Showing posts with label 5th district. Show all posts
Showing posts with label 5th district. Show all posts

Sunday, November 17, 2019

Councilman-elect Josh "JT" Turner announces 5th district community meeting on Saturday, November 23.


Josh "JT" Turner has yet to be sworn in, and already he has scheduled one more community meeting than his 5th district predecessor. In fact, I'm so old I can remember when 3rd district councilman Greg Phipps pledged to hold community meetings. This would have been in 2011.

Have we had any yet?

Fifth district community meeting.

Kolkins Coffee
Saturday November, 23rd
12:30 pm- 2:00 pm

City councilmen Joshua Turner will be on hand for this event for anyone that would like to come and talk to him about their concerns or ideas for district 5.

Monday, September 16, 2019

Vote Josh "JT" Turner for New Albany City Council District 5.



Call it a personal endorsement if you will, or think of it as my personal support, backing, seal of approval, recommendation or advocacy. 

It's been a great pleasure to make Josh Turner's acquaintance during the past year. Personally, he's a great guy with an amazing work ethic: young, enthused, and a fine listener with an open mind.

Politically, the contrast is crystal clear. It's hard to imagine a better antidote than JT to the Democratic Party's corrupt patronage fixes and overall policy exhaustion. There have been no bailouts for Josh. He's made his own way, successfully.

I highly recommend Josh Turner to my friends in the 5th council district. Vote for him, already!

Josh "JT" Turner for New Albany City Council District 5

Saturday, August 11, 2018

Ooh, ooh, that smell: 5th district councilman Matt Nash, a key supporter of Jeff Gahan's colonial agenda, now is employed by the New Albany Housing Authority -- the mayor's personal colonial realm.


New Albany’s 5th district councilman Matt Nash, son of longtime Democratic power broker, current Board of Works gatekeeper and ineffectual former mayor Warren Nash, has taken a job in maintenance at the New Albany Housing Authority.

Matt was pictured in Thursday’s News and Tribune helping Riverview Towers residents (and at least one cat) return to their homes after their displacement in the wake of the recent crisis of David Duggins’ ongoing gross managerial incompetence.

The new job at NAHA comes directly on the heels of the $10 million Reisz Mahal city hall relocation project, approved in council by a 5-4 margin, and with Matt's crucial “aye” vote coming without a single word of attributable public explanation.

In fact, Matt has been a reliably affirmative vote for Mayor Jeff Gahan; although statistics aren’t readily available, he probably has voted with mayor and party in excess of 90% of the time since taking office in 2016 -- and it's hard to blame this lopsidedness on the perfidy of county government.

In Matt's defense, it’s also impossible to know how often he has been subjected to threats and bullying from vile party chairman Adam Dickey, or the extent to which these pressures, and the local party’s enduring small-pond dysfunction, have contributed to this muddled situation.

(You want my opinion? Local mirror-gazing Democratic fixers like Dickey, Gahan and the elder Nash never have given a solitary damn about Matt as a person, only how he might be utilized in pursuit of their self-aggrandizement.)

In 2015, when 5th district Democratic primary winner Dustin Collins was forced to withdraw from the race for reasons of health, Matt was chosen as replacement by the same Democratic Party precinct apparatus overseen for decades by his father.

The Green Mouse believes Matt inquired about the NAHA job or was pointed in this direction earlier in 2018, prior to the city hall relocation fix. It isn’t possible to know precisely whether there is any connection between the timing of the position and Matt’s vote on the Reisz boondoggle.

But it looks really awful, any way you cut it. Since time began, New Albany has been one humongous, underachieving swamp of constantly revolving quid pro quos.

Naturally, we can expect Shane Gibson to ooze forward in a pool of cash-scented K-Y Jelly, arrogantly assuring us there’s nothing at all unethical, or suggestive of a conflict of interest, about just another councilman getting a federal government job.

Except Matt hardly is just another councilman, and it remains that every last decision-maker at the New Albany Housing Authority was put into place not by a clueless bureaucrat in Washington DC, but by toadies and bootlickers inserted into NAHA by Jeff Gahan himself, as charged with performing politically-motivated tasks precisely like this one.

