Tuesday, April 14, 2026

Hickory 201: Note 7 - The Institutional Audit (Rewiring the Public Square)

The Institutional Audit: 

Fixing the Public Square for the People Who Do the Work

A town stays stable when the schools, the hospitals, and the safety nets are wired directly to the people who are actually out there making a living. Right now, in the North Carolina Piedmont and across the rest of the country in 2026, those systems have slipped into a state I call the "Maintenance of Decline". This means the institutions aren't there to help you anymore; they're just there to take what they can. They try to solve economic problems they weren't built for, and they fail to give a high-value workforce the tools they need to succeed. The Institutional Audit is a tool to find out where these systems are shifting their risks onto your shoulders. The goal is to stop wasting local taxes on things that don't work and start supporting the folks on a $100k Career Track














The Anatomy of the Wiring and the Trap of the Appearance of Progress

I call the schools and healthcare systems the "Secondary Circuit" because they are the wiring that keeps a community’s heart beating. In a healthy town, the jobs create the wealth, the houses store that wealth like a battery, and the Secondary Circuit makes sure the power gets where it needs to go without leaking. But when the people in charge start telling "Stained Glass narratives"—which are just polished stories meant to hide the fact that things are broken—the town starts losing its value.

The "Maintenance of Decline" is what happens when leadership lacks the grit to lead and chooses to focus on appearances instead of function. They spend money on pretty streetscapes and parks while the middle class is buried under a "Reality Debt". That debt is the price you pay when you have to use up your own time, health, and money just to make up for a system that is not doing its job.

The Secondary Circuit has moved from being a path for economic progress to a system of permanent maintenance. This shift fosters a service sector where our public institutions no longer help build local wealth but instead manage the daily needs of a population that is stuck in place. When a town focuses on investments in aesthetic "Amenity Theater" while the middle class is buried under debt pressure, it's a sign of the "Maintenance of Decline." The town is no longer building a ladder for the average citizen to climb, but is instead just focusing on keeping the community’s economy rolling for the upper class.











The Technical Gauntlet and the Cost of Your Time

One way these systems fail is through the "Technical Gauntlet". This is when an institution cuts its own costs by making you do the work. They make you handle the data entry, the scheduling, and the paperwork that they should be doing themselves. It is like they are trying to herd cats, but they are making you be the one to do it for free.

In our neck of the woods, the "Hickory Discount" is gone. The average household is facing a yearly deficit of about $18,840. When you add that financial hole to all the time you are wasting on the Technical Gauntlet, you are stuck just trying to survive. You cannot be a "Sovereign Producer" when the system is sucking you dry.

In a service sector economy, the citizen is slowly replaced by the "client." A client is someone who is managed by an institution, while a citizen is someone who owns a piece of the community. When a school or a hospital makes you navigate a Technical Gauntlet of digital portals and paperwork, they're treating you like a client to be processed. This is a clear signal that the local metabolism is no longer geared toward production. The Institutional Audit is the first step in moving the resident back from being a client of a failing system to being a Sovereign Producer who owns their own future.


The Shift in Healthcare: Why the Jobs Are Changing

We used to think healthcare was a safe place to work forever, but that is changing. We are seeing a "Labor Market Pivot" where layoffs are hitting hospitals just as hard as they hit factories. This is being driven by higher costs, broken supply chains, and the fact that federal grant money is drying up fast.















The Money Runs Out for Public Health

The North Carolina Department of Health and Human Services is a good example of this mess. In March 2025, they announced they had to cut 80 jobs because more than $100 million in federal funding just disappeared. The Trump administration cut $12 billion in grants, and that hit home hard. That $100 million loss does not just stay in a government office; it hurts local health departments, schools, and hospitals. They are cutting things like vaccine registries, disease monitoring, and mental health services.

The federal government is doing the same thing. The U.S. Department of Health and Human Services is cutting its staff from 82,000 down to 62,000. That means 3,500 jobs are gone at the FDA, 2,400 at the CDC, and 1,200 at the NIH.


