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Thursday,
November 11, 2004
By Dave Alexander
CHRONICLE BUSINESS EDITOR
Regional
cooperation might be an idea whose time has arrived
as municipal budget deficits grow in West Michigan
and Muskegon County.
A year-end report from the
five-year-old West Michigan Strategic Alliance outlined
how the region is cooperating on six key fronts. But
community leaders from Grand Rapids, Holland and Muskegon
heard that more will be needed in the future.
State Sen. Patricia Birkholz, R-Saugatuck,
addressed the region's government, business and institutional
leaders Wednesday morning at the Trillium Conference
Center in Spring Lake Township.
A key legislative leader in Michigan
on issues of land use and Great Lakes policies, Birkholz
reminded the regional audience that Washington, Lansing
and even local city halls are unable to provide new
funding. So it may be important for communities to
"pool" resources and try things like bulk
buying to save money.
"We need to be more collaborative
... we need to work together," Birkholz said
of the current fiscal strain across all levels of
government. "And I don't see a ground swell of
support for new taxes."
Strategic Alliance Chairman Jim Brooks,
a Holland businessman, echoed the state senator's
remarks.
"We have stable if not shrinking
resources and growing demands," Brooks said.
"We have to do more with less."
At the local level in Muskegon, that
may mean serious discussions on collaboration and
consolidation, Muskegon Area First President Jim Edmonson
said after the regional gathering. The Muskegon Areawide
Plan that local units of government have been working
on might become a foundation to foster cooperative
efforts in Muskegon County, he said.
"Regionalism makes 'cents' --
that's with a 'C,' " said Edmonson, head of the
local economic development agency. "Nationally,
communities have seen this since the 1970s. Now it
is time for West Michigan to look at it. To make sure
that we are cost-effective is a point of view that
we must have."
Look around Muskegon County and there
is red ink flowing in all key local government budgets.
The county lost its Headlee Override
vote last week and now will have to cut more than
$1 million from its general fund budget. The city
of Muskegon Heights continues to struggle with a budget
deficit and will be raising taxes and further cutting
services. The city of Norton Shores lost a charter
revision that would have given its city council authority
to raise property taxes, but now faces major budget
cuts, while the city of Muskegon forestalled major
cuts with a property tax increase this year.
Meanwhile, the Strategic Alliance
-- a group of the region's leaders who feel there
are critical issues facing West Michigan that can't
be solved by any one community, but must be addressed
by all -- has grown geographically in the past year.
The alliance now includes the core
counties of Kent, Ottawa, Muskegon and Allegan and
has expanded to Newaygo, Berry and Ionia. The new
larger region corresponds with federal designations
that look at commuting patterns to show the interdependence
of communities from Hastings to Fremont and Allegan.
© 2004 Muskegon Chronicle.
Used with permission
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