Friday, October 30, 2009

Cignotti-Sission-DeVries ticket upfront and open with voters

David Cignotti, candidate for Wrightsville Beach mayor, and Bill Sisson and Walter DeVries, candidates for the board of aldermen, have participated in numerous meet-and-greets with Wrightsville Beach voters. The most recent of which was at 22 North late Thursday night, Oct. 29, where everyone flashing an I Voted sticker was invited to attend for a “thank you for voting” soiree.
Each one of these meet-the-candidate opportunities represents a unique aspect of the small-town campaigns: the ability of each and every voter to meet their community’s potential leaders.
At a similar event earlier this month, voters milled about the dimmed lights of King Neptune, expressing their support for the three candidates, mostly because of what they called the candidates’ approachable personality and tough stance on key issues.
“They want to improve the quality of our life here downtown,” said Tim Taylor, a local resident and a supporter of the Cignotti-Sisson-DeVries (CSD) ticket.
Taylor cited what he perceives to be the newly formed dangers posed by patrons of the downtown bar district and the proposed solutions that the CSD ticket offers.
“It’s not the same town that it used to be,” Taylor added. “We need to let them (tourists) know that they’re welcome here but they need to respect it.”
Taylor’s words echoed what has become DeVries’ campaign slogan: “Share our beach, yes, but abuse it, no!”
Taylor told a story that’s heard all too frequently from the people who live downtown. Often, Taylor said, he wakes up to find bags of trash in his yard and beer bottles strewn about his driveway.
He believes Wrightsville Beach needs leaders with fresh ideas. He wants politicians who can instill a sense of safety back into the bar district while maintaining the robust economic generator.
DeVries has put forward ideas like putting police officers on Segways and increasing foot patrols to create a bigger presence.
Cignotti says that if elected mayor he will push for holding homeowners who rent to unruly tenants accountable, issuing citations to people who blatantly ignore ordinances and increasing foot-patrols and cameras.
Abbott Shea, a student at the University of North Carolina Wilmington and resident of Wrightsville Beach, has been urging other young people in the community to register and vote. He too was found in King Neptune that night, voicing his all-out support for the CSD ticket.
He said that he was first turned-on to the CSD ticket when Cignotti and Sisson approached him and introduced themselves, showing Shea that they wanted to open a line of communication.
“If I have a problem, then I want to be able to approach them and be taken seriously,” he said. “If we have to live by the rules made by the powers that be then we have to decide who the powers that be are.”

—Brian Freskos

Finance reports reveal big spending

The committee to elect Alderman David Cignotti for mayor has been pumped full of cash. Cignotti is the only candidate in Wrightsville Beach who has reported spending of more than $3,000 on campaigning for office.
Actually, he is the only candidate among all the beach towns in New Hanover County to exceed the $3,000 threshold set by state law.
Basically, the threshold law stipulates that if any candidate wants to spend more than $3,000, they have to file a report with the New Hanover County Board of Elections and are subject to update that report periodically.
According to finance reports filed with the board of elections office on Oct. 26, the committee to elect David Cignotti has spent a total $4,908.66 for campaign-related expenditures.
During the first of two disclosure periods to date—from July 17 to Sept. 22—the committee doled out more than $3,308.
Expenditures during that period, according to finance reports, included $475.48 for 100 yard signs, $625 for 750 campaign Koozies, $89.95 for 100 bumper stickers, $69.81 for a banner sign, $395.62 for 36 T-shirts, $1,599 for 1600 mailers, and a small number of in-kind contributions and reimbursements.
During the second disclosure period, Sept. 23 to Oct. 19, Cignotti received 14 individual donations totaling $1,115, or roughly $40 a day, according to finance reports.
All those who donated $100 or more are residents in Wrightsville Beach, including Lois DeVries, the wife of alderman candidate Walter DeVries, who donated $100 to Cignotti’s committee, finance reports indicate.
At the close of the second filing period, reports indicated that Cignotti still had $2,232.54 cash on hand.
The fact that Cignotti has spent so much on his campaign will undoubtedly boost his numbers in the polls come Nov. 3. He’s strengthened his name recognition and clarified his position on a number of issues, but there are still disadvantages that will have to be overcome in the polling place.
His competition, incumbent Stephen Whalen, has the name recognition and is banking on the town’s successes of the past two years, typical of any incumbent candidate. He also appears to have toned down his infamous tangents, a quality that has unequivocally branded him with a bad reputation and possibly damaged his appeal to some voters.
Whalen said after he announced his reelection bid in July that he would likely exceed that $3,000 threshold, but to date, has yet to do so, despite sending out several mailers and planting numerous yard signs around town.
Some of Cignotti’s spending seemed strategic.
Koozies, for example, will likely appeal to the younger voters who seem to be a sturdy base of Cignotti support. Even though this block tends to vote in small numbers in off-year elections like this one, Cignotti’s ability to rally the youth may give him enough votes to inch ahead of his competition.
Small town elections like the one in Wrightsville Beach can often be decided by a single vote.
It will be exciting to see how the tide turns on Election Night.

