When you hear the word collaboration, the last thing that pops
into your mind is local governments – or any type of government on some
days. This is a weakness for us local governments. We worry about losing
our control, losing our identity, or, worse yet, losing our government
completely to a consolidation. Yet, when we look at examples of local
governments collaborating, we commonly see great success -- Silicon
Valley, Napa Valley, the Research Triangle, and recently the Opportunity
Initiative in Southwestern North Carolina.
Regional
collaboration can be highly effective in a number of ways, including
comprehensive transportation, economic development, and comprehensive
land-use. By ensuring that roads, bikeways, and pedestrian
infrastructure are in place regionally allows residents, businesses, and
tourists to flow more easily through the entire area.
This
additionally helps economic development throughout the region, making
commuting and doing business easier and more fluid. What’s good for
growth in one government or community is good for the other communities.
Tying land-uses together through collaboration is also
beneficial to ensure that regulations are similar throughout the region
and that each community’s growth will be well matched with the other
community's growth.
Collaboration can also help provide a
regional identity. Gatlinburg, Pigeon Forge, Sevierville and Sevier
County consistently collaborate with each other on projects and have
developed an identity as an access to the Smoky Mountains with beautiful
vistas and became a vacation destination. This regional identity has
catapulted the all the governments and communities into economic
success.
Regional collaboration allows us to take the best
elements from each government or community and bring them to the table.
What one community’s weakness is may be another’s strength. One
community may have better housing, another a better industrial base,
another better quality of life, and yet another a more beautiful city.
Each of these communities must not have every element, but it allows all
of the cities to offer something unique to the entire region.
Locally, Elizabethton is a part of the Johnson City Metropolitan
Statistical Area. The US Office of Management and Budget creates this
area. A standard they use is that of an area containing a large,
populated city and adjacent communities that have a high degree of
economic and transportation integration with that large city.
We have already been defined as having a high interaction with Johnson
City, Jonesborough, and Unicoi. When a large new business or industry
moves into one of those communities, Elizabethtonians benefit. When a
major new state highway is built in one of those communities
Elizabethtonians benefit. What could we accomplish if we started
collaborating? Is it time for us to join with our surrounding
communities to begin collaborating regionally? The answer may be yes,
the answer may be no, but either way let’s start talking about it!
No comments:
Post a Comment