To the authors,
I want to begin with sincere thanks. In a world where attention spans are short and convictions fade quickly with the news cycle, your dedication over the past five years has been remarkable. It cannot be easy to maintain such steady vigilance over a city manager whose tenure has been marked by balanced budgets, completed public buildings, and the persistent inconvenience of broad community approval and support. Yet you remain committed to reminding us that things must surely be worse than they appear.
This perseverance deserves recognition.
After all, success can be deeply inconvenient for the careful critic. A functioning city hall, a modern police station, streets improving rather than declining—these developments create an almost hostile environment for grievance. Lesser observers might have conceded defeat. But not you. You continue to peer bravely into the sun, certain that somewhere within it a shadow must be hiding.
And what writing! The casual reader might mistake the rough edges for haste or frustration, but I prefer to believe they are part of a deliberate style—one prioritizing urgency over ornament. With each new sentence the suspense of the author becomes almost unbearable–as if revelation might break loose. One reads on breathlessly, wondering whether the next paragraph will reveal calamity or merely another heroic effort to imagine one.
Your attention to detail has been admirable. Few communities are fortunate enough to have citizens willing to devote such time and scrutiny to a few hundred feet of roadway, the difference between a speed hump and bump—a distinction debated with admirable civic gravity—or the imagined motives behind routine decisions. Oversight of this kind is the quiet machinery of civic life, and it is reassuring to know someone is always watching for catastrophe, even when the city vexingly continues to function.
One cannot help admiring the investigative creativity that has expanded this oversight into observation of a city manager’s comings and goings. The conclusion—that municipal leadership can be measured through parking-lot sightings and speculative arithmetic—represents a novel contribution to public administration. Future scholars may marvel at the elegance of the method: observe a person briefly, assume the rest of the day evaporates, and publish the results without fear of creepiness and with great confidence.
There is also woven through these writings a certain intensity of attention readers may recognize. When a woman occupies a visible leadership role, a particular genre of civic commentary sometimes appears—less interested in policy or outcomes than in the personal rhythms of the individual herself. The hours she works, the places she appears, the motives she must surely possess. It is curious: the work proceeds, the results accumulate, yet the scrutiny grows more animated. One suspects that if the same fiscal stability and completed projects arrived under a different nameplate—perhaps engraved with a slightly deeper voice—the fascination might become suddenly, almost mysteriously, calmer.
Of course, your contributions have not been limited to the written word. One must also acknowledge your innovative approach to civic engagement—particularly the imaginative use of litigation as public commentary. Where others attend meetings or volunteer time, you have demonstrated a more ambitious method: transforming taxpayer-funded institutions into participatory theater in which the community funds the stage, the lighting, and occasionally the curtain call—whether they purchased a ticket or not. It takes a rare ingenuity to discover so many ways to spend public money while explaining, at length, why the public should be concerned about how money is spent.
It is also worth pausing to admire the durability of the object of your attention. Most public servants would find such fascination exhausting. Yet the city manager continues the quiet work of administration—clean audits, utility upgrades, and major planning work moving forward—while serving as the central character in a literary genre that renews itself online with impressive regularity. One suspects that if municipal competence were ever to become less routine, the supply of your material might become much harder to sustain.
Speaking personally, I find your posts relatable. Many of us know what it feels like to stand just outside the circle of community. In those moments it can be tempting to mistake disruption for influence, or criticism for participation. That impulse is human and reminds us how much people care about belonging.
Your efforts serve an unexpected purpose. Each new post reminds the rest of us, quite clearly, of the distance between building community and merely talking about it—so again, thank you, because in that sense your work may be the clearest proof that this town has been built rather well, and without your steady stream of alarms we might occasionally forget it.
BW