Anonymous wrote:I'm against it and I work closely with people who will be affected, but I'm non partisan if that makes sense. So take my opinion in context.
I see it as a limit on a voter's ability to choose. At the local level, it gives staff like me more power because new politicians don't have much subject matter expertise. I do. But you can't fire me. You can "fire" politicians by not voting. And apparently studies show term limits make politicians rely on lobbyists more, again for the expertise.
And I have amazing respect for a few Councilmembers, who I don't want to leave, because they are truly good for the county. They learn the issues, understand the broader policy implications, and know how to compromise.
Practically speaking, 4 of 9 will soon leave office to run for County Executive. So you are cleaning house anyway. Maybe 5. And if that one leaves I'll cry.
Objectively, limiting Council to 3 terms is better than 2.
I have less problem limiting the Executive to three terms. I'd be fine with two like we have for governor and president. Most of the heavy lifting is done in Council. They are the final appropriation authority.
You might look harder at public campaign financing. Might help elect some at/large members from upcounty.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I am for it. The current political environment has become stale and entrenched with many council members becoming unaccountable. The only way to get rid of a bad council member now is through a primary, but no person who wants a political future as a Democrat in this county would primary any ther Democrats. Therefore, we get the farce that we had last time Berliner ran where he was only opposed by a developer backed candidate as retaliation for his ten mile creek vote. Now Berliner has not seen a since development he has saw fit to oppose, like a Chevy Chase Lake, Westbard and downtown Bethesda. Despite significant opposition from communities.
So you see that as the political alliances become more entrenched, it becomes harder to get them out. While at the same time they become less accountable to residents. If someone had to form a coalition and raise campaign money today in District 1, I can guarantee you the outcome would not be a Roger Berliner and our District would not continue to be represented by someone living in Potomac while making life miserable for everyone else in the District.
So if that doesn't convince let me put it another way. Do you want more great public policy like 10% increases in property tax while continuing developer impact tax exemptions for roads and schools? Because if you want more of that, then vote no.
I myself will be voting yes.
This. In an ideal democracy, all good candidates should be able to get traction to run. But the party machine in MoCo and the flow of money to incumbents makes it impossible to get new blood to replace the incumbents in the pockets of the machine. I am very tired of an electorate that only knows the issues superficially and buys the wink and nod from people like Berliner, who "fought" Westbard (and other development) in name only, voted to tax the crap out of us, and doesn't give a damn about those of us that need to live in the county.
Who says we need BRT on Old Georgetown? Isn't it parallel to the Red line? can't we just have sufficient public transit to the metro stations? Why do we have to narrow Old Georgetown Road at Rockville Pike? Oh, to make it safer for pedestrians since we are bringing thousands of more cars because of the development. Why do all of our neighborhoods have "drive like your kid lives here" signs? Because no one on the council wants to deal with all the development pushing traffic off of main roads onto residential streets because we won't invest in infrastructure or have developers invest in it at the time they are developing.
Seriously, the current crew on council doesn't care. there is no ability to support a run to oppose. term limits make sense in this environment, although I have heard developers are standing ready to field their own set of candidates to replace the dead wood that'll be leaving.
Do you think "the machine" or "the money" are going anywhere? No, they aren't. So instead of having seasoned pols who understand the issues and might be persuaded to evaluate them on their merits, you have a series of newbies who never gain the experience to push back. By the time they learn job, they become term limited. The apparatchiks and powerful interests actually gain power from term-limits. Stupid idea.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I am for it. The current political environment has become stale and entrenched with many council members becoming unaccountable. The only way to get rid of a bad council member now is through a primary, but no person who wants a political future as a Democrat in this county would primary any ther Democrats. Therefore, we get the farce that we had last time Berliner ran where he was only opposed by a developer backed candidate as retaliation for his ten mile creek vote. Now Berliner has not seen a since development he has saw fit to oppose, like a Chevy Chase Lake, Westbard and downtown Bethesda. Despite significant opposition from communities.
So you see that as the political alliances become more entrenched, it becomes harder to get them out. While at the same time they become less accountable to residents. If someone had to form a coalition and raise campaign money today in District 1, I can guarantee you the outcome would not be a Roger Berliner and our District would not continue to be represented by someone living in Potomac while making life miserable for everyone else in the District.
