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Regional/Greater Community Development News – September 24, 2012
Multi-jurisdictional
intentional regional communities are, in all cases, “Greater Communities” where
“community motive” is at work at a more than a local scale. This newsletter
provides a scan of regional community, cooperation and collaboration activity
as reported in news media and blogs.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Regional Excellence
Plant an
Intergovernmental Reform Garden Now:
A Modest Proposal for Public
Interest Groups and Their Friends
By Bill Dodge
The National Academy of Public
Administration (NAPA) is preparing a “Memo to National Leaders”. It calls for creating a new intergovernmental
policy council to help restore the health of our ailing federal/state/local
government system. The council would advance
governance reforms to make the system more effective in providing the services
and infrastructure required to restore our equally ailing economy.
Initial
topics suggested for the council’s agenda
-- adopting a Value Added Tax
(VAT) shared by all levels of governments, as it is in Australia, and
empowering innovative mechanisms, such as for-benefit organizations, to bring
old stakeholders together in new ways.
Neal Peirce, the syndicated
columnist, argues that the “unkempt (intergovernmental system) garden needs a plan” and NAPA’s proposed
intergovernmental policy council could prepare and pursue it, given support
from all levels of government, starting with the White House and the
Congress.
All well and good.
But
what will give this new council any better chance at success than its
predecessor, the Advisory Commission on Intergovernmental Relations (ACIR)? Fellow recovering regionalists still look reverently
upon ACIR’s efforts to design, test, and promote new regional governance models. However, they are also haunted by ACIR’s inability
to engage key government partners in controversial discussions -- and
all discussions of intergovernmental reform
are controversial -- and its tragic demise in the polarized
politics of the new century.
Moreover, creating an intergovernmental
policy council could take years and even then it might have difficulty
contending with the dysfunctional dynamics of the Nation’s capital.
Thus
a call to action by public interest groups and their friends.
If
the intergovernmental system is to be reformed, public interest groups that
represent towns, cities, counties, regional organizations and states need to plant
the seeds -- the proven existing and practical new models
for local, state, federal, and especially intergovernmental governance. They need to be the gardeners who will foment
a “revolution from the bottom up”, as opined by Norman Ornstein of the American
Enterprise Institute. And they need to plant
the seeds now as all levels of governance are in crisis, including my beloved
regions.
Regional cooperation has been one of
the positive intergovernmental reforms in my lifetime, providing a new governance
capacity to tackle the tough transportation, air and water quality, emergency
preparedness, sustainable growth and other challenges that cut across all
levels of government and are critical to keeping the United States competitive
in the global marketplace.
It
has had its flaws. Most regional
organizations still have too little power or funding to address the toughest
common challenges. But, these governance
flaws have not thwarted achieving real success, due in no small part to federal
and state government initiatives, along with enough largesse to smooth over intergovernmental
infighting.
Now,
with growing deficits, local governments cannot depend upon federal, state or
other public partners to develop or fund regional initiatives. Nor can they expect other sectors --
private, academic, non-profit, or civic
-- to pick up the slack. And without well-heeled partners helping them
to address the toughest challenges, regional governance flaws will be quickly
exposed and threaten future success.
Bottom
line: Restoring our national economy
requires rebuilding our intergovernmental system.
Local
governments, therefore, need to have access to the best ideas for governance reforms,
ones that can strengthen their capacity to work together until they can address
the toughest challenges, with confidence and limited outside support. They need models for building their
governance capacity to:
·
address
all emerging cross-cutting challenges, no matter how controversial, before they
explode into crises,
·
design
joint action plans to address these challenges and then empower themselves to negotiate
their successful implementation, with each other and other sectors,
·
propose
options for funding priority actions, from primarily local sources, even if
this means taking them to the public for approval,
·
hold
themselves accountable for implementing priority actions, even if this results
in public embarrassment or reduced support for nonperformers, and
·
maybe
most importantly, report to the public on their successes and failures on a
regular basis.
State
and federal governments are still critical.
They need to endorse regional capacity-building efforts and reward them
with supporting legislation and, to the extent available, funding for action
plans to address cross-cutting challenges.
State and federal governments also need to continue to provide
incentives to make sure that more distressed regions, urban and rural, can
complete on a “level playing field” with more affluent ones.
The
same case could be made for similar reforms across the intergovernmental system. Neighboring local governments need to find
better ways to cooperate, and share the benefits, of economic development
initiatives. Neighboring states need to
find better ways to cooperate, especially when their boundaries divide up the
metropolitan regions where over half of us live. And all levels of government need to find
better ways to plan, finance, implement, monitor, and report on initiatives to
address their own challenges, especially those that affect their neighbors as
well.
