Tag Archives: Terry Childers

Childers needed to go; here’s why

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If I had been given the opportunity to write an editorial explaining why Amarillo’s former interim city manager needed a boot in the backside, I might have written something like this:

Terry Childers overstayed his welcome in Amarillo and it was time for him to hit the road.

It wasn’t that he was doing a bad job administratively. By many lights, he had infused City Hall with a renewed can-do attitude and had made some key decisions involving key personnel. He hired a police chief, Ed Drain, who has committed his department to community policing. Good call … and Childers deserves credit for recognizing that initiative in the new police chief.

But, oh man, the city manager revealed a mouth that he at times couldn’t control.

His resignation this week came after only the latest example of Childers engaging his pie hole without thinking first. He muttered “stupid son of a b****” into an open mic in the direction of a constituent. That was the last straw.

He had earlier scolded the City Council — the very people who hired him — for creating a “dysfunctional” atmosphere at City Hall. And before that — not long after he got hired — Childers berated an emergency services dispatcher after he misplaced his briefcase at a local hotel and all but called out the National Guard to find it.

The city manager is something of an ambassador for the city he serves, for the people to whom he answers. Whether it’s the elected body that hired him or taxpayers who foot the bill with their own money, the city manager is a hired hand. He works for us, not the other way around.

In that regard, the interim manager fell short of the mark.

***

I didn’t get to write that editorial, quite obviously. So I have decided to state my piece here.

The Amarillo Globe-News didn’t say it, either. Instead of offering a high-minded editorial that took Childers to the woodshed and delivered a whuppin’ he deserved, the newspaper cleared out the Opinion page and blasted a sophomoric “Goodbye Terry” farewell message that accomplished nothing except perhaps make Childers a sympathetic character in an ongoing feud in which has been engaged with the publisher of the newspaper, Lester Simpson.

Maybe the G-N will get around — eventually — to offering some words of wisdom about what we have all just witnessed.

Childers was right about a few things during his time in Amarillo. One of them related to the “caustic” political atmosphere at City Hall, which Councilman Elisha Demerson suggested might be at the heart of the “stupid SOB” comment the other evening. The environment frustrated Childers, according to Demerson, who suggested that the manager was venting.

The events of the past few days — with all the characters involved in this soap opera — have made the city’s task of finding  a new permanent city manager even more difficult.

Amarillo is undergoing some pretty radical changes at this very moment, starting with the effort to reshape, revive and remake its downtown district. The city needs a strong, steady hand to guide the municipal ship. It also needs a City Council that acts as a team, rather than a collection of individuals each with his own agenda.

I am going to say a prayer or two that the city will find that individual — whether he or she lives elsewhere or perhaps already is on board within the current administrative staff.

I believe most of us who have been watching City Hall over the years would agree on at least one critical point: The city has a serious mess on its hands.

Atkinson lands on his feet; Amarillo still on the deck

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It’s official.

Lubbock’s municipal management leadership team is whole again, while Amarillo’s team has taken a header into the crapper.

Jarrett Atkinson — the former Amarillo city manager — is taking the helm as Lubbock city manager. The Lubbock City Council voted unanimously Thursday night to offer Atkinson the job. He’ll take it and he’ll then bring his substantial expertise on city issues — notably water management and development — to his new job.

Amarillo’s municipal future is decidedly less rosy at the moment.

Its interim city manager, Terry Childers, has quit after mouthing off into a “hot mic” about a constituent, calling him a “stupid son of a b****.” It’s only the latest intemperate remark that Childers has delivered during the year he served as interim manager, a post he took after Atkinson was forced to quit the top job at Amarillo City Hall.

To worsen matters, the Amarillo Globe-News took a decidedly unprofessional approach to chastising Childers by publishing a two-word “editorial” on its Opinion page. “Goodbye Terry” the paper blared on the page in gigantic type. That’s it. Nothing else.

Childers clearly needed to be taken to the woodshed, but it should have occurred in the form of a studied, well-researched and stern editorial commentary.

I would laugh out loud at the paper’s ridiculously chickens*** approach, except that it saddens and disgusts me that the paper’s publisher has taken his personal feud with Childers onto the page in such a manner.

What cannot yet be determined is whether such stupidity has inflicted a mortal wound on the city’s effort to lure a top-tier administrator to become its next city manager.

