INDIANAPOLIS —
Ice on my driveway kept me house-bound for most of the past two weeks. A fellow gets to thinking ...
Something is wrong. Our town of Meridian Hills encompasses just 1,616 persons, according to the latest census. That’s down 5.7 percent, while Marion County grew by 5 percent. It must be the brain drain. Can we find a plumber to fix it?
Of what earthly good is the town of Meridian Hills, or for that matter most of the cities and towns of Indiana? Meridian Hills has just spent who knows how much money for large monuments more appropriate for cemeteries than a community. They carefully erected the sign nearest us to indicate that we are not included. I took that personally.
The town put up designer street signs to differentiate us from the rest of Indianapolis, but who cares? What does the town do other than pay for a constable and snow removal on minor streets driven by SUVs? Let the whale swallow it and no one will know it ever existed.
Look at reality. In this revolutionary period, under the leadership of the governor, Indiana’s township governments disappear. Trustees and boards tumble as assessors already have.
School corporations build moats to protect their castles against charter schools. Why isn’t our legislature shredding the fabric of community government by disbanding cities and towns that are only artifacts of horse-drawn days?
Am I serious about eliminating cities and towns? Yes, and no.
Gary’s 2010 population sank to 80,300, 22 percent below 103,000 10 years earlier. The city is dysfunctional, its schools abysmal, its library system a burlesque. Could things get worse if Gary were combined with Hobart, Lake Station, New Chicago and other places in what we still know as Calumet and Hobart townships?
By my count, 14 cities and towns crowd into the five northern townships of Lake County. Instead of getting rid of the townships, why not consolidate the cities and towns along townships lines?
Someone ought to be asking if consolidation of cities and counties would succeed where only one city dominates a county. In 2000, Evansville’s population totaled 71 percent of Vanderburgh County. By 2010, the city accounted for only 65 percent of the county.
The city’s population declined by 4,000 and the county’s advanced by 8,000. If the city doesn’t want to become hostage to the county, then a joint government should be initiated now.
By contrast, Portland enjoys a stable 29 percent share of Jay County’s population despite both city and county losing population over the last decade. The question becomes: Is a local government for 6,200 persons in a county of 21,000 a luxury? Let’s rethink how we organize government in Indiana.
Could we govern small towns and small counties effectively without separate governmental units?
Take the twin cities of South Bend and Mishawaka. They deny being twins but that’s only because one is uglier/prettier than the other. Together, along with unincorporated Granger, they combine 180,000 people. That’s a good size for an efficient city. Or is the current arrangement more efficient? Doesn’t someone care enough to look into the question?
Similarly, 103,000 persons live cheek by jowl in New Albany, Clarksville and Jeffersonville, but in two separate counties. Would these citizens be happier as one entity?
Many of our existing cities and towns could be pleasant neighborhoods in consolidated urban areas. But we’ll never know if we decide on the basis of another Kernan-Shepard report, a volume with little empirical evidence to support today’s radical change.
— Morton Marcus is an independent economist, speaker and writer formerly with IU’s Kelley School of Business. Reach him via e-mail at mortonjmarcus@yahoo.com
Opinions
MARCUS: Rethink government consolidation now
Could Clarksville, Jeffersonville and New Albany work as one city?
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DODD: An unexpected Angel
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STAWAR: The souvenir state of America
Recently, my wife Diane and I spent the day aboard the Belle of Cincinnati with our daughter’s family. We all had a good time, even though the diesel-powered Cincinnati attraction isn’t a real steamboat, like our own Belle of Louisville, and despite the fact that it poured down rain the whole time.
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NASH: Making a Memorial vacation
Memorial Day weekend is upon us which brings us to the start of the summer travel season. With the mild winter we had around here most schools didn’t have much in terms of snow make-up days so many kids have already finished up their semesters and are ready to get on with their holiday. Not to worry parents it will only be a couple of weeks before the back-to-school sales kick in and in no time at all it will be time for those youngsters to go back.
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HARBESON: A handy little idea
After having worked hard the past few months, I now have something new to add to my resume — “I was Lead Project Manager for a major construction venture, supervising every aspect in the creation of a privately funded community building.”
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MORRIS: Nancy Hogan was more than just an employee
Pulling into The Tribune parking lot each morning was pretty uneventful in the old days. Nothing good happens between 5:30 and 6 a.m. Nothing at all.
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HAMILTON: Is this really the best we can do?
As you know if you pay attention to national affairs, the United States faces a perfect fiscal storm at the end of this year. A confluence of deadlines and policy triggers unlike anything I can remember in a half-century of public life will produce massive budget cuts and serious tax increases amounting to a 3.5 percent hit on the nation’s Gross Domestic Product.
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LETTERS: May 23, 2012
— Tea Party leader responds to bridges column
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BEAM: Lost memories found
As time elapses, so do our memories. I forget things now. I can’t remember his height. How did he curl his lips into that sardonic, wholehearted smile? I only recall flashes of a moment. Wearing his jacket at prom. His golf clubs in the back of his old, golden car. Notes passed in the hallway. Listening to Boys to Men in his basement.
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STANCZYKIEWICZ: A gift for mom and dad
Two strategies for parents are important. First, parents need to model for children how to disagree. “When you’re talking with your spouse and you’re whining and complaining and nagging, you shouldn’t be too surprised when your young person does the same thing,” Allen said. “We need to be good role models.”
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