Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

Gainey’s office continues push for control of cable bureau

- By Megan Guza

City leadership continued its push during budget hearings Tuesday to move the city’s cable bureau into the mayor’s office under the communicat­ions umbrella, but some council members remained resistant to the idea, noting that future administra­tions might not have the same noble intentions as the current administra­tion says it has.

Mayor Ed Gainey’s proposed 2023 operating budget includes plans to move the cable bureau under his office’s control along with the city print shop and other communicat­ions-based positions.

“The idea of communicat­ions existing solely in one branch of government … is not really in the best interest of the population as a whole,” said Councilman Bruce Kraus, who represents the city’s third district, which includes the South Side and portions of the Hilltop neighborho­ods.

Representa­tives from the mayor’s office said department­s and positions that deal in communicat­ions should fall under one umbrella — in this case, a newly formed office of communicat­ions within the office of the mayor.

Jake Pawlak, deputy mayor and director of the city’s office of budget and management, said the city would be better served if the cable bureau were “connected to the work of other communicat­ions profession­als and ultimately supervised by a communicat­ions profession­al who understand­s that entire scope of work.”

The cable channel is currently part of the Office of Innovation and Performanc­e.

“Innovation and Performanc­e — they don’t do communicat­ions,” Mr. Gainey said, noting that the cable bureau is “in the wrong place.”

“In order to be in the right place, [it should be] in the office of communicat­ions, because that’s what they do,” he said.

The proposed budget includes a number of newly budgeted communicat­ions positions. Previous operating budgets had two or three communicat­ions positions within the mayor’s office; Mr. Gainey’s proposed budget includes 14, though some of those are for positions that would have previously fallen under other department­s, like the print shop and the cable bureau.

Positions include a communicat­ions manager as well as both a press secretary and press officer. There is a budget line for a “city correspond­ent,” too.

Mr. Pawlak said the channel should be a place “in which we relay, on behalf of all department­s, to the public the work of city government itself.”

The administra­tion has also proposed moving the city’s 3-1-1 line into the Office of Neighborho­od Services, which is also under the umbrella of the mayor’s office. The non-emergency line is also currently under Innovation and Performanc­e.

“If we agree that [keeping 311 under Innovation and Performanc­e] doesn’t make sense, how can we not agree that not having communicat­ions under communicat­ions makes no sense?” Mr. Gainey said.

Council President Theresa Kail-Smith already said that council would likely reject the idea.

“We appreciate that there needs to be a communicat­ions office, especially nowadays with Twitter [and] social media,” she said during a Nov. 16 budget hearing that included the Office of Innovation and Performanc­e. “We definitely want the mayor to have his office that he wants, but what we want to do is make sure that we have what we need as well, because they don’t communicat­e for us.”

Ms. Kail-Smith said the same sentiment stands for the city print shop.

“As much as we want to work with the administra­tion, we don’t want somebody controllin­g our communicat­ions as well,” she said at the time.

 ?? Pittsburgh Post-Gazette ?? Mayor Ed Gainey’s proposed 2023 operating budget includes plans to move the cable bureau under his office’s control along with the city print shop and other communicat­ionsbased positions.
Pittsburgh Post-Gazette Mayor Ed Gainey’s proposed 2023 operating budget includes plans to move the cable bureau under his office’s control along with the city print shop and other communicat­ionsbased positions.

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