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Town tears into gown
Sunday News
Published: Feb 24, 2008
00:19 EST
Lancaster
By CHIP SMEDLEY, Staff

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He is hired to run F&M, not the City of Lancaster.
Shirley U Geste
QUOTE(Shirley U Geste @ Feb 24 2008, 08:50 PM)

He is hired to run F&M, not the City of Lancaster.


Which is why I'm continually amazed that he manages to do both on so many occasions.
citydweller
If that is the case, the city should have elected a stronger leader.
Shirley U Geste
QUOTE(Shirley U Geste @ Feb 25 2008, 06:24 AM)
If that is the case, the city should have elected a stronger leader.
The mayor of Lancaster, no matter what party they claim affiliation to, is ultimately controlled by the "establishment" of Lancaster; that's why some of Gray's policies are so much like some of Charlie Smithgall's. This includes the Hamilton Club, which represents the richest and most powerful individuals and families in Lancaster; it also includes the Lancaster Chamber/Lancaster Alliance/Lancaster Campaign (all actually parts of the same organization), which represents the most powerful businesses in Lancaster (including High, Fulton, and LNP). In addition, F&M and LGH both exert an immense amount of influence on Lancaster City government.

If you would attend a few public meetings, you would quickly see what I mean.
Artie See
http://nw-ar.com/face/molotch.html

The City as a Growth Machine," by Harvey Molotch, in The American Journal of Sociology, © 1976 by The University of Chicago.
The City as a Growth Machine: Toward a Political Economy of Place 1

Harvey Molotch
University of California, Santa Barbara

A city and, more generally, any locality, is conceived as the areal expression of the interests of some land-based elite. Such an elite is seen to profit through the increasing intensification of the land use of the area in which its members hold a common interest. An elite competes with other land-based elites in an effort to have growth-inducing resources invested within its own area as opposed to that of another. Governmental authority, at the local and nonlocal levels, is utilized to assist in achieving this growth at the expense of competing localities. Conditions of community life are largely a consequence of the social, economic, and political forces embodied in this growth machine. The relevance of growth to the interests of various social groups is examined in this context, particularly with reference to the issue of unemployment. Recent social trends in opposition to growth are described and their potential consequences evaluated.
Mansfield
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