Showing posts with label Julie Jakmides. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Julie Jakmides. Show all posts

Wednesday, November 22, 2017

SCPR POST-ELECTION ANALYSIS: JAKMIDES DOMINATES ALLIANCE POLITICS:

UPDATED:  11/22/2017 AT 3:51 PM


The two biggest winners on the evening of November 7th were incumbent-Councilwoman-at-large Julie Jakmides and "I finally made it" Alliance council-at-large candidate Brian Simone.

Jakmides' re-election is bad news for the Alliance city administration in terms of Jakmides being a leading force for holding the administration (re:  the city's safety service operations and Director Michael Dreger) accountable to the taxpaying Alliance public.

In August, 2017, Jakmides walked out of a council meeting (LINK to an account of that meeting) because she thought she and her fellow council members were being disrespected by Dreger/the administration in refusing to discuss in public questions she and other council members had about the handling of certain matters by Dreger and the administration.

In a late October, 2017 University of Mount Union on Alliance City Council candidates forum covered extensively by the SCPR (LINK), Democratic candidate David Smith tried to make an issue of Jakmides' walk out.

So much for trying.  Jakmides overwhelming win shows that the "walk-out," if anything, enhanced Jakmides favor with Alliance voters.

Look at the numbers in the graphic shown above (note:  base data provided by the Stark County Board of Elections).

Jakmides (in unofficial returns) 401 votes over well known fellow Republican Roger Rhome and over 800 over Democrat Brian Simone (the 3rd of three selections to be made)  a person who has made a number of attempts to get elected to Alliance's legislative body.

Jakmides likely will also be Law Director Jennifer Arnold's worst nightmare going forward over law department/administration spending decisions on outside legal services.

Jakmides openly sided with Democratic candidate Mark Whitaker (corrected from original version) in 2015 when Arnold ran for retention as law director after having been appointed by an Alliance political party process in 2014.  Whitaker lost narrowly to Arnold (corrected from original version) which the SCPR thinks was largely due to Jakmides support of his candidacy.  Nearly every other, if not all, elected Alliance elected officials supported Arnold's re-election.


The characteristic that the SCPR likes about Jakmides above nearly every (perhaps, every) other Stark County political subdivision is her pre-eminent commitment to accountable, accessible, communicative, open and transparent government.

Though a solid supporter of Republican approaches to governance, Jakmides appears to the SCPR to be first and foremost devoted to effective, efficient and qualitative government in the best interest of the entire electorate (Democratic, "independent" or Republican) no matter what her political party's stance might be.

If there is a co-incidents, "fine and dandy."  But, if not, she shows no reluctance at all to depart from the party line.

Jakmides got a plurality in 15 of the 17 Alliance voting precinct wards and tied for the lead in the 16th.

Julie Jakmides is good friends with Stephanie Werren who was on November 7th re-elected to a new term as North Canton Ward 3 represented.

To boot, Werren is director of Leadership Stark County (an effort of the Canton Regional Chamber of Commerce, CRCOC).

Jakmides and the SCPR have differed on Warren.  And, Jakmides has differed with The Report on another blog.

But to The Stark County Political Report, mature public officials disagree without becoming disagreeable and do not cut off communications/accountability because of differences with a given media perspective.

Councilwoman Julie Jakmides consistently demonstrates an uncommon political maturity in functioning as a public official.

To the SCPR, Jakmides is nearly everything a councilperson ought to be in terms of understanding the priorities that an elected official ought to be about whereas Werren is quite the opposite.

If the CRCOC had its head on straight, Julie Jakmides would be its director and not Stephanie Werren in terms of their respective conduct a municipal legislators.

If more Stark County political subdivision elected official operated like Councilwoman Jakmides, then they would like experience the same electoral success that she did on November 7th.

The SCPR applauds Jakmides being a principled politician who thereby engenders the abiding support of the Alliance voting public.

Thursday, February 4, 2016

IS THE "REPUBLICAN 'RISING STAR' STATUS OF JULIE JAKMIDES TARNISHED?


PHOTO EXTRACTED FROM A CAMPAIGN FLYER


Right now Stark County's most pre-eminent Republican is Stark County commissioner Janet Weir-Creighton.

Creighton is the most passionate, popular and progressive Republican in all the county.

But it hasn't always been that way.

In the early days as an aspiring Republican politician, Creighton was being sniped at by looking over their shoulders fellow Republicans on ticky-tacky but nonetheless below-the-belt jabs designed - no doubt - to put her in her place likely because she was a woman making her way in a realm that many men think is their world.

She has had a set back on the way to the Stark County political pinnacle that she now occupies.

Namely; being defeated by the now electorate disposed (the November, 2015 election) William J. Healy, II in the November, 2007 general election.

But she rebounded in being elected Stark County commissioner in 2012 and The Report daresays that had she chosen to take on Healy this past November, she would have had a much easier time in putting Healy on the political sidelines.

Creighton is not finished yet, but she and her fellow Republicans have to be wondering who will take her place when she moves on to the sunny climbs of Florida in retirement.

Looking over the field of aspirants now, one likely candidate is Republican councilwoman Julie Jakmides of Alliance.

The SCPR figured not long ago that there is no stopping Jakmides on her Stark County (if not beyond) political stardom streak.

But she may be in the process of stopping herself.

REASONS WHY JAKMIDES MIGHT BE SELF-DESTRUCTING

THE WHITAKER CAPER 

Jakmides getting in her own way started with public opposition to the re-election of fellow Republican Jennifer Arnold as law director of Alliance.

A clear violation of the Republican (reference:  Ronald Reagan, LINK) 11th Commandment:  "Thou shalt speak no ill of a fellow Republican."

