FRIDAY, DECEMBER 22, 2017 4 — THE BAKER COUNTY PRESS Opinion / Politics Huntington citizens to vote on multiple recalls Submitted by Baker County Clerk Cindy Carpenter December 18, 2017 it became offi cial that the Recall Election will take place for the City of Hun- tington. On the ballot will be: Candy Howland, Mayor of the City of Huntington; Richard Cummings, City Councilor of the City of Huntington; John McLean, City Councilor of the City of Huntington; and Cindy Deck, City Councilor of the City of Huntington. The Baker County Elec- tion Offi ce has chosen January 23, 2018 as the election date for this Re- call. Ballots will be mailed on January 3, 2018. Shall Candy Howland be recalled from the of- fi ce of Mayor for the City of Huntington? Reason given for de- manding the recall: Inability to retain offi ce staff. 3 employees and 1 volunteer, quit due to hostile work environment. Violations of Public Re- cords law – denying access (ORS 142.420). Violations of Or- egon Budget Laws (ORS 294.305 to 294.565). Vio- lations of Oregon Public Meeting Laws (ORS 192.610 to ORS 192.690). Allowing unbonded per- sons to handle city funds including a councilor who has a previous Felony theft and Medicaid fraud con- victions. Allowing volun- teers access to confi dential information. The Justifi cation given by Candy Howland: 1. (2) Offi ce staff quit after being reprimanded; for which I consider are disgruntled ex-employees. The other was afraid of a former council member who resigned after that individual left. 2. This is way to vague about when and what we denied to anyone. 3. If we had broke any budget laws our accountant would have told us. He is very thorough. 4. Which meeting laws were violated exactly? We post, as required, all ORS for our meetings. This is too vague to answer if we don’t know which ones we are supposed to have violated. 5. Our people handling money are bonded except for the volunteer now help- ing us. 6. Our acting Recorder is a volunteer to help us with accounts as we are in the process of hiring a new one and waiting on her background check to put her to work. Shall John McLean be recalled from the offi ce of City Councilor for the City of Huntington? Reason given for de- manding the recall: Inability to retain city offi ce employees – 3 employees and 1 volunteer, quit stating, “hostile work environment.” Violation of public re- cords law (ORS 142.420). Violation of public meeting law (ORS 192.610 to ORS 192.690). Violation of Budget Law (ORS 294.305 to 294.565). Allowing unbonded person to handle city money. Allowing volunteers ac- cess to confi dential infor- mation. Blatant discrimi- nation of legal business in town. The Justifi cation given by John McLean: Doing the best for the community has been a goal of mine, wanting Hunting- ton to move forward but also preserving this small town that the citizens like. I hope the majority of the citizens in Huntington still believe that I can serve this community. I grew up in this small town and want the best for this community. Vote to keep John R. McLean. Shall Richard Cum- mings be recalled from the offi ce of City Council- or for the City of Hun- tington? Reason given for de- manding the recall: His inability to work with employees always a hostile work place. Three employees and one volunteer quit. Allowing unbonded persons handling city monies. Does not abide by Oregon Law. (I.E.) Budget Law (ORS 294.305 to 294.565). Allowing volunteers and unbonded persons access to personal and confi den- tial information. Participated in illegal Oregon Public meetings, laws (ORS 129.610 to 192.690) The Justifi cation given by Richard Cummings: Mr. Allen Driver, after nearly two years on the city council, I do not recall ever seeing you at a coun- cil meeting. So, I am not sure where your accusa- tions or information comes from? Upon checking with Bak- er County Clerk’s Offi ce, there have not been any complaints fi led or wrong doing by Richard Cum- mings or the Huntington City Budget Committee. That committee consisted of, 6 council members, Mayor, 6 members of the community and guide of two certifi ed public ac- countants. Also, upon checking, there have not been any recent complaints fi led against Richard Cum- mings, or the City of Huntington, concerning violations of the Public Meeting Laws. An earlier complaint was fi led, it was dismissed and no further Letter to the Editor Policy: The Baker County Press reserves the right not to pub- lish letters containing factual falsehoods or incoherent narrative. Letters promoting or detracting from specifi c for-profi t business- es will not be published. Word limit is 375 words per letter. Letters are limited to one every other week per author. Letters should be submitted to Editor@TheBakerCounty- Press.com. Advertising and Opinion Page Dis- claimer: Opinions submitted as Guest action needed. With that being said, I personally thank the citizens of Huntington, for allowing me, Richard Cummings to serve as your representative,for the past 21 months, on the city council. With your blessing and support, I will continue to serve your interests to the best of my ability. Shall Cindy Deck be recalled from the offi ce of City Councilor for the City of Huntington? Reason given for de- manding the recall: Convicted felon for Medicare fraud and theft handling city money. 3 employees and 1 Volunteer quit citing “hos- tile work environment” caused by city council and mayor. Participating in illegal meetings. Violation of Oregon Budget Law. Vio- lation of Public Meeting Laws. Violation of Public Record Laws. The Justifi cation given by Cindy Deck: 1. This statement is false, has nothing to do with my position. I am bonded with the City. 2. To the best of my knowledge, no employee has stated to me that they were unhappy. 3. I have never participat- ed in an illegal meeting. 4. I have been present at 3 budgets and all were in accordance to regulation. As per Auditor. 