HomeMy WebLinkAbout21- City Administrator -- •-• •+•+rte oicnnNnrv�nv - KWAUEST FOR COUNCIL ACTION
From: Peggy Ducey �Sub ect: Review of 9/80 Work Schedule
Dept:
City Administration
Date: January 12 , 1995
Synopsis of Previous Council action:
June , 1994 - Mayor and Common Council approved the extension of pilot
9/80 work schedule through January, 1995.
0^-r%r+manded motion:
That the Mayor and Common Council approve the 9/80 work schedule
for City departments.
Signatu
Contact person: Peggy Ducey Phone: 5122
Supporting data attached: yes Ward:
FUNDING REQUIREMENTS: Amount:
Source: (Acct. No.)
(Acct. Description)
Finance:
,ouncil Notes:
-•ozez
Agenda Item No
STAFF REPORT
In June, 1994, the Mayor and Common Council approved a six month
extension of the 9/80 work schedule for City Hall and the Economic
Development Agency. Upon approval of the extension, Council
requested that staff present a more extensive analysis of the
impact of the 9/80 schedule when reconsidered in January, 1995.
Based upon questions asked at the June Council meeting, the
followings areas were reviewed:
1. City Service Availability
2 . Impact on Downtown Businesses
3 . Congestion Management and Air Quality Management District
Regulations
4. Building Operational Savings
5. Sick Leave Usage
6. Overtime Reductions
The chief concerns expressed by the Council were inconvenience to
the public because City Hall was closed two Fridays per month and
a detrimental financial impact to downtown businesses.
CITY SERVICE AVAILABILITY
A major concern for the 9/80 was that high volume services such as
water bill payments, checking the status of planning projects, etc.
could not be done on off-Fridays. Because closure of City services
on alternate Fridays would inconvenience some citizens, the City
Administrator implemented some measures to offset this
inconvenience and is exploring further ideas to make City Hall
services more accessible than ever.
When City Hall went on the 9/80 schedule, the City contracted with
a service to answer incoming phone calls on all closed weekdays,
including holidays. With this service, the caller is informed that
City Hall is closed, and normal City business will resume on a
specific day. The service gives the caller the option to speak to
an operator to either leave a message for a particular City
department or leave an emergency message (other than 911 calls)
that is immediately forwarded to the affected department. The
following is answering service activity for 1994:
ANSWERING SERVICE
FEB MAR APR MAY JUNE
MESSAGES 2 , 025 2 , 142 2 ,297 2 , 392 2, 391
JULY AUG SEPT OCT NOV DEC
MESSAGES 1, 320* 488 581 580 761** 1, 217**
*Prior to July, the answering service picked up all calls to City Hall. In July, the message was added informing
the caller that City Hall was closed. This reduced the number of callers leaving messages for City staff.
**Calls during November and December are higher because Thanksgiving and Christmas holidays and closures
increased the number of closed days.
With the answering service as back-up, citizens can access
departments in an emergency situation and/or leave detailed
messages for all City services.
Another way to make City Hall more accessible is to provide City
services in a more convenient location. The City Administrator is
currently exploring the concept of a "City Hall in the Mall" .
Several other cities have implemented this concept, and all claim
the concept to be highly successful. City Hall in the Mall is a
public service information and collection center in a local mall
which enables residents to access city services at hours other than
City Hall hours, including evenings, weekends, and other times when
City Hall may be closed. Staff is currently exploring developing
such an outstation that would provide not only various City
services but other services such as utility payments as well.
As mentioned earlier, some citizens may be inconvenienced by City
Hall being closed two days per month. However, there is an off-set
in that City Hall extended its hours from 4 : 30 p.m. to 5: 30 p.m. ,
Monday through Thursday, and a significant number of residents are
taking advantage of those extended hours. After the June Council
extension of the 9/80 schedule, departments on the 9/80 tracked in-
person service requests as well as incoming phone calls from
outside City Hall. The following activity occurred in City Hall
between 4 : 30 - 5: 30 for July through December, 1994 :
CITY HALL-4 : 30-5: 30 JULY AUG. SEPT OCT NOV DEC
TELEPHONE CALLS 2 , 249 2 ,478 2, 111 2 ,215 2, 269 1, 678
IN-PERSON REQUESTS 855 1, 026 983 1,278 782 638
TOTAL 3 , 104 3 , 504 3 , 094 3,493 3 , 051 2, 316
During the last six months of 1994, 18, 562 residents accessed City
services during the extended hour of operation.
