A Deep Dive Into Dysfunction in City Government in Richmond
A review of the bureaucracy in the Virginia capital found what most people suspected, that City Hill stinks.

There's no reason to think Richmond is unusually worse (or better) than many other municipalities its size. Which is one reason the new performance review of the city's government merits attention, even by people who live elsewhere.
Mayor Levar Stoney ordered up the review soon after he took office in January, thereby keeping a promise to the voters. Consultants from the Wilder School of Government and Public Affairs at Virginia Commonwealth University released the report a few days ago. They confirm what most people suspected:
- "Excessive bureaucracy, micromanagement, unnecessary delays, and sometimes poor leadership have led to a system that is often not as agile… or as skillful as it should be."
- "Current or prospective employees perceive the weight of bureaucracy to be immobilizing."
- "An annual review of residents… reveals a stark decline in citizen's [sic] satisfaction with City government in the last eight years."
The review walks through City Hall department by department, cataloging the problems and recommending fixes. And just to be clear, it does find some bright spots.
For instance, "there are many employees who are actively engaged in thinking of ways to make the City a superior place. Responses were thoughtful, sometimes passionate, and heartfelt." The staff in the Office of Community Wealth Building are "entrepreneurial, action-oriented, and have innovative ideas." And: The Juvenile Detention Center, which once "had been shut down due to management and operational issues," is now "meeting or exceeding standards" and is "a model of progressive juvenile justice."
Unfortunately, those bright spots are exceptions. Much of the rest of city operations are a Sargasso Sea of red tape, obstruction, and dysfunction.
Departments don't talk to one another or respond to one another's inquiries—except to get in one another's way: If it's not Human Resources holding up badly needed new hires so long that the candidates take jobs elsewhere, it's the city attorney's office bogging down projects with lengthy and unneeded reviews.
Higher-ups don't communicate with people down the chain of command, except to deliver "edicts." Front-line workers pass decisions up the chain to avoid accountability. Decisions get passed from one administrative bailiwick to another to avoid responsibility—and potential blowback from the city council if something goes wrong.
Policies and procedures are often unclear—when they exist at all. (e.g., "Policies and procedures are not in place for many processes in the Finance Department.")
The city has "multiple IT departments … often with different policies and procedures." IT doesn't get notified of new hires, which leaves the new hires twiddling their thumbs. Systems in the Finance Department "are a source of inefficiency and frustration" owing to "poor implementation, out-of-date technology, and poor understanding… by users."
Systems in use by one department can't talk to systems in use by another. Procurement is a nightmare, with "a variety of legacy processes" that are "highly ineffective," "extensive paperwork and approvals needed to make small purchases," and a city attorney's office that "is considered a significant impediment to an efficient process."
Morale stinks. Nobody feels appreciated. And City Hall needs a good cleaning, in the most literal sense.
This isn't just unpleasant or inconvenient. It's holding the city back. When the Department of Economic Development can't get the job done, business goes elsewhere. When the Finance Department takes more than 45 days to cut a check, small entrepreneurs can't afford to do business with the city—no matter how much the Office of Minority Business tries to help.
And these conditions obtain despite the fact that Richmond spends more per resident than comparable Virginia cities in many areas. Of particular note: Richmond spends $273 per capita on general government administration. The state average is $159 for cities and $113 for counties. Yet many localities get high marks on leaner budgets. Neighboring Henrico routinely wins awards for municipal management, for instance.
Richmond is probably tired of that comparison. But it's going to keep hearing about it, unless Henrico gets much worse (unlikely) or Richmond gets much better.
The good news is that it can. And the consultants' report includes many suggestions toward that end: Update and integrate technology. Adopt best practices. Develop clear procedures. Give managers purchasing cards. Train people. Communicate.
Yet those reforms depend on another that might not be so easy: changing the culture. That word, "culture," shows up more than 30 times in the report. Again and again, the consultants refer to a lack of respect among employees, and a lack of any sense of urgency. City Hall, they say, needs to be "more customer-focused and results-oriented."
Stoney has four years to spend repairing the engine of governance in Richmond, and the report from VCU's Wilder School has given him a punch list more than long enough to fill up the time.
If he focuses on the job and keeps grinding away, he could turn the city around. To do that, though, he will need buy-in from the bureaucracy. Without that buy-in, he won't be able to turn around so much as a swivel chair. Because no matter how much energy and enthusiasm you have, you still can't push on a rope.