—Brian Freskos

My Thoughts October 22, 2009

Less than a dozen days are all that remain until this year’s election Nov. 3.

Thankfully, this year is a far cry from the turbulent elections of the past when no stone was left unturned digging for dirt on candidates. Mud slinging puts the media in an uncomfortable spot, because once a fact is brought into the light of day, the duty to the reader is to investigate and report it.

Wilmington held its two candidate forums in the preceding weeks and the worst to come out of that was a question about multiple marriages.

Wrightsville’s candidates’ forum brought to life by the members of the town’s merchants association took place Tuesday night. The merchants association is filling a vacuum created by a chamber of commerce that may have lost its way.

Moderated by UNCW Chancellor Rosemary DePaolo, the forum was a snappy affair until right at the end when it disintegrated into pontificating on the part of not only the questioners from the audience, but several of the candidates responding to questions, unrestrained as they were by the time keeper. Elected officials need never forget that no one likes the sound of your voice as much as you do!

Lumina News does not endorse candidates, feeling every voter has a duty to make an informed choice as to which candidate would best represent them as an elected official. Too often endorsements reek of cronyism, hidden agendas and the inappropriate wielding of power.

Several of the candidates hold differing views, as was evidenced by their answers to forum questions. Anyone attending or watching the video, filmed in its entirety by volunteers from One Tree Hill, should be able to make a choice between those running.

This is the first time in a number of years in which candidates appear to be aligning with others to form some sort of slate. True or not, the old guard will certainly be pleased with how well their candidates preformed. As will be the younger edgier voter, however we will take the liberty of warning against the pitfalls of lumping candidates together.

Rather, each should be analyzed based on his or her own performance. His or her own words. Points can be deducted for the reading of answers prepared in advance. If a candidate can’t be prepared enough for a forum to speak from the heart, how will they handle voting on issues, where thinking clearly and sorting through facts as they are revealed, is mandatory?

Word comes this week of a separate mayoral forum which never really got off the ground. Given just 11 days notice, incumbent Steve Whalen cited schedule conflict as his reason for declining to participate, which killed it. Too bad for David Cignotti, and while this had potential to be explosive, fur most certainly would have flown, based on their track record of communicating — or lack of it this past two years, not having to attend another event here at the end of the month is a blessing.

The forum didn’t hold a lot of surprises except perhaps the number who are in favor of a smoke free beach strand. Just one candidate, Susan Collins went on the record as being against it. She also voted against a litter ordinance. Collins joined Whalen and Ed Miastkowski in voting no to televising town meetings.

It was no surprise water quality, the budget and public safety topped the ticket for discussion. As did recycling.

Crime was a hot topic, along with the downtown business district which can dissolve into near chaos between 12 and 2 am on any given weekends. When a question was posed from the floor by downtown resident Tim Taylor, two incumbents, Whalen and Miastkowski actually seemed to be clueless of how desperate this situation is.

For those in denial that a crisis exists, Miastkowski’s off hand remark that police officers are reluctant to patrol more on foot because they don’t want to leave their cars due to the damage that could occur at the hands of those in the street, was all telling.

It left me thinking if deplorable behavior, not to mention a good portion of the crime goes down between 12 and 2 am, why not, as Collins said, close the bars at midnight like the old days, and get these people off the streets? But that’s a choice made in Raleigh, not here.

One of the good things to come out of the night may be a stepped up effort to get a magistrate assigned to this area. Not having one available when an arrest is made is a large negative.

The candidates were split on who would support rezoning commercial property to more valuable residential, a harbinger of doom for many. Voting yes were, Jim Smith, Ed Miastkowski, Walt DeVires, and Susan Collins. Both mayoral candidates and Bill Sisson voted no.

De Vries is raising the issue of potential voter fraud. He, Cignotti and sent campaign mailings to more than 1,600 households in Wrightsville Beach. Three hundred of those mailings from each did not reach their intended addresses, either because the person moved, had no forwarding address, the address was insufficient or the residence was vacant. Some have out-of-state forwarding addresses in places like Pennsylvania, Virginia, Vermont and Wisconsin, but a majority of them were in Wilmington.

There’s no question we need stronger proof of residency when voting. In a town where each votes counts, that has the very real potential to make a difference.

Find a sample ballot on our Web site, or come by the office, we’ll print you one.

