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              Lincoln, IL  62656 
                    
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			 To the editor:The mayor takes a lot of shots. I knew it came with 
			the job and let most things bounce off my back.  
			 
			I also took the advice of a wise politician who told me when I 
			assumed office: “People who call you want solutions; people who 
			write Letters to the Editor want attention.”  
			 
			But when a former mayor who should know better distorts the facts 
			and fabricates information about what’s going on at City Hall in 
			order to influence an aldermanic election, I am forced to respond.
			 
			 
			Let me clearly state a few facts about City Hall in 2015.  
			 
			One, financial integrity has been restored to City 
			government. I probably don’t have to remind people about the 
			financial scandal that rocked City Hall prior to my assuming office. 
			A lack of financial controls and oversight led to the loss of 
			hundreds of thousands of taxpayer dollars and a felony conviction. 
			When I took office we hired a new, well-respected auditing firm and 
			implemented their recommendations. Six years of clean and strong 
			audits have resulted, as have six years of balanced budgets. All 
			City expenditures are planned for and budgeted.  
			
			
			  
			Two, the new committee structure affords more participation 
			by the aldermen, not less. Under the old committee structure we had 
			a committee and a chairmanship for each alderman. That often 
			resulted in eight little fiefdoms going in eight different 
			directions. Other members with an interest in a topic outside of 
			their committee often were left out of discussions. The new 
			Committee of the Whole structure allows every alderman to be 
			involved in every topic. Aldermen can speak up and address any topic 
			of concern - to them or to their constituents. Nothing was 
			“circumvented.” The change was discussed openly and adopted 
			unanimously by all the aldermen. The old system was great for 
			fiefdoms and fabulous thing for those who wanted their own pocket of 
			control. The new system is better for the city and its citizens.  
			 
			Three, Lincoln’s City government is more transparent than 
			ever. We follow the Open Meetings Act. Period. To the letter of the 
			law. We don’t hold clandestine meetings outside public view. We 
			discuss every topic in open session at our Committee of the Whole 
			meetings and voting sessions. We purposefully rebuilt our website (www.lincolnil.gov)to 
			post more documents than are required by law. We now post, for 
			everyone to see, the following: Monthly budget reports (how much is 
			spent in each and every line of the budget every month), City 
			employee salaries, annual audits, planning reports (such as the 
			five-year infrastructure improvement plan), contracts and agreements 
			(such as the employment contract with the City Administrator and the 
			funding agreement with the Logan County Alliance), and Council 
			voting packets. You read that right – people now have access to the 
			identical documents aldermen receive days before any Council vote. 
			 
			Four, agreement among aldermen shows leadership and support 
			for the new direction taken by City government, not the ignoring of 
			constituent needs. Heated arguments and angry dissension on the 
			floor of the Council aren’t respectful to the citizens of Lincoln; 
			they indicate a lack of leadership and a lack of professionalism. I 
			can assure you the current aldermen and I don’t always agree. They 
			are not shy about telling me. Look at who sits on the Council now. 
			Does anybody think people like Marty Neitzel or Michelle Bauer are 
			shy about bringing up matters important to their wards? When 
			differences do arise, my style is one of listening and trying to 
			resolve those differences; not waiting and letting people duke it 
			out in debate. Nobody forces the aldermen to vote any particular 
			way. They are all strong-willed individuals who take seriously their 
			responsibility to represent the best interests of their 
			constituents.  
			
            [to top of second column in this letter]  | 
            
             
            
			  
            Five, City government is more professionally-run than ever. 
			The City of Lincoln is a $13 million annual enterprise. If we were 
			to succeed, it had to be run more like a business and in a more 
			professional manner than it was when I arrived. Here are just a few 
			of the things not in place in 2009 but are now: weekly department 
			head meetings; annual evaluations of department heads; short-term 
			and long-term goals for each department; budgets based on those 
			goals not on political whims; finance policies with strong oversight 
			and controls; work comp costs brought under control through a 
			multi-department safety committee; a new website that shares more 
			information; and a City Administrator.  
			 
			Hiring an administrator was a big change for Lincoln, but it was 
			needed. Remember that $13 million enterprise that is the City? 
			That’s roughly the same size as Lincoln College. Would anyone expect 
			the college to run without a president? But what about the mayor, 
			you ask? Isn’t that what he’s supposed to do?  
			 
			The City of Lincoln has operated for decades under the policy that 
			the mayor is a part-time position. That was done primarily to keep 
			power in check and also make sure that operationally the City could 
			easily transition from administration to administration. The running 
			of a city has become so specialized and intricate that most cities 
			across Illinois have had full-time and professionally managers and 
			administrations running their cities for decades.  
			 
			When I took office I had an MBA and years of governmental 
			experience. I can tell you, though, that even I didn’t have the 
			experience to run Lincoln on a full-time basis. Those who run cities 
			full-time in the 21st century need experience in public budgeting, 
			fund accounting, labor relations, contract negotiations, government 
			procurement, revenue forecasting, grant writing, HR and insurance 
			compliance, and the list goes on and on. 
			 
              
              
			 
			 
			The City of Lincoln requires, and its citizens should demand 
			professional, full-time administrative leadership at the helm every 
			day. Clay Johnson, our current administrator, is the consummate 
			professional. He provides all the experience mentioned above as well 
			as well-researched advice, better day-to-day coordination of all 
			activities, and greater operating efficiencies than were ever before 
			possible.  
			 
			The City of Lincoln is in a different place than it was in 2009. 
			That’s a good thing for all of us. It’s a much better place, a much 
			stronger place, and a much more prepared place to meet the 
			challenges and the opportunities ahead.  
			 
			Thank you,  
			Keith Snyder 
			Mayor 
            Letter written by Mayor Davis: 
			Letter of support for Wanda Lee 
			Rohlfs Ward 3 alderman candidate [Posted 
			
			February 21, 
			2015]
             
            
            
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