With the filing deadline less than two weeks away for elective offices in small cities and for members of boards of education there has been no great rush to file nominating petitions. Deadline is 4 p.m. August 12 for the November 4 general election.
Most incumbents and a few newcomers have filed for city offices in Burnside and Science Hill. However, so far there are potentially wide open seats at Eubank and Ferguson as well as for positions on the Pulaski County, Somerset and Science Hill boards of education.
In Burnside, five of the six incumbents –– Jimmy Gibson, Richard Gaskin, Brian Watson, Jim Rasnick and David Brummett –– filed Wednesday. They reportedly came together to County Clerk Ralph Troxtell’s office to file. Incumbent Becky Huff has not filed and the Commonwealth Journal was unable to reach her by telephone.
Also filing Wednesday for a seat on Burnside City Council was newcomer Eddie Phillips. Operator of the water-treatment plant at Woodson Bend Resort, Phillips ran unsuccessfully two years ago for a seat on the Burnside governing body.
Burnside City Council election is citywide and the top six vote-getters will win a two-year term on the council. Mayor Chuck Fourman has two years remaining in his current term.
At Science Hill, all four incumbent members of the city commission –– David F. Phelps, Junior Dick, Mike Hall and Terry Wesley –– have filed for re-election. Jeffrey Wesley, a nephew of Terry Wesley, has also filed for a seat on Science Hill’s governing body. A history teacher at Lincoln County High School, Jeffrey Wesley is seeking his first public office.
Members of the Science Hill City Commission are elected at-large and the top four vote-getters will be seated on the commission for the next two years, beginning in January. Science Hill Mayor Bill Dick has two years remaining in his current term.
Incumbent members of Eubank City Commission –– Curtis G. Todd, Lee Coffee, Ken Nothstein and Edward Hicks –– had not filed as of midafternoon Thursday. However, two newcomers –– Alton Fulcher Jr. and Connie Belcher –– have filed for seats on the commission.
Fulcher, 59, is a 30-year employee of the former Crane Plumbing. He is currently taking classes at Somerset Community College. Belcher is co-owner of Belcher’s Grocery in Eubank and sales representative for Cumberland Mountain Express, based in Williamsburg.
Mayor Frey Todd has two years remaining in his current term. He is the only mayor in the history of Eubank and is expected to seek re-election.
Linda Hughes has filed for re-election to Ferguson City Council. As of mid-afternoon Thursday, Hughes was the only filer for the next two-year terms on the Ferguson governing body.
In addition to Hughes, other incumbents on Ferguson City Council are Joni King, Tony Deprato, Wanda Hunt, Sue Poynter and Janie Ping. Mayor Allen Dobbs has two years remaining in his current term.
All 12 seats on Somerset City Council will be filled at the November election. Candidates for Somerset council had a January 29 filing deadline. Four wards had three candidates and primaries on May 20 reduced the number in each ward to two.
• Incumbent Jim Rutherford will square off against former councilor David Burdine in Ward 1.
• Incumbent Linda Stringer will face former councilor Earl Owens in Ward 2.
• Incumbent Jimmy Eastham will be challenged by former councilor Jerry Wheeldon in Ward 3.
• Incumbent Stephen B. Kelley Jr. goes against Scott Simpson in Ward 4.
• Incumbent Jerry Girdler will face off against Bill Meece in Ward 5.
• Incumbent David Childers will run against Mike New, a former Pulaski County magistrate and son of the late council member Charlie New, in Ward 6.
• Incumbent Donna Hunley will be challenged by Lonnie Hurst in Ward 7.
• Incumbent John Ricky Minton is opposed by David Blevins in Ward 8.
• Incumbent Jim Mitchell has Michael McWilliams as an opponent in Ward 9.
• Incumbent Pat Bourne will be challenged by Jeff Sims in Ward 10.
• Incumbent Jerry Burnett will run against David Turner in Ward 11.
• Incumbent Tim Rutherford will face Tom Eastham in Ward 12.
Somerset city council races are nonpartisan and citywide. Eligible voters in the city may vote for a candidate in each of the 12 wards.
Somerset Mayor Eddie Girdler is in the middle of his first four-year term and has two years remaining.
Sherrie Walters, vice-president for employee benefits for First Insurance Group, has filed to fill the unexpired term of Ginger Fitzgerald on the Science Hill Independent School District Board of Education. She is seeking her first public office.
Fitzgerald resigned earlier and Supt. Rick Walker said Thursday morning no one has been appointed to fill the vacancy.
Science Hill school board member Jeff Leigh’s term will expire at the end of this year. Leigh had not filed for another four-year term as of midafternoon Thursday and no one else had filed.
Science Hill school board members with time remaining in their terms are chairman Mike Elliott, vice-chairman Bruce Phelps and David Sayers Jr.