A
modest proposal.
What
if the public interest groups and their friends sent out a request for ideas
for reforming local/state/federal governance?
Their research centers and members have a long history of governance
reform and would be ideal candidates to advance ideas. So would NAPA, the Alliance for Innovation, the
National Civic League, and academic research institutes, along with active and
retired government, academic, and community leaders.
Simultaneously, the public interest groups
could appoint a working group -- a bottom-up, informal, prototype intergovernmental
policy council -- to select
the best, and boldest, ideas for governance reforms to explore this fall. They could use their research centers to recruit
experts and host dialogues to convert the ideas into practical actions. Then, they could turn to their members and
staffs to test and implement them.
I
suspect that national foundations would welcome the opportunity to provide seed
funding for such an effort. Moreover, I
am sure that I, and my column-writing colleagues, would welcome the opportunity
to share these ideas in our columns and solicit reactions and additional ideas
for governance reform.
Collectively, these actions could
become an informal 2013 Intergovernmental Reform Agenda. It might result in a somewhat messy garden,
but if a few of the reforms quickly bear
fruit across the country, it would help restore confidence that governance reform
has not been fatally poisoned by political infighting and encourage others to advance
good ideas in future years. It could also
provide a compelling rationale for quickly creating an intergovernmental policy
council to keep planting and harvesting a garden of most promising reforms. Finally, it could help demonstrate how the
public interest groups can keep such a council accountable for advancing the
most critical reforms.
Members
of public interest groups are the most important consumers of a bountiful
garden of intergovernmental reforms. If
the public interest groups don’t plant the seeds, who will? And, if they don’t do it now, how will our
intergovernmental system ever build the capacity to address the challenges that
will keep our economy competitive and our communities the best places to live?
***
Bill Dodge
is looking for a few good regions that are interested in designing regional
charters to strengthen their capacity to take bold actions to address tough
common challenges. He is the author of Regional
Excellence, and is writing a new book on regional charters. WilliamRDodge@aol.com
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Basic Geocodes -
"Global Region-builder Geo-Code
Prototype" ©
Regional/Greater Community Development News – September 10, 2012
Multi-jurisdictional
intentional regional communities are, in all cases, “Greater Communities” where
“community motive” is at work at a more than a local scale. This newsletter
provides a scan of regional community, cooperation and collaboration activity
as reported in news media and blogs.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Top 10 Stories
Cuyahoga County on Monday awarded $180,000 to Bedford,
Bedford Heights and Maple Heights to create a consolidated emergency dispatch
center.
The merger -- aided with a $720,000 federal grant and a
$55,000 state Local Innovation grant -- was Executive Ed FitzGerald's first
step in a push to eliminate dozens of police and fire dispatch centers across
the county. The county is also paying $270,000 for Cleveland State University
to plan for other cities to consolidate.
Currently, 47 police dispatch centers and dozens of
additional fire dispatch units are spread across 57 municipalities.
"The status quo was not good enough,"
FitzGerald said at a news conference with suburban leaders. "It's a waste
of money."
Maintaining dozens of disparate dispatch operations in Cuyahoga
County is costly, especially for the smallest suburbs, according to a study
commissioned by the county.
Tiny Walton Hills spent $510 per call, according to the
study. The comparable cost to Cleveland: $12 per call.
Bedford spends $67 per call, while Bedford Heights and
Maple Heights spend $92 apiece.
…
It doesn't make headlines or lead the evening news. …
But right now, in communities all over the state, people are working together
to resolve one of California's biggest challenges: our water future.
…
The record shows that Californians have been making
steady progress over the past decades. Water managers are working to stretch
every drop, diversify their water supply sources, protect water quality and
plan for uncertainties in a changing climate. But there is more to be done,
particularly when it comes to improving our statewide system of pipelines,
canals and reservoirs that allows us to capture water in wet periods for use in
the inevitable dry times.
That system, built by previous generations of leaders,
has allowed us to prosper but it's increasingly insecure under today's
environmental rules. It needs to be modernized to improve water supply delivery
and reduce environmental impacts.
This is where a statewide perspective is critical.
Resolving long-term water supply and ecosystem problems in the Delta is not a
matter of one region vs. another. It's about recognizing that the status quo is
not working for the state as a whole and finding solutions that work for all
Californians.
