Flagpole. (Athens, Ga.) 1987-current, July 13, 2011, Image 7
WHAT'S UP IN NEW DEVELOPMENT Why doesn't our community look like we want it to? Why are we so far behind comparable communities in the country and the region? Why is there so little opportunity here, the poor est county in the nation? As we burrow deeper into issues that often manifest themselves outwardly as design and planning questions, the answers become more and more fundamental to what Athens is. At the center of the whole series of Russian dolls, though, there's that old tension between city and county, rural and urban. Is Athens merely a small urban blip of a college town on the otherwise rural and suburban radar of Northeast Georgia? Or is Athens the center of a growing met ropolitan region whose population, when including adjacent counties, could easily comprise a half-million citizens in the next five to 10 years? I can't help but scratch my head at some of the recent "talk" trumpeted by the Athens Banner-Herald about eliminat ing the position of mayor in Athens-Clarke County. That the ABH chose the day after the Fourth of July to suggest eliminat ing our local executive branch just seems a bit un-American. It's an interesting issue to bring up, but ultimately, it touches on a conversation that we often dance around here in Athens, but can never quite seem to discuss openly. It's not that the position of mayor is vestigial, as the folks at the Banner-Herald suggest. The whole commission-manager system of government, with its figurehead mayor, is what's no longer working for us. The relationship between the three players (mayor, commission and manager) is at odds with the community's scale and its vision for itself. The suggestion that the position of the mayor is vestigial and unnecessary only works if you view the job of a mayor as a legislative one; around here, we sort of assume that's how it is, with the mayor's primary role being to set the commission's agenda, sort of like the majority leader or speaker of the house in the upper and lower chambers of Congress. But a mayor tradition ally isn't a legislative role; it's an executive one, and what we really need to be talking about is whether executive power in this county should continue to be wielded by an unelected manager, or whether the community's chief executive should be held accountable to the people in regular elections. Other aspects of the ABH editorial bring the central and unspoken tensions into clearer focus, citing concerns about rural and suburban representation, and a desire to focus on those sorts of issues. Of course, suburban issues are really issues of bad urban planning, and in regard to rural concerns; well, there just aren't that many people "out there" in what's left of our hinterlands to warrant much more representation. This is an urban place, and we need to confront that. Unfortunately, our local government's structure still reflects our rural heritage, with a commission-manager form that is ineffective, and produces a lot of friction. While 20 years ago during unification, an apolitical manager dealing with the ins and outs of a small county might have made sense, today's reality is much dif ferent. Athens is becoming a big, diverse city, with complex problems, like the highest urban poverty rate in the country. It's time to acknowledge we're in the big leagues, and modify our government to look more like the mayor-council system that is common for communities of a larger size. In suggesting the elimination of the role of mayor, proponents may be reading the narrative backwards. In 2006, we finally acknowledged the importance of the mayor by making it a full-time job. The next step is to invest some executive power in the position, and to fund it in a way that makes sense. Another idea thrown out in the ABH editorial was to eliminate the two superdistrict commissioners. Maybe that's a good idea, and maybe it isn't, but if it were a budget-neutral way to put a competitive salary on the table to attract higher-quality mayoral candidates, it would certainly help. The fact that the Mayor of Athens- Clarke County only makes about a third as much as Manager Alan Reddish—her employee—is just silly. We ought to be paying the mayor the type of salary that will draw the attention of local professionals who are actively getting things done, rather than offering a salary so low as to be attractive mainly to retirees like current Mayor Nancy Denson. The commissioners are a busy bunch, too, and the work those folks do approaches being a full-time job; if we want serving on the county commission to become more than an extra-curricular activity, we need to look at their salaries, too. You get what you pay for. Many of the current conflicts in our government seem to come from those remnant rural-county government structures being applied to a highly urban city. The types of decisions which might have seemed like relatively minor concerns in a less populated and more homogenous rural county have become major political issues in our more complex and urban environment. Recent examples include planning questions like those regarding the Sandy Creek sewer line, management decisions like the breakup of the Natural Resources Division of Leisure Services, and most recently, the design of the Classic Center expansion. The role of the manager's office has hardly been without political agenda in these recent situations, with the significant influence of that position used to shape policy in ways that are wholly unaccountable to voters. If anything, it's the Strong Manager, not the Weak Mayor, that is obsolete in Athens-Clarke County. We need people who are accountable running our local government, and the way to achieve that is to put more of the day-to-day executive deci sions in the hands of an elected mayor. Getting there might require tweaking our charter, but it's something that we've got to consider if we want a responsive government that's serious about the problems facing the community. Of course, we've got to be willing to pay competitive salaries that attract innova tive leaders to elected positions, too. We can't afford not to. Kevan Williams alhensrising@flagpole.com EVERY THURSDAY LADIES NIGHT Wtnensa Flow Open! 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