New County Movement Threatens Establishment (Part I)
Citizens in Washington State Work to
Reestablish Democratic Government 
By Paul Clark 
[email protected]
Special to The Libertarian Enterprise
         We live in 
the era of big government: huge federal government, big 
state government, even big local governments. Citizens in Washington 
state, however, are using a provision in the state constitution to 
reign in government and bring it back closer to the people.
         They are 
seceding from their counties, and forming new counties 
within the confines of the old parent counties.
         Citizens 
committees to form new counties have sprung up across the 
state and are spreading like wildfire.  There are nine new counties 
being proposed in Washington.  Four of them have achieved signatures 
of the majority of voters within their jurisdiction, which is required 
to break away.  Five others are still collecting signatures but seem 
poised to quickly achieve the required number.
         Cedar, 
Skykomish and Freedom counties are being created out of 
King and Snohomish around Seattle.  On the Canadian border, Pioneer 
County is being created out of Whatcom County. [SEE MAP] The five 
others are River (near Vancouver) Puget Sound, West Seattle, Vashon 
(near Seattle), and Liberty County (out of Grant County in central 
Washington).
         Why are 
they seceding?  Lois Gustafson, president of Cedar County 
Committee explains that the movement to create new counties is simply, 
"To bring the government close to the people."  Joe Ahrend of Citizens 
for River County says that "taxes are out of control; every time 
someone wants to do something with their land it seems there's some 
endangered bug on it.  We have no say on how money is spent, finally 
we said enough is enough." Arny Hansen of Skykomish County Committee 
says the movement is about "representation, local control, less 
bureaucracy, more responsive officials, and smaller government."
         In the 
view of those who are leading the movement the existing 
county governments have become too distant, too bureaucratic, too 
large, too meddlesome, too entrenched, and have forgotten that local 
officials are supposed to serve the people rather than other 
bureaucracies in Olympia and Washington, DC.
         Many of 
the issues that have brought this movement into being 
involve restriction on development and use of private property. 
Leaders say they plan to eliminate most of the local regulations. 
Another issue which has thrown the establishment into panic is the 
statement of the new county leaders that they intend to reassert local 
control over things like law enforcement and education, which have 
come increasingly under control of state and federal government.  The 
mission statement of Citizens for River County, for example, says that 
the new county will accept no federal or state education funds.  
Rather than trying to maintain an expensive public school bureaucracy 
they say they will actually encourage alternatives like home 
schooling.
Secession As Check On Government
         It has been 
said that the ultimate voting power is the power to 
vote with your feet.  When governments become too burdensome people 
leave their jurisdiction.  To stem the loss of revenue government then 
either must become less burdensome, or extend its jurisdiction to make 
it impractical for anyone to leave.  This being true, the easier it is 
to leave a government's jurisdiction the less burdensome it can be.  
The ultimate extension of this principle is the ability for small 
communities to leave a government's jurisdiction without having to 
move geographically. As one would expect, the political establishment 
in Washington does not look favorably on these movements, but 
supporters are using a provision of the Washington constitution which 
seems to allow for the creation of new counties on fairly easy terms. 
Article 11, section 3 of the Washington constitution reads:
             
    New Counties.  No new counties shall be established
    which shall reduce any county to a population less than
    four thousand (4,000), nor shall a new county be formed
    containing a less population than two thousand (2,000).  
    There shall be no territory stricken from any county 
    unless a majority of the voters living in such 
    territory shall petition therefore and then only under 
    such conditions as may be prescribed by general law 
    applicable to the whole state.
         What is unique 
about this provision is that unlike many 
constitutions which require the permission of the old county in order 
to create a new one; here, all that is required is a petition by a 
majority of voters in the territory to form the new county.
         Theoretically, 
if you are not happy with the way your local 
government is running things, all you have to do is get together with 
a couple thousand of your neighbors, and you can secede and start your 
own county.  It is never quite as easy as that.  The political 
establishment in the state has being doing everything it can to 
prevent the formation of new counties. 
Paul Clark [email protected] 
holds a doctorate in Political 
Philosophy.  He has been active in Washington politics for over ten 
years.  He is former director of Federation for American Afghan Action 
which sought to get effective military aid to the Afghan resistance.  
He is also a former Marine NCO and veteran of the Gulf War.  He is 
currently Director of Coalition for Local Sovereignty, a group that 
works to return political power to local communities.