Saturday, October 27, 2007

GEORGETOWN: Three battle for two at-large seats on council

By CHRIS MORRIS
Chris.Morris@newsandtribune.com

A former Floyd County commissioner, an incumbent and a political newcomer will battle for two at-large seats in the upcoming Georgetown Town Board election Nov. 6.

Republican incumbent Margaret “Dean” Hammersmith faces Democrats Mike Mills and Karla Perkins for the two seats.

Hammersmith is finishing her first term on the board and said she is running for re-election because “there are things we started that we haven’t been able to complete for the betterment of the town.”

Mills, a former Georgetown Town Board member for three terms and Floyd County commissioner, said the main reason he is running is to straighten out the town’s finances.
“The place is practically bankrupt,” Mills said.

Perkins said she would like to sit on the board because, “if you want to be heard, you need to be involved.”

The main issue facing the town is where to build a sewage treatment plant. The town purchased 23 acres of land two years ago outside the town limits, but has faced legal challenges since announcing plans to build the plant on that site. A second site also has faced opposition.
“It’s been the people of Edwardsville (who) oppose us and they don’t have a dog in the fight. They live outside the territory,” Hammersmith said. “They all live a mile or mile and a half away from the site. If we don’t build a plant, they (state) are eventually going to force it on us.”
Mills — a 37-year veteran of the New Albany Police Department and current assistant chief — knows all about the sewer-plant issue in Georgetown. He said when he was on the board in 1980, he tried to get his fellow board members to build a plant. He said at the time, the state was going to pay 95 percent of the cost for the plant. However, the board voted it down.

The current board, he said, has gone about building a plant backward.