Press Releases and Newsletters
Lawmakers return to NC capital to talk sales tax (AP)
Lawmakers return to NC capital to talk sales tax
By GARY D. ROBERTSON (AP)
RALEIGH, N.C. — North Carolina lawmakers returned Tuesday to resume conversations on overhauling the state’s tax system as soon as next spring after House and Senate Democrats couldn’t agree on a plan before the Legislature adjourned in August.
A joint House-Senate finance committee held the first of at least four scheduled meetings that could ultimately lead to approval of a rewrite that’s been batted around in Raleigh since the 1950s.
“Today, we begin the process which is really unprecedented,” said Rep. Paul Luebke, D-Durham, co-chairman of the House Finance Committee. “It’s unclear where we’ll end up at the end of the process,” he added, but meeting is “a sign of our commitment to address the issue.”
At least three state panels have considered these broader tax issues since 2000, which generally have centered on lowering tax rates in exchange for broadening the number of items and services subject to taxation.
The changes are designed to tap into transactions in an economy that have shifted toward services and technology and away from traditional manufacturing.
Bringing several dozen lawmakers together to listen to tax experts is a step forward in building the political will to approve the changes, a committee leader said.
“It’s a useful exercise for everybody to go through,” said Sen. Dan Clodfelter, D-Mecklenburg, one of the Senate’s key proponents of an overhaul.
Senate Democrats negotiated aggressively this year to lower the 6.75 percent overall sales tax rate most consumers pay and top individual income tax rate of 7.75 percent. Their plan also would have subjected building repairs, warranties and other services to the sales tax.
But Luebke and other House Democrats didn’t feel comfortable with the changes as revenues plummeted nearly 11 percent last fiscal year during the recession.
Instead, the two chambers and Democratic Gov. Beverly Perdue agreed to raise an additional $1 billion this year to narrow a budget gap largely by raising temporarily the overall sales tax rate to 7.75 percent and placing an income tax surcharge on the highest wage earners.
Raising rates is a common response by North Carolina and others states during a recession, said Bill Fox, director of the University of Tennessee Center for Economic Research, who spoke to the committee.
“Keep your bases really broad and your rates really low and you’ll have the best policy,” Fox told lawmakers. “It’s high tax rates that cause most of the mischief in taxation and change our behavior.”
Senate Democrats would prefer to approve changes when the General Assembly reconvenes in May with a new plan, but it could get pushed back until 2011, after the November 2010 legislative elections.
“I don’t know what the timeline will be but I think it’s imperative that we start working toward an ultimate tax reform process in North Carolina,” Perdue told reporters after a Council of State meeting. Perdue would be asked to sign any changes into law.
Republicans, the minority party in both chambers, sound suspicious about supporting an overhaul three months after they opposed a new state budget that raised taxes.
“Tax reform cannot be just another public relations strategy to justify a tax hike,” said Senate Republican Leader Phil Berger, R-Rockingham.
Copyright © 2009 The Associated Press. All rights reserved.
Summary of Metro Mayors 2009 Election Results
Here’s a quick summary:
City of Charlotte | Mayor | Patrick | McCrory | Not seeking reelection | Foxx |
Town of Chapel Hill | Mayor | Kevin | Foy | Not seeking reelection | Kleinschmidt |
City of Greensboro | Mayor | Yvonne | Johnson | Defeated | Knight |
City of Asheville | Mayor | Terry | Bellamy | Reelected | |
Town of Boone | Mayor | Loretta | Clawson | Reelected | |
City of Burlington | Mayor | Ronnie | Wall | Reelected | |
Town of Carrboro | Mayor | Mark | Chilton | Reelected | |
City of Concord | Mayor | J. Scott | Padgett | Reelected | |
City of Durham | Mayor | William | Bell | Reelected | |
City of Fayetteville | Mayor | Anthony | Chavonne | Reelected | |
City of Greenville | Mayor | Pat | Dunn | Reelected | |
City of Hickory | Mayor | Rudy | Wright | Reelected | |
Town of Huntersville | Mayor | Jill | Swain | Reelected | |
City of Kannapolis | Mayor | Robert | Misenheimer | Reelected | |
City of Raleigh | Mayor | Charles | Meeker | Reelected | |
City of Salisbury | Mayor | Susan | Kluttz | Reelected | |
City of Wilmington | Mayor | Bill | Saffo | Reelected | |
City of Winston-Salem | Mayor | Allen | Joines | Reelected |
Mayor Joines (Winston Salem) Wins (The Business Journal of the Greater Triad Area)
Greensboro to get new mayor Dec. 1 (The Business Journal of the Greater Triad Area)
Bill Knight, who ran on a fiscal conservatism message, won the city’s close mayoral race Tuesday, edging out incumbent Yvonne Johnson 51.3 percent to 48.6 percent.
