Features
A more-efficient approach to governing
our cities
BALTIMORE — Is there a way
to shatter the secrecy and inefficiencies that so easily plague
American government, from city hall to the White House?
Martin O'Malley, youthful mayor
of this troubled old city, thinks so. It's his "CitiStat"
program, an intensely public way to track each city department's
performance — from health to housing, police to parks.
The story starts four years ago
when the freshly elected O'Malley rode through troubled Baltimore
neighborhoods with Jack Maple, who had been architect of New York
City's groundbreaking CompStat program. CompStat tracks hot spots
of such scourges as burglaries, assaults and murders, deploying
officers to nip crime in the bud. Maple sold O'Malley on the idea
that the same computer and map-based fact-gathering — including
"hot seat" grilling sessions for police commanders —
could be expanded to all local government operations.
O'Malley, about to assume command
of Baltimore's increasingly sluggish bureaucracy, decided to take
the plunge. Starting with the Bureau of Solid Waste, he gradually
expanded his new "CitiStat" reporting system to 16 departments,
ranging from finance to homeless issues.
Every two weeks, each department
director, flanked by his or her deputies, stands at a podium in
a specially designated City Hall briefing room. The interrogators
include O'Malley, Deputy Mayor Michael Enright, CitiStat director
Matthew Gallagher and other top aides. The questions range far and
wide, typically touching on performance indicators, budgets, unexcused
absenteeism and responses to citizen complaints.
And the probing — judging
by a session on public works I witnessed two weeks ago — is
excruciatingly specific and penetrating. The CitiStat team had discovered,
for example, that one agency, which has Baltimore's last municipal
blacksmith on staff, was charging another city department $200 each
for custom-made hammer/pliers to open meter covers. Didn't the price
recall the Pentagon's $600 toilets? How about outsourcing?
CitiStat has produced $100 million
in cost savings and revenue enhancements since 2000, O'Malley's
office contends. The city weathered the recession without being
crippled fiscally. One big reason: sharp overtime and absenteeism
reductions triggered by CitiStat scrutiny.
Plus, performance is up. The backlog
of cleanup projects is down. Ninety percent of potholes get fixed
within 48 hours. The city has planted more trees. Drug-treatment
services are up. Lead-paint poisoning — a chronic and tragic
problem for children in a poor city with old housing — is
being attacked with 478 court complaints filed, compared with just
one case in the '90s. Citywide, employment is up 10,000. Violent
crime is down 29 percent.
Result: Baltimore is better positioned
to attract and hold businesses and middle-class residents.
A constant stream of visiting city
observers comes to watch CitiStat operations. In whole or part,
the system is being copied in Syracuse, Pittsburgh, Detroit, Miami
and Providence.
"The revolutionary feature
of this open and transparent system of government," O'Malley
argues, "is that it moves us from spoils-based patronage politics
to results-based performance politics. A computerized map doesn't
know if a neighborhood is black or white, rich or poor, Democrat
or Republican. We send the resources where the problems are —
or in economic development, where the opportunities are."
But success comes only, he notes,
with constant and intense executive pressure, plus relentless follow-up
with departments.
What O'Malley's innovation represents,
notes Charles Euchner of Harvard's Kennedy School of Government,
is an emphasis on delivering basic services efficiently —
a more modest goal, but maybe more effective than mayors of the
'60s trying to redistribute wealth, or more recent mayors' preoccupation
with big job-generating projects.
Euchner also notes that Baltimore's
system of real-time, comprehensive data, transparent to everyone
from the mayor to front-line workers, wasn't available until computer
and mapping technologies were perfected in recent years. CitiStat's
new data-driven climate drove some old-line Baltimore department
heads out of government. Yet, for the most part, it's increasing
city workers' pride in their jobs. And O'Malley boasts it's attracting
graduates of top government-management schools who suddenly see
exciting opportunities in municipal government.
CitiStat is most likely to be introduced
by newly elected mayors who won't be embarrassed by revelations
of some departments' dismal past performance. And yet, the Baltimore
experience, notes Lenneal Henderson of the University of Baltimore,
shows immense potential.
CitiStat's maps, graphs and analyses,
easily accessed at www.ci.baltimore.md.us/news/citistat/, open up
the secrets of city operations to City Council members, concerned
state and federal officials, indeed all citizens. CitiStat represents
nothing less, Henderson argues, than "a critical management
and civic communication tool" for our times.
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