An very interesting autopsy of institutional dysfunction related to government and non-profits. I recommend reading the whole thing.
Minus the alleged harassment, city government is filled with Yomi Agunbiades — and they’re hardly ever disciplined, let alone fired. When asked, former Board of Supervisors President Aaron Peskin couldn’t remember the last time a higher-up in city government was removed for incompetence. “There must have been somebody,” he said at last, vainly searching for a name.
Accordingly, millions of taxpayer dollars are wasted on good ideas that fail for stupid reasons, and stupid ideas that fail for good reasons, and hardly anyone is taken to task.
The intrusion of politics into government pushes the city to enter long-term labor contracts it obviously can’t afford, and no one is held accountable. A belief that good intentions matter more than results leads to inordinate amounts of government responsibility being shunted to nonprofits whose only documented achievement is to lobby the city for money. Meanwhile, piles of reports on how to remedy these problems go unread. There’s no outrage, and nobody is disciplined, so things don’t get fixed.
In 2007, the Department of Children, Youth, and Families (DCYF) held a seminar for the nonprofits vying for a piece of $78 million in funding. Grant seekers were told that in the next funding cycle, they would be required — for the first time — to provide quantifiable proof their programs were accomplishing something.
The room exploded with outrage. This wasn’t fair. “What if we can bring in a family we’ve helped?” one nonprofit asked. Another offered: “We can tell you stories about the good work we do!” Not every organization is capable of demonstrating results, a nonprofit CEO complained. He suggested the city’s funding process should actually penalize nonprofits able to measure results, so as to put everyone on an even footing. Heads nodded: This was a popular idea.
Reading this I had to bite my hand in frustration.
There are two lessons here. First, many San Francisco nonprofits believe they’re entitled to money without having to prove that their programs work. Second, until 2007, the city agreed. Actually, most of the city still agrees. DCYF is the only city department that even attempts to track results. It’s the model other departments are told to aspire to.
But Maria Su, DCYF’s director, admitted that accountability is something her department still struggles with. It can track “output” — what a nonprofit does, how often, and with how many people — but it can’t track “outcomes.” It can’t demonstrate that these outputs — the very things it pays nonprofits to do — are actually helping anyone.
“Believe me, there is still hostility to the idea that outcomes should be tracked,” Su says. “I think we absolutely need to be able to provide that level of information. But it’s still a work in progress.” In the meantime, the city is spending about $500 million a year on programs that might or might not work.
What the efficient charity movement has done so far looks much more impressive in light of this.
San Francisco historian Charles Fracchia recalls Mayor George Christopher’s ploy after his plan to lure the New York Giants to San Francisco hit a snag in the late 1950s. It all hinged on building Candlestick Park, and doing that hinged on buying land in Hunters Point from real estate magnate Charlie Harney for $65,000 an acre. The trouble was, the city had sold that same land to Harney only five years previously for a fraction of the price.
“There was opposition to this from high-minded people in San Francisco,” Fracchia says. “So Christopher got his opponents as well as his proponents together, and had 10 cases of scotch delivered up to this meeting at the Pacific Union Club. The scotch was drunk, and everyone came to the conclusion — yes, keep Candlestick Park.”
When it comes to mismanaging a city, San Francisco has pulled a 180 — in half a century, we’ve gone from “city fathers” (if you liked them) or “oligarchs” (if you didn’t) operating with limited input from the people to a hyperdemocracy. Overpaying for a Candlesticklike bad land deal today wouldn’t be settled during a drunken soirée, but via years of high-decibel public meetings, developers being made to bleed funds to nonprofits of city supervisors’ choosing, and any number of bond measures or other trips to the ballot box — all of which, when put together, could conceivably cost as much as the bad land deal itself. Maybe more.
For all its scotch-soaked flaws, the city of yore did not suffer from these problems. While archaic and stridently antidemocratic by today’s standards, the system of government cobbled together by a citizens’ commission in 1931 largely did what our forebears wanted it to do — mind the store and eliminate rampant corruption.
From 1932 until 1996, much of city government was handled by a powerful chief administrative officer (CAO), appointed to a 10-year term and tasked with overseeing the city’s largest departments. The job was to take politics out of city management. (Today’s San Francisco is so intensely saturated with politics down to the minutiae that the supervisors’ recent appointment of a transit expert to a transit board — and not a union plumber — was seen as a deeply political move and an affront to organized labor.) The CAO was charged with making the city’s largest decisions in an apolitical manner; the major portion of the job was keeping the books on the most vital departments and making sure they were running smoothly. In a manner of speaking, the CAO was a living, breathing accountability measure. The city certainly made its share of lousy calls, but the sloth, waste, and dysfunction emblematic of today’s city government would have been shocking.
Over time, however, the CAO’s purview was replaced by that hyperdemocracy. The reasonable notion that the people of San Francisco should have input into how things are run has turned into the democratic equivalent of death by a thousand cuts; as everybody gets a voice, democracy votes accountability down. When everyone’s in charge, no one is. “In the old days, they ran roughshod over opposing views,” Fracchia says. “Today, all ya got is opposing views. Pick your poison.”
Wait maybe he has been reading Moldbug?
San Franciscans’ appetite for voting is voracious; ours may be the only city that has had to ponder what to name ballot propositions after all the letters of the alphabet have been used up. “It is extraordinary, the number of things we ask our voters to vote on,” Harrington confirms. “And somebody must like it, because we keep doing it.”
Voters have demonstrated a jarring mixture of selflessness and selfishness. We greenlight billions of dollars in bonds, even when the city’s inability to deliver projects on time or within budget has been rendered painfully clear. Yet we also repeatedly enshrine the wishes of single-issue activists and labor unions into law, and that carries ominous long-term consequences. There’s a reason in times like the present that organizations such as the Department of Public Health are always targeted for deep cuts, while the notion of downsizing librarians, cops, or firefighters is inconceivable. The latter have gone to the voters to enshrine their standing in the city charter. No one has done so for the DPH — yet.
Special interests “go to the voters and say, ‘Do you like libraries? Do you like children?’ Well, of course they do,” Harrington says. And if voters don’t care to think through the fiscal ramifications — well, neither do their elected representatives. “The board likes children, too — so does the mayor. Next year in the budget they’ll say, ‘Oh, shit! Children get $30 million more — what doesn’t?’” If the city ran its finances this way 30 years ago, the former controller notes, the money to respond to the AIDS crisis would have been locked up and unavailable. If such a need arises in the future — well, what then? Today’s city can’t even pay for the things it wants to pay for.
The Worst-Run Big City in the U.S.
An very interesting autopsy of institutional dysfunction related to government and non-profits. I recommend reading the whole thing.
You don’t say?
Reading this I had to bite my hand in frustration.
What the efficient charity movement has done so far looks much more impressive in light of this.
Wait maybe he has been reading Moldbug?