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professional. <br />I'd like to comment on John's township or structure. We did a thing with the League of <br />Women Voters and AAUW. We had four speakers on different kinds of government, <br />and the lady that came from Minnesota, that was on a township board - she had done a <br />lot of research on townships and found that townships are dying. Bigger entities are <br />swallowing them up. That was a shock to us because we were headed down this road <br />and found out there isn't anybody in front of you. There is an opportunity for every <br />community to have their own neighborhood board, and I'd like to call attention to the <br />Waimea Community Association, as a leader in that particular effort. And you'll say <br />they can't vote on things; they have all the power of the voting. Government comes to <br />the Waimea Community Association and says how shall we do this. Help us through <br />this. As my role as the head of the Chamber, government comes to me and said this is <br />what we want to do; how do we do this? We don't, necessarily, with a 150,000 people, <br />need a structure. It wouldn't be bad to have. I'm not against it. I'm not against <br />neighborhood boards. But I think the opportunity is there now. We don't have to have <br />that structure written in. That's the thing I see coming down the line in the Charter. <br />I'd like to call your attention to the fact that 2 years is probably the length of planning <br />stage that any business goes through these days. Five years is way long range <br />visioning. When you're talking about ten years, it'll be a whole different world. We <br />don't know what our population's going to be. In the census, I would guess a 150,000. <br />So, when we get up to half a million, then I think we start looking at different <br />government structures, and I pick that. number out of the air. But I think, right now, <br />there just aren't that many people that we need to have a structured community <br />government. The opportunity's there. Waimea Community Association is the <br />neighborhood board for this area. <br />SANTANGELO: But for a point of information, again, we're talking about City <br />Manager, because I think we could talk and use exactly what you said to build a case <br />for the opposite. But in this City Manager type thing, you said the top vote getter is <br />either the head of the council - <br />HERKES: I said I liked that. <br />SANTANGELO: So, we have single member districts which are very, very <br />different - <br />HERKES: Or 3-6. <br />SANTANGELO: As Waimea is different from Ka'u, in terms of a neighborhood <br />board, or something. I mean, they're very, very different single members. So, if <br />you're talking about a top vote getter, then we have nine single members and the top <br />vote getter would be an individual - <br />4 <br />