The Council asked their staff to develop several alternative options for consideration. This will be discussed at the November 13th Council Work Session. Want to weigh in ahead of the meeting? Comment below!
Thursday, October 18, 2012
The Council asked their staff to develop several alternative options for consideration. This will be discussed at the November 13th Council Work Session. Want to weigh in ahead of the meeting? Comment below!
Nine Months Later . . .
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Hal Miller represents District 3 |
Nine
months ago I took the oath of office as a member of the Provo City Municipal
Council. I promised to sustain the
Constitution of the United States and that of the State of Utah and to serve
the citizens of Provo. Essentially, I
promised to serve each citizen legislatively, with an eye toward taxation and
property use, specifically.
The
ensuing months have been laden with learning.
Reading, conversing, attending conferences, participating in meetings
and retreats, and corresponding have been the primary means for learning. My primary mentors have been my Council mates
and our staff, the City administration, and fellow citizens. I have much to learn yet and mentors still to
meet, and thus much to look forward to.
You
might assume, and correctly, that much of my learning to date has been about
the City’s infrastructures, both physical and organizational. I have discovered a hidden side to those
infrastructures. That is, what you and I
customarily see of the city and its working depends on a vast and unseen
substructure. Especially what we take
for granted as the “taxpayer’s due”—roads and sidewalks, water and electricity,
police and fire protection, storm and sewer drainage, garbage and refuse
removal, , library and arts, parks and recreation, and . . . and . . .—is made reality
by a highly competent and largely invisible network of people, who utilize a
highly complex and largely invisible network of materiel. And they do so with admirable espirit and
efficiency. What I have learned most of
all thus far is that we citizens of Provo are paying unusually capable,
creative, and conscientious people to maintain our city and move it ahead.
A
corollary follows: Our city is best
maintained and its future best served when citizens speak up, lend a hand,
share their vision, and otherwise give themselves out of respect for the city’s
past and an active interest in promoting the well-being and prosperity of all
who call it home. Although those duly
elected or appointed and those whom they duly employ are constitutionally
responsible for the city’s operations and policies, only broad citizen
involvement can bring a genuine sense of community—that this is a place to take
pride in and be part of. Indeed, having
come this gestational distance, I look forward to becoming increasingly alive
to a Provo not mine, not yours, but Ours.
Hal Miller
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