Wednesday, November 16, 2011

Millbrae to outsource police - Pacifica next?

November 16, 2011, 12:34 AM By Heather Murtagh Daily Journal Staff

Millbrae will begin negotiating to contract with the Sheriff’s Office for police services — a decision that could save the city $1.1 million to $2 million annually but that split the opinion of those at Tuesday’s City Council meeting.

San Bruno and Millbrae currently share Neil Telford, who acts as police chief for both cities until Nov. 18 when he will return to San Bruno full time. On Tuesday, Millbrae official voted 3-2, with councilmembers Paul Seto and Nadia Holober dissenting, to begin negotiating a contract for services to be provided by the San Mateo County Sheriff’s Office. The vote came after more than two hours of discussion with community input that raised concerns about adequate staffing, volunteers and the future for non-sworn employees.

The timing of the decision was another topic that split those in attendance. Both Holober and Seto advocated for waiting until the newly elected council took office before the end of the year to make the decision.

“I’m voting no because it goes against the overwhelming majority of our community,” Holober said.

Others on the council disagreed.

“We have to make a decision and sadly, I don’t think we have enough facts,” said Councilwoman Gina Papan, who added Tuesday’s decision allows for negotiations to start so remaining questions can be answered.

Mayor Dan Quigg and Vice Mayor Marge Colapietro both pointed to the city’s financial challenges as a reason the sheriff’s proposal made sense. Quigg added many of the expressed concerns and questions were answered Tuesday before the vote.

For example, Undersheriff Carlos Bolanos said the plan includes positions for all the department employees — sworn and non-sworn, that can be tweaked to accommodate the city’s robust volunteer program, and the city can maintain any property it would like. Items like vehicles and other equipment to be used through the new partnership will result in a credit toward the upstart costs, he said.

The city’s current annual budget for the department is $4.258 million. When the budget is changed to include vehicles, safety equipment, overhead costs and other costs, the annual budget is raised to $7.27 million.

Should the city want to maintain its own department, Telford suggested increasing staffing levels by 2.5 full-time equivalent employees — a cost of $410,000 annually — that would raise the number of employees to 32 FTEs.

Advocates for maintaining an independent department questioned the rush to make a choice while also noting the additional cost seemed minimal.

“We should not risk the safety of our residents for a $410,000 deficit,” said resident Joe Chen.

Chris Co, special services coordinator for Millbrae police, asked the city to consider maintaining the current department staffing adding only a full-time chief and slowly building to the preferred levels. She also suggested asking the city’s electorate for money through a joint safety assessment that would support both the police and fire departments. Co’s suggestion was one Telford couldn’t recommend.

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Submitted by Jim Alex

2 comments:

Lionel Emde said...

Yeah, we're next, wait for it.

Anonymous said...

Of course we'll have to outsource the PD. There just aren't any alternatives left for struggling cities and who knows when or even if that much awaited recovery will happen or what it will look like. Profound changes have occurred in this country. Millbrae is smart to get an early start.