LOUISIANA CATCHING UP TO THE 21st CENTURY?
Thursday, My 18th, 2017
Baton Rouge, Louisiana
LOUISIANA CATCHING UP TO THE 21st CENTURY?
With tax dollars
scarce in Louisiana, this should be the time to discuss streamlining on the
state and local levels. Just how many boards, commissions, water districts,
sewer districts, parish auditors, law enforcement offices, and other special
districts are spread throughout Louisiana? Some estimates are as high as 7,000.
No one really seems to know. Would you believe that no agency, public or
private, can list all the public bodies that exist in Louisiana today? And if
no one knows that number, then it goes without saying that no one can even
begin to know the overlapping costs.
Start with the
sixty-four parishes. In the rural farming economy of the early 20th century,
each parish served as the synergy of daily life in Louisiana. There was a
need for local road and water districts to take care of rural needs.
Government, by nature, was local. Police jurors and sheriffs ran their
respective local districts like fiefdoms. Rural voters elected local
candidates who directly touched their lives.
The sheriff was
not there just to keep you safe, but to offer you a ride to town for groceries
or to take you to the doctor. The local police juror kept the ditches
from overflowing and could see to it that a little gravel was spread on the
dirt road leading to your farmhouse. Baton Rouge was often a two-day ride
on horseback or an all-day trip by car over muddy dirt roads. What
happened or did not happen at the local courthouse had a direct bearing on the
daily lives of a majority of Louisianans.
But that was in
days gone by. Times have changed, and the state has assumed the vast majority
of public duties including the funding and administration of highway
construction, flood protection, healthcare, and an array of other public
needs. Yet the local governing structure, with thousands of commissions,
districts, and boards, hasn’t really changed in the past 75 years.
Do we need
sixty-four parishes? Or would forty-five work more efficiently and save millions?
Do cities that take up the bulk of the parish like New Orleans, Baton Rouge,
and Shreveport really need both a sheriff and a police chief? Some of the
small, rural parishes have as few as nine thousand people per district judge.
The average is more like 20,000 per judge. Should consolidation be
undertaken? Why does every parish elect a coroner? Back in the 70s
in my home parish of Concordia, a local logger held the job. Couldn’t
professionals run this job on a regional basis?
As demographer
Elliot Stonecipher has pointed out in a recent study, Louisiana’s population is
about the same today as it was in 1985. Yet, instead of a reduction in
local and state governmental units, the numbers have been substantially
increased. Over the past century, little has changed in Louisiana in how local
government operates, and the system in place today is run by the same archaic
institutions that were put in place before the invention of the telephone,
light bulb, automobile, and, of course, the computer.
The same overlap
exists on the state level. Do we need four boards to govern higher
education? How come states like California and North Carolina, where
colleges rank at the top of national lists function quite well with just one
board? And how about the slew of state boards and commissions that appear
to make up ways to regulate where none is needed? If I go to my local grocery
store and buy a dozen roses for my wife, do I really need a licensed florist,
who has to be tested and certified through a floral board, to wrap them for
me? Do I need a board to oversee someone I hire to help decorate my
office or home?
Former NBC anchor
Tom Brokaw discussed the problem and the opportunity: “Every state and
every region of the country is stuck with some form of anachronistic and
expensive local government structure that dates to the horse-drawn wagons,
family farms and small-town convenience. It’s time to reorganize our
state and local government structures for today’s realities rather than cling
to the sensibilities of the twentieth century.”
Streamlining state
government should be a major concern of both the governor and the legislature.
Louisiana needs major change. President John Kennedy said it well.
“Change is the law of life. And those who look only to the past or present are
certain to miss the future.”
Peace and Justice
Jim Brown
Jim
Brown’s syndicated column appears each week in numerous newspapers throughout
the nation and on websites worldwide. You can read all his past columns and
see continuing updates at http://www.jimbrownusa.com. You can also hear Jim’s
nationally syndicated radio show each Sunday morning from 9 am till 11:00 am,
central time, on the Genesis Radio Network, with a live stream at http://www.jimbrownusa.com.
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