Wednesday, October 19, 2016

Ah, Yes, the Water. The Cold, Cold Water.


Last night was the Meet the Candidates event/grilling in the run-up to our local election.  The event was very successful, the turnout was quite satisfying, and I think all of us made our positions clear.

We were asked a reasonable array of questions about various Village matters.  Everyone got to make his or her case to the audience.

There was a very distinct theme to the responses, more or less as predictable and as promised by the four who are not incumbents.  They all promised to "listen to the residents" (which all candidates promise to do, and all elected officials do), and they all criticized the current state of the Commission and its (in)attention (as the challengers imagine it) to the budget.  One candidate reassured us in response to a question a voter posed to her, to the effect of wondering whether she would take the same positions and approaches as a Commissioner that she does as a candidate, that she could be relied upon not to waver from her current path.  No matter what she encounters, or what she learns, she will not change her mind or her approach.

Those who are not now, and have never been, elected officials seem to understand that somehow, no one before ever thought of the idea of listening to residents/constituents.  And no one ever thought of how to confront a budget, with its limitations.  It never occurred to BP Commissioners to try to manage a manager.  It's an interesting perspective to adopt.  One of my friends who was there described the approaches of these candidates who have never actually had to deal with this kind of material as "pandering and naive."

Frankly, I think that's probably right.  Passing attention, from a great distance away, allowed authoritative conclusions about a range of difficult problems and dilemmas.  And there was largely little or no sense of what made those problems and dilemmas so difficult.

I took the title of this post from a comment made by one of the candidates, regarding the things she imagines herself improving.  Various Village residents have long complained about the water supplied to us from CNM.  Some complain about what they interpret as the purity and cleanliness of the water, and some complain about the pressure.  The candidate in question reassured us she's going to get to the bottom of this, and get those "two and a half inch" pipes replaced and/or enlarged.  As if no one ever thought about this problem, or tried to do anything about it.

If I get re-elected, we will still have two new, uninitiated, clearly poorly informed Commissioners.  If I don't get re-elected, we'll have three.  Presumably, they will start their tenures as they promised: persistently soliciting and "listening to" the thoughts and wishes of their neighbors.  And they'll certainly hear plenty of those thoughts and wishes, whether they still want to or not.  But they won't all be the same thoughts, the same wishes, and the same theories.  They'll conflict with each other.  If our candidates, two or three of whom will become Commissioners, really are pandering, and if their approach really does spring from naivete, they will get a rude awakening, fast.  It will feel like very cold water to them.  They'll find out that just as is true of the current Commission, and the one before that, and the ones before that, they, too, will soon be accused of not "listening" to their neighbors.  They'll find out that simple answers don't really address difficult and sometimes impossible problems.

They'll find out that a very limited-- frankly wholely inadequate-- budget can be tweaked a tiny bit here, and a tiny bit there, but overall, it will never serve the needs of this Village.  We had our best chance to help ourselves-- an early application for annexation-- but we blew it.  One candidate last night talked about maybe annexing some other tract.  But it isn't likely to happen, for exactly the reason our recent attempt failed.

The new Commission will have a choice, as all elected bodies have a choice.  That choice was represented by one of the questions posed to us last night: would you try to respond to what makes Village residents happy, or would you take a different, perhaps longer, view?  As I said last night, keeping the residents du jour happy has for decades involved not spending money on things like necessary attention to the log cabin.  Past Commissions ignored the man behind the curtain, and they oversaw a municipal headquarters that was decreasing functional, and in no way adequate to the need.  The current Commission, the one that ends next month, took the longer view.  And we made some 2015-2016 Village residents unhappy.  Those who choose to be unhappy can remain that way for the next few years, until the loan is repaid.  But many decades and even some generations of future Village residents will be very happy for what we are leaving them.  And in the meantime, we have dramatically improved our functioning, our appearance, and our sense of place.

As one of my friends put it, in a question that was not asked last night, we are improving the Village's "brand."  That translates variously, but most certainly including our sense of value, and our property values.


8 comments:

  1. Thanks for the update Fred. You really nailed it with this one. And this year is somewhat different that the past if you are really in tune with what is going on here. This year, any responsible resident of this Village will vote for one person and one person only. You. Crazy to dilute a vote for you in a year like this. I just hope that you prevail and the other two that get elected along with you can approach the job with more than just platitudes about "listening to the residents." Good luck.

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  2. Hi All,
    There are some issues, like police and code that the present commission have chosen to ignore.
    If we have 3 of the same commissioners as now, why would there be any change?
    There is also the audit that is 8 months past due..
    Dilute the vote is actually what we need.

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  3. Yes, thank you for the update Fred. I agree, our last commission made a lot of progress, and have definitely improved the Village's "brand." It's unfortunate that the annexation plan failed, but we can learn from it. The tougher decisions in life tends to be the most unpopular ones. I guess that's why BP Commissioners get paid the "big bucks." :-)

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  4. At the present time I'm with you Drew, I can only vote for Fred.
    I heard a lot of criticism about the current Commission from the rest of the candidates none of which offered any viable suggestions or solutions to the issues or concerns (some real some imagined) they raised. Some of the suggestions they made are already in place, some are impractical and some are operational. The Commission sets policy, the Manager implements it, that’s how it works folks.
    One candidate has incorrect information on her literature that indicates we are on a State Audit Watch list, this is completely false. Makes one wonder what else is being said in private.

