The Ottumwa Courier

Local News

December 19, 2012

'Political bias’ argued at City Council meeting

OTTUMWA — Accusations of political bias consumed the last City Council meeting of the year.

The Southern Iowa Labor Council requested the permanent reservation of the Jimmy Jones Shelter for its annual Labor Day event to allow for enough time in advance for planning purposes.

Councilman Mitch Niner questioned why this was never brought before the Parks Advisory Board. He also said this is not the first time the board has been purposely avoided.

Niner said there was a specific reason the item did not first go to the Parks Board.

“I don’t know what you’re talking about, councilman,” said Mayor Frank Flanders. “There was no desire to avoid anyone. It just needed to be done. You need to know what you’re talking about.”

Parks Director Gene Rathje said no one ever told him to put the item on a Parks Board agenda.

“I think we’re all avoiding the issue, and that’s why it wasn’t it brought to park advisory? Because there may have been a little political interaction last year,” said Councilman Bob Meyers. “What’s wrong with postponing this until January and bringing it to a work session?”

Steve Siegel, president of the SILC, said Labor Day was founded by unions and it has always been a union event.

“Nobody avoided the park board on purpose as you’re alleging, Bob,” Siegel said.

Joe Rush, president of the UFCW Local 230, said if a politician shows up at the event and “decides to do something, it’s their legal right to do that. We can’t tell him not to. It’s a public park.”

At the Sept. 2 event, Siegel told the crowd that he would not allow state Sen. Mark Chelgren, R-Ottumwa, to speak at the event.

Jan. 2 is the first day people can reserve shelters for 2013. During this year’s Labor Day event at the Jimmy Jones Shelter, a three-hour period featured nine Democratic political speakers.

Following Tuesday’s meeting, Niner said the City Council is a non-partisan group and he feels Flanders threw the councilmen in the middle of a political issue.

“Mark Chelgren and Blake Smith wanted to speak [at this year’s Labor Day event], but they refused to let them, and that’s fine. That’s their prerogative,” Niner said. “But by doing that, Chelgren has said he’ll be first in line to get the shelter on Jan. 2. It’s a political move.”

That’s correct, Chelgren told the Courier following the meeting.

“It’s supposed to be a non-partisan celebration for Ottumwa, and the unions decided to reserve Labor Day for them,” Chelgren said. “That’s why they’re trying to change the rules so nobody else can have an event. They believe they own Labor Day.

“They wanted to make sure nobody else had those opportunities and they gave special privilege to their political allies. ... Obviously they were caught in their own deception and lies.”

Flanders said the reason it didn’t go to the Parks Board came down to timing.

“It was a timing issue,” Flanders said. “There was no purposeful avoidance of the park board.”

City Clerk Amanda Valent said Flanders requested the item be put on the agenda late Thursday afternoon.

The council voted 3-2 to approve a language revision and a one-year reservation of the shelter, with Meyers and Niner as the dissenting votes.

Both Niner and Meyers said they would have voted to approve a reservation of the shelter a year in advance for the event had it been brought to the Parks Board first.

Following the meeting, Flanders reiterated that the issue was not politically motivated and that in hindsight, he would have moved faster to get the paperwork through so it would have made it to the Dec. 11 Parks Board meeting.



Shelter rental fee increase shot down

The City Council did not approve an increase in the rental fee of the Sycamore Park Shelter.

The Parks Advisory Board had approved 2-1 a fee increase for the shelter from $25 to $35. The City Council did not approve the measure 2-3, with Councilmen Brian Morgan, Mitch Niner and J.R. Richards as the dissenting votes.

Parks Director Gene Rathje said parks employees spend more time cleaning this shelter after it’s used than other park shelters. The shelter was rented 67 times this year, he said.

“If you’re going to do that, I don’t know why you wouldn’t, Monday through Friday, lower the other shelters by $10 to encourage weeknight rentals,” Niner said.

When the item was first presented to the Parks Board, it was presented as an increase to $50, Morgan said.

“It looked like a money grab, just another way to make 25 bucks,” he said. “Then, after the fact, it made it, to me, look like,  well, we can’t get another $25 out of ‘em, let’s get at least another $10 out of ‘em.”

Rathje said one to two parks employees go out every Saturday, Sunday and Monday morning — on overtime — to clean the shelters.

