A Strong Town only builds what it can afford to maintain, and only makes promises it can afford to keep.
Isaiah Paget
Here’s how it works: a city builds new infrastructure. That development brings in some quick revenue. It looks like a win. But the problem is, the long-term cost of maintaining all that infrastructure is far greater than the revenue it generates. And when those bills come due, the city doesn’t have the money. So it approves more new development on the edge of town to get another hit of short-term cash. And the cycle repeats.
It’s called a Ponzi scheme because it only works as long as you keep growing. But eventually, the whole system starts to crack.
If a city consistently spends more than it brings in, it's on a path to insolvency. We don't want our shelter, our water, and transportation to be at the whim of provincial or federal dollars.
When deciding how to steward city finances, Local leaders should ask: What investments will make our place stronger, more resilient, and more livable for the people who are already here? Outside institutions, like bond rating agencies or federal grant programs, often push cities toward growth, expansion, and flashy projects, even when these things don’t serve the people who actually live in the community. The bottom line is this: financial decisions should reflect the values and priorities of the community, not the incentives of outside systems.