Ron & Gail

Thursday, October 11, 2007

EDITORIAL FROM THE SUNNYVALE SUN

Council incumbents have earned voters' confidence

The most remarkable feature of this year's campaign for four seats on the Sunnyvale City Council is how calm and civil it's been. Mayor Otto Lee is running unopposed, and the three incumbents--Dean Chu (Seat 4), Ron Swegles (Seat 6), and Melinda Hamilton (Seat 7)--are even endorsing each other.

Quite a change from campaigns past when races were just short of bloody combat.
But it's not just the welcome change of tone in today's council that prompts us to recommend the incumbents be returned to the council in the Nov. 6 election. A civil tone would mean little if this were a do-nothing council. It's not.

Although challengers--Dave Whittum (Seat 4), Pat Meyering (Seat 7) and Dixie Carney (Seat 6) would have you believe otherwise, the current council has made important strides to get the city headed in the right direction.

The town center is finally on track with construction now under way; citizen committees now participate in reviewing director hiring; noticing of council meetings has been improved with council agendas now posted four days prior to meetings--two days more than mandated by law. By the end of the year, video streaming of city council meetings will be available.

Oh, and the budget has been balanced.

The most controversial issue in this year's campaign appears to be the Mary Avenue Bridge. Challengers say it's a bad plan, and that the city needs to go back to the drawing board to find a better way to provide access to Moffett Park commercial complex. The three incumbents couldn't agree more. They say the plan was developed in the 1970s, and even if it made sense then, it doesn't necessarily make sense today. They are asking staff to rethink the bridge.

Arguably, the best decision the current council made in the past four years, however, was asking interim city manager Amy Chan to remove the "interim" from her title. Her inclusive and open style complements the approach of the council, and together, they are on track to return the city to its former glory days as the city President Clinton praised as the best -run city in the country.

For anyone who actually misses the bad old days of bloody city council races, the faint echo that can be heard in the distance is the sound of copy machines printing out so-called "fact sheets" attacking incumbents with misinformation and half-truths. Tim Risch and his wife, Yolanda, have created the fliers for challengers to distribute. Risch, a former council member who has lost two recent council bids, seems unwilling to accept defeat gracefully. Instead, he and his wife have made a career of trying to get even.

We think the best advice in this election, however, is the old adage, "If it ain't broke, don't fix it." Returning the three incumbents, Ron Swegles, Melinda Hamilton and Dean Chu, to the council on Nov. 6 is the right move for Sunnyvale

This was a story in the Sunnyvale Sun on 10/10/07

Incumbents say current council works together in positive way

By Cody Kraatz


Sunnyvale City Council members seeking re-election on Nov. 6 are supporting each other and feeling safe, while their challengers are running low-budget, door-to-door campaigns and saying they can turn the city in a different direction.

Whether a new direction is where voters want to go is the question.

The challengers say the current council made mistakes on the town center redevelopment, approved development away from transit corridors, mismanaged the city's finances, failed to stop a rise in crime and does not provide enough parks or street maintenance.

They say the Mary Avenue extension over Highway 101 and State Route 237 is outdated and should be scrapped for fresh alternatives.

The incumbents largely agree that the Mary Avenue plan should be re-evaluated and many in the community say that the town center project, long a contentious issue, is now on the right track.

Odd-year elections tend to favor incumbents because fewer people are expected to vote, and no incumbents are termed out.

"It's a different type of race this year because you've got incumbents, and usually when you've got a lot of incumbents you've got a much lower-key race," said Pat Castillo, a former Sunnyvale mayor and councilwoman, and now treasurer and board member of SUNPAC, a political action committee representing Sunnyvale businesses.

She and her group endorsed the incumbents and gave $2,500 to each of their campaigns, as well as $2,500 to support Measure B, a $108 million bond to build a new Sunnyvale Public Library.
"This council appears to have worked very well together," she said. With Sunnyvale's history on contentious council races, and councils that were highly divisive, some question whether the challengers could cooperate with the rest of the council if they are elected.

Supporters of the council point to two fliers circulated by Tim Risch, a former councilman and vice mayor, and his wife, Yolanda, as a hint of contention that could lead to greater controversy before election day.

The Risches are backing the challengers (Mayor Otto Lee is unopposed), claiming the council supports a poor fiscal policy. Tim Risch lost re-election bids to Melinda Hamilton, now facing attorney Pat Meyering for seat 7, in 2003, and in 2005 to Vice Mayor Tony Spitaleri.