And did her support of Democrat Mark Whitaker cause an earthquake with Alliance if not Stark County Republican politics. (LINK)


Some of Whitaker's fellow Republicans in the hierarchy of the Alliance Republican Party are thinking in the words of one such Republican - "she hasn't put her sword down yet," referring to Jakmides' exceptions to Arnold continuing on as the elected law director of Alliance.

The Report told that at the January 4, 2016 meeting of Alliance City Council, Jakmides expressed dissatisfaction with a settlement between Alliance and the Stark County commissioners on the matter of how much money Alliance pays for the prosecutorial services of the Stark County prosecutor's office. 

One has to wonder whether or not veteran, incumbent Republican Councilman Roger Rhome's refusal to appear on a campaign flyer with "the Republican Team" had something to do with Jakmides' support of Democrat Whitaker who narrowly lost to Arnold.


 
Jakmides is the daughter of a prominent Stark County lawyer (Jeff) who will be the Republican nominee to run for a second time (early 2000s being the first time).

It could be that Jakmides herself (a second year law student at The University of Akron School of Law) is projecting herself as an opponent to Arnold three years hence.

The question is this:  Is at its very heart Jakmides opposition to Arnold a self-serving jump start? 

Jakmides says that the opposition is for "conduct unbecoming of a law director."

Which is it?  

Or is it a mix of the two?  

Alliance Republican honcho dissatisfaction with Jakmides' approach vis à vis Arnold, the SCPR thinks, lingers to this day and may come back to haunt her on her seeming jaunt to the political top spot of Stark County Republican politics.

STICKING UP FOR STEPHAN WERREN

Jakmides and yours truly got into a little bit of a tiff on North Canton Republican councilwoman Stephanie Werren in the run up to the 2015 elections.

The Report wrote a blog in which reference was made to Werren having reached out a The Repository 200th Anniversary Gala and pulled a female acquaintance down by the hair reportedly unprovoked.

Jakmides jumped all over yours truly for having published material which Jakmides said was outrageously untrue.

Jakmides source:  Stephanie Werren.

Wow!  

At the time, the SCPR had a lofty take on Jakmides and her assessment of things and temporarily removed the Werren reference in order to check a second time with the source on the matter.

A second time the matter was confirmed by this source who was a person who personally viewed the incident and by name published an account of the occurrence on Facebook.

Everybody knows what happened next.  The Werren hair pulling incident was re-inserted into the blog.

While The Report still regards Jakmides as a quality Stark County politician (she is #6 on the SCPR "Top 10" Stark County Elected Officials List), her word is not quite a good as it once was with yours truly.

As readers of the SCPR know, yours truly has no problem whatsoever in critiquing public officials, even if The Report thinks well of those offcials.

On the other hand, the SCPR will recognize those officials that The Report has a dim view of for surprising us all and do good things for Stark County or one of its political subdivisions. 

She let her personal/political relationship with Werren cloud her willingness to entertain the notion that Werren might be a tad self-serving in making the denial that the incident ever occurred.  

In the SCPR's book, Jakmides is a world ahead of her friend Stehpanie Werren.

In as sense it is admirable for her sticking up for her personal/political (re:  11th Commandment) friend, but the Whitaker/Arnold thing shows that Jakmides is fully capable of separating herself from indefensible conduct.

So what happened on the Werren matter in terms of applying the Arnold standard to Werren?

TRYING TO CONTROL ALLIANCE CITY COUNCIL ORGANIZATIONAL MEETING

The SCPR has reason to believe that Jakmides tried to control the organization of Alliance City Council on January 4th.

Which, if The Report is correct, is clearly an undermining of the place and authority of fellow Republican Art Garnes as the newly elected president of council in his defeating incumbent Alliance Democratic Party (i.e. the central committee members) president Steve Okey in November, 2015.

Yours truly understands that Jakmides wanted to be:
  • chairperson of the Finance Committee,
  • a member on Safety and Justice, and
  • president pro temp,
Well, anybody who knows anything about Alliance Republican politics knows that notwithstanding Jakmides' demonstrated vote getting ability as a candidate for an at-large position on Alliance City Council, is that Larry Dordea is seen as "the real leader" of council.

Out-of-the-box, on the fourth, Republican at-large Roger Rhome nominates Dordea to be president pro temp.

End of story!

Dordea is already being talked about as a successor to Mayor Alan Andreani when he decides he has had enough of being  mayor.

Garnes had his own list of which councilperson should be in what role.

Jakmides was only listed as chair of the Finance Committee.

Garnes had his way.  Two Republicans (Dordea/Rhome) and the two Democrats voting in favor of the Garnes plan.  Three Republicans vote no:  Jakmides herself, Councilman Kline and new councilman Edwards voting "no."

Interesting, no?

So Councilwoman Jakmides has to be frustrated that she did not get to be president pro tem nor on Safety in Justice.  The latter had to be particularly stinging in view of her being on the cusp (next year) of graduating from law school and becoming a lawyer, no?

If she is listening, the SCPR thinks that she should be hearing a message from "the powers that be within the Alliance Republican Party" to back off.

For The Report's part, yours truly loves it (a la Thomas Bernabei and Frank Cicchinelli) when partisans show an "independent" streak in themselves.

And it could be that Jakmides is not being self-serving, but merely bucking the Alliance Republican Party establishment.

Sadly, The Report thinks she is being self-serving and not truly an independent minded partisan.

That her father Jeff is running for Stark County prosecutor as a Republican, you can bet your bottom dollar that Julie Jakmides will not wanting to hear from the likes of Law Director Arnold that she is supporting Democrat John Ferrero.

