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Our Rock and our Mountain

133 reasons to keep thinking metro

The Nobel Prize-winning essayist Albert Camus wrote a compelling little book about Sisyphus, the ancient Greek king of Corinth. Sisyphus is the perfect “absurd hero,” the guy who offended the gods by attempting to subvert their power over life and death, but who was overpowered by them, and then punished with an eternal command—to forever roll a rock up a hill, only to watch it roll back down again.

“His scorn of the gods, his hatred of death, and his passion for life won him that unspeakable penalty in which the whole being is exerted toward accomplishing nothing,” wrote Camus.

To advocates of metropolitan or regional government, this story feels awfully familiar. Newly published evidence that poverty in Rust Belt cities is increasing has to make our anti-poverty workers feel not only that the rock has slid back downhill but that the rock is growing ever larger. Recently refreshed Census data pile on, because those data say that our 40-year-long Rust Belt population decline is accelerating—expressly in the places whose governance is fractured and localized, which also happen to be where the housing foreclosure and abandonment crisis has been going on the longest.

But like good Corinthian kings, some carry on fighting the fight. The recent Buffalo State College conference on the stimulus package and its potential long-term benefits concluded that the president’s money will only really work if it’s spent metro by metro, not local government by local government—and that conclusion will soon be presented to the Obama administration, which might actually implement regional thinking. (Stay tuned.)

So maybe, and we are hopeful, Sisyphus might get a win.

It couldn’t come soon enough, because right here in Erie County, we recently experienced a literally absurd situation, truly worthy of Camus, and for which there is very possibly a precise mythical precedent. (I’ll go check my schoolboy copy of The Odyssey.)

It happened when a county legislator went out and asked all the town supervisors, town council members, town clerks, town superintendents of highways, and town assessors whether they would yield control over a function that towns shouldn’t have—namely, land-use planning—and instead empower a nonpartisan, disinterested, and apolitical county planning body.

The county legislator in question, Robert Reynolds, had the deciding vote over whether to override the county executive’s veto of the planning board. But instead of just voting in the public interest, instead of getting Erie County in line with what may soon be a presidential endorsement of a regional approach to governing—an approach that could finally help Erie County government take the next evolutionary step toward being a functional, metrowide coordinator of public health, infrastructure, and economic conditions—he chose instead to ask the very people whose political existence thwarts the public interest whether they would prefer a cut in their power, or the status quo.

It’s a crazy version of the Sisyphus story. What do you think the answer would have been had brave Sisyphus asked the God of Death to stop abusing humanity by forcing people into Hades? Would the hero who thumbed his nose at death have ever asked the gods of Mount Olympus to break ranks and let mere humans decide their fate? Of course not.

Did the one single county legislator whose vote was needed, whose vote could have broken the county executive’s insane endorsement of regional economic death, really think that he would get the town elected officials (most of them allies of the county executive) to break ranks?

Albert Camus won a Nobel Prize for writing about absurdity. We, sadly, are living it.

But unlike Sisyphus, we’re not up against gods in this fight, folks. We’re up against 133 town and village munchkins and the leader of the Lollipop Guild.

133 visionary statesmen

The 25 towns, 16 villages, and three cities inside Erie County are all empowered to do lots of things on their own. That’s how it’s always been around here in the 1,000 square miles of our county. We started evolving toward regional governance in the 1950s, but that evolution stopped when the towns and villages and cities all stayed put even after the county legislature and executive system was instituted in 1960.

Thus once again this fall, there will be an election for local offices—which means that our absurdity-inured electorate gets to listen to people who will parade before us seeking our good wishes, our money, our attention, and our votes, so that they can go back and occupy the 133 town and village offices that are up this year.

All told, there will actually be 152 offices up this November. Fully 133 are town and village officials. We will also elect the mayors of Buffalo and of Tonawanda, a county sheriff and a county comptroller, and 15 county legislators. But the real story is in the towns—of which there are 25 in Erie County—and in the 16 villages.

