American Societal Changes Affect Municipal Public Services

December 1, 2015, Department, by Roger L. Kemp, Ph.D., ICMA-CM

Widespread societal changes in the United States are having a dramatic impact on municipal public services provided by our cities to their citizens, including parks and recreation.Widespread societal changes in the United States are having a dramatic impact on the types and levels of municipal public services provided in recent years by our cities to their citizens. This includes park and recreation offerings, which often involve many facets of public life, including feeding programs, health and wellness services, child care, cultural services, planning and economic development. 

For our purposes here, societal changes currently affecting the dissemination of municipal public services, particularly those including and related to leisure services, may include:

  • More sophisticated computer hardware systems and software applications, coupled with ease of access through Internet-based interfaces
  • Wi-Fi, Geographic Information Systems (GIS) and Global Positioning Systems (GPS) being used to improve the level of public services, as well as enhance economic development
  • The influx of immigrants and an aging population creating new demands for public services
  • Recent economic downturns creating a need for additional revenues and stretching thin existing municipal coffers
  • Changing economics of American families, with many parents working full-time and little or no access to affordable child care

Impact on Public Services

These societal changes have influenced and impacted the services outlined below, among others. While not all of them fall under the parks and recreation umbrella, these services are all tangentially related to — and often have a direct impact on — community services offered or managed by park and recreation departments. The following bulleted lists capture just a handful of ways in which operations of these social services have been affected by the changes outlined above. 

Economic Development

  • GIS data, including environmental, income, population density and other census information, can help to stimulate economic development
  • Government funds may be made available to redevelop contaminated brownfield sites that must be cleaned before they can be revitalized

Financial Services

  • Adjustments to departmental user fees and charges can impact an agency’s bottom line
  • Many department managers, as well as their employees, can access their respective budgets online 24-7, throughout the year, to help facilitate better planning
  • Coordinated efforts to save funds from the current approved budget to offset a projected deficit for the coming fiscal year are now common, as are joint purchasing programs with other cities, counties, councils-of-government and even state governments

Health Services

  • More health-related educational programs are being provided to senior citizens
  • A greater number of physical fitness workshops are being provided to senior citizens
  • Many educational programs and services are being provided to reduce childhood obesity
  • Health-related literature and programmatic offerings are commonly being made available to citizens of all ages

Information Technology (IT)

  • State-of-the-art websites are increasingly commonplace to help citizens navigate all governmental departments, including management of registration for park and recreation events and services
  • In some cases, organization-wide departmental user committees are formed to ensure that all municipal departments and functions are being properly served from an IT standpoint
  • Social media is increasingly being used to announce events and information to the public

Parks and Recreation 

  • The expansion of feeding programs for both children and senior citizens
  • The increased amount of programmatic offerings demanded by citizens of all ages
  • The increased dissemination of health-related information, including encouraging healthier eating and exercise habits 
  • The placement and/or enlargement of computer rooms for community-wide Internet access

Planning and Building 

  • Some planning services, zoning maps and property assessment information may be obtained online, making it easier to envision new projects and compare services across municipalities 
  • Nationally, there has been some consolidation by states of the number of workforce training, tourism and planning districts (e.g., including regional councils of government)
  • Public officials are increasingly taking measures to revitalize their city’s main streets with wider sidewalks, more trees and vegetation, and benches for citizens to relax on — not just for waiting to catch the bus

Public Works

  • The increased usage of GPS during inclement weather conditions to properly respond to storms, snow-falls and water damage and to improve driving conditions
  • The increased use of online services enabling citizens to report the location of graffiti and/or pot-holes, that staff can promptly remove or repair

The Future

Public officials and local government employees have only limited control over the dynamics of their “working environment,” whether political, economic, social or legal. Politically, those dynamics are affected by the election of liberal, conservative or moderate municipal officials, or some combination thereof. In terms of economics, residents may be looking at hard times through decreased property values, or boom times when new businesses move in to increase the tax base. An aging population, fluctuating income levels and disparate access to education impacts the social environment. Finally, municipal policies and initiatives are bound by the rule of law, which may be cumbersome or time-consuming to modify or update.

Local public officials, including park and recreation leaders, must respond to these societal changes, even if they may have little or no direct control over them. It is better to recognize the shifting social landscape and plan ahead, than be forced to react in circumstances that are perhaps not ideal. 

Roger L. Kemp, Ph.D., ICMA-CM, is a Professor in the School of Public Service, Department of Public Management, at Henry Lee College, University of New Haven.