Out of 34,347 votes cast, Knight’s margin was 935.
On the Greensboro City Council, at-large seats went to incumbent Robbie Perkins, former councilwoman Nancy Barakat Vaughan and newcomer Danny Thompson. Incumbent Sandra Anderson-Groat did not win re-election.
All the candidates running for district council seats in Greensboro won: T. Dianne Bellamy-Small in District 1, Zack Matheny in District 3, Mary Rakestraw in District 4 and Trudy Wade in District 5. Incumbent Councilwoman Goldie Wells was not on the ballot in District 2, which was won by newcomer Jim Kee.
Greensboro voters also approved a $20 million bond issue for the Natural Science Center, which received 61.2 percent of the vote. Stokesdale voters approved both a liquor-by-the-drink referendum and the establishment of an ABC store.
In Winston-Salem, incumbent Democratic Mayor Allen Joines was unopposed, garnering 90.7 percent of the vote.
Incumbent City Council members who appeared on the general election ballot also fared well in Winston-Salem. Winning re-election Tuesday were Democrats Dan Besse in the Southwest Ward, Vivian Burke in the Northeast Ward, Wanda Merschel in the Northwest Ward and Molly Leight in the South Ward and Republican Robert Clark in the West Ward.
The council will see four new members: Democrats Derwin L. Montgomery in the East Ward, Denise (D.D.) Adams in the North Ward and James Taylor in the Southeast Ward.
And in Burlington, incumbent Mayor Ronnie Wall handily won re-election, receiving 90.7 percent of the vote. Former mayor Stephen Ross also won a City Council seat. And Celo Faucette, a perennial candidate, edged out incumbent Councilman Larry Sharpe by eight votes, 1,465 to 1,457.
Saffo cruises to re-election in Wilmington mayoral race (Star News)
Saffo cruises to re-election in Wilmington mayoral race (Star News)
Bill Saffo will lead the city into the next decade.
The incumbent Wilmington mayor won another two-year term Tuesday, handily defeating his only challenger, Paul Knight, in a race in which fewer than 20 percent of the registered voters cast ballots.
“I think the people have spoken very clearly that they like the job that I’ve done,” Saffo said shortly after the results were displayed at the New Hanover County Board of Elections.
According to unofficial results, Saffo received 8,368 votes, or 61 percent. Knight garnered 5,329 votes, about 39 percent.
Knight congratulated Saffo with a handshake at about 9:40 p.m.
He said the low voter turnout was more disappointing than losing the race. The outcome might have been different – or at least closer – if more people had exercised their rights, Knight said.
“I just feel like people don’t care anymore,” he said. “Whatever’s given to them, they just take it and go with the flow.”
Saffo said the council’s progress on parks and transportation projects, as well as its ability to manage a budget through tough times without raising taxes, helped secure the victory.
“We’re getting things done,” he said.
Saffo said he also believes voters recognized his dedication to the city he grew up in.
“I’m passionate about this community, and I want to make it one of the greatest cities in America,” he said. “That’s my goal.”
The mayor’s race featured Saffo, a Democrat and seasoned politician, and Knight, a Republican and political newcomer.
Knight’s campaign focused on reducing crime, holding the line on taxes and reducing what he perceives as wasteful city council spending.
Saffo has said his top goal would be to bring jobs to Wilmington, while continuing to invest in parks, transportation, downtown and the arts.
Knight opposed involuntary annexation of county residents into the city, while Saffo voted to annex residents and businesses in the Monkey Junction area, which is scheduled to take effect next year.
