Downsizing and the City of Saskatoon

By Mario deSantis and reviewed by James F. deSantis; August 21, 1999

   
  Saskatoon city manager Rick Tomaszewicz was fired last week for what mayor Dayday calls
Incompatible management style is not a reason for dismissal "incompatible management style"(1). Incompatible management style is not a reason for dismissal
and therefore the city of Saskatoon will incur an immediate liability of $110,000 along with
a sizable additional money to cover the break of a four year contract, loss of reputation, and other
damages. Tomaszewicz was just hired eight months before on January 1 and given the mandate to
cut costs by downsizing the city administration(2). With the approval of city council, Tomaszewicz
  cut the city's departments in half, and in this process some 30 employees were let go.
   
  Tomaszewicz' dismissal has caused an uproar among councillors, city employees, and citizens at
lost time, waning productivity, and devastated morale create hidden costs large. Notwithstanding the uncertainties for the liability caused by the firing of Tomaszewicz,
most people feel that the downsizing will result in long-term savings for the taxpayers. Phil
Richards, corporate services general manager with the city says " ...I know it will be over a million
dollars. We are looking at 30 staff members... Remember, that's a one-time expenditure. We
anticipate recouping the amount of money in one to two years..."(3) Phil Richards' expertise in
manipulating numbers goes far beyond his interest to care for the needs of the dismissed
employees to the extent that he doesn't know that lost time, waning productivity, and devastated
  morale create hidden costs, which can far outweigh the usual cost-savings predicted from layoff(4).
   
  In a changing economy where people and knowledge are the most important resources, our leaders
Nobody is concerned anymore about the social cost of cutting people out of their jobs are still playing a power game, based on greed, politics, secrecy, likes and dislikes, and short-term
speculations with downsizing(5). Nobody is concerned anymore about the social cost of cutting
people out of their jobs. The city hires an outside hatchet man to carry downsizing(6), and the
hatchet man covers his assets with an appropriate employment contract. As a consequence,
everybody suffers, except our leaders and mayor Dayday. The people who suffer are the employees
being axed, the surviving employees struggling with their anxiety of being next in line of being
fired, and the taxpayers at large who bear the costs of mismanagement and related deterioration of
services. Abrupt cutbacks is a definite sign that management has been incompetent(7), and this is
the case for mayor Dayday. as well as for a large segment of our elite who find in destruction and
disorganization the means for maintaining their leadership and for showing their macho
  behaviour(8).
   
  In Saskatchewan, this disgraceful behaviour of our leaders has caused irreparable damage to our
careers and family lives were destroyed for ever social and economic system(9), and has contributed to the discretional and unjust firing of many
employees whose careers and family lives were destroyed for ever. I have been personally
affected by this shameful behaviour of our leaders and as a consequence I will be writing few
articles in this regard with the hope to bring social changes and facilitate alternatives to the
  phoney compassionate government of our Premier Roy Romanow.
   

-------------Endnotes

   

1.

City manager fired, by Kim McNairn, The StarPhoenix, Aug 13, 99, Saskatoon, Saskatchewan
   

2.

Councillors break silence, by Dan Zakreski, The StarPhoenix Aug 14, 99, Saskatoon, Saskatchewan
   

3.

Shakeup tab in millions, by Kim McNairn, The StarPhoenix Aug 17, 99, Saskatoon, Saskatchewan
   

4.
-
-
-

The Wages of Downsizing, MotherJones, July/August 1996. Refer to Alan Downs, Ph.D., an industrial psychologist and business writer in New York City. His recent book on layoffs, Corporate Executions, was published by the American Management Association. http://www.mojones.com/mother_jones/JA96/downs.html
   

5.
-

From Both Sides Now Organizational Downsizing: What Is the Role of the Practitioner?, by Allan H. Church, http://www.css.edu/users/dswenson/web/dnsize5.htm
   

6.
-

Next city manager should keep back to the wall, by Les MacPherson, The StarPhoenix Aug 17, 99, Saskatoon, Saskatchewan
   

7.
-

The Hocus-Pocus of Reengineering, by Paul A. Strassmann, Across The Board, June 1994 http://www.strassmann.com/pubs/hocus-pocus.html
   

8.
-

Downsizing Study by Dr. Marc Mentzer, University of Saskatchewan marc.mentzer@commerce.usask.ca  http://www.usask.ca/events/news/articles/19961022-3.html
   

9.
-

Refer to articles written by Mario deSantis and published in The North Central Internet News, http://www.ftlcomm.com/ensign/authors/desantis.html