Tuesday, November 24, 2009

Time to Petition the Connecticut Legislature

In the Connecticut 2009 session of the Legislature there were numerous attempts by the towns and cities (local government) to seek property tax relief and moratoriums on mandates to balance their budgets.With little debate and less fanfare local government officials were dismissed, sometimes with little sympathy. The delay of the budget ultimately cost towns additional fees for borrowing while the budget was in impasse.
All of this rancor and lack of collaboration to give the voters at least a voice at the table in the form of those closest to them, local government. Still no action but rather a shift in reminding everyone of who is really in charge, the legislature, as if there were any doubt.The timing of the tea parties and the town hall meetings around the country also serve as an indicator of what is going on in case you forgot.They know best. They have the elitist knowledge to do the right thing. They prevail. You are not heard.
Towns are small. They are represented by the Legislature but town boundaries per house district and overlaps with other towns often conflict and contradict the local wishes of each town and its unique identity. Out of touch with towns, legislators render them useless in actually influencing state priorities. Increased burdens with few options allowed by legislators make the towns as an overall force for change irrelevant.
After many years of probate court mischief the powers in Hartford finally took action to solve the local court system problems.The budget problems nudged the State to take action.Some time later the towns ultimately created a consensus among themselves and agreed upon a formula without a mandate.Proof of town to town cooperation, perhaps under threat of mandate to come from Hartford, but an agreement none the less. Most importasntly, an example of towns cooperation with each other to fix the system, maintain service levels, and provide a cost effective solution for each town.
Based upon this success it would seem that the power of legislation initiated by towns as a statewide referendum could address a variety of issues including:
1. Establishing common interest infrastructural changes to represent fair and equitable educational disbursements
2. Addressing mandates that are not necessary for all towns of all sizes
3. Provisioning towns with shared or individualized resources to address selected mandates
4. Providing statewide bonding access by towns to the state's borrowing authority

In short, allowing towns to use legislation to address common local needs without the interferences of a statewide agenda exercised and imprinted by the legislature could be a useful tool. Especially in those cases when appeals to the legislature go unheeded and their ears go deaf.
The local town political party committes (Independants are welcome also) could start a petition drive to gather signatures soliciting voter interest in seeking a constitutional change to allow "voter initiative" and statewide referendums. Where local officials often use this technique,budget approvals for example, it is a rare occurance on a statewide basis.
With local political parties involvement such a campaign could then aggregate the local signed petitions certified by the local voter registrar for presentation to the legislature.It is not a given that the statewide political leadership would endorse such a project due to the threat to its power, but that is the whole point.
Nobody is listening to the local voters. The petition only proposes to the legislature that such a constitutional change is needed. With the outcry of the people appealing for grass roots democracy how could the legislature not listen? The revolution has just begun!

9 comments:

manowar956 said...

zipped your blog, showin it to my gal, she dont thk i reed serius stuff. what duz she no? hey that probate thg got to me. wen i lived in conn, my dad sed are probate guy was a crook, held up my gramps will for years. if this voter revolt can cleen up this mess lets do it. told my gal to shake up her town. lets boogie this politics thing.

sarah said...

where would this state be if we had the voting you want???? in the same place as that calif that has denied gays their rights. if we didnt have the elites, we wouldnt have our rights. thank you state legislature, thank you courts.

phil said...

i've been tracking probate gran larceny in conn for 10 years. finally a blog, keep writing on probate. fat chance this attempt will put those probate crooks away. the towns are no better, if they wanted to put an end to it they would.

grendel said...

get the feeling the legislature isn't square with us? they depend on us not knowing or caring or having the guts to do anything about it. those teaparties have the right idea, this we the people idea is getting ready for big things! get ready ct! whats gov rell think bout all this?

Samuel said...

Quite good blog, glad I found you, telling my group to link. Your point well taken, instead of just complaining you offer strategies for change. The idea of town petitions is novel. Get the towns talking about something besides money.

Anonymous said...

i ran unsuccessfully for first selectman in one of towns (won't say which one). found i didn't have a message. incumbent had been there for long time and didn't have to say much. thought people might want a change and were listening to me but didn't have any good ideas. so i've been using the web to come up with some for the next election. your post has ideas i havent heard before. i know that people are mad at hartford legislature. but i couldn't connect on this issue. your blog is going to help. who in the town would start this petition? would it be a petition on the issues you mention or only to get some sort of state voting on issues?

marlee said...

you talk about the political parties. don't get that. what do they do in this state. how do people know what name your signing? don't get how this petition thing worked. tryin to get more going in this state, tuf to find out whats going on. thanks for good info.

shauna e. said...

im writing a paper on gov rowland and why he went to prison and wasnt gov anymore. my prof said the web is the only thing you have because hasnt made it into the books yet if it ever does. thats the topic for me. found your blog. some of its harder than my us gov class. but you make it fun. my paper says need a con change to deal with bad govs like rowland. ok i site your blog? my prof said we have to ask.

Burke M. said...

whats with this state and probate judges??? how come folks dont storm hartford to change this system. those judges need to go before judges who send them to jail. right on Allen!