Sturtz on KBIAAttack from Council member alarms candidate's supporters
COLUMBIA, 4/8/11 (Beat Byte) -- A last-minute email bombshell (click images for larger versions) from First Ward Columbia City Councilman Paul Sturtz that accused his predecessor, Almeta Crayton, of accepting influence from land developers to endorse City Council candidate Mitch Richards was one of several intrigues Tuesday's elections generated.
Fred Schmidt defeated Richards to replace Sturtz on the Council.
"I have sources that say Donnie [Stamper] and his friends are helping behind-the-scenes, and I very much believe it," said an April 4 email from Sturtz about Richards' campaign and Central Missouri Development Council director Don Stamper, a longtime Sturtz antagonist. "They know that being above-ground would be poison for Mitch in the First Ward," Sturtz asserted.
In an April 2 email, Sturtz again referenced developer support. "They've paid for Richards' yard signs, advertised his fundraiser, delivered supporters, and raised stakes in his campaign."
Then, the bombshell: "They likewise persuaded Almeta Crayton to endorse Mitch," Sturtz wrote.
"It is defamation of me, Mitch and Almeta," Richards supporter Mark Flakne told the Heart Beat.
Favorable in the Fifth
Though a similar controversy erupted in Columbia's Fifth Ward that
Missourian columnist
George Kennedy opined upon today, attorney Glen Ehrhardt didn't lose Tuesday's election because Firefighters campaigned for him, or his Chamber of Commerce endorsement, or because a "backlash against developers" pushed voters in a new direction (former Councilwoman Laura Nauser was generally regarded as "developer friendly" but with thoughtful reservation.)
The story of this year's Fifth Ward City Council race is that Helen Anthony won because she was a better candidate, with enough presence and panache to become Mayor some day.
Sturtz Email Rt click to enlargeThe Lions of Liberty
First Ward candidate Mitch Richards and the Lions of Liberty -- despite the establishment brush off -- are here to stay, and deserve recognition for a fine effort, not only in the First Ward election, but all over town.
Seems like old uns always bitchin' young uns aren't involved enough -- too much apathy among today's youth, they say. But not this group.
They are providing a much-needed counterpoint to an Orwellian, camera-loving City Hall push that seems designed more to raise revenues than protect public safety (see Heart Beat story on the pending parking price-out).
Other stories from Tuesday's election include voters finally giving Columbia City Council members credit for their hard work. If any backlash was afoot, a growing discomfort with unelected senior staff decisions at City Hall may have played a role in the resounding victory Council pay received at the polls.