Knight said during his campaign that the political climate was good for challengers, as the mayor and city council continue to make decisions that upset residents.
Focusing on city issues early on, the personal and professional pasts of the candidates were eventually aired as the election neared. Saffo’s opponents criticized him recently because his real estate company was suspended by the N.C. Department of Revenue in 2007 for failure to pay a few hundred dollars worth of taxes and fees. Knight’s 2005 arrest on a charge of interfering with a 911 call, which was ultimately dropped, also came to light, as did the fact that he’s been married six times.
Knight, 52, is vice president and general manager for Sea-Comm Media, which operates radio stations The Penguin, The Bone, and The Big Talker FM. Saffo, 49, owns Hanover Realty.
Saffo was first elected to city council in 2003 and was appointed to the mayor’s seat in 2006, when former Mayor Spence Broadhurst left town mid-term. In the 2007 mayor’s race, Saffo defeated former mayor Harper Peterson and tattoo parlor owner Justin LaNasa.
He will be sworn in again next month.
Patrick Gannon: 343-2328
On Twitter.com: @starnewsonline
Copyright © 2009 StarNewsOnline.com — All rights reserved. Restricted use only.
By Patrick Gannon
[email protected]
Published: Tuesday, November 3, 2009 at 1:16 p.m.
Mayor Kluttz (Salisbury) Wins
Blackwell, Miller join City Council (Salisbury Post)
When a woman handed Maggie Blackwell her “lucky scarf” at church Sunday, she didn’t realize just how lucky she’d be on election night.
“She told me I could only keep it a week, so it must be lucky,” said Blackwell.
In what’s become a recurring Salisbury City Council election night theme, current Mayor Susan Kluttz brought in the most votes with 2,365. Blackwell had the second-largest total with 1,924. Current Mayor Pro Tem Paul Woodson had 1,846.
Newcomer Brian Miller followed, with William “Pete” Kennedy securing the fifth seat. Councilman Mark Lewis fell 62 votes short of winning re-election, with a total of 1,508.
Others on the ballot finished in this order: Michael S. Young, 1,142; William C. Peoples Jr., 924; Carl C. Dangerfield, 462; Charles A. Black, 389; Benjamin Johnson, 456. There were 106 write-in votes.
“You’re always disappointed that you lost, especially when you’ve put your heart and soul into it,” Lewis said. “I’m happy for Brian and Maggie, though. Brian has similar skill sets to me, and Maggie ran the best campaign I’ve ever seen.
“I think they’ll be great. They’ll bring fresh ideas to the council, which will be a good thing.”
Blackwell said she hated to see Lewis go and that she wished there were more than five spots.
On having the second-highest number of votes, Blackwell said she’s “thrilled.”
“I have to remind people that I didn’t get myself here, and that there were many people involved,” she said, noting that her husband, Jody, was a great force.
“I’ve learned that someone can criticize you and that doesn’t humble you. But when people give you trust, that’s humbling,” she said. “I’m going to have to work hard the next two years to earn that trust that so many people have given me.”
On placing second to Kluttz, Blackwell said she was “honored.”
“It’s very flattering. I think the world of Mayor Kluttz.”
Kluttz had praise for Blackwell, too.
“I realized that she (Blackwell) was a tremendous leader several years ago when she worked on the park for Fulton Heights,” Kluttz said. “I really admire the way she did her campaigning, door-to-door; she really took it seriously, and I was very impressed.
“We have worked closely with her in the past, so she’s been a part of our team,” Kluttz said.
Miller has also played a large role in different committees in Salisbury, such as the Planning Board, Empire Hotel and more, the mayor said.
“He got banks to partner together for the benefit of Salisbury, which is a great challenge,” said Kluttz. “He’s been a part of our team, too.”
She commented on Lewis’ loss.
“Mark has worked with us for all of our 12 years, and it’s sad because I know how hard he works,” she said.
She said the city has lost “two terrific council members” in Lewis and Bill Burgin, who didn’t seek re-election.
“When we held our dinner for Bill Burgin last week, we knew this was the end of a 12-year team. But we have two team players that are joining us, and they understand where we’re going and want to move forward with us.”
