| My vote to split and why I changed (Part 1) |
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| Written by Rob Bennett | |
| Saturday, 01 September 2007 | |
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I previously went on record stating that I did not feel the time was right for West Jordan to consider splitting from Jordan School District and forming their own West Jordan School District. I layed out my reasons in this article (http://www.robsblog.org/blog/content/view/70/97/). You may ask what has changed since then to make me the swing vote on a 4-3 decision by the city council to place the issue on the ballot for this November. I want to do my best to answer that question.
Item #1 that has changed: the special session of the legislature. Many of the cities and the counties were counting on the legislature to meet and rectify many of the problems created by SB30 http://le.utah.gov/~2007/bills/sbillint/sb0030.htm that created more issues than solving them. In fact, the governor gave four issues for the legislature to meet in special session to address:
It appears the governor had a hard lesson to learn - count the votes before calling the session, even if it appears to all the public that it is a no-brainer that these things need fast action before the train hits the car stalled on the tracks.
Now let's take a look at what they DID address:
What is the common thread in these legislative actions? Well, if you are represented by the east side's legislative officials, you can pretty much count on getting what you need to do what you want, no matter what the consequences might be for someone else. But wait! What about Moab and Ogden and other state locations that don't have a dog in this fight. Why would they vote with the east side's legislators at the expense of the question of "can you just clarify this issue for us before we sink money and our kid's futures into this process no matter where it takes place?" That is a question every Utahn ought to be asking themselves - there is a question of power and who holds it and how it is used to influence others in our "state" government and, to this individual at this point in time, seems to heavily favor one area and disregard the needs of others with equally valid claims for assistance on the same issue.
Lesson learned: don't count on the legislature to provide immediate relief for really sticky issues they caused in a prior legislative session. We have all seen this coming since the east side began work in earnest to break away a year ago. Did this really catch any legislator by surprise - such that the governor of the state made the unusual step of calling a special session, dragging people from the four corners of the state to deal with what he apparently considered an emergency - that they could not have had some refinements or solutions in place other than dealing with Cottonwood High School and Draper on a STATEWIDE level? As long as the status quo exists in the state legislature (guaranteed until at least Novemember of next year), West Jordan, don't expect your fortunes to change dramatically when it comes to equal and fair treatment by the body of the legislature. |
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