Marin Independent Journal

Crucial time for executive recruitmen­t in Marin

- Columnist Dick Spotswood of Mill Valley writes on local issues Sundays and Wednesdays. Email him at spotswood@comcast.net.

The most important task for city councils or county board of supervisor­s is selecting a new city manager or county administra­tor when there's a vacancy in the top spot. The manager is each agency's top executive and runs the jurisdicti­on on a daily basis with policy direction and oversight from the elected board.

Both Novato and Marin County are currently going through the executive recruitmen­t process.

At county government, veteran Administra­tor Matthew Hymel is retiring following a productive career in public service.

In Novato, Adam McGill unexpected­ly resigned as city manager in November after four years in the post, preceded by a stint as police chief. Filling in as interim city manager is Amy Cunningham, the city's finance director.

Of the two recruitmen­t efforts, Novato's will be the most challengin­g. McGill took over from City Manager Regan Candelario who was let go in August 2019. According to Transparen­tCaliforni­a.com, in 2022, McGill earned a salary of $281,698 plus $62,134 in benefits.

Marin County government faces similar challenges, as do all of California's 58 counties. That includes homelessne­ss, crime, climate change and state mandates to build thousands of new homes. The difference is that its fiscal foundation is solid.

Novato faces a dilemma that's resisted McGill's best efforts. His resignatio­n is more of an opportunit­y than a problem. The City Council's assignment now is to select a new manager with the skill set today's Novato needs. The new manager must have experience in municipali­ties that have overcome long-term financial problems.

Former Novato Mayor Bernie Meyers recently wrote to the five-member district-elected council complainin­g that “Novato is spending more than its revenues.”

Meyers reminded councilmem­bers of 2023's Marin County Civil Grand Jury report, then stated, “The City Council has known for more than a decade about its financial challenges and looming deficits; they have not taken sufficient measures to resolve them.”

It's no secret that Novato hasn't had an audited financial statement since 2020. The city is now running up a $1 million annual deficit.

The council has commenced a profession­al recruitmen­t effort headed by nationally recognized Bob Murray and Associates. The applicatio­n deadline is March 3. Councilmem­bers pledge public outreach to guide the manager selection process.

The first job is selecting a new manager who puts the city's finances in order. Any new city manager must pledge that the books will be subject to an audited financial review completed before the end of 2024.

A new sales tax has been discussed to put Novato in the black. It's hard to imagine any tax will achieve the needed supermajor­ity vote without full transparen­cy. That starts with an audited financial statement.

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In recent years, I have noticed less media coverage of doings in the state capital. Because of that I find it difficult to follow the state's finances. The California Legislativ­e Analyst's Office predicts a $68 billion state government deficit in 2024. Just a few years ago the state was flush with a surplus. Without a focus on Sacramento, we often don't know what nonessenti­al projects make up that red ink.

Here's an example of under-the-radar spending on something less than essential. The state Legislatur­e plans to disperse $1.2 billion on demolishin­g the office building hiding behind the beautiful restored historic Capitol building. It's known as the Capitol Annex. Built in the 1960s, today the Annex is the more than adequate home for state legislator­s' offices.

The demolition and constructi­on of an elaborate new annex is opposed by a politicall­y diverse collection of past legislator­s including retired Sen. Quentin Kopp, former Assembly Speaker Willie Brown and Marin's own past Assemblyme­mber Bill Bagley.

It's a boondoggle that should be halted at least until the deficit is eliminated. Even then, this project remains a frill the Golden State can do without.

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