21st Century Government Committee Final Report (PDF)
Excerpts from an Aug 21, 2007 Ben Konop blog posting
Aug 21, 2007 Blade story
Rather than continue to raise taxes or slash services because of a dwindling tax base, the report said governments in Lucas County could "change the way services are delivered." Mr. Konop said the 19-member group's document encourages a gradual move toward a metropolitan or regional form of government, often referred to as unigov.
I'll refer to lew's Feb 26, 2005 Toledo Talk posting, which defines unigov and regionalism.
Regionalism, in most cases, involves more than one county. Silicon Valley is a region. New England is a region. The Research Triangle is a region, consisting of Raleigh, Durham and Chappel Hill.
In Ohio, Cincinnati has been a successful region that includes parts of Kentucky and southeast Indiana. Globally it identifies itself as Cincinnati,USA.It seems to me that the terms unigov and regionalism should not be used interchangeably. Government and media need to eliminate the confusion.
More from the Aug 21 Blade story:
- Customer service
- Joint purchasing between the county's government entities
- The county's technology infrastructure
- Commitment to joint services
- Locations of service operations
- Goal setting and outcome measurement
- Spending below the rate of inflation
- Addressing urban sprawl
More from the Blade story:
The committee suggested a Regional Implementation Team, which would consist initially of one representative each from the city of Toledo, union labor, the Lucas County Township Association, colleges and universities, the Regional Growth Partnership, the Toledo Regional Chamber of Commerce, and the Toledo Community Foundation, as well as one representative from the cities of Sylvania, Oregon, or Maumee.
The committee said the implementation team could grow to 25 members and should "work first on implementation of ideas" suggested in the report. But once the team experiences success, the committee said that "larger, more complex endeavors could be undertaken."
Mr. Konop interpreted that section of the report as the committee's way of introducing regionalism without suggesting it be forced on the county's different governments.The "forced" part will happen later when the other communities don't agree with the Toledo focus.
Also from the Blade:
Mr. Marsh said the end result of the committee's report will "not necessarily be a metropolitan form of government," but was a move "toward greater cooperation between governments at the least."
"I'm cautious to say 'metro government,'" Mr. Marsh said. "If I say it that way, some people will think the day after tomorrow we'll have one government [for the entire county], and that's not likely.""Forced" is Toledo's Plan B. And again, the above talk is unigov, not regionalism as reported in the story. But some aspect of regionalism may have been mentioned in the committee's report as listed in the second bullet point below.
Committee suggestions as reported in the Blade story:
- Designate one county employee as a citizens’ advocate, who will monitor the county’s responsiveness to residents’ concerns.
- Create the Northwest Compact, in which all of northwest Ohio, and not just Lucas County, could opt into an organization that delivers government services. Governmental units in Michigan may also be allowed to join the compact.
- Form the Lucas County Intergovernmental Networking Cooperative, which would provide technology services for all county offices, plus interested townships, cities, school districts, and other units of government.
- Begin the Model Student Metro Government Project, in which 11th-grade students from each high school in Lucas County meet twice a month and attempt to solve real issues facing local governments within the framework of a metropolitan, or regionalized, government.
- Build the Regional Implementation Team, which at first will push the 21st century committee’s suggestions, but eventually could be the bridge for Lucas County to adopt a more regionalized form of government, referred to by some as unigov.
Mainly, the report's focus is on unigov and not regionalism. As far as I can tell in the PDF report file, "Lucas County" is mentioned dozens of times, while Wood County is mentioned twice, and "Lake Erie West" is never mentioned.