Local Cuts and the Private Squeeze

This is not just a government problem; it is happening in private hospitals too. ECU Health in Greenville cut 31 jobs on March 31, 2026, because the money for their "Healthy Opportunities Pilots" ran out. Those programs were trying to fix housing and food issues, which are problems a hospital was not really built to handle in the first place.

Around Hickory, Frye Regional and Caldwell Memorial have been cutting staff because Medicaid is not paying what it used to. Frye Regional let go of more than 80 workers just to make their financial reports look better. This is a national trend, with 69 different hospital systems cutting jobs in 2025 alone.

Health System

Location

Staff Impact

Rationale

NCDHHS

North Carolina

80 positions cut

Loss of $100M federal grant funding.6

ECU Health

Greenville, NC

31 positions eliminated

Discontinuation of Healthy Opportunities Pilot.7

Duke University

Durham, NC

599 voluntary separations

Structural realignment in School of Medicine.10

Kaiser Permanente

Multi-state

216 administrative/IT roles

Cost-control and long-term efficiency.5

Optum (UnitedHealth)

New Jersey

572 employees

Termination of behavioral health services.5

PeaceHealth

Pacific Northwest

492 positions (multiple rounds)

Reduction of financial strain.5

Frye Regional (Conifer)

Hickory, NC

81 revenue cycle workers

Debt collection service termination.9


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How the Risk Moves from the System to Your Wallet

"Risk Transfer" is the name for what happens when the institutions that are supposed to support the community start handing the bill to the individual instead. When we perform an Institutional Audit, we can see exactly how the costs of our schools and hospitals are being shifted onto the shoulders of the regular resident. In 2026, we are seeing this most clearly in the health insurance market. This shift creates a "Reality Debt," which is the structural gap created when you have to spend your own time and money to fix problems the system was supposed to handle for you.


The Economics of Risk Transfer: Healthcare as a Financial Drain

When we look at the "Secondary Circuit," the most dangerous thing happening right now is a massive "Risk Transfer." This is where the costs of the system are shifted away from the institutions and dropped directly onto your personal ledger. You see this most clearly in the health insurance market, where the price hikes and the loss of government help are creating a "Reality Debt" that the middle class simply cannot afford to pay.


The 2026 Insurance Price Jump and the Risk Transfer

Mike Causey, the Insurance Commissioner for North Carolina, announced that the average rate for individual insurance is going up by 28.6% in 2026. This is more than 3 times higher than the increase folks saw in 2024. For some people in our state, the increase on their specific policy is as high as 36.4%.

Now, some people will tell you this is just like an energy company passing along the cost of fuel to the public to keep their profit margins steady. But what the insurance companies and hospitals are doing is actually more aggressive. They aren't just passing along a cost; they are transferring the entire risk of a broken system onto you. When a hospital loses a grant or labor costs go up, they don't just raise prices—they rewrite the rules of your coverage. They make you the shock absorber for their own structural failures.


The Permanent Patch and the Broken System

The "Affordable Care Act" is proving to be a system that cannot stand on its own two feet. Right now, it requires a "permanent patch" of government tax dollars just to keep the whole thing from falling apart. In 2026, the extra help that sustained the market is set to expire. That help was worth an average of $574 a month for nearly 900,000 people in North Carolina.

If Congress has to find new piles of tax money every single year just to fill a hole in the budget, you don't have a working system—you have a "Maintenance of Decline." That "patch" is just borrowed money that hides the true "Reality Debt" of the community. It doesn't fix the wiring; it just pays for a temporary fix while the debt builds exponentially in the background.


The Subsidy Cliff and the People Left Behind

Without those tax credits, about 157,000 North Carolinians will likely lose their insurance because it will be too expensive to keep. When you lose a $574 monthly credit at the same time your rates go up by 28.6%, your monthly bill more than doubles. This puts the "Sovereign Producer" in a hole. They have to decide if they want to pay for insurance or if they want to put that money into the equity of their home or their own job training.


















From Disease Care to Metabolic Sovereignty

The real failure of our current "Secondary Circuit" is that it is built for "disease care," not actual healthcare. There is more profit for a hospital in treating a chronic condition than there is in helping you avoid it. Issues like obesity and metabolic syndrome are the biggest "leaks" in our community metabolism, costing the country about $173 billion every year in direct medical costs.

