By Ed Hammer
The buzz around Rahm Emanuel’s inauguration this week reminded me of each time a new Secretary of State took office and signs had to be changed.
I served under four Secretaries of State: Dixon, Edgar, Ryan and White. The day each one was sworn into office, the process to change the name on the signs began post-haste. We are talking a lot of signs here. There were signs in hallways; signs on doors; signs outside buildings; and signs from Rockford to Cairo. Signs, signs everywhere a sign, clogging up the scenery. Breaking my mind.
I was a special agent supervisor for the Chicago office of the Secretary of State inspector general in 1991 when George Ryan was sworn in as Illinois’ 36th Secretary of State. That morning, a couple of workers removed Jim Edgar’s name from our office’s lobby door and put Ryan’s name in place. Edgar was a good boss and I knew it was an end to an era.
Additionally, in a true example of government efficacy, Edgar’s photo was removed from the front office’s wall and swapped with an image of Ryan that was three times larger. It was an omen of the problems we were about to face in the Department of Inspector General.
Similar deeds in Chicago were being reported as Rahm Emanuel began to assume office this week. The new mayor quickly reacted and ordered that only signs that were “essential” be changed. Some of those essential locations included the airport and the Skyway.
“I do not want people rushing out, making changes on a whole bunch of signs, wasting time, wasting dollars, for no reason,” Emanuel declared.
Back in February, when Rahm was still just a candidate for mayor, he reminded city workers that they were “actually public servants.” I am glad some of the workers were able to serve the public this week by letting us know who their new boss is. We might otherwise have been in left the dark.
Who says government workers are lazy?
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Posted on May 20, 2011