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THE MUNICIPAL BATTLEFIELD

Leading, Surviving, and Winning in Small-Town Government

By Dwight Boddorf

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Overview


Most people have no idea what it really takes to run a town. They see the lights turn on, the water flow, the streets cleared, and emergency services respond, and assume it all just happens. The Municipal Battlefield pulls back the curtain on local government leadership, revealing the reality behind the scenes. Written by a combat veteran and municipal executive, this book treats small-town governance as mission-critical work carried out under constant pressure, limited resources, political complexity, and public scrutiny. Blending lived experience with disciplined systems thinking, the book offers practical guidance on budgets, utilities, infrastructure failures, public safety crises, personnel challenges, political terrain, and the emotional weight of command. It rejects abstract theory in favor of real-world tools, decision frameworks, and lessons learned in moments when mistakes carried real consequences. This is not a memoir. It is not ideology. It is a field manual for leaders who keep communities functioning when systems strain, crises unfold, and no one else sees how close things come to breaking.
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Description


Local government is the closest level of government to the people, and one of the least understood forms of leadership in public service. Every day, municipal leaders are responsible for aging infrastructure, public safety, utilities, budgets, personnel, political conflict, and community trust, often with little preparation and no margin for failure.

The Municipal Battlefield is a practical field manual for those who operate in that reality. Written by a Marine Corps combat veteran and borough manager, the book reframes municipal leadership as mission-oriented command work: stabilizing fragile systems, making decisions with incomplete information, absorbing pressure so others can function, and remaining calm when entire communities are watching. The book draws on real incidents from small-town government, power outages, water emergencies, budget crises, political flashpoints, personnel breakdowns, and moments of public trauma to explain what leadership actually requires when things go wrong. It blends battlefield leadership principles with modern systems thinking to show how municipalities survive not through heroics, but through preparation, documentation, communication, and disciplined routines. Rather than offering abstract best practices, The Municipal Battlefield provides actionable frameworks: how to build systems that outlast any one leader, how to manage political terrain without losing integrity, how to communicate under pressure, how to stabilize finances, and how to lead people who depend on you when the stakes are real and visible. The book also addresses the often-unspoken side of municipal leadership, the emotional and psychological weight of command, the isolation of decision-making, and the toll of carrying responsibility for an entire community. It speaks directly to leaders who feel overwhelmed, unprepared, or alone, and reminds them that steadiness, clarity, and purpose matter more than perfection.

This book offers an honest look at public service, its challenges, its responsibilities, and its impact. It speaks plainly about what it takes to lead a town, while also affirming why the work matters and why it is worth doing well. For those who serve a community, or who aspire to lead one, The Municipal Battlefield is a practical guide to navigating the realities of local government with clarity, steadiness, and purpose.

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About The Author


Dwight Boddorf is a municipal executive, Marine Corps veteran, and public-sector innovator whose work blends battlefield leadership, systems thinking, and community service. A Purple Heart recipient and veteran of Operation Iraqi Freedom, he brings the lessons of combat: calm under pressure, adaptability, and mission focus, into his work in local government. He previously led Allegheny County Veterans Affairs and now serves as municipal manager in Pennsylvania. Including one of the few municipalities in the state that operates both its own electric and water utilities. In this role, he has guided the Borough through modernization, infrastructure renewal, and major public safety and operational challenges, earning statewide recognition, including the Governor's Intergovernmental Cooperation Award. Dwight has led some of the region's most consequential local-government initiatives, including a historic police merger, the formation of a regional EMS Authority, and the stabilization of critical utility systems. His work has earned honors such as Pittsburgh Magazine's 40 Under 40 and the Pennsylvania Veterans' Services Award. He writes from lived experience about leadership, resilience, and the realities of running a small town with big responsibilities. He lives in the Pittsburgh region with his fiancée and children.

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Book details

  • Genre:political science
  • Sub-genre:Public Affairs & Administration
  • Language:English
  • Pages:148
  • eBook ISBN:9798317829537
  • Paperback ISBN:9798317829520