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URBAN AND REGIONAL DEVELOPMENT PLANNING Policy
and Administration
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URBAN AND REGIONAL DEVELOPMENT PLANNING Policy
and Administration
DENNIS
A.
RONDINELLI
Cornell University Press
|
ithaca and london
Copyright
©
1970, 1975 by Cornell University
All rights reserved. Except for brief quotations in a review, this
book, or parts thereof, must not be reproduced in any form without permission in writing from the publisher. For information address Cornell University Press, 124 Roberts Place, Ithaca, First published 1975
New York
by Cornell University Press. Kingdom by Cornell University Press
Published in the United 2-4
Brook
Street,
London
International Standard
W1Y
14850.
Ltd.,
1AA.
Book Number 0-8014-0873-3
Library of Congress Catalog Card
Number 74-18539
Printed in the United States of America by
York Composition
Co., Inc.
Contents
Acknowledgments
PART 1.
I.
9
PLANNING THEORY AND PUBLIC POLICY MAKING
The
State of
Urban Policy Planning
The Evolution of Planning Theory:
13
Six Prescriptions in Search
of a Problem
20
Making, and the
2. Planning, Policy
Political Process
The Inadequacy of Current Planning Theory Planning Theory and Urban and Regional Development Policy
45 47 59
PART II. POLICY FORMULATION: THE EVOLUTION OF REGIONAL DEVELOPMENT PROGRAMS 3.
Emergence of a
Policy:
The Area Redevelopment Act
The Forces of Regional Development "What Could Anybody Do for the Poor Devils?"
66 68
Pennsylvania's Fight for Federal Assistance
71
Pressures for Policy Expansion
81
4. Political Strategy
Policy:
and Reformulation of Development
OEO, ARDC, and
EDA
89
Help for Those "Shortchanged Twice in a Single Lifetime" "The Dole Is Dead" The Public Works and Economic Development Act
PART
65
III.
90 94 100
POLICY ADMINISTRATION AND THE ORGANIZATIONAL
STRUCTURE OF URBAN REGIONS 5.
The
Politics of
Economic Development
Pennsylvania
in Northeastern
115
The Changing Economic Environment
116
Limitations of "Going
117
It
Alone"
6
Contents up Provincial Antagonisms"
"Stirring
"Efforts 6.
Unknown
119
or Dimly Perceived"
The Organizational
126
Structure of Northeastern
Pennsylvania
130
Pluralism, Decentralized Control, and the Openness of the
Regional Structure
The The
132 134
Structure of Exogenous Influence
Structure of Endogenous Decision
Making
141
Shared Influence in Regional Policy Making Shared Functions in Regional Development
144 145
PART IV. ORGANIZATIONAL INTERACTION AND PUBLIC POLICY MAKING 7.
Organizational Complexity and the Ecology of Policy
Making
149
The Distribution of Decision-making Activities Group Interaction and Multinucleated Policy Making Interdependence and Policy-making Structure
The 8.
Characteristics of Public
The Dynamics
of Policy
Goods and
Making
Interaction Processes in Public Policy
The Constraints 9.
V.
186 Making
188 203
of Uncertainty
The Indeterminate Nature
PART
Services
151
159 174 180
of Public Policy
Making
212
PLANNING AND COMPLEX DECISION MAKING
10. Politics, Policy Analysis,
of
and Development: The Future
Planning, Policy Analysis, and the
Change
Summary and Conclusions Index
237
Urban and Regional Planning Management
of
Urban 240 264
267
Tables
and Charts
Tables 1.
Distribution of outlays
by federal departments and
agencies to counties of northeastern Pennsylvania 2.
Industrial location quotients in counties of northeastern
156
Pennsylvania 3.
139
Net income flows
in counties of northeastern
Pennsylvania
1
76
Charts 1.
Policy-making structure and process variables
2.
Variables influencing participation in and control over policy
3.
making
189
Processes of policy-making interaction related to central control, compliance,
4.
152
and intervention
Policy-making and planning characteristics
252
262
A cknowledgments
In preparing this book intellectual
ment
of
I
incurred a
number
of debts, both
and material. Arch T. Dotson, chairman of the Depart-
Government
at Cornell University,
encouragement. Professor Dotson,
who
was a prime source of
has a unique understanding
of and substantial experience in public administration, prodded
my
between planning theory and the
interest in the relationship
complexities of administrative decision making.
He
provided in-
valuable recommendations for editorial improvements in succeeding revisions of the manuscript. I sors
would
also like to
thank Profes-
John W. Reps and Seymour Smidt of Cornell for
evaluations of early drafts of the work.
was developed while
I
Some
critical
of the case material
served on the Cornell-Penn State Regional
Organization Study, which provided partial financial support. association with Barclay G. Jones, a task force leader ect
was an important source of
intellectual stimulation.
My
on the projNearly
fifty
people in the Economic Development Administration in Washington and in various public and private organizations in northeastern
Pennsylvania were interviewed to provide information for the case studies.
Donald D. Moyer, former executive
director of the
Eco-
nomic Development Council of Northeastern Pennsylvania, and his predecessor,
Raymond R. Carmon, were
Sections of Chapters in journals.
The author
the following:
especially helpful.
and 10 have appeared as
articles
1,
3, 9,
is
grateful for permission to reprint
from
"Adjunctive Planning and Urban Development
10
Acknowledgments
Urban Affairs Quarterly, 1 (September 1971), 13-39; "Urban Planning as Policy Analysis: Management of Urban Change," Journal of the American Institute of Planners, 39 (January 1973), 13-22; and "Politics of Law Making and Imple-
Policy,"
mentation:
The Case
of Regional
Development Policy," Journal
of Urban Law, 50 (February 1973), 403-447.
Dennis A. Rondinelli Nashville, Tennessee
:
PARTI
PLANNING THEORY AND PUBLIC POLICY MAKING
Faced with a problem in evaluation that exceeds his capacities, a would-be rational decision-maker can go in either of two ways He can, like Major, the horse in Orwell's Animal Farm, resolve to work harder. Or he can try to develop strategies that adapt to his difficulties and make the most of his capacities by respecting limits on rationality. In its conventional endorsement of clarification of values when they will nevertheless remain obscure, of systematic canvassing of alternative means when alternatives are countless, and of extensive tracking of consequences when consequences go on forever, conventional decision theory displays the mentality of Orwell's horse.
—Charles Comment,"
E.
Lindblom, "Some Limitations on Rationality:
in C. J. Friedrich, ed., Rational Decision.
A
—
CHAPTER
1
The State of Urban Policy Planning
Urban and federal, state,
regional development
and
local
became a major concern of
governments in the 1960's. That concern
was shared by private enterprise as well
by diverse
as
social, civic,
and political institutions. Urban planning policy dealt with a broad range of problems, from the physical renewal of small neighbor-
hoods in nearly forgotten ghettos to creation of a national philosophy
on the
distribution
development. Policy makers at
urban growth
of
and economic
were called upon to cope
all levels
—
with the adverse effects of urbanization gestion,
physical
human
resources
deterioration,
—and
poverty, violence, con-
displacement of economic and
with the alteration in the competitive
advantages of spatial locations caused by rapid technological change. Recent experiments in urban and regional development
were part of a larger to
effort,
—through
spanning three-quarters of a century,
comprehensive planning
control
redevelopment of American of individual programs
is
cities.
—
the growth
Although the success or
and
failure
a matter of continuing debate, the validity
of the planning theories, principles, and assumptions underlying
most federal urban and regional development seriously questioned
policies has
been
and widely repudiated by a sizable element and by its critics in other disciplines
of the planning profession
public administrators, economists, political scentists
become
—who
have
increasingly involved in the process of planning for urban
and regional development.
Planning Theory and Public Policy Making
14
The decade
of the
New
Frontier-Great Society generated more
policies designed to ameliorate
any since the
New
urban and regional problems than
Deal. Policy proposals produced a variety of
Area Redevelopment Act of 1961, the 1962 Federal Highway Act, the Manpower Development and
legislation including the
Training Act of 1964, the Economic Opportunity Act of 1964, the Public
Works and Economic Development Act
of 1965, the
Appalachian Regional Development Act of 1965, and the Model Cities
Program of the Housing and Urban Development Act of
1966. Millions of dollars in federal planning grants were spent to
implement a multibillion-dollar
ment programs.
New
set of
organizations
urban and regional develop-
were created
the
at
city,
county, multicounty, state, multistate, and federal levels. Emphasis at the
national level on urban and regional development con-
tributed to reevaluation
and
structural alteration of the federal
system of intergovernmental relations. 1960's and early 1970's
—
Legislation
of
the
late
the Intergovernmental Cooperation
Act
Act of 1969, and the 1972 State and Local Fiscal Assistance Act of reflected a strugof 1968, the National Environmental Policy
—
gle to readjust both the structural relationships
of interaction
among
federal, state,
as to redefine the relationships
between public and private sectors
in the solution of social problems.
federalism," strained severely istering
Society
and the processes
and local governments, as well
The New Deal concept
by pragmatic
difficulties in
admin-
multipurpose policies, was displaced during the Great
by emergent
in turn yielded,
visions of "creative federalism." This concept
under pressures to establish environmental pro-
tection policies, general revenue-sharing programs, trol of
of "dual
urban and regional development
and
activities, to
local con-
experiments
with "cooperative federalism."
Federal legislation prescribed planning as the means of coordinating
redevelopment
activities
decision makers with the
mechanism
comprehensive and objective
would enable them
and providing
to define
state
to formulate
policies.
and
local
and implement
Comprehensive planning
development problems, identify goals
Urban Policy Planning
and
objectives, delineate alternative courses of action,
and
the costs
15
and analyze
benefits of alternatives. After determining the con-
sequences of alternative courses of action, optimal strategies would
be chosen and combined into a comprehensive plan for regional long-range
development.
remove development
Planning would
making from the vagaries and partisanship of politics, thereby reducing uncertainty, inefficiency, and waste in program implementation. And, perhaps most important, planning would decision
provide strong direction and control over the administration of federal assistance, guiding local programs toward attainment of
goals established
From
by Congress and the executive branch.
a traumatic decade emerged a painful lesson: the most
widely accepted principles and assumptions of American planning theory proved inadequate to meet the complexities of implementing urban and regional development policy. Despite government
expenditure of millions of dollars in the twentieth century to pro-
duce a myriad of master plans for urban development, few in the
cities
United States have been developed or substantially re-
developed in accordance with a comprehensive plan. Large-scale policies designed to ameliorate
problems have been verse. 1
major urban
criticized as
social
and economic
being either ineffective or per-
Attempts to require comprehensive planning in federal
housing,
transportation,
poverty,
and
regional
community
economic development,
development
programs
have
anti-
not
succeeded. Traditional planning theory, calling for comprehensive, long-
range master plans, seriously misperceived the nature of social,
economic,
and
political
through which urban and making normally occur. More than
processes
regional development policy
a decade of experience indicates that the ideal process of planning Robert A. Levine, Public Planning: Failure and Redirection (New York: Edward C. Banfield, The Unheavenly City (Boston: Little Brown, 1970), and Daniel P. Moynihan, Maximum Feasible Misunderstanding (New York: Free Press, 1969), provide some of the more 1.
Basic Books, 1973),
vocal criticisms of urban policy.
Planning Theory and Public Policy Making
16
envisioned in
the
rarely practiced.
New
Frontier-Great Society legislation was
Urban and
regional development policies
emerged
through incremental, disjointed, uncertain political processes. Conflict,
compromise, and
coalition building,
marked
political
maneuvering
the evolution of a succession of federal programs through
fragmented and multinucleated decision-making structures. The planning agencies created to implement the policies were inter-
governmental hybrids controlled
—financed predominantly by
by federal and
state planners, advised
sentatives
from
state
by boards of
and
own
directors
by
local
composed
and
of repre-
local governments, civic groups, interest
groups, labor, and business. its
federal funds,
state guidelines, staffed
"Where
it
was
and judged by
tried,
claims," argues one planning theorist, "comprehensive
planning turned out to be a colossal failure." 2
on designing new solving complex problems drew heavily from public
Urban planners and approaches to
policy makers intent
administration theory in prescribing ideal organizational structures
and planning
tools.
But planners were misled consistently by the
inability of administrative science to recognize the basic political
processes through which planning policy evolves.
management techniques
of quantitative
analysis, operations research,
model
The
scientific
building, systems
and planning-programming-budget-
ing systems wrapped planners in the mantle of rational authoritativeness.
Scientific
management
principles
prescribed
rational
comprehensiveness in plan formulation, hierarchical integration of organzations engaged in policy making and implementation, and objective, technical, nonpolitical criteria for determining optimal
solutions in the public interest. Regulatory control
was seen
major technique for implementing urban and regional
as the
policies,
supplemented by subsidies and incentives to make the regulations
Where hierarchical integration could not be imposed, management science prescribed centralized coordination either
tolerable.
at
the federal or the 2.
local
—
level
—
of organizations influencing
John Friedmann, "The Future of Comprehensive Planning:
tique," Public Administration Review, 31
(May /June
A
1971), 315-326.
Cri-
17
Urban Policy Planning development decisions. Yet
management techniques were heuristic and often amorphous condi-
scientific
inadequate to cope with the
and implementation: they gave planners
tions of policy formulation little
real leverage to solve policy conflicts.
principles of public administration theory
of vertical structure, in which policy
pyramid,
hierarchical
responsibilities,
mand,
subordinate
and
is
organizational
were based on concepts
made
at the top of
organizations
and implementation
control, regulation,
Urban and
is
The
a
delegated
are
monitored through com-
incentive.
regional development planners found that rational
principles did not
work
in a pluralistic political environment.
Prob-
lems were multiple and conflicting, goals of regional decision-
making organizations amorphous and vague, action uncertain
and
and
costs
risky,
alternative courses of
benefits
value-laden and
Urban and regional development decisions are made by numerous public and private organizations with
unquantifiable. actually differing
not conflicting goals
if
—which
—
only consent to be co-
ordinated, despite legislative and executive mandates,
perceive
it
to
be in their own
interests.
These organizations attempt
to create a sphere of influence to protect their
against
the
guidance
when they
domains of power
and control of comprehensive planning
agencies or regional government units. integration, central coordination,
Mechanisms
for hierarchical
and regulatory control
in
urban
regions remain either lacking or weak.
The very nature
of urban
and regional development
programs evolving from the
New
policies
and
Frontier-Great Society decade
eluded solution by management science prescriptions. Traditional principles of planning did not achieve the goals of federal
and regional development
policies;
urban programs that seemingly en-
couraged innovation and redirection actually only produced variations
on
traditional
themes.
The
effort
was made to improve
planning simply by doing more of the same. "The failure of centralized planning has led to decentralized planning with central
review,"
argues
one former deputy director of the Office of
Economic Opportunity, "thus preserving
the worst of both sys-
Planning Theory and Public Policy Making
18
,,;
Former Secretary
terns.
Robert
Wood
claims that
Urban Development "successful community programs contraof Housing and
programs
dict every tenet of traditional administration"; federal
"are non-national
(i.e.,
they cannot be applied uniformly across
must
the country, in Seattle as in Atlanta); nonpublic (they
in-
volve private as well as public organizations); and nonagency
(HUD
cannot help build a neighborhood center without a clear
concept of the health or poverty program to be housed there). Collaboration
is
collaboration
in
the essence of
guarantees
modern
administration; slippage
bureaucratic
failures
and
public
indignation." 4
The
collaborative arrangements necessary for successful plan-
ning and program implementation require political interaction in policy formulation and execution.
Yet administrative theory based
on management science does not consider
When
recognized at
all,
political interaction.
politics is defined as part of the
"problem"
that comprehensive planning
must overcome. The administrative
theories underlying nearly
major urban and regional programs
are derived
on
from intraorganizational management superior-subordinate relationships.
vertical,
fails to
all
principles,
based
Planning theory
provide either a conceptual framework or a suitable vocab-
ulary for understanding policy
environments. Effective
requires
making
in organizationally
complex
5
planning in organizationally complex environments
new approaches, perspectives, techniques, principles, and new planning administration theories based on a
knowledge, and realistic
understanding of the characteristics of urban and regional
policy making.
The concept
of planning itself
must be
redefined.
Traditional comprehensive approaches relying on centralized co-
ordination and control are inadequate. Planning must focus on the
3.
Levine, p.
9.
Robert C. Wood, "When Government Works," Public Interest, 18 (Winter 1970), 39-51, quote at p. 49. 5. See Harlan Cleveland, The Future Executive: A Guide for Tomorrow's Managers (New York: Harper & Row, 1972). 4.
— Urban Policy Planning
19
process of policy innovation in urban areas, on the mobilization
and tion
utilization of policy-influencing resources,
of political interaction
among
and on the
facilita-
the diverse decision-making
groups that shape the nature and direction of urban change.
Chapters 1 and 2 examine in detail the major assumptions and principles of conventional planning theory and explain their deficiencies. The second part of this study focuses on the recent This book will explore four aspects of the problem.
history of the formulation
First,
and implementation of federal regional
development programs, examining the interaction among decision
makers within interest
federal,
state,
and
local governments
and with
groups and private organizations. Chapters 3 and 4 ex-
amine the evolution of federal development
policy, specifically the
Area Redevelopment Act, the Appalachian Regional Development Act, and the Public Works and Economic Development Act. The case history
—which
an
is
interaction in an organizationally
—attempts
cess of policy formulation
political
complex environment rather than
a prototype of public policy making in
development programs
dynamics of
illustration of the
all
urban and regional
to provide insight into the pro-
and implementation
an important
in
component of postwar federal planning programs. The problems involved in planning for the administration of federal development policies are described
by a case study within the case history
the efforts to apply federal development programs in the urban
region of northeastern Pennsylvania. Third, the the nature of
complex organizational structures
book examines
in
urban regions
and the implications for policy planning and administration. Chapter 5 describes the experiences of planners
and policy makers
in
adapting federal programs to local conditions in northeastern Pennsylvania, and Chapter 6 explores the organizational frame-
work
in
which urban development policy
is
made and
There are obvious disadvantages to the use of histories in arguing for
executed. specific case
changes in broad theoretical orientations
the experience of a single set of efforts in policy
making and
administration in a particular area does not yield empirical evi-
20
Planning Theory and Public Policy Making
dcnce
applicable
whole range of urban and regional
the
to
development programs. Specific patterns of
may be unique
generalization difficult
and
risky.
Yet there are
examining particular case histories detail,
political
interaction
under investigation, making
to the particular case
also advantages to
—they provide a
rich source of
allow comparison with other cases, and yield propositions
and hypotheses that can be Moreover, detailed case tions of the
way
in
tested
histories
by other research methodologies. can provide enlightening
illustra-
which general policy making and implemen-
tation processes operate.
The case
of regional development policy
and describe from a propositions
is
used here to
specific set of circumstances
illustrate
more general
concerning the process of policy formulation and
implementation. Chapters
7, 8,
and 9
offer a series of propositions
concerning the ecological basis of organizational complexity in
urban regions, the dynamics of lation
political interaction in policy
and implementation, and the
characteristics of policy
formu-
making
complex environments. The case material
in organizationally
used to describe and explain the propositions rather than to
is
test
or "prove" them. Finally, the last chapter returns to the
of the nature
policy making.
and It
more
theoretical issues
role of planning in organizationally
complex
argues for a basic reorientation of planning
theory and of the education and training of urban planners as
urban and regional policy
analysts.
The Evolution of Planning Theory: Six in Search of a Problem
The inadequacies intellectual
Prescriptions
of current planning theory have roots in
its
development. Since the turn of the century, planners set of prescriptions for analyzing
and
organizing urban and regional development policy making.
The
have produced a strong
basic principles transcend differences in political philosophy and
ideology
—they
were used as enthusiastically by the Roosevelt,
Kennedy, and Johnson administrations to
justify the
expansion of
Urban Policy Planning
government
federal
activities in
21
urban planning as by the Eisen-
hower and Nixon administrations to constrain and reduce federal Although programs and policies differed in both
responsibilities.
the degree to which the prescriptions were emphasized
and the
objective to be achieved, the conventional assumptions and prin-
imbued most of the urban and regional
planning
of
ciples
development policies that emerged since the early 1900's. The prescriptions attained remarkable acceptance
by planners and ad-
ministrative theorists during that seventy-year period, even
the
when
most heated controversies raged over exactly how they should
be applied.
The
prescriptions include: (1) rational comprehensive-
ness in the analysis of policy alternatives, the formulation of plans,
and the implementation of programs; (2) hierarchical integration of public decision-making organizations and policy-making and planning
activities;
criteria for
(3) use of objective, technical, nonpolitical
determining optimal solutions in the public interest;
(4) regulatory control as the major technique for implementing
and programs; (5) emphasis on the physical structure of urban regions in the formulation of development policies; and policies
(6)
centralized coordination of organizations
and development
decisions where strict hierarchical integration cannot be imposed.
Rational comprehensiveness has been a fundamental doctrine of planning theory throughout
its
history,
adopted by physical
and expanded by management
designers,
reinforced
though
application has been a subject of heated debate.
its
prescription requires that planners define their objectives
and
and decision makers
and values, the problem, the
their consequences, then
scientists,
The
clearly
alternatives
choose the optimal alternatives and
combine them into a comprehensive long-range plan. Daniel Burnham's call for comprehensiveness ("make no little plans") and
his attempts to create a large-scale physical design for
at the
end of the nineteenth century
his cause.
rallied
many
Chicago
civic leaders to
Charles Dyer Norton, Frederic Delano, Charles
McKim,
and Thomas Adams promoted the approach through the Regional Plan Association of
New York in
the early 1900's.
Planning Theory and Public Policy Making
22
The master
plan, however, focused almost exclusively
on phys-
ical aspects of
urban development. As early practitioners defined
a master plan
it
was to be a comprehensive analysis of
streets,
parks, sites for public buildings, open space, zoning districts, public utilities,
and pierhead and bulkhead
lines.
6
physical design was reinforced by those
The emphasis on
who
strong
prepared the 1928
Standard City Planning Enabling Act. Proponents of the Regional Plan for the
New York
siveness in the 1920's
to reduce social, political
issues to largely physical dimensions." 7
and economic
The quest
Metropolitan Area promoted comprehen-
by "a tendency
for rational comprehensiveness
and for the
role of
planning theory in the policy-making process led to prescriptions for
two basic
sets of
problems:
ture be organized for policy is
the role
structure? theorists
How
should governmental struc-
making and implementation? What
and place of the planning agency
The responses were confusing and
in the organizational conflicting.
Planning
evoked a variety of theories pinpointing "the" decision-
making body
to
which the planning agency should be attached.
They prescribed
the reorganization of government to meet pre-
conceived specifications for achieving rational comprehensiveness in planning.
Despite controversy over details of application, however, a strong set of assumptions, values, and guidelines emerged. First,
planners
were convinced that planning could be rational and
objective only
if
freed from the pressure of politics. Intellectually
objective, nonpolitical, a priori, rational
nical or
zational
economic
efficiency) criteria
prescriptions.
Second,
the
integration, central to the precepts of
(usually
became the principle
management
meaning tech-
basis for organi-
of
hierarchical
science,
became
The Master Plan (New York: Russell Sage FounJ. Kent, Jr., The Urban General Plan (San Francisco: Chandler, 1964), p. 18; see also Arthur B. Gallion and Simon Eisner, The Urban Pattern (Princeton: Van Nostrand, 1962), pp. 240-250. 7. Forbes B. Hays, Community Leadership: The Regional Plan Associa* tion of New York (New York: Columbia University Press, 1965), p. 30. 6.
Edward M.
Bassett,
dation, 1938), pp. 62-68; T.
23
Urban Policy Planning the fundamental goal in integration requires
and
government reorganization. Hierarchical
an organizational structure
responsibility for policy
or set of
by major purpose, process,
Each
level
is
and "unity of command"
arose, however, in both planning
who
is
or place and arranged
top, with authority delegated
of control of each level
is
preserved to prevent overlap,
and waste and to promote
duplication,
in a single
supervised by and responsible
The span
to the next higher level. limited,
clientele,
from the
in a hierarchy coordinated to the various levels.
which authority
All administrative units are departmen-
official
talized
officials.
in
making are centralized
efficiency. 8 Bitter debates
and public administration
as to
should be at the "top" of the hierarchy and where the
planning agency should be located.
Planning looked to public administration theory for means to extricate policy
making from
politics.
Woodrow
Wilson's dog-
matic insistence, in a paper published in 1887, "that administration lies
outside the proper sphere of politics," set the tone
and direc-
tion of public administration theory for half a century. istration questions are not political questions,"
"Although
politics sets the tasks for administration,
be suffered to manipulate
its
offices." 9
"Admin-
Wilson contended. it
should not
Administrative theorists
sought to ensure the separation of policy making and politics from
implementation and management, while maintaining administrative responsibility.
Basic approaches included limiting the power of
the bureaucracy, maintaining the rule of law, creating legislative
or executive supremacy, and establishing corporate objectivity. 10
Early planning theory evolved from the civic reform move-
ments of the
late 1800's
and the Progressive Era
the century. Reinforced by the "Double 8.
at the turn of
E" movement (economy
M. Pfiffner and Robert V. Presthus, Public Administration, (New York: Ronald Press, 1967), pp. 177-178. Woodrow Wilson, "The Study of Administration," Political Science
See John
5th ed. 9.
Quarterly, 56 (June 1887), 481-506.
Arch Dotson, "Fundamental Approaches
to Administrative ResponWestern Political Quarterly, 10 (Sept. 1957), 701-727, critically evaluates the prescriptions and their impact on public administration. 10.
sibility,"
Planning Theory and Public Policy Making
24
and
in
efficiency)
public
administration,
planning theory was
dominated by Jeffersonian values and Madisonian
principles, lead-
ing to an almost paranoid distrust of politics and of government
Major theories of municipal administration were influenced by James Bryce's wholesale indictment of city government as one of the conspicuous failures of the United States. Reform was centered on how to get politics out of government. The success of itself.
the muckrakers in finding political corruption, examples of inefficiency, patronage,
and party machine influence
in local govern-
ment led them to demand widespread reform and reorganization. Planning and municipal administration theories were both antipolitical and antiurban. The Progressive reformers despised large cities and were hostile to immigrant groups who gathered there "creating" slums, blight, decay, and health hazards. The very processes of urbanization and their effects on the growth and change of the
city
were repugnant to the reformers;
ners to the reform movement.
The
immigrant groups and the powerful
thus, the
and "Garden City" plan-
attraction of "City Beautiful" designers
close relationship political
between
machines increased
The reformers sought
the reformers' distrust of urban politics.
to
reduce the influence of political parties on local government and to control the development of city growth in "orderly" tional" dimensions. City governments
and "ra-
under Progressive leadership
created large numbers of boards, agencies, and commissions "inde-
pendent of
political control" to provide public
health, welfare,
and educational
services.
works, construction,
11
The reformers aimed to separate planning from the structure of 12 The Regional Plan Association of New York, local government. 11.
See Wallace
S.
Sayre and Nelson
W.
Polsby, "American Political
Science and the Study for Urbanization," in P. Hauser and L. Schnore, eds.,
The Study of Urbanization (New York: Wiley, 1965), pp. 155-156; Blake McKelvey, The Urbanization of America, 1860-1915 (New Brunswick, N.J.:
Rutgers University Press, 1963), chs. 6-8; and Richard Hofstadter,
The Age of Reform (New York: Vintage, 1955). 12.
