By Khalida Sarwari
Palo Alto voters passed a ballot measure that will repeal the rights of firefighters and police officers to have arbitrators settle their salary disputes with the city and another measure designating 10 acres of parkland for a new compost facility, according to preliminary election results Tuesday night.
Measure D passed with 67 percent of the vote, according to unofficial figures. The initiative will repeal a city charter requirement that a three-member arbitration panel decide disputes over wages, hours and terms and conditions of employment for Palo Alto’s firefighters and police officers.
Those in favor of the measure, including Councilmen Patrick Burt and Greg Scharff and Councilwoman Karen Holman, claim that the charter provision must be repealed because binding arbitration for public safety unions has prevented the city from ensuring fair reforms across all employee groups and balancing its budget.
Opponents, however, say binding arbitration is a fair system to settle disputes for police and firefighters and that it has proven to be a fair resolution process. Vice Mayor Yiaway Yeh, Councilwoman Gail Price, and LaDoris Cordell, a former councilwoman and San Jose’s independent police auditor, are against the measure.
Measure E passed with 64 percent of the vote.
The initiative allows the city to designate a 10-acre parcel of land at Byxbee Park for a processing facility to convert yard trimmings, food waste, and other organic waste and sewage sludge from the regional wastewater treatment plant.
Proponents, including Burt and former Mayor Peter Drekmeier, argue that the facility is a “financially and environmentally sound alternative” to the current plan for handling organic waste.
Opponents, on the other hand, claim that taking care of waste locally is “impractical and unattainable.” Mayor Sid Espinosa, Councilman Greg Schmid, and Enid Pearson, a former vice mayor and chair of the Save the Baylands Committee, are among the ordinance’s opponents.