Contract city

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Contract city is a term used in some U.S. states for a city that contracts for the provision of one or more municipal services with another unit of government or with a private or commercial organization.

Lakewood

Lakewood, California was incorporated in 1954 as the first contract city.[1] It was not the first city to enter into a contract with a county government to have services provided by the county.[1] At that point in time, Los Angeles County already "had over 400 service agreements with 45 cities."[1] What distinguishes Lakewood and other contract cities from traditional full-service cities is their reliance on "contracting as a way of life."[1]

In Lakewood's case, it outsourced services so thoroughly back to the Los Angeles County government that early on, it only needed three employees: "an attorney, a city manager, and a secretary."[1] This raises the obvious question of why it needed to incorporate in the first place.[1] In the early 1950s, Lakewood was an unincorporated area facing a hostile annexation from adjacent Long Beach, California.[1] American cities traditionally impose additional taxes on top of county taxes, but often provide higher levels of service and a wider range of services than county governments.[1] However, unlike the vast majority of American counties, Los Angeles County had already developed a tradition of providing relatively high levels of service to unincorporated urban areas.[1] Lakewood residents were satisfied with the status quo and were uninterested in paying even higher taxes to support both the Los Angeles County government and the Long Beach city government.[1] Conversely, the county government had an interest in maintaining its traditional service-delivery role, as did its employees.[1] Lakewood's use of municipal incorporation and extensive intergovernmental contracting to maintain local control became known as the Lakewood Plan and has served as a model for contract cities ever since.[1]

In contrast, independent cities are cities which provide basic governmental services themselves, without contracting (this usage is not to be confused with the more common usage of

land use planning
, since they were usually incorporated to exert local control over land use.

Notable contract cities

In the 21st century there has been a significant increase in the number of contract cities. Several that have received attention from the media include:

International influence

British politician Nicholas Ridley regarded contract cities as a role model for local government in the United Kingdom.[1] His ideas eventually led to the Conservative government's 1980s program of compulsory competitive tendering (later known under Labour governments as Best Value).[1]

See also

External links

References