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Lake Worth commissioners give mixed reviews to city manager hired after sex chan

Started by Shana A, March 31, 2010, 12:40:54 PM

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Shana A

Lake Worth commissioners give mixed reviews to city manager hired after sex change
March 30, 2010|By Kevin D. Thompson, The Palm Beach Post

http://articles.sun-sentinel.com/2010-03-30/news/fl-city-manager-sex-change-20100330_1_susan-stanton-evaluation-city-manager

LAKE WORTH — Performance evaluations aren't always easy for employees. Just imagine having to sit through one in a public forum with your five bosses.

That's what Lake Worth City Manager Susan Stanton did Monday night as she received her first review at the city commission meeting. It's the first time in Lake Worth's history a city manager has received a performance evaluation.
"Be yourself; everyone else is already taken." Oscar Wilde


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HelenW

My God, what a thing to put her through!  A public evaluation of the city manager?  For the very first time ever??  The discrimination and misogyny inherent in that action are odious and telling.

Why was Ms Stanton the first ever city manager to be publicly evaluated?  Is there any doubt at all that she was singled out because of her status as an out trans woman?  On top of that, criticizing her for "her abrasive management style" is an obvious application of the sexist double standard where tough male managers are respected for their aggressiveness but female managers who do the same are considered bitchy.

I have to admire Ms Stanton's willingness to endure this kind of politically motivated abuse and I hope her willingness to take it for the sake of her city's well being is worth the price.
FKA: Emelye

Pronouns: she/her

My rarely updated blog: http://emelyes-kitchen.blogspot.com

Southwestern New York trans support: http://www.southerntiertrans.org/
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justmeinoz

I hope that the voters there insist on the same for their City Commissioners in the interest of equity and fairness then :police:.
"Don't ask me, it was on fire when I lay down on it"
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tekla

On top of that, criticizing her for "her abrasive management style" is an obvious application of the sexist double standard where tough male managers are respected for their aggressiveness but female managers who do the same are considered bitchy

I wouldn't be too sure about that.  It was one of the reasons she was let go from her last job, and one of the publicly stated reasons that Berkeley (hardly a hotbed of misogyny) didn't hire her.  And I've seen her interviewed and she does come off as abrasive, and I doubt it would be a positive work environment if her interview style is anything close to her management style.  That management style might work at a Taco Bell where most of the employees are barely HS grads, but it tends to fail when most of your workers are college grads, and people who have been in grad school - which is a huge percentage of the people under the City Manager.

"Tough" male city managers often get in trouble too, (we let one go here last year for pretty much the same reasons), and the 'real' reason tends to be more along the lines of "you were hired to be the manager, so manage - we're (mayor/city council) hired to make the decisions and be the boss, so back off."  Other than misuse of money, the most common reason city manager types are fired (or their contracts not renewed) is that they forget that they are only hired employees whose job merely to implement decisions, not to make them.

And though it seems she might have been singled out, her hiring process was very public too.

I hope that the voters there insist on the same for their City Commissioners in the interest of equity and fairness the
Actually, such people have the most public of all evaluations, they are called 'elections.' And, FTR, I support public evaluations of all top muni officials, from the Manager on down.
FIGHT APATHY!, or don't...
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Michelle.

IIRC. Stanton, when she first took the job made the offer to be subjected to "public" performance reviews.

Actually that act in and of itself brought Lake Worth into compliance with the states "Sunshine Laws." Any review, proposal, budget, contract etc etc by law is a "open to the public" event in Florida.

I'm not 100% sure, but believe, that Stanton is the first Lake Worth city manager to be reviewed under a more strigent passage of our "Sunshine Laws."

In Palm Beach County we recently had about a 1/3rd of the County Commision and a few City of West Palm Beach officials goto "Club Fed."

I swear for awhile the photos of these people hanging on the wall of terminal B at PBIA where changed on a weekly basis .
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