Pat Bradford

Aldermen, mayoral candidates jockey for public support during merchant forum

Candidates for Wrightsville Beach public office weighed in on the issues at a public forum hosted by the Wrightsville Beach Merchants Association at the Blockade Runner Resort on Tuesday, Oct. 20.
Chancellor Rosemary DePaolo, University of North Carolina Wilmington, moderated the two-hour panel which included mayoral candidates, Alderman David Cignotti and incumbent Mayor Stephen Whalen; with aldermen candidates Susan Howell Collins, Walter DeVries, incumbent Ed Miastkowski, Dr. Bill Sisson and James Smith.
When Wrightsville Beach voters go to the polls on Tuesday, Nov. 3, they will vote for one mayor and two aldermen.
Water quality, public safety and the town’s operating budget all drew equal attention from the seven candidates when asked what they thought were the most important issues facing the town.
The WBMA, who solicited input from other organizations like the Wrightsville Beach Chamber of Commerce, the Harbor Island Garden Club and the Surfrider Foundation, framed additional questions that allowed the candidates to respond to other hot-button items, like crime; recycling; town-subsidized sanitation service; the pros and cons of permitted events; the pros and cons of a trolley service to the beach; and support for the proposed bike path and the possible future of a skateboard park.
Several candidates seemed to gravitate toward the same responses. Mayor Whalen, Alderman Miastkowski and candidate Collins all voice opposition to a skate board park citing problems experienced by Carolina Beach. Candidate Smith noted that skate parks are huge and would require paving a large portion of the island, but candidate Sisson said local kids need something to do.
“What’s happened in other places is not necessarily going to happen here,” Sisson said.
Candidate DeVries favored advisory referendums allowing the residents to vote and Alderman Cignotti also favored public input.
Whalen, Miastkowski and Collins also sided over televised or Internet-streamed town meetings, each stating no; and were in accord again when they voted no to relaxed parking restrictions for businesses.
All favored increasing parking fees in already metered spaces; and all but Collins voted yes to increased litter fines and the enforcement of a smoke-free beach strand. Only Cignotti said maybe regarding the installation of surveillance cameras at Johnnie Mercer’s Pier; and Cignotti, Whalen and Sisson voted no to the idea of rezoning commercial property to residential.
These questions were asked early in the forum during a speed round that DePaolo said gave everyone an overview of the candidates’ positions.
Mayor Whalen’s position seemed to be grounded in the town’s achievements during his first two-year term, yet when given the chance to address a hypothetical situation: assuming the economy does not recover next year, what are your thoughts in raising taxes, raising parking fees, eliminating services and cutting non-essential town employees? Whalen said he did not have an answer.
“I think we have to address it when the time comes and understand that decisions that we make are decisions made by the board, they’re not made just by the mayor.”
Cignotti said he believed that a property tax increase was going to occur in order to pay the debt service on the public safety facility and that an increase in parking fees was already on the table.
“The elimination of services and non-essential employees probably could be on the table depending on what the budget looks like,” Cignotti said. He favored a budget review partnership with UNCW, neighboring beach towns and the county which receives 87 percent of Wrightsville’s tax dollars.
Other new ideas were expressed by Smith who advocated for the installation of bio-retention ponds near asphalt parking lots to mitigate windborne debris entering recreational waters, specifically cigarette butts. Smith also favored instituting a return on recycled plastic bottles to encourage residents and visitors to comply with new legislation banning the disposal of plastics into the landfill, and said he had discussed with Sen. Julia Boseman (D-New Hanover) the possibility of placing locks on boat bilge pumps. Collins said she had discussed with Rep. Danny McComas (R-District 19) the possibility of funding a discharge boat that would collect sewage from moored boats.
Only two questions were fielded from the audience. One from Keith Norris, owner of Vito’s Pizzeria who asked if the candidates perceived the downtown district as the bar district? The other from Tim Taylor, a downtown resident, asked what the candidates would do to address safety issues in the downtown area between the hours of midnight and 2 a.m.
Smith favored a task force; Sisson the involvement of all the stakeholders; and Miastkowski more police on foot and in plain clothes. Collins advocated for closing the bars at midnight and said the young people and visitors should not be running the town. DeVries stated the problem was alcohol; Whalen agreed and Cignotti favored the adoption and enforcement of a nuisance ordinance and stepped up communication among bar owners and town officials.
“If you’re thrown out of a bar, you’re put in a cab and sent off our beach,” he said.
The forum was videoed in its entirety and will be available on LuminaNews.com

Marimar McNaughton

Candidates for mayor, alderman, to square off on issues

On Tuesday, Oct. 20, the Wrightsville Beach Merchants Association will host a public candidates’ forum moderated by University of North Carolina Chancellor Rosemary DePaolo.
Seven contenders have been invited to square off on the issues. Of these, two mayoral candidates, represented by incumbent Mayor Stephen Whalen and Alderman David Cignotti, will position themselves for the town’s highest office in the first contested mayor’s race since 2005.
Two seats will also open for a four-year term on the Wrightsville Beach Board of Aldermen. Five candidates have filed for those positions: Susan Howell Collins, Walt De Vries, incumbent Ed Miastkowski, Bill Sisson and Jim Smith.
Lumina News invited each of the alderman candidates to supply answers to the following five questions. The first four responses have been reprinted in alphabetical order with the candidates’ permission in alphabetical order:

Susan Howell Collins, 59, lifelong resident of Wrightsville Beach
Schooling: University of North Carolina Wilmington
Offices served: Vice-chairman of the Wrightsville Beach Planning Board currently serving second 2-year term
Profession: Licensed paralegal; administrator of Collins & Collins Law Firm, PLLC.

