
PUBLISHED
BY MOSHOLU
PRESERVATION
CORPORATION
| Vol.
18, No. 4 |
Feb. 24 - March
9, 2005 |



CB7 Combines Committees
New Guidelines Imposed
By HEATHER HADDON
Community
Board 7’s chair and district manager made a surprise announcement last week
that the organization’s 11 committees will be consolidated after a history
of poor attendance and ineffectiveness. As part of the shift, committees
will be required to conduct additional reporting to the district manager,
and members who miss several meetings will be reprimanded.
“You who are chairing committees and you who are sitting on committees are
falling down on the job,” said Nora Feury, Board chair, during the Feb. 15
full-Board meeting. “You promised to come to all the committee
meetings, and that is not happening.”
The shake-up consolidates the Board’s 11 committees into seven, which
roughly break down to: economic development and long range planning, housing
and land use, human services and health, parks and cultural affairs,
personnel and law, public safety and transportation, and sanitation and
environmental protection. Each committee will maintain a chair, and many
will now have co-chairs.
Committee chairs will be required to send their agendas 10 days in advance
of their monthly meetings to Rita Kessler, the Board’s district manager.
Many Board members agree with Feury and Kessler, who orchestrated the
changes, that the committees aren’t currently working. “There are only a
handful of people that are involved in the committees,” said Gregory
Faulkner, a Board member. “We’re looking to do things differently, and I
think that’s healthy.”
Committees are supposed to convene monthly with local agencies and other
community stakeholders to discuss local issues, and suggest motions to bring
before the full board. Last week’s meeting, which had no
committee-sponsored motions, was a strong indication that the committees
aren’t functioning, according to Feury. The session also lacked a quorum.
While open to change, many Board members felt slighted that they had no
input on the decision. “This came as a total surprise,” said Andrew Laiosa,
a Board member. “Questions about this were never raised. The people who are
affected by this were just told about it.”
Laiosa wished the matter had been proposed before the Executive Committee,
which monitors attendance and conducts other administrative duties. Others
questioned whether the changes violate the Board’s bylaws, where the
committees are stipulated.
“I think there are some constitutional issues here,” Faulkner said.
Kessler said the rearrangement was within the rules since no committees were
eliminated. The Board will try out the new configuration for this spring,
adding new members when they are selected in the coming months, Feury said.
Some Board members questioned whether lumping together committees would help
in attendance. “Part of the problem is the community board facilities are
inadequate for more than one committee to meet at once,” said Don Bluestone,
a Board member, about the Board’s cramped Bedford Park office. Kessler said
during the meeting that committees could assemble off-site, though that
practice has not been encouraged in the past.
Members debated whether a uniform date and time for committee meetings might
help attendance. Bluestone also suggested that chairs, including him, should
do a better job of calling members after they missed a meeting.
Laiosa thinks more should be done to increase the accessibility of the
District Service Cabinet meetings, where city agencies discuss service
delivery with the district manager. Kessler suggested that chairs
should form their committee agendas from issues raised at the meetings, but
as they are held during the day, many members can’t attend them.
“Seventy-five percent of the Board’s agenda comes from that,” said Laiosa,
who thinks the meetings are poorly advertised. “If that’s such an important
thing, wouldn’t we want to make it more publicly accessible?”
Despite some reservations, most members were open to the committee
experiment. “It’s a first step,” Faulkner said.
***
Two new parks personnel introduced
themselves during the Board meeting. Keisha Garnes is the new district
manager for Community Board 7 parks. Kathleen Walker is the new director of
the St. James Recreation Center, which is now undergoing a major renovation
of its facilities.
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