Tuesday, July 28, 2015

UPDATED SCPR "TOP TEN" ELECTED OFFICIALS: JULY, 2015 #4



Continuing on today with the second quarterly listing of the SCPR Stark County Political Subdivision Top 10 Elected Officials, The Report focuses on #5.

Readers will have figured out by now, in order to maintain or advance (as Zumbar has done, going from #5 in March to #4 today)  on the List, an official will have had to made additional leadership contributions to the well being of Stark County government since the first list was published in March of this year.

And Stark County treasurer Alex Zumbar has done so, to wit:


In part, this is what Molnar wrote on June 22nd:
The city [Canton] has $4.2 million in state funding to buy and demolish up to 325 dilapidated buildings.

So far, only about $557,000 has been spent on 157 properties since Aug. 26. Six have been demolished.

“They have 150 that they need to get moving on,’’ said Stark County Treasurer Alexander Zumbar, chairman of the county land bank board that temporarily holds titles to the parcels. “Get ’em down.”

Unbelievably, Stark County treasurer Alex Zumbar cares more about the quality of Canton neighborhoods than does Canton mayor William J. Healy, II and his administration?

That's how it appears!

Equally unbelievable to the SCPR is a seemingly but not really rhetorical question posed by a Canton councilman to yours truly recently:  "Where do you think the problem is [on the Canton demolition program], up on the 8th floor [the domain of the Healy administration in the Canton City Hall building] or with Zumbar?" [president of the Stark County Land Reutilization Commission].

You can bet your bottom dollar that Zumbar did not win any friends on Canton City Hall's 8th floor with his letter.

But in prodding the Mayor Healy administration to get cracking on using those state and federal dollars was absolutely the thing for Treasurer/SCLRC president Zumbar to have done.

The Report has sat in on many Canton City Council work sessions in which councilperson after councilperson after councilperson has put the heat on the administration to pick up the pace on demolishing condemned and abandoned housing that blights the neighborhoods of the Hall of Fame City.

You have the movers and shakers of Stark County putting together a Hall of Fame Village project that has the potential to bring hundreds of millions of dollars in economic development to Stark County and the county seat Canton and Mayor Healy cannot get his act together on getting rid of as much residential blight as possible so as not to burden the eyes of future visitors to the city?

To the SCPR it makes no sense at all that the mayor is dragging his feet in not accelerating/spending the SCLRC held (in a figurative sense) money.

And The Report believes that the mayor is the accountable person.

Not Zumbar, not Healy's administrators, but the mayor himself.

As with nearly everything Healy, The Report thinks that he has made some political calculus that there is an advantage to his personal political fortunes to be dragging his feet

Eventually, Healy will be gone as mayor of Canton but the undone work of cleaning up Canton's neighborhoods will remain.

Kudos therefore to Zumbar for applying the heat to Mayor William J. Healy, II of the city of Canton.

For his effort, Zumbar remains in the top eschelon of the SCPR "Top 10" List.

In order to had made "the list" in the first place, Alex Zumbar has had to render exemplary service as an elected Stark County official in the first place.

Here is a recapitulation of what the SCPR wrote about Zumbar on March 26, 2015:

Today's blog is on Stark County Treasurer Alex Zumbar.

Along with yesterday's SCPR subject Stark County Auditor Alan Harold and Stark County commissioners Thomas Bernabei and Janet Creighton; Alex Zumbar has been a key figure in restoring the Stark County public's confidence in county government following what local attorney and civic activist Craig T. Conley has termed as being Zeiglergate (April 1, 2009 through October 19, 2011).

There is however one key difference between Zumbar and the others.

In Zumbar's case there was an alternative selection to be had to succeed Gary Zeigler as Stark County treasurer.

Zeigler, as it turned out, was "unconstitutionally" removed as treasurer by the-then commissioners Bosley, Meeks and Ferguson in August, 2010.  The Ohio Supreme Court restored Zeigler to office in June, 2011.

The September, 2010 alternative was Democrat Ken Koher who did serve for a short period of time which was from September 20, 2010 through November 24, 2010.

Koher who had been selected by Stark County's "organized" Democrats to replace Zeigler had to face Republican nominee Zumbar (September 9, 2010 at a Stark Co.  GOP meeting which resulted in the SCPR "gone Huffington Post Internet viral" Phil Davison "over-the-top Republican" video) on November 2, 2010.



Zumbar won and was sworn in on November 24th.

But, of course, as indicated above,  Zumbar was out in June, 2011 only to return on October 31, 2011.