Childers’ exit in this manner all by itself quite likely could be enough to dissuade such applicants from wanting anything to do with Amarillo’s dysfunctional governance. I’m still shaking my head over what the newspaper has done to potentially worsen matters.

Congratulations belong to Jarrett Atkinson and his new employers in Lubbock. Amarillo, meanwhile, deserves wishes of good luck as it staggers back to its feet in the wake of its latest embarrassment.

You have unprofessional, petulant, petty … and then you have this

Take a look at this page. It’s today’s Opinion page from the Amarillo Globe-News, the newspaper where I worked for nearly 18 years.

What you see here is the product of a personal feud between the newspaper’s publisher, Lester Simpson and Amarillo’s now-former interim city manager, Terry Childers.

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Words damn near fail me as I ponder what the publisher has done under the name of the organization he has overseen since the summer of 2002.

Childers quit his municipal post this week after muttering a profane epithet at a constituent during an Amarillo City Council meeting.

This is the response today from the newspaper of record. Did the city manager deserve criticism for his own brand of  unprofessional behavior? Of course he did. The newspaper should have delivered it in the form of an editorial explaining why the manager was out of line. But no-o-o-o. The paper delivered this instead.

A few words come to mind: petulant, unprofessional, bullying, petty, shameful, reprehensible, disgusting. Pick one. Pick more if you like. Pick ’em all. Add some more if you choose.

Rarely during the nearly four decades I worked in daily print journalism have I seen such a display from an organization that is charged with being the voice of reason in a community.

Some longtime Amarillo and Texas Panhandle residents will have looked at this page this morning and have been reminded of another such display.

It occurred in the late 1980s when the former Amarillo resident and oil/natural gas tycoon T. Boone Pickens got into a beef with the newspaper over its coverage of local issues and — namely — Pickens himself. Pickens launched a boycott against the Globe-News. He then persuaded the paper’s corporate ownership, Morris Communications, to “reassign” the then-publisher, Jerry Huff.

On Huff’s last day as publisher, one could see a banner hanging from the side of what was known as the Mesa Building. It read: “Goodbye Jerry.”

That, ladies and gents, is the model of decorum that the current publisher of the newspaper demonstrated today with that ridiculous and childish message.

Simpson and Childers have been feuding for nearly the entire time that Childers took over as interim manager. I am not privy to the root of their mutual displeasure. Simpson reportedly disliked the way Childers handled downtown redevelopment. The disagreement likely turned into something much more heated with the forced resignation of Melissa Dailey, former head of Downtown Amarillo Inc., with whom Simpson had worked on downtown issues.

Suffice to say, though, that this example demonstrates how low one can go when disputing matters of public policy.

There’s intelligent, reasoned disagreement. Then there is this.

Good grief!

This thought comes to mind. Given that the Globe-News endorsed Donald J. Trump for president, perhaps the publisher of the paper can seek a job in the Trump administration.

He’d fit right in with the bully in chief.

Karma reveals changing municipal fortunes

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You’ve no doubt heard the saying: Karma’s a bitch.

As such, it works in the strangest ways one can imagine. Consider the fortunes of two leading West Texas municipal government operations.

Amarillo is now looking once again for a city manager to replace the interim manager the City Council appointed to navigate the city through some rough water. Interim manager Terry Childers is out after he muttered a profane epithet into an open mic at a constituent. Childers resigned his temporary job and is slated to depart no later than Dec. 16.

City Hall is roiling yet again in controversy at the highest levels of its municipal administration. Sheesh. It’s the gift that keeps on giving.

B’bye, Mr. Manager.

Meanwhile, down the road about 120 miles in Lubbock, the man Childers succeeded as city manager, Jarret Atkinson, reportedly is about to be named that city’s new city manager. The announcement is likely to be made public on Thursday.

Atkinson was drummed out of office in Amarillo because — it has been reported — he couldn’t work with the new majority elected in May 2015.

Atkinson has become a superior water development expert, and he brought his valuable expertise to bear during his years as Amarillo city manager. Now he gets to deploy his vast knowledge of water management and development in Lubbock.

The former Amarillo city manager has done well for himself and Lubbock has likely done well for itself if it selects Atkinson as its next chief administrator.

Amarillo’s municipal future? It has been thrown into doubt once again. Karma does have this way of biting back … hard!

