Showing posts with label SLIMAN. Show all posts
Showing posts with label SLIMAN. Show all posts

Wednesday, August 2, 2017

CANTON LOOKING TO LEVERAGE WATER INTO A MERGER WITH CANTON TOWNSHIP?




VIDEOS

Canton Councilman Bill Smuckler
"Whatever Happened to Annexation for Those Wanting Canton Water?"

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Canton Council Ponders/Passes Ordinance to Provide Canton Twp Water

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Canton Township Trustee Chris Nichols

No Canton Township/Canton Merger

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Canton + Canton Township = "New Canton, Ohio?"

After all, Canton Township virtually encircles Canton.

"Not in my lifetime, but perhaps decades down the road," says Canton director of annexation Sam Sliman who appeared at a Stark County commissioners meeting about five years ago or so and proudly attributed to himself as being the "Darth Vader of Annexation."

Probably a couple of decades ago, Canton water for Canton Township became a hot topic as a lone wolf township activist approached Canton officials about the prospect of Canton constructing a pipeline into the township and selling water to its residents.

At that time, there was a great push in Canton that water came at a price.

Price?

Indeed:  "ANNEXATION!!!"

Eventually, the whole notion of a Canton/Canton Township nexus on the leverage of "water for all" fell apart.

So what brings the issue of Canton water for Canton Township into view again?

Here's what.  An ordinance on the agenda of Canton City Council:


What's more is this Councilman-at-Large William Smuckler observation during Canton City Council's work session preceding its July 17th council meeting at which the matter was debated and passed by a 9 to 2 margin.  Councilman Smuckler and Ward 5 councilman Fisher voted "no."

Here is Smuckler's work session comments:



During council's regular meeting of the 17th, Canton water superintendent Tyler Converse explained why it was in Canton's interest to take advantage of the economies of doing the design work now so as to be prepared for Canton and its abundant water supplies to work out an agreement with Canton Township residents (short of annexation) to provide water to them.

Note: (regular meeting video picks up after Smuckler "work session" query)



Over the years since Canton Township water acquisition discussion first began under the Dick Watkins administration (1992-2003), the township has edged itself into getting Canton water for about 50% of its residences/businesses all without falling into the clutches of Sam Sliman—the self-described Darth Vader of Annexation vis-a-vis surrounding townships.

But make no mistake about it.

Canton Township has no interest whatsoever in merging into Canton.

Watch this Stark County Political Report interview of township trustee Chris Nichols as he says that while he and former fellow Canton Township trustee Bill Smith (a Stark County commissioner as of January 1, 2017) ran, in part, campaigns for township trustee on a model of inter-governmental cooperation, the answer to Canton Township merging into Canton is absolutely a "no!"



The SCPR does think that Sam Sliman may turn out to have been a seer of  geography of Stark County "decades down the road."

Just think.

There are cooperative agreements all over and among Stark County political subdivisions.

To name a few:
  • Joint Economic Development Districts (JEDD) involving Canton and Jackson Township,
  • JEDD consisting of Canton, Jackson Township and Plain Township,
    • Note:  Landlocked North Canton bowed out in joining this JEDD on the insistence of North Canton mayor David Held,
  • Collaborations among Stark County's 17 school districts, 
  • Canton's recent decision (May, 2017) to join in with the countywide 9-1-1 emergency call receiving and dispatching service,
It is somewhat ironic that Councilman Smuckler raised the spectre of  "annexation as the price for getting Canton water" inasmuch as on other issues he is one of Stark County's foremost advocates for efficiency in government collaboration, cooperation and consolidation among Stark County's cities, villages and townships.

Smuckler now says that he has a somewhat different view on the Canton Township and Canton water.

But, to repeat, he did vote against the design ordinance.

Smuckler excitedly shared with me on this past Monday night that he led the way for Canton to pass an ordinance designed to bring Canton's 9-1-1 into being a full-fledged partner with the existing countywide 9-1-1 effort.




Why the excitement?

Because he has been criticized by some Stark County officials as being "all mouth and no accomplishments" on his "let's come together" advocacy.

Part of his problem, he says, in getting Canton on board before now was former Canton mayor William J. Healy, II insistence that working with the countywide effort was not in the interest of Canton.

Smuckler told me that he has received a call from Randy Gonzalez, the prime architect of Stark County's revamped and highly improved 9-1-1 (modernization began post-2008 and a report that Stark's system was broken) estatically congratulating him on being the lead in bringing Canton onboard.

Moreover, Sheriff George T. Maier contacted him and praised him for his successful effort.

The SCPR agrees with the implication of Director Sliman's forward looking projection.

In 10, 20, 30, 40, 50 years, Stark County's political subdivision operating model if not the county geographical map is likely to be quite a bit different than it is now.

And, in the making, the likes of Smuckler, Nichols, Smith and Gonzalez will be remembered as pioneers in bringing Stark County together!

Monday, March 2, 2009

DISCUSSION: IS TODD BOSLEY THE VISIONARY THAT STARK COUNTY HAS BEEN WAITING FOR?


Yours truly has been a resident of Stark County since 1975. Over the nearly 25 ensuing years, Stark County as well as its major city Canton, have wasted away to "a struggle to survive stage."

Cantonians turned in 2007 to William J. Healy, II as "a needed change" from the "ways things have been done." But as much as Healy likes to trumpet himself as an "agent of change," the STARK COUNTY POLITICAL REPORT (The Report) is unconvinced. Healy has wedded himself to out-of-town interests and there The Report questions whether or not he has a "real" commitment to Canton or, is it, as The Report suspects: all about Jamey Healy?

With Healy, The Report thinks what Canton has bought into is "rearranging the chairs on the deck of the Titanic." The turmoil that Healy and his imperial-esque "I'm in charge" attitude has brought to Canton and Stark County is a major distraction.

Canton will not move forward in a meaningful way a a viable economic entity (even with the "Darth Vader to the Townships" [Canton Director of Annexation Sam Sliman as he describes himself] annexing every thing in sight as a desperation move to save Canton) until the Healy matter is resolved.

If Sliman realizes his goal to annex everything in Stark County that is worth annexing from his and Canton City Council's "generate income tax money flow from the county into Canton" perspective just to survive, then Stark County's economy could be doomed. To The Report; Healy, Sliman and Canton City Council are not about positive area leadership, but about surviving "one more day."

Meanwhile, Stark County does have a burgeoning leader who seems to get it. In today's Alliance Review (Hats Off! to The Review), reporter Laurie Hoffman does a splendid piece on Bosley's effort to work with Stark County Sheriff Tim Swanson to recapitalize the heating plant at the Stark County jail without costs to Stark County taxpayers.

How is Bosley going to pull this one off?

Through grants and cost savings in terms of wood waste products in to fuel for the the wood fired furnaces.

Bosley is like a juggler these days. Working on: a consolidating county operations (the engineering project), a confluence of the Stark County/Canton inspection units, pushing for a reconfiguration of 9-1-1 into a state of the art countywide collaboration; just to name a few.

When The Report talked with Healy several months ago at one of his "Townhall meeting" he wasn't the least bit enthusiastic about the work of Todd Bosley.

Why would that be?

Perhaps because Bosley doesn't have the credentials, the pedigree - if you will. After all Mayor Healy graduated from the New York University Stern School of Business.

Where did Bosley get his education from?

From tiny Wheaton College (Billy Graham's alma mater) and from the "school of hard knocks."

The Report's money is on the highly practical Bosley to lead Stark County into the 21st century. Not the dapper and comopolitan William J. Healy, II.