Subj: LeeLibertarians< soil & water 
Date: 1/23/2007 10:55:44 AM Eastern Standard Time 
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] 
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED] 

News-Press Forum Opinion Elections Soil and Water                     
Submitted by Kim Hawk, Lee  Soil and Water Board member, Seat 5 1-13-07

Time line

Nov ‘04  Jack Tanner, first registered Libertarian elected in Lee County 
history-129,000 votes

Jan ‘05 to June ‘06 Jack is unable to reduce wasteful spending.

July ‘06 Tom Clark runs for Seat 3 against incumbent Mark Smith.  Kim Hawk 
runs unopposed for Seat 5.

Nov ‘06 Tom Wins.  First Libertarian majority on an elected board in Lee 
County.

Jan ‘07  Jack e-mails agenda to interested agencies

1-11-07 New Board votes 3 - 2 to eliminate wasteful spending

1-11-07 6:30 A.M.  Thursday morning was clear and cold.  I felt nervous and 
excited about my first meeting as an elected Lee County politician.  The first 
indication of something special was the sign at the entrance to the old 
Twistee Treat building on Hancock near 41 indicating our meeting had been moved 
to a 
larger room.

Jack had e-mailed the agenda and invited media.  Everyone knew what was 
likely to happen.  Bureaucrats began to file into the room.  Federal, state, 
county 
and city managers of agriculture, utilities, water and parks departments took 
their seats.  Jack had never seen anything like it.  Two years ago he couldn’
t get board members to attend.  The air was electric.  I could feel the 
tension in the room.  Our two employees Nik and Garry were there.  Mark, the 
board 
member unseated by Tom was there with a scowl on his face.  No media were 
present.  Cookies and doughnuts sat largely untouched in the center of the 
table.  
My stomach was in a knot.  I didn't know if I could do what I came to do.  

Chairman Jack Tanner quickly moved through the agenda until he opened the 
floor to discuss the termination of the mobile irrigation laboratory and our 
two 
employees.  The next 45 minutes or so were consumed by a series of earnest and 
emotional pleas by the government managers.  Phrases like “Millions of 
gallons wasted” and “Billions of gallons saved” were used.  Papers were pushed 
around with columns, charts and graphs.  A case was sited in which an elderly, 
feeble, poor woman, unable to manage her lawn sprinklers, was “saved” by our 
wonderful program.           

The process was disturbingly familiar as I have witnessed this play acted out 
in many state, county and city boardrooms over the years.  Politicians eager 
to be reelected are unable or unwilling to stand up to intimidation and 
embarrassment that comes with a difficult or unpopular decision.       

The Cape Coral utilities manager was impressive and forceful.  At one point 
he said “Citizens don’t protect themselves so we have to.”  He concluded “You 
may as well keep this program because if you donut we will find a way to 
continue and the tax payers wont save a dime.”

I have heard this threat before.  For years myself and a small and determined 
alliance have successfully fought off a county sales tax.  Lee County 
officials repeatedly scolded us saying “If you kill this tax well just find 
another 
way to raise taxes.”  Ever since I was a child, threats and intimidation have 
provided me with the energy and determination do to the opposite and face the 
consequences.

I waited until everyone had their say.  I started by telling a familiar but 
fictional story.  I said “Imagine County police coming to my home and taking my 
wife to jail in handcuffs because I failed to pay a fine for making 
unnecessary trips in my car and wasting gasoline.  Imagine her living with a 
criminal 
record caused by a law she didn't know existed.”  I went on “We donut make 
criminals out of people who waste gasoline because we have a relatively free 
market in gasoline.  We do make criminals out of people who waste water because 
we 
donut have a free market in water distribution.”

I turned my attention to both our employees and said “I feel sad that I am 
about to vote to end your jobs but I am going to do what I believe is right, 
not 
what I think is nice.”

I now know how uncomfortable and awkward it feels to look government workers 
in the eye and tell them “You're fired.”  I felt sad for the two men whose 
income was lost and at the same time I felt exhilarated thinking of the 
thousands of taxpayers who will keep more of their own money.

I looked around the room.  Some looked bewildered.  Some looked shocked.  Our 
employees, Nik and Garry were visibly angry.  Garry was muttering something 
I'm glad I couldn't hear.  Jack called for a vote.  Ron Edenfield brusquely 
pushed back his chair and stood announcing “Let the record show I don’t have 
time for this Bullshit!”  Ron walked out.  Jack was unfazed.  Paul Dinger voted 
to keep the service saying “I don’t want to throw the baby out with the bath 
water.”  Jack, Tom and I voted to end the program.

The government managers were mumbling to each other.  I heard phrases like “
this is unbelievable!”  They stayed behind to discuss their next move.  

I felt many conflicting emotions on my way out.  As the day wore on I 
gradually realized that this was a dream come true.  I am 49 years old.  For 35 
years 
I have complained about our intrusive and expensive government.  Now I am 
government and I am doing something about it.  I have found my nirvana.  Jack, 
Tom and I will do whatever we can to prevent other agencies from thwarting our 
attempts to reduce government waste and regulation.  We owe this to the 
taxpayers and ourselves. 

I believe this event should be celebrated as the historic and encouraging 
story that it is, not as a promotion of the Libertarian Party but as a 
fundamental shift of political thought.  Libertarianism is a philosophy and a 
way of 
being, not just a party name.  Ninety-seven years of unchecked government 
growth 
have given us a nine trillion dollar debt, a failing government school system, 
an endless war on drugs, bankrupt pension schemes and unaffordable health and 
home insurance.  All of this is financed by taxes which have increased from 10
% of the average workers income in 1914 to 50% in 2007.  Radical change is 
long overdue.  Ronald Reagan once said “Government is not the solution to our 
problems, government is the problem.” He implied what I believe. We are the 
solution.




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