In the fallout over Toby Futrell‘s 2002 staffing of a specially created Austin Energy position with her brother-in-law, a name familiar to longtime council hounds has been brought up for comparison: Daryl Slusher, a former Austin Chronicle Politics editor and City Council member. In the article disclosing the quasi-nepotistic hire, and the subsequent editorial admonishing Futrell, the Austin American-Statesman notes Slusher’s 2007 hire by Futrell as illustrative of the city manager’s ability to both create a new position and fill it with a hand-picked candidate in this case, Slusher, then working on Austin Energy’s Plug-in Partners hybrid-vehicle campaign, went on to become assistant director of environmental affairs and conservation at the water utility. An unmentioned but implicit subtext is that Slusher’s employ under Futrell is a role reversal from the days when Futrell was under Slusher’s council direction raising questions of whether Slusher is benefiting from a revolving-door arrangement of sorts. So we asked him.
“I knew the Statesman would bring it up, but it’s a legitimate question [they] ask; it was in the first article they did when I got the job. It’s still a legit question. I expected that kind of thing to happen that’s fine,” Slusher says. “I thought about all that stuff before I took the job. I talked to Toby about it, pointed it out [to her], thought all that through. I came to the decision that I was very well suited to the job; it’s a continuation of what I’ve been doing most of my adult life: working to protect the environment,” he continues. “It allows me to keep working [where I’m most effective] I balanced all that out and decided to keep the job.”
While saying he feels the Statesman treated him fairly in his time on the council, he wonders if the attention from the daily is overdue payback from his Chronicle days, when he would mercilessly needle then-Statesman Editor Roger Kintzel for his conflict of interest. “I would repeat that over and over again in my columns: ‘Did I mention that Roger Kintzel is chairman of both the Austin Chamber of Commerce and publisher of the Statesman?’ That’s a pretty serious conflict of interest.”
Posted Monday, July 16, to Chronic; read more at austinchronicle.com/chronic.
This article appears in July 20 • 2007.
