John Drury: “Reinventing” Government

“Reinventing” Government


by John Drury

There’s
been a great deal of talk at the statehouse these days about
reinventing our local governments and reforming our property tax
system. A local government tax reform committee with 12 legislators has
been formed and they are meeting weekly with the Governor working on
creating significant changes to the way our governments do business in
Iowa.




I’ve
always been somewhat fascinated by the terms “reinventing government”
and “thinking outside the box” when it comes to governments providing
services to the citizens. The question, “how many ways are there to
plow the snow off of a city street?” comes to mind.




The
committee is being cautious about using the word consolidation when it
comes to local governments, and especially cautious when they use that
word about our schools. That word has been replaced by
“regionalization”. (Which, by the way, my spell checker doesn’t see as
a word.)




This is
understandable; as legislators know, the people generally do not want
consolidation and they may very well not want regionalization either.
Surveys have shown that they want local governments to work for them
and with them, they want to have a say in the decisions that are made.
If their taxes are going up, or services are being cut, they want the
opportunity to attend a city council meeting to let them know what they
think. If the county roads they travel every day to get to work are in
disrepair, they want to be able to go to the county supervisors and
make a case for their repair.




I’ve
always maintained that government is not always going to be efficient.
The government is there to protect and work for the public. If it’s
inefficient but works for the people, then so be it. Local government
is the best government.




So I
urge the legislative panel to be very careful when they tread these
waters of how local governments should operate. And more importantly,
they should not forget the reasons for this “reinvention.” We are
reinventing government because of the dilemma in our state of dwindling
populations and the infamous brain drain. In fact, many of the
decisions made in the past few years have led to the de-population of
Iowa, especially rural Iowa. They have taken away local control on
issues that affect our quality of life and have in effect, legislated a
civil war on such issues as hog confinements, pitting neighbor against
neighbor. The list of polluted waters in our state has increased and we
sock our kids with enormous student loan debt forcing them to leave the
state for higher paying jobs and a better quality of life.




In north
Iowa, one could say that regionalization means taking several small
communities and combining them into a single unit of government that
will work for the entire region. It means that the small towns will
stop competing with each other and work together, hoping that if one of
them prospers, they may all share in that glory. All of those things
certainly sound rosy but it also may mean fewer services to those in
the area.




If two
small towns unincorporate and allow the county to operate their
government, what will that scenario look like? Well, chances are each
town has at the very least a Fire Dept., a Police Dept., a public
library, and perhaps a community hall. It’s somewhat doubtful that the
county will be interested in funding all of these services, so who gets
the axe? Again, the civil war analogy comes into play.




If the
reasons behind “regionalization” and “reinventing government” are to
create a better way of providing the same level of services currently
provided, that’s fine, let’s have a look. But if it’s to further enable
the lack of any real economic development strategy in rural Iowa, it’s
unacceptable. If it’s to enable the loss of our small towns and our
quality of life, it’s unacceptable. And if this panel is thinking that
all government can and will someday be efficient, they are wasting
their time.

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