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How Does Government Measure Life, Liberty and Happiness?

It seemed a benign (almost self-evident) statement when I posted it at Facebook: "Government should be limited, effective, frugal and totally focused on the customer."

A friend responded: "How do you measure effectiveness? Government does not run on profit or return. Measurement of life, liberty and happiness is subjective."

It's a great question, but perhaps the premise is flawed, and we'll have to go back a few years to deal with that.

Life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness are unalienable rights with which we are endowed by our Creator, as all know who have read the Declaration of Independence. Governments are instituted, deriving their just powers from the consent of the governed in order to secure these rights, not to provide rights or blessings (because God has already provided them).

In other words, government protects each of us from others who would violate our God-given rights. "Others" include those in government, which is why the Declaration says the power comes from those who are governed. It is not inherent within the governors.

So, to determine the effectiveness of government, one need not measure output of life, liberty or happiness, but rather one should measure infringements on those rights, and seek to diminish those, because they are offenses to both the men who receive rights and to God who grants rights.

The government most effective is the one that treads least on the natural rights of men, and that reliably punishes others who impinge upon or trample those rights. This sends a clear signal that here, in America, people are free and responsible.

Let's bring this up to the local level. (Yes "up". The smaller the unit of government, the closer to the people, the higher it ranks in order of significance.)

Lehigh County (Pa.) government administers courts, jail, district attorney and public defender, sheriff, coroner, and public records (wills, deeds, voter registration), among other things. In addition, the county government runs a vast 'human services' operation, that is for the most part mandated by, and largely funded through, the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania and the federal government. The county also maintains 46 bridges -- no roads, just bridges.

The 897-page Lehigh County budget contains no fewer than 60 separate "funds" -- from mental health, to liquid fuels, to gaming, to composting -- most of which represent local efforts to comply with the demands of remote politicians and bureaucrats in Harrisburg and Washington D.C..

Even a cursory glance at the size and scope of this $405 million per year, 2,197-employee operation, makes one wonder how the word "effectiveness" could barge into the conversation.

Government is not a free enterprise business, but that doesn't mean that sensible, effective business practices and processes do not apply. In fact, there's much that government can learn from successful and unsuccessful businesses.

To stretch the analogy, Lehigh County government is a conglomerate, or a holding company, for a wide-range of enterprises, each bearing the Lehigh County brand, but often having little obvious relation to each other beyond that. Sensible managers of conglomerates look for natural links among business units -- resource sharing, pooled purchasing, networking, etc. -- but such leaders must also allow a level of independent operation for each business unit, so that they're not hindered in the execution of their particular missions by the bureaucratic weight of the whole.

Yes, the image of herding cats comes to mind. And while a pack of cats can't easily be chased, they can be led. The job of leadership is to set the expectations in broad terms for fiscal prudence, performance excellence, and customer service...and then, in conjunction with the leaders of each unit, to develop benchmarks for what effectiveness looks like in each realm, and then to hold them accountable to those measures.

Effective courts swiftly and justly administer the law. How fast? The leaders must determine not just what's possible, but what constitutes fairness to the aggrieved and the accused alike.

Humans services units deliver state-mandated aid to needy "clients" in a way that equips them, if possible, to function without such aid. Effectiveness measurement here might consist not so much of 'hours spent' or 'funds disbursed', but of clients released, who have become independent of government assistance. Another measure might be how much human services work can be transferred back to the private sector in order to increase accountability, results and the administration of genuine love, mercy and compassion.

Of course, a wise leader of a conglomerate also knows when to spin off a division for the good of that unit and of the whole. Government should do what government must do with excellence. But much of what government now does would be better handled in the private sector.

To sum up, each unit of government must develop its own set of effectiveness measures, keeping in mind that government secures God-given rights, it does not confer them. This may require what will seem to many in government like a radical re-imagining of their roles.

And that is just what is needed, as long as it is done within the confines of our Founders' stated vision for this great nation.

What might happen if each government employee asked himself at the close of each day: "Today, how did I secure the blessings of liberty on behalf of the people of Lehigh County?"

Better yet, what might happen if that person had both empirical (objective) and anecdotal (subjective) standards by which to answer that question.


Scott Ott is candidate for Lehigh County Executive.
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