Lest we forget, last year the housing authority was abruptly and violently annexed by Gahan, and its governing board hurriedly packed with drooling sycophants intimately connected to the Democratic Party’s political patronage machine.

Overnight, NAHA became Gahan’s and the Democratic Party’s new toy, and a way of providing bored C-minus students with a delightful local social engineering experiment to call their very own.

Throughout this process, Matt the councilman remained resolutely (and regrettably) silent. He had nothing to say when Gahan’s right-hand hatchet man, Duggins, was hired as NAHA director at full pay without any experience whatever, replacing the summarily axed Bob Lane, quickly proving to be so flagrantly unqualified for the job that Tony Toran had to be hastily appointed as deputy director,

By the way, Toran is a key Democratic Party hack from way, way back.

These days the New Albany Housing Authority functions as a colonial possession of a corrupted political party and its megalomaniacal mayor, and now a sitting councilman works for the degraded satrap -- to be sure, in an ordinary low-level job located nowhere near management level, one not to compared with the palm fronds, sweet grapes and vestal virgins handed on a silver platter to the fantastically overmatched Duggins.

To be blunt, it’s Matt’s solemn duty as councilman to scrutinize matters like Duggins’ actions at NAHA; he hasn’t done enough of it, but now Duggins is Matt’s boss. How is this NOT a conflict of interest?

I’m addressing you personally, Matt.

We're not close friends, but we're friends nonetheless. I like you and I’ve struggled with writing about this, but you’re too damned smart not to grasp the implications of what you're doing. You’re neither an unwitting dupe nor an unfortunate bystander, and yes, you're complicit in the perpetual nastiness of these self-appointed pillars of society, although as a mitigating factor, we all can see the way they've never refrained from using you for their own petty political ends.

Whatever the background and intent, you’re in an ethically untenable political position, and one of these two paid positions needs to be terminated. Either stop being an NAHA employee, or leave the city council seat.

There isn't much alternative from an ethical standpoint. Whatever your choice, integrity genuinely does matter, even when you're the only one in the club embracing it.

Your decision to shed one of these two positions will be the single most ethical act to occur on the part of a Democrat during seven years of increasingly narcissistic Gahanism, something to be approvingly recalled in the years to come, and pleasingly contrasted with the toxic legacy of forever posturing second-raters like Dickey and Duggins ... and Warren, who quite plainly is a schlub even if he's your father.

Best of all, this can be a chance to get your life back from their insipid clutches, and to do so on your own terms. They're killing you inside, aren't they? Maybe it's time they picked on someone else for a while. 

I encourage you to consider it.

Tuesday, July 12, 2016

From roadway bomb craters to pedestrian death investigations: This morning's Board of Public Works and Safety meeting -- with the undermanned newspaper AWOL.

Earlier today, a toe (gout-free since 1999) was dipped cautiously into the saucer.

ASK THE BORED: Coffee break's over, so it's back on our heads.


The BOW meeting of July 12 is history, so let's begin with an update on a topic no one in city government seems eager to discuss.


Is the investigation of Chloe Allen's crosswalk death still ongoing?



Police chief Todd Bailey answered my question about this investigation with gritted teeth (paraphrasing):

The investigation is closed, and the reason we haven't seen it in the newspaper is that newspapers usually don't report on investigations that are closed without charges being filed. 

So, this means there'll be no charges in the pedestrian's death at the hands of a driver?

The investigation was conducted by the Combined Accident Reconstruction Team (CART) at the Floyd County Prosecutor's office, so if one really must know, he'll have to contact them.

Thanks much, Todd. That's remarkably unhelpful but yes, I'll give them a call. I'm sure you've already let them know it's coming.

What was that, Greg Phipps?

ON THE AVENUES: On the crass exploitation and politicization of tragedy.


Point rejected. Now go peddle your own hyper-politicized resolutions. Next, this week's destruction/construction updates.

5th and Elm speed crater: Have we reached China yet?


As of July 12, it is expected to take two more weeks to repair the subterranean problems at 5th & Elm, and to replace the roadway.