IMPACT ON DOWNTOWN BUSINESSES
Concern was expressed by Council members as to the financial impact
on businesses in the downtown areas since City Hall would be closed
two Fridays per month. As a means to quantify this analysis, staff
compared sales tax information for the Carousel Mall for the first
and second quarters of 1993 and 1994*. Staff also analyzed the
same time period for the Inland Center Mall as a baseline to
evaluate economic activity in other areas of the City. Sales tax
activity for the comparison period are as follows:
PRE-9/80 SCHEDULE POST-9/80 SCHEDULE
MALL SALES TAX OTR. 1/93 OTR. 2/93 OTR. 1/94 QTR. 2/94 % CHANGE
CAROUSEL MALL $169, 880 $203, 518 $185, 324 $207,413 +5. 1%
INLAND CENTER $197, 907 $195, 683 $193 , 573 $202 , 551 +0. 6%
* Because sales activity is affected by seasonal buying, quarterly tax data was compared to like quarters. The.3rd
and 4th quarter sales tax data were not yet available, so are not included in this analysis.
During the comparison period, the Carousel Mall sales tax revenue
increased an average of 5. 1%, while the Inland Center Mall sales
tax revenue increased an average of 0. 6%.
Downtown restaurants could also be impacted by the 9/80 schedule.
Comparison of sales tax data for downtown restaurants are as
follows:
SALES TAX OTR. 1193 QTR. 2/93 OTR. 1/94 QTR. 2/94 % CHANGE
DOWNTOWN 2, 005 2, 012 5, 580 4 , 839 159%
RESTAURANTS
The sales tax data indicates that restaurant sales significantly
rose in 1994 compared to the same period in 1993. However, closer
analysis of specific sales activity for each restaurant shows that
one downtown restaurant made up the majority of the increase, and
any decreases in other downtown restaurants was probably due to
displacement of sales by this same restaurant.
Through analysis of this data, we can infer that the implementation
of the 9/80 schedule has not adversely affected downtown businesses
as the Council feared.
CONGESTION MANAGEMENT AND AOMD REQUIREMENTS
State law requires the development and implementation of a
Congestion Management Plan which analyzes and provides mitigation
measures for the traffic impact of major developments in the State.
In light of this law, a traffic analysis and mitigation plan was
developed for the downtown. One major premise of the plan was City
offices operating on a 9/80 schedule. If the City were to revert
back to a 5/40 work schedule, the traffic impact during peak hours
would change and traffic mitigation measures for downtown
development could increase for both surface streets and freeways,
potentially increasing traffic mitigation costs.
The AQMD also has traffic mitigation regulations through its
Regulation XV which requires that employers with over 100 employees
provide incentives to reduce vehicle trips to and from the
worksite. Currently, the City of San Bernardino has an AQMD-
mandated target of 1.5 Average Vehicle Ridership (AVR) for City
employees. Prior to the 9/80 schedule, the City's AVR was 1. 13 .
With the implementation of the 9/80 plan, the City's AVR went up to
1. 36, a 23% increase. Implementing a 9/80 schedule alone results
in a 10% vehicle ridership reduction. In addition, we have found
that by providing employees with a consistent work schedule with
one another, we have increased employee ridesharing. If the 9/80
schedule was removed, AQMD could require the City to implement
additional incentives to ensure that the City's AVR does not fall
below 1. 36.
BUILDING OPERATIONAL SAVINGS:
Because City Hall is closed two days per month, it was anticipated
that there would be some reduction in utility usage. In analyzing
electrical usage, this was found to be true:
ELECTRICAL USAGE 1993 1994 DIFFERENCE
KILOWATTS 5, 145, 888 4 , 470, 312 (675, 576)
COST $469 , 540 $431, 652 ($37 , 888)
Since January, 1994, City Hall experienced an electrical usage
reduction of 675, 576 kilowatts. This reduction saved the City
$37,888 in calendar year 1994 . However, not all of this can be
attributed to the 9/80 schedule. The City Hall lighting retrofit
program coincided with the implementation of the 9/80 schedule.