See John L. Hancock, "Planners in the Changing American City,
— 25
Urban Policy Planning for instance,
which campaigned for the creation of municipal
planning bodies, received
its
support from the Russell Sage Foun-
dation, wealthy businessmen, social reformers, "City Beautiful" architects,
for local
led
them
and "good government"
—
government
The
leaders.
reformers' disdain
especially the legislature
to prescribe that the planning function
hands of "an 'independent' or
'non-political'
and the mayor be placed in the
commission of
citi-
zens not responsible to the political executive," relying "on a regional
'elite'
composed
of top-drawer
community
would be activated through personal contacts." 13 mission not controlled by local government
figures,
who
A planning com-
officials,
yet within the
municipal organizational structure, became the universally accepted prescription for formulating
and coordinating urban development
policy in the planning theory of the 1920's.
In spite of their contempt for the
men
serving
bodies, however, early planning theorists for the sake of pragmatism.
The
on
made one compromise
legislature
was by law the organ
— —on which compre-
responsible for ratification of the regulatory devices division control, official maps, housing codes
hensive
planning
city legislative
depended for implementation.
zoning, sub-
Thus Alfred
Bettman, in the 1920's, called for "liaison, friendly diplomatic relations,
to
between the planning body and these other departments,"
ensure
coordination
among
administrative,
legislative,
and
executive branches. Strict organizational separation of planning
from other government agencies, however, could not be compromised. Bettman argued that planning was distinct from either legislation or administration functions this division, in fact,
and that those who denied
repudiated planning. 14
1900-1940," Journal of the American Institute of Planners (hereafter re(Sept. 1967), 290-303, for a review of the early planning literature.
ferred to as JAIP), 33
Hays, p. 17. Alfred Bettman, "The Relationship of the Functions and Powers of the City Planning Commission to the Legislative, Executive and Adminis13.
14.
trative
Departments of the City Government," Planning Problems of Town,
— 26
Planning Theory and Public Policy Making
By
the late 1930's these applications of the prescriptions for
urban development planning were increasingly
chantment appeared in
the
early
1940's.
Disen-
criticized.
by public
Attacks
administration theorists on the scope of master planning during this period,
which traditional planners refer to as "twenty years
confusion,"
of
economic, and
charged that a plan should encompass fiscal as well as
lineate alternative actions
social,
physical factors and should de-
and regulatory controls for improving
the whole urban environment. In brief, to overcome planning's limited success in influencing urban development policy, the plan
had
to
be more comprehensive. Robert Walker, a
who reviewed
political scientist
planning administration in a number of
argued that "the scope of
city
planning
is
cities,
properly as broad as the
scope of city government." 15
The overbearing concern
of planning with comprehensiveness
was strongly reinforced by the theory of management
science.
Walker's thesis reflected the trends emerging from the work of Frederick Taylor, modified by public administration theorists Gulick, Urwick, Dimock, Gaus, and others tives
ing
were the
efficient
prescriptions
implementation of
—whose major
policies.
The
line divid-
urban planning from those of
for
management became extremely
fine.
objec-
scientific
Administrative theorists had
taken an interest in national planning and were attempting to explicate the role of planning in public administration.
concluded,
in
fact,
that
"public
Walker's thesis echoed Dimock's
scope must be broad itself."
—almost
administration
call for
as
is
Dimock
planning."
comprehensiveness: "Its
broad as
all
of government
16
City and Region, Papers and Discussions by the Twentieth National Conference on City Planning (Philadelphia: William Fell, 1928), pp. 142-159.
Robert A. Walker, The Planning Function in Urban Government, Chicago Press, 1950), pp. 110-111. 16. Marshall E. Dimock, "The Meaning and Scope of Public Administration," in John M. Gaus, Leonard E. White, and Marshall E. Dimock, The Frontier of Public Administration (Chicago: Russell and Russell, 15.
2nd
ed. (Chicago: University of
1936), pp. 1-12, quote at
p. 12.
27
Urban Policy Planning
The "City Beautiful"
goals of civic design planners gave
to the "City Efficient" objectives of planning administrators.
way The
principles of planning closely reflected the fundamental belief of
management
science that "efficiency
value scale of administration."
17
is
axiom number one
in the
and economy could
Efficiency
be promoted only through rational analysis. Only comprehensive analysis could that "efficiency
community
all
official
be is
rational.
The
logical conclusion, therefore,
was
measurable only in terms of the attainment of
which the administrator
ideals
and moral nature
18 to consider."
At
is
obligated by his
the national level, the
responsibilities of planning included explication of the objectives
administration,
of
identification
and
of problems,
analysis
comprehensive design of long-range programs.
and
19
Widespread controversy arose from the publication of Robert Walker's thesis in 1942 accepting the basic assumptions and values of nonpolitical involvement, centralized coordination,
and long-
range comprehensiveness, but attacking the normative prescription that planning not be
controlled
by administrative
officials.
He
questioned the basic arguments for maintenance of independent
planning commissions:
and "above
politics"
and
that that
planning boards were
"objective"
board members possessed a special
competence for long-range comprehensive planning. Reviewing the effectiveness of planning in thirty-seven
cities,
Walker con-
cluded that planning board members were no more competent than city
of
councilmen. Their attitudes toward the administrative branch local
government obstructed the flow of advice from the
planning commission's professional
staff to
"Rather than seeking close and harmonious
the chief executive.
ties
with the executive
and the council," Walker argued, "planners have created a maxi17. Luther Gulick, "Science, Values and Public Administration," in Luther Gulick and L. Urwick, eds., Papers on the Science of Administration (New York: Institute of Public Administration, 1937), p. 192. 18. Emmette S. Redford, Ideal and Practice in Public Administration (Birmingham: University of Alabama Press, 1957), p. 18. 19. See John D. Millett, The Process and Organization of Government Planning (New York: Columbia University Press, 1947), pp. 32-57.
28
Planning theory and Public Policy Making
mum
of resistance to recognition of the planning function itself."
Walker saw a
planning viewed as a function of
clear solution:
government should be part of the executive function planning agency should be attached to the
staff
itself,
and a
of a city's elected
chief executive. 20
Attempts to
institutionalize planning at the federal level during
the 1930's and 1940's brought a theorists
into
number
of public administration
planning organizations. They had
national
little
sympathy with the basic assumptions of design-oriented planners, however, or with their prescriptions that planning be separated
from administration. Experiments
in large-scale regional planning
such as the Tennessee Valley Authority, merged the concepts of planning and implementation and eschewed the need for a single long-range master plan. 21
The report of the Management in 1937
President's
Committee on Administrative
called for the placement of "planning
man-
agement" under the auspices of the executive branch. The committee's chairman, Charles E.
Merriam, became a strong advocate
of increasing the president's control over
implementation
activities in the federal
promoting administrative a
member
responsibility.
all
policy-making and
government as a means of Merriam's experience as
of the National Resources Planning
Board led him
to
conclude that an executive-controlled agency should coordinate the plans and programs of federal departments, formulating 22 into long-range master plans for public policy making.
drew analogous arguments and
them
Walker
similar conclusions about the place
of planning in local governmental structure. In effect, his prescription
was a means
of imposing hierarchical integration
tralized executive control 20.
Walker, pp. 166-167.
21.
David
Lilienthal,
and cen-
on policy formation and implementation.
TVA:
Democracy on
the
March (Chicago: Quad-
rangle Books, 1966, originally published in 1944).
Merriam, "The National Resources Planning Board: Chapter in American Planning Experiences," American Political Science Review, 38 (Dec. 1944), 1075-1088. 22. See Charles E.
A
29
Urban Policy Planning
The theory
of executive
supremacy through hierarchical
Hayek and
gration evoked vigorous opposition. Friedrich
inte-
other
economists argued that central planning violated the basic principles of public control
law."
The essence
"government
over administration through the "rule of
is
nounced beforehand," so that certainty
how
Hayek maintained, is that bound by rules fixed and anpeople could foresee with some
of a free society,
in all its actions
public authority
solve problems, impose controls,
would be used. But
in order to
and implement plans the planners
and administrators had to discriminate among the merits and needs of different groups: "[Planning] cannot
tie itself
down
in
advance to general and formal rules which prevent arbitrariness."
By
destroying the rule of law,
integrated planning
government
"Agreement
would
responsible that planning
Hayek
protested, hierarchically
also destroy the public's ability to hold
for is
and
formation
policy
execution:
necessary, together with the inability
of democratic assemblies to produce a plan, will evoke stronger
and stronger demands that government or some should be given powers to act on their belief is
of democratic procedure." 23
problem of
The
responsibility.
becoming more and more widespread
to get done, the responsible authorities fetters
own
single individual
that,
if
things are
must be freed from the
Hayek
raised the classical
political philosophy: If planners are the guardians of
They had
the public interest, quis custodient ipsos custodes?
to
be
constrained by an impartial, fixed, objectively enforced rule of law.
Some opponents
believed that comprehensive policy planning
could be performed responsibly only by a legislature, for there that the less authoritative parties enter for definition
philosopher
and
was
programs of the
and authorization. Legislatures,
Herman Finer argued, Hayek maintained.
the judiciary as
less definite
it
political
create the "rule of law," not If
planning
is
centered there,
the rule of law could not be violated by the master plan, for 23. Friedrich Hayek, The Road to Serfdom Chicago Press, 1944), pp. 67, 72-73.
(Chicago:
it
University of
30
Planning Theory and Public Policy Making
would be an
rule. Arbitrariness
and
it
would be a product of majority
would be checked by the power of the executive
"Hayek's assumption
judiciary.
The plan would not be
part of the law.
integral
created and imposed arbitrarily;
is
that political
power
is
neither
limited in scope, restricted in authority, responsible in operation
nor cooperative and decentralized in execution," Finer retorted. "This assumption
is
stupid." 24
Postwar Planning Theory
Planning theory entered yet another stage of conflict in the
Rexford G. Tugwell, viewing the debate over pre-
early 1950's.
scriptions for legislative
on both
their houses.
to create a
and executive supremacy, wished a plague
The New Deal
braintruster,
commissioned
development board for Puerto Rico, reverted to many
of the ideas of his friend Alfred Bettman. Tugwell, however, took
the civic reformer's principle of separation into an even doctrinaire attempt to eliminate politics that
planning's
ultimate mission
interest" in policy
planning
staff
had
making through
was
from planning.
He
represent the
to
the master plan.
To do
more
argued "public so, the
to be completely separated from control by
the legislature, which
was composed of
politicians using criteria
of selfish interests to decide short-range, trivial details of policy,
and from the influence of the elected
chief executive,
who was
constrained by obligations to political parties and checked by the
power of the
legislators.
the claims of
Hayek and
In a proposal that
came
the fears of critics
close to fulfilling
who found normative
prescriptions of planning theory intellectually arrogant, Tugwell insisted:
"That the future be visualized in
possibilities,
and that
between rational
legislative decision
alternatives;
vancy for another
shall
24.
Herman
Finer,
1945), pp. 67, 213.
its
alternative
be confined to decision
and that the trading of one
no longer be
must somehow be forced
all
possible.
The
irrele-
public interest
into the forefront of decision rather than
The Road
to Reaction (Chicago:
Quadrangle Books,
31
Urban Policy Planning "3
The independent
1 buried under private and local claims."
ning
commission,
freed
of
politics,
plan-
would force the "public
interest" into the forefront of decision.
Tugwell went further. The whole system of American govern-
ment would have to undergo radical reorganization. The checks and balances of American politics and governmental interaction were obstacles
to the rational, long-range,
comprehensive planning
of policy in the public interest. "For the future the
American
system will have to be reorganized by uniting the executive and legislative
as the British did
Tugwell proposed.
when
system was reformed,"
their
that be too radical for immediate imple-
If
mentation, at least "there will have to be added an integrative, a binding,
which
is
a coordinative branch to furnish the organismic unity lacking." 26
now
The independent planning commission
would become the "fourth" branch of government. TugwelTs report came mission's rational
study,
which
five years after the First
in
comprehensiveness,
mended a thorough
the
name
and
of
Hoover Com-
executive
central
supremacy,
coordination
recom-
reorganization of the executive branch of the
federal government.
"The numerous agencies of
the executive
branch must be grouped into departments as nearly as possible by
major purposes ment," urged
in order to give a coherent mission to
this
widely acclaimed report.
"By
each depart-
placing related
functions cheek-by-jowl the overlaps can be eliminated, and, of
even greater importance, coordinated policies can be developed." 27
Along
similar lines, Charles Eliot, former
chairman of the National
Resources Planning Board, in 1950 proposed the creation of a national
development
office
that
would formulate a national
comprehensive plan for economic and physical development, 25. Rexford G. Tugwell, The Place of Planning Puerto Rico Planning Board, 1954), p. 40.
in
assist
Society (San Juan:
26. Ibid., p. 55.
The Commission on Organization of the Executive Branch of the Government, General Management of the Executive Branch, A Report to Congress (Washington, D.C.: Government Printing Office, 1949), p. 34. 27.
Planning Theory and Public Policy Making
32
congressional committees in drafting national development legislation,
and
assist
and correlate
and programming It
activities.
regional, state
and
local planning
28
became fashionable by the
late 1950's
and early 1960's
to
point out the severe limitations of the master plan approach to
making urban and regional development
policy.
Comprehensive
planning was attacked by public administrators and planners themselves for not giving sufficient help in formulating and im-
plementing political decisions. Planners were urged to adopt new
and more sophisticated urban policy making
analytical
decisions in the public interest.
of
scientific
techniques for dealing with
development
in order to influence private 29
Planning turned to
new forms
management: game theory, quantitative modeling,
welfare economics, operations research, statistical decision theory,
and general systems
analysis.
But the master plan mentality
mained: the new techniques of analysis departed not the values,
assumptions,
and prescriptions of
at all
earlier
re-
from
planning
theory.
While much of the
classical
management
science approach to
public administration was dismissed as naive in the early 1950's, the basic assumptions concerning the role of planning remained largely
unquestioned.
Simon, Smithburg, and Thompson,
had taken administrative theory beyond the a "neoclassical" phase,
still
traditional
bounds
who into
defined planning's role in conventional
terms. 30 Planning theorists Davidoff
and Reiner, attempting
to
reformulate planning principles without the traditional master plan, in effect simply reinforced existing assumptions tions.
The planning
efficiency
and prescrip-
process, they argued, primarily concerned with
and rational
action, sought the achievement of preferred,
28. Charles W. Eliot, "Next Steps in National Planning," JAIP, 16 (Winter 1950), 6-10. 29. Constance Perin, "The Noiseless Secession from the Comprehensive Plan," JAIP, 33 (Sept. 1967), 336-346. 30. Herbert
Administration
Simon, Donald Smithburg, and Victor Thompson, Public (New York: Knopf, 1950), pp. 423-424.
Urban Policy Planning
33
ordered ends, the exercise of deliberate choice, orientation to the future, action carried
on within an ends-means chain, and com-
prehensiveness. 31
In response to suggestions that planning should focus on less
comprehensive, shorter range, problem-oriented components of
urban development came the reply that a more comprehensive,
more
Some
detailed,
more
centrally coordinated process
was necessary. 32
planners called for the creation of an "urban guidance
system" to coordinate development by drawing upon a regional master plan supplemented by clearly identified urban goals, detailed policy alternatives, strong regulatory controls,
urban devel-
opment codes, and integrated public works programs. 33 The "guidance system" would provide rational standards for making public and private development decisions and for coordinating regional
development
with the standards control, official
policies.
Others expressed dissatisfaction
approach embodied in zoning, subdivision
map, building codes, and other police powers as
not rational and comprehensive enough. Physical development
planning had to assure the most equitable allocation of benefits
and
costs so that "the timing of construction is optimal to the
intended goal." 34
The focus on in the late
physical development and regulatory control set
1920's and in Depression Era social legislation was
continued in programs enacted during the next three decades. The national urban redevelopment policies were aimed at the physical
symptoms of urban
distress
rather than
at
underlying socio-
31. Paul Davidoff and Thomas Reiner, "A Choice Theory of Planning," JA1P, 28 (May 1962), 103-115. 32. Martin Meyerson, "Building a Middle-Range Bridge for Comprehensive Planning," JAIP, 22 (Spring 1956), 58-64. 33. F. Stuart Chapin, Jr. "Existing Techniques for Shaping Urban Growth," U.S. Housing and Home Finance Agency, Urban Expansion Problems and Needs (Washington, D.C.: Government Printing Office, 1963), pp. 108-130. 34. Melvin M. Webber, "The Role of Intelligence Systems in UrbanSystems Planning," JAIP, 31 (Nov. 1965), 291.
—
Planning Theory and Public Policy Making
34
economic problems
produced physical deterioration. The
that
National Housing Act of 1934 created the Federal Housing Administration to provide mortgage loans enterprise
to
and subsidies
increase housing production.
to private
The urban renewal
programs of the 1950's centered on physical reconstruction and design. Regulatory control
was
to be the
means of implementing
urban renewal planning policies and programs. Eminent domain
was used extensively to condemn buildings and acquire
land,
which was then repackaged and sold
at subsidized prices to private
The 1954 amendments
to urban renewal legislation
developers.
required adoption and enforcement of housing and building codes as the primary in
means of conserving and maintaining urban areas
danger of deterioration and decay. Theorists continued to debate traditional approaches to the
organization of urban and regional policy planning at the local level.
35
The metropolitan government movement rooted
in
the
Progressive Era of the early 1900's gained revitalized support
among
public administrators, political scientists, and planners in
the early 1960's.
The new reformers bemoaned
the fact that local
governments were fragmented, that decision making was decentralized,
and that resources were controlled by numerous public
and private organizations within metropolitan
regions.
Those con-
cerned with rational comprehensive planning charged that the structure of local cient.
government was wasteful, chaotic, and
Rational policies
for
ineffi-
urban development could not be
John M. Gaus, "Education for Regional Planning," JAIP, 17 (Winter Nash and James F. Shurtleff, "Planning as a Staff Function in Urban Management," JAIP, 20 (Sept. 1954), 136-147; J. T. Howard, "In Defense of Planning Commissions," JAIP, 17 (Spring 1951), 89-94; H. T. Pomeroy, "The Planning Process and Public Participation," in G. Breese and D. Whitman, eds., An Approach to Urban Planning (Prince35.
1951), 3-12; Peter
ton: Princeton University Press, 1953), pp. 3-37; D.
the Eventual Abolition
W.
Craig,
of Planning Boards," Planning 1963
"A
Plea for
(Chicago:
American Society of Planning Officials, 1963), pp. 69-81; Peter Nash and Dennis Durden, "A Task Force Approach to Replace the Planning Board," JAIP, 30 (Feb. 1964), 10-22.
Urban Policy Planning planned comprehensively into
until
metropolitan governments.
35
were reorganized
municipalities
planning theory
Conjunctively,
promoted the creation of region-wide agencies with the power to make master plans for the coordinated development of entire metropolitan areas. The prescription of metropolitan government gave the master plan new potential: some planners suggested that
comprehensive plans become regional constitutions. 36 Metropolitan government was but an extension of the basic prescriptions planners
century.
When
had been promoting
political realities
seemed
since the turn of the
to obstruct the aesthetic
redesign plans of the "City Beautiful" movement, the solution was to get planning out of politics. tralized
decision
economic scription
making
When
the complexity of decen-
inhibited imposition of technical
rationality of the "City Efficient"
was
complexity integration
to get politics out of government.
of
and
movement, the pre-
By
the 1950's the
government organization obstructed hierarchical
and centralized coordination for comprehensive plan-
The panacea was to get governments out of government. The techniques to which planning theory turned in the 1960's were deeply rooted in the management science values of efficiency ning.
and economy. "Rationality" efficiency." Operations
in fact
was defined as "economic
research and systems analysis called for
achieving Gulick's "axiom
number one" by
replacing the master
plan with the quantitative model. Nonrational, extrarational, and unquantifiable
lumped
considerations
were ignored, assumed away, or
into a "ceteris paribus" category
"The stranglehold of economics on the result of the Utilitarian foundations of
their contention that people
planner has written. "Those rules are not the
36. Charles
and quickly dismissed. rational
modern economics, with
do (or tend to)
who
act rationally,"
play in a different
concern of the economists." 37
M. Haar, "The Master
Law and Contemporary
model was the
Plan:
one
game by other
When
translated
An Impermanent
Constitu-
Problems, 20 (Summer 1955), 357-419. 37. John W. Dyckman, "Planning and Decision Theory," JA IP, 27 (Nov. 1961), 335-343, quote at p. 336.
tion,"
36
Planning Theory and Public Policy Making
into
planning
became
theory
the
economic
efficiency
ideal
ultimately
the prescription for "optimal planning" of public policy. 38
Optimal planning required reconnaissance of the entire economic structure, estimation of future expansion,
and creation of long-
range production targets. The result was centralized comparison
and choice of public investments, leading to development of a comprehensive econometric model. The "new science of manage-
ment" would view the system as a whole. 39 Operations research and systems analysis prescribe a conceptual framework for policy evaluation that reduces to an orderly, iterative process, in Herbert
new
Simon's words, to "intelligence, design and choice." These
words and more sophisticated techniques held the same values
and objectives of planners and management
scientists of the 1930's.
Indeed, Simon himself noted that "except in matters of degree (e.g.,
the operations researchers tend to use rather high-powered
mathematics)
is
it
any philosophy
Simon admitted
not clear that operations research embodies
different
from that of
scientific
management."
Babbage and Frederick Taylor
that "Charles
will
have to be made, retroactively, charter members of the operations research societies." 40
But planners took the techniques beyond the bounds
that even
operations researchers would go in the quest for rational com-
They expected systems (PPBS) would
prehensiveness.
that planning-programming-bud-
geting
interrelate
decisions objectives,
mine
and coordinate
local
with metropolitan development policies and national
would
priorities
identify "national goals" with precision, deter-
among them, and
support comprehensive planning.
41
relate
The
38. See Jan Tinbergen, Central Planning
Press, 1964), especially chs. 39. See C.
1
and
W. Churchman, R. L. (New York: The
to budgets that
history of
PPBS was
(New Haven: Yale
tied
University
4.
to Operations Research
40. Herbert A. Simon,
them
New
Ackoff, and E. L. Arnoff, Introduction
Wiley, 1957), pp. 20 Science of
ff.
Management Decision (New
York: Harper & Row, 1960), p. 14. 41. Charles M. Haar, "Budgeting for Metropolitan Development: A Step toward Creative Federalism," JAIP, 34 (March 1968), quote at p. 102; and
37
Urban Policy Planning closely to separation of policy
making from
political influence;
experiments in the Department of Defense were designed explicitly
on policy administrators. These techniques, adopted eagerly by urban planners, were based on to force hierarchical integration
traditional assumptions
—
central coordination, hierarchical control,
and objective analysis through mathematically determined costbenefit ratios
As
would ensure policy planning
in the public interest.
the master plan approach had defined rationality in technical
terms concerned almost exclusively with physical structure, eco-
nomic
efficiency
economic
criteria
structure.
were
concerned
Webber noted
almost
wholly
with
that "neither traditional city
plans nor underlying studies have successfully depicted the city as
a social process operating in space." 42 Thus, inevitably, demands
were made once more to expand the scope of comprehensiveness. Planners were urged to become sensitized to social issues, to plan for the provision of social services,
and
to develop
an advocacy
approach to promote the redistribution of material wealth by fostering "participatory democracy." 43 Theorists called for
com-
prehensive community welfare programs and central coordination of social welfare organizations throughout a metropolitan area. 44
Many that
of the programs for urban and regional social planning
emerged from the
strongly
New
Frontier-Great Society decade again
reinforced traditional prescriptions.
The
dedication to
M. Robinson, "Beyond the Middle-Range Planning Bridge," JAIP, (Nov. 1965), 305-310; David A. Page, "The Federal Planning-Programming-Budgeting System," JAIP, 33 (July 1967), 256-259. 42. Melvin M. Webber, "The Urban Place and the Nonplace Urban Realm," in M. Webber et ah, Exploration into Urban Structure (Philadelsee Ira
31
phia: University of Pennsylvania Press, 1967), p. 79-153, quote at p. 89.
"Advocacy and Pluralism in Planning," JAIP, 31 1965), 331-337; Lisa R. Peattie, "Reflections on Advocacy Plan-
43. See Paul Davidoff,
(Nov.
(March 1968), 80-87; Michael P. Brooks and Michael R. Stegman, "Urban Social Policy, Race, and the Education of Planners," JAIP, 34 (Sept. 1965); and Marshall Kaplan, "Advocacy and the Urban Poor," JAIP, 35 (March 1969), 96-104. ning," JAIP, 34
44.
Harvey
S.
Perloff,
(Nov. 1965), 297-303.
"New
Directions in Social Planning," JA IP, 31
Planning Theory and Public Policy Making
38
comprehensive planning was reaffirmed in the Urban Mass Transit
Act of 1964. Congress declared
no federal
that
financial assistance
would be provided unless the aid was sought for a program meeting criteria established by the secretary of housing and urban
development "for a unified or
officially
coordinated urban trans-
portation system as a part of the comprehensively planned devel-
opment
of the urban area." 45 Central coordination
and control
were primary goals of organizations designed to implement the
Economic Opportunity Act, Public Works and Economic Development Act, and the Model Cities Program. The locus of visible control was shifted from federal agencies and local governmental units to public, nonprofit corporations which, as "umbrella" organizations,
were to coordinate physical planning and economic
re-
development programs within metropolitan regions. But attempts to decentralize social planning activities generated strong pressures
by
large-city
mayors
executive control.
programs back under central
to bring the
The
Economic Opportunity (OEO)'s
Office of
elaborate "checkpoint procedure" required public executives in local
and
state agencies to
Action Program
(EDD)
(CAP)
organizations,
area- wide
approve program plans. Community
Economic Development
agencies,
and Model
were to act as
Cities agencies
The concept
coordinating centers.
District
of rational
com-
prehensiveness strongly emerged from the administrative proce-
dures translating enabling legislation into program implementation regulations. Antipoverty funding could not proceed without
prehensive local plans from District organizations
Commerce (OEDPs)
to
CAP
Economic Development
were instructed by the U.S. Department of
submit Overall Economic Development Programs
as a prerequisite to federal aid.
underlying the production of of
agencies.
program
com-
OEDPs
The planning process
would include
"identification
objectives, analysis of existing conditions, formulation
of alternative strategies or courses of action, evaluation of the
consequences 45.
of
alternatives,
selection
Urban Mass Transportation Act of
302, Section 4(a).
of
the
1964, Public
most desirable
Law
88-365, 78
Stat.
39
Urban Policy Planning
and the
courses
carrying
out
of
the
strategies
and
actions
selected." 46
Model
Cities
legislation,
combining physical,
on concentrated
hailed
target areas of
central coordination in
economic planning
an innovative means of
as
and economic development programs
social,
urban regions, not only prescribed
program implementation, but defined socio-
in traditional physical terms.
"The Congress,"
declared the Demonstration Cities and Metropolitan Development
Act of 1966,
"finds that
it
is
essential that
our
state
and
local
governments prepare, keep current and carry out comprehensive plans and programs for their physical development with a view to
meeting
efficiently all their
economic and
social needs."
"Metro-
politan expediters" could be dispatched by the secretary of hous-
ing and urban development to coordinate federal activities at the local level
and
Model
to assist
Cities agencies
—themselves
de-
signed to reduce political conflict over allocation of federal aid
maintain nonpolitical
to
administration.
