This has been an interesting week. I spent a couple of days in Raleigh for the day job and had my first opportunity to get a first hand look at the NC legislature in action. Here's my takeaways from the experience:
- Compared to the US Capitol the state legislature is very casual. It's nothing special to bump into a state rep or senator and give them your two cents while walking to a meeting or getting on an elevator. Heck, it's expected.
- There's no security to speak of; no line to go through a metal detector and no one standing at the door to wand you. Of course there are security guards but I've seen tighter security at a day care center.
- With some exceptions their offices are tiny. I'm talking room for a desk and two chairs.
- The legislators, and their staffs, were very responsive. When I contacted them last week to try and schedule appointments I heard back from most in a matter of hours, which I found pretty impressive given the amount of work they're doing right now.
The other thing that made this week interesting was the hometown drama known as the downtown baseball stadium. While I could probably write dozens of pages of thoughts on the whole situation, I'd rather just ask the leaders of Winston-Salem some questions:
- What the heck were you thinking when you broke the multi-million dollar news on Friday and told the public they had a whole weekend to share their thoughts and give you their feedback before a probable vote at a special city council meeting on Monday night?
- Were you trying to make it look like you were railroading the thing?
- Were you trying to make people even more suspicious than they already were?
- In short, were you trying to be obtuse?
Seriously, the city's leadership couldn't have tried to make this deal look any worse. I'm really not sure what the motivation could have been to handle it this way, but whatever it was I can't imagine that it balances out the negative taste that this left in the public's mouth. Put it this way: Mayor Joines and the city council spent a whole lot of their political capital to get this done and while they were going to take a hit no matter how they handled this, I think they at least doubled the damage by handling it in the manner that they did. It will be interesting to see what happens with the next economic development deal that comes along.
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