Charlie Page wrote:Does the mayor really run the City anyway? Sure, the mayor should have some big picture practical ideas. What I mean is from a day to day perspective. Does the mayor look outside, see the snow falling then call the director of public works and say "hey Joe, it's snowing outside...better get the plows moving...oh, and by the way the left rear tire on truck 2 looks a bit low...better check that out". I doubt it. The mayor relies on the competent professionals in the various director level positions to run their departments. At least I would if I was mayor.
Charlie
Of course you would. Who wouldn't?
The problems is as we learned from Dr. Keller's lecture on forms of Government. The
reason different forms of government have emerged over the way, has been abuse of
power, then a corrective move to limit the power. It was Absolute monarchy, that gave
need and rise to Constitutional monarchy, as the outcry of abuse from the serfs gave
way to take some power, and on and on.
In "Municipalities" a term a style first coined by the Ancient Romans as a way to collect
taxes but stay out of politics, gave way to various forms including "Commission." Some
cities still have a Commission, but City Manager grew out of a corrupt "Commission" style
of government.
Now the problem as I see it and read it is, Lakewood has a mayoral system being run like
a City Manager. Possibly morphing into this on its own. Nudged along by those that feel
all of Lakewood's government should really be an oligarchy. No matter, when you combine
forms of government, what usually disappears first are the CHECKS AND BALANCES that
have been designed into each form of government.
So either we have a Mayor, or council with too much power, or we have a City Manager,
that was hired from friends, that thought he was a nice guy, and could...
The Charter Review besides looking at cleaning up all the laws that have been made since
the last review and beyond, and looking at various aspects and deciding if there is something
they see that can be fixed, removed, changed. One of the things pointed out by Pam
Smith, a republican who once made a strong run for mayor, asked. "The sample successful
charter was only ten pages long, and ours is almost 60 pages. Should we simplify?"
So in a nutshell, you are correct on how to run a city in this day and age, hire competent
managers and directors, and hire a person with the best background from all over the
country that can "Manage" the town for the next "building spell," "park rehabbing spell,"
"Saving our century homes spell" or until they lack the skills then find the next one.
One interesting point of Larry's speech was a city that had gone from Mayor to City Manager
and then hired their manager from within the city limits. Corruption and failure followed.
To quote Dr. Keller, "The worst thing a city could ever do is hire a City Manager from within
the current city. Not only does it often lead to abuse and corruption, it is the worst way
to waste the entire process and the opportunity of change.FWIW.