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    Home»Editorials/Opinion»Letter to The Editor»Letter to the Editor:The Rules of Citizen Engagement
    Letter to The Editor

    Letter to the Editor:
    The Rules of Citizen Engagement

    January 30, 20141 Comment
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    By Elemer Magaziner
    (January 30, 2014) 

    logo_lettereditorThe new Citizen Engagement Program is a detailed set of rules the City Government is to observe when engaging citizens.

    These rules include the functions of many entities: City Council, City Manager, City Staff, Citizen Engagement Coordinator, Community Plan Advisory Groups, Citizen Work Groups, Arts and Culture Coordinator, Volunteer Registry, and a Citizen Registry. The rules also include a process covering Soliciting, Organizing, Prioritizing, Implementing, and Reporting Ideas and Issues; Periodic Reviews and an Annual Evaluation of the Program; and a Recognition Program. Overall, the process contains approximately three dozen steps, calls upon two dozen methods and tools, and includes several decision points. The process is conducted, managed, controlled, and evaluated by the City.

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    This is surprisingly heavy and complex machinery for addressing the relationship between Citizen and City. It implies that the City considers engaging citizens a phenomenon requiring a great deal of management and control. That the citizenry’s desires and concerns are fundamentally capricious and, if left unchecked, will be disruptive.

    But this dense barrier can easily undo the very rationale for its creation, which is to facilitate collaboration. Its presence only solidifies an already existing context of mutual mistrust. So, before attempting anything more advanced, we need to practice something that is more fundamental to, and necessary for, productive engagement:

    Attend City Council meetings until we can clearly and convincingly see members of the public in the chairs, members of the City Staff at the tables, and members of the City Council on the dais as simply residents of the one Sedona community.

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    1 Comment

    1. Lin Ennis on February 3, 2014 10:13 am

      Have you noticed the people at the tables are rarely introduced to the public? And sit with their backs to the public the entire time?

      The meetings are run more like a courtroom than a boardroom.

    Council Slams the Brakes on Flock Surveillance in Sedona
    Video capture of Sedona resident expressing his views on Sedona’s spy cameras

    By Tommy Acosta

    The Sedona City Council through a majority consensus voted 5–1 at its Wednesday, August 13, special meeting, to temporarily shelve a controversial auto license-reading surveillance program, with council members  Melissa Dunn, Kathy Kinsella  Brian Fultz,  Derek J. Pfaf and Pete Furman giving a thumbs down,  and Sedona Mayor Scott Jablow supporting the cameras.

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