Model
objectivity
in
Cities legislation
proceeded to define com-
prehensive planning to encompass nearly scriptions
of
management
science:
"
program planning and
all
of the traditional pre-
'Comprehensive planning'
includes the following, to the extent directly related to area needs
or needs of a unit of general local government: (A) preparation, as a guide for long range development, of general physical plans
with respect to the pattern and intensity of land use and the provision of public facilities, including transportation facilities;
programming of
capital
(B)
improvements based on a determination
of relative urgency; (C) long-range fiscal plans for implementation of such plans
and programs; and (D) proposed regulations
and administrative measures which aid of
all
related
in achieving coordination
plans of the departments or subdivisions of the
governments concerned with intergovernmental coordination of Department of Commerce, Economic Development Administra"Economic Development Districts Concepts, Criteria and Functions" (Washington: EDA, 1966, mimeographed), p. 4. 46. U.S.
tion,
—
40
Planning Theory and Public Policy Making
related planned activities
among
the state
and
local governmental
agencies concerned." 47
By
order
executive
President
Lyndon Johnson
established
selected federal agencies as "convenors" to centralize coordination
of development policies: urban development programs were to be
under the supervision of the secretary of housing and urban development, and rural and regional programs of the secretary of agriculture. 48 In the
Great Society use of mandated central coordination
devices was widespread. Ironically, attempts to coordinate federal policies
and programs for urban and regional development led to
increased organizational fragmentation and complexity.
The De-
partment of Commerce in the mid-1960's was represented on fifteen interagency coordinating
committees concerned with eco-
nomic development. The Department of Housing and Urban Development had mandated interagency agreements and formal coordinating responsibilities with forty-one other federal agencies. It
was a member of thirty-one additional interagency committees,
councils,
and task forces designed to coordinate urban and regional
development programs. 49
Theory supported the emphasis on conventional approaches. Observing the proliferation of federal programs dealing with urban
problems and the increased lobbying
for
political scientist
of
Hayek,
and
political activities of diverse interests
new and expanded urban
assistance
legislation,
Theodore Lowi, returning to the basic arguments
insisted
on the elimination of contending interest groups from urban planning
clientele-oriented administrative agencies
and policy making. Rational planning, he believed, could only effectively in a "Juridical Democracy," in which policy
be done
47. Public
Law
89-754, 80 Stat. 1255, 1261, Sec. 201, 208.
Urban Programs," Executive Order 11297, Federal Register, 31 (Aug. 11, 1966), 10765, and "Coordination of Federal Programs Affecting Agriculture and Rural Area Development," Executive Order 11307, Federal Register, 31 (Sept. 30, 1966), 12917-12918. 48. "Coordination of Federal
49. U.S. Congress, Senate tive
Committee on Government Operations, Crea-
Federalism, Hearings before Subcommittee on Intergovernmental Rela-
tions,
84th Cong. 2d
sess.,
1966,
pt. I,
pp. 138-139 and passim.
41
Urban Policy Planning
and implementation were governed exclusively by objective rules of law. The federal system would be reorganized
formulation
and
local
governments consolidated into unitary metropolitan
structures. If metropolitan
government were seriously
unitary principle, he argued, thereby eliminating
all
tried
on a
autonomy
within the region, government would have authority commensurate
with
its
problems'. 50
Nixon administration
policies
embodied a strong redirection of
urban and regional development programs back to conventional
A
administrative prescriptions.
series of legislative proposals
and
executive orders, variously labeled "Cooperative Federalism," or
"New
Federalism," drew directly on basic management science
1930's as expounded by the first and second Hoover Commissions. The Ash Council, established early in the first Nixon administration to review executive branch structure, saw organizational complexity as an evil to be overcome and eliminated from policy planning and program implementation. principles of the
"The present organizational structure encourages fragmentation when comprehensive responses to social and economic problems are needed," the
Ash Council
around major purpose
is
reported in 1971. "Restructuring
integral to
aging domestic programs."
The
an improved system for man-
president subsequently submitted
to Congress proposals for drastically reorganizing cabinet depart-
ments dealing with domestic programs to ensure executive supremacy in plan implementation, central coordination and control, hierarchical delegation of responsibility, conflict:
"Under the proposals which
the federal government
who
deal with
and elimination of
political
I am submitting, those in common or closely related
problems would work together in the same organizational framework. Each department would be defined in a way that minimizes parochialism and enables the President and the Congress to hold specific officials responsible for the .
.
.
50.
achievement of
specific goals.
Similar functions would be grouped together within each
Theodore
J.
End of Liberalism: Ideology, Policy and (New York; Norton, 1969), quote at p. 267.
Lowi, The
Crisis of Public Authority
new the
42
Planning Theory and Public Policy Making
entity,
making
still
it
easier to delegate authority to lower levels
and further enhancing the accountability of subordinate
officials."
51
Conventional principles were extended, by executive order, to the administration of federal activities at metropolitan and local levels.
The
Office of
1971 required that
Management and Budget
state,
A-95
Circular
of
metropolitan, and regional clearinghouses
be established to coordinate federally assisted projects
locally.
The A-95 agencies would develop organizational and procedural arrangements for coordinating comprehensive and functional planning
to encourage the
activities,
most
effective use of local re-
sources, to eliminate overlap, duplication, local planning activities,
ical
base for the coordination of federal,
ment programs. 52 Executive control and be
strengthened
at
metropolitan
the
and competition
in state
and to provide a consistent geograph-
and
state,
and
local develop-
central coordination level
Variations," a program established to provide
through
power
would
"Planned
to the chief
executive of a major urban area to review and either veto or force
changes in
all
federal
programs with an impact on
his city.
The
Planned Variations program, attempted on an experimental basis in a
dozen
allocation
cities,
invested the
of federal
grant money,
government agencies, but within the
mayor with
power
to influence
not only to his
to all public
city's jurisdiction,
the
own
city
and private organizations
whether or not funds flowed through
local government. 53
These proposals and others such
as
revenue sharing were ad-
vocated as a means of decentralizing power and control, but in 51. U.S.
President's
Office
of
Management and Budget, Papers Relating to the Program (Washington: Government Printing
Reorganization
Office, 1972), pp. 3-22, 46, 48.
Management and Budget, Circular No. A-95, "EvaluaReview and Coordination of Federal and Federally Assisted Programs
52. U.S. Office of
tion
and Projects," Revised, Feb. 9, 1971. 53. See William Lilly, III, Timothy B. Clark, and John K. Iglehart, "New Federalism Report: Tests of Revenue Sharing Approach Identify Problems in Transferring Power to Cities," National Journal, 5 (March 3, 1973), 291-311.
were used
reality they
Urban Policy Planning
43
to reduce federal expenditures for
urban
and regional development and tive
to impose conventional administra-
on planning and program implementation.
prescriptions
A
former assistant director of the Office of Economic Opportunity argued that revenue sharing could be interpreted, "not as a way of letting states
and
choose broad policy objectives, but of
localities
executing more effectively policies
still
determined nationally." 54
Federal administration of revenue sharing emphasized heavily the
enforcement of regulatory control and continuous auditing of the shared funds at the local
level.
"We're going to spend a
lot of
time
getting a full accounting of the kinds of decisions that states,
and
counties,
cities
make
—how
they spend the money," pro-
claimed a presidential assistant following passage of the State and
Local Fiscal Assistance Act of 1972. "We're going to ferret out the violations." 55
With strong centralized control and comprehensive
coordination, programs for urban and regional development would
be cut in
size,
consolidated, and reorganized to
fit
the hierarchical,
management science. At the federal level most of the programs would be "folded in" to a new department of community development that would "provide a vertical
organizational concepts of
central point in the Federal system for formulating policy, advis-
on community development, transportation and housing problems and needs, assigning accountability for Federal ing the President
performance, and reducing jurisdictional disputes and the need for interagency coordination." 56
Thus ing a
the major thrust of postwar planning theory, while adopt-
new
rhetoric, fundamentally
expounded conventional prin-
ciples of administration established in the late
1920's and early
1930's. Techniques of operations research, econometric modeling,
systems
analysis,
and planning-programming-budgeting systems
54. Levine, p. vii.
55.
Quoted
in
nal, 5 (Feb. 17,
56. U.S.
Juergen Haber, "Revenue Sharing Report," National Jour1973), 234.
Office
of
Management and Budget, Papers Relating
President's Departmental Reorganization Program, p. 52,
to
the
44
Planning Theory and Public Policy Making
offer
new approaches
New
Frontier, Great Society,
and
to
1970's drastically
problem solving and policy making. The
The
new means
limitations that
New
Federalism of the 1960's
changed the formal patterns and structures
of intergovernmental relations.
created
and
Yet many of the programs simply
of applying traditional planning principles.
made
the old prescriptions inadequate for
planning urban policy apply as well to their
new
variations.
CHAPTER 2
Planning, Policy Making, and the Political Process
The irony
of planning theory
engendered, for
is
the intellectual conflict
has never described accurately
it
regional development policy
is
made. Nor do
its
it
has
how urban and
prescriptions
form
a framework for analyzing and implementing urban policy proposals.
Traditional planning literature failed to
politics is inherent in policy
making. Past prescriptions assume,
naively and inaccurately, that policy deliberative,
making
form of problem
objective
recognize that
is
an
intellectual,
Conventional
solving.
approaches to urban and regional development planning failed to perceive policy making as a dynamic political process; they ignore, simplify,
or assume away
much
of the complexity inherent in
political interaction.
In
complex
organizationally
environments
through sociopolitical processes, intergroup adjustment. pluralistic
As a
and "is
process of political interaction, policy making
distinctly different
'problem,' "
argues
is
transcends strictly intel-
solving, is
more complex than
from individual decision making. Policy
Banfield,
solution." 1 Policy can 1.
conflict. It
and deliberative problem
an outcome which no one has planned as a
Edward C.
p. 326.
evolves
and mutual
and decentralized, inherently a generator as well as a
product of interorganizational lectual
policy
conflict,
"it
is
'solution' to a
a resultant rather than a
be neither rationally planned nor centrally
Banfield, Political Influence
(New York: Free
Press, 1961),
46
Planning Theory and Public Policy Making
controlled. Politics admits
many
criteria of rationality;
it
is,
as
Lasswell notes, a process by which the irrational bases of society are brought out into the open. Policy
and eventuates
The
making "begins
in conflict
in solution, but the emotionally satisfactory one." 2
basic relationships of interaction are horizontal rather than
vertical.
Truman
that government, the structure through
states
which public policy evolves, "represents a protean complex of
and direction
crisscrossing relationships that change in strength
with alterations in the power and standing of interests, organized
and unorganized." 3 Policy
is
formulated through a process of social "weighting"
and group decisions are
after individual
made.
fully or partially
Other participants are drawn into the process in response to those decisions,
creating conflicts the resolution of which determines
the policy outcome. Only after groups are fully or partially
com-
mitted to seek particular goals or allocations of public resources
does the policy-making process begin. Lindblom explains: "At that time,
whom
the conflicting values of individuals and groups, each of
have been concerned with a limited
brought to bear upon
set
of values, are
policy formulation. Policies are set as a
resultant of such conflict.
.
.
.
The outcome
from what any one advocate of the
probably different
is
final solution
intended and
probably different from what any one advocate could comfortably
defend by reference to his aggregation
2.
is
own
limited values.
a political process,
not
Harold D. Lasswell, Psychopathology and
an
The weighing
intellectual
Politics
or
one." 4
(New York:
Vi-
king, 1960), p. 184. 3.
David B. Truman, The Governmental Process (New York: Knopf,
1959), p. 508. See also Amitai Etzioni, The Active Society (New York: Free Press, 1968), who argues that policy making is a form of social decision in which whole sets of group decisions are considered and conflicts resolved through macrosocial processes. 4.
Charles E. Lindblom, "The Handling of Policy
Norms
in Analysis,"
Allocation of Economic Resources (Stanford: Stanford University Press, 1959), pp. 160-179, quote at p. 174. in
M. Abramovitz
et ah,
47
Planning and the Political Process
Through
interaction
political
individuals
and groups are
and adjustment, the decisions of compromised,
ratified,
altered,
or
rejected.
The
orderly, step-by-step systems analysis
demanded by com-
prehensive planners cannot cope with the dynamics of the policy-
making process. "Not only do these
intellectual steps fail to ex-
haust the factors -which determine decision, but they falsify even
what takes place on a
strictly intellectual level,"
Bauer, Pool, and
Dexter conclude from their intensive review of American business policy making. Decision
making
a stream of social processes."
"is
a social process imbedded in
5
The Inadequacy of Current Planning Theory Although
theorists
have questioned the usefulness of current
planning prescriptions, the fundamental sources of these deficiencies
have yet to be explicated. 6
Conventional theory assumes the existence of "objective rationality," a
standard to be discovered and injected into the decision-
making process.
Both master planning
and systems analysis
techniques have defined rationality as technical-economic efficiency.
But
as
goal
is
Redford notes, "the greatest deficiency of the not that efficiency
is
efficiency
nonmeasurable, but that the goal
itself
5. Raymond R. Bauer, Ithiel de Sola Pool, and Lewis A. Dexter, American Business and Public Policy (New York: Atherton Press, 1963), p. 479. 6. This is not to say that the discrepancy between planning theory and
the realities of policy
making has gone completely unnoticed. John Seeley
recognized the "disorder" of policy making,
"What
is
Planning?
A
Defini-
and Strategy," JAIP, 28 (May 1962), 91-97; Paul Davidoff acknowledged the pluralism of policy making, if he did not explicate its characteristics, "Advocacy and Pluralism in Planning," JAIP, 31 (Nov. 1965), 331-337; Richard Bolan summarized the attacks on comprehensive planning from other professions, "Emerging Views of Planning," JA IP, 33 (July 1967), 233-245; and John Friedmann examined the weaknesses of traditional approaches in planning for underdeveloped countries, "A Con-
tion
ceptual Model for the Analysis of Planning Behavior," Administrative Science Quarterly, 21 (Sept. 1967), 225-251. But planning theory has failed to develop these observations and reorient traditional prescriptions to them.
48 is
Planning Theory and Public Policy Making
Many
inadequate." 7
are
drawn
values, criteria, objectives,
add new dimensions that may political,
and assumptions
inevitably into the policy-making process, to which they
and
with efficiency.
conflict
social "reason" are often different
Legal,
from economic
rationality. 8 Indeed, the only real test of rationality is that the
means used by
policy makers to pursue their objectives have a high
probability of payoff.
Even
determine
this criterion is difficult to
objectively: groups involved in policy formation
may
not clearly
perceive or explicitly define their goals. In other cases, the means-
ends chain
is
not a chain at
Means become
than terminal. determines
all.
how
Goals
may be
ends.
The
instrumental rather
availability of
goals are established. Values
become
intertwined with both ends and means. Since almost as possible combinations of values, ends,
means
inextricably
many
and means are introduced
into the policy-making process as there are participants, the con-
cept of rationality
is
highly subjective. 9
Nor does current theory deal explicitly with what Simon and March call "cognitive limits on rationality." Decision makers are unable to take into account many and complex sets of values, costs, tives.
10
and consequences or
to search widely for policy alterna-
Planning theory has not explained
how
its
prescription for
comprehensiveness and optimal choice can be accomplished in the face of limitations
on
rational analysis identified
by Lindblom, 11
7. Emmette S. Redford, Ideal and Practice in Public Administration (Birmingham: University of Alabama Press, 1957), p. 15. 8. See Paul Diesing, Reason in Society: Five Types of Decisions and Their Social Conditions (Urbana: University of Illinois Press, 1962), and
"Noneconomic Decision-Making," Ethics, 66 (Oct. 1955), 18-35. 9. George Caspar Homans, Social Behavior (New York: Harcourt, Brace and World, 1961), p. 80. 10. James G. March and Herbert A. Simon, Organizations (New York: Wiley, 1958), ch.
6.
David Braybrooke and Charles E. Lindblom, A Strategy of Decision: Policy Evaluation as a Social Process (New York: Free Press, 1963), chs. 5 and 6, and Charles E. Lindblom, "The Science of Muddling Through," 11.
Public Administration Review, 19 (Spring 1959), 79-88.
49
Planning and the Political Process
the costliness of analysis, the inability to construct highly rational
or inclusive solutions, the high degree of interdependence between facts
and values, the openness of the systems to be analyzed, and
the diversity of forms in which problems arise. These limitations
make
the goal of optimality practically meaningless. Indeed, the
concepts
of
subjective.
12
comprehensiveness and optimality themselves
Like
optimality
rationality,
is
mind
in the
are
of the
beholder. Traditional planning and administrative theories appear to ad-
vocate comprehensiveness for
money,
power,
social,
its
own
sake.
The
cost in
and other resources needed to pursue
rational comprehensiveness
is
vast.
"And
so far as the pursuit
of rationality entails study, forethought and calculation,"
"the pursuit of rationality
notes,
costs are
is
itself irrational
may
Even when planners do attempt
comprehensive planning, they inject their
rational
Homans
unless their
reckoned in the balance. The costs of rationality
rationality irrational." 13
make
man-
own
values,
perceptions of goals, and preconceived interpretations of
criteria,
data and information into the process. Ultimately they call rational comprehensiveness
is
their
own
much
of what
intuition
and
judgment based on uncertain and incomplete knowledge and information. "But planners' intuitions can be and, indeed, often are challenged successfully
by groups with an
effective veto over
the pertinent decisions," argues planning theorist
"These groups intuitions
will insist, quite possibly
have as much,
if
John Friedmann.
with reason, that their
own
not greater, validity than those of
professional planners." 14 12. March and Simon argue (p. 209): "Since there is no reason to suppose that any technique of decision-making whether centralized or decen-
—
—
will bring the organization into the
neighborhood of a genuine optimum, the search for decision mechanisms cannot take criteria of optimization too seriously, but must seek 'workable' techniques of satisficing." tralized
13.
Homans,
A
p. 82.
John Friedmann, "The Future of Comprehensive Urban Planning: Critique," Public Administration Review, 31 (May/ June 1971), 315-326,
14.
quote at
p. 318.
—
50
Planning Theory and Public Policy Making
commitment
Their
to
orderliness,
efficiency,
and
rational
comprehensiveness inhibits planning theorists from recognizing incremental sociopolitical techniques of policy analysis and implementation. Instead, they have turned to techniques that reinforce traditional assumptions
and prescriptions, especially
research, systems analysis,
in operations
program budgeting, and PPBS. These
techniques have some value for
programmed problem
solving, for
they are important analytical tools for dealing with problems susceptible to statistical measurement.
But planning cannot simply
transfer these techniques to the heuristic, amorphous, incalculable social processes
through which policy evolves. Planning theory
often attributes Simon's stages of problem solving (intelligence, design,
and choice)
to policy
making and
treats policy formula-
tion as a traditional managerial problem. In so doing, inappropriate tools have
been extended to areas for which they were never
in-
tended. Systems analysts and economists themselves have realized the severe limitations of applying systems analysis to sociopolitical
policy making.
Charles Schultze, a pioneer in systematic analysis of public expenditure policies, has documented the need to reconcile analytical
theory to
political
reality.
He
suggests
that
systematic
analysis dealing with urban development concentrate less
on de-
more on developing workable measures for Hitch and others have warned against viewing
signing ideal plans and
implementation. 15
systems analysis as a panacea for the political complexity inherent in
policy
evaluation
and execution. 16 Other economists have
explicated the fundamental differences between political and eco15. Charles L. Schultze, The Politics and Economics of Public Spending (Washington: Brookings Institution, 1968), p. 119. 16. See Charles Hitch, "Operations Research and National Planning A Dissent," Operations Research, 5 (Oct. 1957), 718-722; Roland McKean and Melvin Anshen, "Problems, Limitations and Risks," in David Novick, ed., Program Budgeting (Washington: Government Printing OflQce, 1964) 218-236; Albert O. Hirschman and Charles E. Lindblom, "Economic Development, Research and Development, Policy Making: Some Converging Views," Behavioral Science, 7 (April 1962), 211-222.
Planning and the Political Process
nomic
rationality.
"In politics one
the substantive costs writes Schlesinger.
and
"One
is
tools
require exact
concerned with more than
is
benefits in a specific decision area,"
engaged
and actions over a whole range of tative
51
in mobilizing support
ill-defined issues."
by words
While quanti-
measurement of inputs and outputs,
long-range analysis, and the development of hard data, the political process can rarely be quantified, emphasizes short-run results, and
depends on judgment, manipulation, and intuitive response. "Put quite briefly, political decision operates under the
normal con-
power." 17
straint to avoid serious risk of the loss of
Planning theory and the principles of administrative responsibility little
on which
its
organizational prescriptions are based have
effect in restructuring federal
had
policy-making processes or in
comprehensively solving urban problems because they ignore or systematically
discount power
organizationally
and
its
unequal distribution in
18
Planning theory has been
complex environments.
misled by administrative theorists' recurring debates over the ideal
approach
to administrative responsibility. All
the problem of political power:
all
have misperceived
ultimately attempt to eliminate
power, competition, and conflict from bureaucracy. 19 "Executive
branch structure
is
argues. "Inevitably
in fact a it
microcosm of our
forces to be found in a pluralistic society.
symmetrical, illusion."
society,"
reflects the values, conflicts
frictionless
organization
The
structure
Seidman
and competing
ideal of a neatly is
a dangerous
20
Because of
its
overwhelming concern with the structure of policy
James R. Schlesinger, "Systems Analysis and the Political Process," Law and Economics, 11 (Oct. 1968), 281-298. 18. Harold Seidman, Politics, Position and Power: The Dynamics of Federal Organization (New York: Oxford University Press, 1970), p. 13. 19. Arch T. Dotson, "Fundamental Approaches to Administrative Responsibility," Western Political Quarterly, 10 (Sept. 1957), 701-727; Norton Long, "Power and Administration," Public Administration Review, 9 (1949), 257-264; and Michel Crozier, The Bureaucratic Phenomenon (Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1961), ch. 6. 17.
Journal of
20. Seidman, p. 13.
52
Planning Theory and Public Policy Making
making, planning theory has ignored the evolutionary processes
by which urban and regional development decisions emerge. Political
adjustment, manipulation, and control through nonhierarch-
ical interaction
have been overlooked by
centralists
preoccupied
with means of designing and imposing optimal end states. Indeed,
only within the last few years have processes such as bargaining
and negotiation, exchange,
coalition building, intermediation,
compensation been treated as legitimate or
and
effective alternatives to
central control in public administration; they have not yet been
applied in planning theory.
Nor have
analyzed carefully the processes of inter-
theorists
action that distribute decision-making activities and shape organizational arrangements in metropolitan areas.
they
condemn
as "duplication," "waste,"
As a
what
result,
and "fragmentation"
is
often the manifestation of differentiation, division of labor, specialization,
indicted
and ecological as
association. Organizational complexity
is
"chaos." Linkages of interdependence are labeled
"mazes." Patterns of dominance-subdominance and exchange are "crazy quilts." Prescriptions for large-scale consolidation of local
government tions
fail to
recognize the functions that existing organiza-
perform or the processes by which they are performed. The
organizational complexity that of urban development
is
is
an integral and inextricable part
considered irrational,
inefficient,
and
inscrutable.
Development decisions interaction of a large
in
urban regions are made through the
number
of public and private organizations,
each controlling a relatively small proportion of the economic and political resources that influence the
development of the region as
a whole. In the private sector a large number of establishments
and households make investment, consumption, production, employment, expenditure, location, distribution, and other decisions that determine the rate, direction,
and pattern of the
region's
socioeconomic development. These decisions influence the physical pattern of development, the type, volume, and intensity of
and support for the production and
demands
distribution of social
goods
53
Planning and the Political Process
and
sector.
same types of resource
of the are
from the public
services
made by
And
in the public sector
allocation
and
many
utilization decisions
federal agencies, state administrative
and
legislative
organs, city, township, borough, and county governments, inde-
pendent school authorities, semi-independent sewer, water,
and special purpose
district
authorities,
utility,
semi-independent plan-
housing redevelopment, and other types of commissions
ning,
funded by
local, state, federal,
and private sources. The decisions
of the multitude of public agencies are in turn influenced
by the
demands, needs, support, and pressures of social groups, formal
and informal associations of
civic groups, professional
interest groups, political parties,
The
decisions of
on each
actions
actors are influenced
all
and special
and individuals within the region.
by the
other; the external economies
effects of their
and diseconomies
they impose create constraints and opportunities for action.
Re-
sources for making and influencing decisions are unevenly dis-
persed
among communities and
organizations within a region; and
the ability of any single group to use strained
by broad environmental,
forces, technological change,
and
its
social,
limited resources
is
con-
economic, and political
local mores. Decision
a pluralistic policy-making system
is
making
in
characterized by division of
labor and functional and geographical specialization that limit the interests
and decision-making
ability of
any single private or public
organization. Interdependencies are thereby created
and with organizations located outside the urban
An urban region may be
socially
economic, and political differentiation. organization. It has
area.
and economically homogeneous
relative to other regions, but is in reality
ment
among them
It
a complex of social,
lacks area-wide govern-
few formal hierarchical structures to
coordinate decisions and no central control over the resource allocation, utilization,
and
redistribution decisions of the multitude
of public and private organizations. In most cases
informal mechanisms interest
groups
exist,
of
political
integration.
and there are no regional
political constituencies.
it
lacks even the
Few
region- wide
political parties
or
Planning Theory and Public Policy Making
54
Rather, most groups and organizations within the region decisions based
on
policy alternatives
advantages fits
—
to
political
their
—vaguely
itself.
own
interests
and
utilities.
and the decisions of others
make
Each evaluates
in
terms of the
defined social, political, and economic bene-
Geographical subareas are microcosms of sociobut
differentiation,
with
often
identifiable
specialized
ecological functions in the larger regional economy. Political jurisdictions within the region are
fragmented and remain so because
of the nature of the public goods and services they provide.
pattern of structural multinucleation local
The
reinforced by the desire of
is
government to control taxation and expenditure decisions;
the need for a wide variety of local market baskets of public goods
and
services;
and the
which production of
different levels at
The
services reach economies of scale.
autonomy and the attempts
to maintain political
social
desire of local governments
of public
and
private interest groups to maintain a variety of leverage points in
the policy-making process militate against imposition of wide-
spread government consolidation, centralized coordination, and hierarchical integration.
The policy-making process continuous because centralized
it
structure.
environments,
is
incremental, disjointed, and dis-
takes place within a fragmented and de-
Moreover,
decisions
are
in
made by
organizationally individuals
complex
with limited
cognitive capacities, with imperfect information concerning present
circumstances, the intentions of other participants in the policy-
making process, and future to
events. In order for
implement socioeconomic and
effects
on other organizations,
explicit approval of a large
When
it
one organization
political decisions with spillover
must obtain
number
tacit
consensus or
of public and private groups.
the actions of one organization pose threats to the interests
of others, a conflict occurs. Resolution requires interaction through
processes of adjustment, negotiation, and bargaining, compromise,
exchange, or coalition building. Each process of interaction involves both real and opportunity costs to the participants.
The consequences
of the interaction processes are often un-
55
Planning and the Political Process
As
predictable from the outset.
ished
during
re-evaluate
their
interests,
uncertainty
may
groups
process,
the
their
alter
is
increased or dimin-
redefine
their
goals,
bargaining positions, re-
examine their expectations concerning the probabilities of success,
and
shift the allocation of their resources, the intensity
of their demands, and the
commit to
amount
to specific policy alternatives.
obtain mutually
which vary
in composition
Groups also
objectives
beneficial
from small
act in concert
by forming
coalitions,
elites to potentially large-
scale constellations. The composition and shift
and scope
of support they are willing to
life
of the coalitions
with specific policy issues.
The whole process
making takes place within past decisions and policies and
of regional policy
parameters set by accumulations of
the dynamics of current socioeconomic
and technological change
Urban
regions are open systems.
within and outside of the region.
They
are subject to constraints
zations located within
can be neither internal
and influences over which organi-
them have
little
or no control and which
nor rationally planned. Both the
fully anticipated
and external socioeconomic and technological conditions
are continuously changing. Alterations occur in the
amount
of
information available to decision-making organizations within the region; the degree of uncertainty under which the decisions are
being made; the cost conditions and potential gains from pursuing a particular course of action; expectations concerning the probability of social,
economic, and political events; and the perceptions
of the roles which groups and organizations can play in the policymaking process. Traditional management science prescriptions are neither effective nor relevant to policy planning
and program
administration in organizationally complex environments.