In one flier, Tim Risch cites taxes to pay for the library that are hundreds of dollars higher than what the city stated in the impartial analysis. He says the city's assumptions are too optimistic.
Dave Whittum, challenging incumbent Dean Chu for seat 4, has been distributing this flier, and library bond supporters have told him that much of the information is inaccurate and will reflect poorly on him.

Barbara Fukumoto, a leader in the Sunnyvale Cool Cities Team, a Sierra Club global warming group, also confronted Whittum after the Oct. 2 forum on what he calls his "agnostic" climate change position. She also said that Whittum and Meyering's "overly aggressive" and critical styles are a turnoff.

Yolanda Risch is also passing out a flier detailing the current council's absences and late arrivals to meetings. Many say the chart is misleading because it does not explain the reasons for the absences, many of which were excused.

"I think it's been used as something of hit piece to people who are running for office right now," said Lee, who has teleconferenced and missed meetings because of personal, city and U.S. Naval Reserve travel.

Campaign financing

By the numbers, the incumbents come out ahead. Candidates reported on Sept. 22 their fundraising totals since July 1.

Hamilton has $22,365 on hand after raising $4,575 and loaning herself another $5,000. Meyering has $167 after raising $275 in three cash contributions, loaning himself $340 and spending $447.

Chu has $26,202 on hand after raising $9,649, much of it from business and development interests.

Meanwhile, Whittum has been walking door-to-door on the weekends and talking with voters. He has $300 to spend after collecting $286 in small donations, loaning himself $1,000 and spending about $1,000 on campaign materials.

Incumbent Ron Swegles, opposed by Sunnyvale Arts Commissioner Dixie Carney for seat 6, has the largest war chest with $27,248 after raising $7,648 from local businesses, developers and Sunnyvale Rotary connections. Carney did not report her fundraising efforts but has pledged to spend no more than $1,000.

Jim Griffith, an organizer of Yes on B and the Sunnyvale Board of Library Trustees chair, made donations to several of the incumbents.

"I've seen them cast difficult votes, and I've been really impressed by the thoughtfulness that they bring to the job," he said of Chu and Hamilton by e-mail. "Then I looked at their challengers, and they both struck me as combative, inexperienced and very negative people."

Public financing

Castillo of SUNPAC represents some of the developers working in Sunnyvale Money gets the message out, she said.

"It's an ear. You get your phone call answered in a more timely fashion," she said. "Nobody gets a commitment to a vote."

However, the council will reconsider the concept of public campaign financing early next year. Whittum and Meyering regularly point out that their opponents take donations from developers, implying that this influences their decisions.

The Public Safety Officers Association, is backing the incumbents, as is the Sunnyvale Employees Association, The incumbents have lists of endorsements from public officials and groups, but the challengers are not focused on endorsements, choosing to do their campaigning voter by voter on the city's streets.

Visit www.smartvoter.org/ca/scl for more information about the Nov. 6 election.

Tuesday, October 9, 2007

Here's my Grandson Jarrett, Daughter Shelley, Me, and Grandson Tyler

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Troy with his Official Retirement Hat. His wife, Dawn, is on the left and his Sister, Shelley, is on his right cutting bread. Everyone loved his hat.

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Some of the awards Troy received. He had two tables of awards.

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Here's the 30 countries Troy visited. Hope you can read them

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From Left to Right you have Jarrett, Mattea, Dawn, Troy and Tyler.

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My Daughter-in-Law and Son at his Retirement Event

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My Son Troy and I

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My Son's Retirement

Okay, time to catch up. I spent a few days with my Son, Daughter-in-law, and Grand kids because my Son just retired from the Air Force after 22 years of service. If you have never been to a military retirement event you need to attend one. It's great to hear everything your Son or Daughter have done for our country. I'll be sure to add some pictures from the event so you can see some of the items and countries he visited. He and his family visited or were stationed in over 30 different countries. He received his promotions every time he was able to test for the new grade. He also received an Associate Degree and a Bachelors Degree while he was in service so he's now ready to go out into the world and make his mark. He currently has 2 offers. One from General Dynamics's and the other is from Sunnyvale's own Lockheed but in Huntsville not here.
:( So he's checking them both out and will decide what is the best for his family. Hope you enjoy the pictures.

Ron

LeAnne Rimes

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