Because both programs projected a reduction in utility costs, cost
savings for each program can only be estimated. Based on the
initial energy conservation estimates, approximately two-thirds of
the utility savings can be attributed to the lighting retrofit,
with one-third, or $12, 629 in savings resulting from the 9/80
schedule.
Water costs decreased by 5%, but because water usage is a minimal
cost to City Hall operation, the impact is nominal. The City also
experience a reduction in custodial costs since custodial services
are not needed for two Fridays each month, resulting in a savings
of approximately $8,400 for 1994 for janitorial services. The only
operational cost that rose was natural gas usage, which increased
by $488 between 1993 and 1994 . This increase was due to a problem
with the geo-thermal system and was not influenced by the 9/80
schedule; the problem has since been corrected.
SICK LEAVE USAGE
With the 9/80 schedule, it was also anticipated that reduced sick
leave usage would show a cost savings since employees would be able
to schedule discretionary medical appointments on off-Fridays.
However, an offset to this cost savings would be that employees off
ill for an entire day would be taking nine (9) sick leave hours,
rather than eight (8) hours as they did in the past, representing
a 12% increase in per day sick leave usage. Given this, an increase
in overall sick leave usage would occur if other employee leave
behavior did not change.
City employee sick leave usage was analyzed from 6/15/94 - 12/31/94
for departments that went on the 9/80 plan in 1994. * Actual sick
leave hours were divided by the total number of employees to get an
average number of hours an employee used during the time period
analyzed.
SICK LEAVE USAGE # OF # OF SICK AVERAGE/
EMPLOYEES LEAVE HOURS EMPLOYEE
1993 290 11, 624 40. 08
1994 303 11,756 38.79
* Fire Department is not affected by the 9180 schedule. Police officers have been on a 4110 schedule fora number
of years. Some divisions in City departments stayed on a 5140 schedule due to customer service demand.
Based on this analysis, sick leave usage decreased by 1.29 hours
per employee, or a decrease of 391 hours in 1994, as compared to
1993 . Over the course of a year, this would equate to a cost
savings of $12, 035 annually, based on the average hourly rate of
non-safety employees.
OVERTIME USAGE
Another indirect cost savings anticipated was a reduction in
overtime usage. Some departmental overtime, like public safety,
would not be affected by the 9/80 schedule since overtime is driven
by minimum staffing and emergency coverage needs. However, other
departments would be affected by t!,e 9/80 since overtime is
sometimes used to complete work at the end of a shift. Comparison
of overtime usage between the 1993 and 1994 calendar years saw a
reduction of $151, 401 in overtime by all non-safety City
departments. (Police and Fire are not included since the 9/80
schedule would not affect their overtime usage. )
1993 1994 DIFFERENCE
OVERTIME USAGE $416, 184 $309,783 ($151, 401)
CONCLUSION
The 9/80 has had both a positive and negative impact on City
operations. The positive impact includes costs savings, increased
service to the public, and increased compliance with air quality
regulations.
SYNOPSIS OF COSTS/SAVINGS OF 9/80 SCHEDULE
$ INCREASE $ DECREASE
ELECTRICAL USE 12, 629
NATURAL GAS (488)
WATER 138
CUSTODIAL COSTS 8,400
SICK LEAVE 12 , 035
OVERTIME 151. 401
TOTAL (488) 184, 603
The 9/80 schedule resulted in a decrease in a number of labor and
operating costs , saving the City $184, 115 for calendar year 1994.
In addition, an analysis of sales tax revenue for downtown
businesses indicates an increase in downtown sales activity for
1994 , as compared to 1993 when the City was not on a 9/80 schedule.
Also, the 9/80 plan increased ridesharing for City employees by
23%, which is a requirement of the AQMD.
The negative impact is the lack of City services on off-Fridays.
However, an offset to this is the increased hours of operation
Monday through Thursday, allowing an additional 18, 562 residents to
be served from July - December. The City Administrator is
exploring other ways to expand access to City services to better
serve the community.
RECOMMENDATION
That the Mayor and Common Council approve the 9/80 work schedule
for City departments.