The Somerset Independent School District will fill three seats during the fall election. Terms of T. Jeffrey Adams and Gretchen W. Cole expire and the recent resignation of longtime board member Hobert T. Withers Jr. created a vacancy.
As of midafternoon Thursday, Adams and Cole had not filed for re-election and nobody had filed to fill the unexpired term of Hobert T. Withers. He resigned as the result of alleged conflict of interest with his job at SomerSplash, the city-owned water park.
A spokeswoman at the city school system’s central office said no appointment has been made for Withers’ vacant seat. Elaine Wilson and Sharon Brown have time remaining in their current terms.
Local elections no doubt will be overshadowed by the most contentious presidential race in years between Democrat Barack Obama and Republican John McCain. Keith Russell Judd is a write-in candidate for president. Presidential contests normally attract a heavy turnout at the polls.
Also, veteran U.S. Senator Mitch McConnell, a Republican, faces a challenge from Democrat Bruce Lunsford, and 5th District Congressman Hal Rogers, R-Somerset, will be opposed by independent candidate Jim Holbert, an Emergency Medical Service pilot from London.
State Sen. Vernie McGaha, representing the 15th Senatorial District, and state representatives Jimmy Higdon, 24th Legislative District; Ken Upchurch, 52nd Legislative District; Danny R. Ford, 80th Legislative District; Jeffrey H. Hoover, 83rd Legislative District; and Tommy Turner, 85th Legislative District, all are unopposed and their names will be on the November general election ballot for complimentary votes.
Local News
There’s been no rush for candidates to file
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Hal Rogers defends Somerset’s Streetscape project
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Survey may attract commercial passenger service
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Somerset on verge of becoming natural gas hub
It sounds like a Buck Rogers fiction series, but it’s true. The city of Somerset is about to become the energy hub of Kentucky, maybe even regionally or nationally.
Somerset Mayor Eddie Girdler, gas company manager Dan Henderson and city engineer Reggie Chaney discussed the grandiose energy network this week with a reporter for the Commonwealth Journal. It’s more than a vision. City officials say it’s about to become reality. -
Old districts are back ... for now
The more things change, the more they stay the same. Such is the legislative redistricting debacle in Frankfort.
Judge Phillip Shepherd in Franklin Circuit Court on Tuesday tossed out the General Assembly’s controversial redistricting plans and reverted everything back to where it was before. -
Fast-moving blaze guts mobile home off Slate Branch Road
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Big Bang Theory
Pulaski County is not at war. The booming you may hear at dusk is mock cannon fire to scare away birds.
Stuart Spillman, environmental director for the Lake Cumberland Health Department, said at least three cannons are on loan from the department to residents who want to scare away swarms of starlings and blackbirds settling in to roost.
He said a cannon is being used by a resident on Laura Lane off Ky. 39; another is in the Oak Hill Road area and a third is on Ashurst Street in the eastern part of Somerset.
Spillman said a timer on each cannon allows it to “fire” at whatever frequency is desired. The cannons must be used as the birds circle before going to roost. “After they settle in, nothing will chase them out,” Spillman said.
The Health Department doesn’t operate the cannons unless there is a specific complaint in an area where there are lots of birds, Spillman noted. He said so far this year the birds are not as bad as in the past. -
Boil water advisory is lifted countywide
The water controversy that Pulaski County has been boiling over — so to speak — for the last week is finally over.
At 10 minutes after noon Wednesday, the “boil water” advisory for the Western Pulaski Water District was lifted — almost a full week after the problems began around 1 p.m. last Thursday.
Prior to that, the Somerset Water Service — along with the other water providers in its system, including Science Hill Water, Southeastern Water, and Eubank Water — lifted their advisories, with Somerset on Saturday afternoon and the last, Southeastern, by Monday morning. Western Pulaski was the last in the system to complete sample testing for potential contaminants, due to not being able to access its Pikeville-based testing lab until Monday.
Somerset Mayor Eddie Girdler thanked the public for its patience and understanding during the duration of the boil water advisory — put in place to keep citizens from drinking water that could have been contaminated after an accident last Thursday at the water plant site — and also thanked all the city employees for their hard work during this time.
“The boil water advisory went about as well as would be expected,” said Girdler.
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SCS to host Medal of Honor recipient
The message is clear: There are heroes. Even here in our own hometowns.
That’s the idea organizers hope to get across Saturday night at Somerset Christian School, when Congressional Medal of Honor winner Sgt. Dakota Meter speaks to all who choose to attend.
For further questions, ticket purchases, and sponsorship opportunities please contact Susan Adams at (606) 875-0255. -
Newspaper veteran name Publisher of Commonwealth Journal
SOMERSET — A fourth generation newspaperman has been named publisher of the Commonwealth Journal.
Rob McCullough, 50, who started working in a newspaper mailroom when he was 15, officially assumes his duties today. He succeeds Jack McNeely who has accepted a position with the Daily Mountain Eagle in Jasper, Alabama.
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Blakley receives worldwide honor
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