‘Caustic’ City Hall environment just got more caustic

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Amarillo’s interim city manager once scolded the City Council for creating a “caustic” political environment.

Interesting, yes? Why, of course it is. Because today, the manager in question — Terry Childers — resigned his post after calling a city resident a “stupid son of a b****” during a council meeting.

You want a caustic environment? There it is.

What happens now? The city is going to resume its search for a permanent city manager. It is going to launch an effort to find the best and the brightest city administrators it can find to operate City Hall’s machinery.

The question that continues to nag at me goes something like this: How does the city attract the best candidates possible when it operates in a dysfunctional environment?

Indeed, who wants to plunge into this setting, seeking to steady a ship that is heading on a bold, new course?

Childers has about 30 days to vacate the office. He need not take that long to hit the road and drift back into whatever life he had before he came on board a year ago to repair what supposedly was wrong with City Hall’s machinery.

His tenure hit some potholes early. He misplaced a briefcase at an Amarillo hotel and called the emergency dispatch center to report a “theft.” It turned into a top-shelf cluster hump.

Then came his stern lecture in September about the dysfunctional nature of municipal government, in which he blamed the council for creating a less-than-healthy atmosphere at City Hall.

This week was the last straw as he muttered an epithet into a “hot mic” about a critic of city policy.

Welcome to the hot seat, Assistant City Manager Bob Cowell, who will be asked to step into the interim post.

City Hall is making many of us around Amarillo a bit crazy. The City Council acts like it intends to set aside the city’s intramural squabbles and move forward as one in the effort to revamp and revitalize the downtown district. Then the city’s top administrator utters a profane insult at a constituent — one of the city “bosses” — and it falls apart … yet again.

Meanwhile …

The most recent permanent Amarillo city manager, Jarrett Atkinson, is set to take a similar post down the highway a bit, in Lubbock.

Atkinson quit his Amarillo city manager’s job because of an inability to work with the newly elected council majority. He has just stuck his landing in Lubbock.

Good for him.

What lies ahead for the city he leaves behind … well, it remains anyone’s guess.

Calling all city manager applicants: Step right up

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This story will need some fleshing out, but I cannot help but offer a quick-hit comment.

Amarillo interim City Manager Terry Childers has submitted his resignation. It appears he got angry with a resident and called him an SOB during a City Council meeting on Tuesday.

Mayor Paul Harpole asked Childers for his resignation and Childers delivered it today. The city is going to appoint Assistant City Manager Bob Cowell to the interim post.

This is big news for an important reason. The city needs a permanent city manager. City Hall has been the picture of dysfunction since the May 2015 election of three new council members. Former City Manager Jarrett Atkinson quit –and now is about to be hired as the city manager in Lubbock; good for him! The council was looking actively for a new manager, then suspended its search; then it renewed it only recently.

The issue facing the City Council now is simple: How does it present a city government that is functional, efficient and cohesive to the next band of city manager candidates willing to assume the awesome job of running a city of 200,000 residents — and more than its share of soreheads?

Let’s all stay tuned. This might get real good.

Response times in APD chief’s sights

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Amarillo Police Chief Ed Drain is a commanding individual.

As someone told me the other day, you know when Chief Drain walks into a room.

Thus, it is with that context established that Drain is setting out to fix what he believes is a potentially serious problem with the department. Response times need to be reduced, he says, and he plans to implement strategies to accomplish that goal.

Did I mention that he’s a commanding individual?

A study the city commissioned found that response times for APD were roughly double the length of time for other comparably sized departments.

That cannot continue.

Drain, who recently took over as the permanent chief after being appointed to the interim post by interim City Manager Terry Childers, wants to implement other improvements to the department. They involve possibly using more civilian personnel and tweaking the emergency call center operation, which already has undergone some significant overhaul over the past few months.

I’ve already commented favorably on Drain’s decision to re-deploy bicycle patrols in higher-crime neighborhoods, emphasizing community policing techniques that had been abandoned under the tenure of former Chief Robert Taylor, who recently retired.

http://amarillo.com/news/latest-news/2016-09-22/apd-chief-sets-sights-lowering-police-response-times

Yes, the response times need improvement, as the study indicates. Someone in need — or in potential danger — must be able to rely on quick response when the call goes out.

Chief Drain strikes me as someone whose very presence can bring along those under his command to implement the changes he believes he needs to make.