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  5. Drew, I don't begin to know what to say. Thank you so much. And you, too, Supreme and Chuck.

    Harvey, I think maybe we missed you last night. I didn't see you there. I'm sorry you missed us, if you weren't there. Had you been there for the discussions about Code, you would have heard described an interesting and problematic dilemma. One opinion was that the Codes were too aggressive, and another was that enforcement was too lax. Curiously, some of the candidates last night made both complaints simultaneously. Thinking about the four candidates you apparently favor, I, for one, would be hard pressed to tell you what approach any of them would actually take to the Code problem. Do they in fact, as they say, favor more stringent adherence to the Codes, or do they react against them, because they're viewed as too demanding or onerous? I suggest you ask each of them. As I said, I was there, listening carefully, and I couldn't tell you.

    As for police, as well as Code, in what sense do you possibly imagine the current Commission have chosen to ignore them? Be more specific about your complaint. And again, from last night's discussion, we have some candidates who want more enforcement ("Click It, or Ticket" was recalled), and others who want less money spent on our police.

    Harvey, it's easy, if you don't know much about the details and do not have to make decisions, to complain about how the Village runs now. You're complaining, and so did the four candidates who have not been involved. But actually confronting these issues, and having to vote in a definitive way on them, is a very different matter, and a different kind of responsibility.

    I hate to say this, but we're going to get two or three new Commissioners who are completely uninitiated and unprepared for this task. If we get the three you're requesting, they could constitute a numerical majority of the Commission. The last time we had that, the Village ground to a halt, we couldn't get anything done, there was persistent sniping (since the new Commissioners had no idea what they were doing, and had nothing else to offer, other than deflection and obstruction) and we lost an opportunity for annexation. That loss will haunt us for a very long time.

    Fred

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  6. Harvey,

    I'm not sure why you say the present commission has ignored anything. Tackling serious problems takes time and often requires that the problems be ranked and confronted in order of priority. We are getting there though, one problem at a time.

    In my view, the absolute last "issue" residents should complain about with the current commissioners is that they fail to listen and ignore problems. Sorry, that isn't really credible and you know I love you man. If anything, I would criticize them for listening too damn much on some of the small stuff (Dias anyone?) which slows the pace of tackling the many issues the Village faces. But if those that serve have the time for that then I can live with it too.

    And look, we all can find reason to disagree with a commission decision here or there. Disappointment and compromise are part of the process. But we all need to divorce personal dissatisfaction on a particular issue when making an assessment of whether the members of our commission are: (i) taking the time to understand the full scope of each particular issue presented to them, (ii) engaging with and giving due deference to the reasonable views of the residents when possible and appropriate, (iii) delivering a fully informed vote in good faith and not on some pre-determined voting bloc or agenda; and (iv) conducting themselves in a manner that is mindful that we are all neighbors and, therefore, should remain friendly and respectful even when we disagree. Anyway, that's my analysis for determining how to vote.

    Disagree all you want (I have and do) with any vote Fred has made over the past few years but tell me up or down whether he has satisfied the above criteria on each and every matter of importance. Unqualifiedly, the answer is yes, he has.

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  7. Hi Drew,
    I say the commission has ignored issues, because they have. Read my post. The audit is 9 months late. How can you do a budget if you don't know last years figures. Not creditable?
    I never mentioned code enforcement. I mentioned code. The rush to pass codes that are ill conceived and very badly written. So bad that after passing the driveway ordinance, they had to make changes because no one including the commission was sure was it said. They suspended enforcing it because of the confusion. Read the code and then comment on it.

    My complain was very specific, residents spoke, including members of the code review board,that what the commission was passing was not what they discussed.
    I sorry Drew, I know what I am talking about, however you did not reach out to see what it was.
    Some, many or most people have noticed a lack of policing in the park. Our mayor has even mentioned it. If revenues from tickets has gone down. It is either people are driving better or less tickets are being issued. Crime is up, that is a fact. When was the last ticket or Click It?
    Fred, are the candidates less prepared then you were? We have an attorney and an ex law enforcement officer. At the previous election, no commissioner had a "holier then thou" attitude.
    I think our commission cam handle more than one item at a time. Hopefully with our new manager. It seems that when our last manager left everything was put on hold, except to pass ordinances.
    Fred you answered many things in your post, but not what I asked about. That is what I mean about not listening.



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  8. Harvey,

    I didn't fail to answer you. I just disagreed.

    Yes, they're less prepared than I was. I had been active on Boards for about eight years continuously before I ran, and I never missed a Commission meeting. I didn't know then what I know now, not yet having been on the Commission, but I was as prepared as someone could be without being on the Commission.

    The "attorney" was a prosecutor in another state, and is now a litigator. What's that got to do with municipal government? The ex law enforcement officer was a federal marshall. What's that got to do with municipal government?

    Fred

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