Does Charlestown
do it right?
Since
the CCA took control of the Charlestown Town Council and Planning Commission in
2008, town residents have frequently struggled over how much the town should regulate
its citizens.
Ruth Platner’s (CCA Party) ascendance to Supreme Leader of the Planning Commission has made her the most powerful person in Charlestown, and her radical views about the role of government in people’s lives affect every resident and business in town.
Ruth Platner’s (CCA Party) ascendance to Supreme Leader of the Planning Commission has made her the most powerful person in Charlestown, and her radical views about the role of government in people’s lives affect every resident and business in town.
Under
Commissar Platner’s leadership, Charlestown has become better known for what it
is against than what it is for. Platner has turned regulation-loving Democrats
like me into neo-Libertarians, chafing at her efforts to put virtually all
activity in Charlestown under her control.
Rather
than simply rail about her regulatory philosophy, however, I suggest that Charlestown
needs to come to grips with the effects of regulation on the town’s business,
environment, culture and even on neighbor-to-neighbor relationships.
As a progressive Democrat, I really do believe in the importance of government regulation. I would like to believe that all reasonable people accept the idea that government regulation to protect public health and safety is not only a good idea, but essential to a civil society.
When
it comes to other kinds of regulation – the kind where lives are not on the line – we should have a
clear set of principles to guide whether or not to enact new ordinances, or
whether or not existing ordinances are worth keeping.
First,
I believe there should be a basic threshold question: does the ordinance address a genuine public need? That need should
be defined and explained. It should be able to stand up to challenge and public
debate.
If
an ordinance passes that first essential requirement, we should then subject it
to additional tests. My list of criteria goes like this:
Is it
reasonable?
Ordinance #359 will address that most serious of Charlestown issues: the depth and color of mulch on business properties |
These two ordinances were reviewed by the Town Council at its October 7 meeting, found wanting and were sent back to the Planning Commission. They are due to return to the Council with revisions at the Council’s December meeting.
The
town’s ordinance on lighting went through a similar process.
Commissar Platner took a pretty substantial town consensus that Charlestown property owners ought to be encouraged to use lighting that protects our wonderful nighttime views and ruined it through over-reach. She proposed a minutely detailed ordinance that would have required compliance with every detail each time a homeowner or business changed a light bulb.
Commissar Platner took a pretty substantial town consensus that Charlestown property owners ought to be encouraged to use lighting that protects our wonderful nighttime views and ruined it through over-reach. She proposed a minutely detailed ordinance that would have required compliance with every detail each time a homeowner or business changed a light bulb.
Ordinance #360 will deal with the rampant problem of parking at Charlestown businesses |
The
original version of Platner’s lighting ordinance sparked a rebellion,
especially by Charlestown’s surviving businesses, and months of delays and
re-writes.
In the end, the Council ended up passing an impractical,
unenforceable and pretty much meaningless ordinance that applies only to
businesses and only under special circumstances. Joe Warner says there have only been two commercial lighting
permits issued under the ordinance.
Charlestown
would have been better
off with a resolution encouraging all property owners to make the switch to
dark sky friendly lighting accompanied by some practical public education
and perhaps lining up discounts for town residents from a non-profit group,
such as the non-profit Energy Federation
where I bought light shields for our outdoor lights. Instead, we have a crappy
law on the books, allowing Platner to say “Mission Accomplished” and she’s on to
her next big thing.
Is it effective?
Residential wind energy - effectively banned in Charlestown |
We
have an ordinance that regulates what a homeowner must do before putting up a
small (less than 5 kilowatt) wind energy generator for personal use. The
requirements are so onerous that they are almost impossible to meet.
According to town Zoning Official Joe Warner, no one has applied for a permit since the town ordinance was enacted almost two years ago, despite widespread interest in green energy.
According to town Zoning Official Joe Warner, no one has applied for a permit since the town ordinance was enacted almost two years ago, despite widespread interest in green energy.
We
have a tree
ordinance that goes into incredible detail on what can and can’t be done by
property owners, residential or commercial, with trees and shrubs on public
right-of-ways, such as road setbacks. The ordinance is supposed to be enforced
by a town Tree Warden backed up by a volunteer Tree Committee.
The
Tree Warden must be a licensed arborist willing to do the job for free. For
obvious reasons, we do not have a Tree Warden.
Five individuals volunteered to serve as the Tree Committee but their applications were turned down because they lack formal credentials as tree people. Thus, we have an elaborate tree ordinance that is not enforced, and probably never will be.
Five individuals volunteered to serve as the Tree Committee but their applications were turned down because they lack formal credentials as tree people. Thus, we have an elaborate tree ordinance that is not enforced, and probably never will be.
When
the accessory
dwelling unit ordinance was presented to the Town Council by Commissar
Platner, she herself admitted that it was unlikely that anyone would apply.
These are units a homeowner would add to their homes to either house a relative
or be rented as an affordable unit.
According to Joe Warner, there has only been one application and that
one is still “a work in process” awaiting DEM septic system approval.
Is it fair?
Great use of town staff time - refereeing fights between neighbors |
There are two problems I see with this approach. The first is that ordinances are inconsistently applied. Enforcement is based on your neighbor ratting you out.
And
that’s the second problem: our complaint-driven ordinances are used in neighbor-versus-neighbor
feuds. Instead of having ordinances that promote a civil society, our ordinances are used as weapons in internecine warfare.
These battles drag town staff or even members of our Town Council, especially Council Boss Tom Gentz, into the middle of fights that are nominally about signage, noise, lights, dogs, trees, parking or whatever but often have nothing to do with the relevant ordinance and are simply the outcome of generations-old beefs between alleged grown-ups.