City Administrator Joe Helfenberger said the upcoming budget for fiscal year 2013-14 will likely hold to the same amount as the prior fiscal year, with some adjustments for union contracts, fuel and energy costs.

William Jones, an Ottumwa resident, expressed his concerns about increasing taxes.

“My real estate taxes were $500 when I moved here, and I thought that was a little high,” Jones said. “But since that time they have increased 600 percent. That doesn’t say much for this community.”

Jones said Ottumwa will never attract new industry due to taxes and “union attitude.”

“It’s worse in Ottumwa than any place I’ve ever lived,” he said. “If we’re not careful, we’re going to be in the same position many other communities are in today, going bankrupt.”

Jones suggested cutting all department budgets by 10 percent and getting rid of the Ottumwa Fire Department, making it entirely run by volunteer firefighters.

“We don’t need it,” he said. “It doesn’t do anything but chase police cars and ambulances.”

Text Only
Local News
  • Expanding Ottumwa's trail system OTTUMWA — The Market Street Bridge is a major link in connecting Ottumwa's north side to its south side. The seventh annual Wapello County Trails Council mediathon kicked off Saturday morning with volunteers on the phones taking pledges from the comm

    May 18, 2013

  • Pages for Pennies.jpg Searching for the perfect book

    A steady stream of people snatched up books, magazines, DVDs and more at the annual Pages for Pennies book sale at Bridge View Center this weekend.

    May 18, 2013 1 Photo

  • Staff eager for swimmers Beach Ottumwa improvements

    OTTUMWA — When kids talk about the last weeks of school, one subject that often comes up is The Beach Ottumwa. It'll be ready soon, said employees. On Friday, the maintenance staff was installing the fountain heads that shoot water straight up at the

    May 18, 2013

  • Mixed reactions to tax reduction OTTUMWA — During past public forums in Ottumwa, Sen. Mark Chelgren, R-Ottumwa, told voters the state should follow its own laws and make taxes equal across the board. This week, legislators in Des Moines took a first step toward that goal, which is a

    May 17, 2013

  • New sports store coming to mall

    OTTUMWA — A new tenant is coming to Quincy Place Mall. Lexington Realty International announced Friday afternoon the mall's newest tenant, MC Sports. Construction has already begun, and the store is anticipated to open just in time for back-to-school

    May 17, 2013

  • 0518 OTT hunter varner color foto -L -T -M Ottumwa teen earns criminal justice scholarship

    OTTUMWA — A high school senior who shares the work ethic and spunk of the late Lisa Caldwell has been awarded a scholarship in her honor. Ottumwan Hunter Varner, a senior at Eddyville-Blakesburg-Fremont High School, earned the first Wapello County Sh

    May 17, 2013 1 Photo

  • Budget shift on county agenda OTTUMWA — There's nothing like having some money in the budget to cover a project that doesn't have enough money on its line item. The Wapello County Supervisors will need to move some money to an item that has spent all of its funding, according to

    May 17, 2013

  • Wellness challenge asks people to live healthy OTTUMWA — Are you ready for the Live Healthy Iowa 10-Week Wellness Challenge? Some of the city employees joined Live Healthy Iowa, and Jody Gates, the city's health director, was captain of one of the two teams of about a dozen people. "Our goals for

    May 17, 2013

  • 0517 OTT wide shot of gardens color foto -M Community gardens gain ground

    OTTUMWA -- In just one month, community gardens have begun to sprout north of Ottumwa. So far, the gardens near the Ottumwa Industrial Park feature 12 raised beds, compost and a compost tumbler, a pallet bench, three oversized tires that will contain

    May 17, 2013 2 Photos

  • 0517 OTT angie and terry hamm color foto -L -M -T Agency couple has provided foster care for 38 kids in last decade

    AGENCY — School pictures of 38 grinning children look out into Angie and Terry Hamm's living room, evidence of the years of work and love they've given to those who needed it most. Their house — currently filled with five children, ages 7, 10, 10, 11

    May 17, 2013 1 Photo

Photo reprints


Obituaries

Poll

Do you think new Bulldog basketball coach Kevin Kanaskie can get the team turned around?

Yes
No
     View Results
Facebook
E-edition
Community Calendar
Loading…
Events by eviesays.com