About Carpentersville

Archive for May, 2009

Media “Black Out” On Carpentersville

Posted by Bill Sarto on May 22, 2009

It looks as though we are now going to see a media “black-out” on news from Carpentersville’s Village board meetings.

This is all part of the plan of course. For the previous four years you couldn’t pick up either the Daily Herald or the Courier-News the day or two after the Village board meetings without reading something about what took place at that meeting. If Carpentersville’s Village board is not making news, they must not be doing anything. I would think that the news media would cover actions or non-actions taken by ALL the Village’s. Didn’t Carpentersville take any action at the last meeting? East Dundee made the news for “not taking action.” Dundee Township made the news for denying a request to use Raceway Woods.  

It was conspicuous by it’s absence that there was nothing written by the local media about the Carpentersville Village board meeting of May 19, 2009.

The news instead focused on East Dundee not filling the Village Clerk’s position. There was another non-story about Dundee Township not allowing an event at Raceway Woods.

Is this what the people of Carpentersville should expect in the future? No reports on what the Village board has done or not done.

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Sometimes Being Right Is Not Good Enough

Posted by Bill Sarto on May 13, 2009

Some post election thoughts. As I look back at these past four years, I realize that being right is not always good enough in politics.

As I look back at my own behavior and the behavior of others, I realize that on the issues, I was right.

When I said, right from the beginning of the talk about illegal immigration, that it is up to the federal government to decide what legally can be done with this problem, I was right. But it was not the answer some people wanted to hear. Some wanted the Village to do whatever it took to crack down on illegal immigrant’s who may have been in our Village. There WAS nothing, there IS nothing, that local government can legally do about this issue, but people believed that it was up to local government to take care of the problem. Sometimes telling the truth is just not good enough to satisfy some people. They are looking for someone to tell them what they want to hear, regardless if it’s true or not. My position on this issue saved the Village a lot of money on legal bills. It was the responsible thing to do.

On the matter of Paul Humpfer being convicted of four counts of domestic battery and his not living in Carpentersville for several months. My reaction was to get legal advice as to how to handle this situation. I asked our Village Attorney and I made a few phone calls to the Illinois Attorney General’s Office and to the Kane County State’s Attorney’s Office. I also sought legal help from both the AG and the Kane County State’s Attorney to get a legal opinion on this situation. I did my duty as Village President in seeking to get an answer to whether or not Paul Humpfer was entitled to remain in office. I did what was right. But again, being right is not what some people are looking for. With politics some people ONLY are looking at the politics and not the facts.

The matter of the illegal meetings that were being held by two of the trustees and their supporters at one of the Village owned Fire Stations was wrong. The intent of those illegal meetings was to disrupt our Village board meetings. I brought this matter to the attention of the Village Manager and he stopped those meetings from continuing to be held at the Fire Station. Once again, I was right to point this infraction of our policy out to the Village Manager and when asked by a reporter from the Courier-News if this was a violation of the Open Meetings Act the Illinois Attorney General’s Office responded by sending a letter to the Village board informing the board that what they had been doing was a violation “of the spirit of the Open Meetings Act”. Once again, I was on the right side of this issue.

The media’s role in all of this? I was very disappointed in the media’s coverage of these matters.

The media instead of presenting the facts and the truth they seemed to be working from their own agenda.

Instead of pointing out to the public that illegal immigration is a federal government matter and does not come under the jurisdiction of local government they instead were critical of me for not doing something. Even though they had been briefed by the feds that there is NOTHING local government CAN DO about illegal immigration.  After the election in 2007, the media backed away from the issue of illegal immigration as an issue in Carpentersville. They never held those who had campaigned on this issue accountable for their actions.

The media instead of siding with me in wanting to know if Paul Humpfer should be removed from office after being found guilty of four counts of domestic battery, they took a different approach. They criticized ME for “playing politics” with the matter. An unusual move by the media.

This coming from the very same media that couldn’t wait to get Illinois Governor Rod Blagojevich out of office before he had even been officially charged with a crime, and to this day, has NOT been found guilty of anything.

The media seemed to want to blame me for the problems created by a couple of Trustees on the board. Even though I was the one person who was doing the right things on all of these matters.

Had the media  taken a more responsible position in these important matters I can’t help but think that the election results would have been much different. Some people like to think the media is “liberal” when in fact the media has always had a right-wing bias. This is especially true of the local media.

It’s difficult to counter the things written by the media on a daily basis. I did my best to be available to the reporters. I didn’t duck their calls or questions. I was very accessible to them throughout my term as Village President. I openly and honestly responded to all of their questions. I told the truth. That’s the best I could do for the Village and for them. How they wrote the stories was up to them.

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New Village President Is Sworn In

Posted by Bill Sarto on May 7, 2009

Carpentersville – Tuesday, May 5, 2009, two new Village trustees and a new Village president were administered the oath of office by Village Clerk, Teresa Wilde.

The two new trustees are Patricia Schultz and Bradford McFeggan. Also taking the oath was Edward Ritter as the new Village president and Kay Teeter who was reelected trustee for a second term.

A short time later Clerk Wilde was reappointed to her position as Village Clerk and also reappointed as Treasurer was Finance Director, Lisa Happ.

The new Village President made some unusual moves upon taking office. Village President, Ed Ritter, decided to change the way things have been done in Carpentersville as far back as anyone can remember. He will NOT be voting on any issues that does not require his vote.

This in my opinion demonstrates a lack of will to LEAD by the new President of Carpentersville.

The Village President by statute is not allowed to make a motion or second a motion that has been made. Only trustees may make a motion or second a motion. Trustees are required to vote on ALL matters that come before the board, unless they have a conflict of interest in casting a vote on a specific item. Then, they are allowed/required to abstain from that particular vote.

There is a very good reason for elected public officials to cast votes on legislative bodies. It’s to allow the public to know their record of supporting or opposing important issues. To NOT vote is to NOT lead. The public has a right to know any elected public officials stand on any given issue. The votes cast by elected officials provides the public record for that office holder. That public record then is a guide for voters to determine who they will support in the next election. To duck that public voting record is a mistake by any public official. Government works best when it is transparent and open. President Ritter is showing his disdain for the public’s right to know beginning on day one of his administration. I would not consider that to be getting off to a very good start.

Another change will be that the President will no longer address the Trustee’s by their elected position title. He will instead address them by their first names. So, in recognizing a trustee the President will call on them as, Brad, Keith, Kay, Paul, Judy or Pat. This again shows a lack of respect by the President for his colleagues. In my view another early mistake by an inexperienced public official who does not fully understand how government works.

Both of these changes are troubling coming from a Village President who campaigned on a platform of showing “respect”. Right out of the box, President Ritter is demonstrating his lack of respect for the public and those who were elected to serve with him.

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