Kluttz said all candidates were positive and progressive, excited about the future, and she hopes to see their faces in committees and meetings.
Woodson said the city has a great new council. “I’m happy to be back on, but I’m sorry Mark Lewis didn’t get re-elected,” Woodson said. “He’s a hard worker. This was one of the toughest elections.
“We’ve got a sharp council and a very diverse council, and I’m proud of all the people who came out and ran, putting their necks on the line.”
Miller said the campaign “has been great.”
“There are a lot of qualified people, and it speaks well of our community that this many people are interested,” he said.
“I hope to continue the progress made recently between the city and the county,” he said. “I look forward to serving, to get in and do what we can to make progress.”
Many of the candidates who didn’t win said they’ll be back.
Charles Black, a critic of the city’s annexation policies, said he plans to run again in two years.
“I’m a victim of forced annexation, and if they’re going to annex you, doubling your taxes, they’re going to have to give you something in return in the first six months,” said Black. “Don’t put me in the city just to get my money.
“With the fiber to the home, it’s the same thing. They’re going to fall on their face. Virginia and Tennessee had it, and it didn’t work. It’s not going to work here, and then they’ll raise everyone’s taxes. For $38 million, at least put out a survey before a vote is made.”
Black said if he is elected in 2011, his first priority will be bringing more people to council meetings.
“Next time I’m going to put up a fight. The council needs a ‘no’ person. If anything will raise taxes and get into people’s pocketbooks, I at least want the citizens’ input.”
The youngest candidate, Blake Jarman, said the No. 1 focus needs to be bringing jobs into Salisbury and working on the budget.
“We need to make sure the city is spending everyone’s money correctly,” said Jarman. “And we need to bring jobs to Salisbury and help those who don’t have jobs to find them.”
Jarman said he plans on running again in 2011, “stronger than before.”
“I think the City Council can be a thriving force in people’s everyday lives,” he said. “I’m still on the residents’ side. Everyone needs proper representation.”
William Peoples said the council needs to focus on neighborhoods and infrastructure.
“We need to look at the neighborhoods and see what they need,” Peoples said. “Citizens who can’t make it to council should hold town hall meetings, and the council should go and hear their needs.”
Peoples also would like to see salary increases for city employees and see more diversity in hiring practices.
Carl Dangerfield said he is definitely running in 2011, “bigger and badder than ever.”
“I’m going to start working on my campaign this week,” said Dangerfield. “My No. 1 focus on my campaign will be to look at more quality across the city, and close the dividing lines.
“There’s a big division from the ‘haves’ and ‘have nots.’ ”
November 04, 2009 9:19 AM |
By Shelley [email protected]
Meeker keeps his job as Raleigh mayor (News and Observer)
Meeker keeps his job as Raleigh mayor (News and Observer) (From October 8)
RALEIGH — Mayor Charles Meeker was re-elected to his fifth consecutive term Tuesday, while one of his past political rivals, John Odom, made his way back onto the City Council after a six-year absence.
The only upset in Tuesday’s nonpartisan city elections came when Odom, a Republican small-business owner, toppled incumbent Rodger Koopman in DistrictB. Odom garnered support from 59percent of the 6,412 people that voted in the northeast Raleigh district.
Odom’s no stranger to the council, having spent five terms on it before unsuccessfully trying to unseat Meeker, a Democratic lawyer, in the city’s 2003 mayoral election.
Odom, 62, will be the only Republican on the council, and he said he plans to focus on how, and where, money gets spent at city hall.
“We’re a billion dollars in debt, and no one knows where the money went,” Odom said.
Also joining the council will be Bonner Gaylord, 31, the general manager of the North Hills development and a planning commission member. Gaylord will be taking over the District E seat in northwest Raleigh being vacated by Philip Isley, a Raleigh lawyer who had been the council’s lone Republican. Isley decided not to run again.
Gaylord, who isn’t affiliated with a political party, faced a fellow member of the city’s planning committee in the race, Waheed Haq, 52. Gaylord ended up with 76percent of the vote.