Walter De Vries, 79, 37-year resident of Wrightsville Beach
Schooling: M.A. and Ph.D. in social psychology and political science from Michigan State University, Harvard University post-graduate fellow.
Offices served: Executive assistant to Governor George Romney; elected Republican delegate to the Michigan Constitutional Convention; former special assistant to the chancellor at UNCW.
Profession: Army veteran, political author, former professor, president of De Vries & Associates, Inc., (a campaign consulting firm) and former director of the N.C. Institute of Political Leadership.

Bill Sisson, 61, 11-year Wrightsville Beach resident
Schooling: B.A. from Ohio Wesleyan University; M.A in Latin American studies and M.A. in urban planning from UCLA; Doctorate of Chiropractic from Palmer College of Chiropractic-West.
Offices served: New Hanover County Commissioner 1992-1996; New Hanover County Planning Board; Wrightsville Beach Planning Board.
Profession: chiropractic physician

Jim Smith, 52, 5-year resident of Wrightsville Beach
Schooling: B.S. Engineering and Architectural from Perdue University.
Offices served: Wrightsville Beach Parks and Recreation Advisory Committee, Charlotte Smart Growth Committee and Urban Land Institute
Profession: Real Estate Development

Question No. 1
Many people we have spoken with recently would like to see a unified approach to local government that respects its residents and property owners; its visiting public; and its employees.
a. If elected, how are you going to build a coalition to achieve common goals?
b. Describe your management style.

Collins: The board’s responsibility is to determine and prioritize the needs of the community. Regard and respect of board members and their opinions is necessary. Open communications using residents’ input should be practiced by aldermen. My style, serving on the WB planning board four years, is building consensus to make united decisions. Hours are spent reading legal documents that pertain to permitting, zoning and ordinances. Understanding and editing legal documents is a daily skill in my present position. My diligence in managing time is an asset to the council, as well as streamlining time spent in discussions at meetings.

DeVries: This is an election about the next four years. Just look at the candidate's answers to these questions and you will see who has the most specific and thoughtful answers. Support those candidates you know can work together and are positive.

I know how to bring government officials and staffs together and did so for 14 years. When I was the executive assistant to Michigan Governor George Romney, my job was to coordinate the state cabinet and make the 130 state agencies, boards and commissions work together in our administration. I listened, examined options and then recommended decisive actions to the Governor; and I was placed in charge of reorganizing … the 130 agencies into 20 principal departments. Government reorganization, like management, is not easy but it can be done. I like to break issues down like this: State the problem, then outline your philosophy about handling it (i.e., solve by government, private organizations or enterprise action) and, finally, outline your program to handle the problem. One more comment: we have a town manager who should administer our town--not the board of alderman who need to make policy.

Sisson: First I assume we are all there to serve the community. I have ideas of my own but I tend to seek out points of agreement with my colleagues and build solutions based on those points. I learned when I was a county commissioner that you can get an awful lot done by working with people rather than against them.

My management style is to include those around me in decisions, to respect their opinions and the information they provide, and then make my decisions having considered this along with other information I have. I guess you could call this team building.

Smith: Communication and teamwork is key. We are all working on a common goal—providing the best services at a reasonable cost while preserving and enhancing our quality of life (upholding the Community Vision Statement). We will have differences of opinion in how to achieve this best. We need to create among the newly formed board a creed by which to govern in which we agree when we disagree to conduct ourselves in a professional, non-personal manner. If something is bothering us about a fellow alderman then darn it—discuss it. It’s kindergarten 101—respect, play nice, work hard, like what you are doing, have fun. What’s wrong with a good debate?

I have one boss, and that is the residents. I have one report, and that is the town manager. I manage from the bottom up—that is I seek out their needs and wants and balance that with budget constraints while continuing to provide for core needs. I seek out advice from those smarter than me to make educated decisions. Teamwork is key while providing the town manager and staff the support they need to do their job to the best of their ability. Manage by wandering around. Meet, discuss, gather ideas and concerns.


Question No. 2
The town’s fiscal year budget for 2010-2011 will have to increase substantially to offset the expense of funding the first payment on the new public safety building.
a. What is your plan for increasing revenue to offset this expense?
b. With the county tax revaluation effective in the same fiscal year, do you have the courage to also raise town property taxes if necessary?

