For 10 seconds, consider selling a batch of state parks. Or consolidating rural school districts into regional units. Or turning off every other streetlight, all over the state.
Ideas that normally would have been discarded out of hand -- or passed around the State Office Building for staff amusement -- are suddenly worth at least 10 seconds of lawmakers' time.
That's what happens when already-strained "normal" gives way to the worst financial distress in state and local governments in 25 years. And when state politicians follow the lead of President-elect Barack Obama and get serious about using the Internet to better connect citizens with government.
With the new year and the new legislative session, which convenes Tuesday, has dawned new receptivity in state and local governments for even wild and crazy ideas to save money and/or stimulate the economy. The Minnesota House is inviting such input at www.house.mn, or by phone: greater Minnesota: 1-800-685-8907, metro area: 651-297-8185.
Don't be shy. No idea is too far-fetched to float. I can attest that plenty of interesting stuff is out there. It will do more good in the House's e-mail box than in mine. (Permit a word to the fellow who recently suggested to me that Minneapolis and St. Paul should merge: I'm sorry I laughed out loud.)
A $5.5 billion state budget deficit in 2010-11 (I'm counting inflation on both sides of the ledger) ought to open at least some government minds to heretofore unimagined or unimaginable possibilities. And to the reconsideration of some previously discarded ones -- even by the people who did the discarding.
For example: Expansion of gambling was judged a bad idea only a few years ago, for sound reasons. But will those reasons still seem so compelling if the alternative is Medicaid cuts that shut down a quarter of the state's nursing homes? That's a hypothetical Hobson's choice, but in this environment, not an implausible one.
The House's effort to collect creative alternatives from average Minnesotans is a bid to avert sour dilemmas like that one at session's end.