Council Candidate 2016: Donna Biggs Sayegh (updated)

[Ms. Donna Biggs Sayegh is one of the certified candidates for Portsmouth City Council. She provided the following platform to help acquaint the Portsmouth electorate with her program as an elected official.]

Platform

I promise if I am elected to City Council, I will make an effort to:

  •  see that all public safety positions are filled in a timely fashion. This includes all public safety offices: sheriff, police, fire, and medics.
  • establish a finance commission; and
  • provide proper funding for the public safety retirement plans.

Rationale:  We the people must support our public safety personnel by providing them with a living wage and help them maintain a standard of living when they retire.

Publisher’s Note: The Retirement Conundrum

An article in the Virginian-Pilot (see Rowe May Have Improperly Received Retirement Benefits) explaining a controversy involving former City Manager John Rowe has raised questions for me about the salary and benefit costs for the current manager, as well. In the case of Mr. Rowe, when he was most recently employed by the city, he appears simultaneously to have collected Virginia Retirement System benefits, something not permitted under IRS regulations. A decision by VRS officials on what needs to happen to square the ledger is pending.

To the best of my knowledge, City Manager Patton is not drawing VRS benefits at this time. Based on the Virginian-Pilot story on Dr. Patton’s compensation package from last fall (see New Portsmouth Officials Receiving More Benefits), though, I am concerned about whether or not the manager and the city are currently paying into the Virginia Retirement System on her behalf. Her compensation package includes “a base salary of $150,000, a city-provided vehicle or $9,600 annual car allowance, up to $3,600 in general expenses and a $50,000 annual lump payment into a defined contribution retirement plan.” The Rowe article, though, refers to the Portsmouth city manager position as a “full-time VRS-covered position” — a crucial factor in the determination of whether Mr. Rowe’s dual payments during his tenure in the position were permissible. If the VRS determines that Portsmouth is liable for unpaid contributions on Mr. Rowe’s behalf, would the city not also have to make payments on Dr. Patton’s, the defined contribution plan notwithstanding? Perhaps it is already making those payments, in which case the citizens should be apprised of how much that adds to the manager’s compensation package. Otherwise, someone needs to take ownership of having missed the boat for a second time.

Council Candidate 2016: Cathy Revell

[Ms. Cathy Revell is one of the announced candidates for Portsmouth City Council. She provided the following biographical information to help acquaint the Portsmouth electorate with what she has to offer.]

I was born in Portsmouth and have lived here most of my life. I am married to David Ratcliff, a local photographer, artist and inventor. We have two grown children, who live locally.

Professional Experience

My professional health care experience includes positions at Portsmouth Psychiatric Hospital, Portsmouth General Hospital, Bon Secours Maryview, and Portsmouth Community Health Center, now Hampton Roads Community Health Center. At Chesapeake Care, Inc., a charitable medical and dental clinic serving low-income, uninsured residents of Chesapeake and Hampton Roads, I was the executive director. I am a partner of the Little Shoppes on High, LLC and president of The Revell Group, providing grant writing and consulting services to non-profit organizations throughout Virginia. Continue reading

“There You Go Again”

The new, responsive Mayor Wright, unveiled during the February 9, 2016, city council meeting — check the video of him making a show of taking notes during some citizen addresses to council — recently threw out this question to his social media following:
“‘Your Thoughts’
 “Norfolk and Virginia Beach don’t air the ‘public comment’ portion of their council meeting, meaning the citizen’s concerns are not shown to the public. Should Portsmouth do the same? Does being on TV make matters better, or worse? If you have a concern for council to address, should that be televised? Are we our own worse enemy? Please be honest!
“-Mayor Wright-“

His post then linked to an article in The Virginian-Pilot — “In videos, some cities take the ‘public’ out of public meetings“.

That he is posing these question is some, albeit slight, consolation. Citizens with memories longer than the six months many public officials ascribe to us will have a sense of “déjà vu all over again”, though. For the sake of those who weren’t paying attention last time around, we had this “conversation” with Portsmouth elected officials in 2013. Just before the new year, a council reshaped by the November 2012 election decided that the cameras did not need to roll during the non-agenda speakers portion of the meeting. Preempting any opportunity for  the public to weigh in on dispensing with the longstanding practice, a council consensus developed, out of public sight or hearing, to pull the plug. Signs went up on the council chamber doors before the first meeting in January, and it was the proverbial “done deal”. Except for one sticky detail: the citizens protested — in letters to the newspaper; in eMail messages and telephone calls to “the Honorables” (a courtesy term); in face-to-face encounters with council members; and in speeches from the podium in the council chamber.

