And then I felt galvanized enough to submit my own take to the paper. That's what I have been doing this morning so far. And since the printing of the article is dubious (the tax proposition has generated a lot of space-consuming reaction pro and con), I think I'll just put it here.
WHOSE QUALITY OF LIFE?
Perhaps it could be called a touchstone in the arsenal of
the socially-sensitized and environmentally-aware, a witticism credited to the
Irish author, Oscar Wilde : "Nowadays, people know the price of everything
and the value of nothing."
On the one hand, it sounds accurate: The painting of
the Mona Lisa is currently valued at something less than a billion dollars. But
for those who love art, the market-place value, while enormous, can hardly
rival the delight of a soaring heart ... beauty and quality, by whatever
definition, have no price.
Which brings me around to Northampton's latest $2.5 million tax override debate and the decisive
vote scheduled June 25. Signs are sprouting on front lawns. "Vote
Yes!" Schools, public safety, public works and a host of other needs are
cited in support of the override.
But the cap stone argument for all of it is a single magic
wand -- a paroxysm of emotional righteousness that trumps all counterclaims:
The city's "quality of life" hangs in the balance.
The first thing to notice about the "quality of
life" argument (and the price of everything and the value of nothing
argument as well) is that whenever the "quality of life" is put
forward, it always seems to cost money. "Quality" may go beyond the mundane
confines of money and yet demands money to keep its stature burnished. This
irony seldom seems to trouble those waving the magic "quality of
life" wand.
But what is the
"quality of life?"
A year of so ago, when my son was wrapping up a stint at Northampton High School, I drove up to watch him compete in a track competition.
He was throwing the shot put, an event held on a back left portion of the
enormous and enormously-well kept greensward. The day was perfect -- sunshine-y
and bright. And as I walked to the back portion of the field, I had a chance to
watch a girls' softball team hard at it; a lacrosse team soaring and swooping
in search of the ball; and in the far right rear, a boy's hardball team
swinging for the fences. Idly, it crossed my mind, "Would the games be any
less fun, any less spirited, any less informative and healthy if the kids were
not all wearing their perfect uniforms?" It wasn't a complaint; it was
just a question.
And a couple of years back, I asked my older son, now a
deans-list student at Keene State College, if he felt that Northampton High School had adequately prepared him for college. He replied with a
certainty that lacked any particular bitterness: "No, but I don't think
anything could have prepared me for it."
I'm not picking on Northampton High School here. I am simply mentioning aspects of my life which,
when spliced together, seem to speak to whatever my "quality of life"
might be. I do not mention the road projects that strike me as busy-work but
are labeled as helpful to travelers (think cobble-stoned islands in the road)
or other civic exercises that strike me as wasteful: My "quality of
life" is always impacted by wider or other versions of "quality of
life" and while I may hope that my "quality of life" and yours
don't conflict, hope and a couple of dollars will get me a bus ride.
As a retiree living on a fixed income, my views are just my
views. And that, as far as I can figure out, is the point. "Quality of
life" has no fixed and over-arching meaning and can lay claim to no
assured and arrogant boundaries. Whining and whimpering about the "quality
of life" is largely self-serving argumentation searching in vain for
legitimacy. No one wants Northampton to turn into another Detroit, but there are trade-offs that deserve a more careful
scrutiny.
If "quality" and "beauty" supersede
anything as mundane as a checkbook, I hope that those devoted to these timeless
values will stop asking me to write larger and larger checks.
After a while, the arrogance becomes galling.
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