Urban Living Would Be Better if Big City Governments Were Less Incompetent
Unions and other special interests seem to get what they want before many urban residents get basic services.

One of the silliest things about the urbanism movement is its insistence that suburbanites abandon single-family homes, spacious yards, and placid neighborhoods for the excitement of big-city living. In those cities, we can supposedly experience more "community," reduce our carbon footprint, and take a bike to buy overpriced groceries at a bodega rather than drive our SUV to Costco.
By all means, developers should be free to build whatever the market demands—including characterless multi-family box housing. I dislike zoning and couldn't care less that my single-family suburban house is near duplexes and stores. But I often wonder why advocates for urban living rarely grapple with a main reason many people won't live in cities: the incompetence of urban governments.
In a recent column, the Los Angeles Times' Steve Lopez looked at a most basic area of municipal governance: sidewalk maintenance. Los Angeles, he reported, has created an online process for residents to request help to fix mangled sidewalks, but found it can take City Hall a decade to get to it "if you're lucky." He's conclusion is spot on: "Your first and best option is to pack up, sell the house, and move out of town."
That's years after, he noted, the city agreed to spend $1.4 billion on the problem after a lawsuit. City governments vary, but the bigger the city, the less likely its officials will respond to citizens' run-of-the-mill concerns about quality-of-life concerns such as dangerous intersections, impassable sidewalks, gang activity, etc. Suburban cities can be incompetent too, but the last time I emailed an official in mine I received a polite response within the hour.
By contrast, I own a rental property in a larger Northern California city and spent months simply trying to get anyone to even answer my simple question about pruning a city-owned tree. I finally gave up trying. Here in supposedly wretched suburbia, my neighbor called the police department to complain about speeders and a motorcycle cop set up a patrol the next day. Go figure, but people rather live in places where the government is at least responsive.
Local governance varies greatly, but bigger cities are dominated by public-sector unions that are more interested in spending money than providing quality services. They exert their power whenever a politician gets out of line and starts worrying about constituent concerns rather than just boosting the budget for those services and the pay for those who provide them.
Is it any wonder it took many months and more than $1 million for San Francisco to build one toilet (Google "toilet-gate") in a park—and that was after private companies donated the structure and the labor?
By the way, I added up the annual total compensation for Los Angeles' superintendent of buildings, five deputy superintendents, and six assistant deputy superintendents and it totaled more than $3.3 million. The city's top public works official earns more than $430,000 in total annual compensation. The head of the LA's Department of Disability earns more than $230,000 in total pay. I'm guessing perhaps the sidewalk issue isn't primarily about money.
In big cities, the resident is not the actual constituent. Instead, the unions or special interests are the voices elected officials are most concerned about placating. Even smaller, suburban, and conservative cities suffer from that problem, but it's more pronounced in bigger cities. Smaller cities are rarely dominated by a local Service Employees International Union (SEIU) branch, but few small-city council members can stand up to the police or fire unions and survive. Even smaller school districts in California are dominated by teachers' and staff unions.
So good luck promoting education reform under those circumstances. Poor-performing urban schools are yet another disincentive to embrace urban life. Not that all suburban schools are good (most are mediocre, actually), but who is going to trade a decent school in Orange County for one run by Los Angeles Unified? Not surprisingly, "world-class" cities such as San Francisco and Seattle have largely become childless thanks to poor schools, a high cost of living, and crime concerns.
In a 2016 paper for Chapman University, Rice University professor William Fulton noted that most cities "reflect the prevailing wisdom at the beginning of the last century, which held that municipal systems (sewers, parks, police) could be more efficiently delivered at a large scale" but that they are now "viewed as hidebound and bureaucratic—responsive, perhaps, to public employee unions but not to the residents or the businesses that inhabit those cities."
That's spot on. Some urban thinkers argue for "smaller" and "more nimble" cities, Fulton added, but I think it's time that our nation, which still views itself as an innovator, considers private solutions that give residents a choice. Competition is the only way to lower costs and improve service. Even urbanists should recognize that waiting 10 years for a sidewalk repair only makes their cause more daunting.
