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Some Perspective

Published: Friday, November 2, 2007 11:13 AM PDT



An anonymous e-mailer checked in with some perspective on my last two posts.

He/she wrote what seems to be clear: The mayor did do many of the things related to declaring a Stage 1 water watch without actually declaring one. The Stage 1 watch asks residents to voluntarily stop doing things like automatically serve customers at restaurants a glass of tap water.

But-- despite what was printed in the recently released 2005 Comprehensive Annual Financial Report -- he made a point of not declaring a Stage 1 water watch. And now the Mayor's Office says he wasn't even advised to -- perhaps because of the other implication of the declaration:

Stage 1 applies during periods when the possibility exists that the City of San Diego Water Department will not be able to meet all of the water demands of its customers.


There has to be a reason the mayor chose not to declare that this was the case, and there has to be a reason his staff is scrambling now to correct the language that said he did.

The John Doe e-mailer went on with a couple of good points:

Even if the Mayor (as Fred Sainz contends) did not declare a Stage 1 water watch as purported in the CAFR, please note that this is not the same type of discrepancy that plagued the City several years ago. The statement in the CAFR is in the introduction section, which provides contextual information and is not part of the audited financial statements. See attached letter from the City's outside auditor. This strikes me as being much more benign than an error or omission in the numbers. I'd hate to see this issue be cast in the same light.


This was what the Mayor's Office contended and it's legitimate.

While I don't think that the discrepancy you point out is very significant (if in fact there is a discrepancy at all), the damning part of your blog is that the Mayor and his policy staff did not know what was written in the CAFR. This could have major fallout.


So, with that, a note to reader Say Scott... who wrote in the comments of the last post:

You say "That's a pretty stark fact to just accidentally make up and then insert in such an important document." Scott, are you expressing the opinion that the mayor or his staff is lying about it? Then just say it. It's unsupportable, and offensive, but if you think it, just say it.


No, I'm not saying the staff is lying about it. What would they be lying about -- that the mayor actually did declare the watch? I don't think so.

But that doesn't mean it's not interesting and there's probably more to it. It's not a typo or a decimal point in the wrong place. It's an account of an interaction and resulting "declaration" that never occurred. For some reason, somebody thought that was the truth of what happened and the mayor, his COO and comptroller all put their signatures on it.

-- SCOTT LEWIS




2 Comments so far on this story...

Part 1: Your John/Jane Doe has done offered some good context on the significance of this misstatement but I thought I'd give you a little more detail. First, as the earlier poster noted, the letter of transmittal is not, strictly speaking, part of the CAFR and it isn't audited. It isn't even required information. That being said, the City cannot use it as a way to distort information in the CAFR itself and a lot of effort goes into making sure it's accurate. Here's what happened with this particular item. As staff in the Mayor's office and the City Attorney went back and forth on some of the information in the letter of transmittal, the City Attorney wanted a more fulsome description of the City's water situation.

Posted by Madison | reply to this comment
November 2, 2007 10:55 am

Part 2: During this, there was talk about adding language about the City Attorney's recommendation that the City declare a stage 2, mandatory, water emergency. Since this didn’t happen, this language was rejected. But the Mayor had called for voluntary measures. After looking at the municipal code language on who is responsible for declaring a water emergency, the drafters, incorrectly as it turns out, thought that this is what had happened. It should also be noted that the County Water Authority, at a July 18 meeting before the City Council, stated that the City, along with the Metropolitan Water District, had called for voluntary conservation measures.

Posted by Madison | reply to this comment
November 2, 2007 11:22 am


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Scott Lewis on Politics

The Scott Lewis on Politics blog, abbreviated cleverly as SLOP, is a collection of observations, insights and the occasional scoop on public affairs in San Diego. Please feel free to e-mail Scott at scott.lewis@voiceofsandiego.org.


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