Council's Administration Panel Hopes To Broaden Communication
Councilâs Administration Panel
Hopes To Broaden Communication
By John Voket
Legislative Councilman George Fergusonâs first reaction to a package of five objectives proposed by Administration Committee Chairman Gary Davis was blunt. âWeâre gonna need an army.â
But after about 20 minutes of discussion surrounding the proposals March 3, he fell in line with Mr Davis and fellow committee members Ben Spragg and Jan Andras in unanimously adopting a recommendation of those objectives to the full council.
If agreed upon by the full body, the objectives would revert to charges, and the committee would be bound to report on the progress of each charge as the balance of its membersâ elected terms progressed through the fall of 2011.
The five final objectives were refined from eight ideas originally floated for discussion by Mr Davis at the committeeâs last meeting February 3. Mr Davis reported that since the earlier meeting, he met with First Selectman Pat Llodra and Council Chairman Jeff Capeci to discuss the original ideas incorporating comments from the full committee.
The final recommendations include: providing budget reviews of town agencies and departments tied to administrative functions; overseeing issues tied to the improved communication of town- and council-related business to the general public; supporting the townâs already robust variety of long-range planning initiatives; a full review of council regulations; and working with the first selectman and other agents to improve grant writing outcomes.
In discussing the long-range planning issue, Mr Davis acknowledged that âthe public at large really doesnât have a clueâ about the existing long-range planning initiatives ongoing in the community. He also agreed that it is neither the administration committeeâs nor the councilâs objective to initiate its own long-range planning effort.
âWeâre not going to create it, we donât own it,â Mr Davis said. âBut we can help pull together [and promote] what everybody else is doing.â
Regarding the expanding use of communications tools to help make more details available to a broadening audience, Mr Davis said he would not only depend on cable access broadcasts of town board and budget meetings along with audio transcripts that might be made available by The Bee through its website.
Instead, he suggested the committee also examine social media tools and technology that could be made available through the townâs own website to broaden the opportunities for residents and taxpayers to access the information they may be looking for on a host of issues.
Mr Davis provided the committeeâs recommendation to the full council later that evening, with plans to hear full deliberations on the objectives in the near future.