Our illogical governments

Over the last couple of months, a series of events in Western Maine has provided strong evidence that this state's structure of government is often not only inefficient, but illogical. Fortunately, as has been well documented in our history, times of adversity and challenge also bring forth new opportunities.

While we could likely select any region of Maine and paint a similar picture, the towns of Jay and Livermore Falls have been through such a unique period it is worth highlighting and asking some important questions.

Jay and Livermore Falls are two separate towns and call two different counties home. And while their downtowns flow seamlessly from one to the other, and a once major, now idle, paper mill straddles the town line, the mil rates for property taxes are day and night, thanks predominantly to Verso's Androscoggin Mill buoying Jay's tax base.

Those political boundaries were set over a century ago and were related more to the land holdings of private investors and industrialists and struggles to cross the river by ferry to access town services.

The economic and community boundaries, however, have evolved significantly as rail and road networks and the growth in technology have redrawn the landscape. And while communities can evolve and economies often must, how do political boundaries evolve?

In Maine, unfortunately, they don't.

Some call it Maine's famed "local control" that has kept around 500 municipalities of some kind in the state. Many describe the lack of local government reform through the lens of high school football. Towns like Jay and Livermore Falls, Lewiston and Auburn or Old Town and Orono won't work together in a meaningful way, because someone lost a high school football game and remains bitter about it.

Of course, most elected and appointed officials in those communities and others probably never played football or can't remember the scores of the games if they did, but the populace remains entrenched against working with their rival town.

But in Jay and Livermore Falls, it appears new movements toward cooperation could help set a future direction.

Under school consolidation, districts were to come together with other districts. Through that effort, a proposal was put forth in Jay and Livermore/Livermore Falls that voters rejected. Yet, in recent months, the towns have come back to the table. New talks are underway, that have been expanded to include Fayette and Winthrop, and hanging over their head are fines that could total $400,000 for not consolidating.

Previous efforts to consolidate dispatching services between Livermore Falls and Androscoggin County had been rejected by voters, but at last month's special town meeting voters, by a very narrow margin, moved to make that consolidation happen.

A partnership to expand the Livermore Falls summer recreation program to include residents from the town of Jay is moving towards adoption. As written, Jay would make an investment in the program sufficient that both Jay and Livermore Falls youth could attend at the same rate.

Rather than propose sharing services as a means to save immediate dollars, the towns noted that this partnership would allow for a better and expanded program at the same cost. Bringing towns under a bigger, but still local umbrella, provides an economy of scale that benefits residents and businesses.

Those are small steps, but could build momentum around providing higher quality services for the region, and not just along town boundaries.

In the mid-20th century, when International Paper decided their mill site along the Androscoggin was no longer sufficient, they narrowed the options for a new mill to two locations; Livermore Falls and Jay. The location in Jay was selected and set the courseof history in a very different direction.

The economy that led to that mill’s construction has changed and left
its shell behind, yet the government created in the 19th century
remains the same.

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Displaying comments, from newest to oldest

cranky yankee's picture

"And while communities can

"And while communities can evolve and economies often must, how do political boundaries evolve?

In Maine, unfortunately, they don't."

Nor do they in most other states. However, from reading your article, I would gather, since you don't come right out and say it, that there are folks in both towns that would like to see them merged. Or are you just suggesting that Jay should subsidize activities in Livermore Falls because Jay has the resources and Livermore doesn't? Or are you suggesting that the legislature come forth with a plan to merger close municipalities, like Jay and Livermore Falls, Lewiston and Auburn, Augusta, Manchester, Hallowell, Farmingdale, Gardiner, South Gardiner, etc.? So your saying for the "financial gains" the towns, and the folks within them, should give up their historical identities, their local traditions, and create "thriving" megalopolises?

Then again, I do agree with the school consolidation plan. That's a little different than the municipal plan, just because of the economics involved, but there are ways that it could be applied municipally. With school consolidation, however, I would argue that it needs to go further. Besides simply consolidating administrations, student populations need to be consolidated. Many schools in this state do not have sufficient student populations to offer special courses like an array of foreign languages-usually they offer only one to the exclusion of others-advanced sciences or mathematics, or even full music and arts programs, at least on a cost efficient basis. It is usually calculated that it takes a minimum enrollment of 15 students to make a class cost effective. Couple that with the additional cost of building special classrooms for sciences, music, art, etc. Using such rooms for regular classrooms is a waste of money, when they could be utilized all day long by simply consolidating schools. Extend the same concept to police and fire protection. Many communities barely served by volunteer fire departments (and this is not meant to disparage the great job they do) could be better served by professional departments that can more quickly respond, but still be supported by the volunteers as a call department. Just saying...

BobStone's picture
verified

In some ways, I like the

In some ways, I like the property tax. It is a tax that requires the property owner to write a check twice a year to the local government. As it rises, it hurts. As it falls, we get the sense that our money is being used efficiently. Sales taxes and income taxes are bundled up and we don't notice them as much as we do property taxes.

The Augustans seem to be disconnected from reality and insulated from accountability to the people who pay income and property taxes. Look at Peggy Rotundo, Margaret Craven, and Deb Simpson. They are champion tax and spenders while the people that put them into Augustan land moan and groan about spending/taxes. Talk about schizophrenia!

I'll bet the next round of budget cuts ($200,000,000.00) in Augusta will come out of state aid to municipalities. The local units will have to increase taxes or decrease spending, two options that are bound to upset just about everyone, one way or the other.

We would have very different government if we got paid gross dollars and had to write a check to the Feds for income taxes and Medicare and to the state for income taxes every pay period.

All the best,

Bob

Jay Bee's picture

Excellent points Jonathan.

Excellent points Jonathan. It seems that in all the talk about TABOR, the elephant in the room is being ignored. Many of the state's cost problems have little to do with state government. In our endless desire for local control, truly massive inefficiencies have remained at the municipal and county levels.

If the district consolidation bill is overruled next month at the ballot box but TABOR prevails, it will demonstrate beyond a shadow of a doubt the schizophrenia of the ballot initiative process. Cali, here we come. We want everything, and we want it for free.

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