I attended last night's meeting of Oriental's Town Board.
I'm not quite sure why I keep going. Possibly because I believe in democracy and think everyone should take part. Possibly because I remain puzzled about why so little of importance gets done, why so much of the activity is expended on trivialities and so little on planning for the future.
You can learn a bit by reading Town Dock's account:
"Oriental’s Town Board met last night. Among other things, the Board
okayed, in a 4-1 vote, the lettering for a Town Hall dedication plaque
that will list the Town Board members and the Town Manager at the time
of the renovation. Cost: upwards of $875 (on top of the $160 spent on an
earlier rendition the Board rejected.) Commissioner Larry Summers said
after the meeting that he voted against it because “I don’t believe in
self-aggrandizement.” He said it was also, “quite a bit of money.”
"Earlier in the meeting, the Board put off spending money on 20
chairs for the public to sit on the Town Hall meeting room. Some
commissioners said they thought the price too high. The chairs, from
Staples, were listed as $54 apiece.
"It was also stated at the meeting that the dock the Town got in the Chris Fulcher land swap cannot be extended now — it’s not CAMA
that decides if it can be made longer, as first thought. Turns out
it’s up to the Corps of Engineers, whose review is seen as a more
onerous process. The dock will stop at 80 feet. The town’s already
spent $12,000 to have planks laid and other modifications."
But that's not all. The board held a public hearing on an amendment to the GMO "for clarification," the mayor explained. Balderdash! The purpose of the amendment was to "get" one of our citizens. This was never clearly explained, but one of the commissioners let slip the true objective.
A good question to ask at one of these hearings about an amendment is: "what is the problem to which this is the solution?"
We should be about fixing the town's figurative and literal potholes, and not pursuing personal vendettas.
Is that too much to ask? Maybe it is.
Thursday, November 14, 2013
Oriental Town Board Meeting November 13, 2013
Topic Tags:
democracy,
town government
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