HomeMy WebLinkAboutCity Council Meeting - Council Workshop - Minutes - 07/20/1999 t
COUNCIL WORKSHOP MINUTES
July 20, 1999
COMMITTEE MEMBERS PRESENT: Chair Leona Orr, Sandy Amodt, Tom Brotherton, Tim
Clark, Connie Epperly, Judy Woods, Rico Yingling
STAFF PRESENT: Linda Birdsall, Jim Harris, Brent McFall, Dena Laurent, John Hodgson, Jed
Aldridge, Sue Viseth, Tom Brubaker,Norm Angelo, Don Wickstrom
PUBLIC PRESENT: John Baker, Joan Stolt, Steve Kato, Doug Easter, Anna Ximines, I. David
Daniels
Diversity Advisory Board Update
Dave Daniels, Diversity Board Member—This is actually our first opportunity as a board to, in a
formal open public type setting,tell you some of the things we're doing. Before I talk a little bit
about that there are a number of our board members that are present in the audience: Anna
Ximines, Doug Easter, Joan Stolt. And we do have two other members that aren't here. One's
in China, and another who's not present tonight as well but you have kind of an overlay.
What we tried to do over these past few months is kind of lay a foundation to try to help with the
city on its work with diversity in general and lay a foundation for years to come. As a society it
took us 200 years to get to where we are and we aren't going to change it overnight. But any
• steps that we can make in a positive direction, we feel have value. So what we've tried to do is
develop a mission statement for the board itself. One of the driving forces behind the task force
itself as far as making it function, came in to work with us to develop a work plan, a mission
statement, guidance principles and those types of things. So again, although we're brand new,
we haven't been just spinning our wheels. We think we've laid a really good foundation for
where we're going as a board. There is the mission statement, guiding principles, some
governments agreements that we have come up with as far as how we're going to run our
meetings and those types of things, and we're ready to go out and start getting somQ feedback
from the community itself.
What we've done to date is planning, taking our points of perspective and putting information on
the table, trying to lay this foundation. But we feel the foundation is laid now and we want to get
or give an opportunity for the community to have something to say about this whole issue. And
so we've planned in the month of September"Unity in the Community, A Community
Conversation". And what that is is an opportunity for folks to come together and have a
conversation about this issue we call diversity. What does that mean to them? What do they see
as some of the issues in the City of Kent? Some things they'd like to see done. Some things that
they see are working quite well that they want to see more efforts. Just those types of things,
because we feel that we represent or we are there to represent the community but we're only
seven folks and there are a lot of other people out there and a lot of other very interesting and
challenging ideas and we need to get that input before we march off and try to slay this dragon
that we call diversity. So we thought it was a good opportunity to kind of bring some of those
perspectives in so we're developing a list of folks we're going to invite.
. We're gonna try to keep it fairly small this year. Although if we set the dragnet out,we probably
will get hundreds of folks showing up, but we thought for the first year to try to keep it as a small
manageable group. We're going to try to involve of course the Diversity Task Force and some
folks in the religious organization community because we're not just looking for churches we're
looking for synagogues and mosques and all different types of religious organizations throughout
the community, and perhaps some city employees, and some folks involved with the school
distric's diversity efforts. So those are some of the groups that we've identified as targets and
we'll solidify that here in the next couple of weeks and send out some invitations. You'll
probably even be invited as a matter of fact.
So that's kind of where we're going so far and again the whole point of that is to get this
feedback and to look at the information and input from the folks who actually receive services
from the city. Now we can start laying the next floor on that foundation that we built. We may
find that there are some folks out there who've never had this opportunity or maybe they didn't
think they had the opportunity but we want folks to know that Kent really does care and that this
is an opportunity for them to come and be heard, to share, and to have some dialogue with us.
So that's basically where we are so far.
Councilmember Rico Yingling—I know one of the items on the agenda was diversity training
and I know that that's going really well and there's really good reviews on that. I just wondered
about the if there's anything else to be said for the other things that were on the list of
recommendations for the Board.
• Employee Services Director Sue Viseth—Maybe I can speak to that a little. Certainly training
was one of the areas that the Mayor's Multicultural Task Force identified in recreation. We have
three more sessions to go and we want all 700 plus employees in the City of to receive the one
full day of training. Managers and supervisors and department directors will receive two full
days of training—one day specifically dedicated to managing and supervising diverse work
force. Other recommendations were around recruitment, outreach efforts. Jed as you know is
our new Employment Manager and has been tasked with monitoring that. Putting together
reports that we'll be able to share with you is one of the things in your ordinance that established
the board. You asked to have a report annually. October is the board's annual meeting and so
we, as staff, will be providing the board with kind of a staff annual report -progress we're
making in terms of the organization of our outreach efforts for recruitment. And then the board
also will add to that their efforts in community conversation and the work plan that they'll
develop for the year 2000 and beyond.
