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Metropolitan DC Local Politics
Reply to "s/o Give DC back to Maryland?"
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[quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote]DC: Many DC politicians and large sections of the government apparatus become redundant. You still need the same number of classroom teachers and policeman but you sure don't need all that upper management. Powerful people don't like losing their careers that they have built up over a lifetime. The politicians that keep their jobs are now now one rung lower on the totem pole. Egos don't like that. Fewer Escalades on the government bill. [/quote] This "problem" goes away if you make DC a city (like Baltimore) or a county (like Montgomery) within Maryland.[/quote] I don't have immediate data but here's what I have from www.city-data.com: Baltimore population 2003: 628,670 Washington population 2003: 563,384 (not so different in size of the city) Baltimore number of city government employees in 2005: 15,099 Washington number of city government employees in 2005: 34,000 Imagine if the Tea Partyers launched a campaign for retrocession based on the idea of eliminating 10 or 20 thousand Washington city employees. That would be fun to watch.[/quote] The DC employee count is down from the bloat in Barry's day, when there were something like 55,000 on the DC payroll. (Back then, the DC government could never say with certainty because its records and controls were so lax). But clearly the DC government workforce is still bloated. It's defenders will say this is because the DC government performs some of the functions of a state, but the reality is that the local government governs only an area the size of a medium-sized city. Moreover, there are few functions in DC that should be duplicated at both the state and local level -- police? no. emergency preparedness? no. roads and highways? Again no. Finally, the federal government actually provides many services directly to DC. It provides and pays for our local prosecutor (the US Attorney). Otherwise, the DC taxpayers would have to fund a state/local district attorney's office. Several federal police forces -- Capitol, Secret Service Uniformed and US Park Police effectively patrol areas of the city and have local enforcement authority. Otherwise, MPD would need to be even larger. The National Park Service maintains most of the parkland within the District. Oh, and public charters educate a large number of DC children, but their faculty and staff are not included in DC government employee totals. Considering all this, the DC government employee rolls are still way too large.[/quote] Our local prosecutor is our elected official the Attorney General. He and all the attorneys of the AGs office are paid for by the taxpayers of the District of Columbia. They prosecute state crimes, as well as handle all the city's civil litigation matters. The US Attorney for the District of Columbia is a federal office paid out of federal funds, just like the US Attorney for the Southern District of California, or the U.S. Attorney for the Eastern District of Maryland, or the U.S. Attorney for Brooklyn, NY, or the U.S. Attorney for . . . . The U.S. Attorney for the District of Columbia does handle the federal crimes and felonies committed in the District. Capitol police patrol areas around the capitol and monuments, that's their limited authority. They didn't or wouldn't leave their post to go to the Navy Yard shooting (federal property). MPD handled that situation. FBI did the follow-up. US Park Police jurisdiction is limited to federal parkland, such as Rock Creek Park, Ft. Dupont Park etc, however if there is a murder jurisdiction reverts to MPD. What other functions or services are you imagining that the federal government is actually providing? [/quote]
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