… we must understand that we are one state. We can't perpetuate
the notion that our natural resources "belong" to a particular
region, or that one region's economy or quality of life is more deserving of
water than another's. We cannot be satisfied with actions that shift the
problem from one region to another or that preserve the status quo because it
benefits one region in particular. Such measures cannot qualify as solutions
over the long term.
…
True solutions to our biggest problems come when we act
as one state. We have the leaders, the knowledge and the opportunity to come
together as a state on water again. It's time to put those ingredients together
and move on solutions that improve water supply security for the entire state.
Regional cooperation is the key to continued growth in
the Denver metro area and Colorado, John Beeble, president and chief executive
of Saunders Construction told the Denver Metro Chamber of Commerceon Wednesday.
Beeble, the new board chair of the organization, said
this "regionalism" is "not easy, intuitive, or always in the
short-term interests of an individual entity."
But regional cooperation matters…because "it
protects us from the vagaries of the political winds. It matters because it is
how we ensure the sustainability of this thriving region for generations to come.
"And it matters because there is no question that
we cannot continue to see business success that we have seen in rough economic
conditions without regional cooperation and support,"…
Both Beeble and outgoing…chair…warned that Colorado and
the country face myriad challenges in the next 12 months involving everything
from potential spending cuts to dealing with the evolving health care system.
Beeble said that the way to deal with those challenges
is in a pragmatic manner, free of partisanship.
Wake up California. You are perilously close to
ratifying Proposition 31, a sweepingly redistributionist and profoundly
undemocratic transformation of your way of life, and you don’t even know what’s
at stake. Suburbanites of California, you are the special targets of Prop. 31.
Act now, or be turned into second-class citizens in your own state.
Wake up America. Look toward the regionalist revolution
on California’s horizon. In an era of looming municipal bankruptcies, this
could be your fate: robbing the suburbs to pay for the cities. The regionalist
transformation now being quietly pressed on California is exactly the sort of
change President Obama has in mind for America should he win a second term. In
California and America both, the 2012 election could open the door for a
regionalist movement in hot pursuit of a redistributionist remaking of American
life.
California’s Proposition 31 is the project of a
collection of “good government” groups, in particular, California Forward.…
PROPOSITION 31 This initiative measure is submitted to
the people of California in accordance with the provisions of Section 8 of
Article II of the California Constitution.
This initiative measure amends and adds sections to the
California Constitution and adds sections to the Education Code and the Government
Code; therefore, existing provisions proposed to be deleted are printed in strikeout
type and new provisions proposed to be added are printed in underlined
type to indicate that they are new.
PROPOSED LAW
The Government Performance and Accountability Act
SECTION 1. Findings and Declarations The people of the
State of California hereby find and declare that government must be:
1. Trustworthy.
California government has lost the confidence of its citizens and is not
meeting the needs of Californians. Taxpayers are entitled to a higher return on
their investment and the public deserves better results from government
services.
2. Accountable
for Results. To restore trust, government at all levels must be accountable for
results.
…
SEC. 7. Article XI A is added to the California
Constitution, to read:
ARTICLE XI A COMMUNITY STRATEGIC
ACTION PLANS
SECTION 1. (a)
Californians expect and require that local government entities publicly explain
the purpose of expenditures and whether progress is being made toward their
goals. Therefore, in addition to the requirements of any other provision of
this Constitution, the adopted budget of each local government entity shall
contain all of the following as they apply to the entity's powers and duties:
…
(b) The State
shall consider and determine how it can support, through financial and
regulatory incentives, efforts by local government entities and representatives
of the public to work together to address challenges and to resolve problems
that local government entities have voluntarily and collaboratively determined
are best addressed at the geographic scale of a region in order to advance a
prosperous economy, quality environment, and community equity. The State shall
promote the vitality and global competitiveness of regional economies and
foster greater collaboration among local governments within regions by
providing priority consideration for state-administered funds for
infrastructure and human services, as applicable, to those participating local
government entities that have voluntarily developed a regional collaborative plan and are making progress toward the
purposes and goals of their plan, which shall incorporate the goals and
purposes set forth in paragraphs (1) to (5), inclusive, of subdivision (a) of
Section 1.
Sec. 7. Nothing
in this article is intended to abrogate or supersede any existing authority
enjoyed by local government entities, nor to discourage or prohibit local
government entities from developing and participating in regional programs and
plans designed to improve the delivery and efficiency of government services.
…
…
Regional development approaches are increasingly being
employed around the country to build more vibrant communities, Riley said. He
said these collaborations also are important because the federal government
isn't looking to do everything for people, but be a partner in helping them
identify ways to make communities better and assist in that process.