Also the consulting firm that we've contracted with for the training started by interviewing many
employees throughout the city in varying diverse groups and they've identified some potential
policy areas that we need to look at and they're going to be giving some feedback at the end of
the training session to help us identify for the year 2000 and beyond, additional training and
maybe some policies that we need to look at modifying.
Performance Measures Proiect.
Director of Operations Brent McFall—Well I'm just gonna do a quick introduction and turn
things over to John Baker. But just by way of reminder to the council, one of the things that you
had identified for us in your target issue process a couple of years ago,was increasing utilization
performance measures, and as we talked about before, we've been collecting a lot of raw data for
a long time and so what we intended to have was a lot of real good volume and kinds of
information. But that's all it told us, really,was how much it was something we did. It didn't
put it into any kind of information that was really useful to us as a management tool to say okay,
so what does that mean? And so I think with a little bit of kick in the pants from the council to
get us moving on this, we have moved ahead on the whole issue of performance measure to try
and get us to a point of having performance measures that we can utilize that are more
meaningful for council policy level, more meaning for us as managers at the management level,
and will help us continue to improve the organization on an ongoing basis.
We did this year's budgets and funds to contract for some assistance in developing our
performance measure program and we were fortunate to select Management Partners,who really,
I think, are one of the foremost firms in the country working with municipalities on the issue of
performance measure, and so they have came in and worked with our staff. They've done
training and worked with us on developing some sort of the first cut of performance measures
and that are designed to work with us. That's sort of the highest management level. And there's
such little things below that level that support this that are performance measurement oriented as
well.
• With that, I think I'm gonna turn it over to John Baker who is the President of Management
Partners and he's with us this evening to give you a presentation on what we've developed and
where we're going with it from here. And then I'm sure that John is happy to answer questions.
Ann is one of our project managers and she's here and she will be happy to have a dialogue with
you about this. Let me turn over to John Baker.
John Baker—Thank you Madame Chair and members of the council. My name is John Baker
and I am not going to repeat the entire report that was sent out to you last week but what I want
to do is kind of give an overview and maybe in some cases a little bit of philosophy so that it put
performance measurement in context of what you do when you operate a city that is as diverse as
Kent. Listening to the previous conversation and diversity, there's not only diversity in the work
force but there's diversity in the number of services and, as a former city manager, I always used
to think that people in the private sector would say why don't you run this more like a business?
And what performance measurement is is really somewhat doing that. But when you look at
what a city is, I don't think there's one resident that really said when you started looking at it,
would say run it like a business because businesses usually talk about bottom line and often in
government that's not what people want. They want service. And they'll only talk about the
bottom line when they don't get the service, so we're in a different business and you've got a
police business, a fire business, a park business, a public works business, and administration. So
you've got a number of businesses that you're trying to run and be the board supervisors or the
board of directors for that business and so it becomes a lot more difficult in terms of operating
that in the context of being in the fishbowl and operating service itself.
• I want to make sure I give you a little bit of an overview in terms of how we go about looking at
performance measures, how your city has gone about looking at those measures. So first of all,
your goals that you stated when you went out with the proposal were to train managers in the
concepts of performance measurements. Often people are reduced to looking at what really are
workload measures. How many of widgets did we create, and that's really not measuring how
well the widget was developed or how much it cost us, so we had to go through and do a
training. You wanted to track ongoing performance with emphasis on outcomes. In other words,
enough training people and tracking performance to look at the service and say were we
achieving what those outcomes were when we set up the service in the first place, which some of
them go back maybe 100 years. Incorporate customer satisfaction. As a firm we are real big
believers in this. When you're in a service organization, you go and ask people how are we
doing? And so customer satisfaction, be it external when you ask the people that get the service,
or internal for your support departments when they provide services to the other departments,
you want to know how well does the customer view the service? What kind customer
satisfaction do you get? You want to develop communication mechanism for stakeholders. That
means some method of reporting.
I want to put performance measurement in context of everything that the city has to do. I mean
as you can see by the chart,performance measurement is really only one piece of a real complex
matrix of things that you've got to put together in terms of operating the organization. You've
got state laws. You've got city charters. You've got codes. You've got administrative manuals
that all dictate to your staff how they should do things. Then you put together, in many cases,
strategic plans. What's our goal? What do we want to achieve as a city and then as an
. organization within the city moving towards those goals? You have an organizational structure
in and of itself that dictates a lot of how you're gonna operate. You've got your financial
management system, which is in your budget, your CRP, your capital improvement programs,
your reports coming into your financial management system, your tools.