These battles drag town staff or even members of our Town Council, especially Council Boss Tom Gentz, into the middle of fights that are nominally about signage, noise, lights, dogs, trees, parking or whatever but often have nothing to do with the relevant ordinance and are simply the outcome of generations-old beefs between alleged grown-ups.
I
understand that sometimes people are reluctant to engage their neighbors in a
civil discussion about annoying conduct or that past attempts, for whatever
reason, haven’t worked out. Maybe it’s easier to make an anonymous call to the
Fire Department to say there’s a fire when it’s just a smoky Weber barbeque
grill.
Many
town departments – zoning, animal control, police – don’t have the personnel to
fairly and uniformly enforce all of Charlestown’s many regulations to convert
them from being “complaint-driven” to being fairly applied. There has to be a
better way.
Consider
Charlestown’s enforcement of the cesspool replacement law. Old-fashioned
cesspools must be replaced with approved new systems appropriate to where
the property is located.
Everyone is required to get their septic system inspected. If your system fails, you must either have it serviced or replaced – the rules spell out the conditions.
Everyone is required to get their septic system inspected. If your system fails, you must either have it serviced or replaced – the rules spell out the conditions.
Town
Wastewater Manager Matt Dowling sends out notices and, if a property owner
doesn’t comply, he uses the progressive enforcement tools available to him that
can and do sometimes result in a property owner facing charges in Charlestown
Municipal Court.
As of October 8, Matt reports there are 86 remaining cesspools on 79 different
properties. Around 20 of them are in the Municipal Court process. For me, one
interesting take-away from the data Matt compiled is that around a third of the
properties with old cesspools have absentee owners.
Whether
or not you like the town’s wastewater treatment policies, it seems to me that
they are fairly applied and properly enforced on every single property in town. Can
we say the same about any of the ordinances that have come out of Ruth
Platner’s shop in the past five years?
New
ordinances should contain fair and practical methods for their enforcement.
Otherwise, what’s the point? Expecting that ordinances will be enforced through
citizen complaints leads to my final suggested criteria, which is….
Does the
ordinance create more problems than it solves?
Clerkbase screen shot of Faith LaBossiere presenting her vision of Charlestown |
Channeling Ted Cruz, she held the podium, yielding for answers to
the many, many, many detailed points she raised. At no point during this
marathon stint at the podium did Town Council Boss Tom Gentz (CCA Party) enforce his own time limit rule on Ms.
LaBossiere. Early on, you can faintly hear his timer go off, but he quickly turned it off.
One
of the best comments of the night came from Charlie Beck, who immediately
followed LaBossiere and thanked her for her unofficial filibuster, saying “I’ve been having trouble sleeping.”
Outlaw bush-whacking? |
A sample of the many things she wants: trees and
shrubs installed by businesses and developers produce berry, be non-invasive
and native. There must be strict monitoring of what happens after plants and
shrubs are installed. Also strict monitoring of mulch installation.
She
looked at Lillian Arnold, chair of the Conservation Commission, to volunteer to
be the Town’s Shrub and Mulch Police Chief.
Ms. Arnold did not accept the nomination.
LaBossiere also called for the requirement of a maintenance plan by businesses and developers that would then be enforced by somebody in the town government.
Ms. Arnold did not accept the nomination.
LaBossiere also called for the requirement of a maintenance plan by businesses and developers that would then be enforced by somebody in the town government.
Good
ideas when taken to absurd extremes become a bigger problem than the problems
they seek to address. E.g. the lighting ordinance. LaBossiere proposes
micro-regulation that will be yet another one of those “complaint-driven”
issues that neighbors can use in their feuds with each other instead of a more
practical town policy that encourages
better landscaping practices, backed up with town technical assistance.
LaBossiere’s
demands for even more microscopic regulation were limited largely to Ordinance
#359 on shrubbery. When it came to the parking Ordinance,
#360, she asked for leniency on such matters as parking boats, noting that
many of her neighbors down by the beach don’t have much room to
park their boats.
She also wanted leniency for new residences to allow for more
than two parking spaces per unit, saying that some families may have one car
each for the adults and another for teenagers living at home.
It
seems so classically CCA – pile the regulations onto small businesses and
people you don’t know, but ease the regulations for the people you do know. Call it government by cronyism
if you will, but this is not government in the public interest.
Indeed,
Charlie Beck also expressed concern about the way Charlestown is piling onto
small businesses and said flat-out that if he was starting a business, it wouldn't be in Charlestown since he believes it is impossible to comply with
all that Charlestown requires.
Charlestown
has 9%
unemployment, a declining workforce and a shrinking commercial base. For
example, the town’s
signage regulations drove out a group of woman-owned businesses that used
to be on Crossland Street.
When is Deputy Dan going to weigh in? |
Laws
that exist but are not enforced, or are not enforced fairly, lead people to disdain
the rule of law.
The town’s choice to substitute a “complaint-driven,” vigilante-style enforcement rather than hire adequate staff to enforce its laws just encourages more conflict between neighbors.
The town’s choice to substitute a “complaint-driven,” vigilante-style enforcement rather than hire adequate staff to enforce its laws just encourages more conflict between neighbors.
Leaders
of the CCA Party like Ruth Platner and Faith LaBossiere want to add more and
more controls over the townspeople, but they don’t want to pay for it. They don't seem to care if the laws they pass actually get enforced. Or maybe they only want those laws to be enforced on the right people while their friends get a pass.
Every new line of unneeded, unfair or unenforced town ordinance they add to the Charlestown Code of Ordinances acts like dripping gasoline onto a fire.
Every new line of unneeded, unfair or unenforced town ordinance they add to the Charlestown Code of Ordinances acts like dripping gasoline onto a fire.