So if that doesn't convince let me put it another way. Do you want more great public policy like 10% increases in property tax while continuing developer impact tax exemptions for roads and schools? Because if you want more of that, then vote no.
I myself will be voting yes.
This. In an ideal democracy, all good candidates should be able to get traction to run. But the party machine in MoCo and the flow of money to incumbents makes it impossible to get new blood to replace the incumbents in the pockets of the machine. I am very tired of an electorate that only knows the issues superficially and buys the wink and nod from people like Berliner, who "fought" Westbard (and other development) in name only, voted to tax the crap out of us, and doesn't give a damn about those of us that need to live in the county.
Who says we need BRT on Old Georgetown? Isn't it parallel to the Red line? can't we just have sufficient public transit to the metro stations? Why do we have to narrow Old Georgetown Road at Rockville Pike? Oh, to make it safer for pedestrians since we are bringing thousands of more cars because of the development. Why do all of our neighborhoods have "drive like your kid lives here" signs? Because no one on the council wants to deal with all the development pushing traffic off of main roads onto residential streets because we won't invest in infrastructure or have developers invest in it at the time they are developing.
Seriously, the current crew on council doesn't care. there is no ability to support a run to oppose. term limits make sense in this environment, although I have heard developers are standing ready to field their own set of candidates to replace the dead wood that'll be leaving.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This is a Robin Ficker amendment, which alone is just about enough to convince me to vote against it.
But if you want a more nuanced view, here is what the Washington Post has to say about why they're a bad idea for county governance:
https://www.washingtonpost.com/opinions/term-limits-would-pointlessly-purge-montgomery-county-council-members/2016/10/19/394ed9e8-9600-11e6-bb29-bf2701dbe0a3_story.html?tid=a_inl&utm_term=.8ab134b11497
Yeah, I bought the "anything Ficker is bad" line from the nice ladies outside my polling place many years ago. After seeing this County go downhill; we need a change. Traffic, taxes, school system - all bad and getting worse. Meanwhile our local politicians and Board of Ed spend time on things like divestment and protesting Labor Day start instead of LISTENING to voter concerns. (Real voters, not the transient people recruited by Planning Board to participate in planning "happy hours." Voting for term limits.
NP and long-time resident here. I've also rolled my eyes at Ficker over the years and refused to sign his petitions. But this time, I agree with him. It's time for some changes. We need to get some new blood in there, people who aren't in cahoots with the developers and who will listen to the citizens. At least we know we'll be getting a new county executive, as Leggett said he won't seek a 4th term.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This is a Robin Ficker amendment, which alone is just about enough to convince me to vote against it.
But if you want a more nuanced view, here is what the Washington Post has to say about why they're a bad idea for county governance:
https://www.washingtonpost.com/opinions/term-limits-would-pointlessly-purge-montgomery-county-council-members/2016/10/19/394ed9e8-9600-11e6-bb29-bf2701dbe0a3_story.html?tid=a_inl&utm_term=.8ab134b11497
Yeah, I bought the "anything Ficker is bad" line from the nice ladies outside my polling place many years ago. After seeing this County go downhill; we need a change. Traffic, taxes, school system - all bad and getting worse. Meanwhile our local politicians and Board of Ed spend time on things like divestment and protesting Labor Day start instead of LISTENING to voter concerns. (Real voters, not the transient people recruited by Planning Board to participate in planning "happy hours." Voting for term limits.
NP and long-time resident here. I've also rolled my eyes at Ficker over the years and refused to sign his petitions. But this time, I agree with him. It's time for some changes. We need to get some new blood in there, people who aren't in cahoots with the developers and who will listen to the citizens. At least we know we'll be getting a new county executive, as Leggett said he won't seek a 4th term.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I am for it. The current political environment has become stale and entrenched with many council members becoming unaccountable. The only way to get rid of a bad council member now is through a primary, but no person who wants a political future as a Democrat in this county would primary any ther Democrats. Therefore, we get the farce that we had last time Berliner ran where he was only opposed by a developer backed candidate as retaliation for his ten mile creek vote. Now Berliner has not seen a since development he has saw fit to oppose, like a Chevy Chase Lake, Westbard and downtown Bethesda. Despite significant opposition from communities.
