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Joshua Bagnato - Excerpts from Capstone Report to the Rappaport Institute
Fellows work directly with officials
from state and local public agencies
in the Greater Boston area on policy
research and management projects. In
addition, at the end of the summer program,
all fellows are required to submit a
capstone project or report that addresses
the policy and management challenges
posed by their work. Here are some excerpts
from our public policy fellows.
Joshua Bagnato
As a Rappaport Fellow, I began working
for Secretary of Environmental Affairs
Roy Herzfelder within the Executive
Office of Environmental Affairs (EOEA)
in May, 2003. The EOEA is the office
charged with managing all of Massachusetts’ state
environmental offices. When I arrived
the EOEA proposed merging the Metropolitan
District Commission (MDC) and the Department
of Environmental Management (DEM) to
create a new entity, known as the Department
of Conservation and Recreation (DCR).
Similar proposals to merge these park
agencies had been denied in the past.
It was unclear exactly how the merger
would be accomplished.
Betsy Shure Gross, then a Special Assistant
for Community Preservation at the EOEA,
had proposed the formation of a new
Office of Public Private Partnerships
to support the newly created DCR. In
early June, when the merger and subsequent
proposal were approved by the legislature,
I was asked by Ms. Shure Gross to submit
a plan for this office’s structure.
I spent the next six weeks researching
and designing this framework. In late
July, I formally submitted my proposal
to both the Secretary and the transition
team, the group responsible for the
merger. Many of my ideas from this proposal
were announced at an August 18, 2003
press conference announcing the Office
of Public Private Partnerships to the
public.
According to assessments performed
by EOEA employees, DCR faced three primary
issues: (1) lack of resources to maintain
and expand DCR facilities, (2) loss
of public trust, and (3) operational
inefficiencies. This Office sought to
create new partnerships and strengthen
existing ones within the private and
nonprofit sector to address these three
issues. However, no organizational structure
for the DCR had been proposed.
The DCR inherited a troubled legacy.
The MDC and DEM combined budgets had
been reduced from approximately $106
million in 2000 to approximately $71.5
million in 2003. Popular doubts about
the agencies stewardship, compounded
by the drastic budget cuts, exacerbated
the crisis. For Boston citizens, the
distrust of the MDC was publicized on
a consistent basis in the local papers.
The common perception was that the MDC
was unable to manage and maintain many
of its historic facilities, such as
the Esplanade and The Blue Hills Reservation.
In order to ensure the on-going conservation
and management of these areas, numerous
nonprofits, like the Esplanade Association
and MDC Blue Hills TrailWatch were created.
These organizations sought to assist
the MDC with maintaining its facilities,
while simultaneously serving as watchdogs.
Although less publicized, the DEM faced
similar criticism from numerous citizen-supported
groups. For example, the five largest
Massachusetts' environmental groups
partnered to create The Massachusetts
Forests and Parks Partnerships. This
partnership released a report on DEM's
facilities called, "Our Forests
and Parks in Crisis." The report
was supported by over fifty environmental
organizations and claimed that the DEM
was failing to maintain its facilities.
The partnership attempted to educate
the Massachusetts' environmental community
about this "crisis" and hoped
that it would force the state to increase
its support for these parks and forests.
A large constituency exists for potential
partnerships. There are approximately
230 environmental groups in Massachusetts
whose organizational missions rely on
the health of DCR's facilities. Approximately
9 percent of Massachusetts' households
have a membership in one of these organizations.
This massive constituency has no centralized,
formal office in which to voice their
opinions or volunteer their support.
Secretary Roy Herzfelder acknowledged
that DCR could never succeed without
improving these relationships. My task
was to recommend a new structure for
the Office of Public/Private Partnerships
that created and nurtured these mutually
beneficial partnerships.
DEM and MDC staff realized that organizational
change was imminent and layoffs were
inevitable. During my interviews with
DEM and MDC field staff, my probing
questions were typically greeted with
caution. Service-employees were concerned
that increased partnerships with the
private sectors might eradicate certain
positions. Efforts to centralize partnerships
were typically discredited because they
would create additional layers of bureaucracy.
Employees explained that they generally
engaged in informal partnerships with
the nonprofit groups and private citizens,
but kept these relationships guarded
for fear of union and liability issues.
The plan I created for the Office of
Public Private Partnerships divided
this office into three distinct programs;
(1) Park Partnerships (2) Revenue Enhancement
(3) Massachusetts Parks Conservancy.
The Massachusetts Parks Conservancy
program would seek private funds to
support DCR facilities. I believed this
Conservancy should be a tax-exempt nonprofit
organization housed within a government
office. The general expenses for this
office would be paid for by the Commonwealth
and the program would be governed by
a Board of Overseers, comprised of both
public and private individuals. Several
state employees felt that a nonprofit
was unnecessary because the state could
approach private individuals on their
own to solicit funding. DEM had successfully
raised money from private contributions
through their tax-deductible Conservation
Trust program since 1993 to improve
and enrich DEM facilities throughout
Massachusetts.
My research from other federal and
state programs indicated that an independent
nonprofit, closely aligned with the
public sector would be more successful
than the Conservation Trust model. For
example, the Golden Gate Conservancy
raised $10 million in 2001 to support
Golden Gate National Parks. Other successful
examples included the California Coastal
Conservancy, California State Parks
Foundation and Partnership for Parks
in New York.
I recommended the nonprofit model for
several reasons. First, nonprofits are
typically trusted more by private individuals,
as they are viewed as less bureaucratic
and more resourceful. This was an issue
since citizens in the Commonwealth already
distrusted state stewardship. I believed
a nonprofit would be more successful
at attracting corporate sponsorships
on behalf of the state. Nonprofits often
specialize in raising money and have
fewer constraints compared to the public
sector.
I recommended that a separate program
within EOEA be established to be responsible
for all partnerships involving revenue-generating
contracts. Several MDC and DEM employees
felt that the current system was successful.
In Fiscal Year 2001, DEM and MDC combined
to net $2.7 million from existing contracts
They believed that centralizing the
oversight of contracts at the state
level would add unnecessary layers of
bureaucracy, while simultaneously stifling
creative entrepreneurial thinking on
a regional level.
I argued that the current system was
faulty for numerous reasons. First,
the expenses associated with administering
these contracts were unknown. Second,
since the contracts were managed on
regional levels, it was difficult to
ascertain if they were maximizing revenues
in each situation. Third, poor incentives
existed to maximize revenue, since the
revenues were allocated to the general
fund rather than benefiting the parks
directly. Lastly, other states, such
as New York and Pennsylvania were generating
significantly higher profits from their
contracts compared to the Commonwealth.
For example, New York Parks and Historic
Sites, which manages a similar amount
of acreage compared to Massachusetts,
generated approximately $8 million in
profit from their contracts in 2002.
For these reasons, I recommended that
this office should be created to: (1)
monitor all contracts, (2) partner with
businesses that seek to maximize revenues,
while staying consistent with DCR’s
mission (3)seek new contract opportunities
and maximize revenue with existing contracts
(4) systematically determine standard
contracts and rental payments. The upper-management
agreed that the existing contract system
should be centralized within EOEA.
I learned that to achieve change within
the public sector, it is important to
market your ideas to the constituent
base. Since the structure does not allow
for vertical communication of ideas
from within the agencies, one also needs
access to upper management to create
change.
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