About 650 people in Tewksbury showed up last week to open town meeting to vote against a change in the form of government. The proposal would have started the process to switch to a 9-member town council. It lost in a laugher, 561-51.
I was rooting for this one to pass. Tewksbury has about 30,000 people, but they are still clinging to Open Town Meeting. Had they made the switch, I think it may have gotten attention of some of the leadership here in Billerica, which has roughly 10,000 more people.
New England towns, many of which would easily be cities were then in any other region, do fine with Open Town Meeting until they run out of physical space. I remember growing up in Acton there were years that the high school auditorium (which held about 1,000 people at the time) filled up and they had to open the gymnasium and wheel in an audio and video feed to handle the overflow. (Acton was at about 17,000 population at the time.) They don’t have that have that problem anymore.
And neither does Tewksbury. Critics of the existing form of government lament that no one shows up anymore, giving a hundred people or so the power to decide what happens to the entire town. Selectman Scott Wilson, the only elected person to support the change, said this:
“The problem with town meeting in my opinion is that people don’t show up,” he said. “And the people that do show up aren’t representative of a community of 30,000 people. It’s a small group of people who have very strong opinions about certain things. The only time other people show up is when a particular issue has their attention.”
Sound familiar?
You might be thinking, after reading this story, that Billerica isn’t the the only town that has trouble with progress or change. But look at these quotes. First, another from Wilson:
“I think that this was a fantastic way to begin a conversation,” he said. “We had 600 people there and they were engaged, they were curious. If town meeting were always like that, town meeting would be more effective.
When did you hear anything like that from anyone in Billerica leadership?
And this:
Wilson said that with key town boards aligned against the plan, “I knew it wasn’t going to pass. But still it was a great discussion. I think people got educated a little. Many of them came up at the end of the night and said, ‘Scott, I really learned a lot. I’m not ready for this yet, but I can see what you are saying makes sense.’ They just need to be comfortable with it.”
Those are the words of a man who was badly beaten but has hope. “I really learned a lot”? Gee, why is it that the people of Tewksbury can have a rational discussion about an important issue and we can’t? Does their open town meeting work better than our representative town meeting?
Speaking of the two forms of town meeting, let’s face it: Billerica’s form is “representative” in name only. If we switched to open town meeting for this fall, how many people do you suppose would show up? I put the over/under at 200, a few more than we get today. We TMRs are supposed to represent our constituents, but we don’t. We represent ourselves. Why? Because unlike other representative bodies, we have no fear of losing the next election. It’s foolish and even a little dishonest to call it “representative” town meeting.
So there’s Option 2 for fixing Billerica’s legislative branch: switching to open town meeting.