Mickey Thompson explained that once digging started, the scope of these problems considerably widened. There is an old storm sewer never properly capped, and damage to the newer (operative) storm sewer. The sanitary sewer also is undergoing work. Pilings have been placed, and these required time-consuming neighborhood monitoring.

Two more weeks puts us at July 26, or thereabouts.

Chronicles of New Gahania, political cowardice edition: Beharrell to Vincennes, or the choke valve from the choke artist.


Monday (July 1) was the first day for the westbound lane closure between Beharell and Vincennes. City officials insisted that the day went relatively well, but the traffic signal at Spring & Silver has been adjusted.

"If the door is open it isn't theft ... you can't return to where you've never left."


The Bono Road project continues. Most utility work is completed. Phase one, or Green Valley to Cottom, is scheduled for completion in November. Phase two, Cottom to Graybrook, has not been put up for bids, and it will be conducted at a time yet to be divulged.

Is it public art? Is it a street lamp stump? Has the street department even noticed?


During my "communications from the public" segment, I offered an observation to the bored: Invariably, the first thing coming from their mouths when asked to rule on a construction project is how vehicular traffic will be affected. Almost never do they ask about the effect on folks walking, riding bicycles (or on handicapped travelers).

Often the concessions made to automobiles result in inconvenience for sidewalk users, so I asked that there be a protocol for considering such matters, and that sidewalk users be taken into consideration. It doesn't seem like much to ask of a group charged with safety.

I made them aware of the trip hazard/street lamp stump on the southeast corner of Main & W. 1st, and also reminded them that similar hazards still remain unaddressed on the northeast and southeast corners of 10th & Elm.

As noted this morning, free admission to BOW's weekly indoor tent revival inevitably comes accompanied by a sexy floor show.

Irv Stumler set to lecture BOW about property safety on the 200 block of East Main Street. He is not expected to address street safety amid monster trucks.


Yes, Irv took issue with Bill Allen's dilapidated dream houses on Main Street, but this is another whole article.

I'll get to it as soon as I can.

Monday, September 21, 2015

What they're saying: A video by Matt Nash (D), 5th district.

As the 2015 general election nears, I'll occasionally provide candidate statements of substance, as lifted from social media and news reports. My aim is to determine whether our municipal candidates have anything to say at all, and I'll quote all candidates, from any and all parties. 

---

Matt Nash has a video.

Friday, August 21, 2015

Matt Nash kicks off 5th district campaign: "New Albany Should Expand its Recycling Program."

For those just tuning in, Matt Nash was chosen by Democratic Party precinct heads to replace Dustin Collins on the 5th district council ticket after Collins withdrew owing to illness.

His first platform plank deals with recycling.

New Albany Should Expand its Recycling Program

In a recent News and Tribune article it was announced that Floyd County government would cut some recycling services due to budget concerns.

As a councilman I would support a measure that would expand the current services of the city's recycling program. Currently the city offers weekly curbside pick-up of recyclable materials. I believe that New Albany could work with the Solid Waste Board and work out a deal that included utilizing current county equipment and workforce to allow for drop off sites to be manned in locations within city limits or just along the fringe areas.

Sunday, August 09, 2015

Matt Nash is the 5th district nominee as the nutty professor bobs to the surface.


It's official: Matt Nash has been selected by the Democratic Party to be the nomineefor 5th district city council, replacing primary winner Dustin Collins, who withdrew due to illness.

More entertainingly, Vicki "Professor Erika" Denhart has broken three months' silence to denigrate Nash, the party and the process.

NEWS FLASH.....ANOTHER FIXED ELECTION.

"No wonder our city is going to HELL in a hand basket!"

By the way, it's Burks, not Burke -- and Matt already announced his departure from column composition.

Interestingly, Nash has differed publicly with the incumbent mayor on several issues, two-way streets foot-dragging prime among them. The party's desperate imperative to remove primary loser Diane Benedetti is duly noted in this context, as she did not always toe the "Gahan as divinity" party line, prompting Team Gahan to not-so-secretly plump for Collins in the run-up to May.