This column was first published in The Orange County Register.
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Government incompetence is what saves us from tyranny.
Think about it. What governments in history were competent and efficient?
I guess I see the point you are trying to make, but neither the CCP, USSR or Nazi regimes were that efficient at governing. They just tended to have a lot of cheerleaders who insisted it was so.
Depends on what they are incompetent about. Prosecuting victimless crimes, saves us. Prosecuting violent killers, not so much.
And let's not forget that tyrannical governments tend to be the most incompetent and inefficient. Everyone is afraid to tell the truth, killing and oppressing people is not good for productivity, and frankly some of it is reversed cause and effect (the incompetence leads to the tyranny).
I think it is obvious to me that the most competent and efficient governments are those that are limited in their power. After the repeal of the Corn Laws in Britain, with so many fewer laws for government bureaucrats to enforce (and fewer opportunities for corruption and graft), British officials became known for competence, efficiency, and fairness.
To be fair, it is still government.
Tyranny doesn't require competence. It requires complacency and compliance.
They are not incompetent, they are are corrupt, evil and pander to too many for power. That last one may make them look incompetent as they serve 5000 masters bit it is all in service of their power and corruption and it just works.
They are incompetent, corrupt, evil, and pander to too many for power.
If people want their city government to change, they have to vote for it to change. Why do Unions have power in city governments, because they turn out their voters. Millions will be spent on a Presidential election that likely will have less impact on people's daily lives. Local elections have little money to support alternative candidates. Nonpartisan city elections often don't even offer a choice with a single name for many offices. Even if you oppose rank choice voting for partisan election, having then for nonpartisan local elections would be a great help.
Either ban public employee unions or take the vote from public employees.
Can not do that without violating the First Amendment.
You can't ban people from forming a union. But you can forbid government entities from contracting with unions or engaging in collective bargaining.
This is the way.
So, the answer is not to get people out to vote but rather to stop people who are voting from doing so. Do I understand your position correctly?
Or just maybe, no one on earth needs an election for a dog catcher. The myth that we need to elect people for the mundane, who in turn hire cronies to manage how a roof is shingled is painfully obvious.
If we have to have pointless elections, it should be cops. Every one of them.
Agree. Elections only produce oligarchy - the corrupted form of rule by the few for the benefit of the few. That's been known since Aristotle pointed that out.
Every form of government I've ever read about involves the rule of the many by the few, which partisans can always claim is an oligarchy.
You know, except for those forms of government that closely resemble unrestrained monarchy.
To quote Churchill: "Democracy is the worst form of government, except for all the others."
Every form of government I’ve ever read about involves the rule of the many by the few, which partisans can always claim is an oligarchy.
Aristotle describes two forms of ‘rule by the many’. The ‘good’ form (where the goal is the common good) is what he called polity but is best understood as rule constrained by law, constitution, minority protection, etc. The ‘deviant’ form (where the goal is the benefit of the many) is called democracy but is best understood now as demagoguery or majoritarian rule.
In BOTH of those cases – random selection or sortition is the means of selecting those citizens who will be doing what needs doing. His definition of citizenship is the people who participate in the polity.
Elections are always about rule of the few. With maybe an appearance of consent by the many. But the winners (the few either directly or as agents of the even fewer) will always do what they want – and usually for their own benefit. I suspect the reason ‘elections’ became called ‘democracy’ is precisely because it gives an appearance of ‘rule by the many’ without being anything of the sort.
Elections for small, local offices like that make some sense when the elections are non-partisan (which, granted, is tough these days). Where I live we still have elected offices like town clerk and welfare officer, and some funny archaic things like fence viewer that are mostly honorary at this point. Those positions are really just jobs and not political at all. And I think that for the most part it is better to have them selected by the people than to have them hired by the select board, which is the governing body for small towns around here, who are a lot more political and also have more favors to hand out and opportunities for corruption. but I live in a very small town (< 2000) and I could see it not scaling well.
