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Joey Durel

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The Power And Promise Of Local Government

Posted: 08/01/2012 7:07 pm

I want to thank The Huffington Post for the opportunity to share the story of my city, Lafayette, Louisiana, a city of 125,000 people, with a trade area of close to 700,000 people. I strongly believe that as state and federal governments grow and become less manageable, people need to look to local government for real solutions and real answers. Obviously, local government is closer to the people, able to be more attentive and respond more quickly.

Lafayette is the hub of the oil and gas industry in South Louisiana. CNN Money recently reported that according to a new report from IHS Global Insight, Lafayette is expected to have the nation's largest gain in jobs among metropolitan areas. Employment is expected to soar 8.8% (number one in the nation) this year, while the area's economy should jump 7.5%. This is due mostly to a healthy energy sector, but also to an ongoing effort to diversify our economy. We are centrally located in south Louisiana, home of the second to largest university in the state (the University of Louisiana). Lafayette's location protects us from some of the extreme weather we have seen along the coast. Our inland location and our relatively high elevation have made us a safe harbor for businesses and for families, while still conveniently located on one of America's most-important highways, Interstate 10, at the intersection of I-49. We are the home of a uniquely authentic Cajun and Creole culture that has resulted in Lafayette being named the Best Food City in America (Rand McNally) and Tastiest City in the South (Southern Living).

Our city has its own citizen-owned utility company, the Lafayette Utility System (LUS) that began in 1896 when the people voted to take control of their own destiny by voting to provide electricity. Again, in 2005, our citizens voted for Lafayette to expand LUS's offerings to include a Fiber Optic system -- now called LUS Fiber. The $125,000,000 investment provides Fiber Optics up and down every street in Lafayette, and the Fiber provides television, telephone and internet service.

This project was done entrepreneurially, without taxes or grants. It must survive strictly by competing with a good (better) product for our citizens. Today, we have the fastest, most affordable Internet speeds in America. We can deliver a true, symmetrical gigabit for less than $1000! We also provide a free symmetrical 100mbs for Intranet to any subscriber to our service. This is local government owned and managed, but paid for only by the people that subscribe to the service. We are providing much higher speeds for much less money than is otherwise available. This will mean opportunities for companies to use Lafayette as a laboratory for what the next generation internet will do for the world. It will help provide good, clean, high-paying jobs for our citizens.

Another important initiative is that the city has just purchased 100 acres of pristine land, located in the middle of the city, from our university to preserve it as a "passive" park, with biking and walking trails, full of gardens and a place to house our police horses. This will give kids a great opportunity to meet policemen in a pleasant environment that is not intimidating -- great PR for the police and a great first impression for children. Most impressive (in my opinion) is that our council voted to buy and fund the purchase in a year that our sales taxes were actually declining. That decision is indicative of the courage of our community. We deal with the issues we have to deal with today, without ignoring the future. The property will then be turned over to our community foundation to fund the build-out and maintenance of the property, taking it out of government's hands and off of the back of the taxpayers. Buying it with taxes insures that it remains accessible to the public. Turning it over to the private sector will increase our chances of bringing it from good to great.

Lafayette is a high tech city, leading America into the future, while preserving great green space in its center. We are growing and thriving, and we are working just as hard to preserve our quality of life and our small-town feel. Being the fastest growing major city in the state, we are currently developing a comprehensive plan to set goals for Lafayette 20 years from now. We are optimistic about our future and know we are going to spend hundreds of millions of dollars over the next few decades. A plan will help us spend those dollars more efficiently.

Local governments cannot wait for state or federal governments to make them great (but keep begging), they have to take control of their own destiny. As a mayor, I am fortunate to live in a very forward thinking community that never takes its eye off of the future. We have a first-class university and people wanting and willing to work together. The president of our university, our superintendent of schools, the community and technical college chancellor, and I have lunch together once a month, just to keep the lines of communication open. We have a community where the government, education, and the private sector work well together for the common good. That is what makes it great to be the mayor of Lafayette; that is what makes me so optimistic about our future!

 
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I want to thank The Huffington Post for the opportunity to share the story of my city, Lafayette, Louisiana, a city of 125,000 people, with a trade area of close to 700,000 people. I strongly believe ...
I want to thank The Huffington Post for the opportunity to share the story of my city, Lafayette, Louisiana, a city of 125,000 people, with a trade area of close to 700,000 people. I strongly believe ...
 