A real Institutional Audit asks why we are spending billions to patch a broken insurance system instead of helping people take care of themselves. We need "Metabolic Sovereignty," where the individual is supported in maintaining their own health so they don't have to rely on a broken "Secondary Circuit." If we don't rewire the system to prioritize health over the management of disease, we will just keep paying for "permanent patches" until the money runs out completely.

This Risk Transfer is propped up by an unspoken subsidy where Medicaid and other government transfers act as de facto wage supplements for employers in the service sector. By providing just enough support to keep a worker viable, the system reveals its structural fragility. When federal funding cliffs occur—like the $100 million cut to the North Carolina Department of Health and Human Services—the mask is removed and the true cost of maintaining this underlayer is transferred directly to the household budget. The middle class is then forced to finance its own survival through tax debt because the institutions have stopped providing a path to real health options.


Insurance Category

Average Rate Increase (2026)

Max Increase Range

Individual ACA (NC)

28.6%

16.88% – 36.4% 11

Small Group ACA (NC)

12.66% – 17.5%

N/A 11

National Median

18%

N/A 12


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The Rise of Pharmacy Deserts and the Digital Burden

Another problem we are seeing is the emergence of "Pharmacy Deserts." As the big retail drugstores close down because of their own financial pressures, folks in places like Hickory are losing their local pharmacy. This forces you to rely on Amazon Pharmacy mail-order delivery or small independent shops just to get your medicine. This is a classic case of an institution offloading its work onto your shoulders. It is part of the "Technical Gauntlet" where the simple act of talking to a local pharmacist is replaced by the job of managing your own prescriptions across 10 different digital platforms. It is just more unpaid administrative work that you have to do for the system.


The School Merger: Fixing a Broken Machine

The plan to merge the 3 separate school systems in Catawba County—Hickory City, Newton-Conover, and the County schools—is the biggest structural decision facing the region. Right now, the system is suffering from a "Mechanical Failure." You have city schools that are hollowing out, seeing their enrollment drop while they still ask for new buildings. At the same time, the county schools are overcrowded and need more room.

The "Sovereign Audit" of this situation shows that the current setup is not working for the middle class. The city systems have largely turned into "Social Centers" that manage poverty rather than "Educational Facilities" that build labor capacity for a $100k Career Track. This has led to a "Waiver Culture," where parents are moving their kids out of the city districts just to get away from a system that is failing to produce results. This is a clear market signal that the city schools have lost their value as a "Housing Anchor."

A school system that operates as a social center rather than a training hub for the $100k Career Track is essentially a training ground for the service sector. These roles require a person to be present and compliant, but they don't offer any real leverage or a path to ownership. The Sovereign Audit must determine if the cost of running 3 separate school systems is being used to build real labor capacity or if it is just paying to maintain a permanent underlayer of support roles. If the schools aren't building producers, they're just acting as a maintenance hub for a system that has already failed.











The Fiscal Move: Capital Avoidance and Redundant Payrolls

The Catawba County Board of Commissioners is looking at a merger as a way to achieve "Capital Cost Avoidance." They have 1 system with empty seats and another system that needs to spend over $100 million on new construction. By merging everyone into 1 "Catawba Valley School District," the county can move students into the buildings we already have. This is an attempt to stop the "Reality Debt" from growing any larger.

The most obvious win in a merger is cutting the redundant administration. There is no logical reason for a single county to pay for the overhead of 3 separate bureaucracies. A Sovereign Audit would identify every duplicate office and every unnecessary "Amenity Theater" program and cut them to redirect that money into technical training and teacher pay.


The Risks: Replacing Three Small Problems with One Big One

While the merger fixes the problem of redundant bosses, it also carries its own "Administrative Tax." The cost of merging the digital infrastructures alone is projected at $8 million to $12 million over the first 3 years. There is also the risk of "Salary Equalization," where the new, larger district has to pay everyone at the highest possible rate, which can eat up all the savings you got from cutting the extra superintendents.

