and assemblyman, good to have you. thank you for having me back, neil. neil: let me ask you a little about what prompted this. you ve been pretty vocal on this long before a lot of your colleagues and so you ve been warning this day would be coming. it s coming in droves and so are migrants. where do you think this goes? yeah, i think this is a clear case of an administrative crisis. you know, we have administrative failures from the bottom up and we need to stop blaming and start building capacity and those are the five words i have for the mayor and the white house, stop blaming and start building capacity. when i say capacity, neil, i don t mean more outsourcing or contracting out, government functions to nonprofits. i m talking about public administrative ability to keep everyone safe in our communities. neil: that s easier said than done, right? i mean, you always hear from the mayor there s no money
(Archived document, may contain errors) 5/17/95 247 TIME FOR NEW MANAGEMENT AT AMERICA'S TROUBLED PUBLIC HOUSING PROJECTS (Updating Backgrounder No. 1024, "Improving America's Housing by Shutting Down HUD," March 16, 1995.)
This article outlines the significance of the decentralisation reforms, which turned the dual federation of India into a multi-tier system, mandating systemic outcomes in democracy, accountability, local economic development, and social justice. It also examines how the grand design to strengthen the process of horizontal equity at the local level failed and probes into the