Rank choice voting is worse than useless when there is no choice. And there is far more money than choice in local elections. School board elections here in Denver spent $2 million for 4 vacant seats last cycle. Not the candidates. Candidates spent near nothing and the job is unpaid. The special interests who run the board - teachers union and charter school advocates - raised and spent the money. They decide which cardboard cutout is the candidate too.
That dynamic is pervasive in the elections below partisan level in cities.
'I dislike zoning and couldn't care less that my single-family suburban house is near duplexes and stores.'
Um, OK. What about people who do care?
Then they have plenty of choices of where to live, since most places have fairly strict zoning.
Of course, the Reason staff writer on that beat was cheering attempts to override local preference on that front by the states.
And local preference often tries to override individual property rights. If you want to live in a planned community with an HOA, fine. But changing what existing property owners can and can't do with their own property seems like a problem to me.
This is the fundamental problem with zoning and rezoning.
If I own a piece of property with restrictions on it, and sell it at an appropriate price for that property, then the guy I sold it to is immediately allowed to develop it in ways I wasn't... well, I got screwed, the developer got the property at a bargain.
Likewise, if I have a property that I can build an apartment complex on and you suddenly change the zoning so it's single family only, you've taken a lot of value off the table.
Fucking with existing zoning always produces losers, and it does so by changing the rules in the middle of the game. A field goal is worth three, a touchdown 6. If you suddenly decide field goals are worth 5 in the middle of the game... well, I might not have gone for the touchdown on my last possession.
His single family house in the suburbs is obviously zoned with no shops nearby - certainly none within walking distance - and probably no duplexes either. That's the definition of a suburb.
Those are not the defining attributes of a suburb, even if many are built that way.
What do you see as the defining features?
Read a dictionary if you don't know.
Suburbs have plenty of pockets of commercial zoning. Turns out people need things like gas and groceries and aren't willing to drive an hour to get them.
Yes and they are still in driving distance not walking distance. There may be older towns that morphed into suburbs – and places like where I live that were once ‘streetcar suburbs’ (layout is often grid with alleys and mixed use zones where the streetcar once stopped) that became the city.
But the overwhelming number of suburbs are post-WW2 with a hierarchical street layout. That requires at minimum de facto zoning. Large areas of single family residential on the local (non-thru) streets where nothing else but residential can survive. Commercial on the arterials/stroads – where no one has any interest in living.
Yes and they are still in driving distance not walking distance.
Yes, because families of 3 or 4 that live in the suburbs are going to walk to the grocery store and buy groceries for the week and carry them home.
Yikes, I don't have to wonder too hard if you're single and live in a metro.
You're not capturing the hilarity of the whole quote:
By all means, developers should be free to build whatever the market demands—including characterless multi-family box housing. I dislike zoning and couldn't care less that my single-family suburban house is near duplexes and stores.
"whatever the market demands" = "Both kinds. Country *and* Western" - Greenhut
Also, in true leftard jurinalist fashion, I read the sentence as "I couldn't care less that my house is [cough] near [cough] duplexes and stores."
Something tells me that if a dog kennel opened on one side of Greenhut's place and a dispensary/bowling alley opened on the other side Greenhut would feel differently about zoning.
Or my favorite, a metal fabrication shop that ran 24/7.
Fine article until the last paragraph where it becomes obvious that Greenhut's suburban libertarianism has nothing to offer any urban resident. Which would be totally ok - mind your own business and fix your own problems is very workable.
Except that he spends an entire article pointing out the failures of urban governance - and only the most obvious superficial failures at that - only to conclude with a link to what some fucking VC has to say (maybe) behind a NYT paywall?
Useless. The reason urban governance sucks is because there is no political competition. Absentee landlords are not going to provide that or understand that. Should be obvious but apparently not to Greenhut. Maybe a parody of competition - the Absentee Landlord Party - would make it more obvious.