Undoubtedly, Arnold has a good working relationship with Ferrero.

Supporting him would be the perfect opportunity for her to get back at Jakmides.

But don't count on it.

Jeff Jakmides did support Arnold.

So there you have it folks.

The Alliance Republican Party in turmoil at the hand of Councilwoman-at-large Julie Jakmides!

Only on The Stark County Political Report will you get this kind of insight as to what is going on in the bowels of  Stark County "organized" Republican and Democratic politics!!!

Wednesday, June 11, 2014

ALLIANCE COUNCILWOMAN JULIE JAKMIDES HAS HER SAY, BUT IGNORES THE "DONKEY IN THE ROOM?"



Last week the Stark County Political Report wrote about the political "hurricane" in the form, of newly selected council president Steve Okey which struck Alliance City Council at its June 2, 2014 meeting.


Okey selected by the Stark County Democratic Party Central Committee/Alliance (SCDP-CC/ALLIANCE; Party) on April 30, 2014 to replace the recently deceased long time president of council John Benincasa caused an uproar on the 2nd in his attempt to unilaterally change council procedure on voting on various measure to come before council.

While the SCPR agrees with Okey (a key Stark County "organized" Party Democrat) that his proposed change needs to be made, The Report thinks his primary motive is not as professed.  But rather that first and foremost his objective is to be confrontational with Alliance City Council in order to embarrass Repubican Larry Dordea.

What would he want to embarrass Larry Dordea?

Because Dordea is the Republican candidate for Stark County sheriff against Okey political pal George T. Maier who interestingly enough is a Democratic Party appointee as sheriff just like Okey.

Earlier in the year Okey filed a lawsuit against Alliance City Council (which he - before being appointed president by the Dems - was a member of for six years) to stop council members from voting "unsigned" paper ballots on various issues.

The issue he focused on in his lawsuit was the denial on the part of council of the right of his political-joined-at-the-hip pal Derrick Loy (an employee since September, 2013 of George T. Maier) to continue on as a member of the Alliance Water and Sewer Advisory Board.

But when he was appointed council president, he dropped the lawsuit.

Hmm?  Some devotion, to principle, no?

Post the Dems appointing Okey as president, the SCPR went on record as predicting that Okey would find ways and means to cast Dordea in a negative light in the proceedings of Alliance City Council.

And the June 2nd meeting is the first of what the SCPR thinks will be standard fare at Alliance City Council meetings.

Contrasted to the SCPR, The Alliance Review wrote an editorial (LINK) about the June 2nd incident in which the editorial board bought into the Okey pretext of his action being all about enhancing democratic procedures in council meetings.

In saying:
We can't be sure why members are so piqued by individual roll-call votes, but we suspect it may have more to do with their disapproval of Okey in general than with his proposed change.
The Report thinks The Review missed "the donkey in the room" (i.e. the political factor) as newspaper editors are wont to do when it comes to identifying reasons for the otherwise inexplicable.

It is disconcerting for the likes of The Review and the SCPR for the likes of a Steve Okey to try to mask "real" motivation with "high-sounding" platitudes.  Such tactics further cynicize the general public attitude about the sincerity of public officials when the only plausible explanation boils down to a political one rather than a civic enhancing one.

Fellow Republican councilperson (vis-a-vis Dordea) Julie Jakmides took offense to the The Review's editorial.  However, The Report thinks she missed the real point (in an email to the SCPR complaining about The Review editorial) of the Okey June 2nd action every bit as much as The Review editors did.

The SCPR thinks that that her rationalizing is merely "the other side of the coin" from Okey in trying to clothe council's action with the indicia of doing a good thing in substituting a censure of President Okey for rather than having the Sergeant at Arms escort him from council chambers, to wit:
I had no choice but to move for censure. The alternative would have been to have our Sergeant of Arms remove Mr. Okey from the meeting, but my fellow members and I simply wanted to move along and follow the Order of Business.
While it may be as the SCPR thinks is the case that Okey started this politicalization of Alliance City Council proceedings, The Report is no more impressed with her response (to be seen in its entirety at the end of this blog) than with Okey's initiative.

The "politiking"  needs to stop and to stop now.

Steve Okey should admit the obvious and apologize for what clearly appears to the SCPR to be a politically inspired bringing "the donkey into the room" of Alliance City Council.

The Republicans need to disengage from political self-defense in responding to Okey's out-of-boundedness.

In the end, Alliance City Council should discontinue the practice of voting "unsigned" paper ballots and do roll call votes on each and every vote except, perhaps, assigning proposed legislation to committee.

The Stark County Political Report believes that both the Democratic president and Republicans on council deserve censure with the greater measure going to Mister Okey for starting the politicization in the first place.

President Okey:  Keep "the donkey out of the room" when it comes to the proceedings of Alliance City Council!!!

Here is the Jakmides e-mailed letter to the SCPR:

Regarding Okey censure
Sunday, June 8, 2014 9:59 PM

From:  "Julie Jakmides" <julie.jakmides@gmail.com>
To:        tramols@att.net


Martin,

Below is a copy of a Letter to the Editor I submitted to The Alliance Review, prior to a 500-word-minimum edit. It is nothing more than a response to the newspaper's editorial assertion that my motion to censure was inappropriate. 


I would be happy to talk further about the events of last Monday's meeting if you are interested.

Link to original editorial: http://www.the-review.com/local%20opinion/2014/06/05/our-view-no-reason-for-censure

RESPONSE TO “NO REASON FOR CENSURE”

The Editorial Board of The Alliance Review coming to the conclusion there was “no reason” for my motion to censure Council President Steve Okey is clearly the result of not having the entire story. 