Meanwhile, down in 400-square-mile Fairfax County, which is right across the Potomac River from Washington, DC, the 10-member legislature is thinking about turning the County of Fairfax into the City of Fairfax.

Apples and oranges, you say? You’d be right. Fairfax is a county of about one million people, while Erie County is a county of about 930,000 people. Apples so far. Fairfax County is dominated by the federal government as an employer and landowner; it’s where the Pentagon is. Fairfax is also a place where our federal tax dollars pay for private enterprises that provide services to our country, including services that they can’t tell you about. Oranges: Government is a relatively small part of the economy here, comprising only 16 percent of the workforce.

And there’s another difference between Fairfax County and Erie County: In Fairfax, there is a county government. There are no towns or villages. And there’s only one school district for 400 square miles. Here? There are 29.

So when it comes to managing services in the 400 square miles of Fairfax County, which is like Erie County in that it has transitioned from a largely rural to a largely suburban landscape over the past 50 years, the folks in Fairfax do it without any local governments at all.

And Fairfax has grown and developed so much that its leaders are thinking that it may be time to take the next step.

The chair of the 10-member Fairfax County legislature recently told the Washington Post that “[f]ifty, 60 years ago…we were one of the largest producers of dairy products…now we are a mostly suburban community with some urbanizing areas. The city label more accurately describes what Fairfax is.”

E pluribus chaos

Back here in Western New York, our 25 Erie County towns each have supervisors. They each have councils. Most have a few other offices. We get to elect them all, even though the details are mind-numbing—in part because many but not all town offices are up for election this year.

So while in Fairfax County there are 10 elected officials who are having a conversation with the state government there over whether to remain a county or to become a city under state law, here where we live, we will get the chance to…change nothing.

Oh, sorry.

In a few of our towns, we will get a chance to reduce the number of council members from seven to five, or from five to three, so that next time, there will be 129 instead of 133 town elected officials to vote for.

But this September and again this November, there will be races for town supervisors in Alden, Amherst, Aurora, Boston, Brant, Colden, Collins, Concord, Elma, Hamburg, Holland, Marilla, Newstead, Orchard Park, Sardinia, and Wales, and council members in all those towns and in the City of Lackawanna.

There will be races for various other offices in Cheektowaga, Clarence, Colden, Collins, Concord, Eden, Elma, Evans, Grand Island, Hamburg, Holland, Kenmore, Lancaster, Marilla, Newstead, North Collins, Orchard Park, Tonawanda, Wales, and West Seneca. These would be town clerks, town superintendents of highways, town assessors, town receivers of taxes and assessments, and town justices.

Two of the three cities are electing mayors, but only half of the 25 towns are electing supervisors. And although the sheriff, the comptroller, and all the county legislators are up for election, the county executive, the county clerk, and the district attorney are not.

What are we getting to vote for, anyway?

Substance versus form

With Fairfax County on the mind, a question naturally arises as we look forward to the fall election season in Western New York. Some now ask why we need so many town board members. I ask this: Why do we need any town governments at all?

There are those who would say that it is the smallness of government in Fairfax County that is exemplary, and that we should emulate that smallness. Local government, those folks say, enabled the tremendous growth in population, wealth, and income in the suburbs of Washington, DC.

That, of course, is nonsense. Study after study has definitively proved that it was precisely because of the massive expansion of the federal government, especially the defense budget, that there came great growth in the Washington, DC area.

What is evident, however, is that the citizens of Fairfax County, Virginia, have a countywide, unified and functional government that encompasses about the same densely developed area as our densely developed area. Put Buffalo, Tonawanda, Amherst, Clarence, Cheektowaga, Lancaster, West Seneca, Lackawanna, Hamburg, Elma, and Aurora together, and you get about 400 square miles.

