One of the most pressing challenges for contemporary local governments is how to provide public services of sufficient quality when resources are scarce. This is particularly acute in peripheral or rural areas facing depopulation, where downsizing or closing public service units is often the only viable option. While much research has focused on the citizens negatively affected by such cuts, this study examines the perspective of decision-makers tasked with these difficult choices. Through an in-depth study of three Swedish municipalities and their handling of public indoor swimming pools, we explore how political representatives and public officials reason and navigate these dilemmas. The analysis identifies two overarching courses of action: “preserve,” which focuses on upholding service provision through strategies such as creative cost-cutting and quiet prioritizations, and “adapt,” characterized by efforts to centralize services, engage in post-decision dialogue, and offer compensatory measures. By shedding light on these approaches, the article contributes to understanding the complex dynamics of local democracy under pressure and offers insights into how decision-makers balance economic, symbolic, and political considerations in contentious public service decisions. • Public decision-makers navigate public service location dilemmas through two main courses of action: preserve or adapt. • Preserve include treading water , quiet prioritization , and quiet quitting. • Quiet practices capture previously underexplored ways of handling service decline without making explicit decisions. • Adapt include inducing realistic expectations, selling change as a fresh new start, and offering compensation. • The article highlights democratic implications of quiet practices in local service provision under pressure.
Licht et al. (Wed,) studied this question.