Tag Archives: 2010 Election

Peoria County Board, District 3: Karrie Alms

I’ve known Karrie Alms for a few years now, and I can tell you this: when she tells you that she believes in transparency in government, following established processes, and giving citizens the opportunity to have meaningful input — she means it. She has worked harder than anyone I know to hold our government leaders accountable. That’s not always easy. It often involves making dozens of calls and requesting a lot of documents through the Freedom of Information Act. Once, it even required taking legal action against the Park District at her own personal expense.

Karrie makes decisions on principle, not out of political expediency. Those principles include common-sense positions such as taking care of needs before wants (a basic-services-first position), keeping our debt load as low as possible, and keeping citizens informed and engaged in the decision-making process. She’s an independent thinker who makes decisions based on facts, wherever those facts may lead. She’s relentless in her search for all the information she needs to make the best decision.

Accessible, responsible, transparent, principled — these are the kinds of attributes I think everyone wants in a representative, and Karrie Alms has them. She is endorsed.

Candidate Forum planned for Oct. 16

From a press release:

League of Women Voters Invites the Public
To Candidate Forum on Oct. 16

PEORIA – The League of Women Voters of Greater Peoria will host a candidate forum for three important races, at 9 a.m. on Saturday, Oct. 16, 2010, at the Weaver Ridge Golf Club, 5100 N. Weaver Ridge Blvd.

The candidates who have agreed to attend are:

  • For the 18th District Congressional Seat: D.K. Hirner, Democrat, and Sheldon Schafer of the Green Party. (Republican incumbent Aaron Schock is unable to attend the event.)
  • For Peoria County Recorder of Deeds: Evonne Fleming, Democrat and Nancy Horton, Republican.
  • For Peoria County Board District 3: Lynn Scott Pearson, Democrat and Karrie Alms, Republican.
  • For Peoria County Board District 13: Randy Stevens, Democrat and James Fennell, Republican.

The candidates will make statements and answer questions from the audience. The event is free and open to the public.

An optional light breakfast for $7.50 will be available for purchase at 8:30 a.m.

Reservations will be appreciated, and can be made by calling 309/691-2167.

Homemade anti-McDade ad appears on YouTube

You don’t generally see (or pay attention to) election ads about retaining judges during campaign season. Races with two or more opponents tend to get all the attention; the question of whether to retain a judge just isn’t very exciting. But it looks like this season things may be a little different, especially for Appellate Court Judge Mary McDade. A Chronicle reader sent me a link to this homemade ad on YouTube:

Peoria School Board – District 3: Lickiss

For most races, Tuesday’s election is a primary. But for the third district of the Peoria Board of Education, Tuesday’s election is final. Current board member Dr. David Gorenz is not running for reelection, and will be replaced with one of three candidates: Ernestine Jackson, 69; Christopher Crawford, 37; and Jeff Lickiss, 49.

Ernestine Jackson is an Equal Opportunity Associate for the City of Bloomington. She hasn’t held public office, but has experience in politics. Her husband is attorney Don Jackson, president of the Peoria chapter of the NAACP. She supported the charter school initiative, “with the understanding that it will, in fact, be open to all students, not just select students,” she told the Chamber of Commerce. She believes the number of administrators needs to be reduced, based on declining enrollment. Her top three priorities are getting a balanced budget, closing the achievement gap, and reducing discipline problems. Her stated priorities are right, but her support for the charter school is counter to the first priority on her list. Also, this gave me pause:

What the District is presently producing is unacceptable and does not meet the needs of the business community. There needs to be drastic changes if this District is to produce a competent workforce that is ready to meet the challenges of a changing job market. The city needs to be able to attract new businesses in order to increase its tax base. This cannot be accomplished if the Board continues on the present path.

When I read this, I picture our schools as factories spitting out little workers for area businesses. In fairness, she was responding to a Chamber of Commerce survey, and was thus likely tailoring her answers to her audience. Nevertheless, I chafe when educational benefits are reduced to “meet[ing] the needs of the business community,” as if the only purpose for public schooling is economic utility. It’s hard to inspire kids when all you have to offer is a common cubicle in corporate America.

But I digress. Jackson also promises to “deliver honest and accurate information to parents and the public,” according to her interview with the Times-Observer, and that would certainly be a welcome change. She also pledges to review the district’s current contracts “with the intent to eliminate excessive spending. This includes doing away with the notion that we must hire a consultant to study every issue confronting the District.” She’s also the only candidate who put “discipline” in her top three priorities for the district. All in all, Jackson is a strong candidate, but will likely be discounted by many because of her continued support of former superintendent Kay Royster.

Christopher Crawford is a local attorney with no previous political experience. He has been endorsed by the Journal Star and the Peoria Area Chamber of Commerce. But on the positive side, he has gained favor with various parent-teacher organizations by being, in some cases, the only candidate to attend their meetings. He’s a strong supporter of the charter school initiative and retaining the Edison schools contract. He supported closing Woodruff High School. He’s in favor of an alternative high school, and might be in favor of returning schools to a K-8 configuration, but wants more information before making a decision. Frankly, his stances on the issues appear indistinguishable from those of Dr. Gorenz. Those who are looking for a good status-quo candidate will find one in Crawford.