 
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06:51 PM on 08/16/2012
Bottom line is that Lafayette, budgetary issues aside, is on a role. And it is due in large part to the leadership skills of Joey Durel. Our fair city has never gotten as much positive press as it has in the last 10 to 12 months which is good for the image of the area. Our unemployment is down and our sales taxes are up and the Horse Farm was saved for generations to come....Allons A Lafayette!
05:52 PM on 08/16/2012
I'd like to applaud the commenters who are using this opportunity to promote our great community to make us look like a bunch of backbiting malcontents. Is everything perfect in Lafayette? No. Does Joey paint a rosy picture? Yes. But that's his job: to promote the positives of our community to aid in attracting businesses and families.

I'm not saying we shouldn't hold him and the rest of our local officials accountable, but if you're really interested in improving Lafayette then we need to move past criticizing for the sake of criticizing and focus discussions on identifying solutions to the many problems we face.

I, for one, am ecstatic that we have a mayor who's willing to put himself out there and make bold moves to achieve a better tomorrow even if they come with the risk of attracting scorn. Most elected officials exemplify shortsightedness and political expediency, or they'll have a long-term vision but no pragmatism in how to achieve it.

While Joey may not make all the right decisions all the time, I'd much rather have him leading us than any other mayor in the country. And while our community may be far from perfect, I'm proud to live in Lafayette.

Now it's time to get off my soapbox and go enjoy some gumbo while listening to incredible Cajun music while watching a community filled with great people dance their butts off before getting back to work building one of the most innovative cities in the country!
11:20 PM on 08/02/2012
don't forget to tell how the city is not in the black and you spent the surplus and paid 1.2million dollars for urban planning.
07:20 AM on 08/03/2012
Yikes, I can't stand the smell of Tea in the morning!
07:26 PM on 08/03/2012
you know the tea party right about fiscal responsibility, if you got your head out of your patchouli, you'd realize that
06:53 PM on 08/03/2012
operate your budget that way?
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
NewAmericanow
04:37 PM on 08/02/2012
We must fundamentally change the structure of power in this country. The constitution does not protect your rights. The supreme court in this land early on did not protect the rights of blacks or natives or Chinese. So the lesson that history has to teach is that if you want freedom and liberty you must demand it, and unfortunately defend it by any means necessary. The Elephant in the room when the bill of rights was ratified was Slavery. For all the talk of equality, slavery shall always make the founding fathers seem fairly hypocritical to say the least, however, the ideal still remains we must be a nation that is fair to all. Today, more and more, our so called representatives are only that in name. They do not represent us in action. It is our fault in the end, of course, because we have allowed others to have power over us for what we felt was the good of all but as history has shown, power corrupts but absolute power corrupts absolutely. It is time we turn the tables and say no more. We no longer need the permission of the state to do things we see fit and remain fully accountable for those decisions as adults. If this society is to regain it's freedom we must not have the state as our parent but as a platform for individuals to work out their differences fairly in the light of day amongst ourselves. newamericanow.wix.com/home
07:24 PM on 08/03/2012
if they de consolidate, he can run again. why is the spending an issue now, after years of "togetherness"?
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Joseph Roman
02:29 PM on 08/02/2012
This poor man wrote so much and managed to say nothing. Just an opinion fluff piece with no teeth. Guess he really is a mayor.
07:25 AM on 08/03/2012
Not so!

I am a resident and a liberal and I respect him for putting our city's progress as his highest priority.
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BBackSoon
Hello, I must be going.
09:56 AM on 08/02/2012
So how much does it cost to buy a local election? $25k, maybe $50k?

