The Telegram (St. John's)

‘Democracy Cookbook’ intended to stir the pot

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I am writing in response to Tom Hawco’s letter to the editor (“Not even the ‘quadruple helix’ can save us”), published on Oct. 4. Tom’s article was in response to one of The Telegram’s instalment­s from “The Democracy Cookbook.” This is exactly what we need in our province — lively and open debate over what we mean by good governance, how we achieve sustainabl­e developmen­t, what our future society should look like, etc. “The Cookbook” is achieving its purpose!

I do think Tom also raises lots of great points about the long history of community and regional developmen­t in Newfoundla­nd and Labrador. In the past, this province has been a leader with the creation of Regional Developmen­t Associatio­ns, Community Futures Committees and Regional Economic Developmen­t Boards. “The Democracy Cookbook” includes chapters going into this history, and the lessons learned, in some detail.

The fact that we have shifted from one model to another, often based on the same principles, but never giving any of them the chance to mature and adapt is a reflection of our approach to governance. Unfortunat­ely “that was them, this is us” is a common response of new government­s, regardless of the political party in power.

Tom takes umbrage with the term the “quadruple helix.” Fair enough. It is jargon, and every profession and discipline has its share — economic developmen­t is no exception. What it means, actually supports Tom’s argument, in part. Our province’s approaches to regional economic developmen­t have emphasized the need for industry, community, government and post-secondary institutio­ns to work together (that’s the four elements in the quadruple helix). With the helix, however (think about the cool spiral that depicts DNA), the four pieces are intertwine­d, not one above the others. That is a difference from our approaches in the past — government has always claimed to be in the driver’s seat (although it kept changing the vehicle we were trying to drive in). And we haven’t had nearly the success we should have as a result.

And contrary to Tom’s understand­able despair about the prospects of rural Newfoundla­nd and Labrador in light of recent population projection­s, the evidence is that our municipali­ties, businesses, non-government­al organizati­ons and many others are ready to work with government­s and with our college and university to do things in new ways, collaborat­e, and make a sustainabl­e future where a smaller population is highly productive, efficient and innovative. The world is full of small jurisdicti­ons that offer higher quality of life than most of the larger more populous places. But core to them all is good governance — at the local, regional, province or state, and national levels. This is one case where too many cooks won’t spoil the broth — we all need to speak up, debate and forge a prosperous future together.

Rob Greenwood, executive director Harris Centre

Memorial University

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