Collins: The town’s revenue will have to increase to pay for the public safety building. Our board approved this significant expenditure and it will be the new council’s responsibility to pay the ongoing expense (approximately $500,000 annually). This council must be diligent and wise in other related expenses because of our present economic position. Tax re-evaluation is necessary to bring properties back to appropriate values. Our tax rate will have to adjust to meet our budget needs.

DeVries: Honestly, where can you go but to increase property taxes? Courage has nothing to do with it. This last board leaves the new 2010 Board with no options. We have no choice but to increase property taxes and have no say about it.

Sisson: I believe we should pay as we go. I like the idea of fee for service income versus general tax increases. Where the town can increase fees it should. Parking may be one of the areas where this will be possible. If we have to tap the reserve fund it should only be as a last resort.

No one wants to raise property taxes. I hate them because they are regressive, but the state does not give us a choice. The public safety building is a done deal. We will have to pay for it and that may mean raising taxes.

Smith: We need to run the town like a business. We have a product to sell. Implement a user fee and in-lieu-of fee schedule. My program regarding these fees could bring in as much as $60,000 per year. I would increase parking fees to $12/day and at the same time renegotiate our agreement with Lanier. Total income with both plans $200,000 or $65 average tax savings per property. Use a contract employee expert for grant applications.
I will strive very hard to keep any increase to a bare minimum.

Question No. 3
Employee moral reportedly dipped last year when the town staff suffered personnel cuts: a hiring freeze, no merit increases and radical changes to employee health insurance benefits. What would you suggest to improve employee morale?

Collins: Employee morale is important and produces quality work outflow. Respect and pride in our workplace with positive input from staff and management is a must. When merit raises are not received by deserving employees, other rewards/honors must take place. Early leave times should be rotated and lunches provided by community and businesses.

DeVries: Do we really know what employee morale is? Have we ever surveyed them to find out how they feel? Right now the board needs to restore their merit pay increases and repair the damage done to health benefits. Chief Carey told me that some police officers, in order to get health insurance for their families, must personally pay $200 a week! I understand that these decisions were made by the BOA in a severe economic downturn, but now conditions are better and changes can be made

Sisson: We start with the board letting the employees know how much we value them for doing their jobs with less and for less than they are worth. But we must begin to restore cuts they have endured. Otherwise we will lose good employees the moment another good offer comes along.

Smith: We must be competitive with salaries and benefits. It is often a false economic formula when we lose quality people and have to replace them.

Question No. 4
To balance the 2209-2010, there was no money earmarked for capital improvements in the 2009-2010 budget. What would you do to amend this situation over the next four-year term?

Collins: Money earmarked for improvements has come from excess tax revenues when economic times were at their peak. No money was marked for capital improvements this year because revenue producing activities were down. It will be necessary to place enough revenue from impact fees and permit fees in the CIP to fund our future budget needs.

DeVries: I have studied the rank order of the capital improvements and it seems to me that beach renourishment recommendations are critical and should be funded now and in the next four years. The same should be said for water quality proposals. Too often, the town has put off needed maintenance and capital needs only to find that had these appropriations made earlier would have saved a lot of money. We need to get away from "crisis management" and start taking planning for the future seriously.

Sisson: Capital improvements cannot be ignored. The longer you put them off the more expensive they become. We have to begin setting portions of the budget aside to fund these projects - cleaning up our waters and beach strand and ensuring beach renourishment cannot wait.

Smith: Combine the expenses of the new safety building, salary and benefit issues, and capital improvement issues with decreased funding from various sources, a tax increase is inevitable. However, it will be my job to help keep any necessary increase to a bare minimum.

Question No. 5
Wrightsville Beach hosts one million visitors each summer impacting public parking, public safety and sanitation.
a. How do you rank these three in order of importance and why?
b. How would you improve your No. 1 choice?

Collins: Our sanitation issues need immediate attention! Waterways testing with high levels of bacteria, beaches that are polluted with trash and storm water runoff draining into Banks Channel are problems affecting all citizens. The “no discharge legislation” is our first step to encourage people to be responsible boaters. Our new WB boat should be used to issue warnings and fines. Our stormwater management is a first step for Wrightsville Beach. Storm water drains and pipes that run into Banks Channel should be improved. Systems of filtration are necessary for the health, safety and welfare of visitors and residents. It is a continuing effort to educate beach visitors of the dangers to our turtle and bird nesting areas when they litter. We cannot relax while litter destroys wildlife at our wonderful family beach. Public safety is not in crisis, according to Police Chief Carey but requires constant attention. Public parking is a continuing problem for citizens since our town has no property for expansion.