That is chump change for a Billionaire. Just a simple rounding error.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Wayne Caswell
Consumer Advocate & Founder of Modern Health Talk
09:12 AM on 08/02/2012
Lafayette, and Mayor Durel, should be commended for standing up against the monopoly telecom providers, who refused to provide competitive broadband service, and now offering the nation's fastest. AT&T and Verizon, using their "model legislation" have so far convinced at least 18 states to ban or severely limit the deployment of municipal networks, even though the big telecom companies refuse to serve the less proitable rural or low-income communities. Open access to public fiber networks, where service providers can simply connect with some electronics rather than the "sunk costs" of building their own networks is, IMHO, the only way to get true broadband competition. The alternative is to highly regulate network operators and require them to provide reasonable connection to competitors, which they have caught for decades. Think of telephone and television as services and broadband as an essential utility like electricity and water. For more, Google "Big Broadband: Public Infrastructure or Private Monopolies."
researcher
researcher
01:59 AM on 08/02/2012
A city in Louisiana is a forward thinking city. that brought a smile to my face. thanks for that.
11:21 PM on 08/02/2012
oh come on, like you're place is perfect.
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IAmWallis
I'm an independent news enthusiast.
10:14 PM on 08/01/2012
A city with seemingly endless money for developments like River Ranch and Upper Lafayette and yet the streets flood every single time it rains. We have an outdated pump system down Ambassador Caffrey, and near that top notch University you touted several times in your op-ed, that will continue to cause strain on flow through, with no solution in site.

We have road systems in the parish crumbling away, making good on the world renowned reputation that Louisiana has the worst roads in this country. We have other roads that need to be widened - Pinhook for example. I would mention overpasses of some sort being needed, but that will never happen.

Speaking of the 100 acre pristine land you just purchased: What about the Youth Park and other amenities you gave to the campus in the exchange? For a future-driven city, things like dog parks and skate parks definitely fit within the changing cultures and times. And yet, the city's youth will be without them due to the deal that was made over the past month. Can we expect some sort of compromise in the future and some area set aside for these things? I know the horse farm will have no active sports areas. So with that in mind, does the city-parish plan on dedicating some other tract of land to the skate, animal, and outdoor cultures?
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IAmWallis
I'm an independent news enthusiast.
10:23 PM on 08/01/2012
ALSO: How many subscribers do you currently have to LUS fiber? How do the numbers actually add up and what are you paying back on the investment? And, as more people adopt or enlist the service of fiber, should they expect a dramatic increase in pricing once they start edging out the larger competitors? I can easily equate that to the Grand Theater that opened with movies being only 6 dollars. At that price they easily drove competition out of town. Now that they are essentially monopolized, prices are higher than ever before. I suspect that would be the case with LUS fiber. Unless there is a plan of some sort that could keep costs low, without the typical go-to claims like "increased load", "peak hours", and other things telecom companies often use to justify their restructuring of prices.
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realsurfin
Pardon me, can you help out a fellow American
09:56 PM on 08/01/2012
They cannot sir... the locally elections are being meddled with by outside the district money... there are corporations and rich folk looking to sway local elections.. especially if their company has a regulatory issue in the local district.

It is legalized and sanctioned election manipulation, sanctioned by the supreme court.
08:47 PM on 08/01/2012
Well, that all sounds nice, but nothing about it supports the idea that state and local government "continue to grow" and are "unmanageable." What it sounds like is you have a great deal of money and are able to accomplish good things with it. $125,000,000 for fiber optics? Sacrament has a city budget of roughly $440,000,000 and serves a population three times your city's. I doubt many cities have the ability to to invest one million dollars per person on fiber optics as you have. That's great for you, but hardly proves that somehow local government is innately superior. What it proves is you have a lot money.
09:43 PM on 08/01/2012
The $125 million came in the form of revenue bonds, backed by the strength of the city-owned utility. That's ultimately backed by the credit worthiness of the city. The bonds are paid back from the proceeds of the city-owned telecom venture. Also, you might want to check your math - $1 million per person would equal about $125,000,000,000.00 - we could build quite a fancy fiber optics network indeed for $125 billion.
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rtx47
08:29 PM on 08/01/2012
Lafayette is the hub of the oil and gas industry in South Louisiana.
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Frankly mayor, you are living off the federal largess (a.k.a tax loopholes and subsidies) given to the Oil and Gas industry; despite their enormous profits at the expense of Americans all over the country.

If your city and your state truly turns down ALL (direct and indirect) federal money, (which goes for projects which local govt do not want to pay for); then I would salute you and stronly urge my city leaders to emulate your example.
11:18 PM on 08/02/2012
tell everybody about the "blight bill" joey, where you would have give the city council the power to declare anything blight and expropriate it. they use federal funds to build housing projects.