Were we governed like Fairfax County, decision-making could be done by a functional, empowered county government rather than by four dozen separate municipal entities. The economic and demographic transition from rural county to suburb to densely populated urbanized region here, as there, would naturally lead to a sensible conversation about what the next evolutionary step actually ought to be.

But here, we are stuck back at the base of the mountain. We have a chance this fall to push 133 little stones back up the mountain—or, if the two downsizing referenda work, 129. Then next year, we get a chance to do it all over again, Sisyphus-style.

Small wonder, then, that participation in these local elections has dropped so badly.

Of the voters who are eligible to vote in the Democratic primary for City of Buffalo Mayor in 2009, the expectation is that only 35,000 will participate—about 32 percent of the 112,000 registered Democrats. Less than 15 percent of eligible voters in the Town of West Seneca bothered to show up to vote on whether to shrink their town board; in Evans, less than 12 percent voted on shrinkage.

Maybe the passionate reformers are shrinking away from conflict, leaving only a tiny, embittered core of scowling negativists. The Census says that our county will shrink by another five to nine percent over the next 10 years, and that the City of Buffalo will itself continue to fall, as it has already, from over 400,000 under Jimmy Griffin to 328,000 under Tony Masiello to 270,000 under Byron Brown.

But this is no time to despair. The good news is that we have it a whole lot better than Albert Camus’s existential hero. The rock will still be heavy, but when the Obama administration gets the message that a bunch of Rust Belt activists send—that we want and need metro solutions because localism is literally killing us—the day will be closer when we may actually get over the hump. So let’s keep pushing on that rock.

Bruce Fisher is visiting professor of economics and finance at Buffalo State College, where he directs the Center for Economic and Policy Studies.


Reader Comments


cw
16 Jul 2009, 12:43
Small towns do not want big city (county) developers to decide what gets built in our towns . Eden has strict rules about this and they would be crushed without our local government . How would your plan let us keep our unique area free of dense housing, Walmarts, McMansions, etc. ? You know we would be buried in the name of "progress" and that is not why we live here . I'll pay more taxes to keep the Paladinos of the world away .

Bruce Fisher
16 Jul 2009, 20:16
Look around you. Eden's farms are becoming subdivisions. Your town board is acting like other town boards...big boxes came to Evans because the town board changed. They came to the outskirts of Hamburg Village and now retail in the village struggles. They are all over Route 219 in Springville and the village center gasps...A regional planning entity is the only way to stop that kind of sprawl from killing your quality of life. Subdivisions on Route 62 in Eden, by the way, include mini-mansions. Subdivisions on East Eden Road are being built even as I write this. Why? Because there is no regional plan. Eden is endangered because your town leadership is inviting development in order to build up the tax base...even while the population of adjacent towns, not new growth, not in-migration, is the source of your new neighbors. Eden used to be a compact village surrounded by farms. No more. Now it is almost completely indistinguishable from any other suburb. Sad, so sad. And so costly to the regional economy, and most acutely to the agricultural economy.

reflip
17 Jul 2009, 08:53
CW,

You sound like a parody of a delusional suburban NIMBY. If you are serious though, then your mode of thinking is the reason why your kids, or your grandkids, will leave Buffalo and never come back. But, if you are lucky enough to have your family stay here and find jobs, then thank you for describing exactly why I want to leave. The provincial-minded population here is what prevents WNY from capitalizing on its numerous assets. I'm already tired of watching the rock roll back down the hill. And I'm tired of caring.

cw
17 Jul 2009, 12:15
Mine are gone - they don't like the weather . You are welcome to go as well . We live where we do so we don't have to be near people like you and we intend to keep it that way . I don't want you anywhere near my back yard where I am free to hunt and farm and you are free to go where assholes can force their lifestyles on anyone without the political clout to keep you out . Don't get caught in my backyard . May you rot with festering boils .

