Pondering life in a united Batavia
Tonight the City and Town of Batavia Consolidation Committee releases a report to the community summarizing its work so far.
We'll get to find out what the committee thinks of the idea, but given the title, "A Vision for One Batavia," we can deduce the outlook is rosy.
We'll probably be presented with spreadsheets and pie charts and improved work flows that tell us it all makes dollars and sense. Somehow it's going to save taxpayers money and lead to a more responsive and efficient government.
But when you strip away the columns of numbers and rows categories, I wonder if anybody will have taken the time to ask one basic question: What unintended consequences might we face as a consolidated government?
Bringing the city and town together is a monumental move. It's going to have impacts beyond what any facts and figures can show us. How do we think through how things might change, and are those changes we want? (I'm not, btw, afraid of change nor necessarily consolidation -- just asking the question.)
What are the intangibles that can't be measured and how will they be different? Will the new government be able to quickly mobilize along the lines of a single vision, and will that vision be good for local business and people who cherish small town values, or will there be an aim to just get bigger?
Which vision of Batavia will be stronger, the one of a locally owned downtown or a chain-driven Veteran's Memorial Drive?
What values do the two governments embody now and how are they different and how are they the same and how will they change?
Will some segments of either the city or town feel like its needs aren't being met?
How will land use change, government services, support of civic life?
There's no doubt that the committee is full of people with the best of intentions, but what about the unintentions? Will these be studied, too?
Nobody thought about the law of unintended consequences when the north side of Main Street was demolished to make way for a mall that people don't use much. Let's not just consider consolidation as a matter of pure fiscal responsibility -- because it may turn out to be very responsible -- let's consider, too, its social and civic impacts.
The meeting is tonight at 7 p.m. at Batavia Town Hall, 3833 W. Main Street Road.
The study committee presenting the report: Lynn Freeman, Sally Kuzon, Steven Lockwood, Beverly Mancuso, Jason Molino, Steven Mountain and Jeffrey Scott.