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Primary schools are municipal at least, serious public transit planning is at least municipal or county, hospitals and secondary schools are sub-regional or regional. Those I can see people care about.
The parish council with a 1,000 person jurisdiction sounds like a glorified homeowners' association that gets an official channel in which to piss and moan every time the muni wants to do anything that reduces house prices in their particular neighborhood, no matte how much objective merit the policy has for the city as a whole.
- Jake Friends come and go. Enemies accumulate.
As I said above, everything should be managed at the lowest possible level, but no lower. It is rightly acknowledged that people of faith have no monopoly of virtue - Queen Elizabeth II
This village - well, this pair of villages - has a parish council. We also have quite a few people who work from home and need good broadband - which we do not yet have, and have no current prospects of same.
When I suggested to the council we look into this, because there's no lack of interest, I was told 'Excellent idea! We'll form a committee at the next meeting.'
That was months ago. Oddly enough, nothing has happened since. (And unfortunately I haven't been here for most of that time to chase things up.)
So representation only works when you have people with an interest in getting things done representing you. When you have people who think decisions can only be made by going through Proper Channels™ you're onto a loser.
And when you have people who become representatives purely for career reasons, things work even less well.
It's not as if it's used much, and could probably have limped along for another few decades without a replacement.
But because this is middle/upper class England that kind of thing matters, while trivia like broadband and a stable electricity supply (ours isn't particularly) don't.
20 years later, when I left, the population was about 500 and climbing, and had lost its former ethnic purity (Gaulish, of the Segusiave tribe). Mainly because it's half an hour's drive from an old industrial city experiencing urban flight.
It was a fine place to bring up young children. It is rightly acknowledged that people of faith have no monopoly of virtue - Queen Elizabeth II
Urban flight is going to reverse. Soon and hard.
And I'm not sure about the reversal of urban flight. The city they left has lots of cheap housing available; and there are no jobs there. It is rightly acknowledged that people of faith have no monopoly of virtue - Queen Elizabeth II
Ethno-nationalist romanticism likes to project local traditions and ancestry local ancestry several centuries back into the past. Truth is, rural collective memory is shorter than often assumed, and both ideas and people moved around a lot. I think that of the melting pot of the Roman Empire, the Burgundian migration, the Frank conquests, the Huguenot wars, at least some must have left their trace in the local gene pool. *Lunatic*, n. One whose delusions are out of fashion.
As for people moving around a lot. Not. Genealogical research by my ex-wife demonstrated that your spouse came from an area within walking distance, for your basic peasants, until the early 20th century. It is rightly acknowledged that people of faith have no monopoly of virtue - Queen Elizabeth II
Where did you search for it? Speaking of which, when was the first mention of your village in historical records? *Lunatic*, n. One whose delusions are out of fashion.
But managing a primary school, providing the buildings, employing ancillary staff, are communal responsibilities. In France, the size of a commune varies wildly (from dozens to millions of inhabitants); what I propose is that it should be a "parish level" competency rather than a municipal one. It is rightly acknowledged that people of faith have no monopoly of virtue - Queen Elizabeth II
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