There are plenty of assholes in small town governments too. I grew up in a rather affluent Boston suburb with about 20k residents that had a board of selectmen and open town meeting and it was always the same group of old farts who dominated it and blocked anything they didn’t like, including a guy who had set up a very popular hot dog stand on the town common. I haven’t lived there in 30 years, but now the town government seems to have been taken over by a group of Karen helicopter moms who are pushing to ban the sale of tobacco/vapes in the town.
Sure there are awful people everywhere. The difference is that in that suburb, someone who has contempt for those old farts or Karens has a reasonable chance of mounting an at least plausible challenge to one of them. The municipalities dramatically increase the cost and organizations necessary to do that. In the city, you're not just taking on bored Karen. You're taking on bored Karen, the municipal unions who she's aligned with, the party apparatus backing her, and the media outlets who she's built a relationship with.
Valid point, although if you will still face an uphill battle if you want to take on the Karens whose answer to everything is “it’s for the children!”
Modern municipalities (anyone remember when they were just cities?) are organized on a scale that will never serve the interests of anyone other than organized constituencies with a vested interest in the the public largesse. A city with a million people, or even hundreds of thousands of people, is never going to see the individual resident as anything beyond a revenue source and a cost factor. That's why, if you look beneath the surface, most cities only function at all on the level of the neighborhood, which loosely parallels the dynamics of a small town.
Now, of course, the same sociopaths who wanted to corral mankind into these dysfunctional megalopolises are pining for "15-minute cities".
The woke hate the idea of 15 minute cities because it would discourage people from encountering diversity, so that might be the end of that idea. Although in places like SF, who wouldn’t want to live in a neighborhood where shitting on the sidewalk isn’t approved of.
The woke hate the idea of 15 minute cities because it would discourage people from encountering diversity, so that might be the end of that idea.
Stopped clock, I guess.
Although in places like SF, who wouldn’t want to live in a neighborhood where shitting on the sidewalk isn’t approved of.
Do you need a 15-minute city for that, though? It strikes me you could at least get partway there by devolving power within those cities down to the local neighborhoods. I've wondered a couple of times, for example, if policing in cities wouldn't be better managed by the equivalent of local sheriff elected at the neighborhood level than a centralized, professionalized police force for the whole city.
The woke hate the idea of 15 minute cities because it would discourage people from encountering diversity, so that might be the end of that idea.
False. See Rick James’ comment below.
If you, accurately, consider predominantly white (in this country), 15 min. cities like Anytown, USA to be 15 min. cities, then yes, the woke hate them. But that’s not what the woke or the term mean. They mean Communist-style 5-year plans where they build Black Cultural centers out in the middle of farm country and rooftop farms in urban centers and pressure the farmers to come to the city and farm and the black people to flock to rural cultural centers and people can’t hunt out in the wild outside cities at any cost but Haitians can strangle and eat fauna out of the local parks for free.
Even if they don’t flat out say it, you can see it in the way they remake ethnically and regionally consistent and homogeneous fiction into ethnically heterogeneous depictions of modern LA above the arctic circle in Scandinavia or Siberia or in the mountainous regions of Eastern Europe or the ME or the deserts of Africa.
Saying they hate 15 min. cities is giving both the woke environmentalists and the woke social factions too much credit for their principles or ideological consistency in their quest to attain and enforce ESG.
They mean Communist-style 5-year plans where they build Black Cultural centers out in the middle of farm country and rooftop farms in urban centers and pressure the farmers to come to the city and farm and the black people to flock to rural cultural centers and people can’t hunt out in the wild outside cities at any cost but Haitians can strangle and eat fauna out of the local parks for free.
So that's your definition of a 15 minute city?
I grew up in a 15 minute city. It was a small town in the southwest, entirely car-dependent and spread out over a wide area. The "15 minute city" is one of the dumbest monikers ever produced. The very idea that everyone "should live in a 15 minute city" is merely a giant tell that these people are only interested in telling humanity how it should live.
I grew up in a 15 minute city. It was a small town in the southwest, entirely car-dependent and spread out over a wide area.
You pretty obviously do not know what a 15 minute city is.
