Successes:
- We now have geographic representation. In the 10 years previous to changing to ward representation, an astounding 89% of at-large candidates came from only three of the city's eight wards. Now every ward has a councilor.
- We have increased racial diversity. In the 45 years previous to ward representation, only four African-Americans and one Latino had ever been elected to city council-- in fact, Jose Tosado got his first seat on the council when a councilor resigned and he moved up from 10th place. Now we have three Latino/as and two African-Americans in ward seat.
- Increase voter turn-out. Voter participation has been declining for decades, and ward representation is not going to turn that around in just two years. However, in the 2008 election when ward representation was on the ballot, an astounding 74.2% of those who voted said YES to ward representation.
- Get more candidates running. 2009 was a truly competitive year for ward seats, but 2011 has only one ward with a contested race. But instead of considering that a failure, it may very well be that people in each ward are pleased the with performance of their representative!
Yesterday's press conference featured some of the real heroes of ward representation. Frank Buntin and Gumersindo Gomez, Exec. Dir. of the Puerto Rican Veterans Center, started meeting about ward rep in 1992, and we built on their experience. Both stayed involved for the long haul. Joe Fountain tried to file a lawsuit against the at-large system in 1996, but was denied standing as a white person. He brought the lawsuit to Arise and we recruited the NAACP and the Spanish American Union (now sadly defunct) to join with us in the first federal lawsuit. Rev. Talbert Swan II was a plaintiff in the second lawsuit, and involved his network in pushing the work forward. Council president Jose Tosado, a long-time supporter of ward rep, got the city council to approve placing the ward rep question on the 2008 ballot. And there were so many more that if I get started, I'll be bound to forget important people, but I do have to give a shout-out to E. Henry Twiggs, Min. Yusuf Muhammad, Nick Camerota, Norm Oliver, Alan Howard and Mable Sharif, to name a few, and, within Arise, most especially Joe Oliverio, Tory Field and Liz Bewsee.
We have a lot more to do to make sure democracy really works in Springfield. I called the Election Office last week to see if there were any community groups leading the charge on voter registration, and sadly, there were not-- not even, to date, Arise. But we're going to turn that around. We need a new coalition in Springfield that focuses on voter education and participation, that helps identify potential leaders and that mentors them through the electoral process. The Springfield Institute and MassVOTE have already offered support. Who else would like to join us?
Photo from the Springfield Institute.
2 comments:
You conveniently left out former Mayor Michael Albano; the real champion of ward representation going back to 1993 as a City Councilor
Your "conveniently left out" comment does imply intent. but I said if I started listing people, I'd be bound to leave some important players out-- forgot Ben Swan and Steve Buoniconti, too, and I know others. Albano certainly was a supporter of ward rep, but somehow absolutely no progress was made in his administration in moving toward. Maybe the time just wasn't right or maybe he didn't call in all the chips he could. But yes, he did support ward rep in concept.
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