DeVries: Public safety, public parking, sanitation. Would you walk around this beach after dark? My wife and I have lived here 37 years and in the l970s and l980s we would have walked the streets on this island without fear. But, in the 1990s and 2000s, no way; and some candidates say we don't have a public safety problem!
I strongly believe when you increase police presence, you quickly see a decrease in bad behavior (drunkenness, assault, vagrancy, burglary, noise, profane language and, yes, even violations by boat owners). We need more police presence now.

Sisson: Public safety - sanitation and public parking. Public safety must be the first priority of any government – but it cannot be separated from a clean environment. Crime is more likely where it looks like the citizens don’t respect their own town. A dirty beach and dirty streets convey this impression as do closed swimming areas. Handling the boat-related sewage problem dovetails with improving public safety and using our police boat to enforce the no dumping zone. Parking is a long-standing problem and there seems to be no immediate on-site solution.

More active citizen and business involvement with law enforcement makes officers’ jobs easier. The same goes for fire prevention and ocean rescue. The aldermen should personally facilitate this effort. Our officers should enforce the no discharge zone as well as other ordinances that protect the environment.

Smith: Safety—residents and tourists must be provided a safe environment to maintain our quality of life. Sanitation—our water and water quality is the reason we want to live and recreate here. Parking—is more of a convenience than a necessity like No.1 and No.2.

Offer competitive salaries and benefits to continue to recruit the “A Team.” Careful consideration needs to be given to adding police as well as addressing the magistrate situation.




Brian Freskos and Marimar McNaughton

Wednesday, October 28, 2009

Friday, October 02, 2009

Ed Miastkowski goes on record to address Wrightsville Beach issues

Wrightsville Beach Board of Aldermen incumbent Ed Miastkowski acknowledged that it is difficult to contact him via telephone or e-mail. To obtain that admission, Miastkowski was approached on Thursday, Sept. 24, following a town meeting, and asked to sit down for an interview after the meeting which had been packed with individuals who represented two sides of a yet-to-be resolved issue that encompasses the South Lumina Avenue traffic pattern between the 500-700 block.
The issue had evolved into an emotional confrontation between both sides, with proponents of change citing what they claim to be safety issues along the one block thoroughfare from Sprunt Street to the Hanover Seaside Club.
At the meeting, the board of aldermen (BOA) tabled the issue, deciding to delve deeper into whether the safety factors need improving in the area in question.
Miastkowski used the public’s division as a platform to say that he often seeks the public’s opinion.
He is likely the longest serving alderman in the history of Wrightsville Beach, first elected in 1993, winning by smooth margins every four years since.
According to the candidate, the support of his right-wing conservative decision-making is slipping away, due to the fact that “all the old people are dying and moving,” he said.
Miastkowski, 68, said that a majority of his support is came from citizens of his generation—people who may view him as a strong representation of what they feel is the former simplicity of life in Wrightsville Beach.
His conservative stance is reflected in how he discussed curbside recycling. While supporting the general proposal of increased recycling and its potential positive affects on the environment, he said the town shouldn’t force it on people.
“I don’t like the government forcing anything on anybody,” he said.
Following the BOA meeting, the candidate made numerous comments regarding his athletic credentials before segueing into a long conversation about local sports.
He is a 1993 inductee of the Lenoire-Rhyne Sports Hall of Fame, and still holds record as one of the university’s leading basketball scorers. He is also an encyclopedia of local sports knowledge.
Without being questioned, Miastkowski addressed a blemish on his alderman record: absenteeism.
It came to light earlier this year that he missed more board meetings in 2008 than all the other aldermen combined since 2005. And in every year since 2005, he has been absent for more meetings than any current board member.
After contending that he never missed a meeting in his first twelve years of office, Miastkowski excused his absences. He cited deaths of friends and family, specifically his wife and sister.
“Certain things are more important than others,” he said. “Friends and family come first.”

Over your 16 years in office, how have you grown and solidified your base of support?

“I think I’ve been losing support because all the old people are dying and moving and that’s where my support comes from: the old beach residents. I don’t know the young people as much … but the older beach residents who’ve lived here a long time is where I get the majority of my support.

Why do you think that is?
“I’ve lived here 32-33 years. I graduated from New Hanover High School in 1960. I played basketball at UNCW for a couple years and people used to come see me play.
I moved to New Hanover County in 1968, except for the years that I went to Lenoire-Rhyne up in Hickory; I’ve lived here that long. My wife is from here, she’s deceased now. We were married 43 years and she’s from Wilmington.
Through school and in those 30 years I’ve got to know a lot of the kids at the beach and their families. I’ve been going to St. Therese’s Church for 40-some years because I lived in Green Meadows before I moved here and that was still my church. I’ve been going to St. Therese’s probably since 1970.

