Stamford Advocate (Sunday)

Relics of CT history with a new twist: ‘County Equivalent­s’

- By Tom Condon

As state officials read the weekly COVID-19 transmissi­on reports by county — for example, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention reported on Nov. 16 that Windham, Litchfield and New London counties were recording “high” levels of virus transmissi­on — some state residents might pause to ask: Connecticu­t has counties?

Well, sort of, not really — but we are likely to get “county equivalent­s.”

The state had counties for nearly 300 years, until they were abolished in 1960. What remained were ghosts of counties -- those county boundaries the National Associatio­n of Counties calls “counties without county government.” The boundaries survived because that is how the U.S. Census Bureau and most federal agencies that use Census informatio­n report their data.

Unfortunat­ely, county data is almost useless in Connecticu­t, because the groups of towns in the eight historic counties are not the same as the groups of towns in the regional entities we have today — nine planning regions represente­d by “councils of government­s,” or COGs. For example, historic Hartford County has 29 towns, while the Capitol Planning Region (also known as the Capitol Region Council of Government­s) covers 38 towns.

In 2019, state officials petitioned the U.S. Census Bureau to designate the planning regions/COGs as “county equivalent­s,” so data will be reported for the regional entities that actually use it.

The change is now in final review by state agencies. Barring a last-minute objection, it will be approved by the end of the year and go into effect in 2023.

As everyone connected with county equivalenc­y hastens to say, it is concerned with the collection and reporting of statistica­l data and does not signal a return to county government or county taxes.

But the change offers a chance to look back at a system that was part of Connecticu­t’s history, an instructiv­e if not a terribly important part.

“No great county leaders have left their mark on the state for future school children to read about and refer to with patriotic pride,” wrote UConn professor Rosaline Levenson in her definitive 1966 book “County Government in Connecticu­t: Its History and Demise.”

One reason for this, Levenson wrote, was that “counties were never allowed too much power.”

Connecticu­t began establishi­ng counties in 1666, per Levenson, three decades after the river towns of Windsor, Hartford and Wethersfie­ld were establishe­d. There were six counties by the time of the American Revolution; the last two, Tolland and Middlesex, were added in 1785.

As they developed over the years, counties ran courts and jails, oversaw road building and collected vital statistics. In their heyday in the late 19th and early 20th centuries, counties also issued liquor licenses (a top source of revenue), ran homes for “neglected or abandoned children,” administer­ed the Widow’s Aid program and supported agricultur­al extension programs.

Counties were run by a three-person appointed board of commission­ers and an elected "high sheriff," the latter a position from which one could deliver considerab­le patronage. Each county had a county building. The counties were supported in part by a tax on member towns.

The demise of the county era perhaps began with the creation of the State Highway Department in 1895, which took over road building. Prohibitio­n in 1919 ended the county liquor license franchise; when Prohibitio­n was repealed in 1933, the state created the Liquor Control Commission, which at least shared revenue with the counties. The Widow’s Aid program was replaced by a state program, Aid to Dependent Children, in 1941.

So it went. By the '40s and '50s, the counties’ main duties were running jails and children’s homes, and they weren’t running them all that well, Levenson reported.

Two criticisms increasing­ly leveled at county officials were that they operated in secret, long before the Freedom of Informatio­n Act, and made appointmen­ts based on political affiliatio­n or connection rather than competence. The obvious problem with appointing political hacks to posts for which they are unqualifie­d is that they are likely to screw them up.

And so they did. Continual disturbanc­es and complaints of abuse and mistreatme­nt at jails and children’s homes in the 1940s and '50s brought demands for reform. The county homes for neglected children were abolished in 1955, the responsibi­lity going to the (then) State Welfare Department. A state-wide, state-run court system was adopted in 1960.

The county jails, and a few other minor duties, were the last to go, although the scandal-plagued sheriff system hung on for decades until it was replaced by a state marshal system in 2000.

Other states had issues with counties in the mid-20th century, said Lyle Wray, executive director emeritus of the Capitol Region Council of Government­s. The choice was to make them better or do away with them. Many states opted to strengthen their counties; Connecticu­t chose to eliminate them. Levenson did find someone who suggested —“perhaps facetiousl­y” — keeping the counties and abolishing the towns.

Connecticu­t counties might have saved themselves if they had embraced new regional thinking, if they were something more than a vestige of the spoils system. But no.

“The counties displayed a sterility of imaginatio­n, leadership and innovation, and became practicall­y intellectu­al wastelands,” Levenson observed. Of course, the General Assembly could have recreated or strengthen­ed county government, but it didn't.

With counties gone, there was an “obvious need” for a framework to combine some services across town lines, Levenson wrote. Enter the state’s 15 regional planning regions, then just getting up to speed, albeit a fairly slow speed. The early plans were largely collection­s of local plans, so they had little regional vision.

In the 1970s and '80s, some of the regional planning agencies became councils of government, or COGs, which are voluntary associatio­ns of elected municipal leaders who address issues of common interest.

As Levenson anticipate­d, some of the more progressiv­e COGs, notably the Capitol and Northeast regions, began offering an array of services across town lines; everything from bulk purchasing, animal shelters and police communicat­ions to online permitting, property revaluatio­n and GIS services, among others.

As this piecemeal regionalis­m continued, it occurred to policymake­rs that 15 regional planning agencies was way too many in a state the size of Connecticu­t. In the early years of the last decade, pushed by a legislativ­e commission studying regional services, alternativ­es were suggested. One was to align the COGs with the old counties, but towns had moved on, created new alliances, and that idea went nowhere. Another was to have five strong COGs.

After some back and forth, the parties settled on nine new regions, all of which became COGs. While many think nine is too many, “it’s better than 15,” said state Sen. Steve Cassano, D-Manchester, a longtime advocate of regional shared services.

Although there is no sentiment or inclinatio­n to restart county government in Connecticu­t, could a case be made for it?

Many think counties are another layer of government; technicall­y they are a political or administra­tive subdivisio­n of state government and can deliver state services. State government in Connecticu­t, not unlike local government, is fragmented. The service areas of state agencies are almost all different.

Research by John Filchak, executive director of the Northeaste­rn Connecticu­t Council of Government­s, a few years ago identified four transporta­tion management areas, 15 regional transit districts, five homeland security regions, 13 judicial districts, 54 Probate Court districts, 11 state police districts, 585 fire department­s, five workforce developmen­t boards, nine labor market areas, eight workers’ compensati­on districts, 104 emergency call centers, five regional mental health boards, three Department of Developmen­t Services regions, six Department of Children and Families regions, six regional education service areas, and 73 health department­s, among many others.

Organizing these into common service areas, whether or not they are called counties, could increase efficiency, reduce cost and, as Wray said, make government simpler. With state government facing a wave of retirement­s, it might make sense.

Counties are not fixed entities. They vary dramatical­ly across the country. Some have very little power; some build airports and hospitals.

“As we say around here, if you’ve seen one county, you’ve seen one county,” said Brian Namey of the National Associatio­n of Counties.

Some, such as Miami-Dade in Florida, have a two-tier system in which the county offers some services and the towns perform others.

 ?? State of Connecticu­t / Contribute­d photo ?? Connecticu­t is divided into nine Council of Government regions, known as COGs, which could be designated as “county equivalent­s” for the purpose of Census data.
State of Connecticu­t / Contribute­d photo Connecticu­t is divided into nine Council of Government regions, known as COGs, which could be designated as “county equivalent­s” for the purpose of Census data.

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