On a Friday afternoon, members of Alliance City Council received a letter from Mr. Steve Okey giving a directive to Council that “we will” change the way we vote at the next regular meeting. In his letter Mr. Okey explained his logic, but gave no opportunity for Council to consider this a recommendation, instead demanding it would happen. To say it lacked tact would be an understatement.

When Mr. Okey attempted to change our process without any input, I made a Point of Order questioning the necessity given the measures we already take to ensure our votes are known. Mr. Okey responded with terminology that did not seem related to a point of order question, and proceeded a second time to instruct the Clerk of Council to call the roll. At that time I raised my hand again and asked for our legal counsel, Law Director Jennifer Arnold, to give her legal opinion on the matter. She explained that our current course of action is perfectly sufficient. Mr. Okey directed another statement at Councilman Dordea, and myself to which neither of us were sure how to respond, as we are not attorneys. After more back and forth, I reminded Mr. Okey that he said in his letter to Council that everything we have been doing is perfectly fine, but it was his opinion it should be altered. I pointed out the Law Director did not agree with his change, and in fact she specifically stated we should continue our current method of voice votes.

After repeatedly speaking over members of City Council, declaring that City Council would follow his legal interpretation and not that of our Law Director, making demands to the Clerk of Council to call the roll despite obvious disapproval of the entire City Council and the Law Director, and engaging in debate that the President of Council is specifically forbidden from doing, I had no choice but to move for censure. 


The alternative would have been to have our Sergeant of Arms remove Mr. Okey from the meeting, but my fellow members and I simply wanted to move along and follow the Order of Business. 

After calling for a vote and censure being approved 5-0 with two abstentions, Mr. Okey continued to argue in circles and change his demands for how to appropriately proceed. At one point he stated we would need to change Council Rules, which would require the action and recommendation of a committee. Later he decided we would need to appeal his ‘ruling’ as the chair of the meeting, and somewhere in between he suggested I must amend a prior motion to overrule his unlawful change of Council Rules.

There are three methods by which Mr. Okey and any other interested party may determine how any individual member of Alliance City Council votes. 


An audio recording of each meeting exists; it is the primary reason all members speak into microphones. 

An audio/video recording exists thanks to Channel 11 and is made available three times each week on television. 

Additionally, our observant Clerk of Council Jerry Yost delineates all opposition and abstentions in the minutes of each and every meeting -all matters of public record and easily accessible. 

After consulting Council Rules and Roberts Rules of Order, I came to the conclusion that such an addition would be unnecessary and redundant.

The regular meeting of Alliance City Council this past Monday was an embarrassment to the City of Alliance. I did not walk in to the meeting expecting to be forced to censure the President of Council simply to conduct normal business, but we would still be in Council Chambers arguing if I had not. No member of City Council has made any attempt to hide his or her votes. We are proud to represent the people of the City of Alliance and because of that we have an abundance of available resources to allow to public to know exactly how we vote. Clerk of Council Jerry Yost delineating specifics in all Council Minutes goes above and beyond what most bodies do in the interest of transparency.

I am disappointed that the Editorial Board of The Alliance Review has failed to consider the actual events of our last City Council meeting. Rather than questioned on my motion for censure, some who were in attendance for the meeting have commended me for my patience. 


I challenge whoever wrote Thursday’s editorial to watch the video and still come to the conclusion that censure of Mr. Okey was not necessary.

Thursday, June 5, 2014

(ENCORE OKEY VIDEO) AS PREDICTED BY THE STARK COUNTY POLITICAL REPORT, STEVE OKEY BRINGS TURMOIL TO ALLIANCE CITY COUNCIL



On May 1st (a little over 30 days ago), the SCPR wrote in a blog commenting on Canton attorney Steve Okey's selection by the Stark County Democratic Party Central Committee/Alliance as Alliance City Council  (Council) president as a replacement for recently deceased long term (since 1994) council president John Benincasa, The Report wrote:
There is no doubt to The Report that Okey as council president will try "to bend over backwards" to avoid open confrontations with organized Alliance Republicans.

But does he have the self-discipline to pull it off?
The Stark County Political Report in making the above statements was giving Okey "the benefit of a doubt" and did so largely on what Okey had to say in this SCPR video interview of April 30th (the date he was selected by SCDP-CC/Alliance to succeed Benincasa)



Well, the SCPR was way off the mark on the first statement, to wit:  "Okey, as council president will try 'to bend over backwards' to avoid open confrontations ... ."

But The Report was implicitly correct in suggesting that Steve Okey would not have the self-discipline to pull the "avoid open confrontations" off.

Moreover, the SCPR had this to say in the very same blog:
Steve Okey said all the right things last night with regard to his relationship with council going forward.

But the SCPR thinks that it will not take long for The Report to ramp up including in this blog's coverage of Stark County's politics and government (given the return of Steve Okey to council):  Alliance City Council.

Up until now, Alliance has been the most mellow of all of Stark County's city/village councils in terms of controversies.  In fact, more times than not, when the SCPR has blogged about Alliance council matters, guess who was at the center of the brouhaha?  You've got it, one Steven Okey.
To say it one more time, with Okey back on the scene, it is likely that The Report will making more trips to Alliance, no?
Monday night's Steve Okey performance was not an avoiding of anything.  What he did on Monday was to make his presence felt to such an "over-the-top" degree (Council censured him) that the SCPR describes it in the introductory graphic to the blog as being HURRICANE STEVEN HITS ALLIANCE CITY COUNCIL.

Before the debacle of Monday night, Okey signaled in a letter written to council members on May 30th that his presidency is going to be an "imperial presidency" in saying in the opening:
"Dear Council Members: At the next meeting of City Council, we will (emphasis added) be making a transition on how certain Council votes are taken."