In your time on the Board of Aldermen what do you consider your greatest accomplishments?
“Trying to hold expenses down. Everybody knows I’m cheap. I treat the town money like it’s my money because I feel like it is our money. Each person that lives here—it’s their money—so I try to hold expenses down as best I can the whole time. That’s one constant that I have is spending.
The other constant is people know how I’m going to vote just about every time. I get very few phone calls because they know my philosophy on things as far as building and ordinances and that; and they know it’s hard to change my mind because I’m consistent. The audience doesn’t sway me a whole lot. I’ve voted for my friends; I have voted against my friends. I just try to do what I think is right for the beach. And I’ve lived here like I said, since 1977.”

How are you most involved in the community?
“For a while I was a member of the Lion’s Club and I enjoyed that. It just takes time. It started taking so much time. My wife was bedridden for six or seven years before she passed away and I had to stay with her—either I had to be there or somebody else had to be there. But I help, and just hang out and walk the neighborhoods and talk to people.
I’m not very accessible on the phone because, mainly, people who call are always these people wanting me to change telephone services and things like that. It aggravates me (he laughs). But I hang out in the parks. I’ll come over during the week and sit out there and watch people and they’ll come up and talk to me. I just try to be available on a personal basis, one-to-one, out in public, like just hanging out.
I don’t like to go to a lot of meetings, because I don’t believe the squeaky wheel gets the most grease. I try to hear both sides. Like I talked tonight. I talked to both sides. I went to visit people on both sides of the issue and I heard from one side and I went to visit somebody else and I heard the other side. When issues come up I try to listen to both people. I’ve got friends on both sides of this issue and I probably should’ve voted tonight but a little more information never hurt anybody. I’ll try to solve the problem before we have to do anything drastic.
I try to talk to both sides of the story all the time and I try to explain to them why I can’t vote for them. I’ve had some of my best friends that I’ve had to vote against because I didn’t think it was the right thing to do.
I think people respect that or at least you can sit down and talk to them. They get mad at you, but they understand and they see my point of view. They don’t agree with it, but they know why I do things. I just don’t cut them off. I try to listen to them and then explain I can’t do it or why I can do it. And then I got to tell the other side just the opposite.

What do you regard as the biggest issues facing the town?
“Probably people coming down in the summer. It’s not a problem, but it’s what to do with them when they get here. It’s just, we’re sinking down here. We have more public parking, people assume that we’re not tourist friendly, but if you check the other beaches we have more public access and more public parking than probably any beach in North Carolina.
And I don’t know how to alleviate any more of that problem but traffic and people coming down here is a terrific problem for us in the summer. They just ride around the circles and tie up the beach. I think they don’t assume we’re friendly to tourists but I think we are because we supply all these services. They complain about the parking meters but the parking meters offset the expenses that we provide for the tourists.
(He cited the sometimes more than 200 trashcans on the beach strand) And we empty them on the weekends and that takes our personnel coming in on the weekends to do it. We don’t leave Friday and come back Monday to do them; we’re out there on the weekends.
We have a full-time maintenance guy to handle bathrooms in the summertime. People say, ‘well you don’t clean them.’ But we’ve got a guy works 40 hours a week and his only job in the summer is to maintain—I think we got five or six public restrooms—and that’s his only job. To me those are tourist-friendly type things to do, and people don’t think we do that.
(Public works director Mike Vukelich said there are five public restrooms maintained by a full-time employee at a significant cost to the town.)
The lifeguards cost us over $350,000 a year, (the exact number is $351,257 for this year, according to town manager Bob Simpson) but it’s a service that we provide for the tourists that come down, make them feel like they’re safe or try to be safe as they can. I think the county ought to help us with that, but they don’t. We pony up the money here at Wrightsville Beach to the tune of $350 grand a year.”

How do you propose we deal with all the people?
“That’s been a problem since I’ve been on the board. We’ve had ideas like build parking decks but parking decks aren’t feasible because they’re only going to be used 12 weekends out of the summer. Monday through Friday parking’s not a problem down here, it’s Saturday and Sunday and sometimes on Friday and on holiday weekends and we’ve checked into it. The last time it’s been six or seven years, so I don’t know if I’m up to date, but it would take 35 years to get our money back out of a parking deck because it would never be used except on Saturdays and Sundays during the summer.
(Town manager Bob Simpson agreed. He said recently that Wrightsville Beach took up the possibility of a trolley line and parking deck in 2005, but the town simply doesn’t have the real estate to handle a project of that size. The costs of construction and maintenance would mean little return on the town’s investment.)
One time we had a trolley down here and it didn’t last very long and we used to shuttle them from here, let them park here and shuttle them every 30 minutes, but nobody would use it. We charged, I think it was a quarter, and ran every 30 minutes and people just didn’t want to use it. I don’t know if that would be something feasible now but this parking lot (he points in the direction of Wrightsville Beach park) fills up anyway without the trolley so I don’t know what good a trolley would do now because there’s no where for them go anywhere on that thing.
But we’ve talked about putting a sign out there on Eastwood somewhere saying: no available spots at the beach. But that wouldn’t stop them—they’d come down and look anyway. We’ve thought about a lot of things, it’s just people are going to come. There’s nothing you can do and they’ll just ride around, they will park in people’s yards and everything else. Like I said, we have more public parking than any beach in North Carolina for size and we provide more public accesses.
It’s 12 weekends a year that we have the problem. The other times it’s not that bad—maybe 14 now because the seasons are getting a little longer. They come a little earlier and a little later. There’s just no land to do anything with.”
“There are lots over there behind Lager Heads (on North Lumina Avenue) and people say, ‘why don’t you buy them and put a deck there?’ but the cost would be astronomical to do something like that and again it would only be used on the weekends.”

