What do the cases of the NYS Watershed, NYC Transit Authority, and the pandemic say about the promise and possibilities of improving government administration? Are we able to fix some of the problems that sometimes arise in public administration? What are some of the obstacles to reform, and what are some of the ways these obstacles are overcome?
SOURCES:
File Hanlon_Watershed_Protection_to_Secure_Ecosystem(1).pdf (199.281 KB)
File How Politics and Bad Decisions Starved New York%u2019s Subways – The New York Times.pdf (161.68 KB)
File MTA_Expensive_Subway_Track_NYT.pdf (311.292 KB)
File 1_Shaky_COVID_Response_Christian_Science_Monitor.pdf (206.98 KB)
File Hu_Billon_Dollar_Investment_NYT_Jan_2018.pdf (2.256 MB)
File Rueb_NY_Gets_Water_NYT.pdf (2.579 MB)
1. Johnson, Chapters 1 and 2
Case 1: NYC Watershed
2. Emily Rueb, “How New York Gets Its Water,” New York Times, March 24, 2016, Available at: https://nyti.ms/2jRSmqf
3. Winnie Hu, A Billion Dollar Investment in New York’s Water, New York Times, January 18, 2018, Available at: https://nyti.ms/2Di5y19
4. Jeffrey W. Hanlon, “Watershed Protection to Secure Ecosystem Services: The New York City Watershed Agreement,” Case Studies in the Environment, 2017, p. 1-6.