Conventional proposals also founder on the naive assumption that the "public interest" is analysis
an
identifiable criterion for policy
and choice, an assumption that claims, with Daland and
Parker, that the planner "his perspective differs
makes a unique contribution because
from others
he has special technical
skills,
in the decision arena in that
he employs a long-range view of
Planning Theory and Public Policy Making
56
development, and he in
entirety." 21
its
public interest
utilizes these
elements to view the community
Planners maintain, with Lippmann, that "the
may be presumed
they saw clearly,
to
be what
thought rationally,
men would
choose
if
acted disinterestedly and
benevolently." 22
Yet by what
come
intellectual
and moral powers do planners over-
the limitations of other policy makers? Cannot others with
different
interests,
values,
also think clearly, rationally,
criteria,
and perspectives
objectives,
and benevolently? Would
all
planners,
given the same policy problem, facts, and access to information,
come
to the
same conclusion?
How
do planners decide what
be the optimal solution for future generations
at the target dates
of ten- or twenty-five-year long-range comprehensive plans? training
will
do planners receive that makes them more
What
sensitive to the
"public interest" than other professionals or politicians in legisla-
and executive positions?
tive
a technical
skill,
If
determining the public interest
what techniques do planners use? Or
is
is
determin-
ing the optimal solution an intuitive, judgmental art? In that case,
do
all
planners possess such intuitive judgment?
What
processes
of recruitment into the profession ensure that planners will possess
such qualifications?
Is there in reality
an objective
criterion, the
"public interest," that can be used as the basis for evaluating
choice in policy making?
"To hold out
the public interest as a criterion
is
to offer
an
imponderable," Herring concluded from his study of policy making in federal agencies. "Representing the public interest
of
individual
judgment.
No
objective
standard
is
is
a matter
possible." 23
Planning theory, based on the assumption that a community, or a 21.
Robert T. Daland and John A. Parker, "Roles of the Planner
in
Urban Development," in F. Stuart Chapin, Jr., and Shirley F. Weiss, eds., Urban Growth Dynamics (New York: Wiley, 1962), pp. 188-225, quote at p. 214.
22. Walter Lippman, Essays in American Library, 1955), p. 42.
the Public Philosophy
23. E. Pendleton Herring, Public Administration
(New York: McGraw-Hill,
1936), pp. 26, 152.
(New York: New
and the Public
Interest
57
Planning and the Political Process region, or a nation has
"an interest"
set of operational goals
—has
—
a compatible and identifiable
led to the conviction that
if
policy
making could only be freed from the influence of politics and "selfish interests" the public interest would triumph. "It is no derogation of democratic preferences," that such an assertion
the behavior of
men
in a
flies
Truman
notes, "to state
in the face of all that
complex
society."
we know
of
24
Finally, prescriptions for rational comprehensiveness are, ipso
cannot define "compre-
facto, nonoperational. Legislative bodies
hensiveness."
Administrative
agencies
cannot
set
up working
standards to achieve synoptic objectives. Executives cannot evaluate programs or policies to determine
if
they are being formu-
and implemented comprehensively. Legitimate interest groups 25 cannot calculate the costs and benefits of comprehensive goals.
lated
It
not surprising that federal urban and regional develop-
is
ment
assistance agencies with enabling legislation requiring
com-
prehensive planning have not been able to implement congressional intent. Indeed, they intent.
Nor have
have not been able to interpret congressional
federal administrators been able to evaluate local
planning efforts or to enforce comprehensive planning require-
—a law and continuing planning process"—
ments. Studies of the Federal- Aid
Highway Act
of 1962
requiring that aided highway projects be the result of a "cooperative,
comprehensive,
that the
indicate
Bureau of Public Roads did not and could not execute
that mandate.
It
viewed the requirements as disruptive to
program and procedures. The bureau lacked the
political
power
its
to
Truman, p. 50. Meyerson and Banfield detail the limitations on the ability of Chicago's City Planning Commission to obtain the information, power, consent, or technical skill to make a comprehensive plan. See Martin Meyerson and Edward Banfield, Politics, Planning and the Public Interest (Glencoe: Free Press, 1955), ch. 10. Alan Altshuler's study of Minneapolis-St. Paul concluded that even if planners in those cities had the capability to make master plans, participants in the policy-making process could not and would not evaluate, legitimize, or implement them (The City Planning Process 24.
25.
[Ithaca: Cornell University Press, 1965], pp. 311
ff.)
Planning Theory and Public Policy Making
58
impose comprehensive planning rules on
and municipal governments
sions
highway commis-
state
in metropolitan areas. 26
The Area Redevelopment Administration's attempts to implement congressional requirements for submission of overall eco-
(OEDPs) by
nomic development plans
condition for financial assistance were no
depressed areas as a
more
successful.
ARA
was able neither
to specify requirements for comprehensiveness
nor to
the
evaluate
OEDPs
submitted.
Most
distressed
area
organizations, therefore, simply filed superficial reports filled with
masses of badly analyzed data to
satisfy
minimum
standards.
ARA
faced the equally unpleasant alternatives of accepting plans they
knew were inadequate qualified
for
constraints
or of declaring certain depressed areas un-
assistance.
prevented
But both administrative and agency from disqualifying
the
because they did not perform a task that define nor evaluate.
ARA itself could neither
"The agency resolved
one observer, "by accepting each
OEDP
political localities
this
dilemma," reports
submitted by communities
as a token of good faith and an indication that the community
desired to plan
The
its
economic future on a sound
older federal programs of urban renewal and
planning have never been able to tional.
basis." 27
The "701" program and
make
community
synoptic analysis opera-
the "Workable
Program" of urban
renewal long ago were recognized as unworkable. 28 Attempts to formulate Model Cities guidelines to allow analysis
and planning by
maximum freedom
localities failed miserably.
for
"They did no
good," one former Model Cities Administration deputy director complained. "Most of the
cities didn't
were willing to play our
silly little
meant 26.
as a challenge, a prod,
See
understand the process but
game
for
was interpreted
money. What was as a regulation, a
Thomas A. Morehouse, "The 1962 Highway Act: (May 1969), 160-168.
A
Study of
Artful Interpretation," JAIP, 35
27. Sar A. Levitan, Federal Aid to Depressed Areas (Baltimore: Johns Hopkins Press, 1964), p. 200. 28. Quoted in Scott Greer, Urban Renewal and American Cities (New York: Bobbs-Merrill, 1965), p. 109.
59
Planning and the Political Process
you can
cage. Regulations
The comprehensive planning Cities administration were
freedom
relate to;
something
is
applications submitted to the
"little
more than laundry
lists
inventories of desirable projects, often put together
consultants."
else."
29
Model
or back
by outside
30
Efforts to institutionalize systems analysis, planning-program-
ming-budgeting, and other forms of synoptic evaluation fared better than attempts at master planning. In istration abolished
PPBS
causes, any of which
"PPB
died because of the
sufficient,"
manner
across-the-board and without
new men
of
1970 the Nixon admin-
in federal agencies.
was
much
little
"PPB
died of multiple
one systems analyst notes.
in
which
it
preparation.
was introduced,
PPB
died because
power were arrogantly insensitive to budgetary tradiloyalties, and personal relationships." 31 Ad-
institutional
tions,
ministrative agencies were unable to categorize their activities into
program frameworks, ities,
measure
attribute costs
spillovers
and
benefits to social activ-
and diseconomies, make
tradeoffs
disparate programs, project future trends, and translate sets into
budget requirements.
"No one knows how
to
among
program
do program
budgeting," Wildavsky concluded, "program budgeting cannot be stated in operational terms. There
words mean
let
is
alone an ability to
no agreement on what the show another person what
should be done." 32
Planning Theory and Urban and Regional Development Policy
The problems
of planning theory are
by the search during the past decade 29.
most vividly demonstrated
for
means
to redevelop de-
Fred Jordan, "Confessions of a Former Grantsman," City (Summer
1971). 30.
Judson L. James, "Federalism and the Model Cities Experiment,"
Publius, 2 (Spring 1972), 69-94, quote at p. 82. 31. Allen Schick, "A Death in the Bureaucracy:
The Demise of Federal PPB," Public Administration Review, 33 (March/ April 1973), 146-156, quote at p. 148. 32. Aaron Wildavsky, "Rescuing Policy Analysis from PPBS," Public Administration Review, 29 (March/ April, 1969), 189-202, quote at p. 193.
60
Planning Theory and Public Policy Making
pressed urban regions. Major
difficulties in establishing
ment planning agencies and delineating have
arisen.
their roles
develop-
and functions
Conventional prescriptions have not provided workeither for solving the substantive problems
able guidelines,
of
regional development or for institutionalizing policy analysis functions.
Proposals to attach the planning
making
decision
in
staff to
government have been of
little
"the center" of
help in pluralistic
systems and in urban regions lacking either area-wide
political
government control or the prospects for achieving failures indicate that current planning doctrine
may be
it.
These
not only
irrelevant, but perverse.
An
alternative to the comprehensive-rational-hierarchical ap-
proach to be
needed
is
made
if
urban and regional development planning
effective in the
United
States.
Development of
is
that
however, depends on the progress of research along
alternative,
three lines. First, better descriptive studies are needed of the
urban and regional development
way
policies are actually formulated
and implemented. Surely planning cannot prescribe improvements in processes
found
and
to
it
cannot describe accurately. Second, means must be
change attitudes and perceptions concerning the nature
characteristics of
dynamic
political interaction in organiza-
complex environments. This requires an understanding of
tionally
urban areas as complex
sociopolitical,
economic, and cultural
the
The multinucleated structure of regional policy making result of the way in which a complex society makes its
social,
economic, and political decisions rather than of pernicious
systems. is
administrative inefficiency, social irrationality, and political disorder.
The
pluralism, decentralization, openness, shared influence,
and disjointed performance of functions
result
from the ways
organizations respond to conditions in their environment.
They
adjust to each other's actions through processes of political interaction.
But these processes that shape the structure of regional made to conform to the traditional pre-
organization cannot be scriptions
of planning administration, which attempt to ignore,
suppress, or centrally control the effects of such interaction.
Planning and the Political Process Ecological and political interaction, in fact,
make
61
the very con-
cept of the urban region as a "structural place" inadequate. Close
examination of the forces that shape the organizational structure of regions confirms Webber's hypothesis that the variables effecting the rate
and direction of development are not
internal
and
realms."
The most important
among
most important
structural, but interactions
among "nonplace urban
factors are process variables: linkages
specialized activities, channels of communication, exchange
and adjustment, and the flows of information, money, goods, people, and other socioeconomic and political resources
among
decision-making organizations. Both planning and public administration theory
must reorient
their
concern from structural re-
organization to the urban region "as
system of dynamic interrelationships
by
as these are modified
a culturally conditioned
among
individuals
and groups
their locational distributions." 33
Former Budget Director Charles Schultze has concisely summarized the problem:
To manage
the
government units
on a
new
—
all
social
programs
efficiently
we must
of which have equal status
—
to
get
many
work together
any one being considered the "boss" of have to develop the managerial techniques of voluntary cooperation and that is much tougher than the other way of having people told what they are to do. The answers to our current organizational dilemma are, therefore, not to be found in the reports of the two Hoover Commissions and the President's Committee on Adminsingle project, without
the other.
istrative
We
—
Management. The Hoover Commission solution of "placing by jowl" so that "overlaps can be eliminated,
related functions cheek
and even of greater importance coordinated policies can be developed" not workable when you must combine major purpose programs such as health, education, manpower training, and housing in alleviating the social and economic ills of a specific metropolitan area, city
is
or neighborhood, 34 33. Melvin M. Webber, "The Urban Place and the Nonplace Urban Realms," in Melvin Webber et al., Explorations into Urban Structure (Philadelphia: University of Pennsylvania Press, 1964), pp. 70-153, quote at p. 93.
34. U.S.
Congress, Senate Committee on Government Operations, The
Planning Theory and Public Policy Making
62 If
attitudes
tions are
and perceptions are
to
be changed,
reliable proposi-
needed about the nature and characteristics of
interaction.
political
These propositions may yield a framework for a
planning strategy. Finally, the function, role,
and
definition of planning in
and regional development must be reassessed.
How
urban
planning can
enter a pluralistic political system to guide and facilitate innovation
and change
in
urban regions must be the key concern of that
reassessment.
Urban Affairs, Hearings, Statement of Charles L. Schultze, Bureau of the Budget, 90th Cong., 1st sess., June 28, 1967, Committee Print, pt. 20, pp. 4261-4262. Federal Role
Director, U.S.
in
PART
II
POLICY FORMULATION:
THE EVOLUTION OF REGIONAL DEVELOPMENT PROGRAMS
Legislative policy-making appears to be the result of a confluence
of factors stemming from an almost endless
number of
tributaries:
national experience, the contributions of social theorists, the clash
of powerful economic interests, the quality of Presidential leadership, other institutional
and personal ambitions and administrative
arrangements in the Executive Branch, the initiative, effort and ambitions of individual legislators and their governmental and staffs, the policy commitments of political and the predominant cultural symbols in the minds both of leaders and followers in Congress. Most of these forces appear to be involved at every stage in the policy-making process, and they act only within the most general limits of popular concern
non-governmental
parties,
about a specific
—Stephen K.
issue.
Bailey, Congress
Makes
a
Law
CHAPTER
3
Emergence of a Policy: The Area Redevelopment Act
am
"If I
that I bill,"
1
want
elected,
and
if
Flood
to pass the Congress,
if
I
can help
John F. Kennedy from a platform
said
of Wilkes-Barre, Pennsylvania,
on a
crisp
Luzerne County Congressman Daniel
The crowd
major
elected, the first
is
J.
it,
will
be the
bill
ARA
in the public square
October day
Flood stood
in 1960.
at his side.
that filled the small patch of green in the center of the
deteriorating coal-mining
town of northeastern Pennsylvania had
heard promises of assistance from presidential candidates before.
The Area Redevelopment Act (ARA) that Flood cosponsored had been bottled up in Congress by political opposition for more than five years. Meanwhile cities like Wilkes-Barre, Scranton, Hazleton, and a dozen mining towns dotting a begrimed landscape
overshadowed by black, smoking culm mountains were slowly
The whole region, seven counties in the corner of the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania between the southern tier of New York and the northwestern quarter of New Jersey, had experienced three decades of depression and poverty. The people of the area had made arduous attempts to adjust to the vagaries of economic dying.
and technological progress long before proposals for federal redevelopment assistance were introduced in Congress in the mid1950's.
Demands
poverty, 1.
and
for help in overcoming wholesale
physical
deterioration
—such
as
unemployment,
Kennedy
Congressional Record, Vol. Ill, Part 15, 89th Cong., 1st 20244.
12, 1965, p.
sess.,
had Aug.
66
Policy Formulation
promised
West
to fulfill in
Virginia,
speech after speech on his travels through
and other Appalachian
Kentucky,
been voiced by public
officials,
northeastern Pennsylvania.
The
states
—had
labor leaders, and businessmen in policies
and programs for regional
development that emerged from Congress in the early 1960's were shaped by the plight of hundreds of such distressed areas scattered throughout the nation.
The Forces
By
of Regional
Development
the early 1800's rapid industrialization in the Northeast
begun to
strain severely the supplies of fuel
—
—
charcoal and
had fire-
wood traditionally used for space heating and manufacturing. As the forests of northeastern Pennsylvania were depleted, a search began for new forms of fuel. Anthracite coal had been used locally in Pennsylvania since the middle of the eighteenth but not for large-scale commercial purposes until the
century, early
1830's because of the high cost of transportation. Local
roads were poor and a network of intercity highways had not yet developed.
A series of technological
combined with the
rising
demand
advances in transportation,
for anthracite, eventually trig-
gered economic growth. Shipping costs were reduced when local
and
state
governments cooperated with private companies
to create
an inland canal system along the northern and central Atlantic coast.
Local canals were then constructed to link up to the larger
interstate system.
With expansion of the
railroads
from 1840 to
1860 anthracite coal became a major source of space heating and industrial
and transport
The export ization.
fuel.
2
of coal brought rapid economic growth and urban-
Between 1890 and 1919 coal production rose from a
more than 50
million to
more than 92
million net tons.
little
The value
2. See the recollections of Terence V. Powderly, The Path I Trod (New York: Columbia University Press, 1940), ch. 1; and George Rogers Taylor, The Transportation Revolution, 1815-1860 (New York: Harper, 1968), especially chs. 2 and 5.
The Area Redevelopment Act
67
600 percent. By 1915 more than 170,000 men were employed in the northeastern Pennsylvania mines. Population in and around the cities of Scranton, Wilkes-Barre, and Hazleton increased by more of production in the anthracite industry increased nearly
than 50 percent every decade between 1830 and 1870, the total in the region tripling in the following half-century
to
more than one
million.
strongly influenced
Composition of
this
from 265,000
new population was
by the demands of the coal industry for relawork under adverse conditions for
tively unskilled labor willing to
long hours and low wages. Thousands of eastern and southeastern
Europeans
—
Slavs, Italians, Russians,
and Poles
shanties
attracted
Immigrants were exploited by the
to northeastern Pennsylvania.
mine owners. The companies provided housing in the
—were little
better than
and shacks, and they monopolized commercial enterprises
towns and
cities of
the region.
Over 50 percent of company
houses were assessed at a value of between $10 and $100 in
1900; a typical one had "no
no paper, no
ceiling,
cellar,
no foundation, no
plastering,
simply the frame with rough hemlock boards
nailed upright and strips fastened over the joints." 3
The environment was up
dirty
and dismal. "Even when they come
to the air of the outside world
vitiated
it
is
a bad air that
by fumes of the burning mines," a
the living conditions of
is theirs,
British author studying
immigrant European miners wrote
at the
turn of the century, "for at Scranton also the coal has been on fire
for ten years,
and the smoke
wastes in volumes, and diffuses
One would
rolls
from the slag-coloured
itself into
the general atmosphere.
think that the wretched frame-dwellings, ruined by
on which they were built, and begrimed with the smoke which factories belched all day, would the subsidence of the ground
disgust humanity." 4 Exploitation of the immigrants led to
some
of
(New York: Macand passim, quote at p. 129. 4. Stephen Graham, With Poor Immigrants to America (New York: Macmillan, 1974), p. 138. 3.
See Peter Roberts, Anthracite Coal Communities
millan, 1904), pp. 12-19,
68
Policy Formulation
the
most militant labor union
strikes
and
companies.
bloody
activity in the country with violent
between
conflicts
miners
and
the
coal
5
Despite the adversities of
life
and and labor
in the coal mines,
the economic growth that anthracite fostered provided employ-
ment and income for thousands of unskilled and uneducated immigrants. They would have found little better opportunity elsewhere, and they had left worse prospects in their native lands.
Many saw
opportunities for advancement in Scranton, Wilkes-
Barre, and the smaller mining towns of northeastern Pennsylvania.
By
the
1920's these
found in
cities of
cities
provided the
comparable
full
range of amenities
size elsewhere in the nation, plus
opportunities for skilled labor and professional practice in services related to mining. their
into
own homes, American
Many
miners soon had saved enough to build
educate their children, and begin to assimilate
society.
"What Could Anybody Do
for the
Poor Devils?"
Economic and technological change could give prosperity but could also take it away. The same forces that led to the development of northeastern Pennsylvania at the turn of the century later brought economic depression. National demand for coal declined sharply by the early 1930's. The increasing use of gas, electricity, and petroleum products for residential and commercial heating deprived the anthracite industry of
its
largest markets.
Average
annual output and value of production dropped nearly 75 percent in the
decade ending in 1935. Mine owners cut back employment
by 35,000
in
the
same
period.
To
a regional economy highly
specialized in the production of coal, these changes brought dis-
placement of a specialized labor force, widespread unemployment in service
industries,
Poverty spread
and decline
among
in total
productive capacity.
those people unable to find jobs in the
5. See S. Perlman and P. Taft, History of Labor in the United 1896-1932 (New York: Macmillan, 1935), especially ch. 4.
States,
— The Area Redevelopment Act area and unable or unwilling to
move
69
elsewhere. Physical structure
slowly deteriorated.
Some
business and civic leaders recognized early in the century
economy dependent on one
that a local
industry was at the
of one-product demand fluctuations. Sporadic
Scranton around 1910 to diversify the
The Chamber
of
Commerce mobilized
city's
efforts
economic
mercy
began
in
structure.
business and civic leaders
throughout the community in the 1920's and 1930's in an attempt to create a
fund to subsidize the location and expansion of manu-
facturing industries in the city, but with
success. Decisions
little
of the mine owners to cut back production had serious economic
The
effects.
jobless
were for the most part unskilled and un-
The demand
educated; their only training was coal mining.
such labor in other regions was low.
Many
of the miners
for
had
invested their meager savings in housing. Moreover, because they
shared ties
common backgrounds and had
and
social
elsewhere.
commitments
By 1940
developed strong family
to the region,
many
refused to
move
average unemployment in northeast Pennsyl-
vania reached 27 percent. One-third of the labor force was un-
employed
in
some urban
centers of the anthracite region.
Facing imminent collapse of the civic
and business leaders
following
money Private
World War
city's
economic base, Scranton
intensified industrial
II.
Community-wide fund
to build shell plants for firms willing to
enterprises
—power
promotion
companies,
move
banks,
drives
efforts
raised
into the area.
even colleges
with large investments in the region or uniquely tied to the local
economy
for their
own
growth, devoted substantial resources to
economic redevelopment. The mobilization program known as the Scranton Plan was used by a plethora of other industrial devel-
opment groups throughout northeastern Pennsylvania. 6 Unemploy6. See I. Wingeard and M. Null, Jr., "Local Action Develops Jobs in Keystone State," Employment Security Review, 20 (Dec. 1953), 6-7, and Federal Reserve Bank of Philadelphia, The Business Review, Dec. 1949, pp. 120-127, and Dec. 1952, pp. 4-11.
70
Policy Formulation
ment continued, however,
200 percent higher than the national average. Physical deterioration and land subsidence became worse. Second- and third-generation immigrants, better educated and less tied to social and family customs, left the area. Between 1940 and 1950 the region lost about 200,000 100
at a rate
to
people.
Local leaders turned for assistance to the federal government
and the major the
political parties,
major candidates in the
hoping for promises of aid from
1952 presidential
election.
One
observer traveling with Adlai Stevenson later recalled the reaction of the candidate as his train stopped at Scranton:
About two hundred people had gathered in the railway yard to hear him make the first of a day-long series of whistle stop speeches, and a sorry crowd they were. Out-of-work coal miners, bleary and unshaven, a few railroad hands, a scattering of tired looking
women
shivering inside their thin coats. Stevenson spoke for about fifteen
minutes, assuring them that they were not forgotten, that elected President he
would do something
he were and other
if
to rescue Scranton
dying towns of Appalachia. Their applause sounded polite but unAs the train pulled out Stevenson turned to a pair of
convinced.
speech writers
who were
assigned to the train for that
week
to outline
he wanted covered in the coming whistle stops of the day seventeen of them if I remember rightly. Then, as we rolled past the smoldering mine dumps at the edge of town he thought back for a moment at the promises he had just made. "My God," he said, "what could anybody do for the poor devils stuck in a graveyard like briefly the points
—
Scranton?" 7
Northeastern Pennsylvanians had a long
government could do
to assist their
list
of things the federal
redevelopment
efforts.
bers of the Northeast Pennsylvania Industrial Development
mission
(NPIDC), formed
in
1950
to
MemCom-
seek federal and state
assistance to attract industry, presented President Eisenhower in
1953 with a detailed report on conditions
in the anthracite region.
7. John Fischer, "The Lazarus Twins in Pennsylvania: How Scranton and Wilkes-Barre Are Rising from the Dead," Harper's Magazine, Nov.
1969, p. 13.
The Area Redevelopment Act
They requested a
71
greater proportion of defense contracts for local
firms,
the location of federal field offices in the region's larger
cities,
appropriations for river valley public works projects, re-
forestation programs, also brought to
and help
many
certain
'in
because of their inability to get such
and
to discuss
glass. its
flooding.
They
later of
were suffering from
local industries
raw and semifinished
firms in the region were forced to cut
steel,
mine
the attention of the White House, and
Congress, the fact that severe shortages
in preventing
materials. Small
back or suspend production
critical materials as
aluminum,
NPIDC
delegation
Eisenhower arranged for the
problems with the Council of Economic Advisers
and the Department of Commerce, but the administration mately refused to provide any
aid.
ulti-
8
Pennsylvania's Fight for Federal Assistance
Subsequent changes in Washington, however, were to offer northeastern Pennsylvania's development leaders federal intervention.
By 1955
at least 19
some hope
for
major and 156 smaller
labor market areas throughout the nation were suffering chronic
and
persistent
economic
unemployment.
activity
and changes
Fundamental in
redistributions
of
the productive capacities of
multistate regions were causing local distress throughout the nation.
Nearly 150,000 jobs were
lost in the
New
England
textile industry
between 1950 and 1959 because of industrial migration. Coalmining towns in Pennsylvania, West Virginia, Indiana, and
plummeted
to their
Illinois
economic nadir. Exhaustion or depletion of
natural resources, changing production and transport technology,
and competition from other areas with industries producing substitute
goods brought economic
region. Local problems rate of
crisis to
the
Upper Great Lakes
were aggravated by the increasing national
unemployment.
Increasing political and economic pressures were brought to 8.
See Northeast Pennsylvania Industrial Development Commission, "ReRecommendations Made to the President by NPIDC," Scranton,
port on
1954, mimeographed, passim.
Policy Formulation
72
bear on Congress and the White House. The Council of Economic Advisers created a task force to study the problem and found
some
basis for federal concern.
more unemployment was not
But Eisenhower and
conservative advisers maintained that local
his
a problem with which the federal government should interfere. In
1955 report the council concluded that "a large part of the
its
adjustment of depressed areas to
new economic
can and should be carried out by the local
The whole problem
conditions both
citizens themselves." 9
of regional depression was condensed by the
council staff to "spot unemployment."
Some congressmen from depressed urban
areas were not satis-
fied with the council's analysis or with the administration's
view
of the role of the federal government. Senator Paul H. Douglas, a
former economics professor, had long been concerned that certain geographical areas lagged behind the
economy
whole in pro-
as a
and income. His campaign for
duction, employment,
re-election in
1954 gave him a personal view of economic depression southern quarter of
Illinois.
10
in the
Douglas concluded that local
re-
sources were insufficient to overcome the comparative economic
disadvantages of depressed areas and that infusion of external capital could assist localities to adjust to changing
economic and
technological conditions, which were, he believed, national trends.
In 1955, as a
member
mittee, he severely criticized report.
Economic Comthe Council of Economic Advisers'
of the Congressional Joint
Together with the Legislative Reference Service, Douglas'
staff hastily
drafted a depressed areas assistance
bill,
senator introduced in the Eighty-fourth Congress. bill
which the
The Douglas
proposed a $100 million revolving fund to aid those urban
industrial areas
three years, 9.
which had average unemployment of 6 percent for
or unemployment of 9 percent over the previous
Economic Report of
the President (Washington:
Government
Print-
ing Office, 1955), p. 57.
The
early history of the depressed areas program is described in by Sar A. Levitan, Federal Aid to Depressed Areas (Baltimore: Johns Hopkins Press, 1964), ch. 1, Levitan, working with the Legislative Reference Service, played an important role in drafting the Douglas bill. 10.
detail
The Area Redevelopment Act eighteen months. loans,
It
and grants
73
called for assistance, vocational retraining,
new
subsidize the location of
to
industry in
depressed areas.
