The dinner will serve approximately 275 city employees a selection of chef's choice butler-passed Hors d'Ouevres during a reception, a two-entree buffet with upgraded beef carving station, and more at the Embassy Suites in Cool Springs. All this for the low, low cost of $36 per plate plus 22 percent in taxes and fees. Of course, those taxes and fees won't make their way into Brentwood's coffers since the Embassy Suites isn't located in Brentwood.
So, the residents of Brentwood will pick up a tab in excess of $12,000 for a private party for Brentwood city employees and the tax revenue will go to Franklin. (Maybe we can get Franklin officials to send a trolley or two over to Brentwood for a day or two as payback? Maybe on luminaria night? Just saying.) This on top of a 1.5% market pay adjustment across the board for city employees totaling more than $159,000 that also passed unanimously Monday night.
At a time when the economy is sagging, jobs are scarce, and Brentwood's housing boom is a distant memory, this is a local example of the same type of behavior that caused an uproar on a national level -- spending taxpayer dollars on a private party (AIG) while those same taxpayers are making tough choices on personal budgets at home.
The very least the city commission could have done would have been to ENSURE that the money spent on this party would stay in Brentwood. The catering could have been provided by a local business owner. The event could have been held at one of the schools, one of the country clubs, or, like many companies do, it could have been held in one of our large Brentwood parks. Then it would have allowed the "Brentwood family" to bring their actual families out to celebrate the good job they do running the city. Such a choice may have necessitated moving the date from November if they didn't want to rent a nice tent for shelter, but the current economic environment is different than it was last year or the year before and some concessions could have been made. Even the tent option with tables, chairs, and linens, and a local caterer would have cost LESS than the approved $12,000 expenditure. This isn't about whether or not Brentwood city employees are doing a good job -- they are. This is about the wisdom of the elected officials and how they are choosing to spend taxpayer dollars.
Instead, Mayor Crossley, Vice Mayor Little, and Commissioners Dunn, Reagan, Smithson, Sweeney, and Webb voted UNANIMOUSLY to endorse sending in excess of $12,000 of taxpayer dollars to another local municipality for the purpose of a private party.
Editor's Note: We propose, given the Friday the 13th date of this private shindig, that the evening's entertainment may be comprised of a screening of everyone's favorite hockey-masked, machete-wielding psycho, Jason, on a big screen in the Embassy Suites ballroom.