Republican candidate Tonye Rutherford lost to Benedetti by less than two dozen votes in 2011, so the 5th district contest should be competitive.

Friday, July 24, 2015

Well, well: "Matthew Nash for 5th District City Council."

When Matt swapped photos here yesterday, I suspected the Green Mouse was right.

Can we speak candidly?

It's widely known that Gahan administration operatives targeted incumbent 5th district rep Diane Benedetti for defeat in the primary. I know this because one of them told me so. Of course, it cannot be quantified as to how much the down-low Gahan chicanery contributed to Dustin Collins' eventual victory, but now it's moot, as Collins was forced to withdraw from the race owing to health concerns.

If I haven't said it already in blog space, all the best to Dustin. He's a personable and bright young man, and there is no doubt about his sincere commitment to public service. Get well, quickly.

But there's an election to be held, and the News and Tribune's Daniel Suddeath explains what happens next as Democratic Party chairman Adam Dickey follows arcane procedures lifted straight from the pages of "Foucault's Pendulum" (alas, not a Disney flick) to ensure his chosen and pre-ordained outcome. Remember the famous song Bob Dylan wrote about Dickey, "Tangled Up in Puppet Strings"?

Qualified Democrats residing in District 5 can submit for nomination by caucus members. The caucus will be held at 6:30 p.m. on Aug. 7 at the New Albany Roadhouse, which is located at 1706 Graybrook Lane.

That's right: The Democrats will caucus by drawing straws and drinking ice cold Bud Light long necks. Fiction simply cannot improve on reality when it comes to satirizing these people.

Know this: None of my obvious and ever expanding derision for our local Fix Is In Democrats should be implied as outweighing my personal esteem for Matt Nash, whose hat has been tossed into the ring in the 5th. I won't get a vote in this one, and we'll see what happens. Even if we still disagree on certain topics, Benedetti has done a good job. Matt's a great fellow, and politics is a nasty business. Anyone got a tea leaf?

A word of advice to Matt: If you don't win the race, be careful the newspaper doesn't screw you on your weekly column resumption * ... and seriously, you might wish to distance yourself from the recently abominable record of your old man on the Bored of Works.

By the way, anyone got a broom?

Here's Matt's Fb campaign page. I wish him well.

Matthew Nash for 5th District City Council

I would like to announce my intention to seek the position of New Albany City Council in the 5th District. For the past six years I have expressed my opinion on how to make our city a better place in a weekly column in the News and Tribune. Now I am actually doing something about it.

I believe that New Albany is a great city but we could be doing better. Between now and November 3rd I will discuss with all of the citizens of New Albany how we can work together to make our city the best that it can be.

* Matt's already dealt with it here.

Thursday, July 16, 2015

Illness compels Dustin Collins to withdraw from the 5th district council race.

Dustin Collins explains his decision in a Facebook post. He's a bright and engaging young man, and I wish him the very best as he takes back his health. It's all that matters. There'll be another political opportunity, and I'm sure he'll seize it when the time comes.

Get well!

Yesterday morning I withdrew my candidacy for City Council, District 5. For those of you who may not know I found out just a couple weeks ago that my cancer has come out of remission and is now in my lymph nodes. My intention was to stay in the race despite this. However, due to the side effects of the medication and my inability to function more then a couple hours daily (and it is anyone's guess which) I have decided it is unfair to the citizens within the 5th District to run for something that I can not dedicate my entirety to.

While I know this news may anger, hurt, or otherwise negatively impact some people it is the right one for me and for the 5th District. I will continue to do everything in my power to ensure the voices of those who I spoke with and those who voted for me are heard. While this is the end for my candidacy it is not the end of the campaign to make New Albany and the 5th District better.

Please keep me and my family in your prayers during this challenging time.

The Democratic Party has thirty days to call a meeting to replace Collins on the ballot. If I understand this correctly, Diane Benedetti is eligible to be named the candidate. Whether this will happen in the aftermath of a concerted effort on the part of Mayor Gahan's team to defeat her in the primary is yet to be seen.

Looks like Adam has some fences to mend, which should be wildly entertaining.