—Brian Freskos

Attack provokes candidate talk

The recent attack on 41-year-old Jud Gee has brought to the forefront what one board of aldermen candidate called an emergency situation in Wrightsville Beach, where degrading behavior has shaken the town’s core.
The attack on South Lumina Avenue Saturday morning, Sept. 12, left Gee in the hospital with life-threatening injuries and resulted in the arrest of Hugh Trey Sandlin, 28, a voice student from Chicago who now sits in a jailhouse cell on $150,000 secured bond.
Alderman candidate Walter DeVries called it a horrid attack that brought to light what the he deemed is a needed upgrade in the town’s safety structure.
DeVries recommended strengthening community policing, putting police on bicycles and Segway Personal Transporters, installing more video cameras, reducing department turnover, adding more officers and restoring merit pay.
He advocated a zero tolerance policy when addressing actions like public drunkenness, drug use, fights, property damage, disturbing the peace, swearing and cursing at residents and generally trashing the town streets, parking lots and beaches.
Citing fiscal constraints, DeVries proposed combating these issues by using the town’s $3.5 million in rainy day fund.
“This money is in the bank. It is to be used for emergencies—and if dealing with problem behavior isn’t an emergency, I don’t know what is,” DeVries said.
But using this money may not be as simple as it sounds.
Town manager Bob Simpson said the state of North Carolina requires municipalities to keep a portion—about 7 percent—of its budget in a fund earmarked for emergencies.
Wrightsville Beach, being a coastal town prone to head-on hurricane strikes, is required by ordinance to dedicate 34.5 percent of its budget toward emergency relief, Simpson said. This fiscal year, the town has set aside about 40 percent, or about $3.5 million of its $8.7 million budget.
DeVries’ statements at times coincided with but other times broke with statements made by the other BOA candidates in the days following the attack.
James Smith and Susan Howell Collins did not agree with DeVries’ suggestion that the attack represents a broader emergency situation on Wrightsville Beach.
“I think we have to recognize that, unfortunately, these types of things are happening all over the country, not just Wrightsville Beach,” Smith said. “It’s obviously a very unfortunate thing that happened but people don’t behave the way they used to.”
Collins said, “Since this is an isolated incident and not a random act of violence, I cannot accept the statement that the town of Wrightsville Beach is in an emergency state.”
When asked whether the Gee attack represented an emergency situation, BOA candidate Bill Sisson said, “Yes and no.”
“I don’t want what I’m saying to imply that the police are not doing their job,” he said. “But people in Wrightsville Beach don’t feel safe...and that can qualify as an emergency.”
Referring to the attack, he added: “There is certainly a perceived emergency to do something so that something like this never happens again.”
Alcohol abuse was cited by both Smith and Sisson as major issues currently having a negative affect on town safety, but proposals put forth by each candidate regarding how to combat the problem differed remarkably.
Smith wants Wrightsville Beach to enter into a collaborative effort with other towns to lobby the governor to change the alcohol beverage control board regulations and the agency’s authority to better control the downtown district.
“We have to take the driver’s seat to get the law changed,” he said. “A town, any town, whether it’s Raleigh or Wrightsville Beach, can’t control the bars and it’s a real shame that we can’t.”
Sisson, on the other hand, wants to increase the amount of community policing, a direct connection to DeVries’ proposal.
“I’m not blaming the bar owners, that’s not their problem,” he said. “It’s the problem of the people who are abusing alcohol.”
Sisson said that done properly, community policing breeds more cooperation between the citizens and police than having an arms-length relationship.
He said the town should look at funding options to initiate policies that take police out of the car and put them on the street, where they can have a physical presence to bridge the gap between officers and the public.
Acknowledging the town’s poor fiscal base, Sisson said that before funding any initiatives, the town should look at whether it is making the most efficient use of its current resources.
“Throwing money at a problem never fixes it,” he said, “but the physical presence of police would act as a deterrent.”
Ed Miastkowski could not be reached for comment. Several phone calls to his home and an email message were not answered.