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Eight is Enough: Local newspaper publisher says no to Fargo, sings KJ’s praises in endorsement letter

By Joe • Sep 25th, 2008 | Bookmark and Share

What a fabulous letter from Cecily Hastings of Inside Publications. Inside Publications publishes newspapers such as Inside East Sacramento and Inside Arden [hey when is Inside Natomas coming?]. The basic premise of her support for Kevin Johnson is that eight years of Fargo is enough. Eight years is enough for a president, a governor, and should be for a mayor as well. I could not agree more. Great points all the way around.

Eight is Enough: Why I support Kevin Johnson for Mayor

By Cecily Hastings, insidepublications.com

There’s no doubt that change is in the air. As our nation gets ready to elect a new president, here in Sacramento we have another important choice to make. We have a two-term incumbent mayor challenged by a former NBA basketball star who returned to his hometown to make it a better place.

After much consideration, I join many other civic leaders in supporting Kevin Johnson for mayor. Since I’ve rarely endorsed a candidate for local public office, I’d like to share with you some of my reasons.

Four years ago, Mayor Heather Fargo rolled to re-election without much trouble or competition. Without Johnson’s entry into the race this spring, she might have had that same experience this year.

Thankfully, Johnson joined the race, because eight years in office is enough for our political leaders. Eight is enough for our presidents and our governors and also our mayors, including Rudy Giuliani, the über-successful mayor of New York City. And Mayor Fargo is no different. It seems that the longer any administration is in office, the less transparent and more self-serving it becomes.

One thing my many years of community involvement has taught me is that only a tiny percentage of our citizens actually gets involved in any meaningful way with their city government. I count those who attend City Council or commission meetings, join neighborhood associations or attend town hall or community interest meetings. The rest stay fairly disengaged.

This past year has been a wakeup call for Sacramentans. First, a $58 million budget deficit was announced after years of growing budgets and rising city spending. As a result, city staff is being laid off—including painful cuts in public safety employee levels—and city services are getting axed.

Then we found out that our utilities department is in such disarray that thousands of city-owned water meters valued at $1.3 million are unaccounted for.

Earlier this year, it was announced that violent crime is up and the mayor went from being somewhat surprised and defensive to recently supporting a hastily crafted anti-gang tax measure for the November ballot that couldn’t even gain City Council support.

The latest was the announcement that Mayor Fargo supported raises for the city’s top managers. But after cries of public outrage, she abruptly yanked the item from the council’s agenda.

But it took these types of events—and there are many more—for many of our citizens to wake up and cry foul.

Realistically, the mayor cannot be solely blamed for many of these events. Given our city’s political structure, the mayor can be held responsible only for the items that get on the council meeting agenda, and even then she’s only one vote. But it is also important to consider the unscripted leadership and communication charge that goes above and beyond the mayor’s defined duties.

This is precisely where Kevin Johnson has been a breath of fresh air and energy in this campaign. A new leader—one with a successful background in tackling challenging civic problems in education and redevelopment—has the perfect opportunity to engage the citizens of our city. A spirited campaign involving a respected alternate to the incumbent has brought out the issues we should have been talking about all along. And for the first time in many years, we’re having a discussion of the current mayor’s role defined in our city charter and how it differs from other major cities.

My initial meetings with Johnson were exciting and inspiring as he shared his great sense of possibility. His track record of success is impressive given the great challenges he faced: reinventing a large, failing urban high school and beautifully restoring key parts of the crumbling historic neighborhood of Oak Park. And he is clearly free of the ties to the entrenched political interests that come with a mayor in office for eight years.

On the campaign trail in the past six months, he has come into his own as a public speaker. At a town hall meeting Johnson held in my neighborhood, there were about 120 in attendance. Thankfully, only recognizable were a couple of dozen from other civic meetings and interest groups. And that’s what energetic leadership does: It inspires people to show up to a crowded school auditorium on a hot summer night.

Johnson managed the one-hour session with leadership ease, efficiency and good humor. He did his best answering the more pointed questions challenging him on his positions.

Another town hall meeting in North Sacramento brought out many citizens from our immigrant communities. Johnson took the time to listen to their concerns.

But there was something else that ran through his responses at these events. You could sense his energy and enthusiasm for what lies ahead in our city, and even some impatience that so many civic challenges have remain unsolved for so many years. That is precisely what is so compelling about Kevin Johnson.

Johnson would be the first to point out that no one person can solve all our city’s challenges. But given his background and success—and seemingly endless energy—he definitely is our best hope of engaging many more of our citizens in the process of creating a better Sacramento for the future.

Hastings publishes three monthly community news publications; Inside The City, Inside East Sacramento and Inside Arden. Visit insidepublications.com to read an article on Johnson’s background that appeared in Sactown Magazine’s May/June edition.

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4 Responses »

  1. Hey Joe, why not a big story on the feds raiding St. Hopelessness, I think this along with the sex with minors problem will hurt KJ. Fargo would be an idiot not to exploit the charges. The US Attorney may even seek criminal charges, and you heard the City Attorney saying if he was elected, it may compromise fed. money. You know its bad when his campaign manager blames the individual who made the allegations as some right wing nut, clearly a pathetic attempt to shift blame, always blame the messenger when you know you’re guilty. How disturbing it is KJ had to steal my tax dollars to wash is friggin car, were these the same cars he was driving the young chicks in??? You may not like Fargo, but she clearly follows laws and stays away from young kids.

  2. Well gosh Charlie, this is a real conundrum, aint it?

    On one hand there is KJ, who appears to have acted less than scrupulous in his personal and business affairs at times; but on the other hand, there is Fargo, whose well-documented lassitude and disrespect for our money has resulted in a broken city that can’t even afford its already scant police and fire resources.

    As for the “sex with minors” thing, I don’t recall that ever having been alleged. There were allegations of bad behavior though. Allegations.

    In my opinion, Fargo’s lassitude and indiscretions are far more of a liability to the city than KJ’s St Hope fumbles and allegations of fondling of 16 year old girls. Fargo has been in office 8 years and has nothing to show for it but problems on top of problems. Eight is enough

  3. In a mayoral system like Sacramento, the mayor actually has very little to do with contracting and I can’t imagine any actual, legitimate reason why KJ would somehow harm Sac’s ability to draw federal money. The mayor’s job is to build consensus, handle the politics and vote. The City Manager handles all the finances, contracting etc. So unless there’s a plan underfoot to change the entire city charter, I don’t see any legal reason why that argument stands.

    KJ is a a solid political front man. He understands the system, how to work it, who knows where to place an effective handshake and how to get what he wants. Fargo is still standing in the corner like a gradeschool kid sticking out her tongue, stomping her foot and yelling “Yeah but he’s worser than me!!!”

    Until she stands up and says what her supposed “progress” involves and how she botched the last 8 years of “progress”, I’m not interested.

  4. Sacto Blog.. you speak truth. Your posts rocked. Lovd it

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