Friday, August
03, 2001
Petitions
reviewed for errors
Anti-tax group
seeks to block campaign-finance ballot
issue
By Howard Wilkinson
The Cincinnati Enquirer
An anti-tax
group is working overtime to keep a Cincinnati charter
amendment for partial public financing of city election
campaigns off the November ballot.
Citizens Opposed to Additional
Spending and Taxes (COAST) is combing through more than 300
petitions containing more than 11,000 signatures hoping to
find enough flaws to prevent the campaign finance reform
package from reaching the ballot.
The law allows us to do this
and we are going to do everything we can to see that this does
not qualify for the ballot, said State Rep. Tom Brinkman Jr.,
the founder of COAST.
The anti-tax group is opposed
to the campaign finance reform measure because it would
include matching public funds for mayoral or council
candidates who agree to a campaign spending limit.
It's not only a waste of
taxpayers' money; it's an attack on free speech, Mr. Brinkman
said.
Backers of the proposal argue
the campaign finance reform package which includes limits on
campaign contributions, as well as partial public financing
is needed to bring the costs of running for office in
Cincinnati under control and take away the perception that big
money contributors are buying politicians.
Last week, Citizens for Fair
Elections, a coalition of groups backing campaign finance
reform, presented its petitions to the Hamilton County Board
of Elections.
Elections officials verified
that the group has more than the 6,994 signatures of
registered Cincinnati voters it needs to make the ballot.
But elections officials only
verify that the names on the petitions are those of registered
voters. COAST members principally Mr. Brinkman and lawyers
Chris Finney and David Langdon are going over copies of the
petitions to see whether the circulators conformed to Ohio
election laws.
Three years ago, some of the
same COAST activists scrutinized petitions for a plan for
direct election of the mayor and were successful in keeping
the issue off the ballot.
Mr. Brinkman said they are
looking for such things as petitions circulated by persons who
are not registered Cincinnati voters or circulators who signed
their own petitions.
In a hearing before the board
of elections, Mr. Brinkman said, COAST could make an argument
that all the signatures on those petitions should be thrown
out.
If COAST officials find enough
problems with the petitions, the board of elections could hold
a hearing to determine whether the petitions are valid.
The board will advise
Cincinnati City Council, which must vote by Sept. 7 for the
issue to be on the Nov. 6 ballot.
Bill Woods, one of the
organizers of the petition initiative campaign, said he is
convinced that organizers took enough care briefing the nearly
100 petition circulators on how to do it properly that COAST
will not be successful.
We bent over backwards to
follow all the guidelines, Mr. Woods said.
Public financing of city
campaigns may become an issue in the mayoral race. Mayor
Charlie Luken opposes it, while Charter candidate Courtis
Fuller thinks it's a good idea.
Teen
faces new charge of attempted murder
Ky.
17 completion should trigger land boom
Hunting
buddies face charges
CAN
announces members of economic inclusion team
Fuller
plan would revive 'voices of city's past'
Goal:
policing without bias
Petitions reviewed for errors
Plan
to move Job Corps opposed
Whitehead,
once homeless, takes helm of national agency
Heart
of town renews its life
Heat
adds stress for fair critters
Tristate
A.M. Report
Tristate
GOP reps support compromise
Unclaimed-funds
books go on tour
Virus
is coming, health officials say
Fairfax
meeting called to end rumors
Hearings
set on tax boost
Lebanon
debates phone costs
Board
promises citizen input
Judge
annuls minister's marriage to wealthy 77-year-old
widow
David
Bunning put up for federal judgeship
Day
care centers get report cards
Kentucky
News Briefs
Man
drowns fishing Lake Cumberland
Past
president of Thomas More College killed in crash
Smokers,
chewers! Give up tobacco, win cash prizes
Two
Boone deputies
suspended