Gainesville City Commission: Public Resisters Rather than Public Servants

Nov 9, 2009

Were not the Commissioners of this city elected to serve the people of our city rather than vehemently resist them while pursuing their own agendas?

The Koppers Superfund Site has been a source of Gainesville citizen outrage for decades. Years ago the EPA took control of this site and confirmed that there were indeed dangerous toxins slowly moving towards the aquifer that Gainesville draws its drinking water from. The EPA has made little if any real progress with regard to the cleanup process. Citizens have urged commissioner after commissioner for entire terms of office to take the necessary actions to secure safe drinking water.

Now at the end of her sixth year in office, Mayor Pegeen Hanrahan reacts to the situation with the following statement, “I’m frustrated by the seemingly lack of response to the concerns we have consistently been putting forward,”(1). Really Ms. Mayor? It took only 6 years in public office to become “frustrated” by the EPA’s lack of action? Could future political aspirations have finally stirred an increased awareness of citizen outrage and kindled this new found frustration? Note that the Mayor’s statement doesn’t allude to any form of action that might be taken against the EPA, but lets us know that she is “frustrated”. For a Mayor that has committed this city to conform to the Kyoto Protocol by 2013(2), she sure doesn’t seem very concerned about this environmental issue that hits so close to home.

Recently our Commissioners announced they will now be enforcing a 130 meal per day limit on the local charity, The St. Francis House. The St. Francis house has feed the hungry in Gainesville since 1980, and now with the holiday’s approaching the City Commission has severely limited their capability. Public outcry was severe on this issue(3), and initially our Commissioners took the stance that their hands were tied and there was nothing they could do. After prolonged, unrelenting criticism and outcry our Commissioners began using their creative energies to come up with a solution and ultimately decided to lift the meal cap for the holidays(4). This however should have been their initial reaction as public servants and leaders rather than having to be urged relentlessly by their constituents to serve their community rather than resist it.

Robert Krames
Gainesville Resident

Sources:

(1)http://www.gainesville.com/article/20091030/articles/910301007

(2)http://www.alligator.org/news/local/article_a9811e8e-9b1b-5b9e-a222-d7fa94fc2055.html

(3)http://www.gainesville.com/article/20090729/articles/907299944

(4)http://www.gainesville.com/article/20091106/articles/911061013

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