Personnel Management—1 can't overemphasize this. You have labor contracts. Often they
dictate how you're going to do things. For example, in talking with your Police Department
when we were going through this, you have a Police Department that runs a 410. I just got
through doing some negotiations with a city in California where they have a 312. City council
tried to get it back because of the implications of that 312 program on their ability to do police
and services, and the police officers, if there was one thing they were not going to give up of
anything they were doing, it was the 312 program. So those things can become a very big
impact in terms of how you're trying to provide a service. And you have work programs and
work plans, but performance measurement only relates to the programmatic aspect of what
you're doing. Something that you can measure repetitively.
Projects are separate things, and I'll come back to them. Then you had just your regular
communications that you want so these are just kind of a real thumbnail of things that are out
there that when you're operating a city, and the administration is operating and telling the
people, and having them do things, these are all the things that go into impacting how the city
will do business, and performance measurement is just one piece of that total management
system that you've got to have in order to make the city run properly.
. Our approach to when we did this—we wanted to make sure that we developed common
expectations. So we brought it and talked with the department heads first and said, okay, this is
where we're going. Gave some development of what it is to do performance measurement and
the kinds of things that we want to make sure that they knew, that we focused the measures on
what's important. A lot of times you'll measure the things that are easy to measure. But it's not
real important in terms of what the community, the council, the management wants to know.
You got to make sure that what you measure is what's important. You want to develop a strong
base in the department for how to do performance measurement. We preached over and over
there's got to be a sensitivity to data collection. If you measure a lot of things, you're going to
be doing nothing but collecting data and not providing the service that is necessary that you
want. So, you've got to make sure that you've got a system that will allow you to collect the
data.
If you do cycle time, in other words,when does something start,when does it stop, and you do it
by tick marks and stopwatch, you can see that if you have a very energetic program with lots of
tick marks and lots of stopwatches (and then averaging), it's going to be horrendous in terms of
getting to the result of terms of your program. So you want to be very careful. You want to
foster continuous improvement. In other words, by measuring, you get a statistic that you can
then say okay, how can we improve on that statistic, whatever it might be? Whether it's a
customer satisfaction or a dollar figure or a number of staff people it takes to do something, you
want to always foster something that will move along and continue to improve. Provide an
impetus to managers that they will improve. And we wanted to make sure people knew the
difference between projects and programs.
We came in and did three days of staff training that went across the city in terms of developing
concepts of performance measurement and then we talked about the difference between projects
and programs. We developed a format for them to collect the data, which is different than the
format that you've got in the book, which is the reporting format but has some major similarities.
We wanted to develop then a program definition with them. So what we did was we trained
them on the concepts and then we came back and worked with them in terms of starting to say
okay, let's define what your programs really are, because there's a tendency to mix people. A
program has to be something that you've got a group of people working on that you can then
measure what that group of people is doing, and come out with a conclusion as to the outcome,
whether it be a satisfaction measure, a quality measure, or a cost measure. So we worked
through with departments program definitions.
Then we went about working with the individual departments to develop measures and we said
three things. Ok,what's important to the policy makers, the mayor and city council,what's
important to the community,what's important to the managers that are running the program.
Lets not measure stuff that's not important. What's your capacity to collect the date and I've
already made a comment about that, that we just keep hammering that home. If you can't collect
the data in a fairly efficient way, then we should go about trying to find another way of
measuring something to get at the program that you think is important. Don't try to collect too
much, too early. Our experience and it's especially true, we've worked with the ICMA
(International City Managers Association) in developing measures on a nationwide basis for now
• 125 cities, and what we've found is if we started and went too far into a program and had too
• many measures going that the agencies out there tended to turn off. Too much work. Too much
work load that they were getting, so we want to make sure that your agency didn't try to do too
much too early which would have the possibility of people here turning off or getting bad data
out of the ones that you are measuring. So we want to be very careful we don't do too much, too
early, and then as we went through thinking about what comparisons we might make in other
agencies using our experience,primarily from the ICMA project with the other cities that we've
been dealing with in terms of developing measures.
All right, now the difference between projects and programs. Projects are what policy makers
and top level managers tend to focus on. You're building a new city hall. It's very important to
you what's going on. What's the progress? Are you on time? Are you on budget? Are you
building it right? Is it going to fall down in the earthquake, whatever those things might be and
so those are the things that people tend to focus on. They're the major"to do" elements. If you
were to look at a work plan of most managers, you would find that most of them are things that
are project oriented. That they've got to complete. They have a beginning time, they have an
ending time. They have a dollar budget, they have a quality expectation, and they should be
measured in that way. But they're not a program that has repetitiveness. So they need to be
separated out and managed separately. Are they meeting the milestones? Are they on schedule?
