Routine work, extra pay for Dixon park workers

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

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For example, although the park district’s ordinances reference a pay schedule for employees, the board never has implemented one, Carey said.

That broad authority, Cecchetti said, always has rubbed him the wrong way.

“Somebody made the conclusion ... that they’re not [being paid] what they should be making or whatever, so we’re going to throw a bone at them now and then,” he said.

“That’s what it looked like to me, because it just doesn’t make sense. ... It was willy-nilly. They’d just throw out a check every once in a while. I don’t get it. I know I didn’t get a lot of checks.”

Sauk Valley Media reviewed all park district financial reports between March 2011 and August 2012, as well as a random sampling of reports from 2003 to 2008.

In the reports, board members and the public are informed about who received the check, from which account they were paid, a description of what it was paid for, the amount, and the check number.

Cecchetti received a handful of checks during his tenure:

n In September 2003, $100 for “corp. seasonal maint.”

n In March 2004, $100 for “playground audit.”

n In June 2004, $50 for “playground inspections.”

n In July 2004, $127.20 for “projects.”

n In September 2004, $50 for “playground project.”

n In October 2004, $50 for “supv.”

(The extra checks stopped after he raised concerns over whether they were appropriate.)

All of those checks, Cecchetti said, were for work that he did on park time and which he considered a normal part of his job.

Carey doesn’t disagree, and said she didn’t know why he received the extra pay some times and not others.

Some paid more often than others

Cecchetti received very few checks in comparison to some other employees. In the records reviewed by SVM, the most frequent recipients were Carey, maintenance director Duane Long, and maintenance foreman Terry Hambley – the only remaining full-time employees.

In March, all three received checks for $175. Carey’s was labeled “reimbursement,” Long and Hambley’s did not have descriptions. Recreation supervisor Terry Shroyer also received a check, labeled “reimbursement,” for $75.

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