The real danger is that a merger might just create a larger version of the same broken machine. If the new "Catawba Valley School District" continues to act as a social safety net instead of a training hub for the $100k Career Track, it won't matter how many superintendents you cut. The "Sovereign Move" here is not just about combining the offices; it is about changing the engine. We have to make sure the school system is wired to support the local Labor Hub and the people who are actually out there producing value. If we don't, we are just merging 3 "Maintenance of Decline" systems into 1 giant one.

Merger Feature

Pro-Merger Position (County)

Anti-Merger Position (City)

Capital Impact

Avoids $100M in new construction by using empty city seats.18

Savings won't cover cost of a single new school; tech costs are $8-12M.20

Governance

Single 9-member board for streamlined oversight.19

Moves decision-making further from the community; loss of local voice.20

Staffing

No staff reductions for 2 years post-merger; full protections.19

Higher administrative salaries in larger systems offset job cuts.20

Enrollment

Fixes overcrowding in county while filling city schools.19

Redrawn lines and longer bus routes disrupt student-teacher ties.20


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The Sovereign Audit: A Way to Rewire the Machine

If you want to fix this, you have to do what I call a Sovereign Audit. This isn't just a standard review of the books or a boring look at the budget. It's a diagnostic tool used to see if a local institution is actually helping the town grow or if it’s just a leak in the tank. The goal is to separate the "Stained Glass narratives"—which are those shiny, fake stories leadership tells to hide a mess—from the functional support that a person on a $100k Career Track actually needs to succeed. You're trying to figure out if the "Sovereign Loop" of the community is getting stronger or if the machine is just breaking down.



The Sovereign Audit Checklist

A real audit of a local institution has to look at 4 main pillars to see if the system is working:

  1. Data Sovereignty and Transparency: You have to ask if the institution is giving the public "Federated Access" to its data or if it’s locking that information away in private silos. A real audit doesn't just look at who is using the data; it tracks exactly where they're sitting when they access it to make sure they actually live in this community.

  2. The Administrative Burden: This is what I call the "Technical Gauntlet." You have to measure how many hours of a citizen's life are being stolen just to access a basic service. If the institution is forcing you to act like an unpaid employee just to get a permit or see a doctor, the system is failing.

  3. Budgetary Forensics: Leaders have to be able to tell the difference between a "Solid Signal" and "Amenity Theater." A Solid Signal is a real investment in things like wastewater pipes, fiber optics, or technical training. Amenity Theater is when the city spends your tax money on decorative streetlights and fancy parks that look good in a brochure but don't help you make a living.

  4. Resource Alignment: You have to look at whether the schools are training kids for the Labor Hub jobs we have right here in town, or if they're just acting as a "Farm Team" for a bigger city. If 100% of a kid's professional value is being harvested by another municipality after they graduate, then our local school system is just creating a "Reality Debt" for the rest of us.

Success in this audit is measured by median wage growth and labor capacity, not just "new business openings." If a burger joint opens, it's "Noise"—it's a service outpost that consumes local wealth without building it. If a data-repair or value-added furniture craft shop opens, it's a "Signal" of real growth. Leaders have to stop "sipping the sauce" of aesthetic growth and start looking at whether a project creates durable community equity or just adds another layer to the servant sector.


















The $100k Career Track and the Infrastructure That Works

The whole point of this audit is to move resources toward the "$100k Career Track." These are the high-value jobs that keep wealth inside our own zip code. To make that happen, a town needs a "Resource Anchor," which is just the physical infrastructure that supports real production.

This infrastructure includes:

  • Wastewater Capacity: We have to bridge the $1.3 billion deficit in our regional wastewater system. We can do this by using "closed-loop" or "direct-to-chip" cooling for big data centers so we can save our pipe capacity for local manufacturing.

  • High-Speed Fiber: We need to build a "Bridge" of municipal fiber. This allows a Sovereign Producer to run a high-velocity business from their own home or office right here in Hickory.

  • Local Supply Chains: We need to buy our parts and hire our trades locally. For example, we should use Corning for our fiber needs so that our capital stays inside our own "Sovereign Loop."


The Math Behind the Decline

We can actually use a mathematical model to see how efficient our institutions are. This is called the "Reality Debt Coefficient."

