This is sickening:
Retail business owners have complained for years about the skyrocketing
violations and sky-high fines slapped on them by the Department of
Consumer Affairs under Mayor Bloomberg.
But a Daily News investigation shows that the unrelenting ticket blitz is no accident.
Top department officials secretly instituted a quota system several
years ago to get inspectors to write more violations, internal agency
records obtained by The News show.
Agency inspectors are tracked each month by the number of citations
they write. They are urged to “keep numbers high,” and most are expected
to maintain a “25% threshold,” the documents show.
That means they
should produce an average of one violation for every four businesses
they inspect.
One of the most stunning fines uncovered by The News was levied on a
Queens discount store, a whopping $14,000 for 14 toy guns that cost the
store owner about 65 cents each. The barrels of the orange guns were
supposed to be plugged, city officials said.
The News also interviewed more than a half-dozen Consumer Affairs
Department employees, who shed light on the city’s clandestine cash cow.
“I was recently given a bad evaluation for not meeting my 25% quota,”
one angry inspector told The News. “They want us to look for anything to
go after a business.”
The businesses include bodegas, catering halls, discount stores, gas
stations and hair-braiding shops. Some have been forced out of business
due to staggering violations that often cost owners tens of thousands of
dollars.
“Instead of protecting consumers, the entire agency has been turned
into a piggy bank for the city,” a high-ranking Consumer Affairs
Department official disgusted with the agency’s actions said. “And the
people being victimized the most are immigrant businesses that can’t
afford good lawyers.”
Even the agency’s judicial process, in which a business owner can
challenge a fine at a hearing, has been tainted by the drive for more
revenue, the employees claim. Top brass routinely pressure
administrative law judges presiding at those hearings to rule in the
city’s favor. And agency bosses have have edited judges’ opinions before
they were issued, according to documents and emails obtained by The
News.
If the judges, who are supposed to be impartial, resist the pressure,
they say, they get overruled by superiors, who must sign off on any
rulings. At least two of those judges recently filed formal complaints
with the city Department of Investigation over the actions of their
supervisors.
The whole process rigged to screw the little guy - even the appeals process.
Take note on the quota system - 25% - for finding violations.
You can bet there will be a quota from Bloomberg next year on "ineffective" ratings for teachers.
And the appeals process will be just as rigged as the one described by Juan Gonzalez above.
How come Goldman Sachs and Bloomberg LP don't get hit with fines by the city when they break the law?
Bloomberg's New York - truly a model in oligarchy.
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ReplyDeletesmall business