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©
2002 Display
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contents of the on-line edition of The Nugget represent a selection
among the stories that appear in the weekly print edition. |
Candidates
visit Camp Sherman
The four Jefferson
County commissioner candidates visited Camp Sherman's Community Hall last
Thursday evening, October 10, to present themselves to a small but interested
group of residents.
Realtor and former small business
owner Mike Ahern squares off against challenger Mary Zemke, a medical
transcriptionist. He is chairperson of the Board of County Commissioners
and the only incumbent running this year.
The other commission race
is between Mike Goss, an insurance agent, and farmer Walter Ponsford,
vying for the seat being vacated by Commissioner Janet Brown.
Moderator Toni Foster opened
the political evening with candidate introductions.
This was followed by questions
shaped by the moderator and answered by each candidate. The PERS (Public
Employee Retirement System) shortfall and what each would do to solve
the crisis got a surprisingly candid response from Mike Ahern.
"I'd declare bankruptcy and
throw it into the courts," he said. "The system is not sustainable."
His opponent, Zemke, said,
"We made promises and should uphold our promises to teachers and other
PERS workers. However, we need to make corrections in the system."
Ponsford responded to the
PERS question, noting that "We were mesmerized by the stock market of
the '90s. We now need sound, basic conservative views on what we can sustain."
Goss followed by saying, "People
may have to work longer. We've got to get younger people working (creating
jobs) and putting more money into the PERS fund. Some changes will also
have to be made."
Another question focused on
growing the Jefferson County tax base.
"Growth in the tax base must
be compatible with what citizens want," said Zemke.
"We should strive for jobs
with good wages in light industry and the high-tech sector."
Ponsford said, "Production
is the only good remedy."
Ahern and Goss favored new
businesses and more housing for the area.
"Not all the news is bad,"
said Ahern. "Non-farm money doubled in Jefferson County in the '90s."
Each candidate was then given
the opportunity to ask one question of another candidate. Responding to
a question on his support of a Cogentrix energy plant, Ahern said,
"This would have been a great
addition to our tax base -- particularly since we're lowering our hydropower
tax base."
Before the meeting, Zemke
said, "Cogentrix is dead in Jefferson County."
Asked by his opponent how
they differed, Goss said, "I'm more aggressive than Walt (Ponsford) and
would bring more new business into Jefferson County."
Finally, questions were fielded
from the audience. Apparently still rankling some local residents is the
increase in the county room tax from 6 to 9 percent.
Earlier in the year County
Commissioners at a Camp Sherman community meeting had said they favored
doing this to raise money for a new community center in Madras.
At that time, they said such
an increase would not have to be voted on by county residents.
Later, it was determined such
an increase would have to be voted on countywide and the issue has remained
moribund since then.
Several people raised concerns
about road quality conditions. All of the candidates felt that something
had to be done.
"Jefferson County has 190
miles of paved roads," said Ahern. "We're $800,000 short for road repairs."
"We've got to face the facts
that our roads need attention," said Ponsford.
"It's costly on tires, shocks
and repairs to continue driving on poor roads."
Zemke concurred.
"Roads are the second greatest
concern in the county," she said. |
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