To find the Reality Debt, you take the hours wasted on the "Technical Gauntlet," multiply that by the extra risks and taxes you're paying, and then multiply that by how long it takes for leadership to actually fix a problem. Then, you divide that whole number by the total value the producers in town are actually creating.

If that final number is higher than 1, the community is in a state of "Maintenance of Decline." It means the institutions are eating up more time and money than the people can actually produce. The goal of the Sovereign Audit is to bring that number below 1.

There's also a "Theory of Realization Elasticity." This explains how a town's heart stops beating when the debt from broken infrastructure leads to higher rates. For every 1% increase in the "Mechanical Tax"—which is just the cost of unfunded debt passed on to the resident—you see a drop in the equity of the middle class. People with high-value skills will simply move away to avoid the burden.


The Reality Debt Coefficient: A Structural Diagnostic

To determine if our local institutions are functioning or failing, we use the Reality Debt Coefficient. This formula measures the "Friction" the system creates against the actual "Value" the citizens produce.












The Variables Defined:

  • Time (The Technical Gauntlet): The hours of labor stolen from the individual to perform the institution’s administrative work (data entry, portal navigation, phone trees).

  • Risk (The Financial Transfer): The dollar amount of structural costs—like the 28.6% insurance hike—shifted from the institution's ledger to the household budget.

  • Lag (The Interpretation Delay): The "Stained Glass" period; the time between when a system fails and when leadership finally acknowledges the reality of that failure.

  • Production (Sovereign Output): The total wealth and value generated by the local producers (the $100k Career Track workforce).


The Audit Results

The goal of the Sovereign Audit is to ensure this number stays below 1.0.

  • If the result is greater than 1: The community is in "Maintenance of Decline." The institutions are consuming more time and capital than the producers can replace. The system is cannibalizing the people it was built to serve.

  • If the result is less than 1: The community is in "Sovereign Growth." The institutions are providing a functional utility that makes it easier for the producer to build equity and wealth.

By using these terms, the "Sovereign Producer" can clearly see that any increase in administrative "cat herding" or insurance premiums is a direct increase in their Reality Debt.


A Real-World Example: The Gusmer Enterprises Deal

You can see how this works in real life by looking at what happened with Gusmer Enterprises in August 2025. Catawba County had an "Economic Development Agreement" with them where the company made a $38.2 million investment. But the company failed to keep the number of jobs they promised for 2024 and 2025.

A Sovereign Audit of that deal would ask 2 tough questions. First, did the leaders prioritize "Stained Glass" job numbers that look good in the paper instead of supporting real $100k careers? And second, is giving them until 2026 to fix the problem a smart move to save the jobs, or is it just the city trying to survive a failure?


EDA Requirement

Original Deadline

Amendment Status

Functional Outcome

Facility Construction

Dec 31, 2025

Maintained

$38.2M investment in place.22

Job Creation (73 jobs)

Dec 31, 2023

Extended to 2026

Failure to maintain roles in '24/'25.22

Job Maintenance

Through 2028

Extended to 2028

Goal to keep the "Engine" running.22



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Conclusion: Rewiring the Public Square

When you look at the results of this Institutional Audit, it is clear that the systems meant to support us—the schools and the hospitals—are actually the main things creating a "Reality Debt" for our town. Between the rising costs of healthcare, the time stolen by the "Technical Gauntlet," and the looming merger of the school systems, you see a machine that is only interested in keeping itself alive. It is not working for the "Sovereign Producer" anymore; it is just solving for its own survival.

If we want to stop this "Maintenance of Decline," our leaders have to stop telling us "Stained Glass narratives" and quit wasting our money on "Amenity Theater" like fancy parks and pretty signs. The real "Sovereign Move" is to sit down and audit every single tax dollar to make sure it is actually going toward high-value careers and infrastructure that works for us. We have to look at the machinery, not just the paint job.

Rewiring the public square is not a project meant to make the town look better; it is a mechanical necessity. We have to secure the "Resource Anchor" and build a bridge for our labor capacity so that our "Sovereign Loop" stays closed within our own community. This is the only way a town like Hickory can stop acting as a "Farm Team" that trains our people just so they can leave for a bigger city. We have to do the work to become a self-sustaining hub of production where the people who do the work get to keep the equity they build.