Wednesday, April 15, 2015

What they're saying: A candidate overview, and Tonye Rutherford on the radio.

As the weeks go past in route to May's primary election, I'm providing periodic candidate statements of substance, mostly unretouched, as lifted from social media and news reports. Familiar gems such as "yard signs win elections, not people" and "donate to my campaign first, and maybe I'll have something of merit to say much, much later" will be omitted. That's because it is my aim to determine whether our declared candidates have anything to say at all, and I'll quote all candidates, from any and all parties, whether or not they're in a contested race. Just promising change and new ideas without divulging them won't cut the mustard, aspirants.


---

We've been listening to what they're saying, and before turning it over to Tonye Rutherford (below), here is an overview of contested primary races in the context of what we've heard.

Unsurprisingly, candidates without primary opponents have tended to reveal little in terms of platform content, although there are exceptions (Al Knable and Cliff Staten spring to mind).

There are three contested Democratic Party races. For mayor, the incumbent Jeff Gahan defends against a challenge from David White. In the city council at-large, returnees John Gonder and Shirley Baird are joined by four candidates in "pick 3 from 6": Brad Bell, James Garner, Adam Keeler and Hannegan Roseberry. In District 5, Dustin Collins is pitted against two-termer Diane Benedetti.

Not much of substance has come from the mayoral duo. Gahan merely releases numerous photos of TIF-financed public works projects, and White tends to fall back on long-since released, poorly edited position statements emphasizing sales-oriented economic development.

Gonder has revealed a bit more than Baird. Garner has been completely invisible on social media, and Bell more concerned with state issues than local ones. Keeler has been better, and Roseberry easily the best when it comes to moving outside the box with content.

In terms of social media, Collins has been ubiquitous, easily outpacing Benedetti, who does not seem to embrace the medium. Unfortunately, some mud has been slung in this race, arguably diverting attention to points both candidates have made about 5th district concerns.

On the Republican side, three District 6 candidates are vying for the nomination: Larry Belcher, Noah McCourt and Nick Vaughn. McCourt has gained confidence as the campaign has progressed, taking positions and delineating himself as a libertarian among Republicans. Vaughn has a young person's instinctive feel for social media and casts himself as an up and comer in perpetual motion. Belcher has had little to say.

In District 5, it's Danita Burks and Tonye Rutherford for the GOP. Rutherford lost to Benedetti by less than two dozen votes in the 2011 general election. Burks has been silent, but on Sunday, Rutherford was a guest on the Black Heart Conservative radio show (970 AM), and you are recommended to listen to the podcast. It is very revealing.

Among the topics of discussion are storm water drainage, potholes, snow removal, the Louisville West End Wal-Mart, campaign finance and even the Ohio River Bridges Project. Rutherford reveals that he doesn't wear a Fitbit, but has been hitting the streets in his district, and he logs more local substance in this podcast than most of the other primary contestants have managed so far.

The link is at Soundcloud: Black Heart Conservative 04-12-15.

Wednesday, April 08, 2015

What others are saying: Collins, Benedetti, Indiana Equality Action and the 5th district council race.

As the days pass in route to May's primary election, I'm providing periodic candidate statements of substance, mostly unretouched, as lifted from social media and news reports. Familiar gems such as "yard signs win elections, not people" and "donate to my campaign first, and maybe I'll have something of merit to say much, much later" will be omitted. That's because it is my aim to determine whether our declared candidates have anything to say at all, and I'll quote all candidates, from any and all parties, whether or not they're in a contested race. Just promising change and new ideas without divulging them won't cut the mustard, aspirants.

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When is the last time a statewide Indiana PAC has gotten involved with a New Albany city council race? It seems to be happening right now, if this direct e-mail received earlier this evening is any indication. It offers rhetorical support to Democratic candidate Dustin Collins, who is challenging incumbent Diane Benedetti in the 5th district primary.

It can't be said we didn't see it coming: What they're saying ... about each other.

Nate Nahler is the president of Indiana Equality Action, an "Indiana non-profit corporation consisting of individuals and organizations dedicated to advancing equal rights for and fighting discrimination against all Hoosier citizens regardless of sexual orientation or gender identity."

