A lengthy drive to Georgian Bay yesterday to spend the day with  my family gave  time to dwell on the time the late  Sergeant  Norm Stewart served  on  Aurora Council.
Despite the  substantial list of initiatives  to his  credit,  none of  us seemed to think  much of it.
Including Norm.
When an idea was adopted by Council. Everybody just got behind it and did whatever needed to be done.  The   credit was shared.
Dick Illingworth was  credited as being the best Mayor .
Dick   put forward few initiatives.  He was  an air force veteran  with huge respect for rank and of a bureaucratic mind set.He never took risks. He was a better Mayor than he was a Councillor
He prided himself in  his  proficiency as  presiding  member.  He respected  Rules of Order   sufficiently  to recognise a  challenge   as part of  the process. He  did not appreciate being challenged but he did not hesitate to put it to the vote.  If he lost it, he took a minute to recover
confidence and control.
The risk of a lost challenge always  kept  the presiding member's feet to the fire.
The  practice of our craft did not mean a different perspective  was  a criticism and therefore  had to  be  silenced.
It didn't  mean a Councillor  had to be destroyed by whatever means  possible, including spending hundreds of thousands of  dollars of  public resources.
It meant... on the basis of our performance, the people would decide, when their turn came again.
As Councillors,  we neither  loved  nor  hated one another .
But there was a  relationship from working together in a common  endeavour. The tension of  differing  ideas competing  made it real and  satisfying and yes, the community took notice.The press liked to refer to the "Old Boys Club"
You won some. You lost some. Onward and upward, there was always another exhilarating  battle hovering  on the horizon.
I have never hammered that thought  out in words  before now.
Great age means broad experience and  the   knowledge that  life is a continuing learning experience.
We have that  in common with the very young.  Along with  the spirit   to laugh with abandonment  over  the silliest  things.
We know the greatest part of our journey is behind us. Much of what concerned us,  is of  little consequence now. What's ahead  is  simply return on investment we are fortunate to be around  to collect.
I pondered yesterday on the  long drive.
is it  unrealistic to compare the current and last Council's  hostility,  consistent block vote and shameless exploitation of the most fundamental of thinking,  to  the way we were?
Should I accept the  current pattern  as the norm and surrender my principles and expectations?
I think....Not Bloody Likely
Sunday, 11 July 2010
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2 comments:
Councillor Buck, you speak a lot of sense. It's too bad it can't be taught to - or caught by - others.
Principled making my blue ribbon post at evelynmbuck.blogspot.com, which seems to be a wonderful forum!
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