I almost choked reading this post.  Mpls inspections is a model and some
of their inspectors sit on National boards??  Give me a break!  I would
like to know the names of the ones who supposedly sit on these National
boards.  Please tell me.  What cities have modelled their inspection
programs after the Mpls department??

I would be happy to share the reams of documents that I obtained from
one of the Mpls Inspections supervisors  that I know that shows just how
incompetant and disorganized this department really is - according to
their own internal reviews!

Steve Meldahl
Jordan (work)
----- Original Message -----
From: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Sent: Tuesday, September 23, 2003 1:26 PM
Subject: [Mpls] what housing inspectors do


> A reminder about the housing inspections department (my information is
from a friend who is a long-time inspector):
>
> There are about 160,000 housing units in the city. There are about 30
inspectors. Do the math yourself. The department's budget has been cut
again and again, despite the fact that the inspections fees more than
pay for the cost (in fact, I believe some of the revenue goes to general
fund).
>
> In most cities, the mayor lives in fear of his inspections department,
because landlords and property owners will often offer bribes to
inspectors, and newspapers and TV stations like to run stings on them to
boost sales/ratings. However, the Minneapolis department was examined
minutely by the FBI during the investigations of our former council
members (Herron, Biernat). They found exactly nothing wrong. Zilch.
Nada.
>
> Now I won't say that the deparment is perfect; nor will I say that all
the inspectors are models of efficiency and rectitude. But Minneapolis'
housing inspections program is considered a model, one which is copied
by other cities. Its inpsectors sit on boards of national and
international inspections groups.
>
> If you want an interesting question, ask why the mayor wants to take
about 30 percent of the deparment's budget to give to the fire
department--when the fire deparment will only be doing about seven
percent of the inspections work. This means a huge cut in the number of
inspectors who would be checking units like the one that burned.
>
> --M. G. Stinnett
> Jordan Neighborhood
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