“We’ve got a lot to accomplish in the city council,” Gaylord said, including working on new building codes for the city. “That’s really going to guide the way the city grows.”
In West Raleigh’s DistrictD, architect Thomas Crowder, 53, easily beat challenger Ted Van Dyk, 48, also an architect. Crowder received 68percent of the vote.
In District C, which represents Southeast Raleigh, James West, a 65-year-old Democrat, easily won his sixth term with 84 percent of the vote over challenger Charles “Chuck” Reisinger, 34, who jumped into the race initially just to make sure West had competition.
Incumbents Mary-Ann Baldwin, 52, and Russ Stephenson, 53, were re-elected as the council-at-large representatives over two much-younger candidates.
In North Raleigh’s DistrictA, incumbent Nancy McFarlane, 53, was unopposed and received 94 percent of the vote.
Milestone for Meeker
Tuesday’s win tied Meeker, 59, with fellow Democrat Avery C. Upchurch as the mayor with the longest consecutive run in office in Raleigh history.
“Raleigh voters have been very kind to me over the years, and they were again tonight,” Meeker said.
One of Meeker’s opponents, Larry Hudson II, 30, received 29 percent of the total vote. Mark Enloe, 47, got 7 percent, and Gregg Kunz, 48, the third challenger, received 3 percent of vote. All in all, the three challengers ended up with 38percent of the total vote in the mayor’s race. The dent in Meeker’s support may be a sign that some residents are seeking a change.
Hudson, 30, a recruiter with a local construction staffing firm who hadn’t voted in city elections beforehand, ran to attention to issues outside the Beltline.
“To be the first election that I’ve ever done and to come up with the third of the vote, I think that’s excellent,” Hudson said. “I wish we could have pulled it out, though. We’ll be running again.”
Eleven percent of eligible voters in Raleigh turned out for Tuesday’s election.
In the at-large race, Baldwin received 35 percent of the vote Tuesday and Stephenson got 33 percent.
Champ Claris, a 32-year-old real estate broker who criticized the spending priorities of the current council and promised to be more fiscally conservative, came in third in the at-large race with 20 percent.
Challenger Lee Sartain, 28, who works for N.C. State’s Friday Institute for Educational Innovation, received 8 percent. He campaigned promising to emphasize economic development and take a more active role in expanding the city’s public transportation network.
The dramatic contest
The liveliest race during the campaign was in District D, where Crowder and Van Dyk both ran aggressive campaigns.
Crowder has represented the district since 2003. He touted his ability to build consensus and engage and protect neighborhoods. He has led the council’s recent efforts to more closely monitor rental properties and to make developers pay more of the cost of growth.
Van Dyk was highly critical of Crowder’s tenure on council, saying he frequently stirred up unnecessary discontent and circumvented the public process to suit his own objectives.
In District B, Koopman, 49, a Democrat and director of a software development company, held the seat for the past two years. He argued during the campaign that the predominantly progressive council had worked hard to correct costly mistakes made by Odom and his conservative colleagues in the 1990s. Meanwhile, Odom said Koopman represented irresponsible taxing and spending.
Koopman said he plans on staying involved with what happens at city hall.
“Clearly it’s a privilege to serve,” Koopman said. “I was hoping to do it again.”
BY SARAH OVASKA AND DAVID BRACKEN – Staff Writers
[email protected] or 919-829-4622
Mayor Misenheimer (Kannapolis) Wins
Incumbents win in Kannapolis (The Independent Tribune)
KANNAPOLIS – The incumbents in Kannapolis were re-elected Tuesday night.
Mayor Bob Misenheimer defeated challenger, Bill Georgiou, with 71 percent of the vote.
Randy Cauthen, Darrell Hinnant and Gene McCombs were re-elected to City Council, with 30 percent, 29 percent and 26 percent, respectively.
This is Misenheimer’s second term as mayor.
“The people of Kannapolis have been awfully good to Bob Misenheimer,” he said. “In the near future I hope we can get this research campus back on track so it can be doing some great things.”
For Georgiou, this was his first time running for municipal office.
He said he took the loss in stride and that he learned a lot from his first municipal campaign.