Then at the meeting itself he wrangled with council members (primarily Republicans Jakmides and Dordea) for some 45 minutes over their insistence (endorsed later by all of Council in a unanimous voice vote [not roll call]) that they be permitted to vote by voice vote on undisputed matters unless the outcome of the voice vote is unclear or a council member asks for a roll call vote.

Members Jakmides and Dordea constantly challenged Okey on debating his position from the presidency chair which they said was a violation of the rules of council by Okey himself.

Okey kept saying he wasn't debating.  Well if he wasn't then the SCPR has no clue what a debate is.

Eventually, Council had its way by overruling Okey's ruling in making a motion to appeal it which motion is decided by guess who?

You've got it:  Council itself.

And the "voice" vote on the motion was unanimous in sustaining the appeal.

Of course, that was about 45 minutes after the argument began.

Okey had difficulty explaining that he said in the May 30th letter that Council had done nothing illegal with its past voice vote procedures, to saying after the voice vote on the appeal  (as Councilwoman Sheila Cherry pointed out) was illegal, to saying that he had not meant to say he thought the voice vote was illegal but that "it might be interpreted by some to be illegal."

Quite a dance, no?


  • SCPR Note:  The Report provided Okey with a "heads up" on today's blog and thereby providing him with an opportunity to weigh-in with his comments regarding matters likely to be broached.  He did take advantage of the opportunity and the SCPR has published his e-mail immediately before the May 30th letter referred to in note 1.
While the SCPR agrees with Okey that it was a bad practice for Alliance City Council to vote on certain matters on an "unsigned" ballot (the lawsuit) and that Council should change its rules and do a roll call vote on each and every matter voted upon (the May 30th letter and the Monday night fracas) except perhaps informal resolutions and referral to committees, The Report doubts that his real motivation is enhancing the democratic quality of Council procedures.

And it is to be noted that Okey himself participated in the practices he now finds so odious.

Isn't that interesting?  Maybe even hypocritical?
    There is much more to this story, the Stark County Political Report thinks, than reformer Okey coming to the rescue of a procedurally inept Alliance City Council.

    The SCPR thinks that the main reason that Steve Okey is back on the scene in Alliance (after having been defeated in his run for mayor in 2013) is to serve as an eastern Stark County (Alliance area) political front man for Stark County Democratic Party appointed sheriff George T. Maier in his November election bid.

    As anybody who knows anything about Stark County politics is aware of, the Johnnie A. Maier, Jr Massillon-based political machine since January, 2013 has been bulldozing Johnnie's brother George through the Stark Dems' selection process (to replace Sheriff-elect Mike McDonald [November, 2012] who could not take office on January 7, 2013 due to an illness which claimed his life on February 22, 2013.

    It took two tries (February 5, 2013 [undone by the Ohio Supreme Court on November 6, 2013] and December 11, 2013 [an appointment that has not been challenged to date, but might be at a future date], but so far it has worked.

    Okey has been a "prime time player" in the "make George T. Maier" the Democratic Party appointed sheriff push.

    For instance he was one of the attorneys (Allen Schulman and Michael Thompson being two other local attorneys) referenced by Stark Dems' chairman Randy Gonzalez as being of the opinion on February 5th that George T. Maier was qualified under ORC 311.01 to be sheriff.

    On November 6th, Stark Countians learned in the Ohio Supreme Court decision that they (Okey, Schulman and Thompson) were wrong in their opinion.

    Moreover, Okey represented Chairman Gonzalez and the SCDP-CC (free of charge) in an effort by former sheriff Tim Swanson to stop the second appointment selection date (December 11th) in a mandamus action.  The Ohio Supreme Court refused to derail the December selection date.

    And Okey got involved representing a George Maier interest (in the form of defending then Democratic Stark County Board of Elections member Deametrious St. John) when suit was filed in the Fifth District Court of Appeals trying to prevent St. John from voting on Maier's qualifications for announcing before the vote that he felt Maier was qualified.  The suit was dismissed for mootness which dismissal is currently under appeal to the Ohio Supreme Court.

    Maier had been challenged by a fellow Massillon Democrat as to his certification as a qualified (under Ohio Revised Code Section 311.01) candidate.

    It took an Ohio Supreme Court decision for Maier to be on the upcoming November 4th ballot.

    Maier's November opponent is Alliance councilman and, of course, Republican Larry Dordea.

    Dordea is a former Alliance police chief (nine [9] years) and is currently Hartville's police chief.

    The SCPR thinks that the Maier folks are bringing the November fight right to Dordea's doorstep in what appears to have been an all out fight between Okey (who The Report sees as the Maier proxy candidate) and Democratic Councilwoman Sue Ryan over the Council presidency.

    The Report believes that the first announced pro-Maier candidate Derrick Loy (who has worked for the sheriff's office since September, 2013) was deemed to be unelectable in the context of the SCDP-CC/Alliance group.  Though having political baggage of his own (in terms of generating controversies during his six (6) years as a  Alliance City Council member), Okey apparently was deemed to be more viable than Loy.

    And, as it turned out, he was.  But by the slimmest of margins.

    Just to go back a bit.

    When Okey filed his lawsuit against Alliance City Council (February 4, 2014), he - in the opinion of the SCPR - took advantage of the pleader's prerogative of naming a group of defendants with a single name.

    Now just guess what name Okey tagged the group with?

    You've got it.

    Dordea!

    Okey had to know that on Monday night with his proposal he was going to generate a fight with Dordea and the other Republicans on Council.  As can be seen in his e-mail to the SCPR set forth at the end of this blog, Okey can see the Republicans as being political but not himself.