This column originally appeared at the Richmond Times-Dispatch.
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Unfortunately, those bright spots are exceptions. Much of the rest of city operations are a Sargasso Sea of red tape, obstruction, and dysfunction.
It's almost as if any given organization can only do a few specific things well at a time and if they try to do too much at once everything else suffers in quality.
It takes a progressive to believe that the limits of scale don't apply to large bureaucracies.
"And these conditions obtain despite the fact that Richmond spends more per resident than comparable Virginia cities in many areas"
Despite? I think you spelled "because" wrong.
Also true of corporations. The more internal transactions there are, the more obscured the price signals become. Without crony capitalism, we would not see such huge megacorps.
+2 big 2 fail
Absolutely. Under the current system it makes sense to merge, merge merge to reduce overhead costs while increasing your stature while lobbying ("Just look at how many jobs we control in your state, Senator!")
"there are many employees who are actively engaged in thinking of ways to make the City a superior place. Responses were thoughtful, sometimes passionate, and heartfelt."
Hopefully these aren't the employees that are very effective at banning stuff.
"Hopefully these aren't the employees that are very effective at banning stuff."
Yeah. Be careful of what you get when you wish for 'better city government'.
Hopefully these aren't the employees that are very effective at banning stuff.
My guess would be yes:
"there are many employees who are actively engaged in thinking of ways to make the City a superior place."
Prohibitionist fuckwits always think they're they "making things better" by telling other people what they can and can't do or buy. Because "the children..."
Yup. That's all that's going on in the world.
Assholes in the Richmond VA city hall.
There's nothing as important or interesting as this.
Did you know that Reason publishes as many as a dozen posts a day, on a wide variety of topics? It's true! Check it out sometime.
I am guessing Azathoth wants nothing but posts about the London attack, because it should be all about him. Never mind what other people are interested in.
I am guessing Azathoth wants nothing but posts about the London attack
It can't just be about the London attack, it must reinforce his worldview and not challenge his per-conceived views about the attack in any way whatsoever. Because God forbid anyone have to actually think about shit.
So far--4 and the morning links counting this one.....that was written for the Times-Dispatch.
I know the place is putrescent, but damn.
Ah well, maybe my 'per-conceived' view of this site needs revision.
And there are things besides the London attack going on, kids--things outside of the Richmond VA city hall even!
So you're complaining that this one article on a (slow, admittedly) day of posts is not about something other than what it's about? That's a really cool, meaningful thing to do, man.
Ah well, maybe my 'per-conceived' view of this site needs revision.
Or you can just continue being a whiny little bitch. You're really good at that.
Azathoth!!|6.5.17 @ 2:16PM|#
"So far--4 and the morning links counting this one.....that was written for the Times-Dispatch."
Gee, maybe you ought to start YOUR OWN WEBSITE!
Or, just keep on being a pathetic victim.
My best friend's ex-wife makes Bucks75/hr on the laptop. She has been unemployed for eight months but last month her income with big fat bonus was over Bucks9000 just working on the laptop for a few hours ?? ONLINE START JOB ????
City Hall, they say, needs to be "more customer-focused and results-oriented."
Having a monopoly means never having to say you give a shit.
Interestingly, the game Monopoly was invented by a Georgist as a warning against land monopoly. She thought people would feel bad about coming to control everything and financially ruling over other people. She was disappointed that it had exactly the opposite effect.
What? A Georgist misunderstand incentives?!? Unpossible!
This seems appropriate here.
"Excessive bureaucracy, micromanagement, unnecessary delays, and sometimes poor leadership have led to a system that is often not as agile... or as skillful as it should be."
This goes for all levels of government.
Also, I once had to deliver something to someone at city hall in rva. They jerked me around and made me fill out some unnecessary form and wait forever because the person I was delivering to was out at the time. I eventually got them to let me leave it on the persons desk. In short, something that should have taken 5 min took an hour.
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Give managers purchasing cards.
That's an interesting suggestion. So if someone spills coffee on his (I am using gendered pronouns here) keyboard it would be more efficient to have the manager just buy a new $15 keyboard from Newegg or Amazon with purchasing card than go through an entire procurement procedure with specifications and at least three bidders. The downside is obvious. Pick the devil you distrust least.
I think it's net-plus suggestion.
I don't know, is this too local? It seems pretty local.