Douglas hastily introduced
this bill
before the adjournment of
Congress to upstage the Council of Economic Advisers and the
Bureau of the Budget, which advocated limited assistance programs. By 1956 the Council of Economic Advisers was forced to admit that "the fate of distressed communities
is
a matter of
11
The administration introduced $50 million (compared to Douglas' revised $390 million) program of loans to new and expanding businesses in depressed areas. The main thrust of the administration measure, however, was aimed at imposing restrictions on the Douglas bill. The administration was adamant in the belief that regional economic depression was mainly the concern of local governments and private business groups and that the federal role should be limited to making loans to private enterprise. national as well as local concern."
its
own
bill calling
for a
"They Were Deadly Enemies of the Thing from the Beginning" Naturally, the Douglas
bill
had more appeal to congressmen
from depressed regions than the administration's stopgap measure. Representative Daniel
many
J.
Flood of Luzerne County had spent
years trying to get federal assistance for his area.
the Senate
Committee on Labor and Public Welfare
1956: "This
is
He
told
in hearings in
the seventh time that I have appeared before a
House Committee, a Senate Committee, a pendent commission, against commissions
executive
on
this
joint committee, inde-
commissions,
and commissions
problem. So far altogether
accomplished practically nothing."
12
we have
Flood saw the opportunity
now to ally himself with other legislators from depressed areas. He became the chief sponsor and floor strategist for the Douglas 11.
Economic Report of
the President (Washington:
Government
Print-
ing Office, 1956), p. 61. 12. U.S. Congress, Senate Committee on Labor and Public Welfare, Area Development, Hearings, 84th Cong., 1st sess., 1956, pt I, p. 681.
74
Policy Formulation
legislation in the
House
of Representatives
and was a major force
behind what was to become known as the "Pennsylvania Lobby."
But area redevelopment faced a number of obstacles In
ington.
addition
to
the
Commerce, strong opposition was expressed by of
Commerce and
(NAM),
the
in
Wash-
and the Department of
president
the U.S.
Chamber
National Association of Manufacturers
both influential and experienced pressure groups. Most
of the organized business lobbies fought against federal redevelop-
ment
They believed
assistance.
that such aid violated traditional
business ideology: individual enterprise, reliance on market operations,
and freedom of
local
government from federal intervention. 13
The major strategy of the proponents of the Douglas-Flood bill was to convince Congress and the administration that widespread "grass roots" support existed for the program. Numerous witnesses representing local government and local chambers of commerce were called before House and Senate committees during 1956. Pennsylvania Governor George M. Leader and Secretary of Commerce William Davlin assured Congress ernments
urgently
needed
federal
that state
and
local gov-
Congressman
help.
Flood
arranged for the Senate Subcommittee on Labor to hold hearings in Wilkes-Barre in February. section
of
local
organizations
Representatives of the United
Garment Workers,
to
He
testify
favor of the
in
Mine Workers,
bill.
International Ladies
AFL-CIO
Textile Workers,
field
then mobilized a cross
Building Trades
Council, and the Pennsylvania Federation of Labor were recruited to record their assent to the legislation. Local mayors, administrative officials,
and
Flood was able
industrial
to get
to testify in favor of the
tion of the U.S.
by Douglas
development groups made statements.
most of the larger chambers of commerce Douglas
bill,
Chamber. 14 Similar
hoping to
field
offset the opposi-
hearings were arranged
in other states with seriously depressed areas.
The
role of pressure groups in influencing area redevelopment legisanalyzed extensively in Roger H. Davidson, "The Depressed Areas Controversy: A Case of American Business Politics," Ph.D. dissertation, 13.
lation
is
Columbia University, 1963. 14. Area Redevelopment, Hearings, 1956,
pt. II, pp.
466
ff.
The Area Redevelopment Act
But the
To
passage.
was not yet large enough
coalition
75
to ensure the bill's
obtain the votes of rural Southern legislators
who
held
committee chairmanships, Douglas agreed to demands by
vital
Senator
William Fulbright of Arkansas that a compromise
J.
provision be added to the
bill
creating a separate revolving fund
for loans to rural areas of equal
Fulbright
also*
magnitude to that of urban areas.
demanded, and
a provision for unlimited
got,
redevelopment assistance.
qualification of rural counties for area
The Douglas
bill
passed the Senate and was sent to the House a
few days before adjournment. Democrats attempted
up
called
for consideration before the
end of the
suspension of the rules required to extricate
it
to get the bill
session, but the
from the House
Rules Committee required a two-thirds vote and the consent of the minority floor leader. Republicans consulted with the
White
House. Meanwhile, Republican Congressmen Ivor Fenton from
Van Zandt from Altoona
Scranton and James
introduced a com-
promise measure in the hope that the administration would allow it
to
be voted upon. Eisenhower
ment
of
Commerce, whose
redevelopment
Flood
bill
administration's
Douglas Congress.
—
House floor not the DouglasFenton-Van Zandt compromise, or the
own
proposal. 15
reintroduced
A
refused to consent to any area
reaching the the
legislation,
negotiations to the Depart-
left
officials
similar
coalition with
legislation
in
the
Eighty-fifth
Senator Frederick Payne, a Maine
Republican, enabled Douglas to guide the measure through committee to the Senate floor. Eventually
and the House. The iterated
his
belief
bill
that
it
passed both the Senate
was vetoed by Eisenhower, who industrial
development
was
a
re-
local
responsibility.
In 1958, however, changing economic and political conditions
placed aid to depressed areas in a veto
became a major
15. Details are
Hill: Studies in
issue in the
new
context.
The Eisenhower
1958 congressional campaign.
provided by John Bibby and Roger Davidson, the Legislative Process
Winston, 1967), ch.
6.
(New York:
On
Capitol
Holt, Rinehart and
76
Policy Formulation
Unemployment was rising to its highest World War II recovery, Democrats from areas
won
heavily
—almost
since
the post-
districts in
depressed
level
four out of five congressional districts
where incumbent Republicans were defeated were areas. 16
Douglas reintroduced
The
Eighty-sixth Congress. clear to both parties,
his
bill
in depressed
for a third time in the
lessons of the 1958
and several depressed area
campaign were were drafted
bills
by both Democrats and Republicans. The administration's tion,
posi-
however, remained unchanged. Republicans from depressed
areas were placed in uncomfortable political situations. Senator
Hugh
Scott,
a Republican from Pennsylvania, broke with the
administration on the issue in 1958 and offered what he hoped
would be a compromise
more important than
bill.
But
political criteria
became
steadily
the economic and philosophical motivations
behind the proposals. Scott's
bill
only caused wider cleavages.
An
observer described the environment in which the fate of the
program was being decided: In this atmosphere, aid to depressed areas became a political football.
The Administration continued
attack the Douglas
bill, and the any other compromise measure. As a result when the Douglas bill came up for a vote before the Senate on March 23, 1959, it only won by a 49-46 majority. Conservative Democrats withdrew their support of the bill, and a
Democrats refused
number of
liberal
Republicans
favor of the Douglas the Scott
bill
bill
came up
approval of their bill,
depressed areas.
own
who
in previous Congresses voted in
supported the Scott compromise. But when it was rejected overwhelmingly Democrats who insisted upon the
for a vote,
(74-20) by a coalition of Republican
to
to accept the Scott bill or
bill,
liberal
Administration stalwarts
and conservatives who opposed
The Administration
bill
who
supported the
all legislation
to aid
could muster only a few
Democratic supporters and was defeated by a 52-43
vote. Since
contained no provisions to help rural depressed areas
it
had
it
little
to offer the Southern Democrats, and, of course, the liberals considered it
completely inadequate. 17 16.
See Levitan, pp. 4-5, 12-13
17. Ibid., p. 14.
The Area Redevelopment Act Northeastern mobilized.
77
Pennsylvania business and political leaders again
When
the
was reintroduced
bill
in the Eighty-sixth
Congress, Pennsylvania's Secretary of Labor and Industry William Batt became a leading lobbyist for
passage. With
its
Solomon
Barkin, a research economist with the Textile Workers Union,
Batt set up the Area
Employment Expansion Committee
From 1956
ordinate supporting pressure groups.
Batt appeared before numerous
to co-
through 1961,
House and Senate committees
to
present detailed analyses of the problems of depressed regions and to urge passage of federal legislation.
He was
joined by Flood,
Fenton, Davlin, Governor David Lawrence, and Senator Scott. Early in 1958 Congressman Flood organized a campaign
chambers of commerce in to sign
his district to urge President
an area redevelopment
among
Eisenhower
bill.
Meanwhile, in Washington the U.S. Chamber of Commerce
and
NAM
were intensifying
They argued before
their opposition.
congressional committees that state credit organizations and local
development groups were making progress in solving local eco-
nomic problems. Federal programs would be "penalizing success" by taxing healthy economic areas into
distressed
areas.
NAM
result in federal "pirating"
in
an
effort to
induce industry
charged that the subsidies would
of industry.
The American Bankers
Association argued that business loan sections of the
bill
would
obstruct the competitive process of business location. 18
Cleavages developed
among
federal administrative agencies over
The Bureau Labor favored
the merits of the area redevelopment proposal.
of
Employment
its
passage,
ARA
Security in the Department of
despite Eisenhower's opposition,
and quietly provided
supporters with information and encouragement.
The De-
partment of Commerce, however, staunchly supported the president's
position.
Commerce
devoted
blocking the progress of the Douglas
substantial bill
resources
in Congress
to
and to
18. See U.S. Congress, Senate Committee on Banking and Currency, Area Redevelopment Act, Hearings, 86th Cong., 1st sess., 1959, pp. 188 ff.
78
Policy Formulation
providing information and support to interest groups appearing before congressional committees in opposition to the program.
Flood
complained of the department's role
later
in the struggle:
make no aspersion upon the Department of Commerce, but I know sir, that if we had an enemy in the last 8 years, it was the Department of Commerce with this bill and if I could relate the "I
behind-the-scenes conversations and meetings in the Halls of the
House and
in the Halls of the
Department year
would be no question about the this
attitude of the
They were deadly enemies
bill.
of
the
after year there
Department of thing
from the
beginning." 19
Opposition forces succeeded in locking up the legislation in the
House Ways and Means Committee session.
Only
after
Democratic
pressure on Speaker
for
most of the congressional
liberals in the
Sam Rayburn
House exerted strong
did he undertake the compli-
cated parliamentary maneuvers required to release the
bill
from
the control of the conservative chairman of the committee. Ray-
burn waited
until late in the session, anticipating that
would veto the
bill if it
Eisenhower
passed, thereby giving the Democrats a
strong issue in the 1960 presidential campaign. 20 the
House
in
May
1960.
The bill passed The area redevelopment program was
vetoed by the president for the second time. "This
The
is
a Point Four Program for
My
People"
administration's opposition to the depressed areas
program
became a national issue in the 1960 presidential campaign. John F. Kennedy, former floor manager of the Douglas bill, used the opposition to regional development assistance as a major point in
West Virginia primary, promising, if elected, to give White House support to the measure. He repeated the promise in a number of states after his nomination. In Scranton in October
his
19. U.S. Congress, House Committee on Banking and Currency, Area Redevelopment Act, Hearings, 87th Cong., 1st sess., 1961, Committee
Print, pp. 98-99.
20. See
Bibby and Davidson,
ch. 6, for details.
The Area Redevelopment Act 1960,
Kennedy outlined a
detailed proposal to aid economically
declining areas such as northeastern Pennsylvania.
He
his
Scranton speech with a promise that "as President
all
agencies of
pressed areas."
79
Government
concluded
I will direct
to give priority to the needs of de-
21
The Eighty-seventh Congress
its
first
order of
business, a revised version of the Douglas-Flood
bill.
Attempts
were made
received,
after the election to
as
expand the scope of the
bill.
Groups in northeastern Pennsylvania submitted reports to the president's
and improving munities.
22
asking for
highway systems
depressed com-
in
his staff conferred with
Kennedy
aides
Department of Commerce on redrafting the
in the
But due
regions,
mine subsidence, eliminating slum areas,
interstate
Douglas and
and technicians legislation.
on depressed
special task force
assistance for preventing
to the confusion of presidential transition
Douglas' desire to submit the
bill
quickly,
little
and
revision took
place: the details were similar to those in proposals introduced in
previous sessions. Nevertheless, with a Democrat in the White
House, proponents were confident of approval.
The Pennsylvania lobby again mobilized of public
the
bill.
and private
officials to
Washington
W.
In addition, William
support, sending dozens to speak in behalf of
Scranton had been elected to
Congress from northeastern Pennsylvania and assigned a seat on the
House Banking and Currency Committee, which had
diction over area redevelopment legislation. Daniel
appeared before Congress, for the
same type of
foreign aid
bills.
this
assistance that Congress
my
bills
district,
while they are starving," Flood pleaded.
have 30,000 people in
my
Flood again
time bringing an emotional appeal
"Overwhelmingly these
by the press and the people of
juris-
district
had provided
in
have been supported
seeing billions go
away
"Do you know,
sir,
surviving
I
on surplus food,
21. Philadelphia Inquirer, Oct. 28, 1960, p. 2.
Report to the Kennedy Task Force on Depressed Areas," prepared by the Greater Hazleton Chamber of Commerce, mimeographed, Dec. 1961. 22. See "Special
80
Policy Formulation
30,000 eating surplus food, so is
why
is
a Point Four program for
I
The
say
I call this
political
on
know whereof
speak and that
1
my people." 23
acceptability
the 1958 congressional lost
I
a Point Four program for America. This
of
area redevelopment shown by
and 1960 presidential campaigns was not
of the Eighty-seventh Congress.
legislators
Thirty-nine
Democratic and four Republican senators joined Douglas in sponsoring the
bill.
Republicans generally, however,
still
hoped
to effect
a more conservative compromise by restricting the proportions of the program. Senator Scott, attempting to introduce a measure on
which moderates could agree, was attacked by Senator Douglas.
Scott's
colleague from
Clark, charged that the compromise it
also
comes too
late."
bill "is
liberal allies of
Pennsylvania,
not only too
Joseph
little,
Douglas accused Scott of being a
but
"split-
down a strong to a number of
the-difference Senator" interested only in watering assistance program. 24
compromises passage.
But Douglas had
in order to
form a
to agree
coalition large
enough
to ensure
In spite of his personal opposition, other proponents
agreed to place the Area Redevelopment Administration under the jurisdiction of the it
Department of Commerce instead of establishing
an independent agency.
as
Many
congressmen insisted that
"antipirating" provisions be included in the
added
bill.
Amendments were
to prohibit the use of loans to assist businesses
moving from
one area to another. After six years of pressuring, campaigning, arbitrating, and
compromising, the Area Redevelopment Act received approval by both houses of Congress in March and was signed into law by the president in
May
1961. Shortly thereafter President Kennedy
appointed Pennsylvania Secretary of Labor and Industry William Batt, Jr., the 23.
first
ARA administrator.
Area Redevelopmcent Act, Hearings, 1961,
p. 100.
24. Congressional Record, Vol. 107, Pt. 3, 87th Cong., 1st sess., 15, 1961, p. 4020.
March
The Area Redevelopment Act
81
Pressures for Policy Expansion
"As much
Area Redevelopment Act was needed,
as the
it
was
said in 1965. "Essentially, the
only the first step," Paul Douglas Area Redevelopment Act was an experimental program to test the feasibility of the economic redevelopment concept and to
develop omies."
25
one of a
new methods for revitalizing local and regional econThe 'Area Redevelopment Act of 1961 was to be but series of responses to the
changing economic and tech-
nological conditions of the 1960's.
The
forces that produced
ARA
generated other ideas, proposals, and programs. seen historically as a catalyst.
Once
enacted,
it
was
to
it
be
became a means
rather than an end, instrumental rather than terminal. Events
quickly displaced istrative
ARA, both as substantive policy and adminNew policies were needed to satisfy the
organization.
continuing, growing
The Legacy of
the
demands
for amelioration of regional distress.
Area Redevelopment Administration
ARA could assist depressed areas in five major ways.
Businesses
located in designated counties could apply for long-term, lowinterest loans to
expand
their operations or begin
new
enterprises.
Loans were available
to local
governments to construct public
works and community
facilities.
Financial and technical assistance
could be given to local redevelopment organizations to prepare "overall economic development programs" sive plans identifying
gesting projects for improving assist
(OEDPs), comprehen-
major causes of economic
distress
economic conditions.
and sug-
ARA
could
both public and private organizations to retrain unemployed
workers. Finally,
it
provided subsistence payments to workers
during their retraining period. Between
1961 and 1963, three hundred projects involving more than $100 million in grants and loans were approved. 25. U.S. Congress, Senate Committee on Banking and Currency, Public Works and Economic Development, Hearings on Titles II and IV of S.
1648, 89th Cong., 1st
sess.,
1965, p. 4.
Policy Formulation
82
But from
its
inception,
plagued the program. agencies had
and administrative troubles
political
ARA
an area
dealt with
which federal
in
experience. Seemingly insurmountable opera-
little
problems arose. 20 From the outset the administrator had
tional
great difficulty finding expert
staff.
petitive with private industry;
and
government agencies because "supergrade"
service
civil
ARA
salaries
were not com-
could not easily "raid" other
it
limited
legislation
positions.
to only five
it
Competent
specialists
in
regional economics, needed to provide technical assistance to local
redevelopment groups priorities,
preparing
OEDPs
and project funding
could not be found.
Administrative problems became more complex in 1962. ARA was given the mission of reducing unemployment in depressed
had large labor
regions while the nation as a whole
nearly
impossible
surpluses, a
task until national economic conditions im-
proved. But as national unemployment rates rose between 1959
and 1961, organizations of municipal and county White House directly,
to
such
labor
develop a program to relieve unemployment
perhaps through massive public works projects
undertaken during the deficit,
officials,
and congressmen from depressed areas pressured the
unions,
the president
enormous
(APW)
bill
difficulty
Deal. Because of a growing budget
was reluctant
expenditures.
was sent
authorizations to
New
$900
like those
commit
to
An
Accelerated
to Congress early in million.
the administration to
The
and was signed by Kennedy
bill
in
Public
was passed with
September.
order, responsibility for the
program
merce and was delegated,
in turn, to the
fell to
Works
1962 which limited
By
little
executive
the Secretary of
Com-
Area Redevelopment
26. An in-depth analysis of its problems was made by the Area Redevelopment Administration staff for the National Public Advisory Committee on Area Redevelopment, "The First Three Years of the Area Redevelopment Program," Unpublished report, Washington, U.S. Department of Commerce, 1964, mimeographed. Administrative operations of ARA have been analyzed by Sar A. Levitan, Federal Aid to Depressed Areas, and Conley H. Dillon, The Area Redevelopment Administration (College Park: University of Maryland, Bureau of Government Research, 1964).
The Area Redevelopment Act
The new
Administration located within the department.
expanded ARA's obligations before
new
functions. Eight thousand
new
it
projects
had
stabilized
83
legislation
its
original
and more than two hundred
labor surplus areas increased the workload of an inadequate
ARA staff.
and already overburdened
Congress, unable to anticipate the consequences of
and without technical expertise
ARA
wide discretion to the agency's
first
responsibilities
decisions
in regional economics,
administrator.
was
its
granted
Thus one of the
to establish criteria for designat-
ing areas eligible for federal aid. Section 5 of the
Area Redevelop-
ment Act provided broad guidelines based on unemployment rates, family income levels, current and prospective employment opportunities, availability of trained manpower, extent of population outmigration, proportion of local residents receiving welfare, and others. later
But some of the indicators were mutually exclusive:
ARA
found that areas with low family incomes did not necessarily
have high unemployment without knowing
if
rates.
Congress included other standards
data even existed.
The agency could not
easily
reckon, for instance, the proportion of local residents receiving public assistance from local, administrator, for
A
and federal sources. 27 The
want of experts, could not
designation standards. of Agriculture
state,
He
and Labor
establish specific
turned, therefore, to the Departments
for technical assistance.
dispute developed between the two departments. Agriculture
insisted that depression
was
basically a rural
problem and offered
a set of criteria that would have designated a vast counties. Labor,
on the other hand,
felt that
number
Congress' intent was
urban industrial depressed areas and offered
to assist
of rural
criteria to
provide aid primarily to these. Agriculture, which had sought to control the rural assistance sections of the
program when the
was before Congress, then refused
ARA
criteria.
Instead
it
to assist
bill
with designation
mobilized interest groups to pressure the agency
into accepting qualifications favorable to rural areas. Standards
27. See
ARA,
pp. 43-46.
84
Policy Formulation
were worked out eventually by
ARA
through a series of compro-
mises with Labor, other federal agencies, and interest groups. Over eight
hundred counties were
employment
rates
creasing pressure led
ARA
criteria
based on un-
But Agriculture's
add 230 counties
to
ARA
Congress also delegated to
eligibility
levels.
to the
list
in-
of eligi-
income or unemployment. 28
ble areas, regardless of
area's designation
under
eligible
and family income
when
local
the
power
to terminate
an
economic conditions no longer met
standards. "Unfortunately adequate data to meet these
implicit needs for information are not available," agency officials
complained.
"Thus the agency cannot
intent of Section
ARA
when they no longer meet simply cannot know when this
areas,
and the
terminated
consolation."
easily
comply with the
13 of the Act which requires that areas are
fact that
no one
eligibility
know
either
is
The
many
condition exists in
else will
of
little
29
After areas were designated the program
Applications
for
ARA
assistance
and be approved by the
located. Public
had
states in
to
faced complex
still
problems. Processing of projects became bogged
OEDPs
standards.
down
in delays.
conform with
local
which the projects were
works grants, moreover, had to be supplemented
by contributions from
local redevelopment organizations equal to
10 percent of the aggregate cost of the project. In areas, project approval
was
many
depressed
either seriously delayed or aborted
by
the inability of local sponsors to raise the 10 percent participation funds. In addition, tive action
between
ARA
ARA
had
to await investigation
from "delegate agencies." The
ARA
clashed
and
its
with
conflicts that
developed
delegate agencies further slowed processing. the
Community
Facilities
charged with clearing grants for sewer and water
CFA
and coordina-
attempted to establish
its
own
Administration, facilities,
grant criteria.
ARA
when
argued
that the standards were unworkable. 30 Other conflicts developed 28. See Levitan, ch. 3, for details of the dispute.
29.
ARA,
pp. 44-45.
30. See Levitan, pp. 141-145.
The Area Redevelopment Act
85
with the Small Business Administration over business loan processing.
ARA
attributed
its
problems with delegate agencies to a
difference "in personal experience as well as the prevailing phi-
losophy and procedures in the various agencies (whose function often differs greatly from that of nevertheless, which tends to
make
it is
a difference,
were constrained
activities
its
own primary
a barrier." 31
itself felt as
Throughout ARA's early years tightly
ARA),
by both friends and enemies. Promises made in the name 1958 and 1960 elections raised
of area redevelopment in the
demands when
expectations and
gressmen who supported
been elected
in
program was enacted. Con-
the
the legislation for six years or
who had
1958 and 1960 on a platform of bringing federal
became impatient with ARA's policy. The president, whose nomi-
assistance to their distressed districts
slowness in implementing the
nation was secured in part by promises in
West Virginia
to
made
"get this country
in a
primary election
moving again," wanted
tangible results quickly.
But redevelopment, by
complex changes advised by
its
very
involved
long-run,
in the structure of regional economies.
ARA was
its
nature,
National Public Advisory Committee to
slowly, to plan carefully
and comprehensively
its
move
allocations. "It
proved impossible for the Administrator to act on that advice," agency
officials
later
complained.
"Local committees warned,
through their Congressmen and Governors, that support for the
program would be
lost unless their projects
could get immediate
approval." Legislators from depressed regions followed closely the progress
(or lack of
it)
of their constituents' applications.
ARA administrators reported: "The ARA reflects the importance of
in
intense Congressional interest
the economic factor in local
voting and served to put the tion
Area Redevelopment Administraunder heavy Congressional pressure from the very beginning.
This interest required a great deal of
no help 31,
in establishing the
ARA,
p. 46,
staff
time and certainly was
kind of dispassionate, analytical atmos-
Policy Formulation
S6
phcrc which tions of
many
ARA
think ought to have surrounded the delibera-
decision-makers." 32
Both within and outside of Congress, the program. That the
critics
continued to attack
Area Redevelopment Act was the first Kennedy made it a political
piece of legislation signed by President target.
Its
success or failure
success or failure of the
became a
political indicator of the
New Frontier.
"This Program Has Utterly Failed"
By March tions.
1963,
ARA
The White House
was beginning
staff
to deplete
its
appropria-
drafted and sent to Congress a
bill
authorizing $455 million in additional funds, but both the White
House and the Area Redevelopment Administration learned that the program was in serious trouble on Capitol Hill. In May the House Banking and Currency Committee had approved increased authorization for five
ARA
programs, but repealed a provision of
the original act allowing the agency to
When of
the
opposition
to
variety of sources,
of whether or not
area redevelopment became evident from a some unconcerned with the substantive question
ARA deserved additional funds. Several Southern
Democrats were more interested in revenge for the president's
in
dealing with
Robert Taft,
borrow from the Treasury.
reached the House floor in June, however, the extent
bill
Jr.,
ARA
on
its
in embarrassing the
proposed merits.
civil rights
White House
program than
Republican Congressman
an Ohio conservative, threatened to introduce an
antidiscrimination rider to the supplementary appropriations
prohibiting contractors
bill,
on ARA-assisted projects from discrim-
inating against Negroes in hiring practices. Conservative forces
were confident that with such a rider the the Southern-dominated
The
bill
would never survive
House Rules Committee. 33
large proportion of
ARA
assistance going to rural areas
32. Ibid., pp. 55, 59.
U.S. Congress, House Committee on Banking and Currency, Area Redevelopment Act Amendments, Hearings, 88th Cong., 1st sess., June 1963, Committee Print, pp. 88-110. 33. See
The Area Redevelopment Act additional
created
among some Northern
hostility
Liberal supporters were disappointed over
its
87
legislators.
lack of results after
Twenty Republicans and eighteen Southern Democrats who had voted for ARA in 1961 now opposed the supplementary appropriations. John V. Lindsay, a New York two years
in operation.
who had been
Republican
a proponent of area redevelopment,
charged from the floor of the House in June 1963 that "this pro-
gram has utterly failed to get off the ground and is leaving in its wake a shameful record of mismanagement, stodginess and waste." 34 A coalition of Republicans and Southern Democrats garnered enough votes to reject the supplementary appropriations bill,
209
to 204.
In the Senate, Republicans labeled the appropriations request
an attempt by the White House to create a "slush fund" for the
1964
presidential campaign.
was resubmitted
to the
it
for almost a year,
it
was released
and the House
in the
bill
passed the Senate and
summer
failed to take action
appropriations, but
it
redevelopment program would lapse when
more
uncertain.
it
when
failed to obtain addi-
faced the prospect that the entire its
enabling legislation
expired in June 1965. Events of the following year future even
on
of 1964. It died with adjournment
Thus the administration not only
in October. tional
But the
House. The Rules Committee pigeonholed
made ARA's
Between early 1964 and mid-1965,
the General Accounting Office issued seventeen reports highly
ARA's
critical of
dures,
and
grant and loan allocations, accounting proce-
inability
to
determine when areas were no longer
eligible to participate in the
"Some
protested. "It
gram
set
program.
of the criticism has been premature,"
up
too early to
is
make a
to attack a long-term
of operation."
35
By
final
ARA
problem
after only three years
the end of fiscal 1964, they pointed out, 1,035
areas were participating in the program, 1,600 projects 34. Congressional Record, Vol.
ARA,
had been
109, Part 8, 88th Cong., 1st sess., June
12, 1963, p. 10712.
