City will reexamine its contracting ways
June Casagrande
NEWPORT BEACH -- In response to one activist’s allegation that the
city is operated less efficiently than any other in the county, officials
are looking for ways to decrease costs for some services without
compromising quality.
At the study session of their Nov. 12 meeting, City Council members
will look at staff recommendations on ways contractors could provide
cost-effective alternatives to providing services ranging from tree
trimming to legal assistance.
Armed with charts that suggest Newport Beach ranks last among Orange
County cities for using contractors’ services, Phil Arst argued to the
council last month that the city’s bottom line would benefit from
competitive bidding by contractors.
“All the other cities in Orange County use subcontracting in greater
degree and provide the same levels of service,” Arst said in a telephone
interview Wednesday.
He pointed to tree trimming as an example. The city reduced its
average cost for tree trimming from about $80 per tree to about $39,
according to Arst’s calculations.
Newport Beach used subcontractors less than any other for building
plan checks; legal, engineering and computer services; fleet maintenance;
graffiti removal; janitorial work; landscaping, park and street
maintenance; and trash collection, according to a 1993 study of 31 Orange
County cities that Arst updated.
Arst emphasized that police and fire services should not be
compromised in any way, but that the city manager could nonetheless hire
an efficiency consultant to examine those operations.
The city has responded, but with caution, to Arst’s charges. Mayor
Gary Adams asked staff to take a look at areas in which the city could
save money.
Some of Arst’s facts were inaccurate and out of date, said Assistant
City Manager Sharon Wood.
“We’re going to show that there’s a lot more contracting going on than
people are aware of,” Wood said. “Whether there needs to be more remains
to be seen.”
She said it’s too soon to say which city services are most likely to
be considered for privatization.
A strike last month by trash collectors, however, could bolster
arguments to maintain the status quo. While many Orange County cities
went without trash pickup, Newport Beach residents enjoyed uninterrupted
service because the city has its own trash collection service.
Arst brought up the privatization issue as part of his Greenlight
Committee’s battle against expansion of the Koll Center, a
250,000-square-foot project that’s the subject of the Nov. 20 special
election. Greenlight opponents have argued that the slow-growth measure
will make it harder for the city to find new revenue sources. Arst’s
efforts are designed to show that more efficient handling of funds is a
better way to improve the city’s economic picture.
“This lays to rest a claim that Greenlight would force a cutback in
city services,” Arst said.
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