New way of business should top legislative agenda
Dec 26, 2009 | 897 views | 3 3 comments | 4 4 recommendations | email to a friend | print
As Alabama heads into the new year, our elected leaders will be heading to Montgomery for a new session of the Legislature.

With new years come new expectations, and Alabamians have every right to expect a different outcome than lawmakers’ business as usual.

The year ahead promises to be a challenging one with the state’s educational system in the grip of financial turmoil and joblessness in the business sector still in double digits.

School reserves are gone, and cuts are being made at the very time investments need to be ensuring a better future for Alabama children and this state.

And the job picture, while improving, is still cloudy at best in the short term.

But delving deeper into underlying factors of what plagues Alabama requires a look back rather than a look forward. U.S. Census Bureau statistics just released show Alabama lagging behind most of its southern neighbors in growth.

Georgia, Florida and North Carolina are in the lead while Alabama hovers in the bottom four. Georgia with Atlanta as its center and Florida with tourism at its core are obvious choices for leadership in growth.

But North Carolina is the storyline worth following. A look back at its past reveals a conscious decision by its leadership to move that state forward.

In 1970, leaders committed themselves to factors like improving education and capitalizing on technology by creating a Research Triangle Park. Today, North Carolina is a leader in education and has developed a global reputation in research. Growth, obviously, has followed.

It is a lesson Alabama would do well to study. Capitalizing on the state’s strengths and opportunities by investing in them was North Carolina‘s approach. To do that in Alabama, its lawmakers must make the same conscious decision North Carolinians made decades ago.

It would be much easier to employ business as usual tactics, wrangling over the same pot of money for education and pitting K-12 against higher education rather than develop a solution.

It’s a simple matter to just cut rather than to find innovative ways to do business or provide stable funding to save programs that are already working.

It is harder to do what North Carolina did and make decisions that might not have been politically expedient at the time but put the state in a better place for the future.

North Carolinians made a conscious decision to turn from politics of the past and worked to transform their state.

It’s a lesson Alabamians would do well to learn if they do indeed expect a different outcome.

comments (3)
« Ex Mayor 2 @AOL.Com wrote on Saturday, Dec 26 at 11:29 PM »
You are so right..When I ran for state wide office, one of my campaign promises was to try and get the powers that be to help turn Cheaha State Park into another Gatlingburg...All it would take would be some upgraded roads and lay out a plan that would protect the park from being gutted and then let private industry develop it. Can you imagine what this would do to the entire state? Can you imagine a cable car or tram running from the top of the mountain down to the lake? sorta like in Chattanooga, Tn. The property could be leased in 50-100 ft lots and let the business owners build the buildings, under the auspices of the Govt...no cost to the govt. Motels, restaurants and the scenery is out of this world...it can be done, but we do not have the folks in control who are willing to let it be developed...No vision. The same thing is going on in Talladega right now...we have 2800 acres that the county commission, Jim Preuitt and Steve Hurst have blocked from being developed...the commission has had title to this land for 6 years with no development..now they don't want Lincoln to have it and develop it......this could already have been developed creating hundreds of jobs, and folks from all over the world would be coming and staying for days and weeks...With the proper development and promotion, this could be as big or bigger than the speedway. But what can you expect from a bunch of "self-serving, do nothing commissioners"?
« vickicrowe@att.net wrote on Saturday, Dec 26 at 10:28 PM »
Larry Barton, I really am depressed now!

I have always wondered why Cheaha Mountain could be set up like Gatlinburg. We have some of the most beautiful country any where.but nope lets do nothing. Well I understand the billboard now. Sylacauga is the best kept secret! Darn Skippy
« Ex Mayor 2 @AOL.Com wrote on Saturday, Dec 26 at 10:12 PM »
It is obvious why Alabama is "lagging" behind the other states...who wants to come to Sylacauga, a community where the folks cannot breathe, or to Talladega, where the city manager has the city in chaos, or to Birmingham where they are 8th in the nation of violent crime.What about Pell City where the police shoot a man in the mouth and still no word "WHY"? What about Childersburg where the police shot a black young man in the back of the head...no news "WHY"? While we have mountains, lakes and a beautiful state, crime and politicians are out of control...Alabama politicians have let the state get in a deplorable condition financially. The school systems are lacking for funds and the courts cannot decipher where bingo is legal or not. The Governor says no, the AG says Yes. Just one persons opinion. What is yours?

Post Your Stuff
Daily Home comment section
Aug 28 09 - 01:41 AM

Should The Daily Home require readers to register before posting comments?