During the “lights out” period for the taxpayer-funded city cameras, PortsmouthCityWatch.org stepped into the breach, recording and posting the moment-by-moment sights and sounds of the “censored” proceedings on YouTube. (They  remain accessible in the PCW video archive and might prove interesting to revisit in light of this renewed threat to the public’s right to know.) Two months later, without acknowledging the public’s role in the process, council reversed itself. Council did so, however, with the assertion that if the citizenry did not comport itself as “the Honorables” desired, the “privilege” of having their remarks recorded could again be withheld.

Continue reading

Mayoral Candidate 2016: Shannon Glover (updated)

[Mr. Shannon Glover is one of the six certified candidates for Mayor of Portsmouth. He provided the following biographical information to help acquaint the Portsmouth electorate with what he has to offer.]

Shannon Glover is a business owner in the City of Portsmouth and a leader in the community. He is running for Mayor because he is concerned about the future of our city and believes it is time for our leadership to change. As Mayor, Shannon will collaborate with council members and listen to the community. He will build relationships with residents, community leaders, schools and businesses to address the current and future struggles being faced by our city. Shannon will be a new Mayor with a new approach who will give our city a new future. Continue reading

Publisher’s Notebook: The Year Ahead

As stated on our Facebook companion page, the mission of PortsmouthCityWatch.org is to serve as a community forum for sharing information, expressing opinions, and engaging in dialogue about civic affairs in Portsmouth, VA, USA, and, when applicable, around the globe. Fulfilling that mission is a civic duty that I take seriously. I am concerned, therefore, that the time demands involved with campaigning for a seat on city council will lessen the attention I can give to this labor of love. Additionally, as a participant in the council race, I cannot avow that my opinions of other candidates and the issues they may raise will be as unbiased as I would like. Going forward, then, you need to read what I post here over my name as requiring independent assessment. Continue reading

Publisher’s Note: Refusing to Surrender to Terrorists

For those as tired as I am of hearing political opportunists exploit the fears of our citizenry, a full-page ad on page 7 of the January 4, 2016, Virginian-Pilot was a sight for sore eyes. Ministers, rabbis, imams, community groups, and numerous citizens pledged to stand together against intolerance in its many manifestations. Not only were we happy to see it, but my wife and I were glad that the sponsors provided an opportunity for more of us to add our names to the initial, impressive list. Continue reading

Portsmouth Taxpayer Alliance Brings FOIA Executive Director to Town

At the invitation of Portsmouth Taxpayer Alliance Co-chair Jennifer Lee, Maria J. K. Everett, Executive Director and Senior Attorney for the Virginia Freedom of Information (FOIA) Advisory Council, spent the better part of an hour discussing her job with Alliance members. Her frank and free-ranging talk at the November Alliance meeting covered the the purpose, legal basis, access procedures, and cost considerations of the FOIA, as well as responses to questions posed by those in attendance. The video recording of the session is available on the PortsmouthCityWatch.org YouTube Channel at https://youtu.be/hnvcAIJo-F8. Additionally, a PDF containing four handouts Ms. Everett made available to those present are accessible for download at from the PCW document archive. Our thanks to the Portsmouth Taxpayer Alliance and Ms. Everett for helping to inform the public about an important citizen access tool.

Publisher’s Notebook: Of Wars, Hot and Cold

As I belatedly watched the PBS tribute commemorating the twenty-fifth anniversary of Ken Burns’s documentary, “The Civil War”, one particularly insightful observation struck both a nerve and a chord. Discussing why he found the subject so compelling that he would devote the effort to making an eleven-hour series about it, Burns said, “[Everything] in American history led up to it, and everything since has been a consequence of it. . . . [T]he centrality of the Civil War in our lives, and [how it shaped] the meaning of who we are as Americans [makes this event] the subject in American history.” Continue reading

Open Letter on School Board Reorganization (updated 07/02/2015)

Mr. Chair and Honorable School Board Members:

In advance of your annual reorganization meeting on Thursday, July 2, I write to encourage a change of chairperson. Although I have warm personal feelings toward Chair Bridgeford and consider him an exemplary human being in many respects, for the following reasons I believe he should step down as chair: 1) rotation of elected leadership is healthy for elected bodies; and 2) taking responsibility for leadership failure is essential to maintaining a credible public entity. Continue reading