By all means, let’s shorten those response times.

‘Interim’ city manager going to stay?

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I cannot shake this feeling that Amarillo’s supposedly “interim” city manager is in it for a longer haul than he or the Amarillo City Council is willing to acknowledge.

Terry Childers announced a big hire the other day when he appointed Ed Drain as the city’s new chief of police. Drain had been brought aboard as “interim police chief” from the Plano Police Department.

Drain took some recommendations offered to make the Amarillo PD a better unit and enacted them. Perhaps the most notable reform has been a re-emphasis on community policing, namely the use of bicycle patrols.

Good deal, yes? Of course it is.

Back to Childers.

The police chief appointment is a major obstacle that the city manager has just cleared. Does he just pack up and leave the administration of the city — and its appointment of the city’s top cop — to someone else? My gut tells me no.

My gut — along with my occasionally reliable trick knee — also tell me that the City Council is quite happy with the way Childers is running the city.

Recall that the city embarked on a city manager search. It collected some resumes from a nationwide job posting. Looked them over — I am going to presume — and then tabled the search.

Am I the only one inclined to think the City Council is decidedly less interested now in looking for someone other than Childers to operate the city’s government machinery?

I’m wrong more than I’m right.

Something, though, tells me that Terry Childers is here to stay a lot longer than he and/or his immediate employers are letting on.

‘Interim chief’ becomes the permanent PD boss

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So, you thought Ed Drain would take over the Amarillo Police Department for a short time, repair some of the broken parts and then return to the Dallas Metropolex, did you?

It ain’t happenin’, folks. Police Chief Drain has the permanent job, meaning he’s likely staying in Amarillo for as long as he wants to stay.

Some of us thought that might be the case when interim City Manager Terry Childers appointed Drain to the interim top cop post.

I won’t mention any names, but … you know who I am.

I’ll be candid: I had a favorite within the police department who I thought would make an excellent choice to be its new chief. I’ll keep that to myself.

Drain, though, is an impressive fellow. I particularly like his emphasis on community policing, his insistence that cops on the beat interact more up close and personally with the people who they swear to “protect and serve.”

I also like his decision to reinstate the bike patrols as part of the community policing initiative.

I don’t know the new police chief. I’ve heard him speak just one time — so far. I hope to hear more from him.

Now … as for the gentleman who selected him — Childers — I think it’s fair to ask whether he, too, is going to shed the “interim” tag in the months ahead.

The City Council already has tabled the search for a permanent city manager. Childers is making his mark known at City Hall. Yes, he got off to a bit of a rocky start with that unfortunate briefcase/9-1-1 matter. He’s said he’s sorry and has moved on.

I’m acquainted with Childers only a tiny bit more than I am with Drain. But I also am impressed at least with the public perception of him as a hands-on municipal administrator.

So, the “change” we knew was coming to City Hall has been felt by a key city department.

That ol’ trick knee of mine is telling we might be seeing more of it … involving one of the key players in this latest critical appointment.

I might be wrong.

Then again … let’s all stay tuned.

How’s it working at the communications center?

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Terry Childers arrived in Amarillo from Oklahoma City to become the interim city manager and then got into a bit of a tussle with the city’s emergency communications center.

He misplaced his briefcase at a local hotel where he was staying, assumed it might have been stolen, placed a 9-1-1 call to the center and then got into a beef with the dispatcher … who in my humble view was doing her job as she was trained to do.

That wasn’t good enough for Childers. His briefcase was recovered.

But the city manager made quite a stink about it until it was found. He wanted the hotel shut down; he wanted the cops to arrive immediately; he wanted to find that briefcase — dammit! — because it had important documents.

Well, after he settled down and cooled off, Childers ended up apologizing for the manner in which he acted. He also enacted some changes in the call center.

There apparently had been complaints about the procedures enacted when the city consolidated its emergency dispatch services into the new communications center. Wait times were too long, allegedly.

The changes involved putting police and fire supervisors on duty inside the call center to enable them to monitor more closely the response to the calls that came in.

My curiosity is nagging me just a bit.

How’s the new system working? Are there still gripes about it? Has the closer monitoring alleviated the problems? Has it been fixed?

With all the attention paid to the dust-up when it occurred, it might be time for the city to provide an update on how the emergency communications center is doing its job.

Isn’t that a form of transparency?