I have a couple of points to make on Rybak's recommendation for police
chief, Bill McManus.

Minneapolis has a tendency to think the thing that they don't have is better
than the thing that they have.  Someone once did something that they didn't
like so everything they do must be awful.  Better to choose someone that has
never done anything at all because they can't have done anything bad.

But I have been around government for a long time.  And I can say that when
you bring someone in from outside the region, you have about a 50%/50%
chance of
getting someone good.  (anyone remember Jim Wright?  Tony Bouza? and yes
this happens even after all the public input, media attention, evaluations,
etc)  The downside risk of getting someone not good is huge.  Because of
this, I think that usually it is better to bring in a good local candidate
that you know than someone outside that you really don't know and only go
national when there are no acceptable candidates locally.  The downside risk
is too great.

Also the people that move around the country taking these jobs are a) ladder
climbing b) running
from messes that they made or c) are being pushed out.  Very few of them are
interested in doing the long term, hard work to change a culture.  They
mostly pad their resumes and move on.  This is why I have a hard time buying
it when Rybak argues that this guy is a change agent.  A real change agent
wouldn't leave a job after two years.  And we should expect the same
treatment as his previous employer.

Also these carpetbaggers typically come in and make all sorts of changes
very quickly.  And typically alienate the people who have to carry out the
changes because they haven't spent the time learning about the culture, the
politics, the incentives in the system, etc.  This effectively neuters any
reform efforts.  McManus's current job shows all the fingerprints of this.
(the vote of no confidence after less than two years by the union is a
hallmark)   When you alienate your employees, the "change agents" never
work.  They do make good P.R. though.

And for Rybak, Mr. "Think Outside the Box," this guy could be the poster
child for "the box."    He looks like a stereotypical chief, he sounds like
a stereotypical chief, and the things he talks about are pretty
stereotypical.  It is good P.R. stuff but pretty light on the hard realities
of making change.

And as for the debate about identity politics, I will say that women think
differently, manage differently, and relate differently. These are
scientific facts.  In the movie 28 Days, there is a quote, "The definition
of insanity is repeating the same behavior over and over again expecting
different results."   As a woman, part of a group that is over half of the
population, I would like the City to really think outside of the box and
give a woman a spin, something that would really be different.  Something
that hasn't happened here before.

Last I have to object to the "stunningly unified chorus of community
support"
that the Strib alleged in its reporting.  I went to the "gay" meet and greet
on Saturday (announced on Friday afternoon for folks who may have needed
more than 24 hours notice a week before Christmas).  McManus was apparently
the liaison
officer between the police department and the gay community in DC.  But he
didn't know who PFLAG was, a stunning omission for anyone claims any
connection with or knowledge of the gay community.  And in asking him what
his duties were as liaison, he met four times a year with a group of gay
business owners.  Not exactly representative of the gay community.  The
Strib really dropped the ball on that one.

Carol Becker
Longfellow






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