I did not attend Council on Tuesday. I watched on television.
Oh my!
Oh My!
It was a short agenda.
Nothing much to be made of it
Much was made of it.
It occurred to me, if I were a competent teacher of civics, the meeting could be used as a classic example of how formal, decision-making can be effectively screwed up.
Staff have been directed, despite solid reasons why it shouldn't, to schlepp Council, staff, agendas and all accoutrements to two high schools, to encourage student interest in government.
The purpose is to combat citizen apathy.
Councillor Pirri brought the notion back from a conference.
The Mayor supports it as an example of innovative thinking.
He discussed it with an educational official who also believes it's a wonderful concept.
The majority of Council agree
Which leaves me to disagree.
I am left to wonder if they have ever watched themselves on television.
Or...here's a thought... being seen and heard on television is so mind-boggling, it has literally boggled minds.
Or.. another ... Collective understanding of how a meeting should be conducted is so skewed, confidence abounds.
Or...
Ah well, what's the point.
It has been decided.
But then sometimes when Council approves a motion , months go by and nothing comes of it.
Nothing indicates why some directions are promptly implemented, some disappear and others re-appear in a different format.Like an initiative of the Mayor and CAO.
I am completing twenty-five years of service as a Councillor and that many again as an observer.
I've served on a variety of Boards; Police, Public Health, Hospital, Children's Aid Society, Library, Recreation Commission, Conservation Authority,Children's Aid Society, a quasi-judicial review board, and dozens more committees.
In the last Council, I saw rules of order regularly twisted to
suit exigencies. I saw provincial regulations ignored if they got in the way.I saw staff mercilessly abused in public.
But I have never seen the disarray and confusion so consistently demonstrated as in this Council.
It has been two years. Things have not improved.
With the best will in the world, a learning instrument for modern high school students, this Council is not.
Saturday, 29 September 2012
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1 comment:
Just let them go. It's like when your kids demand to do something that is seriously goofy but safe. Let them go.
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