Before we go any further, let me ask you something quietly, honestly.
Have you ever sat in a folding chair at a community meeting, waited your turn at the microphone, chosen your words carefully, and walked back to your seat knowing nothing would change?
Not because you didn’t speak clearly.
Not because your concern wasn’t valid.
But because you’ve been here before.
If that feeling is familiar, you’re not being cynical.
You’re remembering.
In Westchester, we are very good at listening sessions. We are good at sign-in sheets, two-minute time limits, and thank-you statements that sound sincere in the moment. We are good at naming concerns publicly and resolving them privately, if at all.
And here’s the part that doesn’t get said out loud: when the same issues resurface year after year, that repetition is data.
Consider this. Across Westchester County, disparities in housing stability, school funding, environmental exposure, and policing outcomes have been documented repeatedly over the last decade. Reports are issued. Task forces are formed. Community feedback is collected. Yet many of the same neighborhoods, often Black, Brown, immigrant, and working-class, continue to experience higher rates of housing insecurity, lower per-pupil school investment, and more frequent police contact than their wealthier counterparts just miles away.
That’s not because no one spoke up.
It’s because speaking up wasn’t enough.
We’re often told to be patient. To trust the process. To understand that systems move slowly. But patience becomes something else when it’s consistently requested from the same communities, while relief arrives quickly elsewhere.
In some Westchester municipalities, infrastructure complaints are addressed within weeks. In others, residents wait years for basic repairs, traffic calming, or environmental remediation. That difference isn’t accidental. It reflects prioritization.
And prioritization always tells the truth.
When you leave a meeting, and nothing shifts, no timeline, no follow-up, no visible change, that non-movement is not neutral. It is information. It tells you what the system is willing to tolerate. It tells you whose discomfort is urgent and whose is manageable.
There’s a specific kind of exhaustion that comes from realizing you’re being asked to keep explaining harm instead of witnessing its correction. That exhaustion shows up in the body first: shallow breathing, tight shoulders, the decision not to attend the next meeting.
That’s not apathy.
That’s discernment developing in real time.
People begin to adjust. Not loudly. Not dramatically. They start watching more closely. They notice which issues get resolved quickly and which ones get “taken under advisement.” They remember who follows up after the meeting and who disappears once the room empties.
This is how trust erodes quietly.
Because trust doesn’t require perfection.
It requires movement.
When nothing changes after something is clearly named, the message received isn’t neutrality, it’s acceptability. And what remains uncorrected becomes part of the culture, whether anyone intends it to or not.
This is why attention matters. Not the viral kind. The steady kind.
Pay attention to what actually shifts after feedback is offered.
Pay attention to how long it takes for correction to occur.
Pay attention to which voices prompt action and which are thanked for their patience.
Those patterns will tell you more than any year-end report ever could.
This column isn’t here to shame people for showing up. Showing up matters. But it’s also here to name the moment when showing up stops being enough and when noticing becomes the next form of power.
If you walked out of a room knowing you did your part and the system didn’t do its own, you’re not being negative.
You’re paying attention.
And attention, when sustained, shared, and trusted, is how accountability eventually finds its way into spaces that once resisted it.
If you felt that, you’re not wrong.
You were paying attention.