Are they within the project budget?
Programs on the other hand are the basic services, they're the patrol officers that are out there
day to day, they're the fire fighters that respond to a medical emergency and fires. They're the
people who go out and fill out the potholes and pave the streets and redo the sidewalks and mow
• the lawns in the parks and take care of the greens at the golf course - every day. Day in and day
out they are doing those things and we start looking at them saying okay,what are the things that
we measure about those that are important to the community, the mayor and council, and the
managers. They are, generally speaking, a group of people working together to accomplish some
kind of a goal. They're repetitive actions that provide for a comparison from one year to the
next. They provide ultimately for a comparison from one agency to another in terms of kind of
services to be provided—the length the project exists to improve the efficiency of a city program.
And then the program performance measures ultimately are reflected by the success of the
project. You want a more effective city staff and you don't want to have them in 13 buildings
around town. You build a city hall, you put them together. They should be more efficient in
terms of interactions and of the passing of paperwork and stuff. But the building of the city hall
began. It's a project. It's not something that you're gonna measure next year so you measure it
in a different way.
Reporting—it should assist policy makers in making future program decisions and goal setting.
It should develop a sense of continuous improvement with the manager of a program always
looking and saying okay, based on what I did last year, if I do this, I can measure next year and
see if I've improved on my cost,on my cycle time, whatever it might be. It shouldn't be used to
micro manage departmental functions. The measures that we put into the report that we are
showing you this evening are measures that we felt, when we went through the departments,
were important that the council and the community know about. But the idea isn't that then you
start micro managing because then we would have several managers. The idea is that you've got
. to measure a departmental manager,not necessarily the department head but a manager of that
• program who should be the one that's held accountable for that program and doing the
continuous improvement. They should be ones that are micro managing their own functions.
And a reporting program should communicate work activities.
In the book we have provided a format. I did not put it in the same format on the screen because
it didn't come out looking as good as it should, so I'm just going to go through there. So we've
given you a reporting format which will say okay, first is the purpose which is to state the goal or
the objective of the program that is being measured. Two—then we put in effectiveness, which
is the quality of the service-cycle time, customer satisfaction. Those are the things that in my
experience are the most important things to the community.
I've given an example to people in the past when I've been doing this training: when I was a
manager, we were taking over from the county a building next door to our city hall which was an
old city jail which we were going to tear out, and it was a beautiful old, old building which we
were going to make into city offices. And I got an estimate from the Public Works Director and
I won't tell you the exact dollar amount but he gave me a dollar figure, and he said this is the
dollar figure we think it will take to fix this building. By the time we got to actually opening the
doors, the price had doubled and I'm here like this, tearing my hair,thinking, oh my goodness,
oh my goodness, and he came in and he said, John if you do it right, they won't ask you how
much it cost. Because that's what they expect—it to be done right. And he was right. Now, I
wouldn't say that he should do that every time and have buildings cost double what he thought
they would, but the point being is that's what people tend to look at and say it's the quality of the
service. And then they'll start looking at what it costs. But they want quality first.
• Efficiency is the next thing which says how well did you use the resources. You've got the
quality now, what was the efficiency in terms of how well you used the resources. If you've got
a high rating in police response,what's it costing us to do that response and is there a way we
can cut that cost and keep the quality. That's the idea of efficiency. Workload in there, it really
doesn't measure. It tells you the number of activities. For example,the crime rate per thousand
or number of fires per thousand population or the number of potholes we fixed. It just gives you
a number. It's a widget thing. Or it could be the request from the citizens, received complaints
about the police department—it's just a number. But it really doesn't tell you anything about
quality or efficiency in terms of what your program's about. But there are a number of things
that council members and community are still interested in—how many new houses did we build
this last year? And so you want to know the number of building permits that were taken out,
residential, industrial, commercial, and all those things. So our recommendation is that there is
some key measure or key workload counts that should be put in. But remember, it doesn't tell
you how well your staff did in dealing with those houses. It doesn't tell me whether they did
good inspections or that people thought that they were on time or anything about that.
When you get the measurement, it should be looked at as a what and then if there is a diversion
or a sudden spike in terns of dissatisfaction, or a sudden down in terms of numbers of things that
have been completed, then you say why, and a good manager will have already provided that
because at the bottom of our form, it says comments and you start telling people what happened
with the report so you say our satisfaction level went from this to this over the year's period but
• you know here was the factor that was in there. You have to decide as the policy making body
whether that is sufficient or not. The program is the responsibility of the program manager who
is then responsible to a department head and that's where you start saying there's an
accountability. If things change with the spikes, it's the manager that's responsible to see that
the staff below them are performing the way they're expected to.
