Monday, December 3, 2018

MAYOR TONY MARTINEZ: THE PEASANTS ARE REVOLTING, YUCK

Image result for possible mpo merger hinges
A) Discussion regarding the Metropolitan Planning Organization Policy Committee (MPO) membership.
B) Discussion regarding the (abolishment) of the Audit & Oversight Committee.

By Juan Montoya

No one knows who fills the role of Fletcher Christian, the chief mate on Mutiny on the Bounty, but if there is one in the City of Brownsville Commission, one can imagine hearing Mayor Tony Martinez sharply redressing him for the state of affairs on the Good Ship Browntown.

"Mr. Christian, flog those scoundrels!"

In short, Martinez is facing the most direct challenge of his control of the commission with the inclusion of the three items listed above for a workshop scheduled this Tuesday at 5:30 p.m. in the city manager's conference room before the 6 p.m. commission meeting.

But even of there is no action taken after that discussion, the same three items are scheduled for votes in the regular meeting, including removing Da Mayor as chair of the Metropolitan Planning Organization and commissioner Ben Neece as a member and appointing their replacements (Item 18).

The other action item related to that action is to appoint a new chairperson to the MPO to replace Martinez. (Item 19)

Item 20 deals with the proposal to abolish the Audit and Oversight Committee and Item 21 deals with consideration and action to appoint three members to the Greater Brownsville Incentives Corporation.

All items were placed on the agenda by commissioners Commissioners Joel Munguia and Ricardo Longoria, Jr.

If the action items can get a four-vote majority, then Martinez and his minority on the commission (Hizzoner, Neece and Rose Gowen) will have little to say about the actions of the majority composed of Mungia, Longoria and commissioners Cesar De Leon and Jessica Tetreau.

Image result for mpo, brownsville, harlingen, san benito, rrunrrunMartinez has long held out against merging the Brownsville, Harlingen, San Benito with that of Hidalgo County claiming it would put Brownsville at the mercy of the larger county upriver. Even though estimates provided by Texas Dept. of Transportation District Engineer Pete Alvarez showing that the city would receive at the very least an additional $2 million if the merger occurred, MArtinez has been adamant about losing local control.

"It is the policy of this board not to pursue the merger," he wrote Alvarez in October 2017. "We continue to discuss this ad nauseum...It will obliterate the local control fro Brownsville. We are being asked to give up the autonomy we have to control the destiny of our community."

But Alvarez countered that under a governance scheme that  in the bylaws being formulated by TxDoT, is includes the concept of a supermajority where the bigger cities in the three existing MPOs would get weighed votes, with Brownsville possibly getting 6 votes and a small community like Los Indios one.

The model envisions the merged MPOs having a board of 42 members, with Hidalgo accounting for 66 percent of the vote. However, in order for any project to be approved, the item would have to get 75 percent of the vote (supermajority), giving Cameron County leverage to decide the outcome of any agenda item with 9 or 10 percent of the vote.

"If 9 or 10 percent of Cameron County votes against any item, it will be quashed," Alvarez told Wood.

Alvarez said that so far, all nine Texas State Representatives in both counties have signed a resolution in favor of the merger as has a unanimous Cameron County Commissioners Court. Cameron County elected state officials including then-State Rep. Rene Oliveira, Rep. Eddie Lucio III, and Sen. Eddie Lucio Jr. have also voiced their support for the merger idea as long as a model making a supermajority included in the bylaws.

Do the MPO rules require the mayor of the city to be its chair? And can a majority on the commission bypass that requirement through a vote? The answers are up in the air and should be decided this Tuesday at the city commission meeting.

The other item that directly challenges Martinez and Neece is the abolition of the Commission Audit
and Oversight Committee. When it was formed, commission members cited the inaction on the part of city administration to investigate and audit city departments, notably the Brownsville Fire Department under then-Chief Carlos Elizondo. In the abeyance of the administration, they formed and passed the committee and Martinez appointed its members.

Now, apparently, the majority feel that with the hiring of a professional city manager in Noe Bernal, the audit and oversight should be left in his hands and the commissioners should refrain from intruding into his purview. Left in the air is the committee's other reports, including one on former city manager Charlie Cabler. Will it be now up to Bernal, his successor, to determine whether to make that public?

