Sunday, April 25, 2010

Governor Quinn wants to explore having more influence in the City of Peoria

Peoria’s crime rates, crumbling infrastructure, cuts in essential services, failing schools, middle class flight and a reputation of failure has convinced Governor Quinn that the City of Peoria is failing.

He says he's looking at larger states for inspiration to initiate change here that would intertwine his job as governor with the decision-making of the City of Peoria.

My interest is not in running the City of Peoria, and I think that's one of the misconceptions that people have when they hear 'gubernatorial control,' Quinn said.

But Quinn said he is "exploring" the gubernatorial appointment of Peoria's City Council members, who in turn approve or reject which direction the City goes.

The Governor didn't say how far his interests go, whether he is thinking of appointing the entire City Council or just a few members.

He contends that with a governor in charge, there is just one elected official who can be held accountable by voters as to whether they're doing a good job or not.

Peoria's Mayor, Ardis favors the current system. I think an elected mayor and city council is a good thing, Ardis said. It's important for all the different public bodies to communicate with each other, but I think it's also important that we all keep our own identities. I think an elected mayor and city council is important to keep.

City Council member Gary Sandberg said he's willing to listen to the governor but didn't know if there was a need. If it's just a power play, then I'm against it, but if it's a collaboration approach - I would just have to hear more about it, Sandberg said, . . . it's worth the discussion.

Quinn said he believes there are both positives and negatives. I think it needs a good vetting to talk about the pros and cons, he said, I'm going to keep pushing the discussion. I can't think of another city that has a greater importance on downstate than the City of Peoria.

8 comments:

kcdad said...

The governor wants to appoint the city council and city council wants to appoint the school board...

anyone see a trend here?

Emerge Peoria said...

This is a spoof on the article in the pjstar entitled "Ardis wants to explore having more influence in District 150".

anonapotumus said...

Thanks for the laugh. Made it funnier that kcdud was clueless. Still.

Sharon Crews said...

I was almost clueless--almost fell for it--was waiting to read the comments first. Since I got caught yesterday because I never have noticed the "source" link on emerge's posts, I was going to check out the source.

Anon1 said...

Very Clever.

kcdad said...

and that is how rumors start... which explains a lot of the tea party ideas.

Emerge Peoria said...

Interesting comments from the Journal Star:

loveliberty - If Ardis can't run a city right, why should he be presented with a bigger plate?.......

Stomper - There are at least three school districts in Peoria: D150, Dunlap, and Limestone.

People in all three districts vote in the Mayor's race.

No one is suggesting that the Mayor would appoint the Dunlap board or the Limestone board. They are only saying the Mayor would appoint the D150 board.

So under this plan Peorians in the Dunlap district and in the Limestone district would have a say as to who runs D150, while those in D150 would not have a say in who runs Dunlap and Limestone districts. This sounds like discrimination to me and a probable violation of equal protection between people in the City of Peoria.

cw - The Mayor will not respond to citizen concerns about the city why would anyone think he would do that for the school dist. ?

Sharon Crews said...

The article mentioned that West Peoria has its own mayor--so Ardis shouldn't have authority in West Peoria.