Dangling participle –
a piece of a sentence in search of it's true identity. Here's an example: Sitting in the boss's chair, deadly disease runs rampant among homeless
people on the streets of San Diego.
What's wrong with this sentence? Something's missing. We can fix it this way: Sitting in the boss's chair, Mayor Kevin
Faulconer twiddles his thumbs while deadly disease runs rampant among homeless
people….
An equally correct alternative might be: Sitting in the boss's chair, the San Diego
County Board of Supervisors lazily ignore their civic responsibilities as deadly
disease runs rampant….
Once we get the grammar right, the picture becomes
clear. Locally-elected officials –
by choosing to ignore their political duty to protect the health and safety of
the San Diego public – permitted a public health disaster to take hold of San
Diego's neighborhoods, canyons, and streets.
Instead of taking timely action, they permitted a
preventable epidemic to spread far and wide – into Santa Cruz, Arizona's
Maricopa County, Los Angeles, Salt Lake City….
There are sins of
commission and sins of omission.
We know that pernicious actions by political actors can be punishable
offenses. What about willful
complacency and pernicious negligence that result in a deadly outcome?
I've commented on our mayor's
reprehensible delinquency in the past. Not much has changed. Kevin Faulconer, the man who's supposed
to be in charge of city affairs, is still incompetent and unequipped for the complex
job of running a major city like ours.
He sits at his desk in his 11th floor City Hall office in a
state of suspended animation. At press conferences and speechmaking events he play-acts
the role of San Diego's highest-executive elected leader.
But could our dangling mayor have gone AWOL in the face of
San Diego's homelessness crisis without tacit permission from certain other
elected officials? To what degree
are San Diego County Supervisors also guilty of pernicious complacency…
bordering on deadly negligence? Has
their complicity over the past decade compounded our city's and region's dual crises over affordable housing
and homelessness?
Here's one of our big
problems – County government is practically invisible. Ask your neighbor, ask your co-worker: What's
the point of County government? Who calls the shots? What impact does it have on our daily lives?
You might see a lot of shrugged shoulders. How many of us really understand what County Supervisors do to earn their comfortable salaries and pensions? Is the Board of Supervisors just a cozy, self-satisfied nest for has-been politicians? Or maybe a convenient way-station along the campaign trail for political neophytes and marathon also-rans?
You might see a lot of shrugged shoulders. How many of us really understand what County Supervisors do to earn their comfortable salaries and pensions? Is the Board of Supervisors just a cozy, self-satisfied nest for has-been politicians? Or maybe a convenient way-station along the campaign trail for political neophytes and marathon also-rans?
Possibly… but County government also happens to be an
essential public entity with the power and resources to improve countless lives in San
Diego. It's worth our attention.
And since it won't be
long before we are bombarded online, on TV, in our mailboxes, on our front doorknobs by campaign solicitations and promotional endorsements on behalf of a bevy of
candidates badly wishing to claim a seat on the County Board of
Supervisors, shouldn't we know a lot more about the job these candidates are knocking
themselves out for?
The more we know about County government, the better our decisions might be about who's best qualified for the job of running it.
The more we know about County government, the better our decisions might be about who's best qualified for the job of running it.
Stay tuned.