Greuel addresses government waste at Urban Issues Forum



imageLos Angeles City Controller and mayoral candidate Wendy Greuel was the guest speaker of the first Urban Issues Breakfast Forum of 2012 held this morning, hosted by Dr. Anthony Asadullah Samad. Titled “Moving toward accountable Government. Who are the real watchdogs,” Greuel was invited to address issues of wasteful spending in the L.A. City government.

Speaking in front of a full house at the West Angeles Church on Crenshaw Blvd., Greuel, who has been City Controller since July of 2009, said she found several instances of waste after conducting audits.

“For example, I found out the City owns 12,000 cell phones and no one knew where they all were,” she told the crowd. “I found that LAPD had 500 cell phones in a cabinet that were not being used and we were paying for them… I identified over $1 million dollars that were being wasted.”

imageGreuel listened attentively as community members lined up to ask her a variety of questions. When one woman told her she had seen a parking lot full of unused police cars collecting dust, the controller promised to look into it. Among the questions askes: what has shocked her most as controller, why she was running for mayor, what she would do about the Crenshaw metro line if she were elected, and if she thought the City Council should have more members to adequately represent constituents.

“What has shocked me the most is that a majority of elected officials didn’t understand the financial side of running a city,” Greuel told the crowd, particularly referring to her 2010 audit of L.A. Department of Water & Power, the municipal utility that tried to hold the City Council hostage by threatening to not transfer millions of dollars to the City if it didn’t approve controversial rate hikes.

imageAs to why she’s running for mayor, she replied: “Nothing comes easy and if you believe, it’s worth taking a risk…. I’m doing it because I think I have the experience to get the job done. In the meantime, I’m going to be the best controller ever.”

Damien Goodmon, of the Crenshaw Subway Coalition, asked Greuel how she would deal with people’s concerns over the impact of an above ground light-rail line on South LA businesses. “We can’t negatively impact businesses…. As mayor, I will work with the community to address the issue and resolve it to best fit the community’s needs,” she assured.

With regards to adding more people to the City Council, she pointed out it was tough enough governing with the current number of members and didn’t think adding more would help better represent constituents. “What you need is a strong mayor that can effectively lead,” she said. “I can be that mayor.”

Controller will launch audit of L.A. Coliseum



Allegations of conflict of interest, poor oversight and requests for questionable pay raises, has prompted L.A. City Controller Wendy Greuel to call for a comprehensive audit of the Los Angeles Memorial Coliseum.

The stadium, home to USC football, is jointly operated by the state, Los Angeles County and the city of Los Angeles.

A press release from Greuel’s office says “The audit assesses internal and management controls regarding financial decision making and reviews the Coliseum’s financial operations from 2009 to present.”

Greuel decided to start the audit after getting a request from an “office manager” to increase the salary of 20 of the department’s 32 employees, including a $25,000 pay hike for the Coliseum’s finance director.

“This request raises many red flags,” stated Greuel. “Given the allegations of conflicts of interest and misuse of public funds, I find it hard to believe that officials at the Coliseum think this would be an appropriate request. It begs for us to review the Coliseum’s books with greater scrutiny.”

According to the L.A. Times, Coliseum Commission President David Israel said he rescinded the $25,000 salary boost for finance director Ronald Lederkramer (who made about $195,000 last fiscal year), after Greuel raised questions about it last week.