Trust lacking say Fort Smith director candidates

story by Aric Mitchell
amitchell@thecitywire.com

While City of Fort Smith Board of Directors candidates at the Monday (June 11) League of Women Voters Candidate Forum did not agree entirely on what the top issues the city faces in 2013 will be, all seven running in Wards 1, 3, and 4, feel there is a trust deficiency throughout the city.

Between the community and the city government. Between city directors and the municipal department heads. Even among the city directors themselves.

“It’s time for Fort Smith to wake up, stand up, and make progress,” said Ward 4 challenger John Cooley. “We can’t do it the way it is now with not enough trust existing between the community and the city government.”

Ward 1 candidate Keith D. Lau added: “When the directors are sitting on top of a $220 million budget, they can’t micromanage each individual thing.”

Ward 3 challenger Mike Lorenz agreed: “We need to trust our department heads to make the best decisions.”

The trust talk, which consumed a significant portion of the presentation, stemmed from a single question to Ward 4 City Director George Catsavis: How will you make decisions when the wants and the needs of your ward are a vocal minority that affect others in the city?

Catsavis voted to end automated refuse collection at the June 5 board meeting in spite of two out of three city surveys showing a preference for the program and a satisfaction rate of 74.5% in areas where the conversions had already been made.

“Automated is more efficient, no doubt about it,” Catsavis said, adding that he voted as he did because the citizens of Park Hill East, who initiated the debate that ultimately ended the automated program, “had legitimate complaints.”

Catsavis continued: “I supported the alley pickup for the residents of Park Hill because I feel they have a legitimate complaint with the logistical or terrain issues they have. A lot of that area is senior citizens, and they are in these motorized wheelchairs, and they have issues getting their trash out.”

Cooley, Catsavis’ opponent, disagreed.

“I’m all for automation, and while I certainly understand there are situations where people have constraints, those are issues that need to be addressed by the department of sanitation through the troubleshooting program that is already in place.”

Lau and Lorenz echoed Cooley’s thoughts, while Lorenz’s opponent Matthew Garner was joined by Ken Pevehouse in aligning closer to Catsavis’ viewpoint, though each advised that automation for alleyway pickups should be further examined.

“From my perspective, maybe I should listen to my ward. I have automated, but maybe we could look at a hybrid system. There has to be a way to compromise so these aren’t such polarizing issues. There has to be other solutions besides, ‘You think this way, I think this way, and we’ll never get together,’” Garner said.

For Lau and Pevehouse, the issue is about more than trash collection.

“The issue at the core of everything we’re looking at is leadership,” Lau said. “We need to put people in place, who have the ability to say, ‘Yeah, I’m sorry this is inconvenient for you as an individual or neighborhood, but it benefits the whole.’”

Pevehouse said, “It’s really more about how the decisions are made,” and was against blanket automated conversion to alleyways because “you would be taking something away from them (homeowners).”

“These people purchased their homes knowing they had alley pickup. What I feel like we need to do is work for a way to accomplish automated in the alleys,” Pevehouse added.

Ward 1 candidate Liz Berry Armstrong sympathized with homes affected by non-automated collection, though she said that “if it goes to a vote, I would abide by the results and respect the voters on that,” referring to current efforts from Fort Smith citizen Joel Culberson to finalize an initiative for citywide automated collection in November.

All of the candidates consider job growth an important issue for 2013, though they were divided on the best way to accomplish the goal.

For Cooley and Lorenz, riverfront development will be the main focal point, while Garner and Armstrong look to focus efforts on Interstate 49 development.

Catsavis noted that Fort Smith “has river, rail, and roads,” but wishes to focus a possible second term on the question of why the city isn’t growing.

“I don’t know if it’s an internal problem or what,” he added, noting that downtown development would be a top priority.

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“I-49, that’s federal money, so we really don’t have all that much control over it. For me, I’d like to see a casino (downtown), because really, it’s already here just a few miles away (in Pocola),” Catsavis said.

Pevehouse believes Fort Smith “has everything in place, but we need to market ourselves better.”

Lau joined Garner and Armstrong in emphasizing I-49, stating that “demand is going to drive what is on the Riverfront.”

Lau continued: “We need more than service jobs. We need basic economic growth, and that means attracting companies that export their services outside the city of Fort Smith. That’s what stimulates real economic growth. We need I-49, and if that means more public and private partnerships, then that’s what we should do. A good example are the ball field additions. We need to be diligent when we put these partnerships together and have a plan in place to ensure we don’t get in to another situation like with the Convention Center.”

