Norwich is too important for you to miss voting in special election

Do you remember those insurance commercials on TV where getting coverage was "so easy even a caveman can do it?" In the ensuing years, it's gotten even easier I guess, which is why these days a cousin to a salamander is now the company's spokesamphibian.

I think about that lizard and caveman when we talk about the city budget and municipal governance. There's a saying, "Nothing is impossible for the person who doesn't have to do it," and for many of us that’s painfully true.

Admittedly I'm being too sensitive and maybe I'm only half-listening to the points (not) being made, but the sense of the city I get on social media and radio call-ins is the people in charge don't have a clue about what "we" really "need" (= want). And it doesn't seem to matter who is in charge.

Bill Kenny
Bill Kenny

And perhaps oversimplified, our thoughts and desires on the current, and/or any city budget approved by whatever configuration of the City Council we have, can always be characterized as "everybody wants to go to heaven, but nobody wants to die."

City Council election is May 24

I bring all of this up, not because I'm offering to throw my hat into a political ring, but because next Wednesday, May 24, we're voting to fill a City Council vacancy we've had since January. Perhaps you've seen the lawn signs? Yep, next Wednesday's vote is what that's all about.

Would I have liked to have seen/heard/read interviews and conversations with both candidates who seek to fill that vacancy and learn what they view as the challenges as well as opportunities Norwich is facing, or what they see as their priorities should they be elected next Wednesday? Yeah, and ideally, so, too should you. But, as my mom used to say, "If you don't ask, you don't get." So, I guess we asked for lawn signs.

Except, the lawn signs I'm most concerned about are the For Sale signs, on houses, apartments, small businesses, almost everywhere, you name it. And I am frustrated that we spend so much time around here talking about the past and the good old days. I don't know why so many of us like to look back; that's not the direction we should be heading in.

More: State money would be better used for existing programs over new initiatives

I could lie and tell you that I don't care for whom you vote, but that's not completely true. I'm very passionate in my support for one of the candidates but I don't want to poison your well with my unsolicited opinion. Instead, I want to encourage you as strongly as I can to make sure if you are eligible to vote that you cast a ballot.

A very wise man, Gene Nathan, once observed, "Bad officials are elected by good citizens who choose to not vote." I have a slightly more abrasive attitude on that: If you don't vote, shut up. You had your chance. Next Wednesday you can make your voice heard or you can shrug your shoulders and say it doesn't matter. And if you do that, you'll be correct, but we'll be poorer for your inaction.

You cannot possibly have anything better to do than exercise your right to vote next Wednesday.

Norwich is too important for you to not find the time to be counted. As we've proven over and over around here, talk is cheap. But good news! Voting is free and effective. Go to the polls next Wednesday and prove it.

Bill Kenny, of Norwich, writes a weekly column about Norwich issues. His blog, Tilting at Windmills, can be accessed at https://tiltingatwindmills-dweeb.blogspot.com/.

This article originally appeared on The Bulletin: Election to vote for new Norwich City Council member to fill vacancy