I absolutely know what a 15 minute city. I've probably spent more time on the World Economic Forum's website than you have. But because like pronouns and the trans movement, the World Economic Forum doesn't own the language.
The idea is relatively simple. Residents should have everything they need within a 15-minute walk or bike ride from home.
I had everything I needed within a 15 minute walk, bike ride or car ride from home. So as far as I'm concerned, I lived in a 15 minute city.
I had everything I needed within a 15 minute walk, bike ride or car ride from home. So as far as I’m concerned, I lived in a 15 minute city.
That is NOT a 15 minute city. A 15 minute city does not require all residents to purchase/store walking shoes, a bike, a car, a hovercraft, a boat, and an airplane.
You described the city as ‘entirely car dependent’. There was ONE mode of mobility that might fit the 15 minute definition. Which is fine if you have a car and want to drive it everywhere. But what about kids (disabled, seniors, etc) in your house? Where could they go within 15 mins absent you chauffeuring them everywhere? And how much land and public resources was allocated to making the car effective in transporting you any significant distance – that could have been spent on alternative uses or not spent at all?
So you're another suburbanite with opinions (based mostly on ignorance) about how cities should work
I lived in New York City for 20 years and moved to the countryside outside a small town about an hour outside of Charleston, SC. Prior to that I lived in Philadelphia for six years. I doubt any of them qualifies as "suburban", you pompous little toad. And I'm not expressing opinions about how I think cities should work. I'm relating observations about how I see cities do and don't work. I really don't care if the cities collapse in on themselves from their own crapulence. As long as it's not foisted on me, they can manage or mismanage themselves however they want. But, commenting on an article whose central thesis is that cities have trouble curing their own suck, it might help to tone down the presumption that urbanites got it all down and everyone else is a rube.
Municipalities include entities that are not cities.
"world-class" cities such as San Francisco and Seattle have largely become childless thanks to poor schools, a high cost of living, and crime concerns.
That crime concern that's falling through the floor.
Seattle is the childless cat lady of cities.
Crime rates are indeed plummeting in almost all US cities. NYC where I live has some of the best schools in the world -- I live near a high school called Bronx High School of Science. Our cost of living is indeed high because so many people want to live here -- supply and demand, as taught in basic economics classes. But the suburbs are actually MORE expensive and have much higher property taxes.
And what percentage of NYC students go to Bronx Science? And let's also note that both Bronx Science and Brooklyn Tech are being hollowed out after years of building their reputation by open admissions.
But, by all means, stay there. The last thing the rest of us need are missionaries.
That's spot on. Some urban thinkers argue for "smaller" and "more nimble" cities,
I'm warming to the argument that cities are no longer effective methods of human organization.
Because the nation is so much more effective scale.
Welcome to the consequences of TOO MUCH COMMUNISM.
“it took many months and more than $1 million for one toilet in a park—and that was after private companies donated the structure and the labor?”
“The city’s top public works official earns more than $430,000 in total annual compensation.”
When people make a living using ‘Guns’ nothing stops them from mass in-justice. Gov-Guns are there to ensure Liberty and Justice for all — *NOT* to make a living off of. Only criminals make a living off of Gun-Force. Cities would do well for themselves to learn what a Co-op and HOA contracts are so their ‘Guns’ of Justice aren't compromised by being mingled with service providers. It’s as dumb as lobbying for Walmart to ensure Buyer Justice of their own sales. Who’s going to get screwed? It isn’t going to be Walmart.
"TOO MUCH COMMUNISM."
Idiot. There are no communists of consequence anywhere in the US.
" what a Co-op and HOA contracts are "
I don't know anyone here in NYC who lives in a single family home who has to worry about an HOA. I am much more free to do what I want with my property than most of my suburban friends. And one of the things that almost no suburb would ever allow is that we have no grass on our lot -- just undeveloped trees and other wild plants. HOAs would call them weeds and demand that we uproot them.
I don’t know anyone here in NYC who lives in a single family home who has to worry about an HOA.
And a co-op board is what, exactly. Oh, you're restricting it to the tiny sliver of NYC single-family homes.
