History, politics, people of Oly WA

On Karen Rogers public forums and the need for another organization

This week, a city councilmember’s forums became the topic of conversation. Since being elected last year, Karen Rogers has been holding formal meetings with citizens to gather input. Summaries of the meetings are posted on the city’s website. Sometimes city staff are requested to attend, and the impact on staff time on one city councilmembers effort to reach out to citizens.

Before I get to my point, here are some tweets by Lakewood City Councilmember Walter Neary (and two) and open government leader Sarah Schacht. Both Walter and Sarah seem to point to a more formalized additional way for the city to encourage input from citizens.

I think Roger’s has hit on something important, but she might be going about it wrong. Granted, I haven actually attended one of these meetings, I’ve only read summaries and of course the coverage in the Olympian. But, they seem to point to the need for more input in city matters. Or, just public matters in general.

By the way, I’ve pointed out in the past that Rogers has a decent time getting public input.

So, the city might just use the model created by Rogers and formalize it. Rotate the city councilmembers that attend, but with no more than three at a time (to prevent a quorum). Councilmembers already have several regional intergovernmental commitments that mean they attend meetings above and beyond regular business. One more meeting a quarter with citizens, with a mix between citizen and city generated topics, wouldn’t be that hard.

What they also might think about doing is formalizing a new so-called “blog policy” (like the one Seattle has) to ease the process of city councilmembers posting on the city’s website.

But, that isn’t really what I am interested in seeing, I think there needs to be a whole new organization focussed on putting on public forums of general civic interest. Something like a city club. Boy, I like this topic, don’t I?

Anyway, there are a lot of example out there locally, Tacoma, Portland, Eugene, Lakewood United, and North Mason (County) Voice. Each of these organizations have a central role of holding forums on generally civic topics. Some, like the Seattle City Club, also have other projects like a living Voters Guide.

So, why haven’t these sort of efforts taken hold in Olympia?


I would say because most of the positive political force in Olympia is focussed for or against a particular issue. Oly2012, Olympia Capitol Park, and other organizations are focussed on their own goals, not necessarily providing an open forum. As they should be.

It also might be, since we are a capital city, that people with this sort of thing in their DNA and who live locally are focussed on statewide issues, not necessarily on the local civic landscape.

But, there seems to be the pieces you could put together to organize a city club like organization. The League of Women Voters has a local chapter, but I honestly don’t hear much from them (I have to make an effort to hear anything from them). There is also SPEECH, which seems to have a general forum role, at least in the environmental sense.

I could could also see how other tangential organizations like the Coalition of Neighborhoods and the Friends of the Olympia Library could play a role.

So, what is standing in the way? 


What can we do to get this done?

3 Comments

  1. einmaleins

    Yeah…. I had a forum like this. No one showed up, unless there was a single issue to rally around: isthmus.

    But I'm sure something like this could be organized in a better setting successfully. Even though alot of people are very disillusioned with the overall process, thus not wanting to put their efforts in any more.

  2. tezzer1

    One thing is not to expect specific outcomes. If people come hoping for some action to occur and it doesn't, they will stop coming. This has to be focused more on discussion and creative thinking for long range community vitality.
    Issues may pop up from time to time and this would give folks a place to discuss their positions, unlike city council – where you get 3 minutes to make a statement with no dialogue with anyone, including the other community members.
    I have always referred to this type of interaction as brainstorming; throwing out ideas without editing or a thought to effectiveness. That can happen later on.

  3. Anonymous

    Twitter might work:
    *participate from where-ever & when ever stuff is being talked about)
    *140chars limits topic drift & spin

    -just a thought/I like the idea

    citizens should form a council to rock the local vote & pack the boards & advisory groups to get something done…

    I agree with Mathias, but not everyone is gonna agree on how to talk to each other, much less what to talk about…

    In the end, and effective process would be to open the idea of a movement up and share it far & wide, allowing folks to gather along similar interests, all working toward a common social agenda in a distributed manner, to accomplish diverse & common goals.

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