Government Change: More than Dollars and Cents

League of Women Voters Buffalo/Niagara

Local Government Committee

September 23, 2009


2.

Our committee started with this charge in June, 2005:

"Study of possible mergers/consolidations of local governments in the Erie Niagara region"

The impetus for the study was the proposed merger of the City of Buffalo and Erie County.


3.

After the collapse of the Buffalo/Erie County merger effort, we broadened our study to consider the following:


4.

We conducted a three-year study. We found few successful city-county mergers in recent years.


5.

Study resources of city-county mergers suggested:


6.

We learned the following about dissolutions of villages or towns:


7.

A 2004 study by Margaret Weir of UC Berkeley, "A Century of Debate about Regionalism and Metropolitan Government," concluded:


8.

The Governance Project of SUNY at Buffalo (1996) considered whether a more regional approach to governance would restore economic health to the region. Their conclusion:


9.

Other sources claim government consolidations and mergers don't readily create the fundamentals that draw businesses. Instead they are attracted by:


10.

We interviewed elected officials in twelve Erie and Niagara County municipalities as well as three public employee union representatives.We learned:


11.

From our study and interviews, we found that these factors facilitate intergovernmental relationships:


12.

We found these barriers hinder intergovernmental relationships:


13.

As a result of our study, we developed a set of criteria for the LWVB/N to support the initiation of an intergovernmental relationship: