City Manager's Blog

Steve Pinkerton has been the City Manager of Manteca since June 16, 2008. He served as Redevelopment Director for the City of Stockton, California from 1994 to 2008. He has also worked for the cities of Long Beach and Redondo Beach. Born in Wisconsin, Mr. Pinkerton has a Master’s degree in Urban Planning and and a Master's Degree in Economics from the University of Southern California, and Bachelor’s degrees in Economics and Geography from the University of Missouri.

Wednesday, May 13, 2009

More Thoughts on the State

All week, I've been telling my staff that I'm done talking about the State and their budget follies. Unfortunately, I just can't help myself and I keep reading more things that I want to share. The Ventura City Manager Blog posted a great essay yesterday on the upcoming election and some of the ideas floating around to reform state government.

He talked about a group called "Common Sense California".

Some years ago, a small group of thoughtful and idealistic activists from both parties (and independents) saw this trainwreck coming. They began meeting and tossing around ideas for heading it off. They adopted the name "Common Sense California." At first, they aimed to "reform" Sacramento. They had sensible ideas, like Redistricting reform to blunt the partisan stranglehold (an idea voters have adopted, but is still years from implementation.) Ultimately, however, they came to the conclusion that democracy needs to be reborn at the local level before we can fix Sacramento.

They preach a simple, sensible message: we are going to fix our monumental self-induced problems only by changing from a "take no prisoners" activism that punishes moderation to an inclusive dialogue that seeks win-win consensus. Common Sense California doesn't claim we can solve our budget, transportation, economic and environmental challenges with a three point panacea. Their mission is "to help solve California's public problems by promoting citizens' participation in governance. We work with city governments, school districts, regional governance associations, and non-profit organizations to both support and promote legitimate civic involvement."It is a long way from the digital OK Corral of virtual bloggers who never listen because they have all the answers. Which is why a revival of healthy civic involvement is so promising. Click here to learn more.

He concluded the blog with a quote that has become one of my favorites:

Winston Churchill said it best: "Americans will always do the right thing, after they've exhausted all the alternatives." Californians have zealously passed initiatives, recalled officials, ousted judges and ranted about the futility of it all. Now it is time to get serious and work together to put our State back on the right track.

You can read the full post here.

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