The last item that we put on the form is that piece that I talked about, which projects? because a
lot of the things that you're gonna want to know about in that relate to a program and you may
do these by program and you may do them department. That's up to you to decide how that's
done. If you did them by program, it may give you too disjointed a process, but the idea is to put
in those one time activities and give a report to the council and to the community also in terms of
what's happening with those few projects within a department or within a program. So if the
Public Works Department is doing a major street reconstruction or if they're building new
bridges or building a new city hall or whatever it might be that that would be reported on as a
part of the reporting process so that you end up putting the programs and projects together when
you report them out. Because frankly I don't think the community is going to differentiate
between them, so there's got to be something that tells them what's happening with those items,
because they tend to focus also on things that are the projects.
Then on the form, we talk about prior year and current year, and this is just the means of
comparing one year to the next. In your first year in the forms that you've got, there's going to
be a varying amount of information depending on the program, and what I'm trying to say is that
there are some departments that collect a lot of information now that they're going to be able to
report on in a year's time over a year's time. Some people are starting brand new with data
• collection and they're going to find some refinements will be needed so that you won't see in
some cases information that's compared to last year and other cases you're going to see just the
base year information going in because they haven't collected it before. They haven't done
surveys on certain things before. So they're not going to be able to report to you with any
accuracy, and you're only going to see one year of figures. It will not be until the second year
that you start seeing comparisons and in some cases you're going to probably see some of that
change as they do the refinements and say what's more important is that we do this, and then
they're going to come back and say we need to change this measure a little bit this way in order
to get a more accurate picture, or we couldn't really collect the data. We had to do the tick
marks and when we got to 500,000 tick marks, we said you know that's really too much, we had
too many people doing tick marks and not doing the work.
Benchmarking is the process of comparing like services with other agencies for the purposes of
achieving a better product. We try to emphasize that it shouldn't be a comparison to say who's
better than whom because the likelihood is that no other city is doing things just like you are. I
don't care which service it is. I mean you do jails. And lots of people don't do jails and there
may be some things that you don't get perfect comparisons. But the idea of benchmarking is to
find as close a thing as you can and then do a comparison from one year to the next and say
okay, why was Bellevue able to do the following level of costwise, qualitywise, whatever it
might be, and we got this. The idea is that the manager of that program will have a name of
somebody they can call and say what are you doing, we're doing the following. This is the what.
Then you go to the why. And you may find out well,but the council doesn't want to do that.
They want us to do the following kinds of things. So, as a result, you know the comparison tells
you there's a difference, but you're not going to borrow from Bellevue because the
circumstances were such that you didn't want to. You may say that's the best idea that's ever hit
and we should borrow it from Bellevue. So the idea is to use the measurements and get like
measurements across so that when you're using them, you're comparing apples and apples as
much as possible.
I happened to be working in a city in California a couple of years ago when Bellevue was one of
the cities surveyed and they told me, because they knew we were doing performance
measurement for ICMA, that they were real worried about it because of the types of questions
being asked and they were unclear as to how their data was going to be used and what kind of
measurements would come out of it. And low and behold, some of them that came back because
they got copies of the survey back, there were interpretations made and that kind of stuff so you
really want to get something that is good across the board that everybody's doing. ICMA has
worked very hard to get to common definitions. But I'll tell you, some of their services are that
deep because they were being very careful not to get to far into it and get to the point where
people would not provide the data. The areas where you get the best data is Public Works
because of the maintenance management system that public works people have developed.
Twenty years ago I did it in Oakland. Police and Fire. Those are the people that have done the
best measurement over the years. You got the federal people, the FBI, and your state agencies
relating to fire and such that have had people collect data with regard to numbers of fires, type of
structures, all that kind of stuff. Public works people have done a lot of stuff on pavement, on
water, and that kind of stuff, so that you'll find better information there than you will in some of
the other areas in the process that's in the ICMA stuff.
Rico Yingling remarked that one of the things that's important to us on the Council is that when
we create policy or ordinances or anything that is a high level policy type of item, that it be
eventually implemented and pursued and made law or become an action item within the staff
within the city. I didn't see any measures of that. I mean that process of creating policy and then
having it become an actionable behavior by the city or ordinance or law or that type of thing. Is
there a process there? It'd be good to see performance measures in that regard.
The meeting was adjourned.