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Thoughts on the 11.4.14 Election

Whitewater will not see an election so big as last night’s for another two years’ time. There’s much to consider about the results. A few remarks appear below, along with a table using preliminary, unofficial data from Walworth, Rock, and Jefferson Counties with results for the referendum and gubernatorial questions. COUNTY COMMUNITY REFERENDUM YES REFERENDUM…

Signs on Election Night

There are both statewide and local signs for how election races are going.  Statewide, Jake of Jake’s Economic TA Funhouse (blogs often have inventive names) is right that, short of an improbable collapse for the major-parties’ strongholds, the areas to watch are the counties that have supported both Walker (’10, ’12) and Obama (’08, ’12). …

Two Topics from the Proposed City Budget

At last night’s Council session, City Manager Clapper mentioned two upcoming budget topics of particular interest: funding for Downtown Whitewater and for the Janesville Transit Bus.  The two items could not be more different: expenditures for Downtown Whitewater support local merchants, while the Janesville Bus supports a bumbling, dissembling Janesville bureaucrat’s ambition for his town…

Bad Policy’s Like Low-Level Radiation Exposure

It’s seldom true that a single misstep ruins an official.  With the exception of criminal conduct, most mistakes are ones from which a politician or bureaucrat can recover.  And yet, and yet, some mistakes take their toll.  They do so, however, with a cumulative effect – one after another debilitates as does cumulative radiation exposure.   …

Ordinances & Department Regulations @ Public Meetings

Whitewater’s last Planning Commission meeting was a week ago, Monday (10.13.14).  I’ve two suggestions: First, it would be a good idea to keep a copy of Whitewater’s ordinances and regulations available at the meeting.  It may be that a city employee cannot recall a certain requirement or provision of our local law.  That’s not surprising;…

The Proposed 2015 City of Whitewater Budget

The challenge of government is not fundamentally its cost, but its complexity, intractability, and most concerning of all its use of authority not as representative of residents but as self-interested action contrary to representation. A small rural town of fifteen-thousand, and it’s 289 pages just to list the town’s annual budget. There’s an anecdote about…

Four Public Topics for the Fall

There are (at least) four predictable public policy topics in the Whitewater area between now and winter’s beginning on December 21st.  The City of Whitewater’s Proposed 2015 Budget.  It’s budget season in Whitewater.  The city’s proposed budget is now under consideration, at weekly meetings to stretch into November.  The Schools Referendum.  Outside and inside the…

The Campus-City Gap

All these years, so much talk about closer ties, and there’s still a chasm between city and university.   So much so, that for many residents in the city to learn about university-related crime, they’d have to look for an out-of-city station or publication. See, from Saturday @ 2:58 PM, Student reportedly called name, kicked, punched:…

Forget Selling

Whitewater can do much better than this. There’s a useful place for sales and marketing in commerce, but they’ve been applied mistakenly and ineffectually to Whitewater’s politics.  It’s been years and years of selling the town, with every tired expression about being a destination community, exceptional place to live, work, and play, etc. Those who…

Whitewater’s Independent Merchants: Supporting Small Bricks Over Bytes

A quick summary of my views on business would be to say that (1) private markets are typically superior to government regulation, subsidies, or game-rigging, (2) government should be impartial to different kinds of businesses, (3) government ‘business’ or ‘development’ efforts are often self-promoting efforts of officials, bureaucrats, and hangers-on who are parasitic of public…

The Fragmented Audience

Whitewater’s a small town, but it has more than one culture within its nine square miles.  (There’s a separate issue, suitable for another time, about whether it’s legitimate to have more than one culture or method from Whitewater’scity government.  It’s not; unlike diverse private life, a representative government cannot legitimately allow its officials and employees…

Meteorology

Meteorology’s just the study of the atmosphere.  Along the way toward of a better explanation of the atmosphere, however, comes the hope that an understanding will improve prediction: that we’ll not simply know, but know beforehand.  Writing about a place like Whitewater – if one really tries – should be a mixture of both principled…