Routine work, extra pay for Dixon park workers

Director has broad discretion over how, and when employees are paid

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DIXON – Steve Cecchetti remembers being handed a check for $100 in March 2004, looking at it, and asking, “What’s this for?”

The check was for inspecting playgrounds, Dixon Park District Executive Director Deb Carey told him.

Although Cecchetti inspected the park district’s playgrounds on a regular basis, he had never before been paid anything extra for it.

No longer employed by the park district, Cecchetti now questions the “willy-nilly” nature of the bonuses he and others received from Carey.

The president of the park board, however, said he trusts Carey’s judgment.

As executive director, Carey has broad discretion over what, and how, employees are paid.

Budgets approved by the park board include a couple of line items for personnel pay. Carey determines how that money is spent and on whom, with minimal oversight.

Extra pay is given to employees, Carey said, “When I think they deserve it.”

While some employees have received bonuses, others have received pink slips. The district has made budget cuts that include eliminating the full-time positions of soccer director and recreation director and shaving the maintenance crew from six full-timers to two.

“I will certainly say the park district is not afraid to pay somebody if they’re doing a good job,” Carey said. “I think it’s the best use of tax dollars that you can do to have a good employee who’s reliable and responsible and doesn’t steal money. Those are things that are really important.”

Not ‘bonuses’

Carey doesn’t like to call the extra checks “bonuses.”

So, what would she call them?

“I don’t know,” Carey said. “Extra pay for going above and beyond the call of duty.”

Yet Carey doesn’t dispute that some employees have received money in addition to their normal pay for work that is part of their regular duties and done during working hours.

Carey also decides whether employees get raises and whether part-time workers get sick days or holidays, she said.

The park district, which is a separate taxing unit from the city, lays out its own codes and ordinances. The park board is the top authority, although it gives the executive director much discretion.

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