From the Stark County treasurer's website:
Alexander Zumbar was first elected Stark County Treasurer in November of 2010. 
Prior to assuming his current position he spent 18 years in public service. 
Beginning in 1996 Treasurer Zumbar was elected to the Alliance City Council and held that position until 2003. 
Also, in 2003 he held the dual position of Administrative Assistant to the Honorable Charles E. Brown Jr. in the Stark County Court of Common Pleas- General Division. 
In November, 2003 he was elected to the position of Alliance City Auditor and held that position until May of 2008 when he was appointed as Finance Director of North Canton and held that position until his election as Treasurer. 
Civically, Alex is on the District Eagle Scout Review Board, Regina Coeli Catholic Church, Knights of Columbus #558, and Christopher Columbus Society. 
Professionally Treasurer Zumbar is a member of Auditor of State Dave Yost-Northeast Ohio Regional Advisory Board, Government Finance Officers Association, County Treasurers Association of Ohio and Association of Public Treasurers of the United States and Canada. 
Alex holds the following certificates and special awards and honors: Emerging Trends in Fraud Investigation and Prevention certificate, Public Records and Open Meetings Law Training certification and the Ohio Financial Accountability certification. He has received the CAFR Award from the State of Ohio Auditor’s Office and the Government Finance Officer Association from 2004 through 2010. The State Auditor Award and is a BSA Eagle Scout. 
Treasurer Zumbar received his B.A. degree in Accounting from Mount Union College.

This is what the SCPR had to say about Zumbar in a November 23, 2011 annual Thanksgiving Day blog: (an extract)
[Zumbar] is a Republican through and through. 
He, picking up where Democrat Ken Koher had left off, on his winning of office in November, 2010 went to work instituting many structural, policy, practice and procedural changes in the Stark County treasury to ensure that a Vince Frustaci-esque theft of taxpayer moneys could never happen again. 
Moreover, Zumbar went to work in proposing and helping establish a Stark County-based land bank program to identify condemned, abandoned and to be torn down properties to be put to more productive use. 
Picking up on local attorney and civic activist Craig T. Conley's focus on the fact that some $40 million of back property taxes are owed to Stark County and its political subdivisions, Zumbar has put together lists of properties for the Stark County prosecutor's office to pursue in order to get much needed revenue into the hands of the county and the subdivisions. 
This despite being bounced in and out of office like a yo-yo. 
Indeed Stark Countians should be thankful that Alex Zumbar had the fortitude to stand tall and do what's good for Stark County.
Zumbar continues his restructuring of the Stark County treasurer's facilities in order to achieve maximum protection of Stark County taxpayer money to the degree it is still kept at the treasurer's office which is located on the second floor of the Stark County Office Building.

Zumbar has done sterling work as the initiator of (March 21, 2012) and guiding factor in the formation of and development of the Stark County Land Reutilization Corporation (SCLRC, aka Stark County Lank Bank).

A number of Stark County political subdivisions have benefited from the formation of the SCLRC.

Canton with some 4,000 of 5,000 blighted and abandoned residential units remaining (the 1,000 removed so far coming from SCLRC administration of an Ohio attorney general office grant and Canton's $1 million local match) has been a major beneficiary of the existence of the SCLRC.

However, as stated by the SCPR in this series about Commissioner Tom Bernabei and Auditor Alan Harold, as well as The Report thinks of Zumbar, he is not perfect.

It was alarming to the SCPR when it appeared that Zumbar:

  • appeared (in July, 2014) to be trying to increase the pay of his chief deputy (Jaime Allbrittain, a former Stark Co. treasurer herself) at the expense of the SCLRC without bidding the "to be created SCLRC position" out to the general public,


Needless to say, Zumbar was furious with yours truly about the blogs on the incidents described above as he has been from time-to-time on other SCPR blogs.

What public officials like Zumbar can't quite seem to figure out is that yours truly does not seek to be liked by Stark County officialdom.  In fact, The Report gets just a tad nervous if a given relationship with a public official gets comfortable.  The question always becomes:  Am I doing my job as a journalist?

The Report gets along well with most of Stark County officialdom.  But things do get testy from time-to-time and that's the way it should be.  Zumbar has been among the most unhappy with the blogs that the SCPR publishes.

And, of course, word filters back to The Report that Johnnie A. Maier, Jr. and elected official members of his Maier Massillon Political Machine go absolutely "bonkers" at some of the SCPR's incisive blogs on how they perform as Stark County officials.

The Report see these folks as cowardly types who only answer questions posed by the "fawning" press.

The SCPR does not mind elected officials having a strong political party loyalty side to them except when The Report thinks that party connections seem to unduly play in the discharge of the official functions.

The Report suspects that Zumbar and his sidekick Allbritain and Stark County Probate Court judge Dixie Park were into some sort of political quid pro quo (something for something) in Park's daughter ending up on the Stark County treasury payroll and Allbritain's showing up on Judge Park's payroll.

Moreover, Zumbar hired into his office the child of a Republican Alliance councilman (Roger Rhome) apparently without making the job available to the general public.
There is probably nothing more odious to the SCPR than these types of "do not meet the smell test" personnel transactions.

On the Democratic Party side, Sheriff George T. Maier is the personification of the "does not meet the smell test" on the question of his non-union hirings.

Notwithstanding Zumbar's warts, the SCPR thinks that he is a superb Stark County official.

And he can be assured that The Report's thinking well of him will be no barrier whatsoever in terms of writing blogs chastising him for what yours truly thinks is this or that inappropriate public action.

A vigilant press helps make the likes of Zumbar better public officials.  Unfortunately, Stark County's only countywide newspaper all to often give certain public officials a pass on intense scrutiny.

On balance the SCPR thinks well enough of Zumbar to make him make #5 on the Stark County "Top 10" List of Stark County political subdivision elected officials.

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