So you see that as the political alliances become more entrenched, it becomes harder to get them out. While at the same time they become less accountable to residents. If someone had to form a coalition and raise campaign money today in District 1, I can guarantee you the outcome would not be a Roger Berliner and our District would not continue to be represented by someone living in Potomac while making life miserable for everyone else in the District.
So if that doesn't convince let me put it another way. Do you want more great public policy like 10% increases in property tax while continuing developer impact tax exemptions for roads and schools? Because if you want more of that, then vote no.
I myself will be voting yes.
+1 Next step is finding good candidates & cutting the bureaucracies in Rockville. MoCo should really have more local representation similar to the ANCs.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I am for it. The current political environment has become stale and entrenched with many council members becoming unaccountable. The only way to get rid of a bad council member now is through a primary, but no person who wants a political future as a Democrat in this county would primary any ther Democrats. Therefore, we get the farce that we had last time Berliner ran where he was only opposed by a developer backed candidate as retaliation for his ten mile creek vote. Now Berliner has not seen a since development he has saw fit to oppose, like a Chevy Chase Lake, Westbard and downtown Bethesda. Despite significant opposition from communities.
So you see that as the political alliances become more entrenched, it becomes harder to get them out. While at the same time they become less accountable to residents. If someone had to form a coalition and raise campaign money today in District 1, I can guarantee you the outcome would not be a Roger Berliner and our District would not continue to be represented by someone living in Potomac while making life miserable for everyone else in the District.
So if that doesn't convince let me put it another way. Do you want more great public policy like 10% increases in property tax while continuing developer impact tax exemptions for roads and schools? Because if you want more of that, then vote no.
I myself will be voting yes.
This. In an ideal democracy, all good candidates should be able to get traction to run. But the party machine in MoCo and the flow of money to incumbents makes it impossible to get new blood to replace the incumbents in the pockets of the machine. I am very tired of an electorate that only knows the issues superficially and buys the wink and nod from people like Berliner, who "fought" Westbard (and other development) in name only, voted to tax the crap out of us, and doesn't give a damn about those of us that need to live in the county.
Who says we need BRT on Old Georgetown? Isn't it parallel to the Red line? can't we just have sufficient public transit to the metro stations? Why do we have to narrow Old Georgetown Road at Rockville Pike? Oh, to make it safer for pedestrians since we are bringing thousands of more cars because of the development. Why do all of our neighborhoods have "drive like your kid lives here" signs? Because no one on the council wants to deal with all the development pushing traffic off of main roads onto residential streets because we won't invest in infrastructure or have developers invest in it at the time they are developing.
Seriously, the current crew on council doesn't care. there is no ability to support a run to oppose. term limits make sense in this environment, although I have heard developers are standing ready to field their own set of candidates to replace the dead wood that'll be leaving.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This is a Robin Ficker amendment, which alone is just about enough to convince me to vote against it.
But if you want a more nuanced view, here is what the Washington Post has to say about why they're a bad idea for county governance:
https://www.washingtonpost.com/opinions/term-limits-would-pointlessly-purge-montgomery-county-council-members/2016/10/19/394ed9e8-9600-11e6-bb29-bf2701dbe0a3_story.html?tid=a_inl&utm_term=.8ab134b11497
Yeah, I bought the "anything Ficker is bad" line from the nice ladies outside my polling place many years ago. After seeing this County go downhill; we need a change. Traffic, taxes, school system - all bad and getting worse. Meanwhile our local politicians and Board of Ed spend time on things like divestment and protesting Labor Day start instead of LISTENING to voter concerns. (Real voters, not the transient people recruited by Planning Board to participate in planning "happy hours." Voting for term limits.
Anonymous wrote:This is a Robin Ficker amendment, which alone is just about enough to convince me to vote against it.
But if you want a more nuanced view, here is what the Washington Post has to say about why they're a bad idea for county governance:
https://www.washingtonpost.com/opinions/term-limits-would-pointlessly-purge-montgomery-county-council-members/2016/10/19/394ed9e8-9600-11e6-bb29-bf2701dbe0a3_story.html?tid=a_inl&utm_term=.8ab134b11497
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I'm surprised anyone needs convincing. They have similar term limits for counties throughout MD with no ill effects.
Any positive effects?
Howard County has the same 3 term limit for councilmembers and a two term limit for executive. I don't think anyone could rightfully argue that it is being mismanaged. In fact, it is probably the best run county government in the state.