Recall effort, over this?

garagesale

Many communities in America have them.

They’re gadflies. Blowhards. People who raise a ruckus just to be heard. Maybe they like the sound of their own voices. I don’t know.

An individual has surfaced over yonder, in Tucumcari, N.M., who I guess qualifies as a gadfly. She doesn’t like a proposed new city ordinance that puts some restrictions on garage, rummage or estate sales in the city.

She’s threatening to recall Tucumcari city commissioners over their insistence on approving the city ordinance.

But here’s the ridiculous aspect of it.

The gadfly, Dena Mericle, doesn’t like in Tucumcari. She lives in rural Quay County. She doesn’t have any proverbial skin in the game. The ordinance doesn’t affect her. Her garage sale restrictions are set by the county commission.

According to my colleague Thomas Garcia, writing for the Quay County Sun, Mericle said this during a public hearing: “The commissioners are elected by us, the public, to serve our best interest and the interest of the city.”

She then used the R-word — “recall” — to make her point. “If the commission passes this ordinance, then I hate to resort to this, but I’ve collected well over 300 signatures … for a recall of the commissioners.”

Tucumcari Mayor Ruth Ann Litchfield told Garcia that commissioners “often make decisions that are unpopular. If we give in to the threat of recall, then anytime there is an item or ordinance that someone doesn’t like, they will resort to that tactic.”

Earth to Dena: You are entitled to express your opinion, but you are not entitled — as a practical matter — to spearhead a recall drive in a community in which you have no vested interest.

Geez, I hate recalls. They should be done only in the case of malfeasance. Tucumcari commissioners are acting totally within their purview by regulating a legal activity inside the city’s corporate boundaries.

As such, commissioners are answerable only to those who pay the bills, the residents of the city — who also would be financially liable for the cost of a recall election.

This kind of outside intrusion isn’t unique, of course, to Tucumcari.

Do you recall the Amarillo municipal referendum this past November in which residents were asked whether to approve construction of a multipurpose event venue in its downtown district? The referendum passed in a close vote.

One of the main foes of the MPEV was a guy who lived in Canyon, about 15 miles south of Amarillo. But there he was, raising Cain at City Council meetings objecting to the MPEV.

I get that he — as is Mericle — is entitled to speak his mind. If he didn’t like the MPEV, the First Amendment to the U.S. Constitution grants him the right to speak out against it.

However, these local issues ought to be decided and argued publicly by those who have a tangible stake in their outcome. That’s not a legal requirement, of course. It just makes sense.

The rest of us are perched in the proverbial peanut gallery, where our arguments and objections will get all the attention they deserve … which isn’t much.

One thought on “Recall effort, over this?”

  1. You are misinformed and a purveyor of misinformation. Since the person you are attacking is my mother, I will admit to being partial. Nevertheless, that does not excuse the bad “facts” of your opinion piece. Your fake quote is enough to discredit you: “I’ve collected well over 300 signatures … for a recall of the commissioners.” My mom has collected no signatures for a recall and definitely did not say this. Further, merely living in the county does not mean she “doesn’t have any proverbial skin in the game.” She lives, literally, across the street from city limits. She does all of her shopping and other tasks inside the City of Tucumcari. Her husband, my father, works for Tucumcari Public Schools as does my aunt. My wife is the school nurse and works for the hospital. I’m the technology manager for Eastern Plains Community Action Agency. My sister owns a dance studio in town and is the vice president of the local Chamber of Commerce. So, to say any of us don’t have a vested interest in what happens in Tucumcari is foolish and ignorant. But, you would know that had you reached out to my mom for comment, rather than choosing to undertake lazy journalism (merely reading the work of others and then resorting to name calling). After the city commission refused to listen to the citizens of Tucumcari, more than one person who lives in the city approached my mother to express interest in helping gather signatures for recall. So, it’s not just an imagined outside agitator who wants this. Your desire to write an honest piece is apparently tainted by your dislike of recalls. I do agree with you on one point, your arguments and objections don’t deserve much attention. Now that I’ve read this piece, I’ll go back to reading you as often as I did in the past, which is not at all.

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