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Election 2011 - Mayoral candidate Turner Askew

by Matt Baldwin / Whitefish Pilot
| September 21, 2011 8:07 AM

Turner Askew says his institutional

knowledge about the issues facing Whitefish makes him a strong

mayoral candidate.

Askew has been elected to city council

twice, first in 1999 and again in 2008, making it nearly 7 1/2

years he’s served the city. He moved to Whitefish about 15 years

ago from Memphis, Tenn., and his family has a long history in the

valley.

“There are things that need to be

done,” Askew told the Pilot. “I understand the background and I

think I can do those things better than anyone else.”

Some of those things, he said, include

tweaking the Critical Areas Ordinance and resolving the city-county

planning doughnut. He believes the CAO is cumbersome and

unenforceable.

“When the planning director and even

John Muhlfeld say they don’t understand it, then let’s fix it,”

Askew said. “I’m going to get it to the point where it makes sense

and it does what it’s suppose to do.”

The CAO was adopted by council in 2008

after years of development. Askew was the lone councilor to vote

against it. The ordinance established a list of criteria that set

out to protect the city’s water quality by limiting development in

environmentally critical areas. The ordinance has since been

amended a few times.

Askew says the CAO as it’s written now

is negatively impacting property sales.

“There’s no question it’s hurting

property sales,” he said. “We started out with water quality and

ended up with steep slopes and a matrix — things that aren’t

understood by anyone.

“I don’t want to gut it. I want to make

it something we understand.”

The city-county planning doughnut, he

says, is one of the top issues facing city council — and it

shouldn’t be difficult to solve.

“Government is pretty simple,” he said.

“The federal government is overall, the state is the next, the

county is next and city government is fourth.

“We don’t tell the county what to

do...but we can negotiate with them and that’s what I intend to

do.”

He says the 2010 Interlocal Agreement

is a good framework to follow when opening new talks with the

county.

“Let’s talk and figure out what we all

can live with and let’s go on with life,” he said.

As mayor, Askew says he wants to help

spur the local economy by eliminating unnecessary regulations that

make Whitefish unfriendly to businesses. The city needs to be

careful not to over-regulate.

“Some regulations pile on top of each

other and are so cumbersome that they hurt job growth,” he said.

“We keep passing regulations, but we never get rid of the old

regulations.”

He says prospective business owners

think it’s difficult to do business in Whitefish.

“That doesn’t help us create jobs,” he

said. “There’s a perception that businesses should look first in

Columbia Falls or Kalispell.”

Some of the regulations are

well-intended, he says, but have unforeseen consequences. He notes

the Dark Sky ordinance, which he was on the committee for. It was

developed for properties within the city, “but now it applies to

people on five acres with livestock,” he said.

“When they hear dogs barking they want

to see what’s going on out there,” he said. “Of course they want a

light, we just never thought about it.

“We need to change that. But the

ordinance has been a real beneficial thing. The stars in Whitefish

are very different than in Denver. I see very real and good reasons

for some of the regulations, but if they need to be looked at,

that’s fine.”

Askew voted against the 2012 city

budget and says it isn’t balanced due to a $300,000 transfer from a

stormwater reserve to help offset another part of the budget. Askew

has said he’s against raising taxes, but shies away from naming

specific places the budget could have been cut to make it

balanced.

“Rather than worrying about cuts, we

have to understand we can’t increase,” he said. “There’s nothing

there to increase to.”

The current council, he says, has done

a good job of tightening the budget.

“We have to be ahead of the curve on

balancing the budget,” he said. “I don’t believe we are out of the

woods yet.”

Askew has mentioned a few ideas about

developing a new city hall. He has suggested buying the Mountain

West Bank site on Spokane Avenue and using saved TIF funds to help

remodel the high school.

The current city hall site, he says,

could be turned into parking and later sold with the condition that

parking is included in any proposed development.

“It’d be nice if it was back on the tax

rolls,” he said.

Askew says an important role of mayor

is to be a good listener.

“There may be something you haven’t

thought of or the council hasn’t thought of,” he said.