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Comments

George's trash talk

According to Director Catsavis: "A lot of that area is senior citizens, and they are in these motorized wheelchairs, and they have issues getting their trash out.” You would be surprised to learn that most seniors are more than healthy enough to take out the trash. The trouble they are mostly having is dealing with rising costs. I see most taking advantage of every early bird special in town. Every dollar matters. Now as far as elderly citizens, just because a neighborhood is old doesn't mean that mostly old people live there. Seniors are evenly residing all over town and most are very unhappy that you just made a decision that will increase their utility bills. And as far as your ridiculous notion that people in motorized wheelchairs would somehow struggle with a curb service wheeled bin but are miraculously able to lug trash cans into alleys, you apparently aren't listening to the details of the sanitation department's trouble shooter program that offers them help.

candidate irony

Unanimous consensus that trust is needed. And yet.. Two candidates say we need to look into more alleyway service options. Are you saying that the City did not already conduct an exhaustive search looking for a solution? They did. One incumbent candidate says people in motorized wheelchairs are not being served. Are you saying that they applied for troubleshooter service and were denied? The are. This candidate also says residents have legitimate complaints. Were they not given ample and fair accommodation to air their concerns? They were. Did the surveys not find they were in a minority? They did. The surveys also found that an overwhelming majority of the people that have the service really like the service. This is mistrust. We are undermining departmental progress. A pattern has been set to do battle rather than find solutions. In the case of automated trash, the solution is obvious. TIME. In time, there will be sufficient technology change to resolve the issue. BUT FOR NOW, a 2006 decision to automate has yet to find an accommodating technology to serve all. The best decision is to modernize now and to be on the look out for a better suite of services.
Unanimous consensus that trust is needed. And yet.. Two candidates say we need to look into more alleyway service options. Are you saying that the City did not already conduct an exhaustive search looking for a solution? They did. One incumbent candidate says people in motorized wheelchairs are not being served. Are you saying that they applied for troubleshooter service and were denied? The are. This candidate also says residents have legitimate complaints. Were they not given ample and fair accommodation to air their concerns? They were. Did the surveys not find they were in a minority? They did. The surveys also found that an overwhelming majority of ...>> Read the entire comment.

Not going to happen in Ft Smith

Have you ever gone and stood in the middle of a field and hoped that if enough people show up that they will eventually build a ball park there? Me neither. But I have seen a ball park built in the middle of a field and then a whole bunch of people show up. In order for people to come to this town, which is what it is going to take for economic development, you have to give them a reason to come here and stay. When you talk about Austin TX, one of the fastest growing towns in the US, do you talk about the businesses or the amenities? When you talk about how great NWA is, do you talk about the businesses or the amenities? Unless we give people a reason to come here, they are not coming. It is going to take investment on a large scale. We will NEVER get that around here because we are only too willing to listen to a very few nay sayers. There are a lot of decisions made by the Directors that make sense and are correct. However they shoot themselves in the foot and figuratively the city in the head, when they make high profile blunders like this trash debacle. Majority rule? Not in Ft Smith. The louder you scream the more your vote counts. Even in the vote for the Restaurant tax, the persons we listened to didn’t even live here. No way is this town going to pay or any kind of promotion. Turn that convention center into city offices. Now, that’s something that will bring people to town in droves! If the citizens of Fort Smith are not willing to invest in our own town, why would some business want to move in here and invest in it?
Have you ever gone and stood in the middle of a field and hoped that if enough people show up that they will eventually build a ball park there? Me neither. But I have seen a ball park built in the middle of a field and then a whole bunch of people show up. In order for people to come to this town, which is what it is going to take for economic development, you have to give them a reason to come here and stay. When you talk about Austin TX, one of the fastest growing towns in the US, do you talk about the businesses or the amenities? When you talk about how great NWA is, do you talk about the businesses or the amenities? Unless we give people a reason to come ...>> Read the entire comment.

Fort Smith Trash

I still don't understand the big deal over the automated trash issue. Fort Smith have trucks that pickup the city trash cans from the rear of the truck. So going down the alley would not be a problem. So why are people whining? Do they not want to use the city trash cans? The trash as to be taking to the alley in something so what is the big deal? Do the whiners not want to put their containers back into their yards? Can someone tell me why they can't use city containers?

Where the buck starts is also important..

Misdirected mistrust? Left alone, a Mayor and a Board of Directors can usually run a city but the problem is this never happens anywhere..but is it anywhere worse than here? just walk a mile in their Pierre Cardins and it's very unlikely basic survival is not something you will see. For years upon years I based my mistrust right at the top just like Harry said to and not one thing ever changed. So I switched to Mickey Spillanes approach and followed the 'money' back. I didn't have to go very far. It's a small group of very politically active people and some of them will literally bug politicians to death over what they want. You want to survive up there? You don't let this bunch not like you then. In our case it's where the buck that stopped, started.
Misdirected mistrust? Left alone, a Mayor and a Board of Directors can usually run a city but the problem is this never happens anywhere..but is it anywhere worse than here? just walk a mile in their Pierre Cardins and it's very unlikely basic survival is not something you will see. For years upon years I based my mistrust right at the top just like Harry said to and not one thing ever changed. So I switched to Mickey Spillanes approach and followed the 'money' back. I didn't have to go very far. It's a small group of very politically active people and some of them will literally bug politicians to death over what they want. You want to survive up there? You don't ...>> Read the entire comment.

The City of Fort Smith is like a trapped buzzard

The City of Fort Smith is like a trapped buzzard. If you put a buzzard in a pen 6 feet by 8 feet and is entirely open at the top, the bird, in spite of its ability to fly, will be an absolute prisoner. The reason is that a buzzard always begins a flight from the ground with a run of 10 to 12 feet. Without space to run, as is its habit, it will not even attempt to fly, but will remain a prisoner for life in a small jail with no top.