Comment Up
Lake Worth politics. There is NO customer service when it comes to Lake Worth Utilties. In fact, there has been no customer service for years. I have never encountered a bunch of people who had no answers for anything.
The very first thing on the agenda last night was about out-sourcing our customer service. All the employees were in the room encouraged by their Union reps who were also there. Some citizens were also there to jump on the "our employees are valuable" mantra and we should treat them better, boo hoo hoo, even going so far as to say that "Everytime I have a problem, I am met with friendly and cordial employees." Well thank God for something here; at least they are pleasant. In the past, the horror stories have been unbelievable. When I have had any question, I either have to wait on the phone to have no one pick up or someone finally answers who does not know how to answer the question. You are literally forced to drive over there to get a real live person who then doesn't know the answer anyway.
How long do you give employees chances to learn their jobs? How long would the Mayor and Amoroso give an employee to learn the job at their business? One year? Three years? A Decade? Most people can learn a job within a few weeks. After years, they can become experts. Not so at the Lake Worth Utility Customer Service. We are forced to retain inefficiency.
Through the years, customer service has been a joke of the first order. Yes, they know how to take your money to pay your bill at the Annex. That's a plus. But if you have a problem such as an extraordinarily high electric bill, the only advice they ever give you is, "You probably need a new hot water heater." They have literally talked down to people and have been less than helpful. My meter reader is outstanding but she is not customer service.
We had a great opportunity last night to get rid of one of our biggest problems, the Union, at a department that has been dysfunctional for at least ten years but politics entered into the decision.
Aside from adopting standard operating procedures that employees would abide, Data Management would reduce our uncollectables from 4% to 1%. The company said that it would hire all 19 employees. This was said in written back-up as well as at a public meeting--the same weight for an oral commitment as a written one. No one was going to lose their jobs. What they would have lost was future Union retirement pensions paid for by you and me that frankly, we can no longer afford particularly for a department with zillions of complaints. The Unions did not want that to happen. No way, Jose.
The Unions run this city, not to mention escalating benefits for some customer service people who do not know their jobs and haven't learned their jobs. Private enterprise does a much better job than government when it comes to hiring efficient employees and working with the Unions. I would think that Republican Maxwell would have known that.
The visionary commission implied that it was the City's fault for not giving the employees enough job training...perhaps again they said, it was irate customers because of the City's fault in the high electric bills. The best one was "It is management's fault." Vice Mayor Maxwell said that he has trained "thousands of people" and it is managements fault. I can't imagine hiring someone with NO experience. Triolo said "it starts from the top." The Visionaries said that Rebecca Mattey was only going to be here a few more months as an excuse to not take her advice as to what is best and what will improve that department and save us money. The commission wants to continue to give the employees a chance to improve. How long has this been going on?
In this case, it is the Union that protects its non-productive employee and the City can't do a damn thing about it. No amount of training is going to help an inefficient person. To fire a union employee is near to impossible. You have to go through untold hoops just to even get to the discussion stage. Employees know they are protected. Some of these people never should have been hired but once they are, the City is almost stuck with them for life.
The truth of the matter is we cannot staff, supervise or manage this department with any degree of efficiency. It has been a constant challenge with various departmental managers who were hired but soon learned that the department was a disaster. It was recommended by the top paid executives in our city, Acting City Manager Steve Carr (the only executive for whom Scott Maxwell has any confidence) and Rebecca Mattey, Utilities Director, to approve a two year contract with Data Management that would get this department running well, these late accounts of over $1.5 million collected, and billing issues would cease. Without a pro-active decision by this Commission that was on the table last night as a solution to correcting the on-going problems, our customer service department will be exactly the same.
The outcome of the vote last night failed on a a 2/3 (with Maxwell, Triolo and Amoroso dissenting) to approve Data Management because the new commission was too afraid to take on the Unions and do what is best for the residents of Lake Worth. Politics should be banned from interfering in efficiency. This is another example of kicking the can down the road.
You were just about the only one who spoke in favor of outsourcing our Customer Service Department. Last night I heard from the union representative that only three employee complaints had been filed in the last two years (i think) and one of them was handled through a minor agreement.
ReplyDeleteWe all heard that virtually NO training was offered or required of employees and since Maxwell requested documentation for that and did not receive it from Mattey, it appears to be so.
Answer this... if it's so important for the new company to hire our existing employees, and it is our employees that are the problem, how will we have benefited? They would still be represented by the Union.
Would the new company train them better? Would the new company supervise them better? Would the new company bring in someone who knows what they are doing?
If so, then why can't someone who we pay $135,000.00 per year plus benefits do it?
At some point, you have to look at the top.
c
Actually, the vote was 2/3 with Triolo, Amoroso and Maxwell dissenting. The motion was to approve the contract.
ReplyDeleteThe answer, anonymous at 9:26, is the UNIONS. Personally, I would like to see Data Management take the job and hire their own people. It was the trio that was so concerned about retaining inefficiency that has never improved for years. I believe, however, that the new company would train them better and would supervise them better. If they did not cut the mustard, they would be cut...no fooling around in something as serious as this department. That is how we would have benefited.
ReplyDelete"I believe, however, that the new company would train them better and would supervise them better." Isn't this what I just said?
ReplyDeleteIf the current leader of the utilities couldn't find someone who could train them better or supervise them better in THREE YEARS, is the problem the employees? And we pay this lady $135K?
If the new company hires the existing employees, would they not be represented by their union?
The level of non-cooperation, attitude and incompetence from Mattey on display Tuesday night was staggering.
c
Unfortunately, Rebecca Mattey was up against politics. That is ALL is was. This subject of outsourcing Customer Non-Service has come up on several occasions. It was recommended by everyone involved. The new commission wanted to placate to the Unions at the expense of the residents. That IS the bottom line here. If these new commissioners had ever been to city commission meetings prior to their running for office, they would have known about the on-going nightmares at Customer Service and the fact that it could not be improved. All Mattey was doing was making a suggestion to correct the problem. Is that incompetent?
ReplyDeleteWho makes $135 k?
Forgot to answer the part about would these people still be represented by their union? I would say the answer is "no." They would no longer be public employees.
ReplyDeleteDidn't Waterman gush over the unions and accept campaign contributions from the unions? Didn't you say you would not support anyone who accepted money from the unions? Didn't you say you voted for Waterman?
ReplyDeleteMattey is making more than $135k with the sweet deal she cut with the City. Las night every problem had been there for many, many years and wasn't her responsibility. Hasn't she been employed by the City of Lake Worth as the Utilities Director for the past three years? That makes everything her responsibility.
ReplyDeleteStuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuu--
ReplyDeleteNo, Waterman did NOT gush all over the Unions.
This is NOT about me, Stu.
What I said was, NO one was getting my endorsement and I was not contributing to anyone's campaign in the general election.
Stop trying to bait me Stu. I do not like the Unions and have made no bones about that.
At the moment, she is the HIGHEST paid employee in Lake Worth and that does not include the money she will be making to stick around for 3 months longer. She was the 2nd highest paid besides Stanton.
ReplyDeleteShe is taking responsibility now that it is under her department. That is why she wants to have a private company do the customer service for all the reasons stated. Thanks.
To the rude person who just tried to post here regarding anonymous' question at 2:33, I would say ask your commissioner. Logically if an employee is leaving the public sector and working for the private sector, he would not be represented by a Public Employee Union. But you never know about Unions. They have their tentacles everywhere. :)
ReplyDeleteCustomer service has always sucked. they are now going to try and make it better when they've been trying for years? Right.
ReplyDelete