TRYON, N.C. – From Charlotte City Council retreat. They’ve just wrapped up discussion on the council-staff operating agreement. And Michael Barnes (District 4) brought up an interesting point: With all this talk about treating people with mutual respect and sharing information, etc., how do you account for the reality of special interest groups? (I’m paraphrasing there.)
“A lot of people are impacted by special interest groups and they don’t tell us – staff and elected officials.” Third-party groups will meet with staff, or elected officials, and then things change. “If you’re not party to those third-party discussions, you don’t know what’s happening,” Barnes said. “You don’t know what the arrangements are between the special interest groups and staff or elected officials.”
Ultimately, he said, that’s the reality of politics.
He’s hit on a key point – and one that hurts mutual trust. If a staffer has been browbeaten by developers (just to take an example), and dials back on a proposal how are elected officials to know? Or, for instance, if elected officials decide to throw some candy toward a civic group they favor, how is staff supposed to deal with that?
But after Barnes brought that up, the honorables just sort of said um, and ended that chapter of the retreat agenda.