than to fight for a fair shake for the public. What a hosejob.

Colma Rising
Colma Rising
August 12, 2012 10:42 pm

Meters are to ration parking spaces, not generate revenue:

Get rid of them if you can’t afford to impliment rationing.

The article says they do animal control as well…

Is it me or isn’t that a county job?

To the meter maid’s credit…. dealing with animals in SoCal probably means beefy pits. Still…. isn’t that a county jurisdiction?

Californiadreamin
Californiadreamin
August 12, 2012 10:45 pm

I live in CA and my wife is a public sector union worker, so I can tell you for a fact that this is a horrible exception, not the rule. My wife is a teacher in N. CA. She has a Masters from UC Berkeley, 15 yrs seniority and does not make anything like this salary. This year she will earn 66k, of which 9.5 % goes for her not especially generous retirement. This story is an aberration. Union jobs in CA are not a gravy train. I have less education and make twice what she does in the IT field, and even that is not a lot in the land of impossible rents. We are far from rich.

All this sewage spewed by lame-ass kuckleheads about overpaid teachers make me sick. I wish they made as much as you all think. And her job is no picnic.

GoldenTool
GoldenTool
August 12, 2012 10:47 pm

I was going to stay out of this then admin had to get personal and post a picture making fun of my brothers so…

The article clearly stats 100k in total compensation. Peirre troll has some good points if the info is factual.

I hate to say this, but llpoh is right. I hate agreeing with you because I find so much of what you say just plain biased, anyway, if labor makes 60k in gross wages you are probably paying almost 100k in total compensation.

You can thank brothers fed and state gov for that. If we need more jobs we can just mandate them.

Make sure you always travel with your papers and at least a cane if you have a handicapped hanger.

I have to admit more then 60k does seems a bit extravagant for meter maids, but it is rather hard to get a woman to dress up in a sexy costume without paying top dollar.

[imgcomment image[/img]

First picture post so please be nice.

“Do unto others.”

Colma Rising
Colma Rising
August 12, 2012 10:55 pm

Oh no, Californiadreamin, you’ve uncorked the genie bottle. I am sympathetic, but the pensions and gravy train health plan of the retirees are directly affecting your old lady’s salary and, well, you didn’t include the stellar benefits which extend to you, the “private” contractor…

Actual picture of Colma Rising’s public school teacher friend with a Masters from Stanford:

[imgcomment image[/img]

GoldenTool
GoldenTool
August 12, 2012 11:03 pm

Total compensation is “total” compensation. That even includes your gym membership discount.

http://blogs.payscale.com/compensation/2010/01/how-to-explain-employees-total-compensation.html

Pierre Le Troll
Pierre Le Troll
August 12, 2012 11:05 pm

Yes, I looked thru the whole thing admin. The Macpherson lawsuit was the reason Hermosa ever thought about filing bankruptcy. In fact they could easily solve all their budgetary problems if they would allow drilling which the people of Hermosa voted against (billions in royalties)

Californiadreamin
Californiadreamin
August 12, 2012 11:22 pm

Needless to say, I am NOT confident that my wife will ever see the retirement benefits she expects. We are making other plans and will probably take a lump sum when she retires if we can.

Stockton, Vallejo, etc went bankrupt due to municipal unions. My wife is a state employee.

The point is that these cities that made poor choices are going broke, but I can’t help laughing when I hear how overpaid teachers are breaking the state. That’s a crock. My wife is better educated than I am, works very hard and gets paid dogmeat. Her benefits are good, but not outrageous.

Pierre Le Troll
Pierre Le Troll
August 12, 2012 11:32 pm

Hermosas accountants say they have no debt.

Why would an accountant lie?

llpoh
llpoh
August 12, 2012 11:56 pm

Californiadreamin – maybe your wife is the exception. But answer this – how much time off does she get? Let’s see, there is Christmas, Easter, 3 months summer vacation, sick days, non-teaching days, personal time, etc etc etc.

Please – teaching unruly heathens must be a real pain in the ass – but on a days worked rate teachers get paid really well. Also, how about tenure? Does she get tenure? Last on first off apply? What is her pension? Defined benefit or other?