cw
18 Jul 2009, 11:00
The subdivisions are in the town of Hamburg despite the name of the road . We never had big retail in the town - just local business . We have a small supermarket, Dollar Gen, and a Timmy Ho's, Eden Tractor and a few others . Any more and they won't be in Eden any more - they will be in Hamburg or Collins . We have strict zoning in the ag districts that limit building to 4-5 acres, no trailers, 200 feet road frontage and most importantly, no county water or sewer . The last county exec. wanted to force water into all the towns south of Buffalo which would have allowed denser housing . It would have cost me and my neighbors $750 for hookup, $1200 @ year assessment for 20 years, up to $1000 @ year water bill (av. water bill in Erie county) and 1+2 $ @ foot to lay the line for my 1000 foot driveway . I have a well . I have a filter system . I don't have a water bill . How would a county government handle our zoning restrictions ? I asked Gaughan this question at a meeting he held some years ago and he told me that it would be up to a county "commission" and we would have one or two reps on the board . Guess who would win that one . We vote on our town master plan and we always vote to stay the way it is . Who the hell are you or Gaughan to tell us we have to become more development friendly in the hope that someone in Clarence will have lower taxes ? We had people like Doug Naylon and Paladino sniffing around here 10-15 years ago and it wasn't because they wanted to be our new best friends . Look what Orchard Park did a while back . They decided they would tax all land at "development" rates and my friend,who lives miles out of town on 10 acres, had his taxes go up times 10 . They tried to raise school taxes 30% and when a reported asked some snotty yuppie if she thought it was fair to do that to the older, long time residents, she said "We are here now and I don't care what they want " . Why wouldn't that happen in Eden ? I'm all for a planning board as long as the towns retain the right to control their own destiny . This is the land of the payoff and the back room deal . Excuse me for being skeptical when it comes to people staying the hell out of our business by cutting town boards to where one payoff gets you a new zoning law, a county exec. can shove un-needed, un-wanted, expensive water down the throats of a population that doesn't want it so they can add new revenue to a corrupt county water board full of political appointees and all the other stuff that passes for a sport in this area . Look at Atlanta, Houston, and other areas where you have to drive 60 miles of more to get away from the developers . No planning board without teeth is going to prevent that and the one that is being talked about has absolutely NO authority to limit anything . Only to suggest . I suggest that when you give up control, the big dogs will eat your lunch every time . Why would anyone trust developers and the dishonest politicians that have brought us the resent show in Albany ? Would you let a Brian Davis type tell you how to run your town ? How about a Hiram Monserrate ? How about the morons that are trying to build the 219 mess that nobody needs ? You have a lot of faith in the wrong people to make the right decisions . Until you can change the whole system all at once, we need to have a siege mentality to keep out the despoilers .

Bob Ashby
21 Jul 2009, 13:43
As a former Buffalo resident now living in Northern Virginia, I would ask for a little better fact-checking. The Pentagon is in Virginia, but in Arlington County, not Fairfax County. Fairfax County does have incorporated towns in it (e.g., Vienna, Herndon), with their own elected officials, though the scope of town government functions is considerably narrower than in New York.

In Virginia, incorporated towns are an integral part of the counties in which they are located. For exampoe, Fairfax County provides to the citizens of Herndon or Vienna public education, library services, health and social services, mental health assistance, fire and rescue service, judicial services, correctional facilities, and additional recreation services and facilities. The towns have some law enforcement, licensing, and zoning powers, maintain their own parks and community centers etc.

To make things more interesting, there are also cities within Virginia counties, such as Fairfax City and Falls Church City, that are geographically located within Fairfax County. The cities can have their own school systems (the Falls Church system is very highly regarded) and have vis-a-vis the state government, which is probably the main reason why Fairfax County is thinking sbouty going to city status. Then there are cities, like Alexandria, which are not part of any county.