"These regional issues, transportation, housing
patterns, all those things really do impact the quality of life in a
community," said Riley, who is one of the department's 10 regional
administrators and coordinates activities in a six-state region that includes
Indiana and Illinois. "And if we are able to get a regional conversation
about how to deploy those resources and make those decisions, we give those communities
an opportunity to move forward."
Riley said regional administrators for eight federal
agencies in January met with Gary city officials and also representatives from
the Northwest Indiana Regional Development Authority, Northwestern Indiana
Regional Planning Commission, and the Metropolitan Planning Council.
Conversations have continued since that time on coordinating a regional
investment strategy as part of the Gary and Region Investment Project.
…
Last Thursday's North Central Florida Regional Planning
Council meeting played to a full house, as North Central Florida's rural
counties and cities came to connect with their fellow members, the planning
Council, and listen to the Department of Economic Opportunity's Dr. Barbara
Foster's presentation called, "Planning For Economic Opportunity."
The North Central Region contains nearly 7000 square
miles. Its members include municipalities from Alachua, Bradford, Columbia,
Dixie, Gilchrist, Hamilton, Lafayette, Madison, Suwannee, Taylor and Union
Counties, as well as those counties.
While the area has abundant natural resources, other
than Alachua County, home of the University of Florida, the region has been
fiscally constrained and challenged for decades with high levels of poverty and
difficult learning environments.
Scott Koons, the Council's Executive Director said the
NCFRPC's purpose is to "address issues, concerns and problems of a multi
county nature."
…
Abstract Through a case study analysis of a regional
leadership development program, this article describes the impact on individual
and group leadership skills and how the skills are employed to benefit
individual communities and the region as a whole. Data were obtained through
surveys. Through cooperation and collaboration between and among leadership
program graduates, leadership alumni, and other regional leaders, graduates
grew personally and professionally, and built new networks that help them
advance their communities and the region. The most significant implication for
Extension from this study is the need to expand partnerships in order to better
utilize resources. Keywords: community leadership, regional leadership,
regional collaboration, networking, community involvement Beverly Maltsberger
Extension Professional Community Development Specialist St. Joseph, Missouri
maltsbergerb@missouri.edu Wilson Majee Community Development Specialist
Princeton, Missouri Majeew@missou
AN "Outback Commission" should be created to
address long-standing problems in governance in remote and regional Australia,
…
The remote FOCUS review spoke to people across remote
and regional Australia, from the Pilbara to Central Queensland and north Queensland.
Report co-author Dr Bruce Walker said successive
government approaches to remote and regional Australia had demonstrably failed,
including the current Regional Development Australia approach.
The report showed the main issues facing many remote regions
were the same, with many communities citing a lack of control and a feeling of
being ignored by policy-makers in Canberra and state capitals.
But Dr Walker said real decision-making power needed to
be given back to the communities affected, citing the government's response to
the fly-in, fly-out mining industry and Aboriginal affairs.
"If you want to get change, you've got to convince
people on the coast to understand the remote and regional areas," he said.
"From our talks, we realise the FIFO industry is no
longer just mining - you've doctors and nurses and teachers flying in and out
of remote communities.
…
With an estimated 50,000 attendees, the recent Rio+20
conference on sustainable development was the largest UN event ever held.
Despite widely reported dissatisfaction with the summit’s outcome, the
gathering was much more …
With more than 500 on-site side events and hundreds of
nearby meetings, forums and workshops, there was ample opportunity for
participants to share their responses as well as discuss new approaches to the
challenges of global development.
One such response, led by the United Nations University
Institute of Advanced Studies (UNU-IAS), is a call for the concerted effort of
multiple stakeholders to further develop collaborative learning systems that
enable transformation towards green, resilient and just societies.
… Regional
Centres of Expertise(RCEs) are regional (in the majority of cases
sub-national) networks of multiple stakeholders that focus their learning
projects on specific sustainability-related challenges framed around their
reality and geographical location.
…
On the road, so next
issue September 24, 2012 –
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Basic Geocodes -
Geocode
|
Geography
|
Wikipedia
page link
|
0000
|
Earth
|
|
0900
|
Arctic Ocean
|
|
1000
|
Europe
|
|
2000
|
Africa
|
|
3000
|
Atlantic Ocean
|
|
4000
|
Antarctica
|
|
5000
|
Americas
|
|
6000
|
Pacific Ocean
|
|
7000
|
Oceania
|
|
8000
|
Asia
|
|
9000
|
Indian Ocean
|
"Global Region-builder Geo-Code
Prototype" ©