The text of Nahler's e-mail follows.

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Dear Roger,

Over the past few weeks, we have seen the reputation of the State of Indiana dragged through the mud by politicians ignoring the will of the voters and pandering to their base. With RFRA being passed by a super majority in the General Assembly and signed into law by Governor Pence, we realize now more than ever the importance of supporting elected officials who reflect our values.

In New Albany, a sitting City Councilwoman--who abstained when a resolution to oppose HJR3 was brought before the New Albany City Council--has attempted to slander her primary challenger's reputation to solidify her political position. Those closest to the Councilwoman have begun knocking on doors and asking supporters of Dustin Collins, her primary challenger, whether they know he’s gay. Is this what we have come to expect out of our elected representatives?

Today I write in support of Dustin and the vision he has for New Albany and the State of Indiana. Dustin (a former member of the military, former staff member for the Freedom Indiana campaign, and a former staff member for the Indiana Democratic Party) has already made many gains in the City of New Albany. Even before the upcoming elections, citizens are already approaching him with their concerns and he is already beginning to solve them....imagine what he could do once elected!

Dustin can't win this election on his own, he needs your help! All of us must stand up and support these candidates and take our home back! This is where you can help. Please consider volunteering or making a financial donation so we can work to fight back against this whisper campaign. Anything you can do to help the campaign succeed is very much appreciated!

Indiana Equality Action
PO Box 20621
Indianapolis, IN 46220
888.567.0750

Tuesday, February 10, 2015

NA council: There are four primary election candidates in District 5.

In 2011, Diane Benedetti won by narrow margins in both the primary (against Randy Smith) and the general election (versus Tonye Rutherford); her margin of victory each time was fewer than 30 votes.

In 2015, Benedetti has a new challenger in the primary, while Rutherford offers the possibility of a fall rematch, although he faces a primary race, too.

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CITY OF NEW ALBANY COUNCIL MEMBER DISTRICT 5
(Precincts New Albany 9, 14, 26, 28, 40)

D Dustin Collins 2534 Charlestown Rd #14
D Diane McCartin Benedetti 1343 Slate Run Rd

R Danita Burks 1111 Lafayette Dr
R Tonye Rutherford 1680 Woodlawn Dr

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As a two-term Democratic incumbent, Benedetti has a record to espouse and defend, and we'll get to that in time. She doesn't have an on-line campaign presence, at least yet.

Her opponent Dustin Collins has a Fb page. I don't know much about him. Anyone?

On the Republican side, neither candidate has an electronic campaign page. However, we know Burks for her unsuccessful bid in the 2014 school board election, and for her marriage to perennial GOP aspirant Steve "Any Office Will Do" Burks, who recently was gang-tackled by the central committee in route to register as a mayoral candidate, so as to give them time to convince Kevin Zurschmiede to evict the spa and get on with it.

Rutherford is one of three sitting Human Rights Commission members to declare for office. Less than two dozen votes separated Rutherford and Benedetti in 2011.

See the complete primary election listings right here.

Thursday, January 15, 2015

Green Mouse says: Randy Smith to contest 5th district council race ...

... as an independent.

In 2011, running as a Democrat, the Bookseller came tantalizingly close (less than two dozen votes) to snatching the seat away from Diane Benedetti.

In 2015, as we declare independence from DixieDemoDisneyism, Randy would be a valued independent presence on a cleansed council. Alas, it's only a rumor ... until it isn't,

Friday, October 14, 2011

Decision 2011: Rutherford over what's-her-name-this-month in the 5th.

On November 8, New Albany's municipal elections will provide a brief, hopeful respite from the general malaise, after which we can lapse yet again into profound depression. NAC is considering these options, with a council race each day through Saturday, at-large hopefuls on Sunday, and the future mayor on Monday, October 17. Listings are cribbed from the clerk's office, followed by brief comments by the senior editor.

