Posted on 09/07/2016 9:39:57 AM PDT by MichCapCon
While primary elections for local offices rarely garner much attention, the results of the August election were dramatic for one county in northern lower Michigan. Of seven members of the current county commission, only one will be on the fall ballot.
I did not anticipate such a dramatic and historic turnover on the Emmet County board, said Commissioner Charlie MacInnis, who ran unopposed in the primary. The community clearly didnt support the massive spending projects that were undertaken without adequate planning or voter approval. Four of the seven incumbents lost primary contests while another two did not seek re-election.
Last year, county commissioners built a $1.7 million substation for emergency medical technicians (EMTs) and planned to break ground on a $9 million dark sky observatory. MacInnis criticized both decisions.
Nancy Sarowski, chairperson of the Emmet County Republican Party, pointed to MacInnis commentaries written in local newspapers to explain the election results. The commentaries gave details on county projects that the commissioner got through the Freedom of Information Act.
Many people, at first, thought he was exaggerating: no contracts, except an hourly rate, no scope of project, no budget, no performance bonds and the like. When the sitting commissioners failed to rebut Charlie, the public began to pay attention, she said.
Larry Cassidy is one of the four incumbents who lost.
I stand behind what we had done, he said. I think we did a phenomenal job at the county. Were the strongest financially in the state and we have some great projects but 69 percent of the people wanted a change and Im OK with that.
Two-term Commissioner Bert Notestine says he wasnt surprised by his defeat.
The fact that the local paper was very much against the incumbent board members had a tremendous impact on the results, said Notestine. He said the basis for all the commissioners decisions was solid and believes the projects will pay off for the county in the long run.
Last year, MacInnis took Michigan Capitol Confidential on a tour of the projects, which was included in a video.
His fellow commissioners claimed he had no authorization to invite a video producer into the new ambulance substation, which was about to open.
The Emmet County Republican Party began a campaign to recruit candidates to challenge sitting commissioners. Sarowski said that MacInnis impressed a number of people and motivated them to seek office. She and MacInnis brought the candidates up to speed on the issues and helped them campaign.
Although all the nominees ran their own individual campaigns, I am confident that they are united in their desire to bring openness and accountability to county government, said MacInnis.
Emmet County is Republican, with 75 percent of the votes in the August primary cast on the Republican side. No Democrats ran in the primary election, and most of the winners from the August primary will be unopposed in November. Two independents will face off in one district.
Sarowski says many people have told her the election gave them hope.
Hope that wrongs can be righted. Hope that good people can be elected. Hope that liberally (bent) newspapers can do good reporting. Hope that our tax money can be allocated responsibly, said Sarowski.
It’s fun to spend other people’s money!
It’s a start.
Montcalm County is having some of the same issues...however their problem is that 9 Million they don’t have is already spent.
Of course the Country Commission voted themselves a nice raise, 5 k a year to serve and none of them seem to know a thing about the sudden shocker that they are 9 Million in the hole.
Now, the first thing the want to do is scale back police patrols etc.
People are fed up. If only a few will get active, the many will follow. Mrs. Clinton will lose in a landslide.
Throw out the incumbent bums...most are pathetic bums.
A few years ago my very small town misplaced $2M. The school district simply lost track of $2M. It was amusing to hear the local school committee explain this:
First things first: it wasnt embezzled. We looked into that and no embezzlement occurred. We didnt actually lose the money, we never had it in the first place. It was an accounting error. No embezzlement. No one in the school system got rich off of this. No crime was committed. So, again, no embezzlement happened. Just an accounting error. Its all OK. No embezzlement. And on the subject of embezzlement, I just want to say: that definitely didn’t happen.
Since then, they keep seeking a tax increase to fix our cash-strapped little school district. Town voters will not approve the tax increases. Why should they? The bastards would just embezzle it again.
I suppose a case can be made for the EMT substation, but what is a “dark sky” observatory and what’s the payback for the county on that?
In my county, two of the three commissioners are Democrats.
These two Democrats keep breaking the law with their actions.
The County Attorney, a Democrat, keeps telling them they are breaking the law.
They do it anyway.
The county then gets sued and loses the trials.
This results in judgements against our county for millions of dollars.
The Democrat County Commissioners don’t care.
They aren’t paying millions out of their pockets.
It’s us taxpayers that are on the hook for the bill.
Fire all of your School Board members ( school committee ). elect or appoint new members.
Hire an independent accounting firm, when the results of an audit are complete, indict the the former members, try them, and put them in prison (forever).
A small School District can’t just lose 2M dollars, there’s some chicanery going on here.
Only the FEDS are allowed to just LOSE MILLIONS AN BILLIONS.
32,000 people in the county. Let’s be generous and say 1/2 are taxpayers. So 16,000 taxpayers / $9 million = $562 per taxpayer for the “dark skys observatory”. Ridiculous. Glad they were voted out.
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