Jefferson County’s
Hierarchy of Needs
by Scott Hogenson
Had anyone told me
last year that I’d be writing about Maslow’s Hierarchy of Needs as it pertains
to Jefferson County politics, I would have told them they’re nuts. But having
made a passing reference to it a few weeks ago, and having listened to local
politicians and community commentators over the past few weeks, I realized I had hit on something.
Abraham Maslow was an American psychologist
who left us too soon. He was only 62 when he died in 1970 but he left behind a
volume of work that merits the study of scholars in developmental psychology,
sociology, and management training to this day. Chief among his theories is his
Hierarchy of Needs, which resulted from his research into
human motivation and curiosity.
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Albert Maslow |
During the course of
his research, Maslow identified stages through which humans pass en route
to reaching their full potential and what we need to get there. Much of
Maslow’s theory laid out the basic things humans need before they can achieve
their full potential - self-actualization, as he described it. Some of these needs
include self-esteem, social belonging and a measure of safety and security. But
the necessary bedrock which precedes all other needs is what Maslow called
physiological needs. These are the things necessary to human survival. Without
them we fail to function.
Maslow broke down
these physiological needs into a handful of necessities: air to breath, water
to drink, food to eat, and shelter from the elements, along with sex, sleep and
clothing. Once these needs have been achieved, we can move to the next level of
Maslow’s hierarchy, which is safety. This involves our personal security, as
well as our emotional and financial security, and our health and well being.
One stage in Maslow’s
hierarchy leads to the next. Leapfrogging
doesn’t work. It does no good to perceive a sense of social belonging, which
Maslow identifies as necessary to self-actualization, if one hasn’t first
attained proper shelter and security. It is at this point that we can see a
nexus between the needs of human beings as individuals - little different from
our cave dwelling ancestors - and the communities we inhabit in the 21st
century.
As the contest for the
vacant seat on the Jefferson County Board of Commissioners takes shape we can
see how candidates are applying Maslow’s theory, and whether they are applying
it properly or improperly, particularly on the issue of infrastructure.
Democrat Craig Durgan and Republican Jon Cooke are pounding the podium for
sewer services in Port Hadlock and other areas of the county, while Democrats
Greg Brotherton and Ryan McAllister are expending more time extolling the
virtues of high-speed Internet.
Maslow would probably
say both are good things, just as he said shelter and acceptance into social
settings are good things. But he was quite specific in determining which must
precede which. That is the question for Jefferson County voters in choosing
among candidates.
Just as with
individuals, the goal of reaching full potential can also be charted among
communities through Maslow’s Hierarchy. Before Jefferson County can achieve its
full potential, it must maneuver through the stages of Maslow’s theory,
demonstrated by how it conducts itself as a civil society. We must first
establish a foundation for the civic equivalent of physiological and safety
needs, followed by fulfillment of social belonging and esteem before reaching
that stage of self-actualization - Jefferson County’s full potential.
Jefferson County has
largely met the physiological needs of its citizens but can the same be said
for safety and financial security? It’s an open question depending on where one
lives. But ask the storekeeper or
restaurateur in Port Hadlock, or the landowner wanting to build apartments to
provide much needed rental housing: does reaching financial security and their
full potential depend more on their Internet service or their sewer service?
You’ll likely find greater need for the latter than the former.
As we contemplate the
contenders for the Board of County Commissioners we would do well to consider
Jefferson County's Hierarchy of Needs and which candidates are prepared to meet
them. There are no shortcuts to self-actualization and anyone who claims
otherwise is ignoring the settled science of Abraham Maslow.
Scott Hogenson lives
in Jefferson County.
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