NEW ALBANY COUNCIL DISTRICT 5
(Precincts New Albany 9, 14, 15, 26, 28, 40)


R Tonye A. Rutherford 1680 Woodlawn Drive 812-945-6722
D Diane McCartin Benedetti 1343 Slate Run Road 812-989-7179

If you intend to use your birth name whenever possible so as to remind people you're a McCartin, that's fine, but then you probably should recognize that doing so rather obviously precludes you from voting on your brother's zoning needs of the moment. Legalistic protests aside, that's called a conflict of interest, and like Bob Caesar's sad pro-1Si votes, it has a way of never, ever leaving the collective memory.

By contrast, I've found Rutherford to be affable and earnest. Like most of the other GOP candidates, his innermost policy thoughts are unknown, but he has yet to parrot reactionary Republican social issue stances, and that's always a welcomed positive.

NAC's pick: Benedetti's view of governance hails from the strip-mall-in-a-cornfield model of sprawligarchy, so let's try some change for the hell of it: Rutherford in the 5th.

Monday, May 02, 2011

On values: Randy Smith for City Council, District 5.

On the eve of the primary election, a compelling essay from Randy Smith.

We Know Who You Are

... No candidate should be allowed to use “dog whistle” words like “values” when it is clear that she does not share our values.

Sunday, May 01, 2011

Randy Smith for City Council: My letter to the News and Tribune.

It's ironic that on the same day my letter appears, Randy Smith's opponent runs an ad featuring her bassetball-playin' son: Just plain embarrassing.

True, Randy didn't play on the championship team. He merely has the championship-caliber platform for service.

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LETTERS: May 1, 2011: Reader urges vote for Randy Smith

There are some who believe, mistakenly, that Randy Smith is at a disadvantage in his primary race for the 5th District New Albany City Council seat currently held by Diane McCartin-Benedetti.

For one, Randy is a challenger and first-time candidate, and the incumbent belongs to a well-known and appropriately connected family.

Given that local politics are tribal, and Randy comes to New Albany from elsewhere — Tennessee, to be exact — this cannot be regarded as detrimental. I see it as a recommendation; after all, the prominence of local bloodlines has not exactly advanced New Albany to the top of any best-of heaps even if it has resulted in a surfeit of cookie-cutter strip malls where corn fields used to be.

Randy owns a bookstore, and what’s more, he actually reads — books, that is, and not just the Daily Racing Form. Because it threatens ingrained comfort zones, Randy’s literacy is refreshing to me. He can write at somewhat beyond the level required to compile grocery lists, and he actually is aware of a larger world extending outside New Albany and its zany bit of acreage.

Randy studied law, and although he is not a lawyer, he possesses the crucial ability to comprehend complex documents, nuanced thoughts and intricate concepts. He has no tolerance for sophistry, cowardice and the small-timer’s delaying tactics. Since the latter comprise the complete arsenal possessed by the council’s less perceptive denizens, it has placed Randy on the opposite side of a few debates.

It is an honorable place to be, indeed, but now residents of the 5th District have the opportunity to select Randy, an authentic Democrat, to serve as their council representative.

True, he’s “not from” here, but he married a local gal, moved here, started a business here, invested here and has been every bit as community-minded and local-first as descendants of the founding Scribners, perhaps even more so. No, Randy did not attend school right down the street or play ball on the championship team. His older brother did not buy beer for you before you were legal age.

However, in challenging civic times, what is more important, nostalgia or hard thinking?

Randy is smart, studious and serious. He’ll use his head, and he will not jerk his knee. I urge you to vote for Randy Smith on May 3. New Albany needs him.

— Roger A. Baylor, New Albany

Just plain embarrassing.



Tuesday, February 01, 2011

All aflutter at Twitter: Bookseller files for Council 5.

Randy himself tweeted it yesterday.

Suggested to me that you readers might be offended if you found out elsewhere; I filed for city council, Dem primary, 5th district today.

Daniel Suddeath and the Tribune follow suit today.

Local business owner Randy Smith filed to run for New Albany City Council Dist. 5, currently held by Diane McCartin-Benedetti.

Looks like blogging may be obsolete ... but one thing I know: More Benedetti fans than you ever knew existed will now be appearing regularly as "anonymous" in the Trogosphere.