In the end Wednesday’s city council vote on whether Barbara Stephenson should be Bremerton’s financial services director turned out about as I expected. She was confirmed in a 6-3 vote. I thought she would have between five and seven votes and it turns out that’s exactly what she had. The only moment I saw reason to wonder was in the council’s meeting before the regular meeting, when council members learned they could vote up or down on the nomination if they didn’t like how much she was getting paid, but it wasn’t their job to negotiate.
Mayor Patty Lent began the conversation downstairs in the big room, acknowledging Will Maupin, Cecil McConnell and former city councilman Mike Short for the work they did in 2004 to reorganize the financial services department and setting the standards for hire.
When Lent mentioned that the police chief and fire chief don’t have degrees, Maupin shook his head.
Lent then again went over Stephenson’s educational experience. She mentioned Stephenson’s six years of study with the American Institute of Banking, but didn’t spend a lot of time on that. It’s probably a good thing. Stephenson herself said the AIB training was not akin to a bachelor’s degree, which is what the city’s policy calls for in a financial services director. Instead Lent focused on training Stephenson received in earning a certificate from the Pacific Coast Banking School at the University of Washington. It’s a three-year program that she said was akin to getting an MBA with an emphasis in finance.
The mayor discussed Stephenson’s salary, saying the step 5 rate of $122,971.68 annually is less than what former director Andy Parks was making and will be less anyway because of staff furloughs.
Stephenson then received kudos from two people who know her.
Cecil McConnell said the fire chief and police chief are not required to have degrees. “The other directors that do require degrees do have them,” he said. McConnell also said Stephenson’s experience as treasurer does not equate to the kind of experience need for municipal finance. “With a lack of a degree and no experience in municipal finances, she be a trainee,” he said.
Carol Arends said Stephenson runs a good office in Port Orchard. “I think we would be making a mistake not to confirm Barbara Stephenson,” she said.
Maupin said it isn’t hard to find someone with a degree and municipal finance experience. He said the council’s job is to set policy and make sure that policy is followed. He said voting to confirm Stephenson would be abdicating the council’s responsibility to make sure policy rules were kept.
Greg Wheeler, Dianne Robinson, Roy Runyon and Jim McDonald all said they’d support Stephenson, expressing confidence in her ability and in her breadth of knowledge in finance.
Adam Brockus, Runyon, Wheeler, Robinson and Arends all voted “yes” before a single no vote was cast, at that point giving her the five votes she needed. Maupin voted “no,” McDonald voted “yes,” McConnell voted “no” and then so did Council President Nick Wofford.
When the council gave committee reports, Wofford and McConnell congratulated Stephenson and welcomed her to the city.
Stephenson expects to begin in mid-February. Her replacement in the county is a political issue, because she was elected. Democratic precinct officers will meet and choose three candidates. The final treasurer will be picked by county commissioners.
The extraneous item that was formerly here was removed. It was once a beginning to a paragraph, but I reconsidered and forgot it was there.
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