2019

Argus ED board chastises Mayor TenHaken’s storm communications

Unless you having been living under a rock the past couple of weeks, it was pretty obvious the TenHaken administration screwed the pooch on communicating to residents the city’s roll in storm cleanup. The ED board asked some of the same things I was wondering;

When the 2018 mayoral race came down to the choice between a reporter and public policy advocate on the one hand, and the CEO of a successful digital marketing agency on the other, it was reasonable for Sioux Falls citizens to expect an era of clear communication from City Hall no matter the victor.

Now that Paul TenHaken earned the office and has faced his first significant crisis, with tornado and flood damage putting leadership at a premium, the verdict on communication is somewhat muddled.

How do you run a supposed successful internet marketing company and not know anything about communicating and messaging? I have argued with people it is because PTH hired really smart people, but didn’t really learn anything from his employees. There have numerous studies and books written on how attractive, tall, people are more successful simply because they are attractive and tall. It also goes back to who you know. I told someone once that if Kristi Noem looked like Rosie O’Donnell she wouldn’t even been able to be elected dog catcher. What we are witnessing is highly attractive people with extremely low IQ’s ruling us. We have become a society obsessed with image. This is why PTH and Noemless wear trucker hats, as a political prop to show they are getting their hands dirty. I’m not so easily fooled, and neither is the ED board;

Messaging from the city regarding cleanup efforts in the tornadoes’ aftermath, while equally swift, was less coherent. A series of staggered press releases as to which debris and branches the city would remove – and which tasks would be the responsibility of property owners – seemed like a work in progress rather than a well-articulated rollout. The disagreement of public officials and citizens on social media regarding how much city government should be doing further eroded clarity.

Getting out in front of issues with unambiguous information goes a long way toward mitigating uncertainty and unhappiness among those a government serves. Homeowners want to know exactly where things stand as they assess timber-lined lawns and twisted branches; telling them that volunteer forces may (or may not) be coming to help does not help them rest easy.

Cameraman Bruce brought this up after a BNSF train derailed under the viaduct missing one of the pylons by a couple of feet. What would have happened if it did hit the pylon? What if it was hazardous materials like ethanol or fertilizers instead of corn? We were told that the city has a ‘plan’. But apparently we saw the city really doesn’t have a plan when it comes to tornado cleanup. You would think a seasoned city director like Mark Cotter would have been able to pull out a 3-Ring binder out of his desk at about 11:45 that night and said, “Here’s our plan Paul, I recommend we follow it.” Instead PTH turned this into a volunteer effort like we were raising a Huetterite Barn.

And it wasn’t like an atomic bomb dropped on us, it was a tornado, something we were actually warned about days in advance could happen that night. Where was the 3-Ring binder? Apparently it was replaced with a Dutch Mafia Bible.

The ED board didn’t finish at storm cleanup, they brought up budgeting for the Cult Officer, and as several friends and I have pointed out after Jen Holsen’s rant about the position, doesn’t it look like PTH is throwing his HR department and directors under the bus by saying they are NOT doing their job?

TenHaken argued that his private sector experience has shown him that city HR isn’t up to addressing employee culture because they’re too busy with payroll and interviews to improve the work environment across departments. If so, that could be a reason to evaluate and overhaul an ineffective department – or some may call it a compelling case for creating the new position. But the fact it took a tiebreaking vote to move the issue forward is proof there was more clarification and communication needed.

And finally, the ED board addresses that age old question, can government be run like a business?

Relevant questions have arisen from these disparate situations: Can all private sector initiatives can be usefully mapped onto running a municipal government? How much budgetary muscle should city leaders use in responding to natural disasters, or should they abdicate to volunteers or partnerships? How much should city government organizationally be mimicking the private sector?

No, because business and government have different objectives. But there is one thing we learned that helps us to understand why both are NOT the same, (good) businesses actually have prepared plans when disasters strike, because if they don’t, they go out of business. Government officials just hide in their garage and hope the problem goes away.