35.
officials
judgment about a pro-
pp. 13-15, quote at p. 13.
88
Policy Formulation
initiated,
and $243 million
in loans
and grants had been made.
Nearly 70,000 new jobs directly attributable to
were projected,
in addition to
ARA
investments
46,000 indirect jobs expected
in
related activities.
But a general image of
inefficiency
1964 the Johnson administration the
program
in
its
had been
created.
By
late
realized that chances of renewing
current form were small.
A
strategy for saving
the regional development concept had to be formulated quickly it
was to survive the Eighty-ninth Congress.
if
CHAPTER 4
Political Strategy
and
Reformulation of Development Policy:
EDA
OEO, ARDC, and
Prospects for saving the area redevelopment program were en-
hanced by two events
in 1964.
Eighty-eighth Congress, sufficient
Late in the second session of the
House and Senate
liberals consolidated
support to enact a sweeping antipoverty program.
The
Economic Opportunity Act of 1964 and the Appalachian Regional Development Act of 1965 focused public attention on the plight of declining areas
and distressed groups as
had not been focused
Perhaps even more important, the 1964
since the Depression. presidential
it
election brought a fundamental realignment in the
composition of the Eighty-ninth Congress. Prior to 1965, Congress
was dominated by a
coalition of Southern
Democrats and Mid-
western Republicans from relatively "safe"
districts,
who had
accumulated seniority and obtained important committee positions. Their rural backgrounds and conservative ideologies led them to
oppose programs involving increased federal intervention
and private
activities.
When
in local
they lacked power to defeat legisla-
tion outright, they could almost always delay
and obstruct
bills
or obtain concessions by forcing compromises.
But Lyndon Johnson's decisive victory over a highly conservaopponent in the 1964 presidential election swept numerous
tive
young, liberal Democratic and Republican congressional candidates into office
on
was unique
in
won 74
presidential coattails.
The Eighty-ninth Congress
postwar history. In 1961 the conservative coalition
percent of the
roll calls
on
bills it
supported or opposed.
90 It
Policy Formulation
won 67
percent in 1963 and 1964.
more
tionally
liberal
Even
in the Senate, tradi-
than the House, the conservative coalition
won between 44 and 48
percent of
battles
its
from 1961
to 1964.
But by 1965 the conservative coalition could win only 25 percent of the decisions as a whole.
it
favored in the House and 33 percent in Congress
Moreover, the Eighty-ninth Congress was much more
willing to support the president's position
Congress in recent history. cent of the
274
roll call
In addition, Democrats,
on
legislation than
votes
on which he indicated a preference.
who
held solid majorities in both cham-
strongly supported an increased federal role in
bers,
government: they approved 80 percent of the ing federal activity.
The
any
gave Johnson victories on 93 per-
It
legislation
American broaden-
1
contrast was dramatic.
At
the end of the Eighty-eighth
Congress, as a result of the conservative coalition's ability to block the president's legislative program, political analysts were decrying the "crisis of democracy" and "government by stalemate."
years later one observer concluded:
"The
first
session of the 89th
Congress was so friendly to President Johnson's as to create concerns that Congress
too deferential." 2
From
Two
legislative
agenda
had become too permissive,
this legislative
environment came major
components of federal policy for regional development planning in 1965.
Help for Those "Shortchanged Twice "This
is
the
in
a Single Lifetime"
emerging pattern for the Nation," Harry
M.
Caudill, chairman of the Congress for Appalachian Development, told Congress in 1967:
"Poor and undereducated people are mov-
ing from the prairies, plains, and mountains
more
rapidly than
Congressional Quarterly Service, Congressional Almanac, 21 1. See (1965), 1083. This was the highest presidential support score recorded since Congressional Quarterly began this type of analysis in 1953, pp. 1099, 1111. 2.
Stephen K. Bailey, The
1966),
p. 29.
New
Congress
(New York:
St.
Martin's Press,
OEO, ARDC, and the cities can assimilate them. There, for
they cluster in worsening slums.
mark such communities
The
EDA
91
too long an interval,
all
rioting
and discontent that
reflect the bitter frustrations of
have been shortchanged twice in a single lifetime
people
—
in their
who
home-
land and, again, in the urban meccas to which they flee in quest of a better day." 3
Urban and
had been recognized
rural poverty
when
as interrelated problems three years earlier
Area Redevelopment Act centered
attention
distress of certain geographical areas
the fight over the
on both the economic
and the
plight of depressed
population groups. Children of the poor lacked educational and occupational opportunities; they were caught in the same cycle of
poverty that had trapped their parents and grandparents. Unskilled
and semiskilled workers were too numerous
to
be absorbed into
an increasingly professionalized and specialized economy. Small farmers and migrant workers shared agriculture
could
not
provide
much
the
adequate
same
fate.
standards
Marginal
of
living.
Minority groups suffered from discrimination and the aged from limited incomes. In 1963, ten million families (nearly thirty-five
million people)
The
had incomes of
federal antipoverty
less
than $3,000 a year.
and area redevelopment programs of
the mid-1960's were, to a large extent,
all
bound
together. Their
experiences with depressed areas, the writings of social political pressures to ameliorate
critics,
and
economic hardship converged in
Kennedy and his close advisers. The administration proposal for a war on poverty began with a call by Council of Economic Advisers Chairman Walter Heller to executhe minds of President
departments for antipoverty recommendations. When Lyndon Johnson succeeded to the presidency, he agreed with early reports tive
urging a diversified program to attack poverty on
many
fronts.
The Bureau of the Budget was assigned to work with the Council of Economic Advisers to draft the initial program. Later Sargent 3. U.S. Congress, Senate Committee on Government Operations, Commission on Balanced Economic Development, Hearings, 90th Cong., 1st sess.,
1967, p. 89.
92
Policy Formulation
Shriver, director of the
Peace Corps, was appointed to plan the
and a group of close
details
of a legislative proposal. Shriver
friends
and associates screened the recommendations. 4
March
sent to Congress in
The enabling private
legislation
and public
special
interest
the ages of sixteen and twenty-one,
New
was
The Job Corps,
groups.
training for youths
was
conservation and urban training centers. variations of the
bill
was a patchwork of proposals from
program of remedial education and job
on
A
of 1964.
to
a
between
be provided in rural
The idea was modeled
Deal Civilian Conservation Corps, youth
conservation legislation introduced by Hubert H.
Humphrey
in the
Senate in the late 1950's, and proposals submitted to the Shriver task force
by the Department of Commerce. The proposal for a
neighborhood youth corps, which would provide
full-
and part-
time work for youth in government health, social welfare, and recreation agencies,
Administration
had roots
in the
New
Deal's National
and the Youth Employment
bill
Youth
submitted to
Congress by the Kennedy administration in 1962. The poverty legislation
included a
Community Action Program designed
to
provide support for local antipoverty campaigns in urban and rural
and among migrant workers. It was community action councils, nonprofit public or private agencies in which the poor themselves would share in program planning and decision making. The CAP section of the bill was proposed by the Ford Foundation based on its educational demonstration experiments in a number of large cities in the early 1960's. It was strongly supported by staff members of the President's Commission on Juvenile Delinquency and Youth areas,
on Indian
reservations,
to be administered through
Crime and of the Department
of Justice. Provisions for adult
basic education were formulated by Shriver and his associates from
independent proposals submitted by the departments of Labor, 4. See U.S. Advisory Committee on Intergovernmental Relations, Intergovernmental Relations in the Poverty Program (Washington: Government Printing Office, 1966), chs. 1, 2, and Appendixes, for background and
legislative history.
OEO, ARDC, and
EDA
93
Health, Education and Welfare, and Defense. Rural loan sections of the legislation were included because of pressures raised
by
the Department of Agriculture, farm organizations, and congressmen from rural states. A small business loan program was incor-
porated from ideas suggested by the Small Business Administration
based on experimental loans to ghetto businesses
VISTA, a voluntary
1964.
in
came from Kennedy
made
in
Peace Corps and from
1963 by Attorney General Robert F.
for a national service program.
philosophical
the
and service work corps,
training
Shriver's experiences with the
proposals of a study
in Philadelphia
Heated debates on both
and administrative aspects of the program
generated a number of substantive changes in Congress before the bill
was approved and signed by the president
The
administration viewed the Office of
created by the
bill,
in late 1964. 5
Economic Opportunity,
as a coordinating organ properly located in
the Executive Office of the President, rather than as an operating
agency. Conflicts
among
of administration, which
federal agencies seeking delegated powers
had begun during congressional consid-
eration of the program, continued after
its
enactment.
When
they
subsided, five of the eight antipoverty programs were parceled out
among
cabinet departments, leaving only the Job Corps,
Start educational assistance,
Head
and Community Action Agency aid
under the direct control of the Office of Economic Opportunity. Nonprofit community action agencies would administer of the
programs
at the local level.
The
bill's
many
drafters included this
provision so the programs would not be taken over by "the estab-
lishment" local
:
existing local welfare agencies
and
politically controlled
government organizations. The community action agencies
were similar in many aspects to those established under the Area Redevelopment Act of 1961. Both required broad representation of minorities, local governments,
and potential
interest groups.
Appendix A; John Bibby and Roger Davidson, On Capitol Hill: (New York: Holt, Rinehart and Winston, 1967), ch. 7; and John C. Donovan, The Politics of Poverty (New York: Western, 1967), chs. 2 and 3. 5.
Ibid.,
Studies in the Legislative Process
94
Policy Formulation
Both were
requijjed to prepare overall
development programs and
establish priorities for project funding.
"The Dole
Is
Dead"
While Congress debated the Area Redevelopment Act late 1950's, a
movement was forming
for a large region of the United States
in the
to secure federal assistance
known
as Appalachia.
The
New
area, stretching
more than
York
Georgia and Alabama, suffered from having been
to central
five
hundred miles from southern
bypassed in the general progress of technology and resource exploitation. For decades its nearly fifteen million residents depended on coal mining, forestry, and marginal agriculture for their economic base a base that had been steadily deteriorating.
—
In 1957 a series of severe floods in Kentucky focused national attention
on the
plight of
Appalachian
residents.
Shortly after-
ward the governor formed the Eastern Kentucky Regional Planning Commission to prepare long-range plans for the area's physical and economic redevelopment. The governor appointed a young lawyer, John Whisman, as the commission's executive director, with a
to
recommend
broad mandate
to study the area's
courses of action.
that called for a massive
Whisman
program of federal
assistance
help, not only for eastern Kentucky, but for the
region.
The
and
self-
whole Appalachian
report urged creation of a federal development agency
to coordinate federal
technical
problems and
issued a report in 1960
programs for Appalachia and to provide
and economic assistance
the order of the
New
to regional planning agencies
on
Deal's National Resources Planning Board.
In addition, an Appalachian states development authority was
needed to study regional problems and to develop a long-range comprehensive plan. The Appalachian assistance to create development
states
would need external
programs and to
attract private
investment and exploit natural resources for productive purposes.
Governors from the Appalachian meetings to discuss their
common
states
often held informal
problems. In 1960 they met
formally to press for assistance. In May, Governor
J.
Millard
OEO, ARDC, and Tawes
of
Maryland
EDA
95
called a meeting of his counterparts in eight
other states to form the Conference of Appalachian Governors.
The conference convened
October in Lexington, Kentucky, and
in
issued a resolution calling for a special regional
program of devel-
opment involving "local, state and federal governments and both public and private forces." Representatives of Alabama, Georgia, North Carolina, Virginia, West Virginia, Tennessee, Kentucky, Maryland, and Pennsylvania continued to meet, make studies of the area,
in
and plan
political strategy for obtaining assistance.
Both the Douglas task force appointed by President Kennedy 1961 to study regional economic decline and the Area Re-
development Administration had noted the depressed economic conditions in the Appalachian region.
number
ARA
had designated a
of Appalachian counties eligible for benefits under
its
program. But the governors wanted more. They pressed for a pro-
gram
specifically directed to the
problems of their region, which
they could influence. Kennedy, however, was reluctant to fight
another battle with Congress similar to the one over the Area
Redevelopment difficulty
bill.
Early in his administration he had great
program through Congress. But
getting his legislative
the governors persisted, and the White
House
staff
was anxious
to
emphasize the problems of Appalachian poverty. Kennedy created the President's Appalachian Regional
Composed
of the governors
Commission
in April 1963.
and representatives of federal agencies
administering programs in the region, the commission was headed
by Under Secretary of Commerce Franklin D. Roosevelt, Jr. This action generated demands from other sections of the nation for similar federal attention.
consin,
The
and Minnesota wrote
six senators
to
Kennedy
from Michigan, Wisin
October requesting
a meeting of the cabinet, heads of independent agencies admin-
economic development programs, and the governors of the three states to discuss a program for relieving economic distress istering
in the
Upper Great Lakes
area.
They wanted a Great Lakes
regional commission similar to the one established for Appalachia.
Kennedy
initiated the meetings,
but in the confusion of presidential
96
Policy Formulation
transition
death in November the proposal was
following his
never implemented. 6
Meanwhile, the Appalachian Regional Commission was in the midst of a year-long study of the problems of economic distress.
The commission
prepared details of a federal
staff
program and took a
draft bill to a series of state
legislative
government
November 1963. A final reThe commis-
leadership conferences beginning in
port was submitted to the president in April 1964. sion's report stressed that
among
the
area's
most
inadequate
services,
income and high employment were
visible
social
access, poorly educated
of the
Appalachia was a unique region requir-
Low
ing special assistance.
difficulties.
facilities,
poor
and trained labor
more productive age groups
The commission argued
The
transportation
force,
also inhibited
that although the
lack of social
and
and outmigration its
development. 7
normal processes of
development had never occurred in Appalachia, the region possessed
an abundance of natural resources.
It
recommended
a
four-point program for federally aided public and private invest-
ment:
improvement of
inter
and intraregional highway
development of natural resources, construction of
access,
facilities
to
control and exploit the abundant rainfall, and promotion of im-
mediate improvement in
The
administration
Congress
late in 1964.
human sent
resources.
the
Appalachian assistance
The measure
bill
to
called for creation of a formal
commission composed of a federal cochairman appointed by the president, a state cochairman,
one member from each
Appalachian region, and a professional
staff.
state in the
The commission
form, a radical departure from administrative organization of most 6. See James L. Sundquist, Politics and Policy: The Eisenhower, Kennedy and Johnson Years (Washington: Brookings Institution, 1968), pp. 97101; and Donald N. Rothblatt, Regional Planning: The Appalachian Experi-
ence (Lexington, Mass.: Heath, 1971), ch.
1,
for a description of the early
pressures to obtain Appalachian assistance.
Appalachian Regional Commission. President's 7. U.S. (Washington: Government Printing Office, 1964), pp. 1-22.
Appalachia
EDA
OEO, ARDC, and
97
was chosen because of pressure by the
federal aid programs,
state
governors to maintain political influence over implementation.
The legislation provided for creation of a federal corporation to make loans to state-designated local development districts. The corporation provision was deleted later when opposition arose in Congress, but the local district requirements remained.
While the administration's chances of guiding the both chambers were good, the White House
number
of promises
bill
had
staff
and exert formidable pressure
to
through
make
a
to consolidate
a strong coalition behind a program benefiting only one section
Opponents attempted
of the nation. bill
in
to obstruct the
Appalachian
both the Senate and the House. Enthusiastic supporters In hearings on the
also caused problems.
bill,
Senators Philip
Hart of Michigan and Gaylord Nelson of Wisconsin argued for
They contended that the Upper Great Lakes region suffered from the same basic problems as Appalachia and was entitled to the same federal assistance. Senators Edward Kennedy of Massachusetts and Edmund Muskie of Maine claimed
extension of
that
its
coverage.
major portions of
economic
distress
extended to the
and
New
New
England were also
in
a state of
any federal aid program must be
that
England region. Nelson
later offered
ments that would extend Appalachian-type assistance to
The that
it
administration
would
Appalachian deplete the
saw
in
feared
amount of funds
all
areas.
expansion attempts the possibility
lose control over the size of the
governors
amend-
that
extended
program. Some coverage
available to their states.
More
would ardent
congressional supporters worried that expansion would endanger the
bill's
chances of clearing conservative coalition opposition in
the House. Thus, the White House, through the Bureau of the
Budget, sent a
letter to
Muskie. "The President
is
aware of the
be gained from planning and carrying out economic redevelopment along regional lines," the Budget Bureau assured
benefits to
the senator, "but the careful definition of regional boundaries
and
the development of regional plans can best be undertaken as part
9S
Policy Formulation
of a general assistance
program for area redevelopment." 8
bill
would be drafted
later
if
A
more extensive amend-
the expansion
ments were withdrawn and the Appalachian Regional Development
Act was approved
in
withdrawn. The
passed the Senate,
on
bill
The amendments were but the House failed to act
original form.
its
before adjournment of the Eighty-eighth Congress.
it
The
proposal, resubmitted to the Eighty-ninth Congress, con-
tained changes designed to overcome expected opposition from
conservative
amended tures.
to
The purposes
legislators.
the
of
program
were
emphasize efficiency and economy in federal expendi-
made
Public investments
would be concen-
in the region
trated in areas with the greatest potential for future growth, the
new
draft stated,
and where the expected return on public
dollars
The bill passed the Senate with little the House once more. But substantial
invested would be greatest.
and was sent
difficulty
opposition arose
to
among both Republicans and Democrats whose
were not included
districts
ander Pirnie,
Mohawk
a
in the
Appalachian boundaries. Alex-
Republican from the economically distressed
Valley of
New
York, for instance, attacked the Appala-
chian program as "sectional legislation at in fairness to the people of
my
district
its
worst." "I could not,
and the
rest of the nation
support the Appalachian Regional Development Act of 1965,"
he told
his constituents.
Like
many
not agree that the problems of his
other congressmen, he could
district
were any
less
important
than those of his colleagues from Appalachia. "It would be an entirely different matter
if
was the only
the Appalachian region
area in the nation with an unemployment problem or in need of
new highways." 9 Proponents of Appalachian assistance once again were caught
between supporters wishing tressed
8.
areas
to
expand the program
and opponents who saw the
Congressional Record, Vol. Ill, Part
2,
bill
to other dis-
as
89th Cong., 1st
a needless Feb.
1,
March
3,
sess.,
1965, p. 1674. 9.
News
Release, Office of Representative Alexander Pirnie,
1965, mimeographed.
EDA
OEO, ARDC, and
99
expenditure of federal funds from whieh their districts would not Testifying before the
benefit.
House Public Works Committee, the Federal Development Planning
John L. Sweeney, chairman of Committee for Appalachia, attempted think
we ought
.
.
.
But the
real fact
return to the Federal government, to greater than
grams.
I
what
think
both
it
is
all
we
"I
sides:
speak frankly. The name of the game
to
ential treatment.
to placate
is
prefer-
believe the ultimate
the States will be far
expends in Appalachia through these pro-
we have pointed out
in the past,
we
are spending
almost $500 million a year today in public welfare money."
Chamber
Interest groups such as the U.S.
Commerce and
of
the
National Association of Manufacturers feared that subsequent
demands for similar assistance would lead to "a crazy quilt patchwork of laws as each region of the country seeks to have its own special
law passed by Congress." 10
House Republicans defeat the
by
bill.
An
realized that they did not have the votes to
attempt was
made
to
substituting a Republican draft that
life
to
two years and expand
in the nation.
eligibility to all
The amendment,
Florida conservative
amend would
offered
who opposed
all
the Senate version
limit the
program's
redevelopment areas
by William C. Cramer, a redevelopment
legislation,
weaken whatever program finally passed. But Republicans from Appalachia favored the Democratic
was calculated
to
number of The White House staff, realizing that Republican forces were split on the issue, put pressure on Democrats to get the measure through the House without any amendments so that it would not have to go back to the Senate and be compromised in a conference a
bill.
committee.
Republicans reacted strongly to the pressure. The
House Republican Policy Committee recommended bers of
its
that
all
mem-
party vote against the administration draft, calling
it
a "boondoggle" and "pork barrel legislation." Subsequent votes
on amendments,
therefore,
10. U.S. Congress,
split
along party
Committee
Democrats
House Committee on Public Works, Appalachian Reand S. 3, 89th Cong.,
gional Development Act of 1965, Hearings on H.R. 4 1st sess.,
lines.
Print, 1965, pp. 42, 226.
J
00
Policy Formulation
mobilized sufficient solidarity to pass the act without change from the Senate version. 11
The Appalachian Regional Development Act expenditures of nearly $1.1
development aid
billion
to twelve states.
of
1965 authorized
over a six-year period for
Over $840 million
struction of 2,350 miles of highways
roads were provided in addition to $252 million to
ment
of health
and education
marks the end
legislation
human want and 9.
and physical
assist
develop-
facilities.
"This
of an era of partisan cynicism towards
misery," President Johnson exuberantly told
guests in the White
March
services
to assist con-
and 1,000 miles of access
"The dole
House Rose Garden as he signed the 12 is dead. The pork barrel is gone."
on
act
The Public Works and Economic Development Act
The
future of the
Area Redevelopment Administration was
still
precarious in the early months of 1965, despite Congress' favorable disposition toward expanding antipoverty programs. Saving the agency
became a problem
in political strategy. General dis-
appointment and opposition in Congress to the Area Redevelopment Administration and the Accelerated Public Works Program
made
continuation
of
enabling
the
legislation
unlikely.
lacked a supporting clientele powerful enough to keep
ARA
Substantive problems arising out of the
it
ARA alive.
experience created
White House and Congress. Economic Advisers, in consultation with the Budget Bureau and high-level administrative staff in ARA, attempted to anticipate criticisms and formulate new ideas to overuncertainties for supporters in both the
The Council
come
of
past weaknesses.
In
floated "trial balloons" that
a
new
its
1965 annual report the council
would
assistance bill offered
by
later
be included in a draft of
the administration.
It
called for
concentration of project investments in "growth centers" of rural
11.
The
roll call
and analytical background of voting can be found
in
Congressional Quarterly Service, "House Sends Appalachian Bill to President," Congressional Quarterly, 23 (Week ending March 5, 1965), 327-328. 12. Public
Papers of the President, 1965, Vol.
1, p.
102.
— OEO, ARDC, and areas, expansion of
multicounty
overhead regions.
101
redevelopment areas from single counties to
districts,
capital
EDA
to
and more emphasis on developing attract
private
investment
social
depressed
in
13
Late in 1964 the president assigned the Bureau of the Budget
Area Redevelopment Administration staff on drafting new legislative proposals. The first problem was to overcome the agency's adverse image. The program needed a "new look." To avoid a battle over the ARA's competence, an Economic
to
work with
the
Development Administration it.
To
(EDA) was
proposed to succeed
ARA
placate opposition from personnel within
porters in Congress, the administration stated that
sonnel would be transferred to the directed
all
agency, but
it
by a new administrator and second-level policy
Drafters
Bureau
new
and
its
sup-
ARA
per-
would be staff.
then concentrated on substantive problems. Budget
officials insisted
on inclusion of the "growth center" ap-
proach for allocation of redevelopment loans and grants to over-
come
criticism that
widely.
ARA
had distributed
its
assistance funds too
The concept, long advocated in European economic develop-
ment planning, postulated
that regional
development took place
through the growth of an urban center having a favorable infrastruc-
from growth
at the
center would promote development of the surrounding area.
A pro-
ture for private investment. Spillover effects
vision
was drafted requiring each redevelopment area to have a
development center in which investment would be concentrated
minor urban areas within or near the depressed region. During the drafting process a
and Bureau of the Budget
staff
the
new agency
to
have
full
conflict officials.
developed between
ARA
ARA
personnel wanted
control over review and approval of
They had earlier complained to the National Public Advisory Committee on Area Redevelopment that delays in applications.
processing projects seriously hindered
ARA's
effectiveness.
"The
requirement that delegate agencies be used in administering the 13.
Economic Report of
ing Office, 1965), p. 140.
the President (Washington:
Government
Print-
102
Policy Formulation
Area Redevelopment Act was dictated by economy motives," they noted. "It false
is
been an example of
possible, however, that this has
economy." 14 But the Budget Bureau
insisted
on maintaining
the delegate agency requirements, both for reasons of to avoid arousing hostility to the bill
delegated powers.
The
among
economy and
federal agencies with
delegate agency provisions remained.
Both the Bureau of the Budget and the Area Redevelopment Administration concurred with the Council of Economic Advisers that the size of
program
to succeed.
redevelopment areas must expand for a new
The
council argued in
its
that "the regions to be aided should be large
1965 annual report
enough
to include
a resource base for self-sustained growth and to support the
range of community services and public
full
Thus a title Economic Development Districts (EDDs) composed of two or more redevelopment areas with at least one "growth center." Ten percent bonuses on development project grants would be offered to induce localities was added allowing the new agency
to
form
ment the
districts.
district"
ARA
decisions
The concepts
utilities."
to designate
of "growth center"
and "develop-
were designed to overcome operating deficiencies
program and
to relieve political pressure
by creating technical
in
on allocation
criteria for distribution of assistance
funds. 15 14. ARA, "The First Three Years of the Area Redevelopment Program," Unpublished report, Washington, U.S. Department of Commerce, 1964, mimeographed, p. 64. 15. Several congressmen and senators, as well as administrative officials, expressed doubts that either concept would relieve political pressure on the program. One liberal senator who supported the new legislation pointed out that virtually every town in depressed areas would want to be designated a "growth center." He was quoted as warning: "The howls are going to be deafening when some of these towns are singled out for special help and
others find out they've been by-passed.
Namara
to stand
up
to the pressure." See
It's
going to take another
Don
Corditz,
Bob Mc-
"Beyond Appalachia:
Expand Attack on Depressed Areas Ills Encounters Problems," Wall Street Journal, April 28, 1965, p. 1. Another problem encountered in the growth center concept would be the difficulty of technically determining which areas had "growth potential" and which did not. One federal official was
Effort to
EDA
OEO, ARDC, and The administration wanted Congress
to delegate
103
broad discre-
tion for implementation of the program to the secretary of com-
who would
merce,
administrator.
in
EDA
turn
the powers
would have the authority
criteria for the designation of
centers,
delegate
to:
the
EDA
(1) establish
redevelopment areas, development
and economic development
districts;
(2) establish criteria
Economic Development Programs by
for Overall
to
local districts as
a basis for funding; (3) determine, in cooperation with the states, the boundaries of the economic development districts; (4) deter-
mine methods of allocating grant and technical assistance funds
among
EDDs
the
and (5) decide
"How Did
and loan funds for business assistance projects;
when
a district's eligibility
would terminate.
This Legislation Get Here?"
Early in 1965, Lyndon Johnson announced that he would send
a
new
area redevelopment program to Congress before
lation expired in June. Political pressure
the
bill
was submitted. The senators
began
ARA legis-
to build even before
who had attempted
to
have
an Upper Great Lakes regional commission appointed by President Kennedy and to expand the Appalachian program to other parts of the nation tion of
its
were quick to remind the Johnson administra-
promise to draft another aid
bill in
exchange for with-
drawal of expansion amendments. Senators Hart, Nelson, and
Kennedy pressured for multistate
the
pressure Senator Pat legislation (S.
Budget Bureau to draft a separate proposal
regional development programs.
McNamara
To
increase the
of Michigan introduced his
own
812) to create commissions modeled on the Appa-
lachian pattern for other sections of the nation.
To
satisfy these
quoted as musing: "Who's going to play God and decide what little towns left to die because they look now like they won't be growth centers in the year 2000?" Pointing out that until the army decided to make
should be
Alabama, a missile research center, "no one could have prewould become a boom town. There isn't a town in the country that doesn't hope something like that will happen to it, too." See Richard F. Janssen, "Reviving Regions: Plan Aims to Shift U.S. Aid to 'Growth Centers' to Avoid Scattering," Wall Street Journal, Jan. 13, 1965, p. 1.
