Guest columnist Russell Peotter: When the county disappears — surviving the squeeze of scarce resources
As I read the column in the March 28 Gazette regarding the budget for Sheriff’s Offices, I had to sigh [“Legislators finally question sheriffs’ bloated budgets“]. Not about the issue per se, but how it reminded me of the old saw “You don’t know what you’ve got ‘til it’s gone.” I’m talking about the abolition of most counties in 1997.
The column was the fifth time this week that I’ve heard a lament for the loss of accountability, efficiency, scale, cooperation and regional clout on Beacon Hill.
A few points:
The list can go on: Group purchasing, IT support, HR services.
When counties were dismantled, there was no uniform template for successor organizations to follow. Some like Franklin Regional Council of Governments (FRCOG) were done well then, are managed well, and succeed. Berkshire County has an integrated model, that does some things very well, but struggles with others. Hampden County largely depends on PVPC and its relatively large legislative presence. Hampshire County had Hampshire Council of Governments [HCOG], which for many reasons, was not organized to succeed, and was dissolved in 2020.
Earlier this week, I was talking with a legislative candidate about how a group of Hilltown leaders were meeting to look into opportunities for collaboration, and I was asked “are they talking about re-creating county government?” I sighed then, too.
Russell Peotter of Chesterfield is former chair of the Hampshire Council of Governments.
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