Take cues from one Texas community, offer City Hall 101 for residents to learn

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Many of my friends and relatives are obsessed with Texas. Some believe Texas has got it right, leading America where it needs to be. Others see Texas as spreading a virus that will destroy civic virtue in this country.

The fact that Texas is a large and fast growing state only intensifies the hopes and fears of these two groups.

Therefore, I was delighted to find something of real worth in Frisco (just north of Dallas) that could be copied all across Indiana. City Hall 101 is a 15-session introduction to local government that seems free of ideology, indoctrination or partisanship.

Before we get into the details of this program, let’s take a step back. Several persistent problems have plagued Indiana for many years.

First, Hoosiers have limited understanding of or interest in local government. Most county governments are ossified and hostility to urban areas is evident statewide.

Second, counties, townships, cities and towns continue to exist when some consolidation would make good sense. Can we justify Beech Grove, Lawrence, Speedway and Southport in Marion County?

Third, we have a steady decrease in the ability of local governments to set their own paths to the future. Since the early ’70s, the General Assembly has stripped or limited the powers of local governments. Schools are now wards of the State.

Fourth, citizens expect quality services from local governments, but are unwilling to pay the taxes and fees necessary to support them.

The Frisco City Hall 101 programs offer citizens excellent opportunities to learn about local government. The weekly, free sessions in 2016 will run from January to April.

Virtually every city activity is covered with sessions starting with the mayor, the city council and the city manager.

Those are the basics, but what makes this program so valuable is the breadth and depth of the topics. There are sessions on convention and visitors activities, economic and community development and information technology.

Perhaps I’m not well-informed, but I don’t know a single locality in Indiana that offers anything like the Frisco program.

With new local administrations taking office next month, perhaps it’s time for Hoosier cities and towns to follow the model of a Texas community.

Morton Marcus is an economist, formerly with the Indiana University Kelley School of Business. Send comments to

dr-editorial@greenfield reporter.com.