5. I have never violated a public meetings law in the three years in offi ce. 6. I am bonded with the City and have never vio- lated public records laws. Summary from the County Clerk All three Councilors and the Mayor will be on the ballot for election day January 23, 2017. This is the same election date as the State Measurer special election. We have created a sepa- rate election with different colored envelopes and ballots so the two elections they will not be able to be confused with each other in any way. The Recall ballots go the City of Huntington Active voters only while the Mea- sure will be sent County wide. It was our decision to do this since the 35 day time line for the Recall fell into this date range to do both at the same time. This will be a huge cost savings for the County and the Recall City. We already have the drop boxes being delivered and picked up also arranged. The Election Board is scheduled and we can now keep them busy all day Election day and have the room to set up two separate board processing centers with the Special election being just one Measurer. Opinions or Letters to the Editor express the opinions of their authors, and have not been authored by and are not necessarily the opinions of The Baker County Press, any of our staff, management, independent contractors or affi liates. Advertisements placed by political groups, candidates, businesses, etc., are printed as a paid service, which does not constitute an endorsement of or fulfi llment obligation by this newspaper for the products or services advertised. — Letters to the Editor — Wolves aren’t good for much To the Editor: I totally agree with Gordon Bloom and his friends about the wolves. All they are good for is to kill off the defenseless deer, elk and domestic livestock. It’s too bad the environmentalists don’t have any idea where their food comes from, nor do they care as long as they can run to the store and buy it. I like our neighboring state’s motto: “Shoot, shovel and shut up.” Pat Culley Baker City Vote yes on Measure 101 To the Editor: This is a crucial time for health care access across Oregon and particularly here in Baker County. Voting YES on Mea- sure 101 this January is one of the most important things you can do to ensure that affordable health care is kept accessible — especially for kids, seniors, and people with disabilities in Baker County. Over 10 percent of our county’s population de- pends on Medicaid for health care. These are our friends, families and neighbors who would otherwise go without needed care. I run the hospital here in town, St. Alphonsus Medical Center-Baker City. Because of that, I know fi rsthand how important accessible health care is. Not too long ago, people without insurance showed up daily for treatment at our emergency department. Now that doesn’t happen as much, because more people have insurance. That means lower costs for all of us, because people get the care they need from the doctor’s offi ce, instead of using the emergency department. State lawmakers crafted a balanced law to fund these vital insurance programs. It was a bipartisan effort that had the sup- port of the entire health care community: doctors, nurses, hospitals and beyond. Now voters are being asked to weigh in on the package in January, and those same doctors, nurses and hospitals are asking you to vote YES on Measure 101. In total, more than 120 trusted organizations — in- cluding AARP-Oregon — are supporting Measure 101. Everyone deserves access to basic health care and no one in our state should have to wonder whether they can afford to go in for care. With this law, more hardworking Oregonians will be able to afford quality health insurance that gets them the care they need. Please join thousands of health- care professionals across the state in voting YES on Measure 101 this January. You can learn more at www.yesforhealth- care.org. J. Phil Harrop President, St. Alphonsus Medical Center Baker City Grassroots petitioning rule revised by SoS Secretary of State Dennis Richardson announced revisions to the grassroots petitioning rule. This rule would prevent wealthy special interest groups from manipulating the initiative process through frivolous lawsuits on ballot titles designed to obstruct and delay signature gather- ing. Legal challenges often create delays of two to three months or even lon- ger, which is unnecessarily burdensome for grassroots petitioners that do not have the resources to hire a sig- nature gathering service. Specifi cally, the revi- sions incorporate the recommendation from the League of Women Voters of Oregon that the grass- roots petitioning rule be changed to allow circu- lation of petitions with the Attorney General’s certifi ed ballot title during any legal challenge. The League pointed out that this process would achieve the goal of avoiding legal delays while ensuring that voters at every stage have a clear idea of what they are signing. “Special thanks to Norm Turrill and Becky Glad- stone of the League of Women Voters of Or- egon for their thoughtful improvement to ensure voters have a clear idea of what they are signing,” said Secretary Richardson. “The public comment process creates an incred- ibly valuable dialogue for rulemaking, and I welcome additional ideas to further improve the grassroots petitioning rule.” Secretary Richardson welcomed public com- ments on election im- provements in August and is reopening the public comment period for the proposed grassroots petitioning revisions to the State Initiative and Referendum Manual. The revisions are highlighted on pages 8, 17, and 34 and are included along with other unrelated changes previously noticed. — Contact Us — Public comments can be emailed to elections.sos@ oregon.gov until December 21 at 5pm or shared during the administrative rule hearing on 2018 Election Manual updates scheduled for December 18 from 2:00pm-4:00pm at the Elections Division, 255 Capitol St NE, Suite 501, Salem, OR 97310. “This rule resolves statu- tory ambiguity in favor of grassroots petitioners and empowers average Oregonians by preventing powerful and wealthy spe- cial interest groups from using frivolous lawsuits to manipulate the initiative process,” said Secretary Richardson. The original idea for the grassroots petitioning rule was identifi ed by Inde- pendent Party of Oregon Co-Chair Dan Meek, a Portland attorney who frequently works on grass- roots petitions and serves as legal representative for the Progressive Party of Oregon. 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