“I spent a lot of time talking with citizens and about the issues that I wanted to bring up,” Georgiou said. “We are quite a diverse community and I’ve really learned to appreciate it a lot more. I love my community so much more after this.”
Georgiou said he called Misenheimer to congratulate him on the win, and said he would run in the future.
Georgiou is active, though, in Democratic politics in the county and district level. He attended the
2008 Democratic National Convention as a delegate from the 8th District.
For Cauthen, Hinnant and McCombs, the refrain was very similar: They were pleased and humbled to be re-elected to City Council.
Only Hinnant expressed concern about the low voter turnout. About 7,200 people voted in this year’s election, out of 24,405 registered voters in Kannapolis, with 19,999 in Cabarrus County and 4,406 in Rowan County.
“There was one precinct where only 57 people voted,” Hinnant said. “That makes me sad. I don’t know what we have to do to get people to vote.”
Contact Web reporter Ben McNeely: 704-789-9131
By Ben McNeely | Media General
Published: November 3, 2009
Mayor Wright (Hickory) Wins (The Hickory Record)
Hickory’s Ward 4: Former officer ousts longtime city leader (The Hickory Record)
HICKORY – Voters rewarded Hickory City Councilwoman Jill Patton with a second term Tuesday, but rejected incumbent Z. Ann Hoyle’s bid for another term.
Challenger Hank Guess defeated Hoyle, who first won her Ward 4 seat 18 years ago, by more than 900 votes.
“I feel good — I’m looking forward to serving on the council,” Guess said. “I’ve just had tremendous support from the city and throughout the community.”
He thanked his family for standing by him during his successful primary and general elections. He said he owed his victory to his campaign manager and treasurer, Joe Brannock.
“I couldn’t have done it without him,” he said.
Patton triumphed in the Ward 6 race, receiving nearly twice as many votes as challenger Harry Hipps.
“I just want to say thanks to all my supporters,” she said.
Patton said she sees their votes as a validation of the job she’s done in her first term in office.
“I’m excited about the next four years,” she said.
Hickory Mayor Rudy Wright ran unopposed, as did Ward 5 Councilwoman Sally Fox.
“I am once again excited about the democratic process,” Wright said. “It’s going to be a good city council and we’re going to continue to move the city forward.”
Fox said she’s going to continue to focus on filling Hickory’s vacant buildings and expanding the city’s tax base.
“I’ve got a lot of ideas and I’m ready to move forward,” she said.
Catawba County Board of Elections Director Larry Brewer said the low voter turnout did not surprise him.
Brewer said Hickory mayoral contests usually draw more voters out to the polls and if Wright would have had opposition, the turnout may have been higher this year.
By Richard Gould | Hickory Daily Record
Published: November 4, 2009
Mayor Dunn (Greenville) Wins
Change coming to council (Greenville Daily Reflector)
Blackburn wins big; Smith holds 12 vote margin over Mildred Council
Excerpted from story
Greenville Mayor Pat Dunn won her bid for re-election, and said she and her supporters worked very hard to earn the victory over opponent Minnie Johnson-Anderson.
“Greenville is a great city with great people,” she said. “But we still have a lot of work to do in terms of revitalization … transportation, and delivering services in tight economic times.”
Johnson-Anderson said she will continue her work to improve Greenville and to call attention to important issues.“I made myself available,” she said. “I’m hoping this administration will continue to address crime and the need for jobs and lead the people. All the people.”
By Kathryn Kennedy
The Daily Reflector
Tuesday, November 03, 2009
Contact Kathryn Kennedy at [email protected] or (252) 329-9566.
Mayor Chavonne (Fayetteville) wins (Fayetteville Observer)
Fayetteville election: Davy ousts incumbent Evans (Fayetteville Observer)
Excerpted from story
With complete but unofficial results, challenger Kady-Ann Davy unseated Evans by 229 votes for the District 2 seat.
Chavonne easily won a third term by defeating Bob White, an elected member of the local Soil and Water Conservation District board, 66.5 percent to 33 percent.
“I think the people in Fayetteville have a clear picture of the way things are going, and they like the results they see,” Chavonne said.
By Andrew Barksdale
Published: 06:14 AM, Wed Nov 04, 2009