This is just to point out that the local government structure in Virginia is more complicatd than it might first appear. The authority of local governments is also constrained by the fact that many actions that would be purely local in many other parts of the country must first be approved by the state legislature, which is often more regressive than at least the Northern Virginia local governments. All that said, Northern Virginia local government is far less dysfunctional than in Western New York. Likewise state government, despite a chronic inability to devise an adequate transportation budget, does not get tied up in Albany-style knots.

I agree with a previous commenter that dysfunction may have some advantages, when the effect of the inefficiency is to place obstacles inthe path of sprawl. The undoubtedly more efficient governmental land use planning process in Fairfax made it possible, especially during the 1970s and 80s, for a pro-development county board and executive to preside over a massive expansion of sprawl (if you like Missasagua, you'll love Tyson's Corner). The sprawl ran -- and still runs -- far ahead of the transportation infrastructure, leading to world-class traffic jams. (The DC area in general typically ranks second only to L.A. in surveys of congegstion.)

Bottom line, though, is that government in Northern Virginia clearly works better than in WNY, and with lower taxes to boot. I still miss Buffalo, though.





Larry Castellani
21 Jul 2009, 22:58
Whether the conditions and ways of life of the communities in question in Erie County have already been eroded and compromised is beside the point. The sense of community is still alive and in fact may be reconstituted on the basis of the residues of existing traditions, customs, practices and values. There is no guarantee, let alone much promise, that a central planning board will be able to achieve any desireable sense of sustainable community nor any balance between town and country. Mr. Fisher seems not to get that there is a deep sense of mistrust, justifiably so, of any move toward centralization of powers that may function to turn control of the constitutive activities of the peoples lives over to technocrats who claim only neutral regulatory powers. Such professional planners are not necessarily guided by principles and values that would serve the ways of life that apparently the communities, towns and villages, seem to want to live. If there were some assurance that a “planning board” were not in the pockets of the traditional political parties which are not to be trusted to preserve local autonomy, integrity and sovereignty, nor under the influence of ‘developers,’ let alone the influence of the bureaucratic centralist ideology of liberal democratic Washington, then such “centralization” of control may conceivably come about in such a way that it would be representative of the interests expressed by the smaller communities. But there is no such assurance and our history of centralism, pseudo-federalism and expropriation of local wealth by the State is reason enough not to trust the profession political technocrats and “developers.” …. It is also odd that Mr. Fisher castigates Legislator Reynolds for doing what he was elected to do. It is also more than odd that he seems to attribute economic decline to ‘fractured, local governance.’ I don’t know what the professionals and professoriat at Buff State concluded during their conference on the economic plight of the area in light of Obama’s stimulus promises, but one has got to be somewhat suspicious that the same “professionals” who would serve on a control board for regional planning would know better how to effectively spend the money. I don’t know how it is possible that such a conclusion could be reached given that the best and most effective use of the money is not determined a priori. My eyes widen and my suspicion grows when Mr. Fisher assures us that the planning board would be a “nonpartisan, disinterested, and apolitical county planning body.” To me this sounds like our author is either living in a fantasy or actually does believe the people of the towns and villages are a bunch of yahoos. Or possibly the academic credentials have gone to his head. The plot thickens when our good technocrat claims that his is an “approach that could finally help Erie County government take the next evolutionary step toward being a functional, metrowide coordinator of public health, infrastructure, and economic conditions.” At this point it seems clear to me that democracy plays little part in Fisher’s utopia. And the use of “evolutionary step” is at best embarrassing or at least requiring some explanation of how he understands history, change and democracy not to mention self-determination. At best this is an autocratic vision which may fly should the Obama administration buy into the vision of the Buff State conferencees. Lastly I would like to know how Mr. Fisher defines the “public interest” that is being “thwarted” by people practicing their political imperative within a democracy if not within a new populist opposition that smells the technocratic vision taking on new life under the auspices of an economic crisis in which all such schemes seems justifiable when exigency and efficiency become everything and democracy becomes a luxury not a fundamental, unimpeachable political value.

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