This unpopular DA is in charge of the office prosecuting Keith Henson,
a beleaguered administration often accused of incompetence and with
a piss-poor approval rating by its own staff.
82.8% disapproval rating for Trask
Staff lacks confidence in District Attorney
http://districtattorney.virtualave.net/dessun.htm
Reprinted from
The Desert Sun
07 May 97
Palm Springs, California
Survey Finds Problems at DA's Office
Employees complain: Document shows workers concerned about morale,
communication.
By Kenny Klein
The Desert Sun
Employees of the Riverside County District Attorney's Office cite concerns with
morale, distribution of work, office communication and the overall work
environment in an internal survey obtained by The Desert Sun.
The department concerns were revealed just one week after District Attorney
Grover Trask criticized the county Public Defender's Office for poor
administration, saying it avoids high-profile cases and bails out on cases at
the last minute.
SURVEY FOLLOWS CRITICISM:The survey, with 410 of the office's 600 employees
responding, is the second one taken during Trasks's term and was released to
managers last month during a retreat at Lake Arrowhead.
"Absolutely, we would like to see the ratings higher," said Assistant District
Attorney Sue Steding, who is based in Indio. "That's why we do surveys - to
identify things and ways to do them better."
The statements with which more than 20 percent of employees strongly disagreed
asked whether the department distributed a fair and reasonable workload; had an
adequate computer system; displayed high morale; had managers who created a
positive and supportive climate; included staffers in the decision-making
process; and had adequate office communication.
Employees generally agreed that work gets done without wasted time or effort,
that mangers show confidence in the ability of their staffers and that the
department demonstrates a commitment to continuous education.
SPEAKING FOR RANK AND FILE: But if a score of five on the 1-to-10 satisfaction
scale was the midpoint, that means employees disagreed with all but three of the
14 statements, said Daniel Fox, president of the Riverside County Deputy
District Attorney's Association, which represents 140 district attorneys.
"That's not a very good sign," Fox said. "As far as the rank-and-file is
concerned, they are alienated from Mr. Trask, and that's not conducive to an
efficient and productive working environment. That's what the survey really
shows."
"We don't feel we are told what's going on and (that) our input is worth
anything. We don't feel we can trust the people we work for, and that's the key
problem."
He said the survey in general shows communication problems up and down "the
management hierarchy."
"It's that breakdown in communication that has created the greatest source of
problems within the DA's office," Fox said.