Chicago Sun-Times

Daley demands that Rahm dismantle ‘golden parachutes’ for agency chiefs

- BY FRAN SPIELMAN, CITY HALL REPORTER fspielman@suntimes.com | @fspielman

Mayor Rahm Emanuel’s successor should not be saddled with his appointees, nor should beleaguere­d Chicago taxpayers be “forced to pay” nearly $1 million to get rid of them, Bill Daley said Tuesday.

Daley branded contracts awarded to heads of the Chicago Park District, the Chicago Housing Authority, the Chicago Public Schools and the City Colleges of Chicago a “blatant abuse of taxpayers’ money.”

“Rich Daley never said to Rahm Emanuel, ‘If you don’t want these people that I had, you’re gonna have to pay ’em off to get ’em outta here.’ That’s not right,” Bill Daley, whose father and brother reigned over Chicago for a combined 43 years, told the Sun-Times.

“There were no big payouts or golden parachutes. That’s something you get in business. That’s shareholde­rs’ money. This is taxpayers’ money. Big difference.”

When a new mayor takes office, city department heads and agency chiefs who serve at the pleasure of the mayor traditiona­lly submit their resignatio­ns as a courtesy. That gives the new chief executive carte blanche to assemble his or her own team of loyalists.

Emanuel should follow that same courtesy and tradition, Daley said.

“This is not Hollywood here. This is not a baseball team giving golden parachutes. This is public service,” Daley said Tuesday.

“What this presents to the next mayor is, ‘If I change this person, I’ve got to give ’em all of this money. So, maybe I won’t fire ’em because it’s gonna cost the taxpayers even more.’ That’s putting the new mayor at a disadvanta­ge.”

Without explaining how, Daley demanded that Emanuel “immediatel­y suspend any employment contracts extending into the new administra­tion.”

Instead, those contracts should terminate on May 20, the day the new mayor is sworn in, with “month-to-month extensions” during the transition, Daley said.

If Emanuel’s successor ultimately decides to retain his appointees, new contracts could then be negotiated, Daley said.

“The City Council oughta take a look at this and try to undo it. This is ridiculous not to run this by the public and talk about it,” Daley said.

“This isn’t Amazon. This isn’t J.P. Morgan. This isn’t some bank or company. This is Chicago. You don’t give people golden parachutes. Who the hell do these people think they are? I don’t care how good of a job they’re doing. It’s not like they don’t get paid well. Over a third of the people at City Hall make over $100,000. Not too many companies have that ratio.”

Emanuel is in London and Paris this week on city business. The mayor’s office had no immediate comment on Daley’s demand.

Mayoral candidate Susana Mendoza agreed with Daley that golden parachutes are an “abuse of power” and a “waste of taxpayer dollars.”

“Locking the next mayor into long-term contracts, some of which last through most of the first term, essentiall­y guarantees a shadow mayor. That’s unacceptab­le,” Mendoza said in a statement.

The Chicago Sun-Times reported this week that Emanuel has tied the new mayor’s hands with contracts for the heads of the Park District, City Colleges, CPS and CHA that would cost $820,000 plus benefits to undo. That’s in addition to the annual salaries for their replacemen­ts.

The most egregious example is Park District Supt. Mike Kelly, who had served without a contract since 2011.

Kelly’s contract was rushed through in December — nearly four months after Emanuel’s surprise exit from the mayor’s race — at the last park board meeting before now-former Park Board President Jesse Ruiz joined the administra­tion of newly elected Gov. J.B. Pritzker. Kelly’s contract could roll over into 2025.

 ??  ?? Bill Daley
Bill Daley
 ??  ?? Rahm Emanuel
Rahm Emanuel

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