Any decision he makes will be politically tainted, since Cabler has announced his intentions to run for Martinez's position as mayor. Martinez has not formally declared he will be a candidate for reelection and neither has local attorney/businessman and Texas Southmost College trustee Trey Mendez.

There is, indeed, mutiny afoot,

"Mr. Christian!"

19 comments:

Anonymous said...

I can understand the MPO issue, but to terminate the audit committee because of a report that is detrimental to Cabler is going to reflect extremely poorly on this commission.

Anonymous said...

Cabler holds all the ace cards and the black book on the the whole of the commissioners, that will convict the whole lot of them in one full full swoop. He did not go to the Wednesday night meetings for nothing. He is untouchable yes untouchable

Anonymous said...

An audit should be written by an auditor; a CPA or a certified internal auditor. An audit should comport to established professional standards. The City of Brownsville "audit committee" audits did neither. They were authored by Bendover Neece and blindly signed by the members of the audit committee...not an auditor. They complied to no professional standards. Then they were accepted by the City as final reports. Real smart!.....Can you say slander lawsuit potential ? Neece used the audit committee as his own personal bully pulpit. Tony Martinez, too smart to put his own name on the audit reports, cheered from the sidelines. This has nothing to do with Cabler. Who wrote the report which is supposedly critical of Cabler...Neece? You can wipe your butt with the report. Worthless piece of paper and political hit job. The City will hopefully get a much needed enema at tuesdays meeting. Tony and Bendover will be flushed out... Who is bringing the popcorn?

Anonymous said...

Que es Cabler de Atkinson?

Anonymous said...

May the Good Lord help us if Charlie becomes mayor! The city would be chaos with him, his cronies (like Atkinson) and Carlos Garcia as a commissioner. Good Lord, talk about going backwards!

Anonymous said...

By doing an audit on Cabler is a jail term for the commissioners for fraud and taking money by false pretense, and false claims for mileage and expenses. Call in the Texas Rangers fraud squad,and bag them all.

Anonymous said...

Charlie Cabler for Mayor.

Anonymous said...

Hope Cabler wins the election for Mayor, he will do a far better job for the citizens of Brownsville than the current Mayor. Charlie Cabler will know exactly what to do to get the city on the right track,which has been way off track for many years. Time for a real chance, we are with Cabler 150%.

Anonymous said...

Charlie Cabler for Mayor, NO !

Anonymous said...

The "peasants" are not revolting, but some members of the City Commission are beginning to feel the heat because of Tony Martinez's failures as Mayor. The city is going backwards while other cities in the RGV grow. Twenty-five years ago people in Brownsville drove to McAllen or even San Antonio to shop. During the tenure of Tony Martinez, people are going to McAllen for shopping, to enjoy a variety of quality restaurants, and to sports and entertainment venues there. And, since the university system is back to the way it was with Pan Am in 1989..the heart of the UTRGV in Edinburg and "a branch" in Brownsville, kids even have to drive to the upper Valley to go to school. It is time for Martinez to go...and members of the Commission are exerting themselves so as not to be connected to all his failures.

General Patton said...

Da mayor Martinez looks liKE the GRINCH, PURO PVC, Cabler for Mayor 2019

Anonymous said...

Go for it Charlie Cabler, we surely need you as our next Mayor. Can't wait to go voting for you to make a positive change for our city once and for all.

Anonymous said...

No more attorneys vote every body out NO MORE ATTORNEYS!!!

Anonymous said...

Thats what you get when you dont take care of the problem properly. They tried to walk Cabler out with a pot of gold thinking he would enjoy life. Now - he's going to use that pot of gold to finance his campaign and become Mayor.

We're doomed!!!

Anonymous said...

That's all we need a police running the city as a mayor. His theme run and duck cause we're coming

Anonymous said...

The unstable and trigger happy will have a field day. Run and Duck cause we're commin'.

Anonymous said...

We'll support Charllie Cabler for Mayor, he will steer the city in the right direction. He knows municipal operations and if elected Mayor, he will do an excellent job on providing true municipal services. Mr. Cabler will be able to do his job freely without the need to worry about being pressure by politics as he was as city manager. Charlie Cabler for Mayor 2019, he has so many supporters that he will win the election with a landslide, no matter the opponents.

Anonymous said...

Can't wait for Mr. Cabler to occupy his old office taken by the current Mayor. Go Charlie!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

Anonymous said...

Remember people with a felony convict can't vote

rita