Well, we've come to the end of another board year here at Morningside Gardens. This year the terms of four of us board members were up. All four of us were eligible to run again but for varying reasons each of us chose not to run, so there were four vacancies. Seven candidates ran for those four positions; they ran as two slates -- one slate of three people and one slate of four people. The slates were each backed by one of the two parties that have dominated internal politics here at Morningside for the past few years.
In the past, I have agonized over how to refer to the two parties, since they don't have names and aren't even really parties. For the moment I'm going to use color names that don't carry too much baggage (at least for me) -- Purple for the supporters of the slate of four and Orange for the supporters of the slate of three.
While the parties embody divisions that have been with us during the more than thirty years that I have been actively involved in the governance of Morningside Gardens, their recent history goes back to the debates over the resale price that occupied us in the first half of the past decade and culminated in a change in the price structure in 2006. The Purples have at their core many persons who supported the increase in price while the Oranges have at their core many persons who opposed the increase in price.
Some vocal members of both the Orange and the Purple parties have made public statements which I deplore, and it is easy to caricature the stances of both parties. Despite slogans and hyperbole, though, both parties are concerned about both the future and the present well-being of Morningside Gardens and of its cooperators. However, they have divergent views of the best way to achieve that well-being. There is also, on each side, a deep mistrust of certain people on the other side which often spills over into a near total rejection of anything put forward by any of the people on the other side.
The Orange slate won the election handily, but one member of the Purple slate out polled all three of them. When we take into account that four of the continuing members of the board are supported by the Orange party and three are supported by the Purple party, it appears on the face of it that the board is starting out divided seven to four or possibly six or seven to three with one or two swing persons. This is essentially the position we were in two years ago and we didn't come out at all well. Last year we had a board which started out divided five to five with one swing vore. Again we didn't come out well.
The reason we came out badly each year is mistrust. Two years ago it was mistrust of the manager by the newly elected officers and mistrust of the officers by the minority. Last year it was mistrust of the preceding year's officers by the newly elected officers. I am not proud of my own role in the past year -- if I had been a little more thoughtful, I might have been able to steer us away from what became an expensive debacle -- expensive in dollars but more importantly expensive in increased ill-feeling and party spirit.
With four new members, the board has an opportunity to try to pull together. Time will tell.
Saturday, May 07, 2011
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3 comments:
What you time and time fail to account for is the outright lying that goes on by the Orange side. All three of them as well as current members of the board who supported them put their names on a flyer completely misrepresenting the loan. Not in a small way but by 16 million dollars. They also used scare tactics to suggest that the balloon payment would be paid by an increase in maintenance. While you and other constantly try to suggest that both side are equal in their care for the Gardens I disagree. People who care tell the truth. They look at the facts. As for the expensive debacle it was an attempt by hundreds of cooperators to say NO MORE LYING. NO MORE SECRET MEETINGS. STOP TRYING TO GET RID OF THE BEST GENERAL MANAGER WE EVER HAD. TELL THE TRUTH. It was due process and our bylaws have the recall process in there for a purpose.
You and others would rather shake your heads and say, they are good people who didn't know what they were doing. That is utter nonsense. And to prove my point they subsequently sent out the March 8th flier with deliberate lies on the loan on it. They deliberately inflamed the situation and stirred up the community. Explain that. Tell us how good people do that.
Jan Harrison duBoulay
Personally, while I have nothing against Mr. McMahon personally, I am tired of this attitude that the man is beyond criticism,and some sort of god who walks among men. He is (until August) our employee. If he cannot get along with the board that we elected, then he must go elsewhere.
And I fail to see much evidence of what an amazing job the guy. Life at the Gardens has NOT gotten better and our management has NOT been more stable during his tenure.
And frankly, Local Law 11 is a screw up on a GRAND scale. At the rate it is proceeding, scaffolding will be up for another 20 years. The timetable was GROSSLY underestimated. The cost was GROSSLY underestimated. And now there is a work stoppage because of safety violations? That's unacceptable. And who is responsible for all of these errors if not the General Manager?
And if people want there to be less animosity, they can start by no longer trying to forceably remove ELECTED BOARD MEMBERS for political reasons.
Thank you, Jonathan. I'm away from the city, so I don't know what the current scuttlebutt is, but as far as I know, there was no safety violation -- there was an unsubstantiated report of something falling, and if it had been true, it would have been the fault of the contractor, not the General Manager. As a result of the report, the city held up the renewal of the permit and required us to hire a third party site safety manager (I'm not sure of the title.)
Also, is anyone currently trying to remove elected board members. I sure hope not..
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