
What I like about a "crisis"...it can create short-term and long-term strategic urgency.*
Scott Meeson
*Assumes we have strong leadership capable of maximizing the opportunities presented
Moderator: Jim O'Bryan
Scott Meeson wrote:What I like about a "crisis"...it can create short-term and long-term strategic urgency.*
Bryan Schwegler wrote:I'm not for huge mega-cities, but I'm also not wholesale against regionalism where it makes sense.
This many entities made sense in the day when travel was difficult and communication was slow and unorganized. That's not the case today.
Bill Call wrote:Regionalization is no panacea.
Bryan Schwegler wrote:Bill Call wrote:Regionalization is no panacea.
Especially when you hand pick several out of context examples to prove that, right?
Bill Call wrote:By the way, whenever the PD does a story about areas that have regional government like Columbus or Indianapolis or Mineapolis/St. paul they forget to mention that those cities are State capitals.
Or: Freeze the construction of new medical buildings that simply duplicate existing infrastructure. Somehow I don't think that's what the regionalists have in mind.
Bryan Schwegler wrote:Or: Freeze the construction of new medical buildings that simply duplicate existing infrastructure. Somehow I don't think that's what the regionalists have in mind.
Considering these are being built by a private company, are you suggesting that we add regulation on businesses on how many they can build and where they can build at? Seems opposite of your general philosophy, pretty shocking
Bill Call wrote:Can you think of any service that should be regionalized? What does regionalism mean to you? To me it means the leadership doesn't have a clue so they talk about the need to find "regional solutions".
Bryan Schwegler wrote:To me it's about cutting down on redundant services, redundant administrators, staff, even mayors, council people, and other elected local and county officials where it makes sense. It's about aligning laws, zoning regulations, etc.