Jeff Lickiss is a registered nurse and former Peoria County Board member. He is the only candidate who would not have voted for the charter school because of the district’s financial situation. He believes his County Board experience would be an asset on the School Board — especially his ability to “ask the tough questions and demand factual answers.” However, he also thinks the next administrator, by which I think he means superintendent, should be “a candidate with a MBA emphasis” rather than “a candidate with emphasis on Education PhD.” This looks to me like it betrays a less-than-full understanding of the roles of Superintendent and Comptroller, or alternatively, an ignorance of the educational requirements to be Superintendent. Or maybe it was just meant to be rhetorical. In any case, his point is that he’s concerned about the financial health of the district, which is fair. Like Jackson, he would also cut consultants. He would “spend the district’s money on education.” Lickiss says, “The district needs to focus on its core responsibilities, develop a long term strategic plan and stick to it.”

I think change is needed on the Board, so it comes down to either Jackson or Lickiss. They’re both good candidates, and residents of the third district would be well-served by either of them. Since you can only pick one, I’m giving the edge to Lickiss based on his stance on the charter school initiative. It takes guts to stand up to powerful local interests and insist on financial accountability above political expediency. We need more of that on the school board. Lickiss is endorsed.

Blogging Bits and Pieces

Here are some odds and ends that I just don’t feel like writing a whole post about:

  • It looks like District 150 has just about settled on a new superintendent, and her name is Grenita Lathan. She’s currently the “interim deputy superintendent at California’s San Diego Unified Schools.” Other than that I don’t know much about her, and there’s surprisingly little on Google, Lexis-Nexis, the San Diego Union-Tribune, the Chicago Tribune, or any number of additional sources I checked. Oh, there are some snippets here and there. You can see some interview footage with her here. Commenters on another post have several links to quotes and information they find troublesome. Some have already passed judgment. I’m kind of old-fashioned, though. I like to wait until someone actually screws up before I start criticizing them. From what I’ve heard, the first thing she wants to do is purge the administration of unnecessary and ineffective administrators. I certainly can’t complain about that.
  • John Vespa was not endorsed by the Journal Star to succeed his brother as the 10th Judicial Circuit judge. The reason they give for passing him over is that “Vespa fell below the 65 passing grade” on something called the bar poll “and is ‘not recommended.'” They say the bar poll (where responses are anonymous) is “controversial,” but they evidently believe it. Not surprisingly, the Vespa campaign begs to differ. They report: “To understand the relevance of the bar poll … it is important to look at … the number of people participating. There are 911 lawyers in the Circuit that are eligible to participate in the poll, according to the ARDC website. Of those 911, there were only 152 that registered an opinion. (16.3%) The majority of those 152 felt John met the requirements of the office. Of course John would expect to have some legitimate detractors, particularly given the fact that half of his practice is devoted to criminal defense. In fact, it would be troubling if he did not. (All of his opponents practice for the most part, civil law only).” As the Journal Star would say, “Voters can make of that what they will.”
  • One of my readers recently told me about this site called “How We Drive” — and specifically, this post on “Parking Availability Bias.” Very cool site full of interesting information.
  • The “religious group” that the city is considering to operate the public access channels on Comcast’s cable system is called GPS-TV, and is located in Washington, Illinois. Here’s their website.
  • You can download a transcript (PDF format) of Mayor Ardis’s State of the City address here. Of course, the biggest announcement of the speech was this: “I have spoken at some length with County Board Chairman Tom O’Neill and we are prepared to put together a group that will be charged with exploring the opportunity to move Peoria City?County towards combined municipal government.” It will be interesting to see what recommendations that group makes in the future. Will it just be combining certain functions, or a total UNIGOV proposal?

Chicago Tribune wants a revolution

The editors of the Chicago Tribune have an interesting take on why we keep electing the same leaders in Illinois:

Evidently, it’s Stockholm syndrome, the tendency of some hostages to bond with their captors. How else to explain Illinoisans’ habit of re-electing lawmakers who chronically spend and borrow billions more than taxpayers supply? The result: huge debts and unfunded obligations that will make this an unaffordable state for employers and workers to build a future.

They want us to snap out of it and clean house in the next election. And they’re running a series of editorials aimed at convincing voters to do just that. The first one — “A call to arms” — ran last Sunday, December 27. Today’s editorial is “Splurge. Borrow. Repeat.” While they’re obviously talking about state government, I think this can be applied to other levels of government as well — specifically in regards to fiscal irresponsibility:

If you enjoy the political culture as is — with the next corruption scandal never far off and with your public officials borrowing future generations into penury in order to prop up today’s treacherously uncontrolled spending — then you should support candidates who’ll protect the status quo. If, however, the failure of too many politicians to make urgently needed reforms infuriates you, then reach for a broom.

We hope you’re among the millions who are infuriated. And we hope you’ll reach for that broom.

Politicians at all levels of government are addicted to debt. The City of Peoria paid almost 11 cents of every dollar toward debt service in 2009 — a percentage that will go up in 2010 as the city cuts operational costs while simultaneously taking on more long-term debt. The next City Council election is in 2011 when all the at-large council representatives come up for reelection.