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until 4 o'clock in the afternoon, and then all of the busi-
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ness had not been transacted, and that's a long time for
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the Board of Public Works to meet. We are thinking now
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of having two meetings a month, but I remember back in the
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early Forties and the early Fifties a Board of Public
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Works meeting lasted maybe an hour, an hour and a half,
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or two hours, but six hours it requires now to dispose of
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the work of the Board of Public Works, and a lot of it is
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trivial matters that should not come before the Board of
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Public Works. I don't know, I don't have a concrete plan
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to submit to you, I could do it, but I didn't come with
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any concrete plan, but my experience on the Board of Pub-
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lic Works, I have been on the Board since 1938 with an
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exception of maybe about three and a half years — 1939,
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I have been a member of the Board of Public Works, and
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that experience leads me to say that there should be some
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reorganization of the Board of Public Works.
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JUDGE ADKINS: You do feel that —
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GOVERNOR TAWES: Now, I do not have a concrete
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plan to propose at this time. I am just saying it needs
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reorganizing.
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