And when your ‘Government’ calls them weeds, cites you and takes the house on unpaid fines who you going to turn too? The “halls of justice”? You’ve literally turned your “halls of justice” into your HOA and have no path left for recourse.
Do you think HOA's build $1M toilets and get paid $1/2M/year?
"Some urban thinkers argue for “smaller” and “more nimble” cities . . . "
- - - which we will continue to call suburbs.
Our road finally got resurfaced and one week later the cable companies came and dug it all up.
I completely understand that the resurfacing made it so that they couldn't access their cables. But what it points to is another lack of infrastructure (trenches vs. pipe), lack of communication, lack of planning, and no shits given.
How is this pertinent to the article? I believe that this is a scaling issue rather than a bureaucratic issue. Once you reach a certain size there is no way to coordinate effectively across all services. The very idea of central planning has a fatal flaw built right in. The bureaucracy needed to run a city cannot realistically run itself. Every point of friction is in reality a point of failure, and every point of failure is an opening for incompetence, inattention, and graft.
TL;DR Bureaucracy is a symptom, not a cause.
Public sector unions to the rescue.
The main problem with any government system, whether a small town or big city, is that it attracts those who seek to control people and those who seek to benefit from controlling people or provide services. I guess you could try to restrict what these governments can and cannot do through their charters, but I don’t think any government ever has tried to limit its scope.
Yep.
It's hard for government to limit its scope on anything that gives them power. This is why libertarians do poorly in political races. Each team wants to expand power for their pet projects.
Libertarians would cut the budget. This would lead to them getting beat up and never asked to a dance by everyone else.
I think France may have tried and the riots against austerity ensued.
Precisely why there was a Supreme Law documented to "limit its scope". The salvation is in the foundation now it's just a matter of honoring that foundation.
The Libertarian case for more government competence? Really Steven?
Greenhut is not the one to make that case – only the headline. Nor is he even targeting an urban audience. He’s just doing the typical R shtick of pointing to cities in order to rile up libertarians/conservatives in suburbs to interfere in city issues on an ideological basis.
But making gummint more competent is exactly the case that needs making by urban oriented classical liberals. Not ‘libertarians’ because that’s just a pos philosophy. The city scale is exactly the scale where some level of uncomfortable governance is necessary.
The libertarian philosophy probably appeals most to the Unabomber hermit off the grid and far far away from people yelling at the clouds. The paleo version can also scale up to white flight suburbs where everyone looks the same and hates the Haitians and drives their kids to soccer practice and can be convinced that govt is only necessary to deport the Haitians and pave the US and put the homeless in jail and kill the criminals and inspect teenage hymens/cycles and etc (all the other libertarian functions of government).
The city scale (meaning everything on the other side of the various offramps) is uncomfortable governance. Not the comfortable – hey Karen call the cops I'll get the Uzi, there’s a darkie walking in the neighborhood.
Tell me you're a douchebag hipster who never gets outside his bubble without telling me you're a douchebag hipster who never gets outside his bubble.
Ok - 你是个傻瓜时髦的人,永远不会摆脱泡沫
That's GoogleChinese for what you said I should tell you without saying so in English.
>Urban Living Would Be Better if Big City Governments Were Less Incompetent
Who writes these headlines?
I mean, duh. 'Government would be better if the people in government knew what they were doing and put public interests ahead of person gain'.
Its literally why we have Public Choice Theory.
"sidewalk maintenance"
In every city I have ever lived in, it is the responsibility of the property owner, not the city, to maintain sidewalks. We just paid $3,800 to fix ours here in New York City. The author is clearly a suburbanite.
Urban living would be better if leftists were not in charge of the city.
Which also means the population would have to stop being leftists. Unfortunately, the personality traits that lead to leftist thinking also makes cities appealing to them so they are going to congregate there regardless.
Until they’ve conquered and consumed the well dry.
Then it’s off to the next cow to milk dry.
Point & Case: CA.
Because ‘Guns’ don’t make sh*t; they conquer and consume only.
Theft is a zero-sum resource game.