Date: Fri 15-Dec-1995
Date: Fri 15-Dec-1995
Publication: Bee
Author: KAAREN
Quick Words:
charter-revision-Snyder
Full Text:
Snyder Elected Chairman Of Charter Revision Panel
B Y K AAREN V ALENTA
The commission which has been formed to review the town charter held its first
meeting in the Old Courtroom at Edmond Town Hall last week and, after three
tie votes, elected Michael Snyder as chairman by a toss of a coin.
Mae Schmidle, the other contender, became vice chairman.
"The ranking justice of the US Supreme Court in the 1920s was chosen by the
toss of a coin and that process is used in Congress when that body can't
decide on a chairman, so I don't think it's a frivolous way to break the tie,"
said David Chipman, a commission member who also had expressed interest in
becoming chairman.
A former four-term member of the Board of Selectmen, Mr Snyder also served on
Legislative Council, and currently is the president of the Newtown Chamber of
Commerce and on the Board of Directors of the Family Life Center. Mrs Schmidle
is a former state legislator and town clerk and also was the chairman of the
last charter revision commission.
Legislative Council appointed the 12-member Charter Revision Commission in
November and directed it to look into 18 possible areas of change in the
existing town charter. The commission includes six Republicans, five Democrats
and one unaffiliated member. Candidates were selected on the basis of resumes
and interviews conducted by a council subcommittee.
The commission members decided to meet every week from January through March,
alternating Tuesday and Thursday nights. Beginning April 4, the commission
will meet every other week on Thursday evenings.
Two Legislative Council members, Vice Chairman Melissa Pilchard and Joseph
Borst, chaired the first commission meeting until the chairman and vice
chairman were elected.
Mrs Pilchard read the list of charter items that the council had specifically
asked the commission to review, adding that the commission could recommend
that all, some or none be changed, and even could completely re-write the
charter.
"You have 16 months to study the charter and come back to council with your
report," she said. "You have a very specific schedule which is timed so you
will come back to the same council which gave you the charge."
Mrs Pilchard said the council would review changes proposed by the commission.
"The council does not have to accept anything," she said. "But if there is
something that you really want and the council doesn't accept it, you can
petition it out, although that is difficult."
The last Charter Review Commission proposed that the council be reduced from
18 to 12 members. The council didn't agree, but the commission petitioned for
the question to be put on the ballot. It was, and the voters approved the
change.
The council allocated $5,000 in the current budget for expenses of the
commission which must hire a clerk to keep records and an attorney to review
proposed charter changes.
The commission members also include Russell Melita of Budd Drive, a former
council member who is chairman of the Republican Town Committee; former
selectman Jim Smith; Steve Koch, a former Newtown resident who is temporarily
living in Southbury while building a house on Sugar Lane; Barbara O'Connor of
Little Brook Lane; former Board of Education member Ruby Johnson of Chestnut
Hill Road; Brandt Schneider, who holds a master's degree in public
administration; former Legislative Council member Stan Karpacz of Hyvue Drive;
David Chipman of Hunting Ridge Road, an attorney and former Board of Education
member; and attorney Ted Winokur of Sturges Road. Greg Bunger, a financial
analyst who lives on Cedar Hill Road, is the unaffiliated member.
