Street sweepings, and cost, to increase
Eron Ben-Yehuda
HUNTINGTON BEACH -- A private company will take over street sweeping
duties Monday.
Some say the work will be superior to municipal services, but others
argue it comes at a cost of nearly twice the amount city staffers say
they would need to do the job. The source of that extra money? New
parking fines.
For the first time since 1996, road cleaning will increase from once to
twice a month. The work will be split between a city work crew and a
private company, Norwalk-based Nationwide Environmental Services, which
was awarded a two-year contract worth $330,000 annually.
The president of the municipal employees association, Tom Hasty, said his
members can do a better job for about $180,000 per year.
“Why are we doing this when we know we can do it cheaper?” he asked. “I
don’t think that’s fair to the public.”
Not everyone is so sure city employees can outperform a private company,
and comparing their work should settle any doubts, City Councilman Dave
Sullivan said.
The street sweeping contract, which the council approved Oct. 18, is just
one example of the city’s new philosophy of government -- managed
competition, which aims to make government run more efficiently, for less
money, with the help of the private sector.
City staffers bristle at the notion that outsiders are muscling in on
their turf. But City Councilman Dave Garofalo said government must be
downsized to its “core” functions, which may or may not include street
sweeping.
The money paid to Nationwide will be recouped with revenue generated by
citations issued to those parked in the path of the sweepers, according
to an Oct. 18 city memo.
Sullivan said he expects at least one parking citation before he begins
to obey the new parking restrictions.
To help everyone ease into the swing of things, warnings will be issued
during November and December, according to a city memo dated Oct. 21.
Beginning Jan. 3, residents will be fined if they fail to obey posted
signs alerting them to what streets are off-limits and at what times.
For information on the new restrictions, call the city’s Infoline at
374-4800, message 405.
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