Huntsville,
dicted that
it
104
Policy Formulation
demands
the
development
Bureau of the Budget added a bill
commissions." The haste with which the as the "Little Appalachias" section,
one observer
to conclude:
"Though
subsequently
title,
was tacked onto the
is
known led
bill
hailed as the enabling clause
for the golden era of regional planning, this itself
to the area re-
title
providing assistance to "regional action planning
the unplanned product of coincidence
new
was
direction
and circumstance.
a classic study of government by improvisation."
16
It
This provision
only temporarily satisfied demands for broad coverage. But the senators anticipated chances to revise the
bill
further at Senate
committee hearings.
On March 25
the president sent his message on
area and
regional economic development to Congress, calling for passage of
a
bill to
aid the
27 million people
living in economically depressed
Area Redevelopment Administration's work as an "experimental program" that provided valuable experience in economic development. The new legislation, the message noted, provided an opportunity to build upon the "best features" of the Accelerated Public Works program, ARA, and the Appalachian program. It would supplement activities initiated regions.
Johnson referred
to the
under the Economic Opportunity Act and the Manpower Develop-
ment and Training program. But opposition to a new area redevelopment program had been steadily building from late 1964 in both the Senate and House Banking and Currency Committees, to which the bill would be referred for hearings and preliminary approval. In the Senate the
chairmanship of Banking and Currency was held by conservative
Democrat A.
Willis
Robertson of Virginia, who had expressed
objections both to extending the
life
of
ARA
and
to creating
now
another area assistance program. The White House
staff
faced a dilemma. In an unfriendly committee a
risked,
best, 16.
bill
his
at
being substantially weakened by amendment, or at worst,
Don
Oberdorfer,
Sept. 9, 1965, p. 23.
"The Proliferating Appalachias," The Reporter,
OEO, ARDC, and EDA
105
being killed altogether without reaching the floor for debate and
on the other hand, they attempted to bypass the Banking and Currency Committees, the bill would become involved in a jurisdictional imbroglio. The bill was clearly economic policy, a vote.
If,
and the committees had legitimate
jurisdiction over
it.
Previous
attempts to bypass Banking and Currency had resulted in heavy
concessions to get a compromise. 17 find a
way
to guide the legislation
The White House needed to through a more friendly com-
mittee without inciting a jurisdictional dispute.
Submission of the message, and a
new
was delayed following the
bill
Title I
was written
president's
to provide federal assis-
The name of the bill was changed to "The Public Works and Economic Development Act of 1965." The strategy was to get the proposal assigned to the Public Works Committees in each chamber, where Democratic majorities favored its passage. Senator McNamara, chairman of the Public Works Committee, introduced the bill (S.1648) with Paul Douglas, who had become chairman of the Banking and Currency Committee's Production and Stabilization Subcommittee. At the same time an identical version (HR.6991) was sponsored by George Fallon, chairman of the House Committee on Public tance for public works construction.
Works. To avoid
jurisdictional disputes, arrangements
were made
by the Senate Public Works Committee to submit
Titles II
IV
Banking and
of the act (dealing with business loans) to the
Currency Committee for
letter to
its
and IV assigned
Titles II
and
"advice." Douglas arranged to have
to his subcommittee.
McNamara,
Robertson, invited Douglas, his subcommittee, and
in a
mem-
17. The attempts in 1956 by Senator Douglas to refer the Area Redevelopment Act to his own Labor Committee resulted in a formal challenge by Senator J. William Fulbright, Robertson's predecessor as Banking and Currency chairman. In return for not taking action that would have killed
the bill for that session, Fulbright was explicitly promised expansion of the area redevelopment program to cover rural areas and future jurisdiction over economic development legislation for the Banking and Currency Committee. See
Bibby and Davidson, pp. 200-201,
106
Policy Formulation
bers of the Banking and Currency Committee to join the Public
Works Committee still
opposed the
at hearings legislation,
Banking and Currency's
on the
bill.
18
Although Robertson
he was not aggressive
jurisdiction
a strong battle with members of his
in protecting
and was reluctant
own
wage
to
party over the committee
assignment.
The
strategic significance of political
assigning the
bill
maneuvering involved
a friendly committee was not lost on
to
in its
opponents. Representative Cramer later complained bitterly during floor
debate about the administration's
legislation get here?
The
"How
tactics:
did this
President sent up earlier this session a
separate message relating to area redevelopment.
a
If
bill
introduced and sent to the proper legislative committee,
had been it
have gone to the Committee on Banking and Currency President Johnson sent
it
up
separately,
and
lo
would .
.
.
and behold, when
they realized that area redevelopment was killed in the last session as a result largely of opposition out of the
Banking and Currency
mind and sent up a new message. And thus was born an Economic Development Act, the
Committees, the President changed
potpourri "little
if
you
please, the
Appalachias"
all in
ARA,
his
accelerated public works and
one package." 19
Douglas' Production and Stabilization Subcommittee favorably
recommended
Titles II
and IV, and the
full
Banking and Currency
The four committee along with Chairman
Committee approved the report by a vote of 9 Republican members of the
to 5.
Robertson were opposed. "Congress Would Be Abdicating
Its
Responsibilities"
The Public Works Committee held hearings in the Senate from May 3. By 1965 the nature of public hearings on
April 27 through
18. See an exchange of correspondence between McNamara and Robertson reprinted in U.S. Congress, Senate Committee on Banking and Currency, Public Works and Economic Development, Hearings, 89th Cong., 1st sess., 1965,
19.
Committee
Print, pp. 1-3.
Congressional Record, Vol. Ill, Part 15, 89th Cong.,
11, 1965, p. 199944.
1st sess.,
Aug.
OEO, ARDC, and regional development legislation
had been on the offensive
EDA
107
had changed. Previously witnesses
in urging assistance to
depressed areas.
ARA,
But because of the unfavorable image created by
the Senate
hearings were dominated by administration officials defending the
program, special interests and clientele groups testifying to the
accomplishments of the agency, and state and local government representatives arguing the need for continued federal aid. 20
opposing
ARA
EDA
and
Those
perceived the difficulty of presenting
their views to a liberal Senate
and a pro-ARA committee. They
focused their attention on House hearings instead.
While members of the Public Works Committee favored the bill,
they
made
before sending
substantial changes in the administration version it
to
the House.
Proponents of expanding the
Appalachian program rewrote provisions of Title V, substituting
McNamara
most of the provisions of the
for the states to join the federal
(S.812) that called
bill
government
planning
in creating
organizations almost identical to the Appalachian Regional
Com-
mission. In addition, they increased the authorization for public
works grants, imposed a five-year
limit
was amended
to place a 15 percent limit
works money
EDA
to the Senate floor
on the
on the
of the grant
life
and increased technical assistance funds.
authorizations,
on the amount of public
could spend in any one
on
May
lives of Titles II
26 where
and
III.
Title I
state.
The
five-year limits
Subsequently,
it
bill
went
were placed
was enacted by
a vote of 71 to 12.
During the second and third weeks
Works Committee held hearings on groups
critical
of the
EDA
in
its
May own
the bill.
House Public Here
interest
program found a more receptive
The National Association of ManuThe federal government's intervention
audience than in the Senate. facturers led the opposition. in the private market,
NAM
maintained, represented a misalloca-
20. See U.S. Congress, Senate Committee on Public Works, Public Works and Economic Development Act of 1965, Hearings, 89 Cong., 1st sess., 1965, Committee Print, passim.
108
Policy Formulation
tion of
economic resources that would hamper American industry
in foreign trade, only temporarily stimulate the economies of de-
pressed areas, and upset the natural processes of competition in industrial location.
The American Farm Bureau Federation
strong objections to provisions that would allow
EDA
raised
to bypass
the states and grant assistance directly to local governments and
economic development
district
organizations.
multistate regional planning commission
neous, uneconomical,
and the
result
The
creation
was attacked
of political pressure.
National Association of Counties generally endorsed
opposed establishing Economic Development
of
as extra-
EDA
The but
District organizations
as nonprofit corporations, preferring that they be placed under
the control of local elected officials. 21
Despite a hard core of opposition in the House, broad social
and economic forces within the nation were creating an atmosphere conducive to EDA's passage. The war on poverty focused attention
on problems that previously received low
gional depression
came
national economy.
"A
resources,
unused
human and
priority.
Re-
to be seen as an opportunity loss to the
growing nation cannot afford to waste those natural,
in distressed areas,"
which are too often neglected and
Lyndon Johnson
message on regional development.
"We
told Congress in his
cannot afford the loss of
buying power and of national growth which flow from widespread poverty." Pressures for regional development planning emanated, moreover,
from the growing
regional
distress
realization that the
—economic
and
major contributors to
technological
change
—would
The National Commission on TechEconomic Progress, formed by Congress in 1964, predicted a technological pattern that would alter regional comparative advantages, displace capital and labor, and make continue to plague the nation. nology, Automation and
21. U.S. Congress, House Committee on Public Works, Public Works and Economic Development Act of 1965, Hearings, 89th Cong., 1st sess., 1965, Committee Print, passim.
EDA
OEO, A RDC, and specialized occupational groups obsolete.
The
vast increase of
during the 1950's
—
local productive capacities
Negro population
the result of migration
Southern depressed areas interrelationship
and
1 09
in
from
Northern
states
rural, agricultural
—brought a new awareness
of the close
between rural and urban problems. Large areas
of economic depression were forming in the black cores of wealthy
metropolitan centers.
Unemployment among Negroes
in the ghettos
of Cleveland, L'os Angeles, Chicago, Detroit, Pittsburgh, and other
from 200
large cities in the mid-1960's ranged
higher than in the national economy. before Congress in support of
EDA
Urban
to
300 percent
officials
appearing
had more than an
legislation
inkling of the danger of widespread violence threatening povertystricken ghettos
if
policies to relieve
economic decline were not
forthcoming.
The
policy emerging from Congress, then,
was being molded
from a curious blend of broad socioeconomic forces and narrow political
demands. Following public hearings in early June, the
House Public Works Committee received version of the
EDA
the
amended Senate
and went into executive session
bill
to write
a compromise draft. In the process numerous changes were made,
many
On the
reflecting special interest pressures. 22
June 22 the Public Works Committee favorably reported
bill
to the
amendments prohibiting EDA public works projects in counties already
House with
from making grants for
additional
being aided under the Appalachian Regional Development Act.
But seven Republican members of the committee voted against the majority report and attached a minority statement condemning the entire
bill
"because we believe that the measures
have been proved wasteful and
was
hastily
it
provides
ineffective, that the bill as reported
and poorly drafted and the Congress would be abdicat-
See U.S. Congress, House Committee on Public Works, Highlights of Works and Economic Development Act of 1965, Public Law 89-136, Section-by -Section Analysis and Legislative History, 89th Cong., 1st sess., 1965, pp. 21-221. 22.
the Public
110 ing
with
Policy Formulation its
responsibilities
if
it
enacted a
bill
so few Congressional guidelines
of such sweeping scope
and controls for proper
administration."- 3
When
the bill reached the floor, additional opposition
became
apparent. Conservatives argued that Congress was delegating enor-
mous policy-making powers to the federal bureaucracy. Congressman Howard Smith of Virginia, chairman of the House Rules Committee, complained This
bill,
like
extensive in
its
bitterly during debate:
the previous
bill,
so vague and indefinite and so
is
grant of authority of administration that no one knows
what extent this thing can go. But we pass bills with this vague authority to some bureaucrat to administer and spend the taxpayers' money in great globs of billions of dollars. After it is done we do not know what is happening down there. ... I just think it is about time that we stop this kind of thing, and it is about time that Congress stopped delegating its duty to legislate to administrators in the executive department, because after you pass one of these vague bills, and I could show you a dozen of them pending before the Committee on Rules now, you just do not know where they start and where they stop and what they can do and what they are prohibited from doing. And when they are in doubt about it they construe the law as they think it ought to be written. 24 to
.
Thirteen amendments
.
.
made by opponents
to restrict the scope of
the legislation and by supporters to expand defeated.
But other amendments having
its
coverage were
substantial impact
on the
program were accepted during the course of debate. B. F. a California Democrat whose congressional
redevelopment assistance under
ARA,
district
was
Sisk,
eligible for
but would not qualify under
23. Four other Republicans on the committee broke with their party and voted with the Democratic majority, primarily because their districts would benefit greatly from EDA assistance. See Congressional Quarterly Service, Congressional Quarterly, 23 (Week ending July 2, 1965), 1291-1292, quote at p. 1292.
24. Congressional Record, Vol. Ill, Part 15, 89th Cong., 1st sess., 11, 1965, pp.
19938-19939.
Aug.
— GEO, ARDC, and criteria outlined in
the
tions for Title I public
new
bill,
works grants from $400 million
another year. The proposal enraged opponents.
can you
an increase of $150 million and
justify
ARA
"How now
long hearings on the question. There
how much
new $100
million
is
no way
additional cost will result
and putting
in these
new
—
$500
to
areas for
in the
world
an increase of
"We
another $100 million," Congressman Cramer demanded.
estimate
111
proposed increasing authoriza-
and extending the qualification of old
million
EDA
that
anyone can
by putting
in this
as I understand
96 counties that cannot qualify under the bill otherwise." 25 Congresswoman Patsy Mink of Hawaii discovered that her had no redevelopment areas under proposed
held
it
state
She per-
criteria.
suaded her fellow congressmen to accept a provision that entitled every state to at least one redevelopment area of the state qualified under
gions later
became known
EDA as
—even
if
eligibility standards.
no
section
These
re-
"Mink Areas." Amendments were
accepted limiting the use of regional development business loans
and prohibiting
EDA from
of the nation to another. These "antipirating" limited
EDA's
amendments
severely
use of regional development funds.
The House passed
the
amended Public Works and Economic
Development Act of 1965 on August 12 by a 246
Four days
from one area
assisting firms relocating
later the Senate
vote, accepting all
to
138 majority.
approved the House version by a voice
amendments
to
its
own
revised draft.
The law
was signed by the president on August 25, five days before the Area Redevelopment Administration's enabling legislation was due to expire.
The focus
from the
legislative to the administrative arena.
of regional development policy
making
shifted
The burden of Economic Development Administration. Its success would depend on its ability to establish regional economic development districts and multistate regional planning commissions. But EDA alone could not planning regional economic recovery
fell
to the
25. Congressional Record, Vol. Ill, Part 15, 89th Cong., 1st sess., 12, 1965, p.
20241.
Aug.
112
hope
Policy Formulation to solve the
complex problems of regional
distress. It
would
need the cooperation of other federal agencies, the assistance of state
and
local agencies in the depressed areas,
private groups in forming, staffing,
gional development organizations.
and the
initiative of
and funding multicounty
re-
PART HI
POLICY ADMINISTRATION AND
THE ORGANIZATIONAL STRUCTURE OF URBAN REGIONS
Where cesses
analysis
may
and policymaking are fragmented,
political pro-
achieve a consideration of a wider variety of values
than can possibly be grasped or weighed by any one analyst or policymaker.
It is this
accomplishment
makes agreement among
analysts
at the political level that
less
necessary.
If
political
processes merely settled disputes without responding to a multiplicity
of interests or values,
fragmentation,
agreement on a comprehensive to be prized.
—Charles in
as
would be the case without
then not only agreement set
E. Lindblom, "Handling of
M. Abramovitz,
et al.,
among
of values would
Norms
analysts, still
be
but
much
in Policy Analysis,"
The Allocation of Economic Resources
CHAPTER
5
of Economic Development in Northeastern
The
Politics
Pennsylvania
Organizing for regional development in the more than eight
hundred counties tion assistance,
eligible for
itself,
Economic Development Administra-
became a policy problem. Many planners
found the attempt to organize an economic development
district
The constraints placed on the convenwisdom of planning theory by implementation of policy became apparent. In many areas, plans for establishing districts a short course in politics.
tional
never succeeded. In others, multicounty
by EDA, but the tical conflicts.
that
In
district
some
districts
were designated
agency did not survive subsequent poli-
regions, the
development planning agencies
emerged were weak, highly dependent on federal
aid,
and
thus incapable of exerting a powerful role in regional policy
making.
Development planning agencies did survive and "sphere of influence" in some areas. eastern Pennsylvania.
program
The
One such
political forces that
to northeastern Pennsylvania
marked the
establish
a
region was north-
brought the
EDA
were not unlike those that
region's struggle for federal redevelopment assistance
in the 1950's.
A
wide variety of economic,
social,
and
political
events formed the parameters for organizational interaction. Inter-
group time.
conflict
shaped policy outcomes and reshaped them over
116
Policy Administration in
Urban Regions
The Changing Economic Environment While local government and business leaders in northeastern Pennsylvania were fighting for area redevelopment assistance from
Washington
1950's, development activities were con-
in the late
tinuing at a quick pace.
New
financial aid
became
the Pennsylvania Industrial Development Authority.
available
from
A community-
wide fund drive organized in 1959 raised more than $1.5 million to assist industries
moving
into the Scranton area.
The
city of
Scranton established a redevelopment authority, which with federal assistance invested nearly
downtown ment fund million
The
million in the rehabilitation of the
projects generated a total investment of
and nearly eleven thousand new region's
As
mining declined
manufacturing.
more than $20
jobs.
economic structure and competitive position were
slowly improving. in
$10
business district. In Wilkes-Barre industrial develop-
the percentage of the labor force employed
drastically,
a larger share was working in
Construction of an interstate highway network
crisscrossing northeastern Pennsylvania near Scranton greatly in-
creased the region's access to larger metropolitan markets in
New cost
York, Harrisburg, and Baltimore. Travel time and transport
among
cities
within the region and with the Philadelphia area
were reduced. In 1960, Congress approved
fifty-eight flood control
and water resource projects (a federal investment of $590 million) in construction
of the
Tocks Island National Recreation Area
adjacent to northeastern Pennsylvania's Pocono Nevertheless, northeastern Pennsylvania
and economic problems. Unemployment
was
still
up
to
district.
still
faced serious social
in
many communities
100 percent higher than national
many younger people and 1960 the region
to
move from
rates,
which led
the region. Between 1930
lost nearly one-third of its total population,
and those who left were among its more skilled, better educated, more productive workers. While the industrial mix had become more diversified the economic base was still dominated by lowwage apparel, textile and tobacco industries. Physical deterioration
Politics of
Development
continued. There were
smoking culm banks,
in
still
in
117
Northeastern Pennsylvania
decaying mining towns, grimy from
which whole blocks of buildings periodi-
were swallowed up when the land upon which they were
cally
constructed subsided into underlying abandoned coal mines. Limitations of "Going
A
It
Alone"
plethora of organizations attempted to promote the region's
recovery.
By 1966
at least thirty-eight nonprofit industrial develop-
ment funds were operating
in
Lackawanna and Luzerne counties
Chambers of Commerce, civic groups, banks, public utilities, and other groups became involved in redevelop-
alone.
local governments,
ment
projects.
competition
Proliferation of these local groups led to strong
among communities
for
new
industries.
Some
leaders
thought that the region was overorganized and that efforts should
be consolidated.
A
few private groups encouraged formation of
a region- wide planning organization. In 1962, Jack K. Busby and
John Davidson of the Pennsylvania Power and Light Company, Dr.
Eugene Farley of Wilkes College, and a dozen lawyers,
bankers, and businessmen from Scranton and Wilkes-Barre began
mobilizing support for creation of a development research organization for Luzerne and
Lackawanna
counties.
men met
regularly
to
regionally
oriented
information collection
discuss
details.
which also served as a catalyst for
The small group
They concluded and
analysis
that
of
a
center,
joint action, could best over-
come
provincial conflicts between Scranton and Wilkes-Barre, two
cities
that traditionally
rivals.
A
had been
bitter political
and economic
research center would inculcate a sense of regional
identification in the
and coordinate
minds of business and
civic leaders in the area
efforts to attract industry to the region as a
whole.
Farley and others brought these arguments to the Ford Foundation with a request for financial support.
Late in 1963, Ford
granted $150,000 to organize the Area Research Center within
Wilkes College.
The
center slowly began collecting information relevant to eco-
nomic recovery in
Lackawanna and Luzerne
counties, but
Ford
US
Policy Administration in
Foundation funds expired
Urban Regions
late in
1964. Through the assistance of
Congressman Daniel Flood, the organization received a $150,000 research grant from ARA and re-established itself as the Economic Development Council (EDC), a nonprofit corporation with representation from a wide variety of public and private groups. In late 1965, however, some board members expressed dissatisfaction with
They thought
the rate and direction of the council's progress. staff
was too research-oriented and too
Wilkes College. catalytic,
The
EDC
and mobilization
closely identified with
move into The president
coordination,
to
failed
activities.
the
of the board,
Louis G. Feldmann of Hazleton, wanted a more dynamic pro-
gram.
"Up
part been planned and promoted
mann
development has for the most
to this time industrial
told the
board of
on a purely
directors,
local basis," Feld-
"and has been
restricted to
scattered communities, with large untouched areas in between."
But from two decades of redevelopment experience "we have least learned that 'going
development
nomic
unit,
potential.
it
alone' places severe limitations
No
single municipality
and none possesses
all
the assets or
on our
a natural eco-
is is
at
free of liabilities.
Resources of a particular locality are limited, but when pooled with the resources of other greatly magnified." 1 localities
localities, their attracting
The EDC, he
to pool their resources
powers are
thought, could actively assist
and coordinate
their activities
toward economic recovery. Opportunities to redirect the council's activities arose in 1965.
Passage of the Appalachian Regional Development Act and the Public
Works and Economic Development Act brought
additional
federal assistance to local development groups seeking to perform
the very functions that activists on the
envisioned.
EDC board
The Pennsylvania Department
of
of directors
had
Commerce was
delegated the authority to establish and certify substate develop-
ment
districts
under both the Appalachian and
EDA
programs.
1. See the remarks of Louis G. Feldmann, Board of Directors Meeting, Economic Development Council of Northeastern Pennsylvania, Wilkes-
Barre, 1966, transcript, p.
1.
Politics of
Development
in
Northeastern Pennsylvania
119
Designated organizations would be eligible for a wide variety of federal technical
other
members
and
of the
Feldmann, and
financial aids. Dr. Farley,
Economic Development Council
having the council certified as the development
investigated
district
organiza-
tion for northeastern Pennsylvania.
In November,
EDA
Administrator Eugene P. Foley asked the
Luzerne County Planning Commission its
overall
if it
was
willing to update
economic development plan and form an organization
to administer
EDA
assistance in the region. Since the
Development Council had already been organized, funded, the possibility that
EDA to
was
it
Economic
staffed,
and
could act in this capacity was raised.
receptive, but insisted that the council
be reorganized
meet the federal agency's representation guidelines. The council
was controlled predominantly by businessmen;
expand
its
cational,
board to include local government
it
would have to
officials, labor,
edu-
and minority groups and gain the membership of the
seven county governments in northeastern Pennsylvania.
"Stirring
up Provincial Antagonisms"
EDC leaders
decided to reorganize to meet federal requirements.
Early in 1966 some board members convinced Dr. Farley that as long as the council was closely affiliated with Wilkes College
it
could not get the widespread participation needed for designation. Reorganization involved two steps.
First,
the council
would be
separated from the college and established as a seven-county
development agency, expanding
its
program to include those
functions supported by the Appalachian Regional
EDA.
Commission and
Second, the executive director would be replaced by a more
dynamic individual with contacts
in both the public
and private
Changes were made quickly. Staff direction was turned Raymond R. Carmon, director of the central division of the Pennsylvania Economy League (PEL), who would devote half time to each job. Carmon was well known in the community as a
sectors.
over to
competent researcher with long experience with municipal govern-
Policy Administration in Urban Regions
120
ment; he also had a dynamic personality.
moved from Wilkes
EDC
headquarters were
downtown
College to an office building in
Wilkes-Barre close to
PEL
offices,
and the professional
staff
was
expanded.
The second phase into the council
agencies, interest
of reorganization, bringing local governments
and obtaining
met opposition due
to
personal
group differences, and latent
leaders in sition to
from federal and
certification
ambitions,
political
rivalries
state
between
Lackawanna and Luzerne counties. Much of EDC's expansion was led by Bernard Blier,
political
the oppo-
executive
director of the Scranton Redevelopment Authority and secretary
of the Scranton City Planning Commission. Blier had built a base of political influence in
Lackawanna County by
his
ability
to
obtain large amounts of federal and state funds for local planning
and development
projects; he
was known
as a master of the art
of "mimeograph-machine politics."
He
media with steady streams of press
releases
provided regional news
on the
activities of
the Redevelopment Authority and his personal role in
was
it.
Blier
also executive director of the Northeastern Pennsylvania In-
dustrial
Development Commission, a "paper organization" used
lobby for federal assistance. Although
it
to
had undertaken few
many community leaders were listed members of its board of directors. The seeds of opposition were sown early in 1965. As the Economic Development Council was expanding, Blier approached the board of directors seeking to become its executive director. Board members antagonistic toward Blier not only spurned his hope for the job, but successfully excluded him from membership on the council. When it became known that EDC was attempting to become the district development agency, NPIDC leaders feared that they would lose control over federal redevelopment funds coming into Lackawanna County. Blier and others announced actual development projects, as
that they
would prepare
their
own economic development
plan for
a fourteen-county area in northern Pennsylvania and bid to have the
NPIDC
designated as the
official
development planning agency,
Politics of
Development
Northeastern Pennsylvania
in
121
March 1966, when Congressman Flood Feldmann urging the council to reorganize
Cleavages became wider in
wrote to
more
EDC
rapidly
President
and promising help
in getting aid
from EDA. There-
Economic Development Council offered membership on its board to officials from seven county governments in northeastern Pennsylvania. It followed up the offer with meetings in each county to explain its program and to mobilize support. But Patrick Mellody, chairman of the Lackawanna County after, the
Commissioners, wrote to Louis Feldmann on March 24 that an organization
composed
entirely of
county
officials
would be the
appropriate body to administer federal and state development assistance
nounced
programs
in
his intention of
northeastern Pennsylvania. Mellody an-
forming such an organization
—
the North-
Pennsylvania Economic Development District Commission
east
(NPEDDC). Mellody echoed
Blier's
EDC
charges that
federal funds only for Luzerne County.
was a
who wanted
"vested interest group" composed of businessmen
He and many
of the other
county commissioners did not feel that an incorporated body
He
lacking political status could be effective.
threatened to with-
hold the support of the Lackawanna County government from any
undertaken by
activities
ment
solidarity
other counties
EDC
These
officials later
was already organized,
Mellody and Blier
officially
from
six
explained that they accepted staffed,
formed the
and funded and had
3
NPEDDC
and obtained
membership of a number of other county commissioners.
Plans for the formation of the State
2.
officials
accepted the Economic Development Council's
begun a "well received" research program. the
claims of county govern-
were weakened, however, when
invitation to join.
because
EDC. 2 Mellody 's
Letter
NPEDDC
had been made known
to
Department of Commerce, the State Planning Board, from Patrick Mellody to Louis Feldmann, March 24, 1966, Economic Development Council of North-
located in the records of the eastern Pennsylvania. 3.
See Lehighton Evening Leader, March 31, 1966, and Evening Record
(Wilkes-Barre),
March
31, 1966.
Policy Administration in Urban Regions
122
EDA,
and the U.S. Department of
the Appalachian Commission,
Urban Development.
