Cairo Association of Teachers - Newsletter



CAT Tracks for February 28, 2007
CAIRO PRIMARY ELECTION RESULTS


From the Southeast Missourian...


Cairo ousts Farris

By Rudi Keller ~ Southeast Missourian

CAIRO, Ill. -- Cairo voters rejected Mayor Paul Farris' bid for a second term Tuesday while at the same time nominating three incumbent city council members for new terms.

The closely watched primary election -- observers were on hand from the Illinois Attorney General's office and the state Board of Elections -- was the voters' verdict on four years of bitter fighting between Farris and a council majority that fought him on most major issues.

In the voting for mayor, Judson Childs ran away with first place and will face Karl Klein in the April 17 general election. Klein narrowly edged Cairo school board president Joe Griggs and Farris for second place in the balloting.

Klein said he's ready to work with whoever voters choose for the council.

"I think it will work out pretty good," he said.

Farris declined to talk about his feelings upon learning of his loss. "I can't put four years in a one- or two-sentence statement," he said.

Childs received 440 votes to 170 for Klein. Griggs received 147; Farris won 142. Three hundred and twenty-four votes were scatted among six other candidates.

Voters chose nominees for six council seats as well. In a citywide race for a councilman-at-large position, Linda Jackson received 529 votes and will face James Conroy, who received 466 votes. Conroy is a former coach at Cairo High School; Jackson is currently on the council. Three other candidates garnered 168 votes.

"Just having a new mayor is helpful in itself," Jackson said. "You can work with a mayor. You can't work with a dictator."

The two other council members sought new terms. Elbert "Bo" Purchase, who was top vote-getter in Ward 1 with 126 votes, will face James W. Holder, who received 101 votes. Purchase is the senior member of the city council. Councilwoman Sandra Tarver came in second in Ward 3 with 48 votes and will face Lorenzo Nelson, who received 50 votes.

"I know there are going to be changes for the betterment of Cairo," Tarver said.

New council members will be elected from wards 2, 4 and 5. In Ward 2, Kathy McAllister, with 101 votes, will face Thomas Simpson, who received 79 votes. In Ward 4, Richard Pitcher, was the top vote-getter with 161 votes and will face Thomas Burris Jr., who received 96 votes. In Ward 5, Tyrone Coleman took 117 votes and will face Phillip Hodges, who received 87 votes.

In all, 1,245 people, or about 50 percent of Cairo's registered voters, turned out Tuesday, according to Alexander County Clerk Kent Thomas.

Voters interviewed after casting their ballots were mixed in their reviews of the council and Farris. "I want people who will work for the city and not for themselves," said Willie "Bill" Rose, who was voting with his wife, Marion, at Emerson School. Rose, who has lived in Cairo since his discharge from the armed forces after World War II, said he chose Klein for mayor and Conroy for councilman-at-large. Both are his neighbors, he said.

Farris supporter Marcus Johnson said he blamed the council for the difficulties of the past four years. "You have got to give a person a second chance to finish what they started," he said.

While poll watchers braced for a busy day reviewing voting credentials, few problems were reported by workers at the polls or by Thomas. One of the few problems occurred early in the afternoon. Council candidate Lorenzo Nelson complained to Thomas that election judges at the Ward 3 polling place in the Alexander County Courthouse had allowed one person to vote who listed a vacant lot as an address, and a second voter cast a ballot who listed a post office box in Mounds, Ill., as his address.

"I'd like to play by the rules, and if it is not supposed to happen, it shouldn't happen," Nelson said after Thomas and Board of Elections observer Jeff Barry heard his complaint.

In response, Barry and Thomas told Nelson that election judges have a right to overrule challenges to a voter's credentials. But they must take a formal vote and record it on the voting rolls, he said.

"You can object, but the judges rule," Barry told Nelson.

Barry then addressed the five election judges and reminded them that they must vote on any challenge.

Elsewhere, visits to three of the other four polling locations didn't disclose any other challenges through 2 p.m. Julie Newell, working as an election judge at Emerson School for the second time, said she has heard in the past about votes being purchased for money or liquor. "Whether it does happen or not, I think it is a good thing the state is here," she said. "I am praying and hoping they don't find anything."

Part of the problem is an out-of-date voter registration list that must be purged, Thomas said. But removing invalid names must wait until after the April 17 general election, he said, because state law bars clerks from cleansing voter rolls within 90 days of an election.


From the KFVS TV Channel 12 website...


Winds of change blow through Cairo

By: Ryan Tate

CAIRO, Ill. - When the Cairo city government meets after the April 17th elections, one thing is for sure: there will be different faces making the decisions. Mayor Paul Farris came in fourth in the mayoral race in Tuesday's consolidated primary and only three city council members made it through to the April 17th elections.

"This is the one time people can come out and give you a pat on the back or a give you a punch," Mayor Paul Farris said.

Council Members Elbert "Bo" Purchase, Sandra Tarver and Linda Jackson made it through the consolidated primary Tuesday night to April's Election. Carolyn Ponting and Joey Thurston did not run. Current council member Bobby Whitaker ran in for mayor and came in sixth place.

So who's in line to vie for Cairo's top elected seat? Judson Childs and Karl Klein will face off for the mayor's job in April. Childs collected the most votes in the Consolidated Primary, garnering 440 votes. Klein came in second with 170.


From the WPSD TV Channel 6 website...


Cairo, IL Politics Changing

Posted By: Holley Doucet

Decision 2007 coverage now on the Illinois primary and its impact on politics in Cairo, Illinois. Voters said no to controversial mayor paul Farris' bid for a 2nd term. He finished 4th in a ten person race. Only the top two vote getters, Judson Childs and Karl Klein move on to the general election. City Council member, Linda Jackson, is excited about the prospects for change. "I was ecstatic. Farris lost. The City of Cairo won." She says the last 4 years have been tough and the contentious relationship between Mayor Farris and the council have kept leaders from taking care of the people's business. "It's been under the rule of basically a dictatorship and we haven't been able to move forward," she continues. She isn't alone.

Neighbors I talked with say Cairo's City Government is stagnant and a change in the political climate is long over due. Others say the City Council has to bear part of the blame for the political hostility in Cairo in recent years.

Newschannel six tried to contact mayor farris, but he was unavailable for comment. The mayor's critics say the time has come to move in a different direction. "Get past the storm. We are a wonderful town. And we're open to business opportunities," Jackson continues.


From the KFVS TV Channel 12 website...


Two men to face-off for mayor in Cairo's April election

By: Ryan Tate

CAIRO, Ill. - Judson Childs and Karl Klein are familiar faces to people in Cairo. They soon will be the face of the City.

Childs and Klein came in first and second in Tuesday's Illinois Consolidated Primary, meaning one of the two will be the next Mayor in Cairo. "Cairo has potential," Childs said. "There is no "I" in teamwork, and if the Mayor and City Council work together, we can get things done." "I think the time is now," Klein said. "We have the chance to get things done and I think we can."

Childs won the Primary with 440 votes. Klein came in second with 170. "I was a big fan of President Kennedy," Childs said. "He said, 'Ask not what your country can do for you, ask what you can do for your country.' I think it's 'Ask not what Cairo can do for you, ask what you can do for Cairo.'" "If we can get the budget passed, auditors in here, we can begin to get things done. I think the future is bright for this town," Klein said.

The two men face off April 17th.



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