The top two votegetters in the primary will move on to the April 6 election.
In an effort to help voters get to know more about the candidates, the Courier-Life asked them to answer a questionnaire about issues, motivations and qualifications. Here are their answers:
Why do you want to serve on the Onalaska Town Board?
They were so detrimental to the business climate that I moved to Onalaska in December 2008. That is when I made a commitment to make sure that small businesses have a voice in local government. I am devoted to bringing fiscal responsibility to the town of Onalaska.
What personal qualities and experiences make you the best qualified candidate for the job?
Now in my second position with a Wisconsin based company, I have grown to understand the climate of the area and can see what needs to be done to protect the interests of the community.
Personally, I am what you get. There is no fake persona, no hidden agenda. I say what is on my mind, regardless of the situation, and you know where I stand and why.
Doing more with less has become my reputation. As a crew chief in the Craftsman Truck Series of NASCAR, my team outperformed Dodge factory teams spending more than 10 times our budget.
As a small business owner, I have built businesses from nothing and made them full-time businesses in a very short time. This is experience that is needed by government to keep our taxes low and our cash reserves high enough to get through tough times like we have now. As the La Crosse Tea Party organizer I have already shown the community my willingness and desire to serve the people.
I am fair, honest and open minded and I believe that ALL sides of any situation have value worth considering.
What are the three most important issues facing the Onalaska Town Board and what would your approach to dealing with those issues be?
School taxes going up. I am a big believer in busing. I do not see why we cannot work a deal with La Crosse — a city closing schools and laying off teachers — to send kids from this area to La Crosse for school and pay a flat fee per year per student. This would keep the schools that are already built open, and not burden the tax payers in our area with building new schools and hiring teachers and the associated administrative staffs. Its a radical idea — but it works in major cities around the country flawlessly.
More citizen involvement in the town. We are well on the way to bringing back all the committees — I think it is of paramount importance that we continue.
I hope to be someone that the people will trust, coming in with no previous “agenda” and that they can trust will listen to everyone and try to find solutions that best suit the majority.
I also believe we need to get back to publishing a quarterly newsletter that is informative and available to the town citizens. I believe we can do this without significant cost by utilizing electronic communication as often as possible and distributing the paper copy of a newsletter through the businesses in the town.
I would be willing to head up a group of volunteers who would create and distribute this publication both in hard copy and via e-mail.
And finally I am concerned that the entire budget process in the town of Onalaska is in serious need of overhaul. I think there is wastefulness, and that we can have a budget that does not create tax increases but will still maintain needed services.
In connection with the budget, there are also many residents in the town who are not satisfied with the assessment process or the responsiveness of the assessor. We need to look at what changes might be needed in the entire assessment process as one the first priorities of the new board to be sure that all properties are assessed fairly and equitably and that we have an assessor who will communicate with the residents when asked.
MEET THE CANDIDATES
Howard Kelly
Jake Speed
Sandra ‘Sandy’ Thompson


ht bast wrote on Feb 12, 2010 3:27 PM:
wrote on
Feb 11, 2010 12:30 PM
bravo bravo "