I had hoped to close this blog today with the results of the final canvass of last week’s election, but I am told that with all the modern technology at the Board of Election’s disposal, it will take another week to get the final numbers. So you’re stuck with me!
This week’s issue of the LC News is out with letters from three of the four Supervisor candidates, including yours truly. Wes and Will fell all over each other with praise of the other guy, while Bob Wilcox was missing in action. My letter (which I reproduce below for those of you who refuse to read the News and so Greg Lamb won’t have to wait for the mail) was rather less effusive.
For reasons that I have never understood, the News allows Bill Cook to bloviate on political matters without disclosing that he is one of Wes’s closest political associates. Apparently he does the same thing in his college classes. There ought to be a law!
After trying to rehab Wes’s tarnished reputation, he attempts a double hit on Bob and I, by saying that Bob’s campaign was so bad that I might have finished third if I were not such a flip-flopper. I don’t intend to respond in the News, but for the more sophisticated readership of this blog I will.
Bill seems mystified as to why I appeared to tilt towards a Lowe’s compromise near the end of the campaign. Could it be that I actually thought that was the best way for the community to resolve this issue? Knowing who Bill’s political mentor is, I can understand why he would be confused that a politician would take a position based on principle.
As I have said, those who think I flip-flopped have failed to distinguish between my previous rhetoric as a PDDG spokesperson and my personal views as a candidate. If they had been paying attention, they would have noticed that I brought up the idea of a compromise on the Lowe’s issue in my very first political ad back in July.
And now the letter. (BTW Advice to future letter writers: send in your own suggested headline, because the guys at the LC News sure won’t get it right.
To the editor,
During the recent campaign, many voters told me that the Geneseo Town election, with nine candidates competing for three seats on six party lines, was the most confusing they had ever seen. Nevertheless, I expect that some will try to draw a simple conclusion from the results that the majority of voters want the proposed Lowe’s. I can understand that sentiment, since the two candidates who supported the project most strongly did garner a total of 61 per cent of the vote, however, it’s important to remember that elections are almost never decided on a single issue.
Perhaps an even simpler conclusion can be drawn on the basis of party-line voting. The winner of the Supervisor’s race, Will Wadsworth, was able to hold on to his Republican base and get almost exactly the same number of votes that Dick Gallivan got four years ago running against the same incumbent. In contrast, the Democratic party vote was badly split, with the incumbent getting little more than half of the 1100 votes he got in 2003.
I congratulate Will on running a smart political race, but note that a large part of his success can be attributed to his avoiding taking any detailed positions on the controversies of the day. Unfortunately for him, however, it will not be possible to govern that way.
The most significant number in this race is the nearly 75 per cent of voters who did not support the incumbent supervisor. This is a clear mandate for change away from the hard-ball tactics that have been used over the last two years to try to force the Newman project through. The voters were clearly looking for a way to end the divisive battle that has resulted from the incumbent’s strategy of holding town and village cooperation on all issues hostage to Lowe’s.
If Supervisor Wadsworth is going to demonstrate the kind of consensus building he promised in his campaign, he will have to make a fresh start on this issue. That new start must include persuading his fellow members on the town board to reject the failed policies of his predecessor and the current PDD application as the wrong vehicle for making major changes in our existing planning and zoning.
The only course of action that will re-unite this community is to quickly re-start a joint town and village Master Plan process that will determine our future land use on a comprehensive basis, including the Gateway District. Only after a re-zoning, pursuant to a new Master Plan, can the Lowe’s be properly approved without setting a damaging precedent that would leaves us extremely vulnerable to a kind of future commercial sprawl that very few would want to see.
I also congratulate my friends Hop and David on their victories. I believe, however, that it was their personal popularity that allowed them to be re-elected despite, rather than because of, the flawed policies they have supported.
Corrin Strong