DALTX Real EstateDALTX Real EstateDALTX Real Estate
  • Home
  • Guest Post
  • Agents
  • Contact Us
  • About
  • Advertise With Us
Reading: Former Dallas Planning Chief Julia Ryan Slams ‘Toxic’ Criticism of Public Sector Employees
Share
Font ResizerAa
DALTX Real EstateDALTX Real Estate
Font ResizerAa
  • Home
  • Guest Post
  • Agents
  • Contact Us
  • About
  • Advertise With Us
  • Home
  • Guest Post
  • Agents
  • Contact Us
  • About
  • Advertise With Us
Follow US
© DALTX. All Rights Reserved.
DALTX Real Estate > Dallas Dirt > Former Dallas Planning Chief Julia Ryan Slams ‘Toxic’ Criticism of Public Sector Employees
Dallas Dirt

Former Dallas Planning Chief Julia Ryan Slams ‘Toxic’ Criticism of Public Sector Employees

6 Min Read
SHARE
Contents
‘The City of Dallas Insists Everyone Wait in Line’ Ryan Reacts to Criticism of Department
David Noguera and Julia Ryan

When Dallas Director of Planning and Urban Design Julia Ryan announced her departure from the city, speculation swirled that all was not well at Marilla Street. 

Ryan’s resignation was announced in a memorandum from City Manager T.C. Broadnax, in which Dallas City Council members were advised that Housing and Neighborhood Revitalization Director David Noguera was leaving, too. 

https://daltxrealestate.com/2023/09/12/planning-and-urban-design-director-julia-ryan-leaves-a-legacy-in-short-tenure-at-dallas-city-hall/

Both department directors were vocal experts in their fields and occasionally respectfully clashed with members of the elected City Council and the public. 

Both left for good jobs in other states, Ryan as a transportation planner with a consulting firm in Arkansas and Noguera with the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development in Miami. 

Then came an Oct. 14 opinion column in the Dallas Morning News by Dallas Cothrum, president of Masterplan, a Texas planning and permitting consulting firm. 

The column was titled, “Dallas’ planning department is awful. Here’s the chance to turn it around.”

‘The City of Dallas Insists Everyone Wait in Line’ 

Cothrum called out the backlog of zoning cases and inefficient processes that Ryan herself acknowledged in a 2022 interview with daltxrealestate.com. 

“The recent citizen satisfaction study ranks the planning department next to last among city departments,” Cothrum wrote. “Only 5 percent of respondents reported the department was excellent, compared with 41 percent that rated it poor (the lowest category). Another 30 percent thought the level of service was only fair.

“Land-use professionals might argue the scores are not low enough,” he continued. “The city has a backlog of cases it’s leaving unaddressed. Meanwhile, there’s a long-range planning group with numerous employees primarily working on the ForwardDallas plan. If this was a business, management would shift these planners to their current jobs, realizing that the future starts now. It’s as if city leaders have never been to the grocery store when they summon more checkers to the front. The city of Dallas insists everyone wait in line.”

He’s not wrong that the department has faced challenges. Now, with Interim Director Andrea Gilles at the helm, all eyes are focused on Planning and Urban Design to see if the implementation of the ForwardDallas comprehensive land use plan might get the train back on the tracks. 

Ryan Reacts to Criticism of Department

The problem with all the criticism, Ryan pointed out in an October LinkedIn post, is the negative attitude and unreasonable expectations the public has toward government employees. 

https://daltxrealestate.com/2022/08/31/dallas-we-have-a-plan-zoning-could-get-easier-and-faster-says-director-of-planning-and-urban-design/

“There hasn’t been enough conversation about the toxicity faced by public sector employees by the public,” Ryan wrote in reference to Cothrum’s editorial. “This is a great (bad) example of a self-serving article by an author who runs one of the largest pay-for-zoning change companies in Dallas. In part, this toxicity (from developers and residents) led me to stepping back from the public sector.” 

Local governments are facing staffing shortages and have a limited number of quality applicants for critical positions such as senior planners, Ryan added. 

“We are then forced to quietly endure the parade of angry residents, business owners, [and] politicians for policy issues that are out of our control,” she said. 

The engagement on Ryan’s post was limited, save for Dallas civil designer Justin Moeller, who asked the former planning chief to elaborate on her views. Current municipal government employees and council members didn’t want to speak on the record about the matter, though several acknowledged it is challenging for city employees to offer their expert opinions and then be lambasted in a public setting when those views go against the grain. 

It doesn’t seem like a coincidence that Ryan’s departure came shortly after she suggested in a June council meeting the unpopular opinion that short-term rentals be regulated through the city’s registration ordinance, pointing out that the matter isn’t a land use issue but a code compliance issue. 

A couple of council members suggested at the time that Ryan’s opinion wasn’t requested or supported. 

https://daltxrealestate.com/2023/06/07/will-a-zoning-change-solve-short-term-rental-problems-dallas-council-vote-set-june-14/

Other council members asked in the same meeting for a formal, written recommendation from the Planning and Urban Design Department after being advised by City Manager T.C. Broadnax that they might not like the result. Ultimately, the council opted to address the matter as a land use issue and ban STRs in residential neighborhoods. The City is being sued by the Dallas Short-Term Rental Alliance, and enforcement is slated to begin next month. 

Ryan didn’t mention STRs in her LinkedIn post but alluded to pushback from residents and developers on zoning matters that are beyond the control of city staff. 

“To the residents, the status quo is what they bought into and will fight (dirty and loudly) against seemingly innocuous code amendments, such as how to measure height,” she wrote. “The toxicity is growing by leaps and bounds and spreading like a cancer. As a recovering 16+ year public servant, we need to talk more about how to professionally confront and shut down this kind of toxicity. If we don’t, the good public servants will flee to the private sector and where will our cities be then?”

Chris Carter: Why I’m Running For Dallas City Council District 10
Dallas Housing Director David Noguera, Planning Director Julia Ryan Announce Resignations
Investor Signals Discontent with Dallas Morning News Parent Company
Holding Off The Wrecking Ball: What is The City of Dallas Doing About Historic Preservation?
Where Does Dallas Fall In a List of Best and Worst Run Cities?
TAGGED:Dallas City CouncilDallas City HallDallas Morning NewsJulia RyanPlanning and Urban Design
Share This Article
Facebook Email Copy Link Print
Previous Article The Gingerbread Stroll Charity Fundraiser Offers Homes so Sweet You Could Just Eat Them Up
Next Article Score The Ultimate Real Estate Touchdown With This Highland Park Italianate
Popular News
Real Estate Disruptors

Door — Another Stab at Shrinking the Real Estate Commission

Visions of a New Kitchen? Let Leicht Light The Way
Renovated Oak Cliff Home Ready For a First-Time Buyer
Best of 2020: Historic 1915 HP Home of Billboard Advertising Mogul Tells Fascinating Story
Expedia Aquires Austin-Based HomeAway for… (Take a Lamaze Breath) $3.9 BILLION
about us

DaltxRealEstate.com is the largest real estate blog and the only one in North Texas.

Links

  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms of Service
  • Contact Us
  • Paid Guest Post Submission

Categories

  • Wednesday WTF
  • East Dallas
  • Monday Morning Millionaire
  • Upon Closer Inspection

Get Involved

  • Advertise With Us
  • Write for Us: Submit Guest Post

Find Us on Socials

© DALTX. All Rights Reserved.
Welcome Back!

Sign in to your account

Username or Email Address
Password

Lost your password?