This article on the tiny municipalities of St. Louis County, Missouri, and how they feed off traffic tickets and fines imposed on their poor black residents. You have to have a street map of the area handy really to appreciate this, and one which shows municipal boundaries, so Google maps is out: some of these municipalities are literally only two blocks long.
If there weren't so many tiny feudal realms, the article concludes, there wouldn't be so much trouble. But not none, because Ferguson, where the troubled headlines have been, is actually a sizable town. Some of the smallest ones are almost entirely black, which Ferguson is not, but there can still be racial tension, because while the elected officials may be black, the cops and city attorneys often aren't.
I'm fascinated by these tiny cities, because I wonder why they're there, and because we don't have them in California. There are only a few small-population incorporated cities in our urban areas, almost all in LA. But they're not so geographically tiny, and rather than having poor tax bases, they're either industrial areas or wealthy suburbs that incorporated to preserve high tax bases from the adjacent larger, poorer suburbs.
I first became aware of tiny cities when I visited my cousin in the Kansas suburbs of KC and discovered that she lived in an all-residential municipality that was ten short blocks in one direction and two long blocks in the other, and that there were two even tinier ones right next to it. What the hey? I subsequently learned from maps that there were quite a few of the same kind around Louisville, Kentucky, and the most of all outside St. Louis (as well as a few, here and there, around some other cities, notably Denver). This article explains why they're there, and what harm their presence does.
If there weren't so many tiny feudal realms, the article concludes, there wouldn't be so much trouble. But not none, because Ferguson, where the troubled headlines have been, is actually a sizable town. Some of the smallest ones are almost entirely black, which Ferguson is not, but there can still be racial tension, because while the elected officials may be black, the cops and city attorneys often aren't.
I'm fascinated by these tiny cities, because I wonder why they're there, and because we don't have them in California. There are only a few small-population incorporated cities in our urban areas, almost all in LA. But they're not so geographically tiny, and rather than having poor tax bases, they're either industrial areas or wealthy suburbs that incorporated to preserve high tax bases from the adjacent larger, poorer suburbs.
I first became aware of tiny cities when I visited my cousin in the Kansas suburbs of KC and discovered that she lived in an all-residential municipality that was ten short blocks in one direction and two long blocks in the other, and that there were two even tinier ones right next to it. What the hey? I subsequently learned from maps that there were quite a few of the same kind around Louisville, Kentucky, and the most of all outside St. Louis (as well as a few, here and there, around some other cities, notably Denver). This article explains why they're there, and what harm their presence does.
no subject
Date: 2014-09-05 08:54 pm (UTC)The current pattern looks not so much like anything that was intended back in those days, as like something that grew up by people taking advantage of an existing system that was capable of being exploited. The result looks on one hand kind of feudal and on the other like classical rent-seeking.
no subject
Date: 2014-09-06 05:43 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2014-09-06 12:52 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2014-09-06 01:08 pm (UTC)