I also just punched in some estimates for your wife. If she retires at 60, she will be on around $70k/year. Don’t know if it is today’s wages or not. But not too bad – gives her an effective retirement account of some $1.5 million thereabouts, divided by 30 or so years service = $50k per year retirement benefits, less her contribution of around $6k = a retirement contribution of some $40 – $45k per year.

You are full of shite. Seriously. She gets $66k + benefits + time off + $45k per year retirement benefits. So all up she is probably costing her employer around $150k/year.

Poor little her. Take a look at the folks in the private sector – they would kill for a retirement fund like that.

Colma Rising
Colma Rising
August 13, 2012 12:04 am

Californiadreamin’:

So you say 66k, plus benefits which pay for you and whatever critters you have.

You say you make twice that.

So your family pulls in 198K with a Calpers benie package, with almost 6k drawn for a pension that promises a high percentage of the working salary and includes health care into your twilight years.

I won’t assume compensation for student loans for working in a rough district.

I appreciate teachers and am certainly not one to hammer them, their pluralistic, rent-seeking mega-pacs being the exception… but:

CRY ME A FUCKING RIVER

You’re doing better than the majority of the state’s tax payers are and believe me I know all about the cost of living.

An individual can do great on 66k + bennies…

I’m not advocating cuts, just advocating a cease to the whining.

Colma Rising
Colma Rising
August 13, 2012 12:24 am

Californiadreamin is a whiny bitch – that’s what I’m sayin.

Alpha Squad
Alpha Squad
August 13, 2012 12:35 am

Looks like the libtards are sending their Trolls and drones here again. Someone’s been reading too many Saul Alinsky books.

Nonanonymous
Nonanonymous
August 13, 2012 8:40 am

I’m not a fan of privatization, it’s just passing the buck and shifting responsibility to someone who cares as little.

Private contractors hire private contractors and so forth, while realizing little or no expenditure savings than if the effort was properly managed in the first place, assuming the city has a town manager with a staff.

Holding public sector employees accountable is the first step, as the egregious conduct gets exponentially worse the higher up the jurisdiction, culminating in the federal bureaucracy, the largest unionized workforce in the world.

TeresaE
TeresaE
August 13, 2012 10:20 am

The one thing in the article I didn’t see, how much revenue are these employees creating?

A meter maid is one of the (very) few times you can accurately gauge a profit/loss on a government program. And yet, nothing.

We aren’t allowed to see the real truth, which is that privatization probably doesn’t make it anymore viable in the long run.

What utter, futile, wasted effort, bullshit.

If parking is suck a problem, a developer would come in and build a structure and provide shuttle type transport if necessary. That is the way a free market would/should work.

Not pay citizens to become “special” citizens and harass other “less than special” citizens.

And, Cali teacher hub, come on! $66k plus benefits (my own plan costs over $2k a month for a family of three, no illnesses, $5k deductible EACH, and is taxed.) divided by hours worked = top 5-10% of compensation in this country.

You all are the “rich” that Obama and Brown keep talking about.

Enjoy.

A teacher should be able to do math. The math says, unsustainable at any cost. Unless there is a glut of new, thriving, businesses in your area opening up, paying taxes and hiring the locals so they can pay too. Then maybe we can afford to pay teachers what they think they are worth.

Just some thoughts.

ThePessimisticChemist
ThePessimisticChemist
August 13, 2012 10:31 am

@TeresaE – Economically speaking we should go back to electric powered trolley cars. They are (fairly) clean, reliable, and are long term sustainable.

MVP
MVP
August 13, 2012 5:36 pm

Well, if government on ANY level could run shit even relatively efficiently, they could turn the meters (or other areas) into profit centers, but with public service unions paying these jokers $60-90K for a job a HS dropout could perform…well, there you have it.

Further, these unions would rather see the jobs flat disappear than negotiate a reasonable lower salary for them…always looking out for the “rank & file” those union leaders.

Why do you think so many people want a job with the city/state/feds? Because they won’t have to work as hard any more – everyone knows that. Less work stress, and way more time off. That’s worth it even notwithstanding pay distortions.

Government at all levels touting a record that is unblemished by success.