Patrick Lalley Show, Episodes 8-9

I’m a little behind on these, but had a chance to listen today. Episode 8 with Sioux Falls City Councilor Erickson is interesting. If you FF to about 18:40 you will hear Lalley ask about the Bunker Ramp. Erickson tries everything in her power to blowoff the important questions, she even asks Pat at one point to change the topic. Erickson said that it really couldn’t be stopped (construction) because they signed a contract. Pat quickly pointed out that the city could have defaulted on the contract and just paid a penalty. He also pointed out that it is ‘ugly’. She slithered thru the questioning.

I skimmed Bowlcut’s book today

I have been meaning to read our past mayor’s book, but haven’t had the opportunity. But today I decided to do some skimming thru it at the local bookshop. What I found interesting is that the chapters are extremely short (5-6 pages) double spaced in about 12 PT type. I literally read two chapters in about four minutes.

I went thru those two chapters today because they looked interesting and wanted to share a couple of tidbits I jotted down. First, he touches on getting his 50+1. Something I called when he was mayor ‘Winning at all costs – F’k everyone else’ He didn’t put it that way 🙂

CHAPTER: If you want everyone to like you, public service is not for you

In government, if you truly want to get things done, quit trying to please everybody. Stop singing “Kumbaya” and cease seeking everyone’s blessing before moving on. Get the minimum votes required, take your hits from those that disagree, execute a plan, and move on. You are not going to accomplish anything if you strive for perfection and appeasement. Make only one promise to those you serve: “I guarantee you, there will be times when we will have to agree to disagree.”

Strive for perfection?! LOL! It was no secret he had a ‘by the skin of his teeth’ mentality.

But he also feels the need to address the ‘Fake News’. I guess I really never thought of him as a Trumpist, but in a lot of ways he is. I saw this when he left the Democratic party (surprised they didn’t have a party).

CHAPTER: Don’ forget about earned media

My administration spent countless hours and taxpayer dollars dealing with made-up nonsense from a few that just wanted to criticize, stir up rumor, create falsehoods, or had nothing better to do. The brick-and-mortar news outlets now have fewer staff to actually discover the truth versus the fake or biased news. It is so hard for the news outlets, along with public servants, to correct the untrue blog post, inappropriate Facebook rant, or salacious Twitter bomb.

The only person making up ‘nonsense’ was you. And the SD Supreme Court agreed.

I will try to read the whole book eventually, bucket by my side.

Nancy Halverson at Dem Forum for Levitt at the Falls

I learned a lot today about the Levitt that I wasn’t aware of. Did you know;

• Levitt (Halverson) must raise approximately $605K a year locally to stay afloat.

• There will be no more Sunday concerts (it was too hot for them) they may do the family concerts on Friday mornings.

• At the Kory & the Fireflies concert the SFPD used it as a training exercise for a possible active shooter. There was a sharp shooter on top of the Lloyd building during the concert.

• JJ’s sold $41K in alcohol at the concerts. I want to applaud JJ’s, they did an excellent and professional job. I still think we should be able to bring our own 6-Pack.

• Approimately 58K attended the concerts this season.

• The city is planning on prepping the land North of Levitt for event space that will be tied into the Sioux Steel Development.

• Sanford wanted to be the leading major sponsor and Halverson had to explain to them that isn’t Levitt policy. In other words, Sanford wanted to pay more for corporate sponsorship then anyone else (and wanted more recognition of course). Halverson told them that ‘All corporate/major sponsors are treated the same and pay the same’. I thought that was refreshing.

It ended with Q & A, and I told Halverson she ‘Knocked it out of the park!’ and I encouraged everyone to go. I added, ‘Even if you don’t like the band playing, guess what, you can leave, you are NOT out of anything!’

Sioux Falls City Council Agenda, Sep 24, 2019

As usual, the city council rarely has a regular meeting the last week of the month. Next week is no different, but there still is a brief informational.

City Council Informational Meeting • 4 PM

Presentations on UDC Meeting, CVB-Bid Board Meeting and the finance department will be giving the August Monthly report.

It was funny, I saw four directors having a ‘patio’ meeting at the Blarney last night at 5 PM. It was Health Director Franken, Finance Director Pritchett, HR Director Bill O’Toole and a fourth one I couldn’t identify (But it looked like Public Works Director Cotter). I wonder if they were celebrating the $545 million dollar boondoggle of a budget? I was hoping they were plotting on how to tank PTH. One can only dream.