    The SCPR sees politics being a play on both ends of the dispute but Okey is the one who started the fight.

    So the political game seems to be that Okey as a George T. Maier advance man is trying to paint Larry Dordea as being against what some interpret as being the "rule of law" (his words on Monday) and anti-sunshine (the lawsuit) in terms of the transparency of Alliance City Council votes.

    One more thing about the Okey lawsuit.

    Guess who the central figure was in the dispute about a particular vote by Alliance City Council on whether or not he was to continue to be a member of the Alliance Water Sewer Advisory Board?

    Bingo, again!

    None other than Derrick Loy.

    To say it again, the  SCPR would like to believe Okey's protestations that his lawsuit and his Monday night proposal and the May 30th letter is about strengthening Alliance City Council democratic procedures.

    But The Report's assessment of  Okey (as an elected official and a public figure) as being one of the most political persons in all of Stark County does not permit the SCPR to think that such is his primary motivation.

    Time will tell, but the SCPR expects Okey to work feverishly between now and November to find bases within the context of Alliance City Council proceedings to embarrass Larry Dordea.

    Sue Ryan incurred, in running for the presidency of Council, a realpoltik lesson in coming up against the Maier political machine alliance with Okey.

    Three incidents occurred at the May 14, 2014 11th Annual Democratic Recognition Dinner (Dinner) that were brutal political eye openers to Councilwoman Ryan that she (from the Maier perspective) made one huge political mistake in not bowing out of the "succeed John Benincasa" process.

    First, she says that at the Dinner she encountered Johnnie A. Maier, Jr.  Usually, she says, Maier, Jr is all smiles and even is known to give her a friendly hug.

    What did she get on the 14th?

    A cold stare and a cryptic: Hi!

    Hmm?

    Why would that be?

    Answer:  The SCPR thinks that she was supposed to have gotten the message (at the very least when Steve Okey got into the presidency quest), DROP OUT!

    Loy apparently had spread the word that Ryan would not sign a George T. Maier loyalty pledge (back during the Maier/Lou Darrow fight over the sheriff appointment) and therefore was not a person to be trusted.

    And, even if the Loy claim is bogus (Ryan says she cannot remember being asked to sign any such pledge), how in God's little green acre of the inner circle Stark County Democratic Party politics could Ryan ever, ever think she could match up with all things Democratic Party true-believer Steve Okey?

    Second, it was a real "ear" opener to Ryan to hear Derrick Loy boo Alliance Area Democratic Party president Brian Simeone as he was recognized as the AllianceArea Democratic Club Democrat of the Year.

    Simeone tells the SCPR that as far as he knows the Loy boo likely came from a comment he made about Steve Okey in a May 5, 2014 article about Simeone in The Alliance Review.

    The quote?

    "I challenge (our new council president) to put aside his partisan politics to continue Benincasa's legacy of bipartisan cooperation."

    Third, at the Dinner, Kathleen Purdy, was getting signatures for petitions to run for the state board of education and she approached the Steve Okey table only to be refused by one of those seated because she - Purdy - was for Larry Dordea.

    Purdy emphatically denied that such was the case.

    None of the three incidents cited above surprises the SCPR.

    The Report has known Johnnie A. Maier, Jr for many, many years.

    It took awhile, but in time it dawned on The Report that Maier, Jr is a "my way or the highway" sort of guy whose political hero is Vern Riffe.

    Vern Riffe, served as Speaker of the Ohio House (1975 - 1995), and whom, during his time in state government, was the undisputed boss of the Ohio Democratic Party.

    Maier served a rather undistinguished career (in terms of substantive legislative achievements) in the 56th (now the 50th) Ohio House District from January 3, 1991 through December 31, 1999s.

    The SCPR takes Steve Okey as being very tight with the Maiers and seemingly is embarked on a quest to advance the cause of George T. Maier across eastern Stark County with an emphasis on Alliance itself.

    But for him to bring that mission onto the floor of Council - as The Report thinks he is -  in trying to make Dordea in particular (under the guise of getting Council straightened out) to appear to be against the rule of law (i.e. the roll call vote issue) and transparency (i.e, the unsigned ballots) is quite another.

    Remember these are practices Okey engaged in as a councilman.  Where was his devotion to democracy fostering procedures then?

    That he is heavily involved in the George T. Maier campaign against Dordea makes his championing of these matters now suspect in terms of his real motivation.

    If he did not have the Maier connection, then the SCPR would be much more impressed with his advocacy.

    Neither Ryan nor Simeone would say that she/he would be supporting Larry Dordea over George T. Maier come November as they assess the race today.

    The Stark County Political Report thinks that if Steve Okey does much more of what he did on Monday night, it will not only be Ryan and Simeone as Democrats supporting the Republican Dordea in November.

    Could Hurricane Steven prove to be a political disaster for George T. Maier?

    OKEY MAKES HIS OWN CASE

    Steve Okey
    Jun 4 at 5:43 PM

    To:   Martin Olson

    Martin,

    Thanks for the opportunity to provide information regarding the Council meeting on Monday.

    As the President of City Council, I have the responsibility to make sure that City Council meetings follow the law of Ohio and the rules of City Council.  Council rule 2.01 states that the President "shall . . . decide all questions of order."  I take these responsibilities very seriously, especially because I have devoted the past 27 years of my life to the practice of law.  Following the law is part of the public trust for every public official.  It’s especially important that Council members who make the law also follow the law.