Housing
and
proached
HUD
governments,
NPEDDC
for
eligible
assistance
financial
Blier that his organization did not
announced
meet
their intention of
its
in
coordinating
informed
requirements,
NPEDDC
expanding membership to
include a cross-section of public and private groups to meet
broad-representation requirements. 4
support
in
ap-
HUD
When
municipal planning and redevelopment.
leaders
organizers
about being designated a regional council of
They continued
Lackawanna County, gaining
backing
the
EDA's
to mobilize
of
the
Scranton Tribune, the Scranton Central Labor Council, and the
chairman of the Scranton City Planning Commission. Meanwhile, the Economic Development Council was mobilizing its
own
coalition of support. Farley
and Carmon asked several
community and business leaders serving on the EDC listed as members of NPIDC to resign formally from the latter organization. Copies of the letters of resignation were then sent to EDA in Washington to demonstrate prestigious
board who had been
Lackawanna group did not have strong community supThe council also secured the endorsement of both of Penn-
that the port.
sylvania's
United States
Congressman Flood.
senators
EDC won
and renewed backing from
the support of the
Development Administration's regional Middle-Atlantic
field
office
headquarters as well.
at several local meetings
on behalf of the
Economic
personnel in the
EDA
field staff
spoke
council's designation,
thereby invoking the anger of the Lackawanna group. "Our organization
is
a bit concerned by the turn of events here in North-
eastern Pennsylvania," Philip
Council protested to the
Brady of the Scranton Central Labor
EDA
administrator in Washington that
EDA field personnel were showing undue favoritism. 4.
See "Development District Proposed for Region," Scranton Times,
March 5.
15, 1966.
Letter
from
Philip
Brady to Eugene
P.
Foley,
1966 in EDC records. See also Tom Wilson, with EDA Funds," Pocono Record, July 5, 1966.
April
5
6.
EDA
administrator,
"A Thousand
'Ifs'
Ride
Politics of
Again
in
123
Northeastern Pennsylvania
summer of 1966 members of the EDC tried to Lackawanna County Commissioners to join the
in the
persuade the council.
Development
But Mellody and
his fellow
commissioners rejected the
support for Blier's position and calling the
offer, reiterating their
EDC's development activities a "private club approach." In December 1966 the Pennsylvania Department of Commerce officially certified the Economic Development Council as the development
A
agency for northeastern Pennsylvania.
district
storm of protests came from Scranton. Telegrams were sent by Mellody, Brady, and others to Pennsylvania Secretary of
merce John Tabor. Mellody threatened
Assembly the threat
investigation; but
demand a General
to
Tabor stood firm on the decision and
was never followed up. Despite
Commonwealth,
EDA
still
certification
by the
EDC
or pro-
would not designate the
vide technical assistance because
Lackawanna County was not
represented officially on the board of directors. Both
EDC
Com-
EDA
and
looked upon the obstruction as a nuisance that would be
resolved in time, and overall
EDC
was allowed
to begin preparing
an
economic development program for the region.
Opponents of the council, however, continued Attempting to block
final designation
their attacks.
by EDA, the Lackawanna
group questioned the competence of the council's research and criticized
its
supporters.
known
to
sonnel,
became a
Congressman Daniel Flood, who was
have substantial influence with favorite target.
EDA
Washington per-
The county commissioners
issued
a news release charging that "the need for a 'special interest'
Luzerne County organization directed by Congressman Flood
is
not in the area's future or the public interest" and claimed that "elected public officials in this county are local planning
more
able to handle
and projects." 6
EDC by the Lackawanna group, many public and private leaders in other counties had decided not to oppose the council further. They began to see Notwithstanding continued attacks on the
6.
Scranton Tribune, June 19, 1967.
124 it
Policy Administration in Urban Regions
in their
own
interests to support
and incidents
certification,
state
began
to create cleavages
among
EDC's
in
efforts after
those
group. Blier's credibility was questioned.
news
issuing
releases
their opposition to
and
letters
EDC;
received
it
summer of 1967 supporting the Lackawanna
the early
He was
charged with
quoting community leaders about
they later claimed never to have
such statements. Blier wrote to the Appalachian Regional mission in
1967, for instance, over the signature of
president, Victor
when of
the letter
NP IDC's
Diehm, protesting the designation of EDC. But
was made
Diehm claimed he knew nothing
public,
and that "Mr. Blier was
it
made Com-
base in registering the protest." 7
off
The Lackawanna County group's
criticism of the
EDC
later
brought some of the council's latent supporters openly into the conflict.
When
EDC
Blier charged
with "juggling statistics" to
channel federal funds for sewer and waste treatment projects away
from Lackawanna County
into Luzerne,
WBRE-TV's news
editor
defended the council in an editorial accusing EDC's opponents of "guttersniping."
"Not only are the charges
truth but they stoop to stirring
when
up
far
removed from the
provincial antagonisms at a time
the region's economic and social well-being depends
on a
healthy sense of unity," the editorial argued. 8
The Lackawanna group intensified attacks on Congressman Flood. The rumor was circulated among local government officials that Flood had been controlling EDC's activities, attempting to build his
own power base
alleged that
EDC
in
the region.
was "hatched
as
Later Blier publicly
a special interest Luzerne
County vehicle [with which] Congressman Daniel J. Flood has been attempting to override county, city, borough and township governments." Mellody accused Flood and
EDC
twisting" to get the commissioners to join. But,
"Lackawanna has done and 7.
will continue to
directors of
Mellody
"arm
insisted,
do pretty well by
See "Diehm Denies He's Protestor," Scranton Sunday Times, June 19,
1967. 8. 1,
WBRE-TV,
1967.
"Guttersniping,"
mimeographed
reprint of editorial, June
Politics of
itself
—we
direction
Development
don't need Luzerne County, badly in need of
itself,
to advise us."
9
125
Northeastern Pennsylvania
in
some good
The Economic Development Council
emphatically denied that Flood was influencing
its activities,
claim-
ing that contacts with his office were routine, those any organization involved in obtaining a federal grant
would have with
its
congressman. Flood himself seemed unaware of the accusations. In late spring of 1967 the congressman was informed of the charges and that Mellody, Blier, and others had filed protests to
EDC's
with
designation
EDA's Middle-Atlantic Flood was moved
Robert Cox,
regional director, and the Washington to use his substantial
power
in
Washington
tion's access to federal agencies.
EDA
asking
letter
office.
The congressman wrote a
stern
people in Washington to warn Secretary of
Commerce Alexander Trowbridge and Economic Development
EDA
Assistant
Secretary for
Ross Davis of the consequences of tolerat-
ing further obstruction by the
consider any
to block the opposi-
Lackawanna group. Flood would
cooperation with Blier a personal affront. 10
That Flood was a member of the House Appropriations Subcommittee reviewing the Commerce Department budget and a cosponsor of
EDA's
that his warning
that he
enabling legislation were assurances enough
would not go unheeded. Flood, moreover, said
would "talk
to
Mellody and Brady."
After more than eighteen months of conflict, on June 25, 1967, the
Economic Development Council was designated
officially as
the development district organization for northeastern Pennsylvania.
The
The board
council formally reorganized using of directors
was expanded
who
futility of
9.
sional
interests.
And many
of
opposed EDC's expansion recognized the
further contravention and agreed to join the council.
Scranton Tribune, Sept.
10.
EDC
initially
guidelines.
to include representatives
from a wide variety of public and private those
EDA
4,
1967, p.
3.
from Flood to Francis Dooley, Director, Office of CongresRelations, Economic Development Administration, June 22, 1967, in
Letter
records.
126
Urban Regions
Policy Administration in
Unknown
"Efforts
or Dimly Perceived"
After two years of planning, reorganizing, pressuring, and comofficial
designation of
EDC
the regional
unemployment
rate fell
promising, the
On
July
1
lasted only five days.
below the minimum
6 percent required by the Public Works and Economic Develop-
ment Act. The Northeastern Pennsylvania Economic Development District was formally de-designated. Despite
de-designation by
its
EDA,
however, the council con-
tinued to be the regional development organization under the
Appalachian and State Department of Commerce redevelopment programs. The
EDA
had given the council a technical assistance
which formal designation was not required, to carry on planning, research, and coordination for economic recovery. grant, for
But the business and
who founded
civic leaders
the
EDC
had only
general conceptions about what functions the organization could
perform. They wanted
it
accelerate
to
industrial
development,
stimulate planning, assemble and analyze information, and promote
cooperation
among
a multitude of communities and organizations
involved in development
activities.
But the Economic Development
Council was a nonprofit corporation, financed by public and private funds.
It
had no
legal
powers to control development
and no formal authority
activities
relatively
few resources
—a budget
and
six professional staff
role
in
regional policy
to require coordination. It
had
of less than $100,000 a year
members. The problem of defining
making would have
what EDC's executive director
later
to be
called "an
its
resolved in
atmosphere of
creative tension."
The which
tension arose from the complex regional organization in
EDC
would have
to
operate.
While regional economic
development had been predominantly a local function in the 1950's,
by 1966 a myriad of public and
federal organizations were
all
and
competing for resources and influence.
The Pennsylvania Department Industrial
private, local, state,
of
Commerce,
Development Authority, and the
the Pennsylvania
State Planning
Board
Development
Politics of
in
127
Northeastern Pennsylvania
were working with local industrial development groups and community planning agencies to create local redevelopment programs.
The Commonwealth, moreover, formed a Department of Community Affairs to provide local governments with technical and financial aid and to coordinate municipal administrative efforts.
At
the federal level
and 1960's created agencies
specialized in particular aspects of
the .local level
at
planning.
new programs established during the 1950's scores of new commissions, authorities, and
Community Action
Model
councils and
Cities agencies
were created pursuant to the Economic Opportunity Act of 1964
and the Housing and Urban Development Act of 1966. Federal development of the Delaware River Basin generated the Tocks Regional Advisory Commission,
Island
planning
agency
included
that
two
a multicounty,
counties
of
tristate
northeastern
Pennsylvania.
The
EDC
board of directors believed that
it
could succeed only
with the cooperation of other public and private groups. In their overall
"The it
economic development program the
role of the Council
is
EDC
staff
explained:
seen primarily as catalytic
—
that
is,
should try to encourage actions of the most vitally interested
groups, but within a framework which will assure the
maximum
benefits to the District within the shortest period of time least
real
cost.
.
.
.
The
usurping no one's role;
its
District
and the
Organization should aim at
goal should be to supplement, not to
supplant."
As
a result,
basic research,
EDC's work was organized regional recreation
dustrial development, planning coordination, tion. Specific tasks,
into five categories:
and tourism promotion,
in-
and public informa-
however, were ultimately adjusted to targets
of opportunity, changing perceptions of the development problem,
and requests for assistance from other organizations. In conjunction with preparation of an overall economic development program required by
EDA,
of regional
manpower
the council undertook a series of special studies resources, labor
and production
capability,
tourism and recreation potential, and local manufacturing char-
128
Policy Administration in Urban Regions
Newspapers and
actcristics.
EDC's
publicize the
were used extensively
television
research studies, as were the council's
to
own
newsletter and circulars. Perhaps the most extensive efforts went
toward industrial development and promotion. Here, so as to avoid interorganizational conflict and political opposition, the council
was
careful not to impinge
on technical and
financial assistance
commerce and focused on activities
functions being performed by local chambers of
development groups. Instead,
industrial
it
would induce them to work together, to pool their advertising and promotion resources. In time the council was able to that
move
other areas of planning.
into
1967
In
it
initiated
joint
highway planning projects with county planning boards and
in
conjunction with public and private agencies assisted the Pennsyl-
vania Department of
Commerce
in preparing a state
Appalachian
Investment Program.
With the succession of a new executive the council expanded the scope of
its
director,
concern in
Donald Moyer, late
1969 and
Moyer placed much more emphasis on getting wider in EDC's activities. The became an intermediary among local groups sponsoring
early 1970.
individual
EDC
and organizational participation
development projects, the Appalachian Regional Commission, and the Pennsylvania
Bureau of
State
and Federal Economic Aid.
Similarly, the council offered to act as intermediary
U.S.
between the
Department of Commerce, which was promoting foreign
trade by manufacturers in depressed areas, and industries in northeastern Pennsylvania.
Moyer committed
the Susquehanna River Basin
EDC
to cooperating with
Study Committee and the State
Planning Board. The council attempted to take a stronger role
problems of education
in analyzing
levels in conjunction with state
Thus the over time.
and
direction It
had
sociopolitical
and
at the
primary and secondary
local school officials.
and scope of the council's
activities
to adjust continually to a changing
environment and adapt to the
pressures of a myriad of other specialized groups. to carve out
its
own
place, define
its
own
changed
economic
activities
The
EDC
and had
role without benefit of
Politics of
Development
in
the experience of predecessor organizations.
Few
other district
planning organizations existed in the nation on which pattern
Moyer work
its activities.
told his
"If the past
board of
efforts are either
perceived."
is
directors,
unknown
129
Northeastern Pennsylvania
it
could
the instructor for the future,"
"some of our most important
at the present time or only
dimly
CHAPTER 6
The Organizational Structure of Northeastern Pennsylvania
Organizations operate within a structural environment. They
must
establish
relationships
with
other organizations in order
and functions, exert
to define their roles
resources most effectively.
influence,
and
utilize their
The development planning agencies Economic Development Admin-
created with the assistance of the istration,
the Appalachian Regional Commission, the Office of
Economic Opportunity, Model Cities, and other federal programs all had to find a place within existing regional organizational strucUnderstanding the nature of regional organization
ture.
to understanding the
is
basic
weaknesses of the prescriptions of traditional
planning administration. Earlier in the
book
was argued that these prescriptions are
it
inadequate because they inaccurately describe regional organiza-
and urge reforms
tion
conform.
Now
it
is
to
which the structure cannot be made to
necessary to ask more searching questions.
What
are the characteristics of the structure of regional organiza-
tion?
Who
makes
decisions affecting the rate
regional development?
What
zations within a region
and direction of
are the relationships
among
organi-
and between regional organizations and
those outside?
Using northeastern Pennsylvania as a
specific
example, a de-
tailed analysis of its organizational structure leads to five
major
propositions: 1
.
The policy-making
structure
is
organizationally complex, plu-
131
Organizational Structure in Northeastern Pennsylvania ralistic,
fragmented, and decentralized.
Numerous informal and make
formal organizations in both the public and private sectors decisions that affect the rate
and direction of socioeconomic and
physical development. 2.
Control over resources and decision-making powers
jointed
is dis-
and dispersed, both organizationally and geographically,
over subsectors of the region. The control of investment funds, jobs, wages, salaries
and other forms of personal income, economic
factors of production, public goods
and is
and
services, social
directly productive capital, taxable property,
decentralized
the region.
among
the
and many others
numerous decision-making
Each organization
overhead
units within
controls relatively small portions of
the total resources.
The policy-making structure is open to external influence from both public and private organizations. The decisions of 3.
exogenous plants,
groups
and organizations
—headquarters
of
branch
resource suppliers, intermediate and final markets, state
government agencies, federal departments and agencies, parent organizations of local social and civic groups, and others
a
vital
4.
—have
impact on the rate and direction of regional development.
Performance of socioeconomic and
shared by decision-making
functions
is
Organizations in both the public
units.
and private sectors are involved
political
in nearly all substantive activities
affecting the region's development.
Few
activities in the
region
are performed exclusively in the public sector or in the private sector, or
by
distinctly separable "levels" of
development functions are shared. 5.
Influence
and power are shared,
numerous organizations within the ture. Policy evolves It
government. Regional
1
albeit
pluralistic
unevenly, by the
policy-making struc-
from interaction among specialized
emanates from organizational competition and 1.
Compare
System, Daniel
this analysis
interests.
conflict, rather
with those by Morton Grodzins, The American
Rand McNally, 1966); and Robert Wood, 1400 Governments (Cambridge: Harvard University Press, 1961) J.
Elazar, ed. (Chicago:
— 132
Policy Administration in Urban Regions
than by authoritative prescription through government hierarchy or a pyramidical socioeconomic "power Pluralism, Decentralized Control,
elite."
and the Openness of
the
Regional Structure
The
Private Sector
Regional structure private enterprise. is
composed
strongly influenced
is
The
by the organization of
private sector in northeastern Pennsylvania
of a multitude of establishments that
make
invest-
ment, consumption, production, and distribution decisions. The sector consists mainly of small firms, each employing relatively
small portions of the total labor force and each producing a small
proportion of total output. Decisions affecting the region's devel-
opment are made by
at least
25,000 establishments and by more
than 270,000 household units.
Although
its
omy," there
seven counties are classified as a "regional econ-
are, in reality, a multitude of open,
fragmented, and
overlapping markets: neighborhood markets, subcenter, and urban-
wide trading areas, metropolitan markets, and interregional trading centers. Hazleton, in Luzerne, serves as a retail
and wholesale
trading subcenter for the southern section of the county, as well as for parts of rural
Carbon County. Wilkes-Barre
also serves
Luzerne and shares part of the Lackawanna County market with Scranton. Both Wilkes-Barre and Scranton are subregional market centers for parts of rural
Stroudsburg in that county
Monroe
is
Wayne, Monroe, and Pike counties. a retail and wholesale subcenter for
and parts of Pike. Hancock and Port
in the southern tier of
New
York,
attract
Jervis, located
consumers of larger
nondurable items from rural northeastern Pennsylvania. Journey-to-work patterns within the region ity of local
labor markets. In
some
areas
up
reflect the
to
complex-
45 percent of the
workers are employed outside of the county of their residence.
Workers
living
outside
the
region
commute
into
northeastern
Pennsylvania, and local residents travel to jobs located outside
133
Organizational Structure in Northeastern Pennsylvania to larger metropolitan centers in
delphia,
New
York,
New
Jersey, Phila-
and Harrisburg. extent of organizational pluralism, decentralization, and
The
fragmentation within northeastern Pennsylvania
by the
size of
made
is
evident
employment, investment, and production capacity.
Nearly 72 percent of the business establishments employ
less
than
seven people. Slightly more than half employ three workers or less.
In relatively few subareas of the region does any single
industry generate
more than 2 percent
received by local residents.
Some regional
firms, of course,
do make a
development. Nearly
Company, Illinois.
relatively larger
140 establishments
and international corporations:
Eberhard
impact on
(less
Faber,
RCA,
American Tobacco,
than
1
the Trane
and
Owens
Their investment, employment, and production decisions,
however, are made primarily on the basis of extraregional national and international financial
number
income
more than 250 workers. These tend
percent of the total) employ to be national
of the personal
2
and technological
criteria:
factors.
of firms, especially in the apparel, textile, electronic,
equipment industries
in northeastern Pennsylvania,
dependent on defense contracts, federal and
moreover, are
state
procurements
of goods and services, and government subcontracts.
20 percent
of total federal expenditures
made
A
and
More than
in northeastern
Pennsylvania in 1967 were in the form of contracts and procurements, the
size, type,
and
stability of
which change from year to
year with changing political and economic factors determined at the national level.
Further, the economic decisions of the private establishments are not
made
entirely
under the control of the organizations ostensibly making
them.
entirely
Countervailing
on the
basis of
power
is
market
exercised
criteria.
Nor
are they
by numerous labor
2. Commonwealth of Pennsylvania, Department of Internal Affairs, Pennsylvania's Income and Population by County, 1929-1963 (Harrisburg:
Commonwealth
of Pennsylvania, 1965).
134
Policy Administration in Urban Regions
unions. Nearly every major occupation group
and nationally
local
affiliated
is
organized into
labor unions, fifty-eight of which
Wilkes-Barre. They attempt to influence decisions wage rates, working conditions, employment, and quality of goods and services. Individual labor unions and central labor councils wield varying amounts of political power that affect the outcome of both public and private development policies.
have
offices in
concerning
The
Public Sector
Control over development resources and regional policy making is
further dispersed
among
federal
and
state agencies, departments,
commissions and administrations, county governments, local municipalities,
semi-independent authorities, independent school boards,
and county school make, and
districts.
These public organizations
indirectly influence,
directly
decisions shaping the rate
and
direction of regional growth, such as the provision and mainte-
nance of social overhead
capital, operating expenditures for a
variety of public goods
and
services, the
from other government agencies and private
services
wide
purchase of goods and establish-
ments, employment of professional and nonprofessional labor, and the regulation of public and private activities.
The Structure
of
Exogenous Influence
Federal agencies had a pervasive impact on socioeconomic and physical
development in northeastern Pennsylvania during the
1960's. In
1967 nearly one hundred federal programs operated
within the region, administered by
more than two dozen
federal
departments and commissions, as well as their component bureaus, offices,
and
more than half a billion dollars seven-county area more than eighteen times
divisions. Outlays of
were made in the
—
amount spent by all municipal governments and thirty times that expended by county governments in 1965. Federal expenditures were more than double that of state agencies. Federal agencies spent nearly $53 million for program administration and wages, including direct payments to military and civilian emthe
135
Organizational Structure in Northeastern Pennsylvania
ployees
and
services
administrative
for
by
supplied
private
least twenty-five major federal programs directly
establishments. At increased income in northeastern Pennsylvania through transfer
payments and
social welfare assistance.
They included commodity
school lunch, and food stamp programs of Agriculture. Health, EducaDepartment administered by the tion and Welfare, the Veterans Administration, and the Civil distribution programs,
Service
Commission provided aid
assistance,
to dependent children,
community health
came
old age
compensation to individuals. Aid
pension payments, and
disability
health assistance
districts,
payments, unemployment insurance,
security
social
school
to
assistance,
and veterans
into the region through state and local
agencies.
Private organizations, state government agencies, business
and
manufacturing establishments, local governments, municipal authorities, special districts,
and individuals received assistance from
a large number of federal agencies. Technical assistance grants
and research and planning aid came from the Farmers ministration, the
Department of
Interior, the
Home Ad-
Appalachian Regional
Commission, the Urban Renewal Administration, the Public Health Service,
and a myriad of other federal sources for
activities
rang-
ing from natural resource research, public works planning, and
urban renewal programing to medical research and community health
program development.
While the impact of federal is
pervasive, administration
"the federal government"
is
is
activities
on regional development
not monolithic. Indeed, to speak of
to distort
and simplify
its
structure.
Federal decisions are not centrally controlled, nor organizationor temporally coordinated. Each of the nearly one
ally, spatially,
hundred programs in operation
in northeastern Pennsylvania
ema-
nates from a distinct decision-making unit. Federal policy for each
program has been developed
in
response to different national
problems, at different periods of time, by different legislators and administrators.
Each has
its
Each agency has
own
its
own
set of legislative directives.
administrative objectives
and
definition of
its
136
Policy Administration in Urban Regions
Each
mission.
own is
as its
own
decision-making
regulations, guidelines,
and
tools for
Each has its implementation. Each criteria.
involved in a complex network of organizational interrelation-
ships with other federal agencies, state bureaus, divisions, and
commissions, local governments, private organizations, and social groups.
The
pluralism,
decentralization,
disjointed
control
over
re-
sources, fragmented influence, shared performance of functions,
and openness of the policy-making system
arise
from complex
networks of delegated responsibilities and discretionary powers. Agencies in one department have administrative control or review
power over
parts of the programs of others.
For one agency
to
operate a program at the regional level that requires cooperation
or specialized inputs from another, an interagency agreement or
memorandum Urban and
of understanding
must be negotiated.
regional development programs, being both areally
oriented and multipurpose,
are entangled in intricate
interagency delegation and coordination arrangements.
Economic Development Administration,
for instance,
webs of
When
the
provided
business loans to private firms the applications had to be cleared
by the Small Business Administration. als
and perfomed a
study of the little
credit investigation
company submitting
control over the time
the criteria
the studies technical
it
SBA
SBA
reviewed the propos-
and market
the loan applications.
feasibility
EDA
had
took to review the applications,
used in the review process, or the personnel doing
and making
assistance
final
recommendations. Supplementary
programs involving manpower
training,
the other hand, were reviewed by the Department of Labor's
on
Man-
power Development Training staff. If EDA public works grants and loans involved sewerage or community facilities, applications had to be processed through the Community Facilities Administration of the Department of Housing and Urban Development.
The Farmers Home Administration reviewed
EDA
grants to rural areas.
grants to municipalities for waste disposal projects were
approved by the Secretary of Health, Education and Welfare. In
137
Organizational Structure in Northeastern Pennsylvania
EDA
addition,
sponsibilties
had interagency agreements or coordinating rewith the Bureau of the Budget on sewer-project fund-
Education and Welfare on hospital and educational grants; and the Bureau of Public Roads of the Depart-
ing; Health, facilities
ment of Transportation on highway-related of Economic Opportunity, which provided
The
decisions.
Office
assistance to county-
wide antipoverty agencies during the 1960's, delegated the administration of of Labor;
its
Neighborhood Youth Corps
its
to the
Department
Adult Basic Education programs to the Department
of Health, Education
and Welfare;
its
programs
rural loan
to the
Department of Agriculture. The Small Business Administration implemented OEO's loan assistance programs;
HEW
controlled
work experience development projects. The director of OEO could make decisions only with the joint approval of the heads of 3
its
the delegate agencies. Ironically, attempts to coordinate decision
making led and
to increased organizational fragmentation, pluralism,
decentralization.
The U.S. Department
of
Commerce was
represented on fifteen interagency coordinating committees con-
cerned with economic development. The Department of Housing
and Urban Development had interagency agreements, formal understandings,
and mandated coordinating arrangements with
forty-one other federal agencies. It additional formal
was a member of
and informal interagency committees,
and task forces attempting
to
thirty-one councils,
coordinate urban and regional
development programs. 4 The degree to which these administrative arrangements impinge on the decision-making
agency
is
variable.
ability of
any single
While some coordinating committees and task
forces require a great deal of
manpower, agency
interaction,
and
Nixon administration removed the Job Corps and program from OEO control and delegated them to the Department of Labor and HEW respectively, leaving the poverty agency managing only the Community Action program. In 1972 the administration began dismantling OEO altogether, vesting functions in delegate agencies. 4. See U.S. Congress, Senate Committee on Government Operations, Creative Federalism, Hearings before the Subcommittee on Intergovernmental Relations, 89th Cong., 2d sess., 1966, pt. I, pp. 138-139 and passim. 3.
the
In early 1969 the
Head
Start
138
Policy Administration in Urban Regions
compromise, others are only "paper organizations" that meet per-
and Budget Bureau demands
functorily to satisfy congressional for "coordination."
Fragmentation of control tional.
distributed thinly over tions
is
geographical as well as organiza-
Federal expenditures are dispersed throughout the region,
in
the
numerous
local
Table 1). Only defense spending counties and
governments and organiza-
seven counties of northeastern Pennsylvania
HEW
in
(see
Lackawanna and Monroe
expenditures in urban centers are relatively
concentrated. While federal agencies, departments, and commissions have a pervasive impact federal programs
on regional development
decisions,
are often merely large rather than powerful.
Resources are not concerted. Their impact
is
not directed.
In addition to the programs of federal agencies and depart-
ments, another complex set of influences on regional development
emanates from the sions, fiscal
activities
of departments, agencies, commis-
and authorities of the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania. In 1967, state agencies spent nearly a quarter of a billion dollars
in northeastern Pennsylvania.
Money came
highway construction, maintenance, and
into the region for
repair, educational assis-
tance programs, and public works. Like the federal agencies, state
government units
influence, directly
and
indirectly, a
wide spectrum
of regional activities. Flood control, stream clearance, park and
open space
acquisition,
housing and redevelopment, mines and
mineral industries, and port development are aided by the depart-
ments of Agriculture, Forests and Waters, Labor and Industry,
Mines and Minerals, Urban
Affairs,
and Highways. Transfer pay-
ments flow into the region from the departments of Labor and Industry, Military Affairs, Firemen's Relief
Motor Fund and
new
the Liquid Fuel
building construction
state-aided institutions
ments to the region's 5.
and Pension Fund,
Tax Fund. The
state invested in
and renovation of state-owned and
and made substantial wage and salary pay-
residents. 5
See Commonwealth of Pennsylvania, Governor's Office of Administra-
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