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Mayors Adopt Resolution Demanding Active Participation in Presidential
Transition
June 26,
2000
Following extensive discussion in
a leadership meeting on June 10 in Seattle, a special resolution was
reported for consideration by the entire voting body of The U.S.
Conference of Mayors, and was passed unanimously on June 12.
Mayors and the Presidential
Transition
1. WHEREAS, the
next administration must support policies which allow our economy to
continue to grow, and which ensure that every citizen has the opportunity
to benefit from the economic prosperity; and
2. WHEREAS, the
American economy is not being driven entirely by the federal government,
or the 50 states; and
3. WHEREAS,
studies conducted by Standard and Poor’s DRI for The U.S.
Conference of Mayors and National Association of Counties continue to show
that our "metropolitan economic engines" are driving the growth which has
made us the number one economic nation on earth; and
4. WHEREAS,
these metro economic engines are comprised of core cities,
surrounding cities, their counties and the businesses within them which
account for approximately four out of every five Americans and most of
America’s economic output; and
5. WHEREAS, the
economic output of the nation’s 319 city/county metro economies are
largely responsible for our recent economic prosperity, generating 86
percent or more than $2.6 trillion of the growth in the U.S. economy from
1992-1999; and
6. WHEREAS, if
ranked with nations, 48 of the world’s top 100 economies would be U.S.
metro areas, with 85 of them ranking in the top 150 economies of the
world; and
7. WHEREAS, when
compared with the output of states, the 10 largest city/county metro areas
exceed the combined output of 31 states; and
8. WHEREAS,
today’s mayors are the entrepreneurial CEOs that drive these
metro economies, having formed new local partnerships which cut across
traditional government boundaries in order to make government more
efficient, and working daily with the private sector to create jobs and
help build strong communities; and
9. WHEREAS,
under the leadership of a new generation of city and county
leaders, our communities have made great progress on these priorities in
the 1990’s which must be continued and expanded in the new century;
and
10. WHEREAS, too
often the federal government expresses confidence in government that is
"closest to the people," yet federal regulations continue to impose
unfunded mandates on local governments and/or pass requirements through
the states that cost our citizens billions of dollars every year;
and
11. WHEREAS,
only rarely have mayors and their other local-elected partners
received the necessary flexibility to spend the money as we see fit — to
serve the needs of our residents — without cumbersome restrictions and
expensive regulatory requirements; and
12. WHEREAS,
federal funding often stops at the statehouse door without
reaching our cities and counties to meet the needs of our citizens and our
metropolitan economies; and
13. WHEREAS, we
must reverse the trend of federal policies which push people, businesses
and resources farther out from our metro areas and toward our nation’s
prime farm land and open spaces; and
14. WHEREAS,
with all of our economic success, there are still people and
places that are being left behind, and the nation must create incentives
for the private sector to make investments in our "untapped domestic
markets"; and
15. WHEREAS,
under the leadership of Conference President Denver Mayor
Wellington E. Webb the U.S. Conference of Mayors has developed A New
Agenda for America’s Cities, a 10-point plan which builds on the
entrepreneurial spirit of the new mayor and county leader and addresses
the needs of the new economy; and
16. WHEREAS,
this A New Agenda for America’s Cities has also been adopted by
the National Association of Counties; and
17. WHEREAS, A
New Agenda for America’s Cities calls on the next President and
Administration to address issues such as 1) making government more
responsive to local priorities and metro economies; 2) improving public
safety; 3) investing in kids and schools; 4) building affordable housing;
5) promoting arts, culture and sporting amenities; 6) investing tax cuts
in challenged neighborhoods and working families; 7) helping communities
grow smarter by recycling land, preserving open spaces, and supporting
local parks; 8) building a competitive workforce; 9) modernizing
infrastructure; and 10) increasing access to affordable healthcare;
and
18. WHEREAS, A
New Agenda for America’s Cities will allow us to build stronger
communities, fashion innovative and lasting measures to develop diverse
and historically underutilized talent pools from within our nation’s
public and private sectors, and continue the momentum of economic
prosperity and growth,
19. NOW, THEREFORE, BE IT
RESOLVED that during the presidential election period the
candidates and their parties adopt and support the tenets of A New Agenda
for America’s Cities; and
20. BE IT FURTHER
RESOLVED that during the transition period — which will run from
November 8, 2000 until the Inauguration on January 20, 2001 — mayors
should be active participants at the table in the process of transition
and in making decisions that will affect the policies of the new
Administration when the President takes office; and
21. BE IT FURTHER
RESOLVED that, as called for in A New Agenda for America’s
Cities, the new President should establish within the White House a
Domestic Metropolitan Policy Advisor, similar to the National Security
Advisor, who has sweeping authority over the federal agencies to promote
the economic well-being of the metro and regional areas and provide
regulatory flexibility to local governments to meet critical local needs;
and
22. BE IT FURTHER
RESOLVED that to help implement A New Agenda for America’s Cities
and support policies which benefit the metro economic engines, mayors
should be appointed to Cabinet, sub-Cabinet, White House and Ambassadorial
positions.
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