    Every organization needs to take a fresh look from time to time at how it operates.  Just because “we’ve always done it that way” does not mean that past practice is still the best way.  People in the business world know this.  Government should do the same.  That’s why after I became Council President, I took a fresh look at Council rules and the law.  And I saw that the Ohio Revised Code and Council rules don’t need to be changed.  They simply need to be applied and followed more consistently.  Again, this is part of my job as President of Council.   

    As part of my effort to fairly apply and follow the law and rules, I tried to hold a roll call vote at Monday night’s meeting of Alliance City Council.  This was not changing the rules, but simply applying the rules that are already there.    

    Ohio Revised Code section 731.17(A)(3) states very clearly:  “The following procedures shall apply to the passage of ordinances and resolutions of a municipal corporation:  . . . (3) The vote on the passage of each ordinance or resolution shall be taken by yeas and nays and entered upon the journal.”  This statute is mandatory.

    Council Rule 5.02 is similar to the statute:  “All ordinances, resolutions and rules for the government of Council shall require for their passage or adoption the concurrence of a majority of all members elected, and the votes on their passage or adoption shall be taken by yeas and nays and recorded on the journal.”  Council rules require the “yeas and nays” for other votes, too.

    The phrase “yeas and nays” means a roll call vote.  A roll call vote is when the clerk calls each individual member’s name, and that member then orally states his or her vote.

    We don’t have to look any further than Council’s own rules to know what “yeas and nays” means.  Council rule 5.01 states:  “In taking the yeas and nays, the Clerk shall call the names of the members in alphabetical order.”  That rule sounds pretty clear to me.  

    But if that’s not enough authority, we can look to the decisions of the Ohio Supreme Court and to Robert’s Rules of Order (which Council has adopted by its own rule 7.05).  They also say that “yeas and nays” means a roll call vote.

    “Yeas and nays” does not mean a voice vote, which is what Council has mostly done in the past.  A voice vote is when members of Council say “aye” as a group at the same time.  Then the members voting no, if any, all say “no” at the same time.  The trouble with group voice votes is that they do not always clearly identify whether all members actually voted.  The Alliance Review has stated that it sometimes has been difficult to tell whether members of Council even bothered to vote.  After all, no individual member of Council is called upon to state his or her vote.

    Again, in order to transition from voice votes to roll call votes, I was not changing any rules, but simply following the law and rules already in place.  Before I took this action, I sent a carefully researched, four page letter to every member of City Council and to other city officials, including the law director.  (A copy of that letter is attached to this email.)  I explained my reasons and shared all of the legal authority.  That way everyone could be on the same page and there would be no surprises.

    In reply to my letter, I received no emails and no phone calls (even though they all have my cell number).  I received no legal authority from the law director suggesting that my application of the law and rules would be incorrect -- and indeed, have received nothing from her to this day.  The only response I received was an insulting text message that one member of Council sent.  That kind of childish behavior is disappointing.

    Having heard nothing of substance, I then attempted to follow Ohio law and Council rules and hold a roll call vote at the Council meeting on Monday.  Unfortunately, Council refused to follow the correct procedure and demanded instead that only group voice votes be used, regardless of what the law and rules say.

    Council’s behavior seems particularly silly, since it takes only about 10 seconds to hold a roll call vote of the seven members.       

    Sometimes there are disagreements about what procedure should be followed.  If a Council member disagrees with the President on a question of order, then Council rule 2.01 permits any two members to appeal the President’s decision to the whole Council.  Council members should know this because it’s right in their own rules.

    On several occasions, I asked Council member Jakmides if she was making an appeal of my decision to hold a roll call vote.  Over and over again, she said “no.”  Even though I gave Ms. Jakmides numerous opportunities to make an appeal, she refused.  It was only after the law director told her what to say that the meeting could finally move forward.  Yet again, Council members are unfamiliar with their own rules.  

    Instead of appealing my decision to hold a roll call, Ms. Jakmides first made a motion to “censure” me.  If I am to be “censured” for trying to follow Ohio law and Council rules, then I will consider that a badge of honor.  But it is a sad day when members of a city council ignore their own rules and state law, and refuse to give their individual votes on the record.  Censuring the Council President simply because he calls for a roll call vote?  It sounds Orwellian.  Just what are they afraid of?  

    Holding elective office is a privilege.  Casting a vote on behalf of the people you represent is an honor, and we should be deeply concerned that members of Council are trying to hide in a group voice vote, rather than take 10 seconds to follow the law and their own rules.  We should also be concerned about the city law director’s advice to Council regarding their votes, both now and in the recent past.

    Some might ask, “What difference does all this make?”

    It might make a huge difference.  If Council fails to scrupulously follow the law in passing an ordinance, someone could dispute whether the ordinance is valid.  A criminal defendant could seek the dismissal of charges because the charging ordinance was not adopted according to law.  A person could dispute a tax obligation because the tax ordinance was not adopted according to law.

    Why take chances?  Consistently following the law helps us to avoid these and other problems.  Also, a roll call vote as required by the statute and rules avoids any uncertainty and keeps the public better informed of the decisions of their representatives.  I can't think of a single downside to holding a roll call vote.        

    I am a realist.  I understand that some members of Council might refuse to follow my lead because they are motivated by party politics.  But partisan politics has nothing to do with this.  Good government is not a Republican or a Democratic goal.  It is an American goal.  Council members from both parties need to be aware of the correct path to follow.  In that manner, I am following the example set by our late Council President John Benincasa.

    Others might be motivated by bitterness because of their disappointed aspirations or because I previously filed a court action over other votes of Council that were legally improper.  It is unfortunate if public officials let hurt feelings get in the way of following the law and rules.  

    My job and my motivation are clear:  follow the law, apply the law, and clean up this voting process so that the law and rules are followed consistently.  It's the same process I started in fighting for open meetings and against illegal secret ballot votes.       

