The beginning of a new mayoral term in any community is — or should be — a time when the talk of the town is rife with ideas, improvements and changes.
Too often that talk, and the enthusiasm that drives it, fades as the everyday business of government overwhelms the ideas.
New Sullivan Mayor Clint Lamb is trying to change that, it certainly does appear. And he is doing so in a concerted way that all nearby cities and towns would do well to duplicate.
As our Brian Boyce reported recently, Lamb has recruited a 28-member, bipartisan mayoral transition team to help him gather ideas for improving his fair city and putting the best ideas into an action plan. In other words, the team will help translate the talk into tasks that together can result in improvements in service to the public — and in a better Sullivan.
The transition team membership is impressive in its breadth of community sectors — business, finance, medicine, government, education, arts, law, historical preservation and more. Many of Sullivan County’s leading and most active citizens are on that team.
And the team includes members from beyond county lines, and in one case, state lines. A Terre Haute city councilman joins the mayor of Marshall, Ill., an attorney from a leading Indianapolis law firm and a state employee to give advice from larger settings to complement hometown views.
As impressive as anything, though, is the bipartisan nature of the team that Lamb, a Democrat, has attracted. His Republican opponent for a city council seat, Jim Exline, is chairman of the transition team, which appears to be working hard to put politics aside for the good of the community. Others on the team also represent contrasting political and economic views. That’s all healthy if it produces a collaborative analysis of what Sullivan needs. No one is likely to get everything he or she wants, but everyone is likely to get something.
Among the team’s best ideas: developing a new, relevant master plan for the city so it can set goals and advance toward them. The last master plan has not been updated since 1968 — which, at the pace of the last half of the 20th century and the first decade of the 21st, is an ancient document that might as well have been written in hieroglyphics.
And we really like these two simple ideas: recruiting local students to develop a town slogan, and conducting governmental meetings at schools so those meetings can become part of the learning process.
By the looks of things, too, the transition team will be around for more than a few days. The tasks its subcommittees are taking on will take time to flesh out, so Lamb’s mayorship — and Sullivan’s citizens — will benefit from the transition team’s ongoing efforts for several months, if not longer.
For Lamb, his vow to make Sullivan better is in part an homage to his great-grandfather, Guy Roscoe Biddle, who was the town’s mayor 60 years ago. Lamb’s method, the use of collaboration and, we hope, consensus from some of his community’s best minds to attack some of its biggest challenges, is an excellent way to bring a new era to Sullivan’s City Hall.
Editorials
EDITORIAL: Time for teamwork in Sullivan
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EDITORIAL: Noteworthy in the news
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EDITORIAL: The politics of Primary 2012
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EDITORIAL: Noteworthy in the news
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EDITORIAL: Hoosier Republicans should stick with Richard Lugar
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EDITORIAL: Matt Branam: 1954-2012
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EDITORIAL: A transplant from St. Ann’s
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EDITORIAL: Pragmatic approach to downtown development benefits community
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TRIBUNE-STAR EDITORIAL: A salute to pride of ’55
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EDITORIAL: A match of Mitt and Mitch?
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EDITORIAL: Drilling for fairness
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EDITORIAL: Noteworthy in the news
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EDITORIAL: Be fair, consistent, but keep smokefree ordinance on track
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EDITORIAL: Towering response




