North Kitsap Herald Wednesday, September 7, 2005


Page A4

Quade, Regis

to November

Downtown parking, traffic, Olhava, the Marine Sci-

ence Center, a new city hall. The topics of the day for

Poulsbo once again translate into a vision of the future

for Little Norway but who has the ability to best lead the city

and realize its potential?

With the September primary already in the process of push-

ing two prospective mayors toward the November ballot, mem-

bers of the North Kitsap Herald Advisory Board sat down with

candidates Donna Jean Bruce, Mike Regis and Kathryn Quade

to determine who truly fit the city's leadership needs.

The board was unanimous in determining the Herald's

endorsement for mayor: Kathryn Quade.

We love the fact that Quade possesses the intrinsic ability

to not only think, but look outside the box. Her tradition of

furthering her education on city government via workshops

and networking showed us that she was not only serious about

getting new perspectives but passionate about moving Poulsbo

forward.

"I've made it a priority to get out and learn," she explained,

adding that mayor's position is presently "managerial" and lacks

much-needed leadership. "We're in a mode of stasis. We need

someone pushing and pulling for the city."

We agree.

We also concurred that while Bruce has done a good job of

maintaining the city, she has come up short in terms of laying

the needed groundwork for the Poulsbo of the future.

When asked about the role of mayor, Bruce said, "It's kind

of like being the CEO of a company @ you do what the coun-

cil tells you to and make sure the employees are doing what

they're suooosed to."

True enough but we feel the Mayor of Poulsbo shouldn't be

content there and that the person holding this title should go

out of his or her way to ensure Little Norway stands out as a

cutting edge small town in Washington.

"The city is too reactionary," Quade assessed.

While Bruce pointed out new efficiencies brought to the gov-

ernment via software upgrades and noted the smooth transitiol

during the reorganization of the employee structure at city hal]

we feel she has been stagnant as a leader.

Bruce, after much hesitation, saidishetfelt the. solution to ;.

downtown's parking crunch was a well-placed garage across;:

from the current city hall on Jensen Way.

Regis, who sees the mayoral role as being a "facilitator of

the process," raised an excellent point on the parking garage

subject, pointing to the "frozen months." Downtown parking in

January-March should be studied before the city took any posi-

tion on how to best fix the issue, he reasoned.

This fit well with his campaign promise of always getting th(

facts first before proceeding with a plan or policy. We liked tha

and the idea that while Regis recognizes the council as being

the most powerful part of the city's process, the mayor should

be more involved in the council's agenda.

He was also big on making sure that the city make a better

effort to show the relationship of things: i.e. how does traffic

really affect businesses and why.

We were a bit worried that he might get too involved with

staff and have the propensity to lean toward being a microman-

ager. Bruce, we agreed, was just the opposite.

Speaking about the perception of her being a "part-time

mayor," Bruce countered that although she might not be at the

office until 5 p.m. every weekday, "You're mayor 24 hours a

day."

ff that were the case for the mayor, she shouldn't have even

had to bring it up.

While all three agreed on the need for a new city hall and

Bruce noted that the Electronic Data Systems (EDS) Building

is out of the equation as it is not for sale, only Quade questioned

Poulsbo's apparent push to beat the Critical Areas Ordinance

deadline of Dec. 31 and secure the permit "grandfathering" the

city needs to build at the 10th Avenue site.

"Government should be held to a higher standard," she

remarked.

We couldn't agree more and we think Quade will ensure that

as far as the City of Poulsbo is concerned, it will be.

 

North Kitsap Herald Wednesday, September 7, 2005