    But I would prefer to work with the members of Council, rather than have them attack me for the sin of asking for a roll call vote.  Perhaps they will be more willing to put their individual votes on the record if the people of Alliance remind them that a roll call vote is a virtue, not a vice.  Again, what are they afraid of?

    Regards,

    Steve


    Monday, November 5, 2012

    SHERIFF RACE: "FIGHT TO THE FINISH!"




    What started off as a "Marquess de Queensbury rules," gentlemen-esque campaign has gone over the line and turned into a knock down, drag out "Fight to the Finish!"

    To review recent history of this race and what appears to be the last round of the fight, a few days ago (LINK), Democratic sheriff candidate Mike McDonald told the SCPR:

    "I do not beleve [Larry Dordea] is qualifed to be the sheriff, I don't think he knows what he is talking about."

    And, to boot, he added in a flyer he sent out at the end of last week:


    Hmm?

    Dordea is a politician but "candidate" McDonald is not?

    On Friday last, yours truly received a highly inflammatory campaign mailer from Republican candidate Larry Dordea's  campaign, to wit:


    and


    Hmm?

    Who believes that Mike McDonald was (as implied) insensitive to the lady's death?

    Swanson endorses McDonald and that Swanson has a history of supporting former Stark County Treasurer Gary Zeigler somehow connects McDonald to Zeigler?

    Tortured and convoluted logic, no?

    Such is a not too subtle effort to bring out the political memories of the Stark County electorate, large numbers of whom undoubtedly remain upset with the way Zeigler managed the Stark treasury insofar as sufficient infrastructure, policy, and practices are seen by the public as having not been in place so as to have prevented his former chief deputy Vince Frustaci from having stolen upwards of $3 million of Stark County taxpayer money.

    So the rough stuff is flowering unabated in the final days of the campaign.

    All the political vitriol began to surface with the Dordea's forces (i.e. Dordea campaign manager and Jackson trustee James Walters), complaining/alleging to county Auditor Alan Harold that McDonald and his fellow chief deputy Rick Perez have been/are being overpaid on longevity/vacation pay when they retired/rehired within the sheriff's department.

    Quite a fight, no?

    On top of what the candidates themselves have said, their supporters have weighed in also.

    Julie Jakmides (Republican Alliance councilwoman) for Dodea and Derrick Loy (president of Alliance Area Democratic Club) for McDonald.

    The SCPR received an e-mail from Mister Loy (who sent a copy of a letter to the editor alleging certain facts about Dordea LINK) denying that he is a "surrogate" of McDonald's (as is the opinion of the SCPR in a de facto sense), to wit:
    I am not involved in Deputy McDonald's campaign any more than I am with Sherrod Brown's campaign. I am not on Deputy McDonald's committee, I have not knocked a single door or made a single telephone call for Deputy McDonald's campaign. I do not speak for or represent the McDonald campaign in any fashion, including as a surrogate as you've referred to me.
    The SCPR has never said that Loy has an "official" role in the McDonald campaign.  The use of the word "surrogate" is intended in a nuanced sense.  That is to say, in the opinion of yours truly, Loy's effort has the effect of what a representative  (i.e. surrogate) of a campaign does for a candidate.

    Whatever!

    The Report always gives subjects of SCPR blogs an opportunity to respond when there is disagreement.

    The Report will not accept/agree with any implication that Loy is somehow a disinterested citizen whose only concern is that Stark County get a quality Stark County top cop elected in Tuesday's election, to wit:
    I didn't create the public records, newspaper articles, and facts, they are what they are. Information for interested citizens and voters to consider as they evaluate candidates for public office. Some people choose to deflect from the facts when the facts are not in their favor.

    Thanking you for the opportunity to clarify and expand upon the items in my previous communications with you.
     Finally, this from Loy's e-mail:
    The information provided to me by the City of Alliance as a result of my initial request for Alliance Police Department payroll records didn't clearly distinguish between base wage and overtime monies paid. 
    So I am providing you the message below, which contains accurate Alliance City information that Mr. Knowles provided me yesterday in response to my recent request for two particular items of importance. 
    Also shown is Mr. Dordea's former and current campaign treasurer's brother's [Andrew Zumbar, brother of Dordea campaign treasurer and Stark County Treasurer Alex Zumbar who is running for election as treasurer], wage prior to Dordea sponsoring and voting to approve the amendment to Alliance City Ordinance 101-11. 
    The amended ordinance raised the Law Director's wage from $31,961.31 to $45,920 beginning January 1, 2012. Those figures reflect an increase of $13,958.69 annually. 
    This significant increase to one particular employee of the City while the City's hardworking rank-and-file employees take pay freezes and other Alliance elected officials receiving a 3% pay increase. 
    Mr. Dordea may not take me serious, but the tax-paying citizens of Alliance and Stark County should be concerned and view this type of fiscally irresponsibility VERY SERIOUS! 
    Can the people of Stark County afford Mr. Dordea!
    Here is a copy of an e-mail sent by Alliance Auditor Kevin Knowles [who has written to the SCPR in support of Dordea] to a public records request by Loy.   (Note:  Dordea was not the Alliance police chief in 2008, so why does Loy include 2008 in the request?)


    So the fight goes on right up to election day.

    But the SCPR has never wavered.

    Notwithstanding the heavy fighting going on between McDonald and Dordea and their supporters, The Report's take is that either would do a fine job as Stark County sheriff.

    This race is definitely a "pick 'em."

    But can there be any doubt that the victor will be tarnished by the turn from a model thoughtful campaign to a back alley "fight to the finish?"