I am very disappointed to see the old city/township divisions resurface. This is particularly hard to understand, given that every square inch of the city is part of the township. Folks, we're fighting ourselves.
We're one community, largely defined by the boundaries of our school district. We need to act like one. Unless we do, others will eat our lunch while we're too distracted by these pointless internal squables to notice. It's happened before.
I was hoping that the JEDD would provide a foundation for trust and cooperation, at last, between the Board of Trustees and the City Council. So did others, including some members of both governments. It does not look, however, as if this ever will happen, and I think it's time to take another direction.
We do not need two separate units of government in this community, one overlapping with the other. Not only is this redundant, but it keeps us even from formulating a common vision for this community's future. Do we want to take control of our common future, and decide for ourselves on our community's direction, or to we want to leave this up to builders and developers, most of whom are gone as soon as their land/buildings are sold?
Let's at least get started on this. If our elected leaders won't appoint a citizens' group to study a merger of the city and township, let's get a commission started ourselves. Let's all join together to fight for our common future, instead of fighting each other.
By Yosemite Pam
We're one community, largely defined by the boundaries of our school district. We need to act like one. Unless we do, others will eat our lunch while we're too distracted by these pointless internal squables to notice. It's happened before.
I was hoping that the JEDD would provide a foundation for trust and cooperation, at last, between the Board of Trustees and the City Council. So did others, including some members of both governments. It does not look, however, as if this ever will happen, and I think it's time to take another direction.
We do not need two separate units of government in this community, one overlapping with the other. Not only is this redundant, but it keeps us even from formulating a common vision for this community's future. Do we want to take control of our common future, and decide for ourselves on our community's direction, or to we want to leave this up to builders and developers, most of whom are gone as soon as their land/buildings are sold?
Let's at least get started on this. If our elected leaders won't appoint a citizens' group to study a merger of the city and township, let's get a commission started ourselves. Let's all join together to fight for our common future, instead of fighting each other.
By Yosemite Pam