Coauthor of: So You Want Blog
Mayor Rick Kriseman's
crass statement "build the damn Pier" is a testament to how little he
and his deeply inexperienced senior staff fail to understand the office of a
strong Mayor. Faced with the very process he created crumbling before his eyes
the Mayor is frustrated and his staff is clueless.
This is not the time for
barroom rhetoric; it is the time for insightful leadership. It's time to calm
the waters not stir the pot. It's time to be a leader.
We will never know for
sure whether Kriseman's handpicked Selection Committee Chairman Mike Connors
screwed up with his rant against the current pier or was simply following
orders like the good solider he is.
What is obvious is the
Mayor's failure to step in and do some damage control regarding the Connors'
rant and reassure the Selection Committee that they have his full support has
left the people serving on the Selection Committee in a very difficult spot.
There has been a lot of
talk about how the Committee can only evaluate on the merits of the proposers.
The objective of this
formal selection process is to get a project built. One of the merits must be
how the customer views the quality, suitability and functionality of the
proposed design.
One Survey and two polls
provide the answer.
The thing to keep in mind
is the customer for this project is not the Mayor, not the Selection Committee,
not Mike Connors, not the Mayor's Dream Team, not City Council; it is you the
citizen and taxpayer. The Selection Committee must accord your opinion the
merit it deserves.
There seems to be general
agreement that all of the remaining designs can be constructed. The bigger
question is which one can actually be approved and actually built?
The Selection Committee
has a responsibility to evaluate all of the merits including the public's opinion,
which is a functional merit, and that merit is simply acceptability.
It is unreasonable for
the Selection Committee to rank a design team first when it is highly unlikely
the project with that team will actually be approved due to lack of public and/or
political support.
The five people on the
Selection Committee have the opportunity to make a historic decision that will
allow City Council to move St. Pete forward or create a firestorm which will
distract the Kriseman administration, the City Council and the community for
months if not years to come.
The Selection Committee
can do the City of St. Petersburg a great service by simply following the rules
and looking at all of the merits.
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